Select Orations of Saint Gregory
Nazianzen, Sometime Archbishop of Constantinople
Prolegomena
Division
I
The Life
S. Gregory Nazianzen, called by the
Ecumenical Council of Ephesus "The Great," and universally known
as "The Theologian" or "The Divine," a title which he shares with
S. John the Evangelist alone among the Fathers of the Church,
was, like the great Basil of Caesarea and his brother Gregory,
Bishop of Nyssa, by birth a Cappadocian. He was born at Arianzus,
a country estate belonging to his father, in the neighbourhood of
Nazianzus.
This latter, sometimes called Nazianzum, is
a place quite unknown to early writers, and derives all its
importance from its connection with our Saint. The Romans seem to
have called it Diocaesarea. This would place it in the
south-western portion of the district called Cappadocia Secunda,
a sub-division of the Province, which had previously included the
whole country of Cappadocia under the Prefect of Caesarea. The
Emperor Valens made the division for financial purposes about
a.d. 371, and assigned Tyana as its civil Metropolis, and, as we
shall see, thereby caused an ecclesiastical quarrel which had
considerable effect on the life of S. Gregory. Tyana was situated
at no great distance south and east of Nazianzus, which place is
usually identified with some interesting ruins about eighteen
miles south-east of Ak Serai, on a rocky platform at the foot of
the mountains called Hassan Dagh. Amongst other ruined buildings
here are the remains of three Byzantine churches of great age,
but more recent than the rest of the town.
His father, who bore the same name with
himself, had originally belonged to an obscure sect called
Hypsistarians or Hypsistians, of whom we know little except what
we learn from Gregory of Nazianzus and his namesake of Nyssa.
They seem to have held a sort of syncretist doctrine, containing
elements derived from heathen, Christian, and Jewish sources.
They were very strict monotheists, rejecting both polytheism and
the doctrine of the Trinity, and worshipping the One Supreme
Being under the names of The Most High and The Almighty, and the
emblems of Fire and Light, but with no external cultus; for they
rejected sacrifice and every outward form of worship, holding
adoration to be an exclusively interior and spiritual act. With
singular inconsistency, however, they adopted the observance of
the Jewish Sabbath, and the Levitical prohibition of certain
kinds of food. They were but few in number, and their influence
was insignificant even in Cappadocia, which was the headquarters
of sect. From this form of error the elder Gregory was converted
by the influence of his wife, Nonna; and soon after his
conversion was consecrated to the bishopric of
Nazianzus.
Nonna, the mother of our Saint, was the
daughter of Christian parents, and had been very carefully
brought up. Like S. John Chrysostom and S. Augustine, Gregory had
the inestimable advantage of being reared at the knee of a mother
of conspicuous holiness. There were three children of the
marriage-a sister, Gorgonia, probably somewhat older than
Gregory, who was devotedly fond of her, and a brother, Caesarius,
perhaps younger, who was a distinguished physician, and occupied
a post of confidence at the Court of Constantinople. Gregory was
certainly born at a late period of the life of his mother. He
tells us that, like so many other holy men of whom we read both
in the Bible and outside its pages, he was consecrated to God by
his mother even before his birth. The precise date is uncertain.
There are two lines in his poem on his own life which seem to
indicate clearly that it took place after his father's elevation
to the Episcopate, or at any rate after his ordination to the
Priesthood. Speaking of the great desire of the elder Gregory to
see his son ordained to the Priesthood, in order that he might
have him as a coadjutor and aid to his own declining years and
failing strength, he gives the arguments by which the old man
sought to persuade him to take upon himself a burden which he
dreaded; and among them we find the father saying to the son:
"You have not been yet so long in life as I have spent in
sacrifice." He tells us that he left Athens in or about his
thirtieth year, and also that the Emperor Julian was his
contemporary there. Now Julian was at Athens in 355; so that we
must place Gregory's birth not earlier than 325; and if we give
its natural meaning to the first passage quoted, not earlier than
330, the latest date available for his father's consecration as
Bishop. This is not inconsistent with the Athenian chronology of
his life, as he certainly spent many years there, and probably
did not leave the place till 357.
As soon as the children's age permitted,
Gregory and his brother Caesarius were sent to school at
Caesarea, under the care of a good man named Carterius, who as
long as he lived retained a great influence over the mind of his
elder pupil. This is perhaps the same Carterius who afterwards
presided over the monasteries of Antioch in Syria, and was one of
the instructors of S. John Chrysostom. The following is a free
rendering of one of four funeral epigrams written in later years
by our Saint in honour of his old friend and tutor:
"Whither, Carterius, best beloved of
friends,
O whither hast thou gone, and left me
here
Alone amid the many toils of
earth?
Thou who didst hold the rudder of my
youth,
When in another land I learned to
weigh
The words and stories of a learned
age;
Thou who didst bind me to the uncarnal
life.
Truly the Christ, whom thou possessest
now,
Took thee unto Himself, the King thou
lov'st.
O thou bright lightning of most glorious
Christ,
Thou best protection of my early
days,
Thou charioteer of all my younger
life,
Remember now the Gregory whom
erst
Thou trainedst in the ways of virtuous
life,
Carterius, master of the life of
grace."
It was probably at Caesarea that the
acquaintance between Gregory and S. Basil the Great began, which
was afterwards to ripen into a lifelong friendship. But their
association did not last long at this period, for Basil soon went
to Constantinople to continue his education, while Gregory and
his brother removed to the Palestinian Caesarea; probably as much
for the sake of making a pilgrimage to the Holy Sepulchre, as for
the advantage of the schools of that learned resort. Caesarius
soon went on to Alexandria; but Gregory was tempted by the
flourishing Palestinian school of rhetoric to remain a while and
study that art. One of his fellow-students here was Euzoius, the
future heresiarch. From Palestine he too went on to Alexandria,
where he found his brother enjoying an excellent character, and
highly distinguished among the students of the University. S.
Athanasius was at this time the Bishop, and Didymus head of the
famous Catechetical School; but as Gregory, though one of his
orations is a panegyric on S. Athanasius, does not mention having
ever met either of these two great men, we must suppose that the
former was at this time suffering one of his many periods of
exile-his second banishment lasted from 340 to 347. Gregory does
not seem to have remained very long at Alexandria; the
fascination exercised on his mind by a yet more famous seat of
learning-Athens-soon drew him thither. He could not even wait for
a favourable time of year, but must start at once. He took
passage in the month of November in a ship bound for AEgina, with
some of whose crew he was acquainted. They had a prosperous
voyage until they were in sight of Cyprus, when they were
assailed by a tremendous storm, and the ship, swept by the heavy
seas, became waterlogged, and would not answer her helm. At the
same time the violence of the sea burst the water-tanks, and the
ship's company were left in dire distress. Gregory, who was not
yet baptized, was thrown into terrible distress at thus finding
himself in peril of death while yet outside the Covenant of God.
In earnest prayer he renewed his self-dedication, and vowed to
give himself wholly to the service of God, if his life might be
spared to receive Holy Baptism. He tells the story at some length
and with great graphic power in his long poem on his own life,
from which we subjoin a cento, and also in his oration spoken at
his father's funeral (Orat. XVIII, c. 31, p. 352 Ed. Ben.). It
is, however, uncertain whether he was baptized immediately after
this deliverance, or whether he waited till his return to
Nazianzus. At any rate he reached Athens in safety, and shortly
afterwards was joined there by Basil; when the early acquaintance
which was now renewed soon deepened into an intimacy of brotherly
affection, which, though often sorely tried, never grew cold in
Gregory's heart. In the funeral oration which he pronounced over
his friend, Gregory has left us a most interesting account of
University life in the middle of the fourth century, of which we
give a summary here, referring the reader for details to the
oration itself, which will be found in the present volume.
Basil's reputation, he says, preceded him to Athens, where he was
received with much enthusiasm. Many of the silliest students
there are mad upon Sophists, and are divided upon the respective
merits of their teachers with as much excitement as is shown by
the partisans of the various chariots in the Hippodromes. And so
a new-comer is laid hold of by them in this fashion. First of
all, he is entertained by the first who can get hold of
him-either a relation or a friend or a fellow-countryman, or a
leading Sophister, who is in favour with his master, and touts
for him. There he is unmercifully chaffed, and with more or less
of rough horseplay, by everybody, to take down his pride; and is
then escorted processionally through the streets to the Baths;
after which process he is regarded as free of the students'
guild. Basil, however, through the good offices of his friend
Gregory, was spared this trial of his nerves, out of respect for
his great attainments; and this kind action was the beginning of
their long and affectionate intimacy. Among the students,
however, were a number of young Armenians, some of whom had been
at school with Basil, and were very jealous of him. These young
men, with the object of destroying his reputation if possible,
were continually harassing him with disputations upon hard and
sophistical questions. Basil was quite able to hold his own
against them, but Gregory, jealous for the honour of his
University, and not at first perceiving the malice of these young
men, sided with them and made the conflict more equal. As soon,
however, as he began to see their real purpose, he forsook them
and took his stand by his friend, whose victory was thus made not
only assured but easy. The young gentlemen naturally did not like
this, and Gregory became, much to Basil's distress, very
unpopular among them, as they chose to regard his conduct in the
matter as treason against his University, and especially against
the students of his own year.
The city of Athens at this time was full of
dangerous distractions for young men; feasts, theatres,
assemblies, wine parties, etc. Gregory and his friend resolved to
renounce all these, and to allow themselves to know only two
roads-one, that which led to the Church and its holy teachers;
the other, that which took them to their University lectures.
Amongst other famous students of Gregory's day was Prince Julian,
afterwards the Emperor who apostatized and endeavoured to restore
the ancient heathenism, and galvanize it into something like a
new life. Gregory claims even at this early period to have
foreseen and dreaded the result of Julian's accession. "I had
long foreseen," he says, "how matters would be, from the time
that I was with him at Athens. He had come there shortly after
the violent measures against his brother, having asked permission
of the Emperor to do so. He had two reasons for this sojourn-the
one more honest, namely, to visit Greece and its schools, the
other more secret and known only to a few persons, namely, to
consult with the heathen priests and charlatans about his plans,
because his wickedness was not as yet declared. Even then I made
no bad guess about the man, although I am not one of those
skilled in such matters; but I was made a prophet by the
unevenness of his disposition and the very unsettled condition of
his mind. I used these very words about him: What an evil the
Roman State is nourishing,' though I prefaced them with a wish
that I might prove a false prophet." (Orat. V. 23, 24.) Gregory
must have been a long time at Athens. He seems to have gone there
at about the age of eighteen, and not to have left till he was
past thirty. Basil left before him and returned to Cappadocia,
and as soon as he could follow he went to Constantinople, where
he met his brother, who had just come there to practice as a
Court Physician, but resolved to throw up his practice and return
with his brother to Nazianzus. They found their parents still
living and their father occupying the Episcopal Throne. From this
time onward Gregory divided his time between his parents and his
friend, living partly at Arianzus, and partly with Basil in
Pontus, in monastic seclusion. At his Baptism, which it seems
most probable took place at this period, he made a solemn vow
never to swear, and to devote his whole energies and powers
solely to the glory of God, and the defence and spreading of the
faith. Caesarius did not remain long in the retirement of home,
but soon returned to the Capital, where a brilliant career seemed
opening before him. Gregory, whose mind was strongly impressed
with the dangers and temptations of a life at Court, did not
altogether approve of this step, yet he does not very severely
blame it. He himself, however, felt very strongly drawn to the
monastic life; but as retirement from the world did not seem to
him to be his vocation, he resolved to continue to live in the
world, and to be a help and support to his now aged parents, and
especially to his father in the duties of his Episcopate, but at
the same time to live under the strictest ascetic rule. He had,
however, always a secret hankering after the Solitary life, which
he had once (Ep. i.) promised Basil to share with him; and he did
find himself able for some years to spend part of his time with
his friend in his retirement in the wilds of Pontus. They
portioned out their days very carefully between prayer,
meditation and study, and manual labour, on the principles laid
down by Basil in a letter to his friend, which afterwards were
developed into the celebrated Rule still observed by the entire
body of the Religious of the Eastern Church. Retirement, he says,
does not consist in the act of removal from the world in bodily
presence, but in this, that we tear away the soul from those
bodily influences which stir up the passions; that we give up our
parental city and our father's house, our possessions and goods,
friendship and wedlock, business and profession, art and science,
and everything, and are quite ready to take into our hearts
nothing but the impressions of the divine teaching.
In solitude, Basil thinks, it is possible
altogether to tame the passions, like wild beasts, by gentle
treatment; to lull them to sleep, to disarm them. By turning away
the soul from the enticements of sense, and withdrawing into
one's self for the contemplation of God and of Eternal Beauty, it
is possible to raise man to a forgetfulness of natural wants, and
to a spiritual freedom from care. The means to this spiritual
elevation are in his view the reading of Holy Scripture, which
sets before us rules of life-but especially the pictures of the
lives of godly men; Prayer which draws down the Godhead to us,
and makes our mind a pure abode for It; and an earnest silence,
more inclined to learn than to teach, but by no means morose or
unfriendly. At the same time Basil desires that the outward
appearance of one who thus practises solitude shall be in keeping
with his inner life; with humble downcast eye, and dishevelled
hair, in dirty untidy clothes he must go about, neither lazily
loitering nor passionately quick, but quietly. His garment, girt
upon his loins with a belt, is to be coarse, not of a bright
colour, suited for both summer and winter, close enough to keep
the body warm without additional clothing; and his shoes adapted
to their purpose, but without ornament. For food, let him use
only the most necessary, chiefly vegetables; for drink, water-at
least in health. For mealtime, which begins and ends with prayer,
one hour is to be fixed. Sleep is to be short, light, and never
so dead as to let the soul be open to the impressions of
corrupting dreams.
They gave themselves especially to the
study of Holy Scripture, and to the practice of devotional
exercises. In their study their great principle was to interpret
the holy writings not by their own individual judgment, but on
the lines laid down for them by the authority of ancient
interpreters. Of uninspired commentators they had the greatest
respect for Origen, whose errors, however, they happily avoided.
From his exegetical writings they compiled a book of Extracts,
which they published in twenty-seven books, to which they gave
the name of Philocalia, i.e., what in modern language is called a
Christology. This is happily still extant, and is valuable as
preserving for us many passages otherwise lost, or existing only
in a Latin translation. Gregory sent a copy of this work to his
friend and subsequent companion at Constantinople, Theodore,
Bishop of Tyana, as an Easter gift many years afterwards, and
accompanied it with a letter, in which he speaks of the work as a
memorial of himself and Basil, and as intended for an aid to
scholars; and begs that his friend will give a proof of its
usefulness, with the help of diligence and the Holy Spirit.
Socrates says that this careful study of Origen was of the
greatest service to the two friends in their subsequent
controversies with the Arians; for these heretics quoted him in
support of their errors, but the two Fathers were enabled to
confute them readily, by shewing that they were completely
ignorant of the meaning of Origen's argument.
But Gregory does not appear to have stayed
long in Basil's Monastery;-although Rufinus speaks of a sojourn
of thirteen years. This cannot for chronological reasons have
been a continuous stay, although it is true that Basil's monastic
life in Pontus, and Gregory's various visits to him there
extended over a period of about that length, from his first
retirement in 357 to his consecration to the Episcopate in 370.
It was after about three years that Gregory returned to Nazianzus
(360), possibly, as Ullmann suggests, because of circumstances
which had arisen at his home, which seemed to call imperatively
for his presence in the interests of the peace of the Diocese,
and for the assistance which he might, though a layman, be able
to give to his aged Father, who had got into trouble through a
piece of imprudent conduct.
The Emperor Constantius, who was an Arian,
had in 359 assembled at Ariminum (the modern Rimini) a Council of
400 Western Bishops, and these, partly duped, partly compelled by
the Imperial Officers, had put out a Creed, which, while
acknowledging the proper Deity of the Son, and confessing Him to
be Like the Father, omitted to say Like In All Points, and
refused the word Consubstantial; thus, while condemning the
extreme followers of Arius, favouring the views of the Semi-Arian
party. At the same time another Synod, of 150 Eastern Bishops,
was assembled under Court influence at Seleucia, and promulgated
a similar formula. The Bishop of Nazianzus, though still as
always a staunch upholder of Nicene orthodoxy, was in some way
induced to attach his signature to this compromising Creed; and
this action led to most important consequences. The Monks of his
Diocese took the matter up with the usual earnestness of
Religious, and, with several also of the Bishops, withdrew from
Communion with their own Bishop. This may have been the reason
for his son's return. He induced his Father to apologize for his
involuntary error and to put out an orthodox Confession, and so
he healed the schism. To this period belongs his first Oration on
Peace; in which, after an eloquent encomium on the Religious
life, he sets forth the blessings of peace and concord, and
contrasts them with the misery of discord; begging the people to
be very slow indeed on this account to sever themselves from the
Communion of those whom they think to be erring brethren; and
thanking God for the restoration of peace. He concludes the whole
with a splendid setting forth of the Catholic doctrine concerning
the Trinity, in the following terms:-
"Would to God that none of us may perish,
but that we may all abide in one spirit, with one soul labouring
together for the faith of the Gospel, of one mind, minding the
same thing, armed with the shield of faith, girt about the loins
with truth, knowing only the one war against the Evil One, and
those who fight under his orders, not fearing them that kill the
body but cannot lay hold of the soul; but fearing Him Who is the
Lord both of soul and body; guarding the good deposit which we
have received from our fathers, adoring Father, Son, and Holy
Ghost, knowing the Father in the Son, and the Son in the Holy
Ghost-into which Names we were baptized, in Which we have
believed, under Whose banner we have been enlisted ; dividing
Them before we combine Them, and combining before we divide; not
receiving the Three as one Person (for They are not impersonal,
or names of one Person, as though our wealth lay in Names alone
and not in facts), but the Three as one Thing. For They are One,
not in Person, but in Godhead, Unity adored in Trinity, and
Trinity summed up in Unity; all adorable, all royal, of one
throne and one glory; above the world, above time, uncreated,
invisible, impalpable, uncircumscript; in Its relation to Itself
known only to Itself; but to us equally venerable and adorable;
Alone dwelling in the Holiest, and leaving all creatures outside
and shut off, partly by the First Veil, and partly also by the
Second;-by the first, the heavenly and angelic host, parted from
Godhead; and by the second, we men, severed from the Angels. This
let us do; let this be our mind, Brethren; and those that are
otherwise minded let us look upon as diseased in regard to the
truth, and as far as may be, let us take and cure them; but if
they be incurable let us withdraw from them, lest we share their
disease before we impart to them our own health. And the God of
Peace that passeth all understanding shall be with you in Christ
Jesus our Lord. Amen."
Gregory the Elder was now aged and infirm,
and began to feel his need of a Coadjutor in his pastoral duties.
So, by the great desire of the people of Nazianzus, he ordained
his son to the Priesthood, much against the will of the said son.
This Ordination took place at some great Festival, probably at
Christmas of the year 361. Gregory the Younger was much aggrieved
at this gentle violence, which even in after years he describes
as an act of tyranny, and says he cannot bring himself to speak
of it in other terms, though he asks pardon of the Holy Spirit
for his language. Immediately after his Ordination he made his
escape to Pontus, apparently reaching Basil about Epiphany, 362.
Here he had time for reflection on the obedience he now owed to
his father, not only as son to father, but as Priest to Bishop;
and with a truer view of his duty he returned to Nazianzus, where
he was present in the Church on Easter day 362, and preached his
first Sermon as a Priest, in apology for his reluctance. Strange
to say, though it was so great a Festival, and though the
preacher was so well known and so much beloved in Nazianzus, the
congregation was very small;-probably many refrained from going
to Church in order to mark their feeling about Gregory's flight
to Pontus. Anyhow he felt the discourtesy keenly, and in his next
sermon took occasion to reprove them severely for their
inconsistency in receiving him so badly after having compelled
him for their sakes to finally renounce the solitude he loved so
well. Of this discourse the Abbe Benoit speaks as
follows:-
"It is not very long, and it seems to us a
model of the tact and art which a Minister of the Gospel ought to
use in his speech when just grievances compel him to address
deserved reproaches to the faithful. It would be impossible to
blame with greater force, to complain with more frankness, and
yet to do it in a way less offensive to the hearers. Praise,
indeed, is so mingled with blame in this discourse, and there is
in its tone something so earnest and affectionate, that the
audience, though sharply reprimanded, not only could not take
offence, but was compelled to conceive a yet greater affection
and admiration for him who so reproved them."
Gregory took the opportunity to write
another very long Oration as his apology for his flight. In it he
sets forth at great length his conception of the nature and
responsibilities of the Priestly Office, and justifies himself
both for having shrunk from such a charge, and for having so soon
returned to take it up. It is very improbable that this Oration,
numbered II. in the Benedictine Edition, was ever delivered viva
voce; but it was published, and is a complete Treatise on the
Priesthood, used both by S. John Chrysostom as the foundation of
his Six Books on the Priesthood, and by S. Gregory the Great as
the basis of his Treatise on the Pastoral Rule. It has also
furnished material to many of the best Ecclesiastical writers of
all ages.
Julian had now succeeded to the Empire, and
had entered Constantinople in 361. He had by this time completely
broken with the Church, and renounced even the outward semblance
of Christianity. He persuaded Caesarius, however, to retain his
position at Court, hoping perhaps that he might succeed in
perverting him. This was a matter of deep regret to his father
and brother, and they felt, the latter says, obliged to keep the
fact from the knowledge of his mother. Gregory wrote his brother
a letter of most affectionate though earnest remonstrance; with
the result that Caesarius soon made up his mind to retire, and
put his resolution in practice on the opportunity afforded by the
departure of the Emperor from Constantinople to assume the
direction of his campaign against the Persians. Nazianzus was not
allowed to remain without attempts being made against its
Christianity, for the Prefect of the Province was sent with an
armed escort of considerable strength to demand possession of the
Church. But the aged Bishop, supported by his son and by his
people, boldly refused to comply with the Imperial commands, and
there seemed such a probability of powerful resistance that the
Prefect felt compelled to withdraw his force, and never came to
Nazianzus again on such an errand. The Gregorys, father and son,
frequently came into collision with Julian during his stay in
Cappadocia on his way to Persia; and indeed it is not too much to
say that the firm stand which they made on behalf of the right
was, under God, the means of diverting the Emperor from his
purpose of making a vehement assault upon the faith and rights of
the Church in that Province. As the Abbe Benoit remarks, Julian
saw that he must be careful in dealing with a province where
Christian faith was such a living power, and where a simple
village Bishop could dare to make so stout a stand against
Imperial Authority; but he declared his intention of avenging
himself upon his opponents on his return from his expedition. The
Providence of God, however, interfered, and he never did return,
but was defeated and killed.
In 363 or 364 Basil, like Gregory, was
ordained Priest much against his will. The Bishop of Caesarea,
Metropolitan of Cappadocia, was Eusebius. He had been elected in
362 by a popular clamour, while yet only a Catechumen, and was
very unwillingly consecrated by the Bishops of the Province. He
felt it necessary to have at hand a Priest who by his skill in
Theology would be a help to him in the controversies of the
times, and he selected Basil. But for some unknown reason,
possibly no more than a certain jealousy of Basil's superior
reputation and influence, within a very short time Eusebius
quarrelled with him, and endeavoured to deprive him. This might
easily have led to a serious schism, had Basil been a
self-seeking man, but as it was, he quietly retired to his
Community in Pontus, accompanied by his friend Gregory, who,
however, was not able to remain long in that congenial society,
as his presence was still much needed by his father. On the
succession of Valens, an Arian, to the Throne of the Empire,
Eusebius wrote to Gregory, entreating him to come to Caesarea and
give him the benefit of his advice. Gregory, however,
respectfully declined the invitation on the grounds of his sense
of the wrong which his friend had suffered, and after some
correspondence he succeeded in effecting a reconciliation between
the latter and his Metropolitan, in the year 365.
Caesarius meantime had returned to the
Court and had received from Valens a valuable piece of preferment
in Bithynia; but in the end of 368 or beginning of 369, having
been terrified by a great earthquake, during which he had been in
considerable danger, he was arranging matters for his final
retirement, when he was seized with illness, and very soon died,
leaving all his property, which must have amounted to a
considerable sum, to his brother in trust for the poor. He was
buried at Nazianzus, and on the occasion of his funeral his
brother preached the Sermon which is numbered VIII. in the
Benedictine Edition. About the same time, but a little later,
Gorgonia also departed, and he preached a funeral sermon on her
too. Eusebius of Caesarea died in 370, and Basil at once wrote an
urgent letter to Gregory, begging him to come to Caesarea,
probably in order to get him elected Archbishop. Gregory,
however, declined to go, and he and his father exerted themselves
to the utmost of their power to procure the election of Basil;
the elder Gregory writing through his son two letters, one
addressed to the people of Caesarea, the other to the Provincial
Synod, urging Basil's claims very strongly. Though ill at the
time, he managed to convey himself to the Metropolis in time for
the meeting of the Synod; and Basil was elected and consecrated.
Gregory wrote him a letter of congratulation; not, however, a
very warm one; but when troubles began to arise he spoke out with
all the fervour of their early friendship in support of the
Archbishop. About this time Valens divided the civil Province of
Cappadocia into two, one of which had Caesarea, the other Tyana,
for its Metropolis. Anthimus, Bishop of the latter See, thereupon
claimed to be ipso facto Metropolitan of the new Province, a
claim which Basil strenuously resisted, as savouring of what we
call Erastianism. A long dispute followed, in the course of which
Basil, to assert his rights as Metropolitan, and to strengthen
his own hands, erected several new Bishoprics in the disputed
Province; and to one of these, Sasima, a miserable little village
he consecrated his friend Gregory, almost by force. Gregory was,
not unnaturally, indignant at this treatment; while Basil, whose
great object had been to strengthen himself against Anthimus,
took it as unkind of Gregory to be so reluctant to comply with
his friend's wishes. So the two were for a long time in very
strained relations to one another. Although, however, Gregory
ultimately yielded to the earnest wish of his father, and
submitted to the authority of the Archbishop, yet he did not
disguise his reluctance, and in the Sermons which he preached on
the occasion (Or. ix. x.) he spoke very strongly on the point.
Anthimus, however, occupied the village of Sasima with troops,
and prevented Gregory from taking peaceable possession of his
See, which it is probable he never actually administered, for his
father begged him to remain at Nazianzus and continue his
services as coadjutor Bishop. The contest about the
Metropolitanate of Tyana went on for some time, but in the end,
mainly by Gregory's mediation, it was amicably settled. In 374
Gregory the elder died, and his wife also, and thus our Saint was
set free from the charge of the diocese. He spoke a panegyric at
his father's funeral, and wrote a number of little "In Memoriam"
poems to his mother's memory; and out of respect for his father
continued to administer the See of Nazianzus for about a year,
making great efforts meanwhile to secure the appointment of a
Bishop. But, perceiving that his efforts would be fruitless,
because of the devotion of the people to himself, he at length
withdrew, after a very serious illness, to Seleucia in Isauria
(375,) where he lived three or four years, attached to the famous
Church of S. Thecla. Very little is known of his life there; but
it must have been at this period that he heard of the death of
Basil, upon whom two years later in the Cathedral of Caesarea he
pronounced a splendid panegyric.
In 379 the Church at Constantinople, which
for forty years had been oppressed by a succession of Arian
Archbishops, and was well nigh crushed out of existence by the
multitude of other heresies, Eunomian, Macedonian, Novatian,
Apollinarian, etc., which Arian rule had fostered, besought the
great Theologian to come to their aid. Theodosius the new
Emperor, who was a fervent Catholic, backed their entreaty, as
did also numerous Bishops. Gregory resisted the call for a long
time; but at last he came to see that it was the will of God that
he should accept the Mission, and he consented to go and fill the
gap, until such time as the Catholics of the Capital might be
able to elect an Archbishop.
The following account of the religious
condition of Constantinople at this time is condensed from
Ullmann:-
"Religious feeling like everything else had
become to the idle and empty mind a subject of joke and
amusement. What belonged to the theatre was brought into the
Church, and what belonged to the Church into the theatre. The
better Christian feelings were not seldom held up in comedies to
the sneer of the multitude. Everything was so changed by the
Constantinopolitans into light jesting, that earnestness was
stripped of its worth by wit, and that which is holy became a
subject for banter and scoffing in the refined conversation of
worldly people. Yet worse was it that the unbridled delight of
these men in dissipating enjoyments threatened to turn the Church
into a theatre, and the Preacher into a play actor. If he would
please the multitude, he must adapt himself to their taste, and
entertain them amusingly in the Church. They demanded also in the
preaching something that should please the ear, glittering
declamation with theatrical gesticulation; and they clapped with
the same pleasure the comedian in the holy place and him on the
stage. And alas there were found at that period too many
preachers who preferred the applause of men to their souls'
health. At this period the objects of the faith excited,
particularly in Constantinople, a very universal and lively
interest, which was entertained from the Court downwards, though
not always in the most creditable manner; but it was in great
part not the interest of the heart, but that of a hypercritical
and disputatious intellect, where it was not something far lower,
to which the dispute about matters of faith served only as a
pretext for attaining the exterior aims of avarice or ambition.
While the sanctifying and beatifying doctrines of the Gospel,
which are directed to the conversion of the whole inner man were
let lie quiet, everyone from the Emperor to the beggar busied
himself with incredible interest about a few questions concerning
which the Gospel communicates only just so much as is beneficial
to the human spirit and necessary to salvation, and whose fuller
expression at any rate belongs rather to the school than to
practical life. But the more violently these doctrinal disputes
were kindled, disturbing and dividing States, cities, and
families, so much the more people lost sight of the practical
essentials of Christianity; it seemed more important to maintain
the Tri-unity of God than to love God with all the heart; to
acknowledge the Consubstantiality of the Son, than to follow Him
in humility and self-denial; to defend the Personality of the
Holy Spirit, than to bring forth the fruits of the Spirit, love,
peace, righteousness. . . . In addition to these religious
disputes came also political struggles, namely, the hard-fought
wars of the Roman Empire with the Goths; so that the Empire at
large presented the picture of a sea, tossed by violent storms.
But the unhappy schisms which at this time were severing
Christians everywhere, shewed themselves in a particularly
discouraging form in the Capital. Under the late reigns several
parties had been favoured; but especially those which, though
again divided among themselves by differences of opinion, yet
agreed in this that they all rejected the Nicene system of
doctrine. Constantius had bestowed his favour on the Arians;
Julian during his short reign on all parties, at least in
appearance,-to crush them all. After Jovian's early death Valens
succeeded to power in the East, and with him, even more than with
Constantius, Arianism, which he not only protected, but also
sought to make predominant by horrible atrocities against the
friends of the Nicene Decrees. These had now been forbidden the
use of all Churches and Church property, and the Arians had been
put in possession of them. But Constantinople still remained the
scene of ecclesiastical strifes and partizanships. Here where
with a little good so much evil flowed from all three parts of
the world, all opinions had their adherents; but the following
parties in particular shewed themselves:-The Eunomians,
professing an intellectual theology, which claimed to be able
completely to explore the Being of God by logical definitions,
and maintained in strict Arian fashion the Unlikeness of the Son
to the Father, were very numerous in Constantinople (as is shewn
by the fact that most of Gregory's polemical utterances were
directed against them), and injured earnest religious thought
principally by this, that they used the doctrines of the faith
exclusively as subjects for an argumentative dialectic. The
Macedonians, addicted to the Semi-Arian dogma of the Like
Substance, and thereby somewhat more nearly approaching the
Orthodox, and distinguished besides by an estimable earnestness
of demeanour, and a monk-like strictness of manner, were indeed
themselves excluded by the pure Arians from the property of the
Church, but were ever being abundantly multiplied, partly in
Constantinople itself, partly in the neighbouring regions of the
Hellespont, Thrace, Bithynia, and Phrygia. The Novatians, who
even overstepped the Macedonians in the strictness of their
practical principles, had somewhat earlier been on the point of
uniting themselves with the Orthodox, from whom they did not
differ on the chief doctrine in dispute, and with whom they found
themselves under like oppression from the Arians; but the
malevolent disposition of a few of the party leaders had stood in
the way, and so they remained separate, and swelled the number of
the opponents of Orthodoxy. Lastly the Apollinarians too began to
establish themselves there. Their teaching was opposed to the
acknowledgment of true and perfect Manhood in Jesus (for true
Manhood lies in the reason especially); and there was at that
time, as Gregory informs us, a report that an assembly of
Apollinarian bishops was to be held at Constantinople, with a
view of raising their teaching as to Christ into general notice,
and forcing it upon the Churches.
In such a crisis Gregory came most
unwillingly to the Capital. At first he lodged in the house of a
relation of his own, part of which he arranged as a Chapel, and
dedicated under the title Anastasia, as the place where the
Catholic faith was to rise again. There he began at once to carry
out the rule of the Church as to daily service, to which he added
his own splendid preaching.
His constant theme was the worship of the
Trinity. After two Sermons in deprecation of religious
contentiousness, he preached those famous Five Orations which
have won for him the title of the Theologian. To analyse these
belongs to another portion of this work; it will be enough in
this place to say, that after warning his audience against the
frivolity with which the Arians were dragging religious subjects
of the most solemn kind into the most unsuitable places and
occasions, he proceeds in four magnificent discourses to set
forth the Catholic doctrine of the Trinity, shewing carefully the
difference between Sabellian confusion of Persons and Tritheistic
division of Substance. The Arians, however, persecuted him
bitterly; even, on one occasion at least, hiring an assassin to
murder him; and their persecution was all the more bitter because
of the wonderful success which attended Gregory's preaching. S.
Jerome, who came to Constantinople at this time, has left on
record the pleasure with which he listened to and conversed with
the great Defender of the Faith.
Unfortunately Gregory now let himself be
taken in by a plausible adventurer named Maximus, who had come to
Constantinople in the hope of obtaining the Bishopric for
himself. He attached himself to Gregory and won his confidence,
the latter even going so far as to deliver a panegyric upon him
as a sufferer for the Faith. After a short time, however, Maximus
managed to procure his own consecration secretly from some
Egyptian Bishops, who during an illness of Gregory enthroned him
at night in the Church. In the morning, when the people
discovered what had been done, they were very indignant, and
Maximus and his friends were driven out of the Church and forced
to leave the City. Meanwhile the rank and fashion of
Constantinople began to dislike Gregory, who would not condescend
to the arts of the popular preacher, and whose simple retiring
life and gentle demeanour were made matter of reproach to him.
Gregory was quite willing to retire, and was only prevented from
doing so by the earnest remonstrances of his friends, who
solemnly assured him that if he went away the Faith would depart
with him; so he consented to remain till a fitter man could be
found. Late in 380 Theodosius came to Constantinople, where
almost his first act was to deprive the Arians of the Churches,
and to put Gregory in possession of the Cathedral of S. Sophia.
The next year the great Council of Eastern Bishops, which ranks
as the Second Ecumenical Council, met at the Capital, under the
presidency of Meletius of Antioch. Its first care was to sanction
the translation of Gregory from the See of Sasima to that of the
Metropolis of the Empire, and to enthrone him in S. Sophia, and
thus he became the recognised Archbishop of the Imperial City.
Meletius shortly afterwards died, and Gregory assumed the
Presidency of the Council. He failed in his endeavours to heal
the schism which was troubling the Church of Antioch, and when
the Egyptian Bishops on their arrival shewed a disposition to
take up the case of Maximus, and were determined at any rate to
oust Gregory from the Patriarchal Throne on the ground of a
Nicene canon forbidding translations, which had virtually been
rescinded by the act of the Council, he made up his mind to
resign. He obtained a reluctant assent to this course from the
Emperor, and then took leave of the Synod in one of the most
magnificent of all his Orations, in which he gives a graphic
account of his work in the Metropolis. Nectarius, Prefect of the
City, who was only a catechumen, was elected in his place, and
Gregory went home to Nazianzus. He administered the affairs of
the Church there for a little while, and then, having procured
the election of Eulalius as Bishop, he retired to Arianzus, where
he passed the few remaining years of his life in seclusion, but
still continued to take an active interest in the affairs of the
Church. His own city was greatly disturbed by Apollinarian
teachers, whose efforts to establish themselves within the Church
were very persevering. Apollinarius, or as he is frequently
called in the West, Apollinaris, was a Bishop of Laodicea in the
latter half of the Fourth Century, and was at one time greatly
respected for his learning and orthodoxy by S. Athanasius and S.
Basil. He was even an instructor of S. Jerome in 374, but he
seceded from the Church in the next year, owing to views which he
had come to hold about the nature of our Lord; these really
prepared the way for various forms of the Monophysite heresy. He
fell into the error of a partial denial of our Lord's true
Humanity, attributing to Christ a human body and a human soul,
but not a reasoning spirit, whose place, according to him, was
supplied by the Divine Logos. This view had first appeared in
362, when it came before a Council at Alexandria. Those who were
accused of holding it denied it, and expressed their sense of the
absurdity of such a view, pointing out that our Lord could not be
said to be really incarnate if He had no human mind; but about
369 it assumed a definite form (though even then it was not known
to be the teaching of Apollinarius). Arguing from the Divinity of
Christ that He cannot have had a human mind, for if He had He
would have had sinful inclinations, and the one Christ would have
been two persons, Apollinarius and his followers went on to
maintain that the Incarnation only meant a certain converse
between God and Man; and that Christ's Body was not really born
of Mary, but was a part of the Godhead converted into flesh. S.
Athanasius wrote two Books against these two propositions, but
did not name Apollinarius, most probably because he did not
believe him to be committed to them. The fundamental error of the
system was the idea that the Incarnation was, not the Union of
the two Natures, but only a blending so close, that in the mind
of these teachers all the Divine Attributes were transferred to
the human nature, and all the human ones to the Divine, and the
two were merged in one compound being.
In 377 a Roman Synod excommunicated
Apollinarius and his adherents, and S. Damasus wrote a letter
containing twenty-five anathemas, which he sent to Paulinus of
Antioch and others. This condemnation is in almost the identical
words used by S. Gregory in the first of two letters on the
question which he wrote to Cledonius, a Priest of Nazianzus, and
which were adopted as symbolic at the Councils of Ephesus and
Chalcedon. Of these letters Canon Bright says that they belong to
that class of documents of the Fourth Century which refuted by
anticipation the heresies of the Fifth. Gregory affirmed True
Godhead and True Manhood to be combined in the One Person of the
Crucified, Who was the adorable Son, Whose Mother was the Mother
of God, and Who assumed, in order to redeem it, the entire nature
that fell in Adam. In his seclusion, says Mr. Crake, his sole
luxuries were a garden and a fountain. He spent his last days in
continual devotion. His knees were worn with kneeling, and his
whole thoughts and aspirations had gone before to the long home
to which he was hastening. After the manner of the Saints, he was
very rigorous in his self-denial. His bed was of straw with a
covering of sackcloth, and a single tunic was all the outward
clothing of him who had been Bishop of Constantinople. Yet his
glory was only in the Lord. "As a fish cannot swim without water,
and a bird cannot fly without air, he said, so a Christian cannot
advance a single step without Christ." He died in 391, and in the
same year that he passed from the roll of the earthly episcopate
Augustine was ordained Priest at Hippo Regius in
Africa.
Ullmann gives the following description of
his character and personal appearance:
"Gregory was of middle height and somewhat
pale; but his pallor became him. His hair was thick and blanched
by age, his short beard and conspicuous eyebrows were thicker. On
his right eye he had a scar. His manner was friendly and
attractive; his conduct simple. The keynote of his inner being
was piety; his soul was full of fiery strength of faith, turned
to God and Christ; a lofty zeal for divine things led him all his
life. This zeal manifested itself above all in a steadfast
adherence to and defence of certain dogmas which that age held to
be specially important; as well as in lively conflicts, not
always free from partisanship, with opposing convictions; but not
less in a hearty and living apprehension of practical
Christianity, the establishment and enlargement of which in men's
minds was to him all important. His asceticism was overdone; it
injured his health; yet it did not degenerate into hypocrisy; it
was to him the means for elevating and liberating the mind, but
not in and for its own sake a higher virtue. An inborn and inbred
love of solitude hindered him from turning all his powers to a
publicly useful activity. His seclusion did not allow him to
become familiar with the knowledge of men and of the world;
lacking in knowledge of men, carelessly confident, sometimes
distrustful and bitter in his judgment of others, he demanded
from others much, but from himself most. Susceptible of great
resolves, and full of fiery zeal for all good, he was not always
steadfast and persevering in carrying them out. In endurance and
conflict he was noble and high-minded; in victory moderate; in
prosperity humble; never flattering the great, but an ever ready
helper to the oppressed and persecuted, and to the poor a loving
father. The most excellent qualities were in Gregory mingled with
faults; he was not quite free from vanity, he was very irritable
and sensitive, but also readily forgave and cherished no grudges.
He was a man feeling after holiness, and striving after the
highest good, but not perfect, as no man upon earth
is."
Before leaving Constantinople he made his
will, in which he bequeathed all his property to the Deacon
Gregory for life, with reversion to the poor of
Nazianzus.
Division
II
The Writings
I. The Orations.-These-forty-five in
number-raise him to equality with the best Orators of
antiquity.
a. The Five Theological Orations.-These won
him the title of The Theologian. They were delivered in
Constantinople, in defence of the Church's faith in the Trinity,
against Eunomians and Macedonians. In the First and Second he
treats of the existence, nature, being, and attributes of God, so
far as man's finite intellect can comprehend them. In the Third
and Fourth the subject is the Godhead of the Son, which he
establishes by exposition of Scripture, and by refutation of the
specious arguments brought forward by the heretics. In the Fifth
he similarly maintains the Deity, and Personality of the Holy
Ghost.
b. The Two Invectives against Julian.-These
were delivered at Nazianzus after the death of the Emperor, and
present us with a very dark picture of his character. The orator
dwells upon his attempt to rebuild the Temple at Jerusalem, and
its failure, and his overthrow in the campaign against Persia.
From these facts he demonstrates the power of God's Justice, and
sets forth the Christian doctrine of the Divine Providence
inculcating a lesson of trust in God.
c. Moral Orations.-(1) The Apology for his
flight. As was said above, it is most probable that this
discourse was never actually spoken; if it was, it certainly must
have been considerably enlarged afterwards. In it Gregory dwells
on the motive of his flight and his return after his forced
ordination; he speaks of his love of retirement, but most of all
lays stress upon the difficulty of the Priestly Office, its heavy
responsibilities and grave dangers, and upon his own sense of
unworthiness. His return, he says, was prompted by respect for
his hearers and by care for his aged parents; by the fear of
losing his father's blessing; and by the recollection of what
befel the Prophet Jonas on account of his resistance to the will
of God. The remainder of the Oration is practically a treatise on
the Priesthood, and was made use of by S. Chrysostom and S.
Gregory the Great in their books on the subject.
(2) The Farewell Oration at Constantinople,
containing an account of his work there.
(3) On Love of the Poor.
(4) On the Indissolubility of Marriage, the
only Sermon of S. Gregory on a definite text which has come down
to us.
(5) Three Orations on Peace.
(6) One on Moderation in theological
discussion.
d. The Festal Orations.-On Christmas,
Epiphany (on the Baptism of Christ in the river Jordan, followed
up next day by a long one on Holy Baptism), two on Easter (one of
these his first sermon, the other almost if not quite his last).
On Low Sunday, and on Pentecost.
e. Panegyrics on Saints.-The Maccabee
Brothers and their Mother; S. Cyprian of Carthage (in which there
is evidence of the cultus of the Blessed Virgin Mary and of the
practice of invocation of the Saints); and on S.
Athanasius.
f. Funeral Orations on Eminent People.-On
his Father, preached before his Mother and S. Basil. On
Caesarius, in presence of his parents, consoling them by the
picture of his brother's virtue, especially in having withstood
Julian's efforts to pervert him, and in resigning his post at
Court and leaving the Capital. On Gorgonia, whom he praises as a
model Christian Matron, and whose wonderful cure before the Altar
he relates. On S. Basil.
g. Occasional Orations, of which we mention
three: (1) On a plague of hail. (2) On the consecration of
Eulalius of Doara. (3) On his own consecration to
Sasima.
II. The Letters, of which two hundred and
forty-three are extant, are characterised by a clear, concise,
and pleasant style and spirit. Some of them treat of the
theological questions of the day, as for example the two to
Cledonius, and one to Nectarius his Successor in the See of
Constantinople; these deal with the Apollinarian errors. Most of
them however are letters to private friends; sometimes of
condolence or congratulation, sometimes of recommendation,
sometimes on mere general subjects of interest. To this section
must be ascribed his Will, which is probably genuine.
III. The Poems, five hundred and seven in
number, are in various metres. While leaving much to be desired,
these verses shew much real poetic feeling, and at times rise to
genuine beauty. Thirty-eight are dogmatic, on the Trinity, on the
works of God in Creation, on Providence, on Angels and Men, on
the Fall, on the Decalogue, on the Prophets Elias and Elissaeus,
on the Incarnation, the Miracles and Parables of our Lord, and
the canonical Books of the Bible. Forty are Moral; two hundred
and six Historical and Autobiographical; one hundred and
twenty-nine are Epitaphs, or rather funeral Epigrams; ninety-four
are Epigrams.
There is also a long Tragedy, called
Christus Patiens which is the first known attempt at a Christian
drama; the parts are sustained by Christ, The Blessed Virgin, S.
Joseph, S. Mary Magdalene, Nicodemus, Pontius Pilate, Theologus,
Nuntius, and others. The Benedictine Editors however doubt the
genuineness of this Tragedy and Caillau, who published the second
volume of this Edition after the troubles of the French
Revolution, thinks it is to be ascribed to another Gregory,
Bishop of Antioch in the Sixth Century, and relegates it to an
Appendix. None of The Theologian's Odes or Hymns have, however,
found a place in the liturgical poetry of the Church.
Select Orations of Saint Gregory
Nazianzen, Sometime Archbishop of Constantinople
Oration I
On Easter and His Reluctance
I. It is the Day of the Resurrection, and
my Beginning has good auspices. Let us then keep the Festival
with splendour, and let us embrace one another. Let us say
Brethren, even to those who hate us; much more to those who have
done or suffered aught out of love for us. Let us forgive all
offences for the Resurrection's sake: let us give one another
pardon, I for the noble tyranny which I have suffered (for I can
now call it noble); and you who exercised it, if you had cause to
blame my tardiness; for perhaps this tardiness may be more
precious in God's sight than the haste of others. For it is a
good thing even to hold back from God for a little while, as did
the great Moses of old, and Jeremiah later on; and then to run
readily to Him when He calls, as did Aaron and Isaiah, so only
both be done in a dutiful spirit;-the former because of his own
want of strength; the latter because of the Might of Him That
calleth.
II. A Mystery anointed me; I withdrew a
little while at a Mystery, as much as was needful to examine
myself; now I come in with a Mystery, bringing with me the Day as
a good defender of my cowardice and weakness; that He Who to-day
rose again from the dead may renew me also by His Spirit; and,
clothing me with the new Man, may give me to His New Creation, to
those who are begotten after God, as a good modeller and teacher
for Christ, willingly both dying with Him and rising again with
Him.
III. Yesterday the Lamb was slain and the
door-posts were anointed, and Egypt bewailed her Firstborn, and
the Destroyer passed us over, and the Seal was dreadful and
reverend, and we were walled in with the Precious Blood. To-day
we have clean escaped from Egypt and from Pharaoh; and there is
none to hinder us from keeping a Feast to the Lord our God-the
Feast of our Departure; or from celebrating that Feast, not in
the old leaven of malice and wickedness, but in the unleavened
bread of sincerity and truth, carrying with us nothing of ungodly
and Egyptian leaven.
IV. Yesterday I was crucified with Him;
today I am glorified with Him; yesterday I died with Him; to-day
I am quickened with Him; yesterday I was buried with Him; to-day
I rise with Him. But let us offer to Him Who suffered and rose
again for us-you will think perhaps that I am going to say gold,
or silver, or woven work or transparent and costly stones, the
mere passing material of earth, that remains here below, and is
for the most part always possessed by bad men, slaves of the
world and of the Prince of the world. Let us offer ourselves, the
possession most precious to God, and most fitting; let us give
back to the Image what is made after the Image. Let us recognize
our Dignity; let us honour our Archetype; let us know the power
of the Mystery, and for what Christ died.
V. Let us become like Christ, since Christ
became like us. Let us become God's for His sake, since He for
ours became Man. He assumed the worse that He might give us the
better; He became poor that we through His poverty might be rich;
He took upon Him the form of a servant that we might receive back
our liberty; He came down that we might be exalted; He was
tempted that we might conquer; He was dishonoured that He might
glorify us; He died that He might save us; He ascended that He
might draw to Himself us, who were lying low in the Fall of sin.
Let us give all, offer all, to Him Who gave Himself a Ransom and
a Reconciliation for us. But one can give nothing like oneself,
understanding the Mystery, and becoming for His sake all that He
became for ours.
VI. As you see, He offers you a Shepherd;
for this is what your Good Shepherd, who lays down his life for
his sheep, is hoping and praying for, and he asks from you his
subjects; and he gives you himself double instead of single, and
makes the staff of his old age a staff for your spirit. And he
adds to the inanimate temple a living one; to that exceedingly
beautiful and heavenly shrine, this poor and small one, yet to
him of great value, and built too with much sweat and many
labours. Would that I could say it is worthy of his labours. And
he places at your disposal all that belongs to him (O great
generosity!-or it would be truer to say, O fatherly love!) his
hoar hairs, his youth, the temple, the high priest, the testator,
the heir, the discourses which you were longing for; and of these
not such as are vain and poured out into the air, and which reach
no further than the outward ear; but those which the Spirit
writes and engraves on tables of stone, or of flesh, not merely
superficially graven, nor easily to be rubbed off, but marked
very deep, not with ink, but with grace.
VII. These are the gifts given you by this
august Abraham, this honourable and reverend Head, this
Patriarch, this Restingplace of all good, this Standard of
virtue, this Perfection of the Priesthood, who to-day is bringing
to the Lord his willing Sacrifice, his only Son, him of the
promise. Do you on your side offer to God and to us obedience to
your Pastors, dwelling in a place of herbage, and being fed by
water of refreshment; knowing your Shepherd well, and being known
by him; and following when he calls you as a Shepherd frankly
through the door; but not following a stranger climbing up into
the fold like a robber and a traitor; nor listening to a strange
voice when such would take you away by stealth and scatter you
from the truth on mountains, and in deserts, and pitfalls, and
places which the Lord does not visit; and would lead you away
from the sound Faith in the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost,
the One Power and Godhead, Whose Voice my sheep always heard (and
may they always hear it), but with deceitful and corrupt words
would tear them from their true Shepherd. From which may we all
be kept, Shepherd and flock, as from a poisoned and deadly
pasture; guiding and being guided far away from it, that we may
all be one in Christ Jesus our Lord, now and unto the heavenly
rest. To Whom be the glory and the might for ever and ever.
Amen.
Oration II
In Defence of His Flight to Pontus, and His Return, After
His Ordination to the Priesthood, with an Exposition of the
Character of the Priestly Office
1. I have been defeated, and own my defeat.
I subjected myself to the Lord, and prayed unto Him. Let the most
blessed David supply my exordium, or rather let Him Who spoke in
David, and even now yet speaks through him. For indeed the very
best order of beginning every speech and action, is to begin from
God, and to end in God. As to the cause, either of my original
revolt and cowardice, in which I got me away far off, and
remained away from you for a time, which perhaps seemed long to
those who missed me; or of the present gentleness and change of
mind, in which I have given myself up again to you, men may think
and speak in different ways, according to the hatred or love they
bear me, on the one side refusing to acquit me of the charges
alleged, on the other giving me a hearty welcome. For nothing is
so pleasant to men as talking of other people's business,
especially under the influence of affection or hatred, which
often almost entirely blinds us to the truth. I will, however,
myself, unabashed, set forth the truth, and arbitrate with
justice between the two parties, which accuse or gallantly defend
us, by, on the one side, accusing myself, on the other,
undertaking my own defence.
2. Accordingly, that my speech may proceed
in due order, I apply myself to the question which arose first,
that of cowardice. For I cannot endure that any of those who
watch with interest the success, or the contrary, of my efforts,
should be put to confusion on my account, since it has pleased
God that our affairs should be of some consequence to Christians,
so I will by my defence relieve, if there be any such, those who
have already suffered; for it is well, as far as possible, and as
reason allows, to shrink from causing, through our sin or
suspicion, any offence or stumbling-block to the community:
inasmuch as we know how inevitably even those who offend one of
the little ones will incur the severest punishment at the hands
of Him who cannot lie.
3. For my present position is due, my good
people, not to inexperience and ignorance, nay indeed, that I may
boast myself a little, neither is it due to contempt for the
divine laws and ordinances. Now, just as in the body there is one
member which rules and, so to say, presides, while another is
ruled over and subject; so too in the churches, God has ordained,
according either to a law of equality, which admits of an order
of merit, or to one of providence, by which He has knit all
together, that those for whom such treatment is beneficial,
should be subject to pastoral care and rule, and be guided by
word and deed in the path of duty; while others should be pastors
and teachers, for the perfecting of the church, those, I mean,
who surpass the majority in virtue and nearness to God,
performing the functions of the soul in the body, and of the
intellect in the soul; in order that both may be so united and
compacted together, that, although one is lacking and another is
pre-eminent, they may, like the members of our bodies, be so
combined and knit together by the harmony of the Spirit, as to
form one perfect body, really worthy of Christ Himself, our
Head.
4. I am aware then that anarchy and
disorder cannot be more advantageous than order and rule, either
to other creatures or to men; nay, this is true of men in the
highest possible degree, because the interests at stake in their
case are greater; since it is a great thing for them, even if
they fail of their highest purpose-to be free from sin-to attain
at least to that which is second best, restoration from sin.
Since this seems right and just, it is, I take it, equally wrong
and disorderly that all should wish to rule, and that no one
should accept it. For if all men were to shirk this office,
whether it must be called a ministry or a leadership, the fair
fulness of the Church would be halting in the highest degree, and
in fact cease to be fair. And further, where, and by whom would
God be worshipped among us in those mystic and elevating rites
which are our greatest and most precious privilege, if there were
neither king, nor governor, nor priesthood, nor sacrifice, nor
all those highest offices to the loss of which, for their great
sins, men were of old condemned in consequence of their
disobedience?
5. Nor indeed is it strange or inconsistent
for the majority of those who are devoted to the study of divine
things, to ascend to rule from being ruled, nor does it overstep
the limits laid down by philosophy, or involve disgrace; any more
than for an excellent sailor to become a lookout-man, and for a
lookout-man, who has successfully kept watch over the winds, to
be entrusted with the helm; or, if you will, for a brave soldier
to be made a captain, and a good captain to become a general, and
have committed to him the conduct of the whole campaign. Nor
again, as perhaps some of those absurd and tiresome people may
suppose, who judge of others' feelings by their own, was I
ashamed of the rank of this grade from my desire for a higher. I
was not so ignorant either of its divine greatness or human low
estate, as to think it no great thing for a created nature, to
approach in however slight degree to God, Who alone is most
glorious and illustrious, and surpasses in purity every nature,
material and immaterial alike.
6. What then were my feelings, and what was
the reason of my disobedience? For to most men I did not at the
time seem consistent with myself, or to be such as they had known
me, but to have undergone some deterioration, and to exhibit
greater resistance and self-will than was right. And the causes
of this you have long been desirous to hear. First, and most
important, I was astounded at the unexpectedness of what had
occurred, as people are terrified by sudden noises; and, losing
the control of my reasoning faculties, my self-respect, which had
hitherto controlled me, gave way. In the next place, there came
over me an eager longing for the blessings of calm and
retirement, of which I had from the first been enamoured to a
higher degree, I imagine, than any other student of letters, and
which amidst the greatest and most threatening dangers I had
promised to God, and of which I had also had so much experience,
that I was then upon its threshold, my longing having in
consequence been greatly kindled, so that I could not submit to
be thrust into the midst of a life of turmoil by an arbitrary act
of oppression, and to be torn away by force from the holy
sanctuary of such a life as this.
7. For nothing seemed to me so desirable as
to close the doors of my senses, and, escaping from the flesh and
the world, collected within myself, having no further connection
than was absolutely necessary with human affairs, and speaking to
myself and to God, to live superior to visible things, ever
preserving in myself the divine impressions pure and unmixed with
the erring tokens of this lower world, and both being, and
constantly growing more and more to be, a real unspotted mirror
of God and divine things, as light is added to light, and what
was still dark grew clearer, enjoying already by hope the
blessings of the world to come, roaming about with the angels,
even now being above the earth by having forsaken it, and
stationed on high by the Spirit. If any of you has been possessed
by this longing, he knows what I mean and will sympathise with my
feelings at that time. For, perhaps, I ought not to expect to
persuade most people by what I say, since they are unhappily
disposed to laugh at such things, either from their own
thoughtlessness, or from the influence of men unworthy of the
promise, who have bestowed upon that which is good an evil name,
calling philosophy nonsense, aided by envy and the evil
tendencies of the mob, who are ever inclined to grow worse: so
that they are constantly occupied with one of two sins, either
the commission of evil, or the discrediting of good.
8. I was influenced besides by another
feeling, whether base or noble I do not know, but I will speak
out to you all my secrets. I was ashamed of all those others,
who, without being better than ordinary people, nay, it is a
great thing if they be not worse, with unwashen hands, as the
saying runs, and uninitiated souls, intrude into the most sacred
offices; and, before becoming worthy to approach the temples,
they lay claim to the sanctuary, and they push and thrust around
the holy table, as if they thought this order to be a means of
livelihood, instead of a pattern of virtue, or an absolute
authority, instead of a ministry of which we must give account.
In fact they are almost more in number than those whom they
govern; pitiable as regards piety, and unfortunate in their
dignity; so that, it seems to me, they will not, as time and this
evil alike progress, have any one left to rule, when all are
teachers, instead of, as the promise says, taught of God, and all
prophesy, so that even "Saul is among the prophets," according to
the ancient history and proverb. For at no time, either now or in
former days, amid the rise and fall of various developments, has
there ever been such an abundance, as now exists among
Christians, of disgrace and abuses of this kind. And, if to stay
this current is beyond our powers, at any rate it is not the
least important duty of religion to testify the hatred and shame
we feel for it.
9. Lastly, there is a matter more serious
than any which I have mentioned, for I am now coming to the
finale of the question: and I will not deceive you; for that
would not be lawful in regard to topics of such moment. I did
not, nor do I now, think myself qualified to rule a flock or
herd, or to have authority over the souls of men. For in their
case it is sufficient to render the herd or flock as stout and
fat as possible; and with this object the neatherd and shepherd
will look for well watered and rich pastures, and will drive his
charge from pasture to pasture, and allow them to rest, or
arouse, or recall them, sometimes with his staff, most often with
his pipe; and with the exception of occasional struggles with
wolves, or attention to the sickly, most of his time will be
devoted to the oak and the shade and his pipes, while he reclines
on the beautiful grass, and beside the cool water, and shakes
down his couch in a breezy spot, and ever and anon sings a love
ditty, with his cup by his side, and talks to his bullocks or his
flock, the fattest of which supply his banquets or his pay. But
no one ever has thought of the virtue of flocks or herds; for
indeed of what virtue are they capable? Or who has regarded their
advantage as more important than his own pleasure?
10. But in the case of man, hard as it is
for him to learn how to submit to rule, it seems far harder to
know how to rule over men, and hardest of all, with this rule of
ours, which leads them by the divine law, and to God, for its
risk is, in the eyes of a thoughtful man, proportionate to its
height and dignity. For, first of all, he must, like silver or
gold, though in general circulation in all kinds of seasons and
affairs, never ring false or alloyed, or give token of any
inferior matter, needing further refinement in the fire; or else,
the wider his rule, the greater evil he will be. Since the injury
which extends to many is greater than that which is confined to a
single individual.
11. For it is not so easy to dye deeply a
piece of cloth, or to impregnate with odours, foul or the
reverse, whatever comes near to them; nor is it so easy for the
fatal vapour, which is rightly called a pestilence, to infect the
air, and through the air to gain access to living being, as it is
for the vice of a superior to take most speedy possession of his
subjects, and that with far greater facility than virtue its
opposite. For it is in this that wickedness especially has the
advantage over goodness, and most distressing it is to me to
perceive it, that vice is something attractive and ready at hand,
and that nothing is so easy as to become evil, even without any
one to lead us on to it; while the attainment of virtue is rare
and difficult, even where there is much to attract and encourage
us. And it is this, I think, which the most blessed Haggai had
before his eyes, in his wonderful and most true figure:-"Ask the
priests concerning the law, saying: If holy flesh borne in a
garment touch meat or drink or vessel, will it sanctify what is
in contact with it? And when they said No; ask again if any of
these things touch what is unclean, does it not at once partake
of the pollution? For they will surely tell you that it does
partake of it, and does not continue clean in spite of the
contact."
12. What does he mean by this? As I take
it, that goodness can with difficulty gain a hold upon human
nature, like fire upon green wood; while most men are ready and
disposed to join in evil, like stubble, I mean, ready for a spark
and a wind, which is easily kindled and consumed from its
dryness. For more quickly would any one take part in evil with
slight inducement to its full extent, than in good which is fully
set before him to a slight degree. For indeed a little wormwood
most quickly imparts its bitterness to honey; while not even
double the quantity of honey can impart its sweetness to
wormwood: and the withdrawal of a small pebble would draw
headlong a whole river, though it would be difficult for the
strongest dam to restrain or stay its course.
13. This then is the first point in what we
have said, which it is right for us to guard against, viz.: being
found to be bad painters of the charms of virtue, and still more,
if not, perhaps, models for poor painters, poor models for the
people, or barely escaping the proverb, that we undertake to heal
others while ourselves are full of sores.
14. In the second place, although a man has
kept himself pure from sin, even in a very high degree; I do not
know that even this is sufficient for one who is to instruct
others in virtue. For he who has received this charge, not only
needs to be free from evil, for evil is, in the eyes of most of
those under his care, most disgraceful, but also to be eminent in
good, according to the command, "Depart from evil and do good."
And he must not only wipe out the traces of vice from his soul,
but also inscribe better ones, so as to outstrip men further in
virtue than he is superior to them in dignity. He should know no
limits in goodness or spiritual progress, and should dwell upon
the loss of what is still beyond him, rather than the gain of
what he has attained, and consider that which is beneath his feet
a step to that which comes next: and not think it a great gain to
excel ordinary people, but a loss to fall short of what we ought
to be: and to measure his success by the commandment and not by
his neighbours, whether they be evil, or to some extent
proficient in virtue: and to weigh virtue in no small scales,
inasmuch as it is due to the Most High, "from Whom are all
things, and to Whom are all things."
15. Nor must he suppose that the same
things are suitable to all, just as all have not the same
stature, nor are the features of the face, nor the nature of
animals, nor the qualities of soil, nor the beauty and size of
the stars, in all cases the same: but he must consider base
conduct a fault in a private individual, and deserving of
chastisement under the hard rule of the law; while in the case of
a ruler or leader it is a fault not to attain to the highest
possible excellence, and always make progress in goodness, if
indeed he is, by his high degree of virtue, to draw his people to
an ordinary degree, not by the force of authority, but by the
influence of persuasion. For what is involuntary apart from its
being the result of oppression, is neither meritorious nor
durable. For what is forced, like a plant violently drawn aside
by our hands, when set free, returns to what it was before, but
that which is the result of choice is both most legitimate and
enduring, for it is preserved by the bond of good will. And so
our law and our lawgiver enjoin upon us most strictly that we
should "tend the flock not by constraint but
willingly."
16. But granted that a man is free from
vice, and has reached the greatest heights of virtue: I do not
see what knowledge or power would justify him in venturing upon
this office. For the guiding of man, the most variable and
manifold of creatures, seems to me in very deed to be the art of
arts and science of sciences. Any one may recognize this, by
comparing the work of the physician of souls with the treatment
of the body; and noticing that, laborious as the latter is, ours
is more laborious, and of more consequence, from the nature of
its subject matter, the power of its science, and the object of
its exercise. The one labours about bodies, and perishable
failing matter, which absolutely must be dissolved and undergo
its fate, even if upon this occasion by the aid of art it can
surmount the disturbance within itself, being dissolved by
disease or time in submission to the law of nature, since it
cannot rise above its own limitations.
17. The other is concerned with the soul,
which comes from God and is divine, and partakes of the heavenly
nobility, and presses on to it, even if it be bound to an
inferior nature. Perhaps indeed there are other reasons also for
this, which only God, Who bound them together, and those who are
instructed by God in such mysteries, can know, but as far as I,
and men like myself can perceive, there are two: one, that it may
inherit the glory above by means of a struggle and wrestling with
things below, being tried as gold in the fire by things here, and
gain the objects of our hope as a prize of virtue, and not merely
as the gift of God. This, indeed, was the will of Supreme
Goodness, to make the good even our own, not only because sown in
our nature, but because cultivated by our own choice, and by the
motions of our will, free to act in either direction. The second
reason is, that it may draw to itself and raise to heaven the
lower nature, by gradually freeing it from its grossness, in
order that the soul may be to the body what God is to the soul,
itself leading on the matter which ministers to it, and uniting
it, as its fellow-servant, to God.
18. Place and time and age and season and
the like are the subjects of a physician's scrutiny; he will
prescribe medicines and diet, and guard against things injurious,
that the desires of the sick may not be a hindrance to his art.
Sometimes, and in certain cases, he will make use of the cautery
or the knife or the severer remedies; but none of these,
laborious and hard as they may seem, is so difficult as the
diagnosis and cure of our habits, passions, lives, wills, and
whatever else is within us, by banishing from our compound nature
everything brutal and fierce, and introducing and establishing in
their stead what is gentle and dear to God, and arbitrating
fairly between soul and body; not allowing the superior to be
overpowered by the inferior, which would be the greatest
injustice; but subjecting to the ruling and leading power that
which naturally takes the second place: as indeed the divine law
enjoins, which is most excellently imposed on His whole creation,
whether visible or beyond our ken.
19. This further point does not escape me,
that the nature of all these objects of the watchfulness of the
physician remains the same, and does not evolve out of itself any
crafty opposition, or contrivance hostile to the appliances of
his art, nay, it is rather the treatment which modifies its
subject matter, except where some slight insubordination occurs
on the part of the patient, which it is not difficult to prevent
or restrain. But in our case, human prudence and selfishness, and
the want of training and inclination to yield ready submission
are a very great obstacle to advance in virtue, amounting almost
to an armed resistance to those who are wishful to help us. And
the very eagerness with which we should lay bare our sickness to
our spiritual physicians, we employ in avoiding this treatment,
and shew our bravery by struggling against what is for our own
interest, our skill in shunning what is for our
health.
20. For we either hide away our sin,
cloaking it over in the depth of our soul, like some festering
and malignant disease, as if by escaping the notice of men we
could escape the mighty eye of God and justice. Or else we allege
excuses in our sins, by devising pleas in defence of our falls,
or tightly closing our ears, like the deaf adder that stoppeth
her ears, we are obstinate in refusing to hear the voice of the
charmer, and be treated with the medicines of wisdom, by which
spiritual sickness is healed. Or, lastly, those of us who are
most daring and self-willed shamelessly brazen out our sin before
those who would heal it, marching with bared head, as the saying
is, into all kinds of transgression. O what madness, if there be
no term more fitting for this state of mind! Those whom we ought
to love as our benefactors we keep off, as if they were our
enemies, hating those who reprove in the gates, and abhorring the
righteous word; and we think that we shall succeed in the war
that we are waging against those who are well disposed to us by
doing ourselves all the harm we can, like men who imagine they
are consuming the flesh of others when they are really fastening
upon their own.
21. For these reasons I allege that our
office as physicians far exceeds in toilsomeness, and
consequently in worth, that which is confined to the body; and
further, because the latter is mainly concerned with the surface,
and only in a slight degree investigates the causes which are
deeply hidden. But the whole of our treatment and exertion is
concerned with the hidden man of the heart, and our warfare is
directed against that adversary and foe within us, who uses
ourselves as his weapons against ourselves, and, most fearful of
all, hands us over to the death of sin. In opposition then, to
these foes we are in need of great and perfect faith, and of
still greater co-operation on the part of God, and, as I am
persuaded, of no slight countermanoeuvring on our own part, which
must manifest itself both in word and deed, if ourselves, the
most precious possession we have, are to be duly tended and
cleansed and made as deserving as possible.
22. To turn however to the ends in view in
each of these forms of healing, for this point is still left to
be considered, the one preserves, if it already exists, the
health and good habit of the flesh, or if absent, recalls it;
though it is not yet clear whether or not these will be for the
advantage of those who possess them, since their opposites very
often confer a greater benefit on those who have them, just as
poverty and wealth, renown or disgrace, a low or brilliant
position, and all other circumstances, which are naturally
indifferent, and do not incline in one direction more than in
another, produce a good or bad effect according to the will of,
and the manner in which they are used by the persons who
experience them. But the scope of our art is to provide the soul
with wings, to rescue it from the world and give it to God, and
to watch over that which is in His image, if it abides, to take
it by the hand, if it is in danger, or restore it, if ruined, to
make Christ to dwell in the heart by the Spirit: and, in short,
to deify, and bestow heavenly bliss upon, one who belongs to the
heavenly host.
23. This is the wish of our schoolmaster
the law, of the prophets who intervened between Christ and the
law, of Christ who is the fulfiller and end of the spiritual law;
of the emptied Godhead, of the assumed flesh, of the novel union
between God and man, one consisting of two, and both in one. This
is why God was united to the flesh by means of the soul, and
natures so separate were knit together by the affinity to each of
the element which mediated between them: so all became one for
the sake of all, and for the sake of one, our progenitor, the
soul because of the soul which was disobedient, the flesh because
of the flesh which co-operated with it and shared in its
condemnation, Christ, Who was superior to, and beyond the reach
of, sin, because of Adam, who became subject to sin.
24. This is why the new was substituted for
the old, why He Who suffered was for suffering recalled to life,
why each property of His, Who was above us, was interchanged with
each of ours, why the new mystery took place of the dispensation,
due to loving kindness which deals with him who fell through
disobedience. This is the reason for the generation and the
virgin, for the manger and Bethlehem; the generation on behalf of
the creation, the virgin on behalf of the woman, Bethlehem
because of Eden, the manger because of the garden, small and
visible things on behalf of great and hidden things. This is why
the angels glorified first the heavenly, then the earthly, why
the shepherds saw the glory over the Lamb and the Shepherd, why
the star led the Magi to worship and offer gifts, in order that
idolatry might be destroyed. This is why Jesus was baptized, and
received testimony from above, and fasted, and was tempted, and
overcame him who had overcome. This is why devils were cast out,
and diseases healed, and the mighty preaching was entrusted to,
and successfully proclaimed by men of low estate.
25. This is why the heathen rage and the
peoples imagine vain things; why tree is set over against tree,
hands against hand, the one stretched out in self indulgence, the
others in generosity; the one unrestrained, the others fixed by
nails, the one expelling Adam, the other reconciling the ends of
the earth. This is the reason of the lifting up to atone for the
fall, and of the gall for the tasting, and of the thorny crown
for the dominion of evil, and of death for death, and of darkness
for the sake of light, and of burial for the return to the
ground, and of resurrection for the sake of resurrection. All
these are a training from God for us, and a healing for our
weakness, restoring the old Adam to the place whence he fell, and
conducting us to the tree of life, from which the tree of
knowledge estranged us, when partaken of unseasonably, and
improperly.
26. Of this healing we, who are set over
others, are the ministers and fellow-labourers; for whom it is a
great thing to recognise and heal their own passions and
sicknesses: or rather, not really a great thing, only the
viciousness of most of those who belong to this order has made me
say so: but a much greater thing is the power to heal and
skilfully cleanse those of others, to the advantage both of those
who are in want of healing and of those whose charge it is to
heal.
27. Again, the healers of our bodies will
have their labours and vigils and cares, of which we are aware;
and will reap a harvest of pain for themselves from the
distresses of others, as one of their wise men said; and will
provide for the use of those who need them, both the results of
their own labours and investigations, and what they have been
able to borrow from others: and they consider none, even of the
minutest details, which they discover, or which elude their
search, as having other than an important influence upon health
or danger. And what is the object of all this? That a man may
live some days longer on the earth, though he is possibly not a
good man, but one of the most depraved, for whom it had perhaps
been better, because of his badness, to have died long ago, in
order to be set free from vice, the most serious of sicknesses.
But, suppose he is a good man, how long will he be able to live?
Forever? Or what will he gain from life here, from which it is
the greatest of blessings, if a man be sane and sensible, to seek
to be set free?
28. But we, upon whose efforts is staked
the salvation of a soul, a being blessed and immortal, and
destined for undying chastisement or praise, for its vice or
virtue,-what a struggle ought ours to be, and how great skill do
we require to treat, or get men treated properly, and to change
their life, and give up the clay to the spirit. For men and
women, young and old, rich and poor, the sanguine and despondent,
the sick and whole, rulers and ruled, the wise and ignorant, the
cowardly and courageous, the wrathful and meek, the successful
and failing, do not require the same instruction and
encouragement.
29. And if you examine more closely, how
great is the distinction between the married and the unmarried,
and among the latter between hermits and those who live together
in community, between those who are proficient and advanced in
contemplation and those who barely hold on the straight course,
between townsfolk again and rustics, between the simple and the
designing, between men of business and men of leisure, between
those who have met with reverses and those who are prosperous and
ignorant of misfortune. For these classes differ sometimes more
widely from each other in their desires and passion than in their
physical characteristics; or, if you will, in the mixtures and
blendings of the elements of which we are composed, and,
therefore, to regulate them is no easy task.
30. As then the same medicine and the same
food are not in every case administered to men's bodies, but a
difference is made according to their degree of health or
infirmity; so also are souls treated with varying instruction and
guidance. To this treatment witness is borne by those who have
had experience of it. Some are led by doctrine, others trained by
example; some need the spur, others the curb; some are sluggish
and hard to rouse to the good, and must be stirred up by being
smitten with the word; others are immoderately fervent in spirit,
with impulses difficult to restrain, like thoroughbred colts, who
run wide of the turning post, and to improve them the word must
have a restraining and checking influence.
31. Some are benefited by praise, others by
blame, both being applied in season; while if out of season, or
unreasonable, they are injurious; some are set right by
encouragement, others by rebuke; some, when taken to task in
public, others, when privately corrected. For some are wont to
despise private admonitions, but are recalled to their senses by
the condemnation of a number of people, while others, who would
grow reckless under reproof openly given, accept rebuke because
it is in secret, and yield obedience in return for
sympathy.
32. Upon some it is needful to keep a close
watch, even in the minutest details, because if they think they
are unperceived (as they would contrive to be), they are puffed
up with the idea of their own wisdom. Of others it is better to
take no notice, but seeing not to see, and hearing not to hear
them, according to the proverb, that we may not drive them to
despair, under the depressing influence of repeated reproofs, and
at last to utter recklessness, when they have lost the sense of
self-respect, the source of persuasiveness. In some cases we must
even be angry, without feeling angry, or treat them with a
disdain we do not feel, or manifest despair, though we do not
really despair of them, according to the needs of their nature.
Others again we must treat with condescension and lowliness,
aiding them readily to conceive a hope of better things. Some it
is often more advantageous to conquer-by others to be overcome,
and to praise or deprecate, in one case wealth and power, in
another poverty and failure.
33. For our treatment does not correspond
with virtue and vice, one of which is most excellent and
beneficial at all times and in all cases, and the other most evil
and harmful; and, instead of one and the same of our medicines
invariably proving either most wholesome or most dangerous in the
same cases-be it severity or gentleness, or any of the others
which we have enumerated-in some cases it proves good and useful,
in others again it has the contrary effect, according, I suppose,
as time and circumstance and the disposition of the patient
admit. Now to set before you the distinction between all these
things, and give you a perfectly exact view of them, so that you
may in brief comprehend the medical art, is quite impossible,
even for one in the highest degree qualified by care and skill:
but actual experience and practice are requisite to form a
medical system and a medical man.
34. This, however, I take to be generally
admitted-that just as it is not safe for those who walk on a
lofty tight rope to lean to either side, for even though the
inclination seems slight, it has no slight consequences, but
their safety depends upon their perfect balance: so in the case
of one of us, if he leans to either side, whether from vice or
ignorance, no slight danger of a fall into sin is incurred, both
for himself and those who are led by him. But we must really walk
in the King's highway, and take care not to turn aside from it
either to the right hand or to the left, as the Proverbs say. For
such is the case with our passions, and such in this matter is
the task of the good shepherd, if he is to know properly the
souls of his flock, and to guide them according to the methods of
a pastoral care which is right and just, and worthy of our true
Shepherd.
35. In regard to the distribution of the
word, to mention last the first of our duties, of that divine and
exalted word, which everyone now is ready to discourse upon; if
anyone else boldly undertakes it and supposes it within the power
of every man's intellect, I am amazed at his intelligence, not to
say his folly. To me indeed it seems no slight task, and one
requiring no little spiritual power, to give in due season to
each his portion of the word, and to regulate with judgment the
truth of our opinions, which are concerned with such subjects as
the world or worlds, matter, soul, mind, intelligent natures,
better or worse, providence which holds together and guides the
universe, and seems in our experience of it to be governed
according to some principle, but one which is at variance with
those of earth and of men.
36. Again, they are concerned with our
original constitution, and final restoration, the types of the
truth, the covenants, the first and second coming of Christ, His
incarnation, sufferings and dissolution, with the resurrection,
the last day, the judgment and recompense, whether sad or
glorious; I, to crown all, with what we are to think of the
original and blessed Trinity. Now this involves a very great risk
to those who are charged with the illumination of others, if they
are to avoid contracting their doctrine to a single Person, from
fear of polytheism, and so leave us empty terms, if we suppose
the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit to be one and the same
Person only: or, on the other hand, severing It into three,
either foreign and diverse, or disordered and unprincipled, and,
so to say, opposed divinities, thus falling from the opposite
side into an equally dangerous error: like some distorted plant
if bent far back in the opposite direction.
37. For, amid the three infirmities in
regard to theology, atheism, Judaism, and polytheism, one of
which is patronised by Sabellius the Libyan, another by Arius of
Alexandria, and the third by some of the ultra-orthodox among us,
what is my position, can I avoid whatever in these three is
noxious, and remain within the limits of piety; neither being led
astray by the new analysis and synthesis into the atheism of
Sabellius, to assert not so much that all are one as that each is
nothing, for things which are transferred and pass into each
other cease to be that which each one of them is, of that we have
an unnaturally compound deity, like those mythical creatures, the
subject of a picturesque imagination: nor again, by alleging a
plurality of severed natures, according to the well named madness
of Arius, becoming involved in a Jewish poverty, and introducing
envy into the divine nature, by limiting the Godhead to the
Unbegotten One alone, as if afraid that our God would perish, if
He were the Father of a real God of equal nature: nor again, by
arraying three principles in opposition to, or in alliance with,
each other, introducing the Gentile plurality of principles from
which we have escaped?
38. It is necessary neither to be so
devoted to the Father, as to rob Him of His Fatherhood, for whose
Father would He be, if the Son were separated and estranged from
Him, by being ranked with the creation, (for an alien being, or
one which is combined and confounded with his father, and, for
the sense is the same, throws him into confusion, is not a son);
nor to be so devoted to Christ, as to neglect to preserve both
His Sonship, (for whose son would He be, if His origin were not
referred to the Father?) and the rank of the Father as origin,
inasmuch as He is the Father and Generator; for He would be the
origin of petty and unworthy beings, or rather the term would be
used in a petty and unworthy sense, if He were not the origin of
Godhead and goodness, which are contemplated in the Son and the
Spirit: the former being the Son and the Word, the latter the
proceeding and indissoluble Spirit. For both the Unity of the
Godhead must be preserved, and the Trinity of Persons confessed,
each with His own property.
39. A suitable and worthy comprehension and
exposition of this subject demands a discussion of greater length
than the present occasion, or even our life, as I suppose,
allows, and, what is more, both now and at all times, the aid of
the Spirit, by Whom alone we are able to perceive, to expound, or
to embrace, the truth in regard to God. For the pure alone can
grasp Him Who is pure and of the same disposition as himself; and
I have now briefly dwelt upon the subject, to show how difficult
it is to discuss such important questions, especially before a
large audience, composed of every age and condition, and needing
like an instrument of many strings, to be played upon in various
ways; or to find any form of words able to edify them all, and
illuminate them with the light of knowledge. For it is not only
that there are three sources from which danger springs,
understanding, speech, and hearing, so that failure in one, if
not in all, is infallibly certain; for either the mind is not
illuminated, or the language is feeble, or the hearing, not
having been cleansed, fails to comprehend, and accordingly, in
one or all respects, the truth must be maimed: but further, what
makes the instruction of those who profess to teach any other
subject so easy and acceptable-viz. the piety of the audience-on
this subject involves difficulty and danger.
40. For having undertaken to contend on
behalf of God, the Supreme Being, and of salvation, and of the
primary hope of us all, the more fervent they are in the faith,
the more hostile are they to what is said, supposing that a
submissive spirit indicates, not piety, but treason to the truth,
and therefore they would sacrifice anything rather than their
private convictions, and the accustomed doctrines in which they
have been educated. I am now referring to those who are moderate
and not utterly depraved in disposition, who, if they have erred
in regard to the truth, have erred from piety, who have zeal,
though not according to knowledge, who will possibly be of the
number of those not excessively condemned, and not beaten with
many stripes, because it is not through vice or depravity that
they have failed to do the will of their Lord; and these
perchance would be persuaded and forsake the pious opinion which
is the cause of their hostility, if some reason either from their
own minds, or from others, were to take hold of them, and at a
critical moment, like iron from flint, strike fire from a mind
which is pregnant and worthy of the light, for thus a little
spark would quickly kindle the torch of truth within
it.
41. But what is to be said of those who,
from vain glory or arrogance, speak unrighteousness against the
most High, arming themselves with the insolence of Jannes and
Jambres, not against Moses, but against the truth, and rising in
opposition to sound doctrine? Or of the third class, who through
ignorance and, its consequence, temerity, rush headlong against
every form of doctrine in swinish fashion, and trample under foot
the fair pearls of the truth?
42. What again of those who come with no
private idea, or form of words, better or worse, in regard to
God, but listen to all kinds of doctrines and teachers, with the
intention of selecting from all what is best and safest, in
reliance upon no better judges of the truth than themselves? They
are, in consequence, borne and turned about hither and thither by
one plausible idea after another, and, after being deluged and
trodden down by all kinds of doctrine, and having rung the
changes on a long succession of teachers and formulae, which they
throw to the winds as readily as dust, their ears and minds at
last are wearied out, and, O what folly! they become equally
disgusted with all forms of doctrine, and assume the wretched
character of deriding and despising our faith as unstable and
unsound; passing in their ignorance from the teachers to the
doctrine: as if anyone whose eyes were diseased, or whose ears
had been injured, were to complain of the sun for being dim and
not shining, or of sounds for being inharmonious and
feeble.
43. Accordingly, to impress the truth upon
a soul when it is still fresh, like wax not yet subjected to the
seal, is an easier task than inscribing pious doctrine on the top
of inscriptions-I mean wrong doctrines and dogmas-with the result
that the former are confused and thrown into disorder by the
latter. It is better indeed to tread a road which is smooth and
well trodden than one which is untrodden and rough, or to plough
land which has often been cleft and broken up by the plough: but
a soul to be written upon should be free from the inscription of
harmful doctrines, or the deeply cut marks of vice: otherwise the
pious inscriber would have a twofold task, the erasure of the
former impressions and the substitution of others which are more
excellent, and more worthy to abide. So numerous are they whose
wickedness is shown, not only by yielding to their passions, but
even by their utterances, and so numerous the forms and
characters of wickedness, and so considerable the task of one who
has been intrusted with this office of educating and taking
charge of souls. Indeed I have omitted the majority of the
details, lest my speech should be unnecessarily
burdensome.
44. If anyone were to undertake to tame and
train an animal of many forms and shapes, compounded of many
animals of various sizes and degrees of tameness and wildness,
his principal task, involving a considerable struggle, would be
the government of so extraordinary and heterogeneous a nature,
since each of the animals of which it is compounded would,
according to its nature or habit, be differently affected with
joy, pleasure or dislike, by the same words, or food, or stroking
with the hand, or whistling, or other modes of treatment. And
what must the master of such an animal do, but show himself
manifold and various in his knowledge, and apply to each a
treatment suitable for it, so as successfully to lead and
preserve the beast? And since the common body of the church is
composed of many different characters and minds, like a single
animal compounded of discordant parts, it is absolutely necessary
that its ruler should be at once simple in his uprightness in all
respects, and as far as possible manifold and varied in his
treatment of individuals, and in dealing with all in an
appropriate and suitable manner.
45. For some need to be fed with the milk
of the most simple and elementary doctrines, viz., those who are
in habit babes and, so to say, new-made, and unable to bear the
manly food of the word: nay, if it were presented to them beyond
their strength, they would probably be overwhelmed and oppressed,
owing to the inability of their mind, as is the case with our
material bodies, to digest and appropriate what is offered to it,
and so would lose even their original power. Others require the
wisdom which is spoken among the perfect, and the higher and more
solid food, since their senses have been sufficiently exercised
to discern truth and falsehood, and if they were made to drink
milk, and fed on the vegetable diet of invalids, they would be
annoyed. And with good reason, for they would not be strengthened
according to Christ, nor make that laudable increase, which the
Word produces in one who is rightly fed, by making him a perfect
man, and bringing him to the measure of spiritual
stature.
46. And who is sufficient for these things?
For we are not as the many, able to corrupt the word of truth,
and mix the wine, which maketh glad the heart of man, with water,
mix, that is, our doctrine with what is common and cheap, and
debased, and stale, and tasteless, in order to turn the
adulteration to our profit, and accommodate ourselves to those
who meet us, and curry favor with everyone, becoming
ventriloquists and chatterers, who serve their own pleasures by
words uttered from the earth, and sinking into the earth, and, to
gain the special good will of the multitude, injuring in the
highest degree, nay, ruining ourselves, and shedding the innocent
blood of simpler souls, which will be required at our
hands.
47. Besides, we are aware that it is better
to offer our own reins to others more skilful than ourselves,
than, while inexperienced, to guide the course of others, and
rather to give a kindly hearing than stir an untrained tongue;
and after a discussion of these points with advisers who are, I
fancy, of no mean worth, and, at any rate, wish us well, we
preferred to learn those canons of speech and action which we did
not know, rather than undertake to teach them in our ignorance.
For it is delightful to have the reasoning of the aged come to
one even until the depth of old age, able, as it is, to aid a
soul new to piety. Accordingly, to undertake the training of
others before being sufficiently trained oneself, and to learn,
as men say, the potter's art on a wine-jar, that is, to practise
ourselves in piety at the expense of others' souls seems to me to
be excessive folly or excessive rashness-folly, if we are not
even aware of our own ignorance; rashness, if in spite of this
knowledge we venture on the task.
48. Nay, the wiser of the Hebrews tell us
that there was of old among the Hebrews a most excellent and
praiseworthy law, that every age was not entrusted with the whole
of Scripture, inasmuch as this would not be the more profitable
course, since the whole of it is not at once intelligible to
everyone, and its more recondite parts would, by their apparent
meaning, do a very great injury to most people. Some portions
therefore, whose exterior is unexceptionable, are from the first
permitted and common to all; while others are only entrusted to
those who have attained their twenty-fifth year, viz., such as
hide their mystical beauty under a mean-looking cloak, to be the
reward of diligence and an illustrious life; flashing forth and
presenting itself only to those whose mind has been purified, on
the ground that this age alone can be superior to the body, and
properly rise from the letter to the spirit.
49. Among us, however, there is no boundary
line between giving and receiving instruction, like the stones of
old between the tribes within and beyond the Jordan: nor is a
certain part entrusted to some, another to others; nor any rule
for degrees of experience; but the matter has been so disturbed
and thrown into confusion, that most of us, not to say all,
almost before we have lost our childish curls and lisp, before we
have entered the house of God, before we know even the names of
the Sacred Books, before we have learnt the character and authors
of the Old and New Testaments: (for my present point is not our
want of cleansing from the mire and marks of spiritual shame
which our viciousness has contracted) if, I say, we have
furnished ourselves with two or three expressions of pious
authors, and that by hearsay, not by study; if we have had a
brief experience of David, or clad ourselves properly in a
cloaklet, or are wearing at least a philosopher's girdle, or have
girt about us some form and appearance of piety-phew! how we take
the chair and show our spirit! Samuel was holy even in his
swaddling-clothes: we are at once wise teachers, of high
estimation in Divine things, the first of scribes and lawyers; we
ordain ourselves men of heaven and seek to be called Rabbi by
men; the letter is nowhere, everything is to be understood
spiritually, and our dreams are utter drivel, and we should be
annoyed if we were not lauded to excess. This is the case with
the better and more simple of us: what of those who are more
spiritual and noble? After frequently condemning us, as men of no
account, they have forsaken us, and abhor fellowship with impious
people such as we are.
50. Now, if we were to speak gently to one
of them, advancing, as follows, step by step in argument: "Tell
me, my good sir, do you call dancing anything, and
flute-playing?" "Certainly," they would say. "What then of wisdom
and being wise, which we venture to define as a knowledge of
things divine and human?" This also they will admit. "Are then
these accomplishments better than and superior to wisdom, or
wisdom by far better than these?" "Better even than all things,"
I know well that they will say. Up to this point they are
judicious. "Well, dancing and flute-playing require to be taught
and learnt, a process which takes time, and much toil in the
sweat of the brow, and sometimes the payment of fees, and
entreaties for initiation, and long absence from home, and all
else which must be done and borne for the acquisition of
experience: but as for wisdom, which is chief of all things, and
holds in her embrace everything which is good, so that even God
himself prefers this title to all the names which He is called;
are we to suppose that it is a matter of such slight consequence,
and so accessible, that we need but wish, and we would be wise?"
"It would be utter folly to do so." If we, or any learned and
prudent man, were to say this to them, and try by degrees to
cleanse them from their error, it would be sowing upon rocks, and
speaking to ears of men who will not hear: so far are they from
being even wise enough to perceive their own ignorance. And we
may rightly, in my opinion, apply to them the saying of Solomon:
There is an evil which I have seen under the sun, a man wise in
his own conceit; and a still greater evil is to charge with the
instruction of others a man who is not even aware of his own
ignorance.
51. This is a state of mind which demands,
in special degree, our tears and groans, and has often stirred my
pity, from the conviction that imagination robs us in great
measure of reality, and that vain glory is a great hindrance to
men's attainment of virtue. To heal and stay this disease needs a
Peter or Paul, those great disciples of Christ, who in addition
to guidance in word and deed, received their grace, and became
all things to all men, that they might gain all. But for other
men like ourselves, it is a great thing to be rightly guided and
led by those who have been charged with the correction and
setting right of things such as these.
52. Since, however, I have mentioned Paul,
and men like him, I will, with your permission, pass by all
others who have been foremost as lawgivers, prophets, or leaders,
or in any similar office-for instance, Moses, Aaron, Joshua,
Elijah, Elisha, the Judges, Samuel, David, the company of
Prophets, John, the Twelve Apostles, and their successors, who
with many toils and labors exercised their authority, each in his
own time; all these I pass by, to set forth Paul as the witness
to my assertions, and for us to consider by his example how
important a matter is the care of souls, and whether it requires
slight attention and little judgment. But that we may recognize
and perceive this, let us hear what Paul himself says of
Paul.
53. I say nothing of his labours, his
watchings, his sufferings in hunger and thirst, in cold and
nakedness, his assailants from without, his adversaries within. I
pass over the persecutions, councils, prisons, bonds, accusers,
tribunals, the daily and hourly deaths, the basket, the stonings,
beatings with rods, the travelling about, the perils by land and
sea, the deep, the shipwrecks, the perils of rivers, perils of
robbers, perils from his countrymen, perils among false brethren,
the living by his own hands, the gospel without charge, the being
a spectacle to both angels and men, set in the midst between God
and men to champion His cause, and to unite them to Him, and make
them His own peculiar people, beside those things that are
without. For who could worthily detail these matters, the daily
pressure, the individual solicitude, the care of all the
churches, the universal sympathy, and brotherly love? Did anyone
stumble, Paul also was weak; did another suffer scandal, it was
Paul who was on fire.
54. What of the laboriousness of his
teaching? The manifold character of his ministry? His loving
kindness? And on the other hand his strictness? And the
combination and blending of the two; in such wise that his
gentleness should not enervate, nor his severity exasperate? He
gives laws for slaves and masters, rulers and ruled, husbands and
wives, parents and children, marriage and celibacy,
self-discipline and indulgence, wisdom and ignorance,
circumcision and uncircumcision, Christ and the world, the flesh
and the spirit. On behalf of some he gives thanks, others he
upbraids. Some he names his joy and crown, others he charges with
folly. Some who hold a straight course he accompanies, sharing in
their zeal; others he checks, who are going wrong. At one time he
excommunicates, at another he confirms his love; at one time he
grieves, at another rejoices; at one time he feeds with milk, at
another he handles mysteries; at one time he condescends, at
another he raises to his own level; at one time he threatens a
rod, at another he offers the spirit of meekness; at one time he
is haughty toward the lofty, at another lowly toward the lowly.
Now he is least of the apostles, now he offers a proof of Christ
speaking in him; now he longs for departure and is being poured
forth as a libation, now he thinks it more necessary for their
sakes to abide in the flesh. For he seeks not his own interests,
but those of his children, whom he has begotten in Christ by the
gospel. This is the aim of all his spiritual authority, in
everything to neglect his own in comparison with the advantage of
others.
55. He glories in his infirmities and
distresses. He takes pleasure in the dying of Jesus, as if it
were a kind of ornament. He is lofty in carnal things, he
rejoices in things spiritual; he is not rude in knowledge, and
claims to see in a mirror, darkly. He is bold in spirit, and
buffets his body, throwing it as an antagonist. What is the
lesson and instruction he would thus impress upon us? Not to be
proud of earthly things, or puffed up by knowledge, or excite the
flesh against the spirit. He fights for all, prays for all, is
jealous for all, is kindled on behalf of all, whether without
law, or under the law; a preacher of the Gentiles, a patron of
the Jews. He even was exceedingly bold on behalf of his brethren
according to the flesh, if I may myself be bold enough to say so,
in his loving prayer that they might in his stead be brought to
Christ. What magnanimity! what fervor of spirit! He imitates
Christ, who became a curse for us, who took our infirmities and
bore our sicknesses; or, to use more measured terms, he is ready,
next to Christ, to suffer anything, even as one of the ungodly,
for them, if only they be saved.
56. Why should I enter into detail? He
lived not to himself, but to Christ and his preaching. He
crucified the world to himself, and being crucified to the world
and the things which are seen, he thought all things little, and
too small to be desired; even though from Jerusalem and round
about unto Illyricum he had fully preached the Gospel, even
though he had been prematurely caught up to the third heaven, and
had a vision of Paradise, and had heard unspeakable words. Such
was Paul, and everyone of like spirit with him. But we fear that,
in comparison with them, we may be foolish princes of Zoan, or
extortioners, who exact the fruits of the ground, or falsely
bless the people: and further make themselves happy, and confuse
the way of your feet, or mockers ruling over you, or children in
authority, immature in mind, not even having bread and clothing
enough to be rulers over any; or prophets teaching lies, or
rebellious princes, deserving to share the reproach of their
elders for the straitness of the famine, or priests very far from
speaking comfortably to Jerusalem, according to the reproaches
and protests urged by Isaiah, who was purged by the Seraphim with
a live coal.
57. Is the undertaking then so serious and
laborious to a sensitive and sad heart-a very rottenness to the
bones of a sensible man: while the danger is slight, and a fall
not worth consideration? Nay the blessed Hosea inspires me with
serious alarm, where he says that to us priests and rulers
pertaineth the judgment, because we have been a snare to the
watchtower; and as a net spread upon Tabor, which has been firmly
fixed by the hunters of men's souls, and he threatens to cut off
the wicked prophets, and devour their judges with fire, and to
cease for a while from anointing a king and princes, because they
ruled for themselves, and not by Him.
58. Hence again the divine Micah, unable to
brook the building of Zion with blood, however you interpret the
phrase, and of Jerusalem with iniquity, while the heads thereof
judge for reward, and the priests teach for hire, and the
prophets divine for money-what does he say will be the result of
this? Zion shall be plowed as a field, and Jerusalem be as a
lodge in a garden, and the mountain of the house be reckoned as a
glade in a thicket. He bewails also the scarcity of the upright,
there being scarcely a stalk or a gleaning grape left, since both
the prince asketh, and the judge curries favour, so that his
language is almost the same as the mighty David's: Save me, O
Lord, for the godly man ceaseth: and says that therefore their
blessings shall fail them, as if wasted by the moth.
59. Joel again summons us to wailing, and
will have the ministers of the altar lament under the presence of
famine: so far is he from allowing us to revel in the misfortunes
of others: and, after sanctifying a fast, calling a solemn
assembly, and gathering the old men, the children, and those of
tender age, we ourselves must further haunt the temple in
sackcloth and ashes, prostrated right humbly on the ground,
because the field is wasted, and the meat-offering and the
drink-offering is cut off from the house of the Lord, till we
draw down mercy by our humiliation.
60. What of Habakkuk? He utters more heated
words, and is impatient with God Himself, and cries down, as it
were our good Lord, because of the injustice of the judges. O
Lord, how long shall I cry and Thou wilt not hear? Shall I cry
out unto Thee of violence, and Thou wilt not save? Why dost Thou
show me toil and labour, causing me to look upon perverseness and
impiety? Judgment has been given against me, and the judge is a
spoiler. Therefore the law is slacked, and judgment doth never go
forth. Then comes the denunciation, and what follows upon it.
Behold, ye despisers, and regard, and wonder marvellously, and
vanish away, for I work a work. But why need I quote the whole of
the denunciation? A little further on, however, for I think it
best to add this to what has been said, after upbraiding and
lamenting many of those who are in some respect unjust or
depraved, he upbraids the leaders and teachers of wickedness,
stigmatising vice as a foul disorder, and an intoxication and
aberration of mind; charging them with giving their neighbours
drink in order to look upon the darkness of their soul, and the
dens of creeping things and wild beasts, viz.: the dwelling
places of wicked thoughts. Such indeed they are, and such
teachings do they discuss with us.
61. How can it be right to pass by Malachi,
who at one time brings bitter charges against the priests, and
reproaches them with despising the name of the Lord, and explains
wherein they did this, by offering polluted bread upon the altar,
and meat which is not firstfruits, which they would not have
offered to one of their governors, or, if they had offered it,
they would have been dishonoured; yet offering these in
fulfilment of a vow to the King of the universe, to wit, the lame
and the sick, and the deformed, which are utterly profane and
loathsome. Again he reminds them of the covenant of God, a
covenant of life and peace, with the sons of Levi, and that they
should serve Him in fear, and stand in awe of the manifestation
of His Name. The law of truth, he says, was in his mouth, and
unrighteousness was not found in his lips; he walked with me
uprightly in peace, and turned away many from iniquity: for the
priest's lips shall keep knowledge, and they shall seek the law
at his mouth. And how honourable and at the same time how fearful
is the cause! for he is the messenger of the Lord Almighty.
Although I pass over the following imprecations, as strongly
worded, yet I am afraid of their truth. This however may be cited
without offence, to our profit. Is it right, he says, to regard
your sacrifice, and receive it with good will at your hands, as
if he were most highly incensed, and rejecting their
ministrations owing to their wickedness.
62. Whenever I remember Zechariah, I
shudder at the reaping-hook, and likewise at his testimony
against the priests, his hints in reference to the celebrated
Joshua, the high priest, whom he represents as stripped of filthy
and unbecoming garments and then clothed in rich priestly
apparel. As for the words and charges to Joshua which he puts
into the angel's mouth, let them be treated with silent respect,
as referring perhaps to a greater and higher object than those
who are many priests: but even at his right hand stood the devil,
to resist him. A fact, in my eyes, of no slight significance, and
demanding no slight fear and watchfulness.
63. Who is so bold and adamantine of soul
as not to tremble and be abashed at the charges and reproaches
deliberately urged against the rest of the shepherds. A voice, he
says, of the howling of the shepherds, for their glory is
spoiled. A voice of the roaring of lions, for this hath befallen
them. Does he not all but hear the wailing as if close at hand,
and himself wail with the afflicted. A little further is a more
striking and impassioned strain. Feed, he says, the flock of
slaughter, whose possessors slay them without repentance, and
they that sell them say, "Blessed be the Lord, for we are rich:"
and their own shepherds are without feeling for them. Therefore,
I will no more pity the inhabitants of the land, saith the Lord
Almighty. And again: Awake, O sword, against the shepherds, and
smite the shepherds, and scatter the sheep, and I will turn My
Hand upon the shepherds; and, Mine anger is kindled against the
shepherds, and I will visit the lambs: adding to the threat those
who rule over the people. So industriously does he apply himself
to his task that he cannot easily free himself from
denunciations, and I am afraid that, did I refer to the whole
series, I should exhaust your patience. This must then suffice
for Zechariah.
64. Passing by the elders in the book of
Daniel; for it is better to pass them by, together with the
Lord's righteous sentence and declaration concerning them, that
wickedness came from Babylon from ancient judges, who seemed to
govern the people; how are we affected by Ezekiel, the beholder
and expositor of the mighty mysteries and visions? By his
injunction to the watchmen not to keep silence concerning vice
and the sword impending over it, a course which would profit
neither themselves nor the sinners; but rather to keep watch and
forewarn, and thus benefit, at any rate those who gave warning,
if not both those who spoke and those who heard?
65. What of his further invective against
the shepherds, Woe shall come upon woe, and rumour upon rumour,
then shall they seek a vision of the prophet, but the law shall
perish from the priest, and counsel from the ancients, and again,
in these terms, Son of man, say unto her, thou art a land that is
not watered, nor hath rain come upon thee in the day of
indignation: whose princes in the midst of her are like roaring
lions, ravening the prey, devouring souls in their might. And a
little further on: Her priests have violated My laws and profaned
My holy things, they have put no difference between the holy and
profane, but all things were alike to them, and they hid their
eyes from My Sabbaths, and I was profaned among them. He
threatens that He will consume both the wall and them that daubed
it, that is, those who sin and those who throw a cloak over them;
as the evil rulers and priests have done, who caused the house of
Israel to err according to their own hearts which are estranged
in their lusts.
66. I also refrain from entering into his
discussion of those who feed themselves, devour the milk, clothe
themselves with the wool, kill them that are fat, but feed not
the flock, strengthen not the diseased, nor bind up that which is
broken, nor bring again that which is driven away, nor seek that
which is lost, nor keep watch over that which is strong, but
oppress them with rigour, and destroy them with their pressure;
so that, because there was no shepherd, the sheep were scattered
over every plain and mountain, and became meat for all the fowls
and beasts, because there was no one to seek for them and bring
them back. What is the consequence? As I live, saith the Lord,
because these things are so, and My flock became a prey, behold I
am against the shepherds, and I will require My flock at their
hands, and will gather them and make them My own: but the
shepherds shall suffer such and such things, as bad shepherds
ought.
67. However, to avoid unreasonably
prolonging my discourse, by an enumeration of all the prophets,
and of the words of them all, I will mention but one more, who
was known before he was formed, and sanctified from the womb,
Jeremiah: and will pass over the rest. He longs for water over
his head, and a fountain of tears for his eyes, that he may
adequately weep for Israel; and no less does he bewail the
depravity of its rulers.
68. God speaks to him in reproof of the
priests: The priests said not, Where is the Lord, and they that
handled the law knew Me not; the pastors also transgressed
against Me. Again He says to him: The pastors are become brutish,
and have not sought the Lord, and therefore all their flock did
not understand, and was scattered. Again, Many pastors have
destroyed My vineyard, and have polluted My pleasant portion,
till it was reduced to a trackless wilderness. He further
inveighs against the pastors again: Woe be to the pastors that
destroy and scatter the sheep of My pasture! Therefore thus saith
the Lord against them that feed My people: Ye have scattered My
flock, and driven them away, and have not visited them: behold I
will visit upon you the evil of your doings. Moreover he bids the
shepherds to howl, and the rams of the flock to lament, because
the days of their slaughter are accomplished.
69. Why need I speak of the things of
ancient days? Who can test himself by the rules and standards
which Paul laid down for bishops and presbyters, that they are to
be temperate, soberminded, not given to wine, no strikers, apt to
teach, blameless in all things, and beyond the reach of the
wicked, without finding considerable deflection from the straight
line of the rules? What of the regulations of Jesus for his
disciples, when He sends them to preach? The main object of these
is-not to enter into particulars-that they should be of such
virtue, so simple and modest, and in a word, so heavenly, that
the gospel should make its way, no less by their character than
by their preaching.
70. I am alarmed by the reproaches of the
Pharisees, the conviction of the Scribes. For it is disgraceful
for us, who ought greatly surpass them, as we are bidden, if we
desire the kingdom of heaven, to be found more deeply sunk in
vice: so that we deserve to be called serpents, a generation of
vipers, and blind guides, who strain out a gnat and swallow a
camel, or sepulchres foul within, in spite of our external
comeliness, or platters outwardly clean, and everything else,
which they are, or which is laid to their charge.
71. With these thoughts I am occupied night
and day: they waste my marrow, and feed upon my flesh, and will
not allow me to be confident or to look up. They depress my soul,
and abase my mind, and fetter my tongue, and make me consider,
not the position of a prelate, or the guidance and direction of
others, which is far beyond my powers; but how I myself am to
escape the wrath to come, and to scrape off from myself somewhat
of the rust of vice. A man must himself be cleansed, before
cleansing others: himself become wise, that he may make others
wise; become light, and then give light: draw near to God, and so
bring others near; be hallowed, then hallow them; be possessed of
hands to lead others by the hand, of wisdom to give
advice.
72. When will this be, say they who are
swift but not sure in every thing, readily building up, readily
throwing down. When will the lamp be upon its stand, and where is
the talent? For so they call the grace. Those who speak thus are
more fervent in friendship than in reverence. You ask me, you men
of exceeding courage, when these things shall be, and what
account I give of them? Not even extreme old age would be too
long a limit to assign. For hoary hairs combined with prudence
are better than inexperienced youth, well-reasoned hesitation
than inconsiderate haste, and a brief reign than a long tyranny:
just as a small portion honourably won is better than
considerable possessions which are dishonourable and uncertain, a
little gold than a great weight of lead, a little light than much
darkness.
73. But this speed, in its
untrustworthiness and excessive haste, is in danger of being like
the seeds which fell upon the rock, and, because they had no
depth of earth, sprang up at once, but could not bear even the
first heat of the sun; or like the foundation laid upon the sand,
which could not even make a slight resistance to the rain and the
winds. Woe to thee, O city, whose king is a child, says Solomon.
Be not hasty of speech, says Solomon again, asserting that
hastiness of speech is less serious than heated action. And who,
in spite of all this, demands haste rather than security and
utility? Who can mould, as clay-figures are modelled in a single
day, the defender of the truth, who is to take his stand with
Angels, and give glory with Archangels, and cause the sacrifice
to ascend to the altar on high, and share the priesthood of
Christ, and renew the creature, and set forth the image, and
create inhabitants for the world above, aye and, greatest of all,
be God, and make others to be God?
74. I know Whose ministers we are, and
where we are placed, and whither we are guides. I know the height
of God, and the weakness of man, and, on the contrary, his power.
Heaven is high, and the earth deep; and who of those who have
been cast down by sin shall ascend? Who that is as yet surrounded
by the gloom here below, and by the grossness of the flesh can
purely gaze with his whole mind upon that whole mind, and amid
unstable and visible things hold intercourse with the stable and
invisible? For hardly may one of those who have been most
specially purged, behold here even an image of the Good, as men
see the sun in the water. Who hath measured the water with his
hand, and the heaven with a span, and the whole earth in a
measure? Who hath weighed the mountains in scales, and the hills
in a balance? What is the place of his rest? and to whom shall he
be likened?
75. Who is it, Who made all things by His
Word, and formed man by His Wisdom, and gathered into one things
scattered abroad, and mingled dust with spirit, and compounded an
animal visible and invisible, temporal and immortal, earthly and
heavenly, able to attain to God but not to comprehend Him,
drawing near and yet afar off. I said, I will be wise, says
Solomon, but she (i.e. Wisdom) was far from me beyond what is:
and, Verily, he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow. For
the joy of what we have discovered is no greater than the pain of
what escapes us; a pain, I imagine, like that felt by those who
are dragged, while yet thirsty, from the water, or are unable to
retain what they think they hold, or are suddenly left in the
dark by a flash of lightning.
76. This depressed and kept me humble, and
persuaded me that it was better to hear the voice of praise than
to be an expounder of truths beyond my power; the majesty, and
the height, and the dignity, and the pure natures scarce able to
contain the brightness of God, Whom the deep covers, Whose secret
place is darkness, since He is the purest light, which most men
cannot approach unto; Who is in all this universe, and again is
beyond the universe; Who is all goodness, and beyond all
goodness; Who enlightens the mind, and escapes the quickness and
height of the mind, ever retiring as much as He is apprehended,
and by His flight and stealing away when grasped, withdrawing to
the things above one who is enamoured of Him.
77. Such and so great is the object of our
longing zeal, and such a man should he be, who prepares and
conducts souls to their espousals. For myself, I feared to be
cast, bound hand and foot, from the bride-chamber, for not having
on a wedding-garment, and for having rashly intruded among those
who there sit at meat. And yet I had been invited from my youth,
if I may speak of what most men know not, and had been cast upon
Him from the womb, and presented by the promise of my mother,
afterwards confirmed in the hour of danger: and my longing grew
up with it, and my reason agreed to it, and I gave as an offering
my all to Him Who had won me and saved me, my property, my fame,
my health, my very words, from which I only gained the advantage
of being able to despise them, and of having something in
comparison of which I preferred Christ. And the words of God were
made sweet as honeycombs to me, and I cried after knowledge and
lifted up my voice for wisdom. There was moreover the moderation
of anger, the curbing of the tongue, the restraint of the eyes,
the discipline of the belly, and the trampling under foot of the
glory which clings to the earth. I speak foolishly, but it shall
be said, in these pursuits I was perhaps not inferior to
many.
78. One branch of philosophy is, however,
too high for me, the commission to guide and govern souls-and
before I have rightly learned to submit to a shepherd, or have
had my soul duly cleansed, the charge of caring for a flock:
especially in times like these, when a man, seeing everyone else
rushing hither and thither in confusion, is content to flee from
the melee and escape, in sheltered retirement, from the storm and
gloom of the wicked one: when the members are at war with one
another, and the slight remains of love, which once existed, have
departed, and priest is a mere empty name, since, as it is said,
contempt has been poured upon princes.
79. Would that it were merely empty! And
now may their blasphemy fall upon the head of the ungodly! All
fear has been banished from souls, shamelessness has taken its
place, and knowledge and the deep things of the Spirit are at the
disposal of anyone who will; and we all become pious by simply
condemning the impiety of others; and we claim the services of
ungodly judges, and fling that which is holy to the dogs, and
cast pearls before swine, by publishing divine things in the
hearing of profane souls, and, wretches that we are, carefully
fulfil the prayers of our enemies, and are not ashamed to go a
whoring with our own inventions. Moabites and Ammonites, who were
not permitted even to enter the Church of the Lord, frequent our
most holy rites. We have opened to all not the gates of
righteousness, but, doors of railing and partizan arrogance; and
the first place among us is given, not to one who in the fear of
God refrains from even an idle word, but to him who can revile
his neighbour most fluently, whether explicitly, or by covert
allusion; who rolls beneath his tongue mischief and iniquity, or
to speak more accurately, the poison of asps.
80. We observe each other's sins, not to
bewail them, but to make them subjects of reproach, not to heal
them, but to aggravate them, and excuse our own evil deeds by the
wounds of our neighbours. Bad and good men are distinguished not
according to personal character, but by their disagreement or
friendship with ourselves. We praise one day what we revile the
next, denunciation at the hands of others is a passport to our
admiration; so magnanimous are we in our viciousness, that
everything is frankly forgiven to impiety.
81. Everything has reverted to the original
state of things before the world, with its present fair order and
form, came into being. The general confusion and irregularity cry
for some organising hand and power. Or, if you will, it is like a
battle at night by the faint light of the moon, when none can
discern the faces of friends or foes; or like a sea fight on the
surge, with the driving winds, and boiling foam, and dashing
waves, and crashing vessels, with the thrusts of poles, the pipes
of boatswains, the groans of the fallen, while we make our voices
heard above the din, and not knowing what to do, and having,
alas! no opportunity for showing our valour, assail one another,
and fall by one another's hands.
82. Nor indeed is there any distinction
between the state of the people and that of the priesthood: but
it seems to me to be a simple fulfilment of the ancient curse,
"As with the people so with the priest." Nor again are the great
and eminent men affected otherwise than the majority; nay, they
are openly at war with the priests, and their piety is an aid to
their powers of persuasion. And indeed, provided that it be on
behalf of the faith, and of the highest and most important
questions, let them be thus disposed, and I blame them not; nay,
to say the truth, I go so far as to praise and congratulate them.
Yea! would that I were one of those who contend and incur hatred
for the truth's sake: or rather, I can boast of being one of
them. For better is a laudable war than a peace which severs a
man from God: and therefore it is that the Spirit arms the gentle
warrior, as one who is able to wage war in a good
cause.
83. But at the present time there are some
who go to war even about small matters and to no purpose, and,
with great ignorance and audacity, accept, as an associate in
their ill-doing, anyone whoever he may be. Then everyone makes
the faith his pretext, and this venerable name is dragged into
their private quarrels. Consequently, as was probable, we are
hated, even among the Gentiles, and, what is harder still, we
cannot say that this is without just cause. Nay, even the best of
our own people are scandalized, while this result is not
surprising in the case of the multitude, who are ill-disposed to
accept anything that is good.
84. Sinners are planning upon our backs;
and what we devise against each other, they turn against us all:
and we have become a new spectacle, not to angels and men, as
says Paul, that bravest of athletes, in his contest with
principalities and powers, but to almost all wicked men, and at
every time and place, in the public squares, at carousals, at
festivities, and times of sorrow. Nay, we have already-I can
scarcely speak of it without tears-been represented on the stage,
amid the laughter of the most licentious, and the most popular of
all dialogues and scenes is the caricature of a
Christian.
85. These are the results of our intestine
warfare, and our extreme readiness to strive about goodness and
gentleness, and our inexpedient excess of love for God.
Wrestling, or any other athletic contest, is only permitted
according to fixed laws, and the man will be shouted down and
disgraced, and lose the victory, who breaks the laws of
wrestling, or acts unfairly in any other contest, contrary to the
rules laid down for the contest, however able and skilful he may
be; and shall anyone contend for Christ in an unchristlike
manner, and yet be pleasing to peace for having fought unlawfully
in her name.
86. Yea, even now, when Christ is invoked,
the devils tremble, and not even by our ill-doing has the power
of this Name been extinguished, while we are not ashamed to
insult a cause and name so venerable; shouting it, and having it
shouted in return, almost in public, and every day; for My Name
is blasphemed among the Gentiles because of you.
87. Of external warfare I am not afraid,
nor of that wild beast, and fulness of evil, who has now arisen
against the churches, though he may threaten fire, sword, wild
beasts, precipices, chasms; though he may show himself more
inhuman than all previous madmen, and discover fresh tortures of
greater severity. I have one remedy for them all, one road to
victory; I will glory in Christ namely, death for Christ's
sake.
88. For my own warfare, however, I am at a
loss what course to pursue, what alliance, what word of wisdom,
what grace to devise, with what panoply to arm myself, against
the wiles of the wicked one. What Moses is to conquer him by
stretching out his hands upon the mount, in order that the cross,
thus typified and prefigured, may prevail? What Joshua, as his
successor, arrayed alongside the Captain of the Lord's hosts?
What David, either by harping, or fighting with his sling, and
girded by God with strength unto the battle, and with his fingers
trained to war? What Samuel, praying and sacrificing for the
people, and anointing as king one who can gain the victory? What
Jeremiah, by writing lamentations for Israel, is fitly to lament
these things?
89. Who will cry aloud, Spare Thy People, O
Lord, and give not Thine heritage to reproach, that the nations
should rule over them? What Noah, and Job, and Daniel, who are
reckoned together as men of prayer, will pray for us, that we may
have a slight respite from warfare, and recover ourselves, and
recognize one another for a while, and no longer, instead of
united Israel, be Judah and Israel, Rehoboam and Jeroboam,
Jerusalem and Samaria, in turn delivered up because of our sins,
and in turn lamented.
90. For I own that I am too weak for this
warfare, and therefore turned my back, hiding my face in the
rout, and sat solitary, because I was filled with bitterness and
sought to be silent, understanding that it is an evil time, that
the beloved had kicked, that we were become backsliding children,
who are the luxuriant vine, the true vine, all fruitful, all
beautiful, springing up splendidly with showers from on high. For
the diadem of beauty, the signet of glory, the crown of
magnificence has been changed for me into shame; and if anyone,
in face of these things, is daring and courageous, he has my
blessing on his daring and courage.
91. I have said nothing yet of the internal
warfare within ourselves, and in our passions, in which we are
engaged night and day against the body of our humiliation, either
secretly or openly, and against the tide which tosses and whirls
us hither and thither, by the aid of our senses and other sources
of the pleasures of this life; and against the miry clay in which
we have been fixed; and against the law of sin, which wars
against the law of the spirit, and strives to destroy the royal
image in us, and all the divine emanation which has been bestowed
upon us; so that it is difficult for anyone, either by a long
course of philosophic training, and gradual separation of the
noble and enlightened part of the soul from that which is debased
and yoked with darkness, or by the mercy of God, or by both
together, and by a constant practice of looking upward, to
overcome the depressing power of matter. And before a man has, as
far as possible, gained this superiority, and sufficiently
purified his mind, and far surpassed his fellows in nearness to
God, I do not think it safe for him to be entrusted with the rule
over souls, or the office of mediator (for such, I take it, a
priest is) between God and man.
92. What is it that has induced this fear
in me, that, instead of supposing me to be needlessly afraid, you
may highly commend my foresight? I hear from Moses himself, when
God spake to him, that, although many were bidden to come to the
mount, one of whom was even Aaron, with his two sons who were
priests, and seventy elders of the senate, the rest were ordered
to worship afar off, and Moses alone to draw near, and the people
were not to go up with him. For it is not everyone who may draw
near to God, but only one who, like Moses, can bear the glory of
God. Moreover, before this, when the law was first given, the
trumpet-blasts, and lightnings, and thunders, and darkness, and
the smoke of the whole mountain, and the terrible threats that if
even a beast touched the mountain it should be stoned, and other
like alarms, kept back the rest of the people, for whom it was a
great privilege, after careful purification, merely to hear the
voice of God. But Moses actually went up and entered into the
cloud, and was charged with the law, and received the tables,
which belong, for the multitude, to the letter, but, for those
who are above the multitude, to the spirit.
93. I hear again that Nadab and Abihu, for
having merely offered incense with strange fire, were with
strange fire destroyed, the instrument of their impiety being
used for their punishment, and their destruction following at the
very time and place of their sacrilege; and not even their father
Aaron, who was next to Moses in the favor of God, could save
them. I know also of Eli the priest, and a little later of Uzzah,
the former made to pay the penalty for his sons' transgression,
in daring to violate the sacrifices by an untimely exaction of
the first fruits of the cauldrons, although he did not condone
their impiety, but frequently rebuked them; the other, because he
only touched the ark, which was being thrown off the cart by the
ox, and though he saved it, was himself destroyed, in God's
jealousy for the reverence due to the ark.
94. I know also that not even bodily
blemishes in either priests or victims passed without notice, but
that it was required by the law that perfect sacrifices must be
offered by perfect men-a symbol, I take it, of integrity of soul.
It was not lawful for everyone to touch the priestly vesture, or
any of the holy vessels; nor might the sacrifices themselves be
consumed except by the proper persons, and at the proper time and
place; nor might the anointing oil nor the compounded incense be
imitated; nor might anyone enter the temple who was not in the
most minute particular pure in both soul and body; so far was the
Holy of holies removed from presumptuous access, that it might be
entered by one man only once a year; so far were the veil, and
the mercy-seat, and the ark, and the Cherubim, from the general
gaze and touch.
95. Since then I knew these things, and
that no one is worthy of the mightiness of God, and the
sacrifice, and priesthood, who has not first presented himself to
God, a living, holy sacrifice, and set forth the reasonable,
well-pleasing service, and sacrificed to God the sacrifice of
praise and the contrite spirit, which is the only sacrifice
required of us by the Giver of all; how could I dare to offer to
Him the external sacrifice, the antitype of the great mysteries,
or clothe myself with the garb and name of priest, before my
hands had been consecrated by holy works; before my eyes had been
accustomed to gaze safely upon created things, with wonder only
for the Creator, and without injury to the creature; before my
ear had been sufficiently opened to the instruction of the Lord,
and He had opened mine ear to hear without heaviness, and had set
a golden earring with precious sardius, that is, a wise man's
word in an obedient ear; before my mouth had been opened to draw
in the Spirit, and opened wide to be filled with the spirit of
speaking mysteries and doctrines; and my lips bound, to use the
words of wisdom, by divine knowledge, and, as I would add, loosed
in due season: before my tongue had been filled with exultation,
and become an instrument of Divine melody, awaking with glory,
awaking right early, and laboring till it cleave to my jaws:
before my feet had been set upon the rock, made like hart's feet,
and my footsteps directed in a godly fashion so that they should
not well-nigh slip, nor slip at all; before all my members had
become instruments of righteousness, and all mortality had been
put off, and swallowed up of life, and had yielded to the
Spirit?
96. Who is the man, whose heart has never
been made to burn, as the Scriptures have been opened to him,
with the pure words of God which have been tried in a furnace;
who has not, by a triple inscription of them upon the breadth of
his heart, attained the mind of Christ; nor been admitted to the
treasures which to most men remain hidden, secret, and dark, to
gaze upon the riches therein? and become able to enrich others,
comparing spiritual things with spiritual.
97. Who is the man who has never beheld, as
our duty is to behold it, the fair beauty of the Lord, nor has
visited His temple, or rather, become the temple of God, and the
habitation of Christ in the Spirit? Who is the man who has never
recognized the correlation and distinction between figures and
the truth, so that by withdrawing from the former and cleaving to
the latter, and by thus escaping from the oldness of the letter
and serving the newness of the spirit, he may clean pass over to
grace from the law, which finds its spiritual fulfilment in the
dissolution of the body.
98. Who is the man who has never, by
experience and contemplation, traversed the entire series of the
titles and powers of Christ, both those more lofty ones which
originally were His, and those more lowly ones which He later
assumed for our sake-viz.: God, the Son, the Image, the Word, the
Wisdom, the Truth, the Light, the Life, the Power, the Vapour,
the Emanation, the Effulgence, the Maker, the King, the Head, the
Law, the Way, the Door, the Foundation, the Rock, the Pearl, the
Peace, the Righteousness, the Sanctification, the Redemption, the
Man, the Servant, the Shepherd, the Lamb, the High Priest, the
Victim, the Firstborn before creation, the Firstborn from the
dead, the Resurrection: who is the man who hearkens, but pays no
heed, to these names so pregnant with reality, and has never yet
held communion with, nor been made partaker of, the Word, in any
of the real relations signified by each of these names which He
bears?
99. Who, in fine, is the man who, although
he has never applied himself to, nor learnt to speak, the hidden
wisdom of God in a mystery, although he is still a babe, still
fed with milk, still of those who are not numbered in Israel, nor
enrolled in the army of God, although he is not yet able to take
up the Cross of Christ like a man, although he is possibly not
yet one of the more honorable members, yet will joyfully and
eagerly accept his appointment as head of the fulness of Christ?
No one, if he will listen to my judgment and accept my advice!
This is of all things most to be feared, this is the extremest of
dangers in the eyes of everyone who understands the magnitude of
success, the utter ruin of failure.
100. Let others sail for merchandise, I
used to say, and cross the wide oceans, and constantly contend
with winds and waves, to gain great wealth, if so it should
chance, and run great risks in their eagerness for sailing and
merchandise; but, for my part, I greatly prefer to stay ashore
and plough a short but pleasant furrow, saluting at a respectful
distance the sea and its gains, to live as best I can upon a poor
and scanty store of barley-bread, and drag my life along in
safety and calm, rather than expose myself to so long and great a
risk for the sake of great gains.
101. For one in high estate, if he fail to
make further progress and to disseminate virtue still more
widely, and contents himself with slight results, incurs
punishment, as having spent a great light upon the illumination
of a little house, or girt round the limbs of a boy the full
armor of a man. On the contrary, a man of low estate may with
safety assume a light burden, and escape the risk of the ridicule
and increased danger which would attend him if he attempted a
task beyond his powers. For, as we have heard, it is not seemly
for a man to build a tower, unless he has sufficient to finish
it.
102. Such is the defence which I have been
able to make, perhaps at immoderate length, for my flight. Such
are the reasons which, to my pain and possibly to yours, carried
me away from you, my friends and brothers; yet, as it seemed to
me at the time, with irresistible force. My longing after you,
and the sense of your longing for me, have, more than anything
else, led to my return, for nothing inclines us so strongly to
love as mutual affection.
103. In the next place there was my care,
my duty, the hoar hairs and weakness of my holy parents, who were
more greatly distressed on my account than by their advanced
age-of this Patriarch Abraham whose person is honored by me, and
numbered among the angels, and of Sarah, who travailed in my
spiritual birth by instructing me in the truth. Now, I had
specially pledged myself to become the stay of their old age and
the support of their weakness, a pledge which, to the best of my
power, I have fulfilled, even at the expense of philosophy
itself, the most precious of possessions and titles to me; or, to
speak more truly, although I made it the first object of my
philosophy to appear to be no philosopher, I could not bear that
my labor in consequence of a single purpose should be wasted, nor
yet that blessing should be lost, which one of the saints of old
is said to have stolen from his father, whom he deceived by the
food which he offered to him, and the hairy appearance he
assumed, thus attaining a good object by disgraceful trickery.
These are the two causes of my submission and tractability. Nor
is it, perchance, unreasonable that my arguments should yield and
submit to them both, for there is a time to be conquered, as I
also think there is for every purpose, and it is better to be
honorably overcome than to win a dangerous and lawless
victory.
104. There is a third reason of the highest
importance which I will further mention, and then dismiss the
rest. I remembered the days of old, and, recurring to one of the
ancient histories, drew counsel for myself therefrom as to my
present conduct; for let us not suppose these events to have been
recorded without a purpose, nor that they are a mere assemblage
of words and deeds gathered together for the pastime of those who
listen to them, as a kind of bait for the ears, for the sole
purpose of giving pleasure. Let us leave such jesting to the
legends and the Greeks, who think but little of the truth, and
enchant ear and mind by the charm of their fictions and the
daintiness of their style.
105. We however, who extend the accuracy of
the Spirit to the merest stroke and tittle, will never admit the
impious assertion that even the smallest matters were dealt with
haphazard by those who have recorded them, and have thus been
borne in mind down to the present day: on the contrary, their
purpose has been to supply memorials and instructions for our
consideration under similar circumstances, should such befall us,
and that the examples of the past might serve as rules and
models, for our warning and imitation.
106. What then is the story, and wherein
lies its application? For, perhaps, it would not be amiss to
relate it, for the general security. Jonah also was fleeing from
the face of God, or rather, thought that he was fleeing: but he
was overtaken by the sea, and the storm, and the lot, and the
whale's belly, and the three days' entombment, the type of a
greater mystery. He fled from having to announce the dread and
awful message to the Ninevites, and from being subsequently, if
the city was saved by repentance, convicted of falsehood: not
that he was displeased at the salvation of the wicked, but he was
ashamed of being made an instrument of falsehood, and exceedingly
zealous for the credit of prophecy, which was in danger of being
destroyed in his person, since most men are unable to penetrate
the depth of the Divine dispensation in such cases.
107. But, as I have learned from a man
skilled in these subjects, and able to grasp the depth of the
prophet, by means of a reasonable explanation of what seems
unreasonable in the history, it was not this which caused Jonah
to flee, and carried him to Joppa and again from Joppa to
Tarshish, when he entrusted his stolen self to the sea: for it
was not likely that such a prophet should be ignorant of the
design of God, viz., to bring about, by means of the threat, the
escape of the Ninevites from the threatened doom, according to
His great wisdom, and unsearchable judgments, and according to
His ways which are beyond our tracing and finding out; nor that,
if he knew this he would refuse to co-operate with God in the use
of the means which He designed for their salvation. Besides, to
imagine that Jonah hoped to hide himself at sea, and escape by
his flight the great eye of God, is surely utterly absurd and
stupid, and unworthy of credit, not only in the case of a
prophet, but even in the case of any sensible man, who has only a
slight perception of God, Whose power is over all.
108. On the contrary, as my instructor
said, and as I am myself convinced, Jonah knew better than any
one the purpose of his message to the Ninevites, and that, in
planning his flight, although he changed his place, he did not
escape from God. Nor is this possible for any one else, either by
concealing himself in the bosom of the earth, or in the depths of
the sea, or by soaring on wings, if there be any means of doing
so, and rising into the air, or by abiding in the lowest depths
of hell, or by enveloping himself in a thick cloud, or by any
other of the many devices for ensuring escape. For God alone of
all things cannot be escaped from or contended with; if He wills
to seize and bring them under His hand, He outstrips the swift,
He outwits the wise, He overthrows the strong, He abases the
lofty, He subdues rashness, He represses power.
109. Jonah then was not ignorant of the
mighty hand of God, with which he threatened other men, nor did
he imagine that he could utterly escape the Divine power; this we
are not to believe: but when he saw the falling away of Israel,
and perceived the passing over of the grace of prophecy to the
Gentiles-this was the cause of his retirement from preaching and
of his delay in fulfilling the command; accordingly he left the
watchtower of joy, for this is the meaning of Joppa in Hebrew, I
mean his former dignity and reputation, and flung himself into
the deep of sorrow: and hence he is tempest-tossed, and falls
asleep, and is wrecked, and aroused from sleep, and taken by lot,
and confesses his flight, and is cast into sea, and swallowed,
but not destroyed, by the whale; but there he calls upon God,
and, marvellous as it is, on the third day he, like Christ, is
delivered: but my treatment of this topic must stand over, and
shall shortly, if God permit, be more deliberately worked
out.
110. Now however, to return to my original
point, the thought and question occurred to me, that although he
might possibly meet with some indulgence, if reluctant to
prophesy, for the cause which I mentioned-yet, in my own case,
what could be said, what defence could be made, if I longer
remained restive, and rejected the yoke of ministry, which,
though I know not whether to call it light or heavy, had at any
rate been laid upon me.
111. For if it be granted, and this alone
can be strongly asserted in such matters, that we are far too low
to perform the priest's office before God, and that we can only
be worthy of the sanctuary after we have become worthy of the
Church, and worthy of the post of president, after being worthy
of the sanctuary, yet some one else may perhaps refuse to acquit
us on the charge of disobedience. Now terrible are the
threatenings against disobedience, and terrible are the penalties
which ensue upon it; as indeed are those on the other side, if,
instead of being reluctant, and shrinking back, and concealing
ourselves as Saul did among his father's stuff-although called to
rule but for a short time-if, I say, we come forward readily, as
though to a slight and most easy task, whereas it is not safe
even to resign it, nor to amend by second thoughts our
first.
112. On this account I had much toilsome
consideration to discover my duty, being set in the midst betwixt
two fears, of which the one held me back, the other urged me on.
For a long while I was at a loss between them, and after wavering
from side to side, and, like a current driven by inconstant
winds, inclining first in this direction, then in that, I at last
yielded to the stronger, and the fear of disobedience overcame
me, and has carried me off. Pray, mark how accurately and justly
I hold the balance between the fears, neither desiring an office
not given to me, nor rejecting it when given. The one course
marks the rash, the other the disobedient, both the
undisciplined. My position lies between those who are too bold,
or too timid; more timid than those who rush at every position,
more bold than those who avoid them all. This is my judgment on
the matter.
113. Moreover, to distinguish still more
clearly between them, we have, against the fear of office, a
possible help in the law of obedience, inasmuch as God in His
goodness rewards our faith, and makes a perfect ruler of the man
who has confidence in Him, and places all his hopes in Him; but
against the danger of disobedience I know of nothing which can
help us, and of no ground to encourage our confidence. For it is
to be feared that we shall have to hear these words concerning
those who have been entrusted to us: I will require their souls
at your hands; and, Because ye have rejected me, and not been
leaders and rulers of my people, I also will reject you, that I
should not be king over you; and, As ye refused to hearken to My
voice, and turned a stubborn back, and were disobedient, so shall
it be when ye call upon Me, and I will not regard nor give ear to
your prayer. God forbid that these words should come to us from
the just Judge, for when we sing of His mercy we must also by all
means sing of His judgment.
114. I resort once again to history, and on
considering the men of best repute in ancient days, who were ever
preferred by grace to the office of ruler or prophet, I discover
that some readily complied with the call, others deprecated the
gift, and that neither those who drew back were blamed for
timidity, nor those who came forward for eagerness. The former
stood in awe of the greatness of the ministry, the latter
trustfully obeyed Him Who called them. Aaron was eager, but Moses
resisted, Isaiah readily submitted, but Jeremiah was afraid of
his youth, and did not venture to prophesy until he had received
from God a promise and power beyond his years.
115. By these arguments I charmed myself,
and by degrees my soul relaxed and became ductile, like iron, and
time came to the aid of my arguments, and the testimonies of God,
to which I had entrusted my whole life, were my counsellors.
Therefore I was not rebellious, neither turned away back, saith
my Lord, when, instead of being called to rule, He was led, as a
sheep to the slaughter; but I fell down and humbled myself under
the mighty hand of God, and asked pardon for my former idleness
and disobedience, if this is at all laid to my charge. I held my
peace, but I will not hold my peace for ever: I withdrew for a
little while, till I had considered myself and consoled my grief:
but now I am commissioned to exalt Him in the congregation of the
people, and praise Him in the seat of the elders. If my former
conduct deserved blame, my present action merits
pardon.
116. What further need is there of words.
Here am I, my pastors and fellow-pastors, here am I, thou holy
flock, worthy of Christ, the Chief Shepherd, here am I, my
father, utterly vanquished, and your subject according to the
laws of Christ rather than according to those of the land: here
is my obedience, reward it with your blessing. Lead me with your
prayers, guide me with your words, establish me with your spirit.
The blessing of the father establisheth the houses of children,
and would that both I and this spiritual house may be
established, the house which I have longed for, which I pray may
be my rest for ever, when I have been passed on from the church
here to the church yonder, the general assembly of the firstborn,
who are written in heaven.
117. Such is my defence: its reasonableness
I have set forth: and may the God of peace, Who made both one,
and has restored us to each other, Who setteth kings upon
thrones, and raiseth up the poor out of the dust and lifteth up
the beggar from the dunghill, Who chose David His servant and
took him away from the sheepfolds, though he was the least and
youngest of the sons of Jesse, Who gave the word to those who
preach the gospel with great power for the perfection of the
gospel,-may He Himself hold me by my right hand, and guide me
with His counsel, and receive me with glory, Who is a Shepherd to
shepherds and a Guide to guides: that we may feed His flock with
knowledge, not with the instruments of a foolish shepherd,
according to the blessing, and not according to the curse
pronounced against the men of former days: may He give strength
and power unto his people, and Himself present to Himself His
flock resplendent and spotless and worthy of the fold on high, in
the habitation of them that rejoice, in the splendour of the
saints, so that in His temple everyone, both flock and shepherds
together may say, Glory, in Christ Jesus our Lord, to Whom be all
glory for ever and ever. Amen.
Oration III
To Those Who Had Invited Him, and Not Come to Receive
Him
(About Easter a.d. 362.)
I. How slow you are, my friends and
brethren, to come to listen to my words, though you were so swift
in tyrannizing over me, and tearing me from my Citadel Solitude,
which I had embraced in preference to everything else, and as
coadjutress and mother of the divine ascent, and as deifying man,
I had especially admired, and had set before me as the guide of
my whole life. How is it that, now you have got it, you thus
despise what you so greatly desired to obtain, and seem to be
better able to desire the absent than to enjoy the present; as
though you preferred to possess my teaching rather than to profit
by it? Yes, I may even say this to you: "I became a surfeit unto
you before you tasted of me, or gave me a trial"-which is most
strange.
II. And neither did you entertain me as a
guest, nor, if I may make a remark of a more compassionate kind,
did you allow yourselves to be entertained by me, reverencing
this command if nothing else; nor did you take me by the hand, as
beginning a new task; nor encourage me in my timidity, nor
console me for the violence I had suffered; but-I shrink from
saying it, though say it I must-you made my festival no festival,
and received me with no happy introduction; and you mingled the
solemn festival with sorrow, because it lacked that which most of
all would have contributed to its happiness, the presence of you
my conquerors, for it would not be true to call you people who
love me. So easily is anything despised which is easily
conquered, and the proud receives attention, while he who is
humble before God is slighted.
III. What will ye? Shall I be judged by
you, or shall I be your judge? Shall I pass a verdict, or receive
one, for I hope to be acquitted if I be judged, and if I give
sentence, to give it against you justly? The charge against you
is that you do not answer my love with equal measure, nor do you
repay my obedience with honour, nor do you pledge the future to
me by your present alacrity-though even if you had, I could
hardly have believed it. But each of you has something which he
prefers to both the old and the new Pastor, neither reverencing
the grey hairs of the one, nor calling out the youthful spirit of
the other.
IV. There is a Banquet in the Gospels, and
a hospitable Host and friends; and the Banquet is most pleasant,
for it is the marriage of His Son. He calleth them, but they come
not: He is angry, and-I pass over the interval for fear of bad
omen-but, to speak gently, He filleth the Banquet with others.
God forbid that this should be your case; but yet you have
treated me (how shall I put it gently?) with as much haughtiness
or boldness as they who after being called to a feast rise up
against it, and insult their host; for you, though you are not of
the number of those who are without, or are invited to the
marriage, but are yourselves those who invited me, and bound me
to the Holy Table, and shewed me the glory of the Bridal Chamber,
then deserted me (this is the most splendid thing about you)-one
to his field, another to his newly bought yoke of oxen, another
to his just-married wife, another to some other trifling matter;
you were all scattered and dispersed, caring little for the
Bridechamber and the Bridegroom.
V. On this account I was filled with
despondency and perplexity-for I will not keep silence about what
I have suffered-and I was very near withholding the discourse
which I was minded to bestow as a Marriage-gift, the most
beautiful and precious of all I had; and I very nearly let it
loose upon you, whom, now that the violence had once been done to
me, I greatly longed for: for I thought I could get from this a
splendid theme, and because my love sharpened my tongue-love
which is very hot and ready for accusation when it is stirred to
jealousy by grief which it conceives from some unexpected
neglect. If any of you has been pierced with love's sting, and
has felt himself neglected, he knows the feeling, and will pardon
one who so suffers, because he himself has been near the same
frenzy.
VI. But it is not permitted to me at the
present time to say to you anything upbraiding; and God forbid I
ever should. And even now perhaps I have reproached you more than
in due measure, the Sacred Flock, the praise-worthy nurselings of
Christ, the Divine inheritance; by which, O God, Thou art rich,
even wert Thou poor in all other respects. To Thee, I think, are
fitting those words, "The lot is fallen unto Thee in a fair
ground: yea Thou hast the goodliest heritage." Nor will I allow
that the most populous cities or the broadest flocks have any
advantage over us, the little ones of the smallest of all the
tribes of Israel, of the least of the thousands of Judah, of the
little Bethlehem among cities, where Christ was born and is from
the beginning well-known and worshipped; amongst those whom the
Father is exalted, and the Son is held to be equal to Him, and
the Holy Ghost is glorified with Them: we who are of one soul,
who mind the same thing, who in nothing injure the Trinity,
neither by preferring One Person above another, nor by cutting
off any: as those bad umpires and measurers of the Godhead do,
who by magnifying One Person more than is fit, diminish and
insult the whole.
VII. But do ye also, if you bear me any
good will-ye who are my husbandry, my vineyard, my own bowels, or
rather His Who is our common Father, for in Christ he hath
begotten you through the Gospels-shew to us also some respect. It
is only fair, since we have honoured you above all else: ye are
my witnesses, ye, and they who have placed in our hands
this-shall I say Authority, or Service? And if to him that loveth
most is due, how shall I measure the love, for which I have made
you my debtors by my own love? Rather, shew respect for
yourselves, and the Image committed to your care, and Him Who
committed it, and the Sufferings of Christ, and your hopes
therefrom, holding fast the faith which ye have received, and in
which ye were brought up, by which also ye are being saved, and
trust to save others (for not many, be well assured, can boast of
what you can), and reckoning piety to consist, not in often
speaking about God, but in silence for the most part, for the
tongue is a dangerous thing to men, if it be not governed by
reason. Believe that listening is always less dangerous than
talking, just as learning about God is more pleasant than
teaching. Leave the more accurate search into these questions to
those who are the Stewards of the Word; and for yourselves,
worship a little in words, but more by your actions, and rather
by keeping the Law than by admiring the Lawgiver; shew your love
for Him by fleeing from wickedness, pursuing after virtue, living
in the Spirit, walking in the Spirit, drawing your knowledge from
Him, building upon the foundation of the faith, not wood or hay
or stubble, weak materials and easily spent when the fire shall
try our works or destroy them; but gold, silver, precious stones,
which remain and stand.
VIII. So may ye act, and so may ye honour
us, whether present or absent, whether taking your part in our
sermons, or preferring to do something else: and may ye be the
children of God, pure and unblamable, in the midst of a crooked
and perverse generation: and may ye never be entangled in the
snares of the wicked that go round about, or bound with the chain
of your sins. May the Word in you never be smothered with cares
of this life and so ye become unfruitful: but may ye walk in the
King's Highway, turning aside neither to the right hand nor to
the left, but led by the Spirit through the strait gate. Then all
our affairs shall prosper, both now and at the inquest There, in
Christ Jesus our Lord, to Whom be the glory for ever.
Amen.
Oration VII
Panegyric on His Brother S. Caesarius
1. It may be, my friends, my brethren, my
fathers (ye who are dear to me in reality as well as in name)
that you think that I, who am about to pay the sad tribute of
lamentation to him who has departed, am eager to undertake the
task, and shall, as most men delight to do, speak at great length
and in eloquent style. And so some of you, who have had like
sorrows to bear, are prepared to join in my mourning and
lamentation, in order to bewail your own griefs in mine, and
learn to feel pain at the afflictions of a friend, while others
are looking to feast their ears in the enjoyment of my words. For
they suppose that I must needs make my misfortune an occasion for
display-as was once my wont, when possessed of a superabundance
of earthly things, and ambitious, above all, of oratorical
renown-before I looked up to Him Who is the true and highest
Word, and gave all up to God, from Whom all things come, and took
God for all in all. Now pray do not think this of me, if you wish
to think of me aright. For I am neither going to lament for him
who is gone more than is good-as I should not approve of such
conduct even in others-nor am I going to praise him beyond due
measure. Albeit that language is a dear and especially proper
tribute to one gifted with it, and eulogy to one who was
exceedingly fond of my words-aye, not only a tribute, but a debt,
the most just of all debts. But even in my tears and admiration I
must respect the law which regards such matters: nor is this
alien to our philosophy; for he says The memory of the just is
accompanied with eulogies, and also, Let tears fall down over the
dead, and begin to lament, as if thou hadst suffered great harm
thyself: removing us equally from insensibility and immoderation.
I shall proceed then, not only to exhibit the weakness of human
nature, but also to put you in mind of the dignity of the soul,
and, giving such consolation as is due to those who are in
sorrow, transfer our grief, from that which concerns the flesh
and temporal things, to those things which are spiritual and
eternal.
2. The parents of Caesarius, to take first
the point which best becomes me, are known to you all. Their
excellence you are eager to notice, and hear of with admiration,
and share in the task of setting it forth to any, if there be
such, who know it not: for no single man is able to do so
entirely, and the task is one beyond the powers of a single
tongue, however laborious, however zealous. Among the many and
great points for which they are to be celebrated (I trust I may
not seem extravagant in praising my own family) the greatest of
all, which more than any other stamps their character, is piety.
By their hoar hairs they lay claim to reverence, but they are no
less venerable for their virtue than for their age; for while
their bodies are bent beneath the burden of their years, their
souls renew their youth in God.
3. His father was well grafted out of the
wild olive tree into the good one, and so far partook of its
fatness as to be entrusted with the engrafting of others, and
charged with the culture of souls, presiding in a manner becoming
his high office over this people, like a second Aaron or Moses,
bidden himself to draw near to God, and to convey the Divine
Voice to the others who stand afar off; gentle, meek, calm in
mien, fervent in spirit, a fine man in external appearance, but
richer still in that which is out of sight. But why should I
describe him whom you know? For I could not even by speaking at
great length say as much as he deserves, or as much as each of
you knows and expects to be said of him. It is then better to
leave your own fancy to picture him, than mutilate by my words
the object of your admiration.
4. His mother was consecrated to God by
virtue of her descent from a saintly family, and was possessed of
piety as a necessary inheritance, not only for herself, but also
for her children-being indeed a holy lump from a holy
firstfruits. And this she so far increased and amplified that
some, (bold though the statement be, I will utter it,) have both
believed and said that even her husband's perfection has been the
work of none other than herself; and, oh how wonderful! she
herself, as the reward of her piety, has received a greater and
more perfect piety. Lovers of their children and of Christ as
they both were, what is most extraordinary, they were far greater
lovers of Christ than of their children: yea, even their one
enjoyment of their children was that they should be acknowledged
and named by Christ, and their one measure of their blessedness
in their children was their virtue and close association with the
Chief Good. Compassionate, sympathetic, snatching many a treasure
from moths and robbers, and from the prince of this world, to
transfer it from their sojourn here to the [true] habitation,
laying up in store for their children the heavenly splendour as
their greatest inheritance. Thus have they reached a fair old
age, equally reverend both for virtue and for years, and full of
days, alike of those which abide and those which pass away; each
one failing to secure the first prize here below only so far as
equalled by the other; yea, they have fulfilled the measure of
every happiness with the exception of this last trial, or
discipline, whichever anyone may think we ought to call it; I
mean their having to send before them the child who was, owing to
his age, in greater danger of falling, and so to close their life
in safety, and be translated with all their family to the realms
above.
5. I have entered into these details, not
from a desire to eulogize them, for this, I know well, it would
be difficult worthily to do, if I made their praise the subject
of my whole oration, but to set forth the excellence inherited
from his parents by Caesarius, and so prevent you from being
surprised or incredulous, that one sprung from such progenitors,
should have deserved such praises himself; nay, strange indeed
would it have been, had he looked to others and disregarded the
examples of his kinsfolk at home. His early life was such as
becomes those really well born and destined for a good life. I
say little of his qualities evident to all, his beauty, his
stature, his manifold gracefulness, and harmonious disposition,
as shown in the tones of his voice-for it is not my office to
laud qualities of this kind, however important they may seem to
others-and proceed with what I have to say of the points which,
even if I wished, I could with difficulty pass by.
6. Bred and reared under such influences,
we were fully trained in the education afforded here, in which
none could say how far he excelled most of us from the quickness
and extent of his abilities-and how can I recall those days
without my tears showing that, contrary to my promises, my
feelings have overcome my philosophic restraint? The time came
when it was decided that we should leave home, and then for the
first time we were separated, for I studied rhetoric in the then
flourishing schools of Palestine; he went to Alexandria, esteemed
both then and now the home of every branch of learning. Which of
his qualities shall I place first and foremost, or which can I
omit with least injury to my description? Who was more faithful
to his teacher than he? Who more kindly to his classmates? Who
more carefully avoided the society and companionship of the
depraved? Who attached himself more closely to that of the most
excellent, and among others, of the most esteemed and illustrious
of his countrymen? For he knew that we are strongly influenced to
virtue or vice by our companions. And in consequence of all this,
who was more honoured by the authorities than he, and whom did
the whole city (though all individuals are concealed in it,
because of its size), esteem more highly for his discretion, or
deem more illustrious for his intelligence?
7. What branch of learning did he not
master, or rather, in what branch of study did he not surpass
those who had made it their sole study? Whom did he allow even to
approach him, not only of his own time and age, but even of his
elders, who had devoted many more years to study? All subjects he
studied as one, and each as thoroughly as if he knew no other.
The brilliant in intellect, he surpassed in industry, the devoted
students in quickness of perception; nay, rather he outstripped
in rapidity those who were rapid, in application those who were
laborious, and in both respects those who were distinguished in
both. From geometry and astronomy, that science so dangerous to
anyone else, he gathered all that was helpful (I mean that he was
led by the harmony and order of the heavenly bodies to reverence
their Maker), and avoided what is injurious; not attributing all
things that are or happen to the influence of the stars, like
those who raise their own fellow-servant, the creation, in
rebellion against the Creator, but referring, as is reasonable,
the motion of these bodies, and all other things besides, to God.
In arithmetic and mathematics, and in the wonderful art of
medicine, in so far as it treats of physiology and temperament,
and the causes of disease, in order to remove the roots and so
destroy their offspring with them, who is there so ignorant or
contentious as to think him inferior to himself, and not to be
glad to be reckoned next to him, and carry off the second prize?
This indeed is no unsupported assertion, but East and West alike,
and every place which he afterward visited, are as pillars
inscribed with the record of his learning.
8. But when, after gathering into his
single soul every kind of excellence and knowledge, as a mighty
merchantman gathers every sort of ware, he was voyaging to his
own city, in order to communicate to others the fair cargo of his
culture, there befell a wondrous thing, which I must, as its
mention is most cheering to me and may delight you, briefly set
forth. Our mother, in her motherly love for her children, had
offered up a prayer that, as she had sent us forth together, she
might see us together return home. For we seemed, to our mother
at least, if not to others, to form a pair worthy of her prayers
and glances, if seen together, though now, alas, our connection
has been severed. And God, Who hears a righteous prayer, and
honours the love of parents for well-disposed children, so
ordered that, without any design or agreement on our part, the
one from Alexandria, the other from Greece, the one by sea, the
other by land, we arrived at the same city at the same time. This
city was Byzantium, which now presides over Europe, in which
Caesarius, after the lapse of a short time, gained such a repute,
that public honours, an alliance with an illustrious family, and
a seat in the council of state were offered him; and a mission
was despatched to the Emperor by public decision, to beg that the
first of cities be adorned and honoured by the first of scholars
(if he cared at all for its being indeed the first, and worthy of
its name); and that to all its other titles to distinction this
further one be added, that it was embellished by having Caesarius
as its physician and its inhabitant, although its brilliancy was
already assured by its throngs of great men both in philosophy
and other branches of learning. But enough of this. At this time
there happened what seemed to others a chance without reason or
cause, such as frequently occurs of its own accord in our day,
but was more than sufficiently manifest to devout minds as the
result of the prayers to god-fearing parents, which were answered
by the united arrival of their sons by land and sea.
9. Well, among the noble traits of
Caesarius' character, we must not fail to note one, which perhaps
is in others' eyes slight and unworthy of mention, but seemed to
me, both at the time and since, of the highest import, if indeed
brotherly love be a praiseworthy quality; nor shall I ever cease
to place it in the first rank, in relating the story of his life.
Although the metropolis strove to retain him by the honours I
have mentioned, and declared that it would under no circumstances
let him go, my influence, which he valued most highly on all
occasions, prevailed upon him to listen to the prayer of his
parents, to supply his country's need, and to grant me my own
desire. And when he thus returned home in my company, he
preferred me not only to cities and peoples, not only to honours
and revenues, which had in part already flowed to him in
abundance from many sources and in part were within his reach,
but even to the Emperor himself and his imperial commands. From
this time, then, having shaken off all ambition, as a hard master
and a painful disorder, I resolved to practise philosophy and
adapt myself to the higher life: or rather the desire was earlier
born, the life came later. But my brother, who had dedicated to
his country the firstfruits of his learning, and gained an
admiration worthy of his efforts, was afterwards led by the
desire of fame, and, as he persuaded me, of being the guardian of
the city, to betake himself to court, not indeed according to my
own wishes or judgment; for I will confess to you that I think it
a better and grander thing to be in the lowest rank with God than
to win the first place with an earthly king. Nevertheless I
cannot blame him, for inasmuch as philosophy is the greatest, so
is it the most difficult, of professions, which can be taken in
hand by but few, and only by those who have been called forth by
the Divine magnanimity, which gives its hand to those who are
honoured by its preference. Yet it is no small thing if one, who
has chosen the lower form of life, follows after goodness, and
sets greater store on God and his own salvation than on earthly
lustre; using it as a stage, or a manifold ephemeral mask while
playing in the drama of this world, but himself living unto God
with that image which he knows that he has received from Him, and
must render to Him Who gave it. That this was certainly the
purpose of Caesarius, we know full well.
10. Among physicians he gained the foremost
place with no great trouble, by merely exhibiting his capacity,
or rather some slight specimen of his capacity, and was forthwith
numbered among the friends of the Emperor, and enjoyed the
highest honours. But he placed the humane functions of his art at
the disposal of the authorities free of cost, knowing that
nothing leads to further advancement than virtue and renown for
honourable deeds; so that he far surpassed in fame those to whom
he was inferior in rank. By his modesty he so won the love of all
that they entrusted their precious charges to his care, without
requiring him to be sworn by Hippocrates, since the simplicity of
Crates was nothing to his own: winning in general a respect
beyond his rank; for besides the present repute he was ever
thought to have justly won, a still greater one was anticipated
for him, both by the Emperors themselves and by all who occupied
the nearest positions to them. But, most important, neither by
his fame, nor by the luxury which surrounded him, was his
nobility of soul corrupted; for amidst his many claims to honour,
he himself cared most for being, and being known to be, a
Christian, and, compared with this, all other things were to him
but trifling toys. For they belong to the part we play before
others on a stage which is very quickly set up and taken down
again-perhaps indeed more quickly destroyed than put together, as
we may see from the manifold changes of life, and fluctuations of
prosperity; while the only real and securely abiding good thing
is godliness.
11. Such was the philosophy of Caesarius,
even at court: these were the ideas amidst which he lived and
died, discovering and presenting to God, in the hidden man, a
still deeper godliness than was publicly visible. And if I must
pass by all else, his protection of his kinsmen in distress, his
contempt for arrogance, his freedom from assumption towards
friends, his boldness towards men in power, the numerous contests
and arguments in which he engaged with many on behalf of the
truth, not merely for the sake of argument, but with deep piety
and fervour, I must speak of one point at least as especially
worthy of note. The Emperor of unhappy memory was raging against
us, whose madness in rejecting Christ, after making himself its
first victim, had now rendered him intolerable to others; though
he did not, like other fighters against Christ, grandly enlist
himself on the side of impiety, but veiled his persecution under
the form of equity; and, ruled by the crooked serpent which
possessed his soul, dragged down into his own pit his wretched
victims by manifold devices. His first artifice and contrivance
was, to deprive us of the honour of our conflicts (for, noble man
as he was, he grudged this to Christians), by causing us, who
suffered for being Christians, to be punished as evil doers: the
second was, to call this process persuasion, and not tyranny, so
that the disgrace of those who chose to side with impiety might
be greater than their danger. Some he won over by money, some by
dignities, some by promises, some by various honours, which he
bestowed, not royally but in right servile style, in the sight of
all, while everyone was influenced by the witchery of his words,
and his own example. At last he assailed Caesarius. How utter was
the derangement and folly which could hope to take for his prey a
man like Caesarius, my brother, the son of parents like
ours!
12. However, that I may dwell awhile upon
this point, and luxuriate in my story as men do who are
eyewitnesses in some marvellous event, that noble man, fortified
with the sign of Christ, and defending himself with His Mighty
Word, entered the lists against an adversary experienced in arms
and strong in his skill in argument. In no wise abashed at the
sight, nor shrinking at all from his high purpose through
flattery, he was an athlete ready, both in word and deed, to meet
a rival of equal power. Such then was the arena, and so equipped
the champion of godliness. The judge on one side was Christ,
arming the athlete with His own sufferings: and on the other a
dreadful tyrant, persuasive by his skill in argument, and
overawing him by the weight of his authority; and as spectators,
on either hand, both those who were still left on the side of
godliness and those who had been snatched away by him, watching
whether victory inclined to their own side or to the other, and
more anxious as to which would gain the day than the combatants
themselves.
13. Didst thou not fear for Caesarius, lest
aught unworthy of his zeal should befall him? Nay, be ye of good
courage. For the victory is with Christ, Who overcame the world.
Now for my part, be well assured, I should be highly interested
in setting forth the details of the arguments and allegations
used on that occasion, for indeed the discussion contains certain
feats and elegances, which I dwell on with no slight pleasure;
but this would be quite foreign to an occasion and discourse like
the present. And when, after having torn to shreds all his
opponent's sophistries, and thrust aside as mere child's play
every assault, veiled or open, Caesarius in a loud clear voice
declared that he was and remained a Christian-not even thus was
he finally dismissed. For indeed, the Emperor was possessed by an
eager desire to enjoy and be distinguished by his culture, and
then uttered in the hearing of all his famous saying-O happy
father, O unhappy sons! thus deigning to honour me, whose culture
and godliness he had known at Athens, with a share in the
dishonour of Caesarius, who was remanded for a further trial
(since Justice was fitly arming the Emperor against the
Persians), and welcomed by us after his happy escape and
bloodless victory, as more illustrious for his dishonour than for
his celebrity.
14. This victory I esteem far more sublime
and honourable than the Emperor's mighty power and splendid
purple and costly diadem. I am more elated in describing it than
if he had won from him the half of his Empire. During the evil
days he lived in retirement, obedient herein to our Christian
law, which bids us, when occasion offers, to make ventures on
behalf of the truth, and not be traitors to our religion from
cowardice; yet refrain, as long as may be, from rushing into
danger, either in fear for our own souls, or to spare those who
bring the danger upon us. But when the gloom had been dispersed,
and the righteous sentence had been pronounced in a foreign land,
and the glittering sword had struck down the ungodly, and power
had returned to the hands of Christians, what boots it to say
with what glory and honour, with how many and great testimonies,
as if bestowing rather than receiving a favour, he was welcomed
again at the Court; his new honour succeeding to that of former
days; while time changed its Emperors, the repute and commanding
influence of Caesarius with them was undisturbed, nay, they vied
with each other in striving to attach him most closely to
themselves, and be known as his special friends and
acquaintances. Such was the godliness of Caesarius, such its
results. Let all men, young and old, give ear, and press on
through the same virtue to the same distinction, for glorious is
the fruit of good labours, if they suppose this to be worth
striving after, and a part of true happiness.
15. Again another wonder concerning him is
a strong argument for his parents' piety and his own. He was
living in Bithynia, holding an office of no small importance from
the Emperor, viz., the stewardship of his revenue, and care of
the exchequer: for this had been assigned to him by the Emperor
as a prelude to the highest offices. And when, a short time ago,
the earthquake in Nicaea occurred, which is said to have been the
most serious within the memory of man, overwhelming in a common
destruction almost all the inhabitants and the beauty of the
city, he alone, or with very few of the men of rank, survived the
danger, being shielded by the very falling ruins in his
incredible escape, and bearing slight traces of the peril; yet he
allowed fear to lead him to a more important salvation, for he
dedicated himself entirely to the Supreme Providence; he
renounced the service of transitory things, and attached himself
to another court. This he both purposed himself, and made the
object of the united earnest prayers to which he invited me by
letter, when I seized this opportunity to give him warning, as I
never ceased to do when pained that his great nature should be
occupied in affairs beneath it, and that a soul so fitted for
philosophy should, like the sun behind a cloud, be obscured amid
the whirl of public life. Unscathed though he had been by the
earthquake, he was not proof against disease, since he was but
human. His escape was peculiar to himself; his death common to
all mankind; the one the token of his piety, the other the result
of his nature. The former, for our consolation, preceded his
fate, so that, though shaken by his death, we might exult in the
extraordinary character of his preservation. And now our
illustrious Caesarius has been restored to us, when his honoured
dust and celebrated corse, after being escorted home amidst a
succession of hymns and public orations, has been honoured by the
holy hands of his parents; while his mother, substituting the
festal garments of religion for the trappings of woe, has
overcome her tears by her philosophy, and lulled to sleep
lamentations by psalmody, as her son enjoys honours worthy of his
newly regenerate soul, which has been, through water, transformed
by the Spirit.
16. This, Caesarius, is my funeral offering
to thee, this the firstfruits of my words, which thou hast often
blamed me for withholding, yet wouldst have stripped off, had
they been bestowed on thee; with this ornament I adorn thee, an
ornament, I know well, far dearer to thee than all others, though
it be not of the soft flowing tissues of silk, in which while
living, with virtue for thy sole adorning, thou didst not, like
the many, rejoice; nor texture of transparent linen, nor
outpouring of costly unguents, which thou hadst long resigned to
the boudoirs of the fair, with their sweet savours lasting but a
single day; nor any other small thing valued by small minds,
which would have all been hidden to-day with thy fair form by
this bitter stone. Far hence be games and stories of the Greeks,
the honours of ill-fated youths, with their petty prizes for
petty contests; and all the libations and firstfruits or garlands
and newly plucked flowers, wherewith men honour the departed, in
obedience to ancient custom and unreasoning grief, rather than
reason. My gift is an oration, which perhaps succeeding time will
receive at my hand and ever keep in motion, that it may not
suffer him who has left us to be utterly lost to earth, but may
ever keep him whom we honour in men's ears and minds, as it sets
before them, more clearly than a portrait, the image of him for
whom we mourn.
17. Such is my offering; if it be slight
and inferior to his merit, God loveth that which is according to
our power. Part of our gift is now complete, the remainder we
will now pay by offering (those of us who still survive) every
year our honours and memorials. And now for thee, sacred and holy
soul, we pray for an entrance into heaven; mayest thou enjoy such
repose as the bosom of Abraham affords, mayest thou behold the
choir of Angels, and the glories and splendours of sainted men;
aye, mayest thou be united to that choir and share in their joy,
looking down from on high on all things here, on what men call
wealth, and despicable dignities, and deceitful honours, and the
errors of our senses, and the tangle of this life, and its
confusion and ignorance, as if we were fighting in the dark;
whilst thou art in attendance upon the Great King and filled with
the light which streams forth from Him: and may it be ours
hereafter, receiving therefrom no such slender rivulet, as is the
object of our fancy in this day of mirrors and enigmas, to attain
to the fount of good itself, gazing with pure mind upon the truth
in its purity, and finding a reward for our eager toil here below
on behalf of the good, in our more perfect possession and vision
of the good on high: the end to which our sacred books and
teachers foretell that our course of divine mysteries shall lead
us.
18. What now remains? To bring the healing
of the Word to those in sorrow. And a powerful remedy for
mourners is sympathy, for sufferers are best consoled by those
who have to bear a like suffering. To such, then, I specially
address myself, of whom I should be ashamed, if, with all other
virtues, they do not show the elements of patience. For even if
they surpass all others in love of their children, let them
equally surpass them in love of wisdom and love of Christ, and in
the special practice of meditation on our departure hence,
impressing it likewise on their children, making even their whole
life a preparation for death. But if your misfortune still clouds
your reason and, like the moisture which dims our eyes, hides
from you the clear view of your duty, come, ye elders, receive
the consolation of a young man, ye fathers, that of a child, who
ought to be admonished by men as old as you, who have admonished
many and gathered experience from your many years. Yet wonder
not, if in my youth I admonish the aged; and if in aught I can
see better than the hoary, I offer it to you. How much longer
have we to live, ye men of honoured eld, so near to God? How long
are we to suffer here? Not even man's whole life is long,
compared with the Eternity of the Divine Nature, still less the
remains of life, and what I may call the parting of our human
breath, the close of our frail existence. How much has Caesarius
outstripped us? How long shall we be left to mourn his departure?
Are we not hastening to the same abode? Shall we not soon be
covered by the same stone? Shall we not shortly be reduced to the
same dust? And what in these short days will be our gain, save
that after it has been ours to see, or suffer, or perchance even
to do, more ill, we must discharge the common and inexorable
tribute to the law of nature, by following some, preceding
others, to the tomb, mourning these, being lamented by those, and
receiving from some that meed of tears which we ourselves had
paid to others?
19. Such, my brethren, is our existence,
who live this transient life, such our pastime upon earth: we
come into existence out of non-existence, and after existing are
dissolved. We are unsubstantial dreams, impalpable visions, like
the flight of a passing bird, like a ship leaving no track upon
the sea, a speck of dust, a vapour, an early dew, a flower that
quickly blooms, and quickly fades. As for man his days are as
grass, as a flower of the field, so he flourisheth. Well hath
inspired David discoursed of our frailty, and again in these
words, "Let me know the shortness of my days;" and he defines the
days of man as "of a span long." And what wouldst thou say to
Jeremiah, who complains of his mother in sorrow for his birth,
and that on account of others' faults? I have seen all things,
says the preacher, I have reviewed in thought all human things,
wealth, pleasure, power, unstable glory, wisdom which evades us
rather than is won; then pleasure again, wisdom again, often
revolving the same objects, the pleasures of appetite, orchards,
numbers of slaves, store of wealth, serving men and serving
maids, singing men and singing women, arms, spearmen, subject
nations, collected tributes, the pride of kings, all the
necessaries and superfluities of life, in which I surpassed all
the kings that were before me. And what does he say after all
these things? Vanity of vanities, all is vanity and vexation of
spirit, possibly meaning some unreasoning longing of the soul,
and distraction of man condemned to this from the original fall:
but hear, he says, the conclusion of the whole matter, Fear God.
This is his stay in his perplexity, and this is thy only gain
from life here below, to be guided through the disorder of the
things which are seen and shaken, to the things which stand firm
and are not moved.
20. Let us not then mourn Caesarius but
ourselves, knowing what evils he has escaped to which we are left
behind, and what treasure we shall lay up, unless, earnestly
cleaving unto God and outstripping transitory things, we press
towards the life above, deserting the earth while we are still
upon the earth, and earnestly following the spirit which bears us
upward. Painful as this is to the faint-hearted, it is as nothing
to men of brave mind. And let us consider it thus. Caesarius will
not reign, but rather will he be reigned over by others. He will
strike terror into no one, but he will be free from fear of any
harsh master, often himself unworthy even of a subject's
position. He will not amass wealth, but neither will he be liable
to envy, or be pained at lack of success, or be ever seeking to
add to his gains as much again. For such is the disease of
wealth, which knows no limit to its desire of more, and continues
to make drinking the medicine for thirst. He will make no display
of his power of speaking, yet for his speaking will he be
admired. He will not discourse upon the dicta of Hippocrates and
Galen, and their adversaries, but neither will he be troubled by
diseases, and suffer pain at the misfortunes of others. He will
not set forth the principles of Eucleides, Ptolemaeus, and Heron,
but neither will he be pained by the tumid vaunts of uncultured
men. He will make no display of the doctrines of Plato, and
Aristotle, and Pyrrho, and the names of any Democritus, and
Heracleitus, Anaxagoras, Cleanthes and Epicurus, and all the
members of the venerable Porch and Academy: but neither will he
trouble himself with the solution of their cunning syllogisms.
What need of further details? Yet here are some which all men
honour or desire. Nor wife nor child will he have beside him, but
he will escape mourning for, or being mourned by them, or leaving
them to others, or being left behind himself as a memorial of
misfortune. He will inherit no property: but he will have such
heirs as are of the greatest service, such as he himself wished,
so that he departed hence a rich man, bearing with him all that
was his. What an ambition! What a new consolation! What
magnanimity in his executors! A proclamation has been heard,
worthy of the ears of all, and a mother's grief has been made
void by a fair and holy promise, to give entirely to her son his
wealth as a funeral offering on his behalf, leaving nothing to
those who expected it.
21. Is this inadequate for our consolation?
I will add a more potent remedy. I believe the words of the wise,
that every fair and God-beloved soul, when, set free from the
bonds of the body, it departs hence, at once enjoys a sense and
perception of the blessings which await it, inasmuch as that
which darkened it has been purged away, or laid aside-I know not
how else to term it-and feels a wondrous pleasure and exultation,
and goes rejoicing to meet its Lord, having escaped as it were
from the grievous poison of life here, and shaken off the fetters
which bound it and held down the wings of the mind, and so enters
on the enjoyment of the bliss laid up for it, of which it has
even now some conception. Then, a little later, it receives its
kindred flesh, which once shared in its pursuits of things above,
from the earth which both gave and had been entrusted with it,
and in some way known to God, who knit them together and
dissolved them, enters with it upon the inheritance of the glory
there. And, as it shared, through their close union, in its
hardships, so also it bestows upon it a portion of its joys,
gathering it up entirely into itself, and becoming with it one in
spirit and in mind and in God, the mortal and mutable being
swallowed up of life. Hear at least how the inspired Ezekiel
discourses of the knitting together of bones and sinews, how
after him Saint Paul speaks of the earthly tabernacle, and the
house not made with hands, the one to be dissolved, the other
laid up in heaven, alleging absence from the body to be presence
with the Lord, and bewailing his life in it as an exile, and
therefore longing for and hastening to his release. Why am I
faint-hearted in my hopes? Why behave like a mere creature of a
day? I await the voice of the Archangel, the last trumpet, the
transformation of the heavens, the transfiguration of the earth,
the liberation of the elements, the renovation of the universe.
Then shall I see Caesarius himself, no longer in exile, no longer
laid upon a bier, no longer the object of mourning and pity, but
brilliant, glorious, heavenly, such as in my dreams I have often
beheld thee, dearest and most loving of brothers, pictured thus
by my desire, if not by the very truth.
22. But now, laying aside lamentation, I
will look at myself, and examine my feelings, that I may not
unconsciously have in myself anything to be lamented. O ye sons
of men, for the words apply to you, how long will ye be
hard-hearted and gross in mind? Why do ye love vanity and seek
after leasing, supposing life here to be a great thing and these
few days many, and shrinking from this separation, welcome and
pleasant as it is, as if it were really grievous and awful? Are
we not to know ourselves? Are we not to cast away visible things?
Are we not to look to the things unseen? Are we not, even if we
are somewhat grieved, to be on the contrary distressed at our
lengthened sojourn, like holy David, who calls things here the
tents of darkness, and the place of affliction, and the deep
mire, and the shadow of death; because we linger in the tombs we
bear about with us, because, though we are gods, we die like men
the death of sin? This is my fear, this day and night accompanies
me, and will not let me breathe, on one side the glory, on the
other the place of correction: the former I long for till I can
say, "My soul fainteth for Thy salvation;" from the latter I
shrink back shuddering; yet I am not afraid that this body of
mine should utterly perish in dissolution and corruption; but
that the glorious creature of God (for glorious it is if upright,
just as it is dishonourable if sinful) in which is reason,
morality, and hope, should be condemned to the same dishonour as
the brutes, and be no better after death; a fate to be desired
for the wicked, who are worthy of the fire yonder.
23. Would that I might mortify my members
that are upon the earth, would that I might spend my all upon the
spirit, walking in the way that is narrow and trodden by few, not
that which is broad and easy. For glorious and great are its
consequences, and our hope is greater than our desert. What is
man, that Thou art mindful of him? What is this new mystery which
concerns me? I am small and great, lowly and exalted, mortal and
immortal, earthly and heavenly. I share one condition with the
lower world, the other with God; one with the flesh, the other
with the spirit. I must be buried with Christ, arise with Christ,
be joint heir with Christ, become the son of God, yea, God
Himself. See whither our argument has carried us in its progress.
I almost own myself indebted to the disaster which has inspired
me with such thoughts, and made me more enamoured of my departure
hence. This is the purpose of the great mystery for us. This is
the purpose for us of God, Who for us was made man and became
poor, to raise our flesh, and recover His image, and remodel man,
that we might all be made one in Christ, who was perfectly made
in all of us all that He Himself is, that we might no longer be
male and female, barbarian, Scythian, bond or free (which are
badges of the flesh), but might bear in ourselves only the stamp
of God, by Whom and for Whom we were made, and have so far
received our form and model from Him, that we are recognized by
it alone.
24. Yea, would that what we hope for might
be, according to the great kindness of our bountiful God, Who
asks for little and bestows great things, both in the present and
in the future, upon those who truly love Him; bearing all things,
enduring all things for their love and hope of Him, giving thanks
for all things favourable and unfavourable alike: I mean pleasant
and painful, for reason knows that even these are often
instruments of salvation; commending to Him our own souls and the
souls of those fellow wayfarers who, being more ready, have
gained their rest before us. And, now that we have done this, let
us cease from our discourse, and you too from your tears,
hastening, as you now are, to your tomb, which as a sad abiding
gift you have given to Caesarius, seasonably prepared as it was
for his parents in their old age, and now unexpectedly bestowed
on their son in his youth, though not without reason in His eyes
Who disposes our affairs. O Lord and Maker of all things, and
specially of this our frame! O God and Father and Pilot of men
who are Thine! O Lord of life and death! O Judge and Benefactor
of our souls! O Maker and Transformer in due time of all things
by Thy designing Word, according to the knowledge of the depth of
Thy wisdom and providence! do Thou now receive Caesarius, the
firstfruits of our pilgrimage; and if he who was last is first,
we bow before Thy Word, by which the universe is ruled; yet do
Thou receive us also afterwards, in a time when Thou mayest be
found, having ordered us in the flesh as long as is for our
profit; yea, receive us, prepared and not troubled by Thy fear,
not departing from Thee in our last day, nor violently borne away
from things here, like souls fond of the world and the flesh, but
filled with eagerness for that blessed and enduring life which is
in Christ Jesus, our Lord, to whom be glory, world without end.
Amen.
Oration VIII
On his Sister Gorgonia
Funeral Oration on his Sister
Gorgonia.
1. In praising my sister, I shall pay
honour to one of my own family; yet my praise will not be false,
because it is given to a relation, but, because it is true, will
be worthy of commendation, and its truth is based not only upon
its justice, but upon well-known facts. For, even if I wished, I
should not be permitted to be partial; since everyone who hears
me stands, like a skilful critic, between my oration and the
truth, to discountenance exaggeration, yet, if he be a man of
justice, demanding what is really due. So that my fear is not of
outrunning the truth, but, on the contrary, of falling short of
it, and lessening her just repute by the extreme inadequacy of my
panegyric; for it is a hard task to match her excellences with
suitable action and words. Let us not then be so unjust as to
praise every characteristic of other folk, and disparage really
valuable qualities because they are our own, so as to make some
men gain by their absence of kindred with us, while others suffer
for their relationship. For justice would be violated alike by
the praise of the one and the neglect of the other, whereas if we
make the truth our standard and rule, and look to her alone,
disregarding all the objects of the vulgar and the mean, we shall
praise or pass over everything according to its
merits.
2. Yet it would be most unreasonable of
all, if, while we refuse to regard it as a righteous thing to
defraud, insult, accuse, or treat unjustly in any way, great or
small, those who are our kindred, and consider wrong done to
those nearest to us the worst of all; we were yet to imagine that
it would be an act of justice to deprive them of such an oration
as is due most of all to the good, and spend more words upon
those who are evil, and beg for indulgent treatment, than on
those who are excellent and merely claim their due. For if we are
not prevented, as would be far more just, from praising men who
have lived outside our own circle, because we do not know and
cannot personally testify to their merits, shall we be prevented
from praising those whom we do know, because of our friendship,
or the envy of the multitude, and especially those who have
departed hence, whom it is too late to ingratiate ourselves with,
since they have escaped, amongst all other things, from the reach
of praise or blame.
3. Having now made a sufficient defence on
these points, and shown how necessary it is for me to be the
speaker, come, let me proceed with my eulogy, rejecting all
daintiness and elegance of style (for she whom we are praising
was unadorned and the absence of ornament was to her, beauty),
and yet performing, as a most indispensable debt, all those
funeral rites which are her due, and further instructing everyone
in a zealous imitation of the same virtue, since it is my object
in every word and action to promote the perfection of those
committed to my charge. The task of praising the country and
family of our departed one I leave to another, more scrupulous in
adhering to the rules of eulogy; nor will he lack many fair
topics, if he wish to deck her with external ornaments, as men
deck a splendid and beautiful form with gold and precious stones,
and the artistic devices of the craftsman; which, while they
accentuate ugliness by their contrast, can add no attractiveness
to the beauty which surpasses them. For my part, I will only
conform to such rules so far as to allude to our common parents,
for it would not be reverent to pass unnoticed the great blessing
of having such parents and teachers, and then speedily direct my
attention to herself, without further taxing the patience of
those who are eager to learn what manner of woman she
was.
4. Who is there who knows not the Abraham
and Sarah of these our latter days, Gregory and Nonna his wife?
For it is not well to omit the incitement to virtue of mentioning
their names. He has been justified by faith, she has dwelt with
him who is faithful; he beyond all hope has been the father of
many nations, she has spiritually travailed in their birth; he
escaped from the bondage of his father's gods, she is the
daughter as well as the mother of the free; he went out from
kindred and home for the sake of the land of promise, she was the
occasion of his exile; for on this head alone I venture to claim
for her an honour higher than that of Sarah; he set forth on so
noble a pilgrimage, she readily shared with him in its toils; he
gave himself to the Lord, she both called her husband lord and
regarded him as such, and in part was thereby justified; whose
was the promise, from whom, as far as in them lay, was born
Isaac, and whose was the gift.
5. This good shepherd was the result of his
wife's prayers and guidance, and it was from her that he learned
his ideal of a good shepherd's life. He generously fled from his
idols, and afterwards even put demons to flight; he never
consented to eat salt with idolators: united together with a bond
of one honour, of one mind, of one soul, concerned as much with
virtue and fellowship with God as with the flesh; equal in length
of life and hoary hairs, equal in prudence and brilliancy, rivals
of each other, soaring beyond all the rest, possessed in few
respects by the flesh, and translated in spirit, even before
dissolution: possessing not the world, and yet possessing it, by
at once despising and rightly valuing it: forsaking riches and
yet being rich through their noble pursuits; rejecting things
here, and purchasing instead the things yonder: possessed of a
scanty remnant of this life, left over from their piety, but of
an abundant and long life for which they have laboured. I will
say but one word more about them: they have been rightly and
fairly assigned, each to either sex; he is the ornament of men,
she of women, and not only the ornament but the pattern of
virtue.
6. From them Gorgonia derived both her
existence and her reputation; they sowed in her the seeds of
piety, they were the source of her fair life, and of her happy
departure with better hopes. Fair privileges these, and such as
are not easily attained by many of those who plume themselves
highly upon their noble birth, and are proud of their ancestry.
But, if I must treat of her case in a more philosophic and lofty
strain, Gorgonia's native land was Jerusalem above, the object,
not of sight but of contemplation, wherein is our commonwealth,
and whereto we are pressing on: whose citizen Christ is, and
whose fellow-citizens are the assembly and church of the first
born who are written in heaven, and feast around its great
Founder in contemplation of His glory, and take part in the
endless festival; her nobility consisted in the preservation of
the Image, and the perfect likeness to the Archetype, which is
produced by reason and virtue and pure desire, ever more and more
conforming, in things pertaining to God, to those truly initiated
into the heavenly mysteries; and in knowing whence, and of what
character, and for what end we came into being.
7. This is what I know upon these points:
and therefore it is that I both am aware and assert that her soul
was more noble than those of the East, according to a better than
the ordinary rule of noble or ignoble birth, whose distinctions
depend not on blood but on character; nor does it classify those
whom it praises or blames according to their families, but as
individuals. But speaking as I do of her excellences among those
who know her, let each one join in contributing some particular
and aid me in my speech: for it is impossible for one man to take
in every point, however gifted with observation and
intelligence.
8. In modesty she so greatly excelled, and
so far surpassed, those of her own day, to say nothing of those
of old time who have been illustrious for modesty, that, in
regard to the two divisions of the life of all, that is, the
married and the unmarried state, the latter being higher and more
divine, though more difficult and dangerous, while the former is
more humble and more safe, she was able to avoid the
disadvantages of each, and to select and combine all that is best
in both, namely, the elevation of the one and the security of the
other, thus becoming modest without pride, blending the
excellence of the married with that of the unmarried state, and
proving that neither of them absolutely binds us to, or separates
us from, God or the world (so that the one from its own nature
must be utterly avoided, and the other altogether praised): but
that it is mind which nobly presides over wedlock and maidenhood,
and arranges and works upon them as the raw material of virtue
under the master-hand of reason. For though she had entered upon
a carnal union, she was not therefore separated from the spirit,
nor, because her husband was her head, did she ignore her first
Head: but, performing those few ministrations due to the world
and nature, according to the will of the law of the flesh, or
rather of Him who gave to the flesh these laws, she consecrated
herself entirely to God. But what is most excellent and
honourable, she also won over her husband to her side, and made
of him a good fellow-servant, instead of an unreasonable master.
And not only so, but she further made the fruit of her body, her
children and her children's children, to be the fruit of her
spirit, dedicating to God not her single soul, but the whole
family and household, and making wedlock illustrious through her
own acceptability in wedlock, and the fair harvest she had reaped
thereby; presenting herself, as long as she lived, as an example
to her offspring of all that was good, and when summoned hence,
leaving her will behind her, as a silent exhortation to her
house.
9. The divine Solomon, in his instructive
wisdom, I mean his Proverbs, praises the woman who looks to her
household and loves her husband, contrasting her with one who
roams abroad, and is uncontrolled and dishonourable, and hunts
for precious souls with wanton words and ways, while she manages
well at home and bravely sets about her woman's duties, as her
hands hold the distaff, and she prepares two coats for her
husband, buying a field in due season, and makes good provision
for the food of her servants, and welcomes her friends at a
liberal table; with all the other details in which he sings the
praises of the modest and industrious woman. Now, to praise my
sister in these points would be to praise a statue for its
shadow, or a lion for its claws, without allusion to its greatest
perfections. Who was more deserving of renown, and yet who
avoided it so much and made herself inaccessible to the eyes of
man? Who knew better the due proportions of sobriety and
cheerfulness, so that her sobriety should not seem inhuman, nor
her tenderness immodest, but prudent in one, gentle in the other,
her discretion was marked by a combination of sympathy and
dignity? Listen, ye women addicted to ease and display, who
despise the veil of shamefastness. Who ever so kept her eyes
under control? Who so derided laughter, that the ripple of a
smile seemed a great thing to her? Who more steadfastly closed
her ears? And who opened them more to the Divine words, or
rather, who installed the mind as ruler of the tongue in uttering
the judgments of God? Who, as she, regulated her lips?
10. Here, if you will, is another point of
her excellence: one of which neither she nor any truly modest and
decorous woman thinks anything: but which we have been made to
think much of, by those who are too fond of ornament and display,
and refuse to listen to instruction on such matters. She was
never adorned with gold wrought into artistic forms of surpassing
beauty, nor flaxen tresses, fully or partially displayed, nor
spiral curls, nor dishonouring designs of men who construct
erections on the honourable head, nor costly folds of flowing and
transparent robes, nor graces of brilliant stones, which color
the neighbouring air, and cast a glow upon the form; nor the arts
and witcheries of the painter, nor that cheap beauty of the
infernal creator who works against the Divine, hiding with his
treacherous pigments the creation of God, and putting it to shame
with his honour, and setting before eager eyes the imitation of
an harlot instead of the form of God, so that this bastard beauty
may steal away that image which should be kept for God and for
the world to come. But though she was aware of the many and
various external ornaments of women, yet none of them was more
precious to her than her own character, and the brilliancy stored
up within. One red tint was dear to her, the blush of modesty;
one white one, the sign of temperance: but pigments and
pencillings, and living pictures, and flowing lines of beauty,
she left to women of the stage and of the streets, and to all who
think it a shame and a reproach to be ashamed.
11. Enough of such topics. Of her prudence
and piety no adequate account can be given, nor many examples
found besides those of her natural and spiritual parents, who
were her only models, and of whose virtue she in no wise fell
short, with this single exception most readily admitted, that
they, as she both knew and acknowledged, were the source of her
goodness, and the root of her own illumination. What could be
keener than the intellect of her who was recognized as a common
adviser not only by those of her family, those of the same people
and of the one fold, but even by all men round about, who treated
her counsels and advice as a law not to be broken? What more
sagacious than her words? What more prudent than her silence?
Having mentioned silence, I will proceed to that which was most
characteristic of her, most becoming to women, and most
serviceable to these times. Who had a fuller knowledge of the
things of God, both from the Divine oracles, and from her own
understanding? But who was less ready to speak, confining herself
within the due limits of women? Moreover, as was the bounden duty
of a woman who has learned true piety, and that which is the only
honourable object of insatiate desire, who, as she, adorned
temples with offerings, both others and this one, which will
hardly, now she is gone, be so adorned again? Or rather, who so
presented herself to God as a living temple? Who again paid such
honor to Priests, especially to him who was her fellow soldier
and teacher of piety, whose are the good seeds, and the pair of
children consecrated to God.
12. Who opened her house to those who live
according to God with a more graceful and bountiful welcome? And,
which is greater than this, who bade them welcome with such
modesty and godly greetings? Further, who showed a mind more
unmoved in sufferings? Whose soul was more sympathetic to those
in trouble? Whose hand more liberal to those in want? I should
not hesitate to honour her with the words of Job: Her door was
opened to all comers; the stranger did not lodge in the street.
She was eyes to the blind, feet to the lame, a mother to the
orphan. Why should I say more of her compassion to widows, than
that its fruit which she obtained was, never to be called a widow
herself? Her house was a common abode to all the needy of her
family; and her goods no less common to all in need than their
own belonged to each. She hath dispersed abroad and given to the
poor, and according to the infallible truth of the Gospel, she
laid up much store in the wine-presses above, and oftentimes
entertained Christ in the person of those whose benefactress she
was. And, best of all, there was in her no unreal profession, but
in secret she cultivated piety before Him who seeth secret
things. Everything she rescued from the ruler of this world,
everything she transferred to the safe garners. Nothing did she
leave behind to earth, save her body. She bartered everything for
the hopes above: the sole wealth she left to her children was the
imitation of her example, and emulation of her merits.
13. But amid these tokens of incredible
magnanimity, she did not surrender her body to luxury, and
unrestrained pleasures of the appetite, that raging and tearing
dog, as though presuming upon her acts of benevolence, as most
men do, who redeem their luxury by compassion to the poor, and
instead of healing evil with good, receive evil as a recompense
for their good deeds. Nor did she, while subduing her dust by
fasting, leave to another the medicine of hard lying; nor, while
she found this of spiritual service, was she less restrained in
sleep than anyone else; nor, while regulating her life on this
point as if freed from the body, did she lie upon the ground,
when others were passing the night erect, as the most mortified
men struggle to do. Nay in this respect she was seen to surpass
not only women, but the most devoted of men, by her intelligent
chanting of the psalter, her converse with, and unfolding and
apposite recollection of, the Divine oracles, her bending of her
knees which had grown hard and almost taken root in the ground,
her tears to cleanse her stains with contrite heart and spirit of
lowliness, her prayer rising heavenward, her mind freed from
wandering in rapture; in all these, or in any one of them, is
there man or woman who can boast of having surpassed her?
Besides, it is a great thing to say, but it is true, that while
she was zealous in her endeavour after some points of excellence,
of others she was the paragon: of some she was the discoverer, in
others she excelled. And if in some single particular she was
rivalled, her superiority consists in her complete grasp of all.
Such was her success in all points, as none else attained even in
a moderate degree in one: to such perfection did she attain in
each particular, that any one might of itself have supplied the
place of all.
14. O untended body, and squalid garments,
whose only flower is virtue! O soul, clinging to the body, when
reduced almost to an immaterial state through lack of food; or
rather, when the body had been mortified by force, even before
dissolution, that the soul might attain to freedom, and escape
the entanglements of the senses! O nights of vigil, and psalmody,
and standing which lasts from one day to another! O David, whose
strains never seem tedious to faithful souls! O tender limbs,
flung upon the earth and, contrary to nature, growing hard! O
fountains of tears, sowing in affliction that they might reap in
joy. O cry in the night, piercing the clouds and reaching unto
Him that dwelleth in the heavens! O fervour of spirit, waxing
bold in prayerful longings against the dogs of night, and frosts
and rain, and thunders, and hail, and darkness! O nature of woman
overcoming that of man in the common struggle for salvation, and
demonstrating that the distinction between male and female is one
of body not of soul! O Baptismal purity, O soul, in the pure
chamber of thy body, the bride of Christ! O bitter eating! O Eve
mother of our race and of our sin! O subtle serpent, and death,
overcome by her self-discipline! O self-emptying of Christ, and
form of a servant, and sufferings, honoured by her
mortification!
15. Oh! how am I to count up all her
traits, or pass over most of them without injury to those who
know them not? Here however it is right to subjoin the rewards of
her piety, for indeed I take it that you, who knew her life well,
have long been eager and desirous to find in my speech not only
things present, or her joys yonder, beyond the conception and
hearing and sight of man, but also those which the righteous
Rewarder bestowed upon her here: a matter which often tends to
the edification of unbelievers, who from small things attain to
faith in those which are great, and from things which are seen to
those which are not seen. I will mention then some facts which
are generally notorious, others which have been from most men
kept secret; and that because her Christian principle made a
point of not making a display of her [Divine] favours. You know
how her maddened mules ran away with her carriage, and
unfortunately overturned it, how horribly she was dragged along,
and seriously injured, to the scandal of unbelievers at the
permission of such accidents to the righteous, and how quickly
their unbelief was corrected: for, all crushed and bruised as she
was, in bones and limbs, alike in those exposed and in those out
of sight, she would have none of any physician, except Him Who
had permitted it; both because she shrunk from the inspection and
the hands of men, preserving, even in suffering, her modesty, and
also awaiting her justification from Him Who allowed this to
happen, so that she owed her preservation to none other than to
Him: with the result that men were no less struck by her
unhoped-for recovery than by her misfortune, and concluded that
the tragedy had happened for her glorification through
sufferings, the suffering being human, the recovery superhuman,
and giving a lesson to those who come after, exhibiting in a high
degree faith in the midst of suffering, and patience under
calamity, but in a still higher degree the kindness of God to
them that are such as she. For to the beautiful promise to the
righteous "though he fall, he shall not be utterly broken," has
been added one more recent, "though he be utterly broken, he
shall speedily be raised up and glorified." For if her misfortune
was unreasonable, her recovery was extraordinary, so that health
soon stole away the injury, and the cure became more celebrated
than the blow.
16. O remarkable and wonderful disaster! O
injury more noble than security! O prophecy, "He hath smitten,
and He will bind us up, and revive us, and after three days He
will raise us up," portending indeed, as it did, a greater and
more sublime event, yet no less applicable to Gorgonia's
sufferings! This then, notorious to all, even to those afar off,
for the wonder spread to all, and the lesson was stored up in the
tongues and ears of all, with the other wonderful works and
powers of God. But the following incident, hitherto unknown and
concealed from most men by the Christian principle I spoke of,
and her pious shrinking from vanity and display, dost thou bid me
tell, O best and most perfect of shepherds, pastor of this holy
sheep, and dost thou further give thy assent to it, since to us
alone has this secret been entrusted, and we were mutual
witnesses of the marvel, or are we still to keep our faith to her
who is gone? Yet I do think, that as that was the time to be
silent, this is the time to manifest it, not only for the glory
of God, but also for the consolation of those in
affliction.
17. She was sick in body, and dangerously
ill of an extraordinary and malignant disease, her whole frame
was incessantly fevered, her blood at one time agitated and
boiling, then curdling with coma, incredible pallor, and
paralysis of mind and limbs: and this not at long intervals, but
sometimes very frequently. Its virulence seemed beyond human aid;
the skill of physicians, who carefully examined the case, both
singly and in consultation, was of no avail; nor the tears of her
parents, which often have great power, nor public supplications
and intercessions, in which all the people joined as earnestly as
if for their own preservation: for her safety was the safety of
all, as, on the contrary, her suffering and sickness was a common
misfortune.
18. What then did this great soul, worthy
offspring of the greatest, and what was the medicine for her
disorder, for we have now come to the great secret? Despairing of
all other aid, she betook herself to the Physician of all, and
awaiting the silent hours of night, during a slight intermission
of the disease, she approached the altar with faith, and, calling
upon Him Who is honoured thereon, with a mighty cry, and every
kind of invocation, calling to mind all His former works of
power, and well she knew those both of ancient and of later days,
at last she ventured on an act of pious and splendid effrontery:
she imitated the woman whose fountain of blood was dried up by
the hem of Christ's garment. What did she do? Resting her head
with another cry upon the altar, and with a wealth of tears, as
she who once bedewed the feet of Christ, and declaring that she
would not loose her hold until she was made whole, she then
applied her medicine to her whole body, viz., such a portion of
the antitypes of the Precious Body and Blood as she treasured in
her hand, mingling therewith her tears, and, O the wonder, she
went away feeling at once that she was saved, and with the
lightness of health in body, soul, and mind, having received, as
the reward of her hope, that which she hoped for, and having
gained bodily by means of spiritual strength. Great though these
things be, they are not untrue. Believe them all of you, whether
sick or sound, that ye may either keep or regain your health. And
that my story is no mere boastfulness is plain from the silence
in which she kept, while alive, what I have revealed. Nor should
I now have published it, be well assured, had I not feared that
so great a marvel would have been utterly hidden from the
faithful and unbelieving of these and later days.
19. Such was her life. Most of its details
I have left untold, lest my speech should grow to undue
proportions, and lest I should seem to be too greedy for her fair
fame: but perhaps we should be wronging her holy and illustrious
death, did we not mention some of its excellences; especially as
she so longed for and desired it. I will do so therefore, as
concisely as I can. She longed for her dissolution, for indeed
she had great boldness towards Him who called her, and preferred
to be with Christ, beyond all things on earth. And there is none
of the most amorous and unrestrained, who has such love for his
body, as she had to fling away these fetters, and escape from the
mire in which we spend our lives, and to associate in purity with
Him Who is Fair, and entirely to hold her Beloved, Who is I will
even say it, her Lover, by Whose rays, feeble though they now
are, we are enlightened, and Whom, though separated from Him, we
are able to know. Nor did she fail even of this desire, divine
and sublime though it was, and, what is still greater, she had a
foretaste of His Beauty through her forecast and constant
watching. Her only sleep transferred her to exceeding joys, and
her one vision embraced her departure at the foreappointed time,
having been made aware of this day, so that according to the
decision of God she might be prepared and yet not
disturbed.
20. She had recently obtained the blessing
of cleansing and perfection, which we have all received from God
as a common gift and foundation of our new life. Or rather all
her life was a cleansing and perfecting: and while she received
regeneration from the Holy Spirit, its security was hers by
virtue of her former life. And in her case almost alone, I will
venture to say, the mystery was a seal rather than a gift of
grace. And when her husband's perfection was her one remaining
desire (and if you wish me briefly to describe the man, I do not
know what more to say of him than that he was her husband) in
order that she might be consecrated to God in her whole body, and
not depart half-perfected, or leave behind her imperfect anything
that was hers; she did not even fail of this petition, from Him
Who fulfils the desire of them that fear Him, and accomplishes
their requests.
21. And now when she had all things to her
mind, and nothing was lacking of her desires, and the appointed
time drew nigh, being thus prepared for death and departure, she
fulfilled the law which prevails in such matters, and took to her
bed. After many injunctions to her husband, her children, and her
friends, as was to be expected from one who was full of conjugal,
maternal, and brotherly love, and after making her last day a day
of solemn festival with brilliant discourse upon the things
above, she fell asleep, full not of the days of man, for which
she had no desire, knowing them to be evil for her, and mainly
occupied with our dust and wanderings, but more exceedingly full
of the days of God, than I imagine any one even of those who have
departed in a wealth of hoary hairs, and have numbered many terms
of years. Thus she was set free, or, it is better to say, taken
to God, or flew away, or changed her abode, or anticipated by a
little the departure of her body.
22. Yet what was I on the point of
omitting? But perhaps thou, who art her spiritual father, wouldst
not have allowed me, and hast carefully concealed the wonder, and
made it known to me. It is a great point for her distinction, and
in our memory of her virtue, and regret for her departure. But
trembling and tears have seized upon me, at the recollection of
the wonder. She was just passing away, and at her last breath,
surrounded by a group of relatives and friends performing the
last offices of kindness, while her aged mother bent over her,
with her soul convulsed with envy of her departure, anguish and
affection being blended in the minds of all. Some longed to hear
some burning word to be branded in their recollection; others
were eager to speak, yet no one dared; for tears were mute and
the pangs of grief unconsoled, since it seemed sacrilegious, to
think that mourning could be an honour to one who was thus
passing away. So there was solemn silence, as if her death had
been a religious ceremony. There she lay, to all appearance,
breathless, motionless, speechless; the stillness of her body
seemed paralysis, as though the organs of speech were dead, after
that which could move them was gone. But as her pastor, who in
this wonderful scene, was carefully watching her, perceived that
her lips were gently moving, and placed his ear to them, which
his disposition and sympathy emboldened him to do,-but do you
expound the meaning of this mysterious calm, for no one can
disbelieve it on your word! Under her breath she was repeating a
psalm-the last words of a psalm-to say the truth, a testimony to
the boldness with which she was departing, and blessed is he who
can fall asleep with these words, "I will lay me down in peace,
and take my rest." Thus wert thou singing, fairest of women, and
thus it fell out unto thee; and the song became a reality, and
attended on thy departure as a memorial of thee, who hast entered
upon sweet peace after suffering, and received (over and above
the rest which comes to all), that sleep which is due to the
beloved, as befitted one who lived and died amid the words of
piety.
23. Better, I know well, and far more
precious than eye can see, is thy present lot, the song of them
that keep holy-day, the throng of angels, the heavenly host, the
vision of glory, and that splendour, pure and perfect beyond all
other, of the Trinity Most High, no longer beyond the ken of the
captive mind, dissipated by the senses, but entirely contemplated
and possessed by the undivided mind, and flashing upon our souls
with the whole light of Godhead: Mayest thou enjoy to the full
all those things whose crumbs thou didst, while still upon earth,
possess through the reality of thine inclination towards them.
And if thou takest any account of our affairs, and holy souls
receive from God this privilege, do thou accept these words of
mine, in place of, and in preference to many panegyrics, which I
have bestowed upon Caesarius before thee, and upon thee after
him-since I have been preserved to pronounce panegyrics upon my
brethren. If any one will, after you, pay me the like honour, I
cannot say. Yet may my only honour be that which is in God, and
may my pilgrimage and my home be in Christ Jesus our Lord, to
Whom, with the Father and the Holy Ghost, be glory for ever.
Amen.
Oration XII
To His Father, When He Had Entrusted to Him the Care of the
Church of Nazianzus
1. I opened my mouth, and drew in the
Spirit, and I give myself and my all to the Spirit, my action and
speech, my inaction and silence, only let Him hold me and guide
me, and move both hand and mind and tongue whither it is right,
and He wills: and restrain them as it is right and expedient. I
am an instrument of God, a rational instrument, an instrument
tuned and struck by that skilful artist, the Spirit. Yesterday
His work in me was silence. I mused on abstinence from speech.
Does He strike upon my mind today? My speech shall be heard, and
I will muse on utterance. I am neither so talkative, as to desire
to speak, when He is bent on silence; nor so reserved and
ignorant as to set a watch before my lips when it is the time to
speak: but I open and close my door at the will of that Mind and
Word and Spirit, Who is One kindred Deity.
2. I will speak then, since I am so bidden.
And I will speak both to the good shepherd here, and to you, his
holy flock, as I think is best both for me to speak, and for you
to hear to-day. Why is it that you have begged for one to share
your shepherd's toil? For my speech shall begin with you, O dear
and honoured head, worthy of that of Aaron, down which runs that
spiritual and priestly ointment upon his beard and clothing. Why
is it that, while yet able to stablish and guide many, and
actually guiding them in the power of the Spirit, you support
yourself with a staff and prop in your spiritual works? Is it
because you have heard and know that even with the illustrious
Aaron were anointed Eleazar and Ithamar, the sons of Aaron? For I
pass over Nadab and Abihu, lest the allusion be ill-omened: and
Moses during his lifetime appoints Joshua in his stead, as
lawgiver and general over those who were pressing on to the land
of promise? The office of Aaron and Hur, supporting the hands of
Moses on the mount where Amalek was warred down by the Cross,
prefigured and typified long before, I feel willing to pass by,
as not very suitable or applicable to us: for Moses did not
choose them to share his work as lawgiver, but as helpers in his
prayer and supports for the weariness of his hands.
3. What is it then that ails you? What is
your weakness? Is it physical? I am ready to sustain you, yea I
have sustained, and been sustained, like Jacob of old, by your
fatherly blessings. Is it spiritual? Who is stronger, and more
fervent, especially now, when the powers of the flesh are ebbing
and fading, like so many barriers which interfere with, and dim
the brilliancy of a light? For these powers are wont, for the
most part, to wage war upon and oppose one another, while the
body's health is purchased by the sickness of the soul, and the
soul flourishes and looks upward when pleasures are stilled and
fade away along with the body. But, wonderful as your simplicity
and nobility have seemed to me before, how is it that you have no
fear, especially in times like these, that your spirit will be
considered a pretext, and that most men will suppose, in spite of
our spiritual professions, that we are undertaking this from
carnal motives. For most men have made the office to be looked
upon as great and princely, and accompanied with considerable
enjoyment, even though a man have the charge and rule over a more
slender flock than this, and one which affords more troubles than
pleasures. Thus far of your simplicity, or parental preference,
if it be so, which makes you neither admit yourself, nor readily
suspect in others anything disgraceful; for a mind hardly roused
to evil, is slow to suspect evil. My second duty is briefly to
address this people of yours, or now even of mine.
4. I have been overpowered, my friends and
brethren, for I will now, though I did not at the time, ask for
your aid. I have been overpowered by the old age of my father,
and, to use moderate terms, the kindliness of my friend. So, help
me, each of you who can, and stretch out a hand to me who am
pressed down and torn asunder by regret and enthusiasm. The one
suggests flights, mountains and deserts, and calm of soul and
body, and that the mind should retire into itself, and recall its
powers from sensible things, in order to hold pure communion with
God, and be clearly illumined by the flashing rays of the Spirit,
with no admixture or disturbance of the divine light by anything
earthly or clouded, until we come to the source of the effulgence
which we enjoy here, and regret and desire are alike stayed, when
our mirrors pass away in the light of truth. The other wills that
I should come forward, and bear fruit for the common good, and be
helped by helping others; and publish the Divine light, and bring
to God a people for His own possession, a holy nation, a royal
priesthood, and His image cleansed in many souls. And this,
because, as a park is better than and preferable to a tree, the
whole heaven with its ornaments to a single star, and the body to
a limb, so also, in the sight of God, is the reformation of a
whole church preferable to the progress of a single soul: and
therefore, I ought not to look only on my own interest, but also
on that of others. For Christ also likewise, when it was possible
for him to abide in His own honour and deity, not only so far
emptied Himself as to take the form of a slave, but also endured
the cross, despising the shame, that he might by His own
sufferings destroy sin, and by death slay death. The former are
the imaginings of desire, the latter the teachings of the Spirit.
And I, standing midway between the desire and the Spirit, and not
knowing to which of the two I should rather yield, will impart to
you what seems to me the best and safest course, that you may
test it with me and take part in my design.
5. It seemed to me to be best and least
dangerous to take a middle course between desire and fear, and to
yield in part to desire, in part to the Spirit: and that this
would be the case, if I neither altogether evaded the office, and
so refused the grace, which would be dangerous, nor yet assumed a
burden beyond my powers, for it is a heavy one. The former indeed
is suited to the person of another, the latter to another's
power, or rather to undertake both would be madness. But piety
and safety would alike advise me to proportion the office to my
power, and as is the case with food, to accept that which is
within my power and refuse what is beyond it, for health is
gained for the body, and tranquillity for the soul, by such a
course of moderation. Therefore I now consent to share in the
cares of my excellent father, like an eaglet, not quite vainly
flying close to a mighty and high soaring eagle. But hereafter I
will offer my wing to the Spirit to be borne whither, and as, He
wills: no one shall force or drag me in any direction, contrary
to His counsel. For sweet it is to inherit a father's toils, and
this flock is more familiar than a strange and foreign one; I
would even add, more precious in the sight of God, unless the
spell of affection deceives me, and the force of habit robs me of
perception: nor is there any more useful or safer course than
that willing rulers should rule willing subjects: since it is our
practice not to lead by force, or by compulsion, but by good
will. For this would not hold together even another form of
government, since that which is held in by force is wont, when
opportunity offers, to strike for freedom: but freedom of will
more than anything else it is, which holds together our-I will
not call it rule, but-tutorship. For the mystery of godliness
belongs to those who are willing, not to those who are
overpowered.
6. This is my speech to you, my good men,
uttered in simplicity and with all good will, and this is the
secret of my mind. And may the victory rest with that which will
be for the profit of both you and me, under the Spirit's guidance
of our affairs, (for our discourse comes back again to the same
point,) to Whom we have given ourselves, and the head anointed
with the oil of perfection, in the Almighty Father, and the
Only-begotten Son, and the Holy Spirit, Who is God. For how long
shall we hide the lamp under the bushel, and withhold from others
the full knowledge of the Godhead, when it ought to be now put
upon the lampstand and give light to all churches and souls and
to the whole fulness of the world, no longer by means of
metaphors, or intellectual sketches, but by distinct declaration?
And this indeed is a most perfect setting forth of Theology to
those Who have been deemed worthy of this grace in Christ Jesus
Himself, our Lord, to Whom be glory, honour, and power for ever.
Amen.
Oration XVI
On His Father's Silence, Because of the Plague of
Hail
1. Why do you infringe upon the approved
order of things? Why would you do violence to a tongue which is
under obligation to the law? Why do you challenge a speech which
is in subjection to the Spirit? Why, when you have excused the
head, have you hastened to the feet? Why do you pass by Aaron and
urge forward Eleazar? I cannot allow the fountain to be dammed
up, while the rivulet runs its course; the sun to be hidden,
while the star shines forth; hoar hairs to be in retirement,
while youth lays down the law; wisdom to be silent, while
inexperience speaks with assurance. A heavy rain is not always
more useful than a gentle shower. Nay, indeed, if it be too
violent, it sweeps away the earth, and increases the proportion
of the farmer's loss: while a gentle fall, which sinks deep,
enriches the soil, benefits the tiller and makes the corn grow to
a fine crop. So the fluent speech is not more profitable than the
wise. For the one, though it perhaps gave a slight pleasure,
passes away, and is dispersed as soon, and with as little effect,
as the air on which it struck, though it charms with its
eloquence the greedy ear. But the other sinks into the mind, and
opening wide its mouth, fills it with the Spirit, and, showing
itself nobler than its origin, produces a rich harvest by a few
syllables.
2. I have not yet alluded to the true and
first wisdom, for which our wonderful husbandman and shepherd is
conspicuous. The first wisdom is a life worthy of praise, and
kept pure for God, or being purified for Him Who is all-pure and
all-luminous, Who demands of us, us His only sacrifice,
purification-that is, a contrite heart and the sacrifice of
praise, and a new creation in Christ, and the new man, and the
like, as the Scripture loves to call it. The first wisdom is to
despise that wisdom which consists of language and figures of
speech, and spurious and unnecessary embellishments. Be it mine
to speak five words with my understanding in the church, rather
than ten thousand words in a tongue, and with the unmeaning voice
of a trumpet, which does not rouse my soldier to the spiritual
combat. This is the wisdom which I praise, which I welcome. By
this the ignoble have won renown, and the despised have attained
the highest honours. By this a crew of fishermen have taken the
whole world in the meshes of the Gospel-net, and overcome by a
word finished and cut short the wisdom that comes to naught. I
count not wise the man who is clever in words, nor him who is of
a ready tongue, but unstable and undisciplined in soul, like the
tombs which, fair and beautiful as they are outwardly, are fetid
with corpses within, and full of manifold ill-savours; but him
who speaks but little of virtue, yet gives many examples of it in
his practice, and proves the trustworthiness of his language by
his life.
3. Fairer in my eyes, is the beauty which
we can gaze upon than that which is painted in words: of more
value the wealth which our hands can hold, than that which is
imagined in our dreams; and more real the wisdom of which we are
convinced by deeds, than that which is set forth in splendid
language. For "a good understanding," he saith, "have all they
that do thereafter," not they who proclaim it. Time is the best
touchstone of this wisdom, and "the hoary head is a crown of
glory." For if, as it seems to me as well as to Solomon, we must
"judge none blessed before his death," and it is uncertain "what
a day may bring forth," since our life here below has many
turnings, and the body of our humiliation is ever rising, falling
and changing; surely he, who without fault has almost drained the
cup of life, and nearly reached the haven of the common sea of
existence is more secure, and therefore more enviable, than one
who has yet a long voyage before him.
4. Do not thou, therefore, restrain a
tongue whose noble utterances and fruits have been many, which
has begotten many children of righteousness-yea, lift up thine
eyes round about and see, how many are its sons, and what are its
treasures; even this whole people, whom thou hast begotten in
Christ through the Gospel. Grudge not to us those words which are
excellent rather than many, and do not yet give us a foretaste of
our impending loss. Speak in words which, if few, are dear and
most sweet to me, which, if scarcely audible, are perceived from
their spiritual cry, as God heard the silence of Moses, and said
to him when interceding mentally, "Why criest thou unto Me?"
Comfort this people, I pray thee, I, who was thy nursling, and
have since been made Pastor, and now even Chief Pastor. Give a
lesson, to me in the Pastor's art, to this people of obedience.
Discourse awhile on our present heavy blow, about the just
judgments of God, whether we grasp their meaning, or are ignorant
of their great deep. How again "mercy is put in the balance," as
holy Isaiah declares, for goodness is not without discernment, as
the first labourers in the vineyard fancied, because they could
not perceive any distinction between those who were paid alike:
and how anger, which is called "the cup in the hand of the Lord,"
and "the cup of falling which is drained," is in proportion to
transgressions, even though He abates to all somewhat of what is
their due, and dilutes with compassion the unmixed draught of His
wrath. For He inclines from severity to indulgence towards those
who accept chastisement with fear, and who after a slight
affliction conceive and are in pain with conversion, and bring
forth the perfect spirit of salvation; but nevertheless he
reserves the dregs, the last drop of His anger, that He may pour
it out entire upon those who, instead of being healed by His
kindness, grow obdurate, like the hard-hearted Pharaoh, that
bitter taskmaster, who is set forth as an example of the power of
God over the ungodly.
5. Tell us whence come such blows and
scourges, and what account we can give of them. Is it some
disordered and irregular motion or some unguided current, some
unreason of the universe, as though there were no Ruler of the
world, which is therefore borne along by chance, as is the
doctrine of the foolishly wise, who are themselves borne along at
random by the disorderly spirit of darkness? Or are the
disturbances and changes of the universe, (which was originally
constituted, blended, bound together, and set in motion in a
harmony known only to Him Who gave it motion,) directed by reason
and order under the guidance of the reins of Providence? Whence
come famines and tornadoes and hailstorms, our present warning
blow? Whence pestilences, diseases, earthquakes, tidal waves, and
fearful things in the heavens? And how is the creation, once
ordered for the enjoyment of men, their common and equal delight,
changed for the punishment of the ungodly, in order that we may
be chastised through that for which, when honoured with it, we
did not give thanks, and recognise in our sufferings that power
which we did not recognise in our benefits? How is it that some
receive at the Lord's hand double for their sins, and the measure
of their wickedness is doubly filled up, as in the correction of
Israel, while the sins of others are done away by a sevenfold
recompense into their bosom? What is the measure of the Amorites
that is not yet full? And how is the sinner either let go, or
chastised again, let go perhaps, because reserved for the other
world, chastised, because healed thereby in this? Under what
circumstances again is the righteous, when unfortunate, possibly
being put to the test, or, when prosperous, being observed, to
see if he be poor in mind or not very far superior to visible
things, as indeed conscience, our interior and unerring tribunal,
tells us. What is our calamity, and what its cause? Is it a test
of virtue, or a touchstone of wickedness? And is it better to bow
beneath it as a chastisement, even though it be not so, and
humble ourselves under the mighty hand of God, or, considering it
as a trial, to rise superior to it? On these points give us
instruction and warning, lest we be too much discouraged by our
present calamity, or fall into the gulf of evil and despise it;
for some such feeling is very general; but rather that we may
bear our admonition quietly, and not provoke one more severe by
our insensibility to this.
6. Terrible is an unfruitful season, and
the loss of the crops. It could not be otherwise, when men are
already rejoicing in their hopes, and counting on their all but
harvested stores. Terrible again is an unseasonable harvest, when
the farmers labour with heavy hearts, sitting as it were beside
the grave of their crops, which the gentle rain nourished, but
the wild storm has rooted up, whereof the mower filleth not his
hand, neither he that bindeth up the sheaves his bosom, nor have
they obtained the blessing which passers-by bestow upon the
farmers. Wretched indeed is the sight of the ground devastated,
cleared, and shorn of its ornaments, over which the blessed Joel
wails in his most tragic picture of the desolation of the land,
and the scourge of famine; while another prophet wails, as he
contrasts with its former beauty its final disorder, and thus
discourses on the anger of the Lord when He smites the land:
before him is the garden of Eden, behind Him a desolate
wilderness. Terrible indeed these things are, and more than
terrible, when we are grieved only at what is present, and are
not yet distressed by the feeling of a severer blow: since, as in
sickness, the suffering which pains us from time to time is more
distressing than that which is not present. But more terrible
still are those which the treasures of God's wrath contain, of
which God forbid that you should make trial; nor will you, if you
fly for refuge to the mercies of God, and win over by your tears
Him Who will have mercy, and avert by your conversion what
remains of His wrath. As yet, this is gentleness and
loving-kindness and gentle reproof, and the first elements of a
scourge to train our tender years: as yet, the smoke of His
anger, the prelude of His torments; not yet has fallen the
flaming fire, the climax of His being moved; not yet the kindled
coals, the final scourge, part of which He threatened, when He
lifted up the other over us, part He held back by force, when He
brought the other upon us; using the threat and the blow alike
for our instruction, and making a way for His indignation, in the
excess of His goodness; beginning with what is slight, so that
the more severe may not be needed; but ready to instruct us by
what is greater, if He be forced so to do.
7. I know the glittering sword, and the
blade made drunk in heaven, bidden to slay, to bring to naught,
to make childless, and to spare neither flesh, nor marrow, nor
bones. I know Him, Who, though free from passion, meets us like a
bear robbed of her whelps, like a leopard in the way of the
Assyrians, not only those of that day, but if anyone now is an
Assyrian in wickedness: nor is it possible to escape the might
and speed of His wrath when He watches over our impieties, and
His jealousy, which knoweth to devour His adversaries, pursues
His enemies to the death. I know the emptying, the making void,
the making waste, the melting of the heart, and knocking of the
knees together, such are the punishments of the ungodly. I do not
dwell on the judgments to come, to which indulgence in this world
delivers us, as it is better to be punished and cleansed now than
to be transmitted to the torment to come, when it is the time of
chastisement, not of cleansing. For as he who remembers God here
is conqueror of death (as David has most excellently sung) so the
departed have not in the grave confession and restoration; for
God has confined life and action to this world, and to the future
the scrutiny of what has been done.
8. What shall we do in the day of
visitation, with which one of the Prophets terrifies me, whether
that of the righteous sentence of God against us, or that upon
the mountains and hills, of which we have heard, or whatever and
whenever it may be, when He will reason with us, and oppose us,
and set before us those bitter accusers, our sins, comparing our
wrongdoings with our benefits, and striking thought with thought,
and scrutinising action with action, and calling us to account
for the image which has been blurred and spoilt by wickedness,
till at last He leads us away self-convicted and self-condemned,
no longer able to say that we are being unjustly treated-a
thought which is able even here sometimes to console in their
condemnation those who are suffering.
9. But then what advocate shall we have?
What pretext? What false excuse? What plausible artifice? What
device contrary to the truth will impose upon the court, and rob
it of its right judgment, which places in the balance for us all,
our entire life, action, word, and thought, and weighs against
the evil that which is better, until that which preponderates
wins the day, and the decision is given in favour of the main
tendency; after which there is no appeal, no higher court, no
defence on the ground of subsequent conduct, no oil obtained from
the wise virgins, or from them that sell, for the lamps going
out, no repentance of the rich man wasting away in the flame, and
begging for repentance for his friends, no statute of
limitations; but only that final and fearful judgment-seat, more
just even than fearful; or rather more fearful because it is also
just; when the thrones are set and the Ancient of days takes His
seat, and the books are opened, and the fiery stream comes forth,
and the light before Him, and the darkness prepared; and they
that have done good shall go into the resurrection of life, now
hid in Christ and to be manifested hereafter with Him, and they
that have done evil, into the resurrection of judgment, to which
they who have not believed have been condemned already by the
word which judges them. Some will be welcomed by the unspeakable
light and the vision of the holy and royal Trinity, Which now
shines upon them with greater brilliancy and purity and unites
Itself wholly to the whole soul, in which solely and beyond all
else I take it that the kingdom of heaven consists. The others
among other torments, but above and before them all must endure
the being outcast from God, and the shame of conscience which has
no limit. But of these anon.
10. What are we to do now, my brethren,
when crushed, cast down, and drunken but not with strong drink
nor with wine, which excites and obfuscates but for a while, but
with the blow which the Lord has inflicted upon us, Who says, And
thou, O heart, be stirred and shaken, and gives to the despisers
the spirit of sorrow and deep sleep to drink: to whom He also
says, See, ye despisers, behold, and wonder and perish? How shall
we bear His convictions; or what reply shall we make, when He
reproaches us not only with the multitude of the benefits for
which we have continued ungrateful, but also with His
chastisements, and reckons up the remedies with which we have
refused to be healed? Calling us His children indeed, but
unworthy children, and His sons, but strange sons who have
stumbled from lameness out of their paths, in the trackless and
rough ground. How and by what means could I have instructed you,
and I have not done so? By gentler measures? I have applied them.
I passed by the blood drunk in Egypt from the wells and rivers
and all reservoirs of water in the first plague: I passed over
the next scourges, the frogs, lice, and flies. I began with the
flocks and the cattle and the sheep, the fifth plague, and,
sparing as yet the rational creatures, I struck the animals. You
made light of the stroke, and treated me with less reason and
attention than the beasts who were struck. I withheld from you
the rain; one piece was rained upon, and the piece whereupon it
rained not withered, and ye said "We will brave it." I brought
the hail upon you, chastising you with the opposite kind of blow,
I uprooted your vineyards and shrubberies, and crops, but I
failed to shatter your wickedness.
11. Perchance He will say to me, who am not
reformed even by blows, I know that thou art obstinate, and thy
neck is an iron sinew, the heedless is heedless and the lawless
man acts lawlessly, naught is the heavenly correction, naught the
scourges. The bellows are burnt, the lead is consumed, as I once
reproached you by the mouth of Jeremiah, the founder melted the
silver in vain, your wickednesses are not melted away. Can ye
abide my wrath, saith the Lord. Has not My hand the power to
inflict upon you other plagues also? There are still at My
command the blains breaking forth from the ashes of the furnace,
by sprinkling which toward heaven, Moses, or any other minister
of God's action, may chastise Egypt with disease. There remain
also the locusts, the darkness that may be felt, and the plague
which, last in order, was first in suffering and power, the
destruction and death of the firstborn, and, to escape this, and
to turn aside the destroyer, it were better to sprinkle the
doorposts of our mind, contemplation and action, with the great
and saving token, with the blood of the new covenant, by being
crucified and dying with Christ, that we may both rise and be
glorified and reign with Him both now and at His final appearing,
and not be broken and crushed, and made to lament, when the
grievous destroyer smites us all too late in this life of
darkness, and destroys our firstborn, the offspring and results
of our life which we had dedicated to God.
12. Far be it from me that I should ever,
among other chastisements, be thus reproached by Him Who is good,
but walks contrary to me in fury because of my own contrariness:
I have smitten you with blasting and mildew, and blight; without
result. The sword from without made you childless, yet have ye
not returned unto Me, saith the Lord. May I not become the vine
of the beloved, which after being planted and entrenched, and
made sure with a fence and tower and every means which was
possible, when it ran wild and bore thorns, was consequently
despised, and had its tower broken down and its fence taken away,
and was not pruned nor digged, but was devoured and laid waste
and trodden down by all! This is what I feel I must say as to my
fears, thus have I been pained by this blow, and this, I will
further tell you, is my prayer. We have sinned, we have done
amiss, and have dealt wickedly, for we have forgotten Thy
commandments and walked after our own evil thought, for we have
behaved ourselves unworthily of the calling and gospel of Thy
Christ, and of His holy sufferings and humiliation for us; we
have become a reproach to Thy beloved, priest and people, we have
erred together, we have all gone out of the way, we have together
become unprofitable, there is none that doeth judgment and
justice, no not one. We have cut short Thy mercies and kindness
and the bowels and compassion of our God, by our wickedness and
the perversity of our doings, in which we have turned away. Thou
art good, but we have done amiss; Thou art long-suffering, but we
are worthy of stripes; we acknowledge Thy goodness, though we are
without understanding, we have been scourged for but few of our
faults; Thou art terrible, and who will resist Thee? the
mountains will tremble before Thee; and who will strive against
the might of Thine arm? If Thou shut the heaven, who will open
it? And if Thou let loose Thy torrents, who will restrain them?
It is a light thing in Thine eyes to make poor and to make rich,
to make alive and to kill, to strike and to heal, and Thy will is
perfect action. Thou art angry, and we have sinned, says one of
old, making confession; and it is now time for me to say the
opposite, "We have sinned, and Thou art angry:" therefore have we
become a reproach to our neighbours. Thou didst turn Thy face
from us, and we were filled with dishonour. But stay, Lord,
cease, Lord, forgive, Lord, deliver us not up for ever because of
our iniquities, and let not our chastisements be a warning for
others, when we might learn wisdom from the trials of others. Of
whom? Of the nations which know Thee not, and kingdoms which have
not been subject to Thy power. But we are Thy people, O Lord, the
rod of Thine inheritance; therefore correct us, but in goodness
and not in Thine anger, lest Thou bring us to nothingness and
contempt among all that dwell on the earth.
13. With these words I invoke mercy: and if
it were possible to propitiate His wrath with whole burnt
offerings or sacrifices, I would not even have spared these. Do
you also yourselves imitate your trembling priest, you, my
beloved children, sharers with me alike of the Divine correction
and loving-kindness. Possess your souls in tears, and stay His
wrath by amending your way of life. Sanctify a fast, call a
solemn assembly, as blessed Joel with us charges you: gather the
elders, and the babes that suck the breasts, whose tender age
wins our pity, and is specially worthy of the loving-kindness of
God. I know also what he enjoins both upon me, the minister of
God, and upon you, who have been thought worthy of the same
honour, that we should enter His house in sackcloth and lament
night and day between the porch and the altar, in piteous array,
and with more piteous voices, crying aloud without ceasing on
behalf of ourselves and the people, sparing nothing, either toil
or word, which may propitiate God: saying "Spare, O Lord, Thy
people, and give not Thine heritage to reproach," and the rest of
the prayer; surpassing the people in our sense of the affliction
as much as in our rank, instructing them in our own persons in
compunction and correction of wickedness, and in the consequent
long-suffering of God, and cessation of the scourge.
14. Come then, all of you, my brethren, let
us worship and fall down, and weep before the Lord our Maker; let
us appoint a public mourning, in our various ages and families,
let us raise the voice of supplication; and let this, instead of
the cry which He hates, enter into the ears of the Lord of
Sabaoth. Let us anticipate His anger by confession; let us desire
to see Him appeased, after He was wroth. Who knoweth, he says, if
He will turn and repent, and leave a blessing behind Him? This I
know certainly, I the sponsor of the loving-kindness of God. And
when He has laid aside that which is unnatural to Him, His anger,
He will betake Himself to that which is natural, His mercy. To
the one He is forced by us, to the other He is inclined. And if
He is forced to strike, surely He will refrain, according to His
Nature. Only let us have mercy on ourselves, and open a road for
our Father's righteous affections. Let us sow in tears, that we
may reap in joy, let us show ourselves men of Nineveh, not of
Sodom. Let us amend our wickedness, lest we be consumed with it;
let us listen to the preaching of Jonah, lest we be overwhelmed
by fire and brimstone, and if we have departed from Sodom let us
escape to the mountain, let us flee to Zoar, let us enter it as
the sun rises; let us not stay in all the plain, let us not look
around us, lest we be frozen into a pillar of salt, a really
immortal pillar, to accuse the soul which returns to
wickedness.
15. Let us be assured that to do no wrong
is really superhuman, and belongs to God alone. I say nothing
about the Angels, that we may give no room for wrong feelings,
nor opportunity for harmful altercations. Our unhealed condition
arises from our evil and unsubdued nature, and from the exercise
of its powers. Our repentance when we sin, is a human action, but
an action which bespeaks a good man, belonging to that portion
which is in the way of salvation. For if even our dust contracts
somewhat of wickedness, and the earthly tabernacle presseth down
the upward flight of the soul, which at least was created to fly
upward, yet let the image be cleansed from filth, and raise aloft
the flesh, its yoke-fellow, lifting it on the wings of reason;
and, what is better, let us neither need this cleansing, nor have
to be cleansed, by preserving our original dignity, to which we
are hastening through our training here, and let us not by the
bitter taste of sin be banished from the tree of life: though it
is better to turn again when we err, than to be free from
correction when we stumble. For whom the Lord loveth He
chasteneth, and a rebuke is a fatherly action; while every soul
which is unchastised, is unhealed. Is not then freedom from
chastisement a hard thing? But to fail to be corrected by the
chastisement is still harder. One of the prophets, speaking of
Israel, whose heart was hard and uncircumcised, says, Lord, Thou
hast stricken them, but they have not grieved, Thou hast consumed
them but they have refused to receive correction; and again, The
people turned not to Him that smiteth them; and Why is my people
slidden back by a perpetual backsliding, because of which it will
be utterly crushed and destroyed?
16. It is a fearful thing, my brethren, to
fall into the hands of a living God, and fearful is the face of
the Lord against them that do evil, and abolishing wickedness
with utter destruction. Fearful is the ear of God, listening even
to the voice of Abel speaking through his silent blood. Fearful
His feet, which overtake evildoing. Fearful also His filling of
the universe, so that it is impossible anywhere to escape the
action of God, not even by flying up to heaven, or entering
Hades, or by escaping to the far East, or concealing ourselves in
the depths and ends of the sea. Nahum the Elkoshite was afraid
before me, when he proclaimed the burden of Nineveh, God is
jealous, and the Lord takes vengeance in wrath upon His
adversaries, and uses such abundance of severity that no room is
left for further vengeance upon the wicked. For whenever I hear
Isaiah threaten the people of Sodom and rulers of Gomorrah, and
say Why will ye be smitten any more, adding sin to sin? I am
almost filled with horror, and melted to tears. It is impossible,
he says, to find any blow to add to those which are past, because
of your newly added sins; so completely have you run through the
whole, and exhausted every form of chastisement, ever calling
upon yourselves some new one by your wickedness. There is not a
wound, nor bruise, nor putrefying sore; the plague affects the
whole body and is incurable: for it is impossible to apply a
plaster, or ointment or bandages. I pass over the rest of the
threatenings, that I may not press upon you more heavily than
your present plague.
17. Only let us recognise the purpose of
the evil. Why have the crops withered, our storehouses been
emptied, the pastures of our flocks failed, the fruits of the
earth been withheld, and the plains been filled with shame
instead of with fatness: why have valleys lamented and not
abounded in corn, the mountains not dropped sweetness, as they
shall do hereafter to the righteous, but been stript and
dishonoured, and received on the contrary the curse of Gilboa?
The whole earth has become as it was in the beginning, before it
was adorned with its beauties. Thou visitedst the earth, and
madest it to drink-but the visitation has been for evil, and the
draught destructive. Alas! what a spectacle! Our prolific crops
reduced to stubble, the seed we sowed is recognised by scanty
remains, and our harvest, the approach of which we reckon from
the number of the months, instead of from the ripening corn,
scarcely bears the firstfruits for the Lord. Such is the wealth
of the ungodly, such the harvest of the careless sower; as the
ancient curse runs, to look for much, and bring in little, to sow
and not reap, to plant and not press, ten acres of vineyard to
yield one bath: and to hear of fertile harvests in other lands,
and be ourselves pressed by famine. Why is this, and what is the
cause of the breach? Let us not wait to be convicted by others,
let us be our own examiners. An important medicine for evil is
confession, and care to avoid stumbling. I will be first to do
so, as I have made my report to my people from on high, and
performed the duty of a watcher. For I did not conceal the coming
of the sword that I might save my own soul and those of my
hearers. So will I now announce the disobedience of my people,
making what is theirs my own, if I may perchance thus obtain some
tenderness and relief.
18. One of us has oppressed the poor, and
wrested from him his portion of land, and wrongly encroached upon
his landmark by fraud or violence, and joined house to house, and
field to field, to rob his neighbour of something, and been eager
to have no neighbour, so as to dwell alone on the earth. Another
has defiled the land with usury and interest, both gathering
where he had not sowed and reaping where he had not strawed,
farming, not the land, but the necessity of the needy. Another
has robbed God, the giver of all, of the firstfruits of the
barnfloor and winepress, showing himself at once thankless and
senseless, in neither giving thanks for what he has had, nor
prudently providing, at least, for the future. Another has had no
pity on the widow and orphan, and not imparted his bread and
meagre nourishment to the needy, or rather to Christ, Who is
nourished in the persons of those who are nourished even in a
slight degree; a man perhaps of much property unexpectedly
gained, for this is the most unjust of all, who finds his many
barns too narrow for him, filling some and emptying others, to
build greater ones for future crops, not knowing that he is being
snatched away with hopes unrealised, to give an account of his
riches and fancies, and proved to have been a bad steward of
another's goods. Another has turned aside the way of the meek,
and turned aside the just among the unjust; another has hated him
that reproveth in the gates, and abhorred him that speaketh
uprightly; another has sacrificed to his net which catches much,
and keeping the spoil of the poor in his house, has either
remembered not God, or remembered Him ill-by saying "Blessed be
the Lord, for we are rich," and wickedly supposed that he
received these things from Him by Whom he will be punished. For
because of these things cometh the wrath of God upon the children
of disobedience. Because of these things the heaven is shut, or
opened for our punishment; and much more, if we do not repent,
even when smitten, and draw near to Him, Who approaches us
through the powers of nature.
19. What shall be said to this by those of
us who are buyers and sellers of corn, and watch the hardships of
the seasons, in order to grow prosperous, and luxuriate in the
misfortunes of others, and acquire, not, like Joseph, the
property of the Egyptians, as a part of a wide policy, (for he
could both collect and supply corn duly, as he also could foresee
the famine, and provide against it afar off,) but the property of
their fellow countrymen in an illegal manner, for they say, "When
will the new moon be gone, that we may sell, and the sabbaths,
that we may open our stores?" And they corrupt justice with
divers measures and balances, and draw upon themselves the ephah
of lead. What shall we say to these things who know no limit to
our getting, who worship gold and silver, as those of old
worshipped Baal, and Astarte and the abomination Chemosh? Who
give heed to the brilliance of costly stones, and soft flowing
garments, the prey of moths, and the plunder of robbers and
tyrants and thieves; who are proud of their multitude of slaves
and animals, and spread themselves over plains and mountains,
with their possessions and gains and schemes, like Solomon's
horseleach which cannot be satisfied, any more than the grave,
and the earth, and fire, and water; who seek for another world
for their possession, and find fault with the bounds of God, as
too small for their insatiable cupidity? What of those who sit on
lofty thrones and raise the stage of government, with a brow
loftier than that of the theatre, taking no account of the God
over all, and the height of the true kingdom that none can
approach unto, so as to rule their subjects as fellow-servants,
as needing themselves no less loving-kindness? Look also, I pray
you, at those who stretch themselves upon beds of ivory, whom the
divine Amos fitly upbraids, who anoint themselves with the chief
ointments, and chant to the sound of instruments of music, and
attach themselves to transitory things as though they were
stable, but have not grieved nor had compassion for the
affliction of Joseph; though they ought to have been kind to
those who had met with disaster before them, and by mercy have
obtained mercy; as the fir-tree should howl, because the cedar
had fallen, and be instructed by their neighbours' chastisement,
and be led by others' ills to regulate their own lives, having
the advantage of being saved by their predecessors' fate, instead
of being themselves a warning to others.
20. Join with us, thou divine and sacred
person, in considering these questions, with the store of
experience, that source of wisdom, which thou hast gathered in
thy long life. Herewith instruct thy people. Teach them to break
their bread to the hungry, to gather together the poor that have
no shelter, to cover their nakedness and not neglect those of the
same blood, and now especially that we may gain a benefit from
our need instead of from abundance, a result which pleases God
more than plentiful offerings and large gifts. After this, nay
before it, show thyself, I pray, a Moses, or Phinehas to-day.
Stand on our behalf and make atonement, and let the plague be
stayed, either by the spiritual sacrifice, or by prayer and
reasonable intercession. Restrain the anger of the Lord by thy
mediation: avert any succeeding blows of the scourge. He knoweth
to respect the hoar hairs of a father interceding for his
children. Intreat for our past wickedness: be our surety for the
future. Present a people purified by suffering and fear. Beg for
bodily sustenance, but beg rather for the angels' food that
cometh down from heaven. So doing, thou wilt make God to be our
God, wilt conciliate heaven, wilt restore the former and latter
rain: the Lord shall show loving-kindness and our land shall
yield her fruit; our earthly land its fruit which lasts for the
day, and our frame, which is but dust, the fruit which is
eternal, which we shall store up in the heavenly winepresses by
thy hands, who presentest both us and ours in Christ Jesus our
Lord, to whom be glory for evermore. Amen.
Oration XVIII
On the Death of his Father
Funeral Oration on His Father, in the
Presence of S. Basil.
1. O man of God, and faithful servant, and
steward of the mysteries of God, and man of desires of the
Spirit: for thus Scripture speaks of men advanced and lofty,
superior to visible things. I will call you also a God to Pharaoh
and all the Egyptian and hostile power, and pillar and ground of
the Church and will of God and light in the world, holding forth
the word of life, and prop of the faith and resting place of the
Spirit. But why should I enumerate all the titles which your
virtue, in its varied forms, has won for and applied to you as
your own?
2. Tell me, however, whence do you come,
what is your business, and what favour do you bring us? Since I
know that you are entirely moved with and by God, and for the
benefit of those who receive you. Are you come to inspect us, or
to seek for the pastor, or to take the oversight of the flock?
You find us no longer in existence, but for the most part having
passed away with him, unable to bear with the place of our
affliction, especially now that we have lost our skilful
steersman, our light of life, to whom we looked to direct our
course as the blazing beacon of salvation above us: he has
departed with all his excellence, and all the power of pastoral
organization, which he had gathered in a long time, full of days
and wisdom, and crowned, to use the words of Solomon, with the
hoary head of glory. His flock is desolate and downcast, filled,
as you see, with despondency and dejection, no longer reposing in
the green pasture, and reared up by the water of comfort, but
seeking precipices, deserts and pits, in which it will be
scattered and perish; in despair of ever obtaining another wise
pastor, absolutely persuaded that it cannot find such an one as
he, content if it be one who will not be far inferior.
3. There are, as I said, three causes to
necessitate your presence, all of equal weight, ourselves, the
pastor, and the flock: come then, and according to the spirit of
ministry which is in you, assign to each its due, and guide your
words in judgment, so that we may more than ever marvel at your
wisdom. And how will you guide them? First by bestowing seemly
praise upon his virtue, not only as a pure sepulchral tribute of
speech to him who was pure, but also to set forth to others his
conduct and example as a mark of true piety. Then bestow upon us
some brief counsels concerning life and death, and the union and
severance of body and soul, and the two worlds, the one present
but transitory, the other spiritually perceived and abiding; and
persuade us to despise that which is deceitful and disordered and
uneven, carrying us and being carried, like the waves, now up,
now down; but to cling to that which is firm and stable and
divine and constant, free from all disturbance and confusion. For
this would lessen our pain because of friends departed before us,
nay we should rejoice if your words should carry us hence and set
us on high, and hide distress of the present in the future, and
persuade us that we also are pressing on to a good Master, and
that our home is better than our pilgrimage; and that translation
and removal thither is to us who are tempest-tost here like a
calm haven to men at sea; or as ease and relief from toil come to
men who, at the close of a long journey, escape the troubles of
the wayfarer, so to those who attain to the hostel yonder comes a
better and more tolerable existence than that of those who still
tread the crooked and precipitous path of this life.
4. Thus might you console us; but what of
the flock? Would you first promise the oversight and leadership
of yourself, a man under whose wings we all would gladly repose,
and for whose words we thirst more eagerly than men suffering
from thirst for the purest fountain? Secondly, persuade us that
the good shepherd who laid down his life for the sheep has not
even now left us; but is present, and tends and guides, and knows
his own, and is known of his own, and, though bodily invisible,
is spiritually recognized, and defends his flock against the
wolves, and allows no one to climb over into the fold as a robber
and traitor; to pervert and steal away, by the voice of
strangers, souls under the fair guidance of the truth. Aye, I am
well assured that his intercession is of more avail now than was
his instruction in former days, since he is closer to God, now
that he has shaken off his bodily fetters, and freed his mind
from the clay which obscured it, and holds intercourse naked with
the nakedness of the prime and purest Mind; being promoted, if it
be not rash to say so, to the rank and confidence of an angel.
This, with your power of speech and spirit, you will set forth
and discuss better than I can sketch it. But in order that,
through ignorance of his excellences, your language may not fall
very far short of his deserts, I will, from my own knowledge of
the departed, briefly draw an outline, and preliminary plan of an
eulogy to be handed to you, the illustrious artist of such
subjects, for the details of the beauty of his virtue to be
filled in and transmitted to the ears and minds of
all.
5. Leaving to the laws of panegyric the
description of his country, his family, his nobility of figure,
his external magnificence, and the other subjects of human pride,
I begin with what is of most consequence and comes closest to
ourselves. He sprang from a stock unrenowned, and not well suited
for piety, for I am not ashamed of his origin, in my confidence
in the close of his life, one that was not planted in the house
of God, but far removed and estranged, the combined product of
two of the greatest opposites-Greek error and legal imposture,
some parts of each of which it escaped, of others it was
compounded. For, on the one side, they reject idols and
sacrifices, but reverence fire and lights; on the other, they
observe the Sabbath and petty regulations as to certain meats,
but despise circumcision. These lowly men call themselves
Hypsistarii, and the Almighty is, so they say, the only object of
their worship. What was the result of this double tendency to
impiety? I know not whether to praise more highly the grace which
called him, or his own purpose. However, he so purged the eye of
his mind from the humours which obscured it, and ran towards the
truth with such speed that he endured the loss of his mother and
his property for a while, for the sake of his heavenly Father and
the true inheritance: and submitted more readily to this
dishonour, than others to the greatest honours, and, most
wonderful as this is, I wonder at it but little. Why? Because
this glory is common to him with many others, and all must come
into the great net of God, and be caught by the words of the
fishers, although some are earlier, some later, enclosed by the
Gospel. But what does especially in his life move my wonder, it
is needful for me to mention.
6. Even before he was of our fold, he was
ours. His character made him one of us. For, as many of our own
are not with us, whose life alienates them from the common body,
so, many of those without are on our side, whose character
anticipates their faith, and need only the name of that which
indeed they possess. My father was one of these, an alien shoot,
but inclined by his life towards us. He was so far advanced in
self control, that he became at once most beloved and most
modest, two qualities difficult to combine. What greater and more
splendid testimony can there be to his justice than his exercise
of a position second to none in the state, without enriching
himself by a single farthing, although he saw everyone else
casting the hands of Briareus upon the public funds, and swollen
with ill-gotten gain? For thus do I term unrighteous wealth. Of
his prudence this also is no slight proof, but in the course of
my speech further details will be given. It was as a reward for
such conduct, I think, that he attained to the faith. How this
came about, a matter too important to be passed over, I would now
set forth.
7. I have heard the Scripture say: Who can
find a valiant woman? and declare that she is a divine gift, and
that a good marriage is brought about by the Lord. Even those
without are of the same mind; if they say that a man can win no
fairer prize than a good wife, nor a worse one than her opposite.
But we can mention none who has been in this respect more
fortunate than he. For I think that, had anyone from the ends of
the earth and from every race of men attempted to bring about the
best of marriages, he could not have found a better or more
harmonious one than this. For the most excellent of men and of
women were so united that their marriage was a union of virtue
rather than of bodies: since, while they excelled all others,
they could not excel each other, because in virtue they were
quite equally matched.
8. She indeed who was given to Adam as a
help meet for him, because it was not good for man to be alone,
instead of an assistant became an enemy, and instead of a
yoke-fellow, an opponent, and beguiling the man by means of
pleasure, estranged him through the tree of knowledge from the
tree of life. But she who was given by God to my father became
not only, as is less wonderful, his assistant, but even his
leader, drawing him on by her influence in deed and word to the
highest excellence; judging it best in all other respects to be
overruled by her husband according to the law of marriage, but
not being ashamed, in regard of piety, even to offer herself as
his teacher. Admirable indeed as was this conduct of hers, it was
still more admirable that he should readily acquiesce in it. She
is a woman who while others have been honoured and extolled for
natural and artificial beauty, has acknowledged but one kind of
beauty, that of the soul, and the preservation, or the
restoration as far as possible, of the Divine image. Pigments and
devices for adornment she has rejected as worthy of women on the
stage. The only genuine form of noble birth she recognized is
piety, and the knowledge of whence we are sprung and whither we
are tending. The only safe and inviolable form of wealth is, she
considered, to strip oneself of wealth for God and the poor, and
especially for those of our own kin who are unfortunate; and such
help only as is necessary, she held to be rather a reminder, than
a relief of their distress, while a more liberal beneficence
brings stable honour and most perfect consolation. Some women
have excelled in thrifty management, others in piety, while she,
difficult as it is to unite the two virtues, has surpassed all in
both of them, both by her eminence in each, and by the fact that
she alone has combined them together. To as great a degree has
she, by her care and skill, secured the prosperity of her
household, according to the injunctions and laws of Solomon as to
the valiant woman, as if she had had no knowledge of piety; and
she applied herself to God and Divine things as closely as if
absolutely released from household cares, allowing neither branch
of her duty to interfere with the other, but rather making each
of them support the other.
9. What time or place for prayer ever
escaped her? To this she was drawn before all other things in the
day; or rather, who had such hope of receiving an immediate
answer to her requests? Who paid such reverence to the hand and
countenance of the priests? Or honoured all kinds of philosophy?
Who reduced the flesh by more constant fast and vigil? Or stood
like a pillar at the night long and daily psalmody? Who had a
greater love for virginity, though patient of the marriage bond
herself? Who was a better patron of the orphan and the widow? Who
aided as much in the alleviation of the misfortunes of the
mourner? These things, small as they are, and perhaps
contemptible in the eyes of some, because not easily attainable
by most people (for that which is unattainable comes, through
envy, to be thought not even credible), are in my eyes most
honourable, since they were the discoveries of her faith and the
undertakings of her spiritual fervour. So also in the holy
assemblies, or places, her voice was never to be heard except in
the necessary responses of the service.
10. And if it was a great thing for the
altar never to have had an iron tool lifted upon it, and that no
chisel should be seen or heard, with greater reason, since
everything dedicated to God ought to be natural and free from
artificiality, it was also surely a great thing that she
reverenced the sanctuary by her silence; that she never turned
her back to the venerable table, nor spat upon the divine
pavement; that she never grasped the hand or kissed the lips of
any heathen woman, however honourable in other respects, or
closely related she might be; nor would she ever share the salt,
I say not willingly but even under compulsion, of those who came
from the profane and unholy table; nor could she bear, against
the law of conscience, to pass by or look upon a polluted house;
nor to have her ears or tongue, which had received and uttered
divine things, defiled by Grecian tales or theatrical songs, on
the ground that what is unholy is unbecoming to holy things; and
what is still more wonderful, she never so far yielded to the
external signs of grief, although greatly moved even by the
misfortunes of strangers, as to allow a sound of woe to burst
forth before the Eucharist, or a tear to fall from the eye
mystically sealed, or any trace of mourning to be left on the
occasion of a festival, however frequent her own sorrows might
be; inasmuch as the God-loving soul should subject every human
experience to the things of God.
11. I pass by in silence what is still more
ineffable, of which God is witness, and those of the faithful
handmaidens to whom she has confided such things. That which
concerns myself is perhaps undeserving of mention, since I have
proved unworthy of the hope cherished in regard to me: yet it was
on her part a great undertaking to promise me to God before my
birth, with no fear of the future, and to dedicate me immediately
after I was born. Through God's goodness has it been that she has
not utterly failed in her prayer, and that the auspicious
sacrifice was not rejected. Some of these things were already in
existence, others were in the future, growing up by means of
gradual additions. And as the sun which most pleasantly casts its
morning rays, becomes at midday hotter and more brilliant, so
also did she, who from the first gave no slight evidence of
piety, shine forth at last with fuller light. Then indeed he, who
had established her in his house, had at home no slight spur to
piety, possessed, by her origin and descent, of the love of God
and Christ, and having received virtue as her patrimony; not, as
he had been, cut out of the wild olive and grafted into the good
olive, yet unable to bear, in the excess of her faith, to be
unequally yoked; for, though surpassing all others in endurance
and fortitude, she could not brook this, the being but half
united to God, because of the estrangement of him who was a part
of herself, and the failure to add to the bodily union, a close
connexion in the spirit: on this account, she fell before God
night and day, entreating for the salvation of her head with many
fastings and tears, and assiduously devoting herself to her
husband, and influencing him in many ways, by means of
reproaches, admonitions, attentions, estrangements, and above all
by her own character with its fervour for piety, by which the
soul is specially prevailed upon and softened, and willingly
submits to virtuous pressure. The drop of water constantly
striking the rock was destined to hollow it, and at length attain
its longing, as the sequel shows.
12. These were the objects of her prayers
and hopes, in the fervour of faith rather than of youth. Indeed,
none was as confident of things present as she of things hoped
for, from her experience of the generosity of God. For the
salvation of my father there was a concurrence of the gradual
conviction of his reason, and the vision of dreams which God
often bestows upon a soul worthy of salvation. What was the
vision? This is to me the most pleasing part of the story. He
thought that he was singing, as he had never done before, though
his wife was frequent in her supplications and prayers, this
verse from the psalms of holy David: I was glad when they said
unto me, we will go into the house of the Lord. The psalm was a
strange one to him, and along with its words the desire came to
him. As soon as she heard it, having thus obtained her prayer,
she seized the opportunity, replying that the vision would bring
the greatest pleasure, if accompanied by its fulfilment, and,
manifesting by her joy the greatness of the benefit, she urged
forward his salvation, before anything could intervene to hinder
the call, and dissipate the object of her longing. At that very
time it happened that a number of Bishops were hastening to
Nicaea, to oppose the madness of Arius, since the wickedness of
dividing the Godhead had just arisen; so my father yielded
himself to God and to the heralds of the truth, and confessed his
desire, and requested from them the common salvation, one of them
being the celebrated Leontius, at that time our own metropolitan.
It would be a great wrong to grace, were I to pass by in silence
the wonder which then was bestowed upon him by grace. The
witnesses of the wonder are not few. The teachers of accuracy
were spiritually at fault, and the grace was a forecast of the
future, and the formula of the priesthood was mingled with the
admission of the catechumen. O involuntary initiation! bending
his knee, he received the form of admission to the state of a
catechumen in such wise, that many, not only of the highest, but
even of the lowest, intellect, prophesied the future, being
assured by no indistinct signs of what was to be.
13. After a short interval, wonder
succeeded wonder. I will commend the account of it to the ears of
the faithful, for to profane minds nothing that is good is
trustworthy. He was approaching that regeneration by water and
the Spirit, by which we confess to God the formation and
completion of the Christlike man, and the transformation and
reformation from the earthy to the Spirit. He was approaching the
laver with warm desire and bright hope, after all the purgation
possible, and a far greater purification of soul and body than
that of the men who were to receive the tables from Moses. Their
purification extended only to their dress, and a slight
restriction of the belly, and a temporary continence. The whole
of his past life had been a preparation for the enlightenment,
and a preliminary purification making sure the gift, in order
that perfection might be entrusted to purity, and that the
blessing might incur no risk in a soul which was confident in its
possession of the grace. And as he was ascending out of the
water, there flashed around him a light and a glory worthy of the
disposition with which he approached the gift of faith; this was
manifest even to some others, who for the time concealed the
wonder, from fear of speaking of a sight which each one thought
had been only his own, but shortly afterwards communicated it to
one another. To the baptiser and initiator, however, it was so
clear and visible, that he could not even hold back the mystery,
but publicly cried out that he was anointing with the Spirit his
own successor.
14. Nor indeed would anyone disbelieve this
who has heard and knows that Moses, when little in the eyes of
men, and not yet of any account, was called from the bush which
burned but was not consumed, or rather by Him who appeared in the
bush, and was encouraged by that first wonder: Moses, I say, for
whom the sea was divided, and manna rained down, and the rock
poured out a fountain, and the pillar of fire and cloud led the
way in turn, and the stretching out of his hands gained a
victory, and the representation of the cross overcame tens of
thousands. Isaiah, again, who beheld the glory of the Seraphim,
and after him Jeremiah, who was entrusted with great power
against nations and kings; the one heard the divine voice and was
cleansed by a live coal for his prophetic office, and the other
was known before his formation and sanctified before his birth.
Paul, also, while yet a persecutor, who became the great herald
of the truth and teacher of the Gentiles in faith, was surrounded
by a light and acknowledged Him whom he was persecuting, and was
entrusted with his great ministry, and filled every ear and mind
with the gospel.
15. Why need I count up all those who have
been called to Himself by God and associated with such wonders as
confirmed him in his piety? Nor was it the case that after such
and so incredible and startling beginnings, any of the former
things was put to shame by his subsequent conduct, as happens
with those who very soon acquire a distaste for what is good, and
so neglect all further progress, if they do not utterly relapse
into vice. This cannot be said of him, for he was most consistent
with himself and his early days, and kept in harmony his life
before the priesthood with its excellence, and his life after it
with what had gone before, since it would have been unbecoming to
begin in one way and end in another, or to advance to a different
end from that which he had in view at first. He was next
entrusted with the priesthood, not with the facility and disorder
of the present day, but after a brief interval, in order to add
to his own cleansing the skill and power to cleanse others; for
this is the law of spiritual sequence. And when he had been
entrusted with it, the grace was the more glorified, being really
the grace of God, and not of men, and not, as the preacher says,
an independent impulse and purpose of spirit.
16. He received a woodland and rustic
church, the pastoral care and oversight of which had not been
bestowed from a distance, but it had been cared for by one of his
predecessors of admirable and angelic disposition, and a more
simple man than our present rulers of the people; but, after he
had been speedily taken to God, it had, in consequence of the
loss of its leader, for the most part grown careless and run
wild; accordingly, he at first strove without harshness to soften
the habits of the people, both by words of pastoral knowledge,
and by setting himself before them as an example, like a
spiritual statue, polished into the beauty of all excellent
conduct. He next, by constant meditation on the divine words,
though a late student of such matters, gathered together so much
wisdom within a short time that he was in no wise excelled by
those who had spent the greatest toil upon them, and received
this special grace from God, that he became the father and
teacher of orthodoxy-not, like our modern wise men, yielding to
the spirit of the age, nor defending our faith by indefinite and
sophistical language, as if they had no fixity of faith, or were
adulterating the truth; but, he was more pious than those who
possessed rhetorical power, more skilled in rhetoric than those
who were upright in mind; or rather, while he took the second
place as an orator, he surpassed all in piety. He acknowledged
One God worshipped in Trinity, and Three, Who are united in One
Godhead; neither Sabellianising as to the One, nor Arianising as
to the Three; either by contracting and so atheistically
annihilating the Godhead, or by tearing It asunder by
distinctions of unequal greatness or nature. For, seeing that Its
every quality is incomprehensible and beyond the power of our
intellect, how can we either perceive or express by definition on
such a subject, that which is beyond our ken? How can the
immeasurable be measured, and the Godhead be reduced to the
condition of finite things, and measured by degrees of greater or
less?
17. What else must we say of this great man
of God, the true Divine, under the influence, in regard to these
subjects, of the Holy Ghost, but that through his perception of
these points, he, like the great Noah, the father of this second
world, made this church to be called the new Jerusalem, and a
second ark borne up upon the waters; since it both surmounted the
deluge of souls, and the insults of the heretics, and excelled
all others in reputation no less than it fell behind them in
numbers; and has had the same fortune as the sacred Bethlehem,
which can without contradiction be at once said to be a little
city and the metropolis of the world, since it is the nurse and
mother of Christ, Who both made and overcame the
world.
18. To give a proof of what I say. When a
tumult of the over-zealous part of the Church was raised against
us, and we had been decoyed by a document and artful terms into
association with evil, he alone was believed to have an unwounded
mind, and a soul unstained by ink, even when he had been imposed
upon in his simplicity, and failed from his guilelessness of soul
to be on his guard against guile. He it was alone, or rather
first of all, who by his zeal for piety reconciled to himself and
the rest of the church the faction opposed to us, which was the
last to leave us, the first to return, owing to both their
reverence for the man and the purity of his doctrine, so that the
serious storm in the churches was allayed, and the hurricane
reduced to a breeze under the influence of his prayers and
admonitions; while, if I may make a boastful remark, I was his
partner in piety and activity, aiding him in every effort on
behalf of what is good, accompanying and running beside him, and
being permitted on this occasion to contribute a very great share
of the toil. Here my account of these matters, which is a little
premature, must come to an end.
19. Who could enumerate the full tale of
his excellences, or, if he wished to pass by most of them,
discover without difficulty what can be omitted? For each trait,
as it occurs to the mind, seems superior to what has gone before;
it takes possession of me, and I feel more at a loss to know what
I ought to pass by, than other panegyrists are as to what they
ought to say. So that the abundance of material is to some extent
a hindrance to me, and my mind is itself put to the test in its
efforts to test his qualities, and its inability, where all are
equal, to find one which surpasses the rest. So that, just as
when we see a pebble falling into still water, it becomes the
centre and starting-point of circle after circle, each by its
continuous agitation breaking up that which lies outside of it;
this is exactly the case with myself. For as soon as one thing
enters my mind, another follows and displaces it; and I am
wearied out in making a choice, as what I have already grasped is
ever retiring in favour of that which follows in its
train.
20. Who was more anxious than he for the
common weal? Who more wise in domestic affairs, since God, who
orders all things in due variation, assigned to him a house and
suitable fortune? Who was more sympathetic in mind, more
bounteous in hand, towards the poor, that most dishonoured
portion of the nature to which equal honour is due? For he
actually treated his own property as if it were another's, of
which he was but the steward, relieving poverty as far as he
could, and expending not only his superfluities but his
necessities-a manifest proof of love for the poor, giving a
portion, not only to seven, according to the injunction of
Solomon, but if an eighth came forward, not even in his case
being niggardly, but more pleased to dispose of his wealth than
we know others are to acquire it; taking away the yoke and
election (which means, as I think, all meanness in testing as to
whether the recipient is worthy or not) and word of murmuring in
benevolence. This is what most men do: they give indeed, but
without that readiness, which is a greater and more perfect thing
than the mere offering. For he thought it much better to be
generous even to the undeserving for the sake of the deserving,
than from fear of the undeserving to deprive those who were
deserving. And this seems to be the duty of casting our bread
upon the waters, since it will not be swept away or perish in the
eyes of the just Investigator, but will arrive yonder where all
that is ours is laid up, and will meet with us in due time, even
though we think it not.
21. But what is best and greatest of all,
his magnanimity was accompanied by freedom from ambition. Its
extent and character I will proceed to show. In considering their
wealth to be common to all, and in liberality in bestowing it, he
and his consort rivalled each other in their struggles after
excellence; but he intrusted the greater part of this bounty to
her hand, as being a most excellent and trusty steward of such
matters. What a woman she is? Not even the Atlantic Ocean, or if
there be a greater one, could meet her drafts upon it. So great
and so boundless is her love of liberality. In the contrary sense
she has rivalled the horse-leech of Solomon, by her insatiable
longing for progress, overcoming the tendency to backsliding, and
unable to satisfy her zeal for benevolence. She not only
considered all the property which they originally possessed, and
what accrued to them later, as unable to suffice her own longing,
but she would, as I have often heard her say, have gladly sold
herself and her children into slavery, had there been any means
of doing so, to expend the proceeds upon the poor. Thus entirely
did she give the rein to her generosity. This is, I imagine, far
more convincing than any instance of it could be. Magnanimity in
regard to money may be found without difficulty in the case of
others, whether it be dissipated in the public rivalries of the
state, or lent to God through the poor, the only mode of
treasuring it up for those who spend it: but it is not easy to
discover a man who has renounced the consequent reputation. For
it is desire for reputation which supplies to most men their
readiness to spend. And where the bounty must be secret, there
the disposition to it is less keen.
22. So bounteous was his hand-further
details I leave to those who knew him, so that if anything of the
kind is borne witness to in regard to myself, it proceeds from
that fountain, and is a portion of that stream. Who was more
under the Divine guidance in admitting men to the sanctuary, or
in resenting dishonour done to it, or in cleansing the holy table
with awe from the unholy? Who with such unbiassed judgment, and
with the scales of justice, either decided a suit, or hated vice,
or honoured virtue, or promoted the most excellent? Who was so
compassionate for the sinner, or sympathetic towards those who
were running well? Who better knew the right time for using the
rod and the staff, yet relied most upon the staff? Whose eyes
were more upon the faithful in the land, especially upon those
who, in the monastic and unwedded life, have despised the earth
and the things of earth?
23. Who did more to rebuke pride and foster
lowliness? And that in no assumed or external way, as most of
those who now make profession of virtue, and are in appearance as
elegant as the most mindless women, who, for lack of beauty of
their own, take refuge in pigments, and are, if I may say so,
splendidly made up, uncomely in their comeliness, and more ugly
than they originally were. For his lowliness was no matter of
dress, but of spiritual disposition: nor was it expressed by a
bent neck, or lowered voice, or downcast look, or length of
beard, or close-shaven head, or measured gait, which can be
adopted for a while, but are very quickly exposed, for nothing
which is affected can be permanent. No! he was ever most lofty in
life, most lowly in mind; inaccessible in virtue, most accessible
in intercourse. His dress had in it nothing remarkable, avoiding
equally magnificence and sordidness, while his internal
brilliancy was supereminent. The disease and insatiability of the
belly, he, if anyone, held in check, but without ostentation; so
that he might be kept down without being puffed up, from having
encouraged a new vice by his pursuit of reputation. For he held
that doing and saying everything by which fame among externs
might be won, is the characteristic of the politician, whose
chief happiness is found in the present life: but that the
spiritual and Christian man should look to one object alone, his
salvation, and think much of what may contribute to this, but
detest as of no value what does not; and accordingly despise what
is visible, but be occupied with interior perfection alone, and
estimate most highly whatever promotes his own improvement, and
attracts others through himself to that which is supremely
good.
24. But what was most excellent and most
characteristic, though least generally recognized, was his
simplicity, and freedom from guile and resentment. For among men
of ancient and modern days, each is supposed to have had some
special success, as each chanced to have received from God some
particular virtue: Job unconquered patience in misfortune, Moses
and David meekness, Samuel prophecy, seeing into the future,
Phineas zeal, for which he has a name, Peter and Paul eagerness
in preaching, the sons of Zebedee magniloquence, whence also they
were entitled Sons of thunder. But why should I enumerate them
all, speaking as I do among those who know this? Now the
specially distinguishing mark of Stephen and of my father was the
absence of malice. For not even when in peril did Stephen hate
his assailants, but was stoned while praying for those who were
stoning him as a disciple of Christ, on Whose behalf he was
allowed to suffer, and so, in his long-suffering, bearing for God
a nobler fruit than his death: my father, in allowing no interval
between assault and forgiveness, so that he was almost robbed of
pain itself by the speed of pardon.
25. We both believe in and hear of the
dregs of the anger of God, the residuum of His dealings with
those who deserve it: For the Lord is a God of vengeance. For
although He is disposed by His kindness to gentleness rather than
severity, yet He does not absolutely pardon sinners, lest they
should be made worse by His goodness. Yet my father kept no
grudge against those who provoked him, indeed he was absolutely
uninfluenced by anger, although in spiritual things exceedingly
overcome by zeal: except when he had been prepared and armed and
set in hostile array against that which was advancing to injure
him. So that this sweet disposition of his would not, as the
saying goes, have been stirred by tens of thousands. For the
wrath which he had was not like that of the serpent, smouldering
within, ready to defend itself, eager to burst forth, and longing
to strike back at once on being disturbed; but like the sting of
the bee, which does not bring death with its stroke; while his
kindness was superhuman. The wheel and scourge were often
threatened, and those who could apply them stood near; and the
danger ended in being pinched on the ear, patted on the face, or
buffeted on the temple: thus he mitigated the threat. His dress
and sandals were dragged off, and the scoundrel was felled to the
ground: then his anger was directed not against his assailant,
but against his eager succourer, as a minister of evil. How could
anyone be more conclusively proved to be good, and worthy to
offer the gifts to God? For often, instead of being himself
roused, he made excuses for the man who assailed him, blushing
for his faults as if they had been his own.
26. The dew would more easily resist the
morning rays of the sun, than any remains of anger continue in
him; but as soon as he had spoken, his indignation departed with
his words, leaving behind only his love for what is good, and
never outlasting the sun; nor did he cherish anger which destroys
even the prudent, or show any bodily trace of vice within, nay,
even when roused, he preserved calmness. The result of this was
most unusual, not that he was the only one to give rebuke, but
the only one to be both loved and admired by those whom he
reproved, from the victory which his goodness gained over warmth
of feeling; and it was felt to be more serviceable to be punished
by a just man than besmeared by a bad one, for in one case the
severity becomes pleasant for its utility, in the other the
kindliness is suspected because of the evil of the man's
character. But though his soul and character were so simple and
divine, his piety nevertheless inspired the insolent with awe: or
rather, the cause of their respect was the simplicity which they
despised. For it was impossible to him to utter either prayer or
curse without the immediate bestowal of permanent blessing or
transient pain. The one proceeded from his inmost soul, the other
merely rested upon his lips as a paternal reproof. Many indeed of
those who had injured him incurred neither lingering requital
nor, as the poet says, "vengeance which dogs men's steps;" but at
the very moment of their passion they were struck and converted,
came forward, knelt before him, and were pardoned, going away
gloriously vanquished, and amended both by the chastisement and
the forgiveness. Indeed, a forgiving spirit often has great
saving power, checking the wrongdoer by the sense of shame, and
bringing him back from fear to love, a far more secure state of
mind. In chastisement some were tossed by oxen oppressed by the
yoke, which suddenly attacked them, though they had never done
anything of the kind before; others were thrown and trampled upon
by most obedient and quiet horses; others seized by intolerable
fevers, and apparitions of their daring deeds; others being
punished in different ways, and learning obedience from the
things which they suffered.
27. Such and so remarkable being his
gentleness, did he yield the palm to others in industry and
practical virtue? By no means. Gentle as he was, he possessed, if
any one did, an energy corresponding to his gentleness. For
although, for the most part, the two virtues of benevolence and
severity are at variance and opposed to each other, the one being
gentle but without practical qualities, the other practical but
unsympathetic, in his case there was a wonderful combination of
the two, his action being as energetic as that of a severe man,
but combined with gentleness; while his readiness to yield seemed
unpractical but was accompanied with energy, in his patronage,
his freedom of speech, and every kind of official duty. He united
the wisdom of the serpent, in regard to evil, with the
harmlessness of the dove, in regard to good, neither allowing the
wisdom to degenerate into knavery, nor the simplicity into
silliness, but as far as in him lay, he combined the two in one
perfect form of virtue. Such being his birth, such his exercise
of the priestly office, such the reputation which he won at the
hands of all, what wonder if he was thought worthy of the
miracles by which God establishes true religion?
28. One of the wonders which concern him
was that he suffered from sickness and bodily pain. But what
wonder is it for even holy men to be distressed, either for the
cleansing of their clay, slight though it may be, or a touchstone
of virtue and test of philosophy, or for the education of the
weaker, who learn from their example to be patient instead of
giving way under their misfortunes? Well, he was sick, the time
was the holy and illustrious Easter, the queen of days, the
brilliant night which dissipates the darkness of sin, upon which
with abundant light we keep the feast of our salvation, putting
ourselves to death along with the Light once put to death for us,
and rising again with Him who rose. This was the time of his
sufferings. Of what kind they were, I will briefly explain. His
whole frame was on fire with an excessive, burning fever, his
strength had failed, he was unable to take food, his sleep had
departed from him, he was in the greatest distress, and agitated
by palpitations. Within his mouth, the palate and the whole of
the upper surface was so completely and painfully ulcerated, that
it was difficult and dangerous to swallow even water. The skill
of physicians, the prayers, most earnest though they were, of his
friends, and every possible attention were alike of no avail. He
himself in this desperate condition, while his breath came short
and fast, had no perception of present things, but was entirely
absent, immersed in the objects he had long desired, now made
ready for him. We were in the temple, mingling supplications with
the sacred rites, for, in despair of all others, we had betaken
ourselves to the Great Physician, to the power of that night, and
to the last succour, with the intention, shall I say, of keeping
a feast, or of mourning; of holding festival, or paying funeral
honours to one no longer here? O those tears! which were shed at
that time by all the people. O voices, and cries, and hymns
blended with the psalmody! From the temple they sought the
priest, from the sacred rite the celebrant, from God their worthy
ruler, with my Miriam to lead them and strike the timbrel not of
triumph, but of supplication; learning then for the first time to
be put to shame by misfortune, and calling at once upon the
people and upon God; upon the former to sympathize with her
distress, and to be lavish of their tears, upon the latter, to
listen to her petitions, as, with the inventive genius of
suffering, she rehearsed before Him all His wonders of old
time.
29. What then was the response of Him who
was the God of that night and of the sick man? A shudder comes
over me as I proceed with my story. And though you, my hearers,
may shudder, do not disbelieve: for that would be impious, when I
am the speaker, and in reference to him. The time of the mystery
was come, and the reverend station and order, when silence is
kept for the solemn rites; and then he was raised up by Him who
quickeneth the dead, and by the holy night. At first he moved
slightly, then more decidedly; then in a feeble and indistinct
voice he called by name one of the servants who was in attendance
upon him, and bade him come, and bring his clothes, and support
him with his hand. He came in alarm, and gladly waited upon him,
while he, leaning upon his hand as upon a staff, imitates Moses
upon the mount, arranges his feeble hands in prayer, and in union
with, or on behalf of, his people eagerly celebrates the
mysteries, in such few words as his strength allowed, but, as it
seems to me, with a most perfect intention. What a miracle! In
the sanctuary without a sanctuary, sacrificing without an altar,
a priest far from the sacred rites: yet all these were present to
him in the power of the spirit, recognised by him, though unseen
by those who were there. Then, after adding the customary words
of thanksgiving, and after blessing the people, he retired again
to his bed, and after taking a little food, and enjoying a sleep,
he recalled his spirit, and, his health being gradually
recovered, on the new day of the feast, as we call the first
Sunday after the festival of the Resurrection, he entered the
temple and inaugurated his life which had been preserved, with
the full complement of clergy, and offered the sacrifice of
thanksgiving. To me this seems no less remarkable than the
miracle in the case of Hezekiah, who was glorified by God in his
sickness and prayers with an extension of life, and this was
signified by the return of the shadow of the degrees, according
to the request of the king who was restored, whom God honoured at
once by the favour and the sign, assuring him of the extension of
his days by the extension of the day.
30. The same miracle occurred in the case
of my mother not long afterwards. I do not think it would be
proper to pass by this either: for we shall both pay the meed of
honour which is due to her, if to anyone at all, and gratify him,
by her being associated with him in our recital. She, who had
always been strong and vigorous and free from disease all her
life, was herself attacked by sickness. In consequence of much
distress, not to prolong my story, caused above all by inability
to eat, her life was for many days in danger, and no remedy for
the disease could be found. How did God sustain her? Not by
raining down manna, as for Israel of old or opening the rock, in
order to give drink to His thirsting people, or feasting her by
means of ravens, as Elijah, or feeding her by a prophet carried
through the air, as He did to Daniel when a-hungered in the den.
But how? She thought she saw me, who was her favourite, for not
even in her dreams did she prefer any other of us, coming up to
her suddenly at night, with a basket of pure white loaves, which
I blessed and crossed as I was wont to do, and then fed and
strengthened her, and she became stronger. The nocturnal vision
was a real action. For, in consequence, she became more herself
and of better hope, as is manifest by a clear and evident token.
Next morning, when I paid her an early visit, I saw at once that
she was brighter, and when I asked, as usual, what kind of a
night she had passed, and if she wished for anything, she
replied, "My child, you most readily and kindly fed me, and then
you ask how I am. I am very well and at ease." Her maids too made
signs to me to offer no resistance, and to accept her answer at
once, lest she should be thrown back into despondency, if the
truth were laid bare. I will add one more instance common to them
both.
31. I was on a voyage from Alexandria to
Greece over the Parthenian Sea. The voyage was quite
unseasonable, undertaken in an AEginetan vessel, under the
impulse of eager desire; for what specially induced me was that I
had fallen in with a crew who were well known to me. After making
some way on the voyage, a terrible storm came upon us, and such
an one as my shipmates said they had but seldom seen before.
While we were all in fear of a common death, spiritual death was
what I was most afraid of; for I was in danger of departing in
misery, being unbaptised, and I longed for the spiritual water
among the waters of death. On this account I cried and begged and
besought a slight respite. My shipmates, even in their common
danger, joined in my cries, as not even my own relatives would
have done, kindly souls as they were, having learned sympathy
from their dangers. In this my condition, my parents felt for me,
my danger having been communicated to them by a nightly vision,
and they aided me from the land, soothing the waves by prayer, as
I afterwards learned by calculating the time, after I had landed.
This was also shown me in a wholesome sleep, of which I had
experience during a slight lull of the tempest. I seemed to be
holding a Fury, of fearful aspect, boding danger; for the night
presented her clearly to my eyes. Another of my shipmates, a boy
most kindly disposed and dear to me, and exceedingly anxious on
my behalf, in my then present condition, thought he saw my mother
walk upon the sea, and seize and drag the ship to land with no
great exertion. We had confidence in the vision, for the sea
began to grow calm, and we soon reached Rhodes after the
intervention of no great discomfort. We ourselves became an
offering in consequence of that peril; for we promised ourselves
if we were saved, to God, and, when we had been saved, gave
ourselves to Him.
32. Such were their common experiences. But
I imagine that some of those who have had an accurate knowledge
of his life must have been for a long while wondering why we have
dwelt upon these points, as if we thought them his only title to
renown, and postponed the mention of the difficulties of his
times, against which he conspicuously arrayed himself, as though
we were either ignorant of them, or thought them to be of no
great consequence. Come, then, we will proceed to speak upon this
topic. The first, and I think the last, evil of our day, was the
Emperor who apostatised from God and from reason, and thought it
a small matter to conquer the Persians, but a great one to
subject to himself the Christians; and so, together with the
demons who led and prevailed upon him, he failed in no form of
impiety, but by means of persuasions, threats, and sophistries,
strove to draw men to him, and even added to his various
artifices the use of force. His design, however, was exposed,
whether he strove to conceal persecution under sophistical
devices, or manifestly made use of his authority-namely by one
means or the other-either by cozening or by violence, to get us
into his power. Who can be found who more utterly despised or
defeated him? One sign, among many others, of his contempt, is
the mission to our sacred buildings of the police and their
commissary, with the intention of taking either voluntary or
forcible possession of them: he had attacked many others, and
came hither with like intent, demanding the surrender of the
temple according to the Imperial decree, but was so far from
succeeding in any of his wishes that, had he not speedily given
way before my father, either from his own good sense or according
to some advice given to him, he would have had to retire with his
feet mangled, with such wrath and zeal did the priest boil
against him in defence of his shrine. And who had a manifestly
greater share in bringing about his end, both in public, by the
prayers and united supplications which he directed against the
accursed one, without regard to the [dangers of] the time; and in
private, arraying against him his nightly armoury, of sleeping on
the ground, by which he wore away his aged and tender frame, and
of tears, with whose fountains he watered the ground for almost a
whole year, directing these practices to the Searcher of hearts
alone, while he tried to escape our notice, in his retiring piety
of which I have spoken. And he would have been utterly
unobserved, had I not once suddenly rushed into his room, and
noticing the tokens of his lying upon the ground, inquired of his
attendants what they meant, and so learned the mystery of the
night.
33. A further story of the same period and
the same courage. The city of Caesarea was in an uproar about the
election of a bishop; for one had just departed, and another must
be found, amidst heated partisanship not easily to be soothed.
For the city was naturally exposed to party spirit, owing to the
fervour of its faith, and the rivalry was increased by the
illustrious position of the see. Such was the state of affairs;
several Bishops had arrived to consecrate the Bishop; the
populace was divided into several parties, each with its own
candidate, as is usual in such cases, owing to the influences of
private friendship or devotion to God; but at last the whole
people came to an agreement, and, with the aid of a band of
soldiers at that time quartered there, seized one of their
leading citizens, a man of excellent life, but not yet sealed
with the divine baptism, brought him against his will to the
sanctuary, and setting him before the Bishops, begged, with
entreaties mingled with violence, that he might be consecrated
and proclaimed, not in the best of order, but with all sincerity
and ardour. Nor is it possible to say whom time pointed out as
more illustrious and religious than he was. What then took place,
as the result of the uproar? Their resistance was overcome, they
purified him, they proclaimed him, they enthroned him, by
external action, rather than by spiritual judgment and
disposition, as the sequel shows. They were glad to retire and
regain freedom of judgment, and agreed upon a plan-I do not know
that it was inspired by the Spirit-to hold nothing which had been
done to be valid, and the institution to have been void, pleading
violence on the part of him who had had no less violence done to
himself, and laying hold of certain words which had been uttered
on the occasion with greater vigour than wisdom. But the great
high-priest and just examiner of actions was not carried away by
this plan of theirs, and did not approve of their judgment, but
remained as uninfluenced and unmoved as if no pressure at all had
been put upon him. For he saw that, the violence having been
common, if they brought any charge against him, they were
themselves liable to a counter-charge, or, if they acquitted him,
they themselves might be acquitted, or rather with still more
justice, they were unable to secure their own acquittal, even by
acquitting him: for if they were deserving of excuse, so
assuredly was he, and if he was not, much less were they: for it
would have been far better to have at the time run the risk of
resistance to the last extremity, than afterwards to enter into
designs against him, especially at such a juncture, when it was
better to put an end to existing enmities than to devise new
ones. For the state of affairs was as follows.
34. The Emperor had come, raging against
the Christians; he was angry at the election and threatened the
elect, and the city stood in imminent peril as to whether, after
that day it should cease to exist, or escape and be treated with
some degree of mercy. The innovation in regard to the election
was a new ground of exasperation, in addition to the destruction
of the temple of Fortune in a time of prosperity, and was looked
upon as an invasion of his rights. The governor of the province
also was eager to turn the opportunity to his own account, and
was ill disposed to the new bishop, with whom he had never had
friendly relations, in consequence of their different political
views. Accordingly he sent letters to summon the consecrators to
invalidate the election, and in no gentle terms, for they were
threatened as if by command of the Emperor. Hereupon, when the
letter reached him, without fear or delay, he replied-consider
the courage and spirit of his answer-"Most excellent governor, we
have one Censor of all our actions, and one Emperor, against whom
his enemies are in arms. He will review the present consecration,
which we have legitimately performed according to His will. In
regard to any other matter, you may, if you will, use violence
with the greatest ease against us. But no one can prevent us from
vindicating the legitimacy and justice of our action in this
case; unless you should make a law on this point, you, who have
no right to interfere in our affairs." This letter excited the
admiration of its recipient, although he was for a while annoyed
at it, as we have been told by many who know the facts well. It
also stayed the action of the Emperor, and delivered the city
from peril, and ourselves, it is not amiss to add, from disgrace.
This was the work of the occupant of an unimportant and suffragan
see. Is not a presidency of this kind far preferable to a title
derived from a superior see, and a power which is based upon
action rather than upon a name.
35. Who is so distant from this world of
ours, as to be ignorant of what is last in order, but the first
and greatest proof of his power? The same city was again in an
uproar for the same reason, in consequence of the sudden removal
of the Bishop chosen with such honourable violence, who had now
departed to God, on Whose behalf he had nobly and bravely
contended in the persecutions. The heat of the disturbance was in
proportion to its unreasonableness. The man of eminence was not
unknown, but was more conspicuous than the sun amidst the stars,
in the eyes not only of all others, but especially of that select
and most pure portion of the people, whose business is in the
sanctuary, and the Nazarites amongst us, to whom such
appointments should, if not entirely, as much as possible belong,
and so the church would be free from harm, instead of to the most
opulent and powerful, or the violent and unreasonable portion of
the people, and especially the most corrupt of them. Indeed, I am
almost inclined to believe that the civil government is more
orderly than ours, to which divine grace is attributed, and that
such matters are better regulated by fear than by reason. For
what man in his senses could ever have approached another, to the
neglect of your divine and sacred person, who have been
beautified by the hands of the Lord, the unwedded, the destitute
of property and almost of flesh and blood, who in your words come
next to the Word Himself, who are wise among philosophers,
superior to the world among worldlings, my companion and
workfellow, and to speak more daringly, the sharer with me of a
common soul, the partaker of my life and education. Would that I
could speak at liberty and describe you before others without
being obliged by your presence, in dwelling upon such topics, to
pass over the greater part of them, lest I should incur the
suspicion of flattery. But, as I began by saying, the Spirit must
needs have known him as His own; yet he was the mark of envy, at
the hands of those whom I am ashamed to mention, and would that
it were not possible to hear their names from others who
studiously ridicule our affairs. Let us pass this by like a rock
in the midstream of a river, and treat with respectful silence a
subject which ought to be forgotten, as we pass on to the
remainder of our subject.
36. The things of the Spirit were exactly
known to the man of the Spirit, and he felt that he must take up
no submissive position, nor side with factions and prejudices
which depend upon favour rather than upon God, but must make the
advantage of the Church and the common salvation his sole object.
Accordingly he wrote, gave advice, strove to unite the people and
the clergy, whether ministering in the sanctuary or not, gave his
testimony, his decision and his vote, even in his absence, and
assumed, in virtue of his gray hairs, the exercise of authority
among strangers no less than among his own flock. At last, since
it was necessary that the consecration should be canonical, and
there was lacking one of the proper number of Bishops for the
proclamation, he tore himself from his couch, exhausted as he was
by age and disease, and manfully went to the city, or rather was
borne, with his body dead though just breathing, persuaded that,
if anything were to happen to him, this devotion would be a noble
winding-sheet. Hereupon once more there was a prodigy, not
unworthy of credit. He received strength from his toil, new life
from his zeal, presided at the function, took his place in the
conflict, enthroned the Bishop, and was conducted home, no longer
borne upon a bier, but in a divine ark. His long-suffering, over
whose praises I have already lingered, was in this case further
exhibited. For his colleagues were annoyed at the shame of being
overcome, and at the public influence of the old man, and allowed
their annoyance to show itself in abuse of him; but such was the
strength of his endurance that he was superior even to this,
finding in modesty a most powerful ally, and refusing to bandy
abuse with them. For he felt that it would be a terrible thing,
after really gaining the victory, to be vanquished by the tongue.
In consequence, he so won upon them by his long-suffering, that,
when time had lent its aid to his judgment, they exchanged their
annoyance for admiration, and knelt before him to ask his pardon,
in shame for their previous conduct, and flinging away their
hatred, submitted to him as their patriarch, lawgiver, and
judge.
37. From the same zeal proceeded his
opposition to the heretics, when, with the aid of the Emperor's
impiety, they made their expedition, in the hope of overpowering
us also, and adding us to the number of the others whom they had,
in almost all cases, succeeded in enslaving. For in this he
afforded us no slight assistance, both in himself, and by
hounding us on like well-bred dogs against these most savage
beasts, through his training in piety. On one point I blame you
both, and pray do not take amiss my plainspeaking, if I should
annoy you by expressing the cause of my pain. When I was
disgusted at the evils of life, and longing, if anyone of our day
has longed, for solitude, and eager, as speedily as possible, to
escape to some haven of safety, from the surge and dust of public
life, it was you who, somehow or other seized and gave me up by
the noble title of the priesthood to this base and treacherous
mart of souls. In consequence, evils have already befallen me,
and others are yet to be anticipated. For past experience renders
a man somewhat distrustful of the future, in spite of the better
suggestions of reason to the contrary.
38. Another of his excellences I must not
leave unnoticed. In general, he was a man of great endurance, and
superior to his robe of flesh: but during the pain of his last
sickness, a serious addition to the risks and burdens of old age,
his weakness was common to him and all other men; but this
fitting sequel to the other marvels, so far from being common,
was peculiarly his own. He was at no time free from the anguish
of pain, but often in the day, sometimes in the hour, his only
relief was the liturgy, to which the pain yielded, as if to an
edict of banishment. At last, after a life of almost a hundred
years, exceeding David's limit of our age, forty-five of these,
the average life of man, having been spent in the priesthood, he
brought it to a close in a good old age. And in what manner? With
the words and forms of prayer, leaving behind no trace of vice,
and many recollections of virtue. The reverence felt for him was
thus greater than falls to the lot of man, both on the lips and
in the hearts of all. Nor is it easy to find anyone who
recollects him, and does not, as the Scripture says, lay his hand
upon his mouth and salute his memory. Such was his life, and such
its completion and perfection.
39. And since some living memorial of his
munificence ought to be left behind, what other is required than
this temple, which he reared for God and for us, with very little
contribution from the people in addition to the expenditure of
his private fortune? An exploit which should not be buried in
silence, since in size it is superior to most others, in beauty
absolutely to all. It surrounds itself with eight regular
equilaterals, and is raised aloft by the beauty of two stories of
pillars and porticos, while the statues placed upon them are true
to the life; its vault flashes down upon us from above, and it
dazzles our eyes with abundant sources of light on every side,
being indeed the dwelling-place of light. It is surrounded by
excrescent equiangular ambulatories of most splendid material,
with a wide area in the midst, while its doors and vestibules
shed around it the lustre of their gracefulness, and offer from a
distance their welcome to those who are drawing nigh. I have not
yet mentioned the external ornament, the beauty and size of the
squared and dove-tailed stonework, whether it be of marble in the
bases and capitals, which divide the angles, or from our own
quarries, which are in no wise inferior to those abroad; nor of
the belts of many shapes and colours, projecting or inlaid from
the foundation to the roof-tree, which robs the spectator by
limiting his view. How could anyone with due brevity describe a
work which cost so much time and toil and skill: or will it
suffice to say that amid all the works, private and public, which
adorn other cities, this has of itself been able to secure us
celebrity among the majority of mankind? When for such a temple a
priest was needed, he also at his own expense provided one,
whether worthy of the temple or no, it is not for me to say. And
when sacrifices were required, he supplied them also, in the
misfortunes of his son, and his patience under trials, that God
might receive at his hands a reasonable whole burnt offering and
spiritual priesthood, to be honourably consumed, instead of the
sacrifice of the Law.
40. What sayest thou, my father? Is this
sufficient, and dost thou find an ample recompense for all thy
toils, which thou didst undergo for my learning, in this eulogy
of farewell or of entombment? And dost thou, as of old, impose
silence on my tongue, and bid me stop in due time, and so avoid
excess? Or dost thou require some addition? I know thou bidst me
cease, for I have said enough. Yet suffer me to add this. Make
known to us where thou art in glory, and the light which
encircles thee, and receive into the same abode thy partner soon
to follow thee, and the children whom thou hadst laid to rest
before thee, and me also, after no further, or but a slight
addition to the ills of this life: and before reaching that abode
receive me in this sweet stone, which thou didst erect for both
of us, to the honour even here of thy consecrated namesake, and
excuse me from the care both of the people which I have already
resigned, and of that which for thy sake I have since accepted:
and mayest thou guide and free from peril, as I earnestly
entreat, the whole flock and all the clergy, whose father thou
art said to be, but especially him who was overpowered by thy
paternal and spiritual coercion, so that he may not entirely
consider that act of tyranny obnoxious to blame.
41. And what do you think of us, O judge of
my words and motions? If we have spoken adequately, and to the
satisfaction of your desire, confirm it by your decision, and we
accept it: for your decision is entirely the decision of God. But
if it falls far short of his glory and of your hope, my ally is
not far to seek. Let fall thy voice, which is awaited by his
merits like a seasonable shower. And indeed he has upon you the
highest claims, those of a pastor upon a pastor and of a father
upon his son in grace. What wonder if he, who has through your
voice thundered throughout the world, should himself have some
enjoyment of it? What more is needed? Only to unite with our
spiritual Sarah, the consort and fellow-traveller through life of
our great father Abraham, in the last Christian
offices.
42. The nature of God, my mother, is not
the same as that of men; indeed, to speak generally, the nature
of divine things is not the same as that of earthly things. They
possess unchangeableness and immortality, and absolute being with
its consequences, for sure are the properties of things sure. But
how is it with what is ours? It is in a state of flux and
corruption, constantly undergoing some fresh change. Life and
death, as they are called, apparently so different, are in a
sense resolved into, and successive to, each other. For the one
takes its rise from the corruption which is our mother, runs its
course through the corruption which is the displacement of all
that is present, and comes to an end in the corruption which is
the dissolution of this life; while the other, which is able to
set us free from the ills of this life, and oftentimes translates
us to the life above, is not in my opinion accurately called
death, and is more dreadful in name than in reality; so that we
are in danger of irrationally being afraid of what is not
fearful, and courting as preferable what we really ought to fear.
There is one life, to look to life. There is one death, sin, for
it is the destruction of the soul. But all else, of which some
are proud, is a dream-vision, making sport of realities, and a
series of phantasms which lead the soul astray. If this be our
condition, mother, we shall neither be proud of life, nor greatly
hurt, by death. What grievance can we find in being transferred
hence to the true life? In being freed from the vicissitudes, the
agitation, the disgust, and all the vile tribute we must pay to
this life, to find ourselves, amid stable things, which know no
flux, while as lesser lights, we circle round the great
light?
43. Does the sense of separation cause you
pain? Let hope cheer you. Is widowhood grievous to you? Yet it is
not so to him. And what is the good of love, if it gives itself
easy things, and assigns the more difficult to its neighbour? And
why should it be grievous at all, to one who is soon to pass
away? The appointed day is at hand, the pain will not last long.
Let us not, by ignoble reasonings, make a burden of things which
are really light. We have endured a great loss-because the
privilege we enjoyed was great. Loss is common to all, such a
privilege to few. Let us rise superior to the one thought by the
consolation of the other. For it is more reasonable, that that
which is better should win the day. You have borne, in a most
brave, Christian spirit, the loss of children, who were still in
their prime and qualified for life; bear also the laying aside of
his aged body by one who was weary of life, although his vigor of
mind preserved for him his senses unimpaired. Do you want some
one to care for you? Where is your Isaac, whom he left behind for
you, to take his place in all respects? Ask of him small things,
the support of his hand and service, and requite him with greater
things, a mother's blessing and prayers, and the consequent
freedom. Are you vexed at being admonished? I praise you for it.
For you have admonished many whom your long life has brought
under your notice. What I have said can have no application to
you, who are so truly wise; but let it be a general medicine of
consolation for mourners, so that they may know that they are
mortals following mortals to the grave.
Oration XXI
On the Great Athanasius, Bishop of Alexandria
1. In praising Athanasius, I shall be
praising virtue. To speak of him and to praise virtue are
identical, because he had, or, to speak more truly, has embraced
virtue in its entirety. For all who have lived according to God
still live unto God, though they have departed hence. For this
reason, God is called the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, since
He is the God, not of the dead, but of the living. Again, in
praising virtue, I shall be praising God, who gives virtue to men
and lifts them up, or lifts them up again, to Himself by the
enlightenment which is akin to Himself. For many and great as are
our blessings-none can say how many and how great-which we have
and shall have from God, this is the greatest and kindliest of
all, our inclination and relationship to Him. For God is to
intelligible things what the sun is to the things of sense. The
one lightens the visible, the other the invisible, world. The one
makes our bodily eyes to see the sun, the other makes our
intellectual natures to see God. And, as that, which bestows on
the things which see and are seen the power of seeing and being
seen, is itself the most beautiful of visible things; so God, who
creates, for those who think, and that which is thought of, the
power of thinking and being thought of, is Himself the highest of
the objects of thought, in Whom every desire finds its bourne,
beyond Whom it can no further go. For not even the most
philosophic, the most piercing, the most curious intellect has,
or can ever have, a more exalted object. For this is the utmost
of things desirable, and they who arrive at it find an entire
rest from speculation.
2. Whoever has been permitted to escape by
reason and contemplation from matter and this fleshly cloud or
veil (whichever it should be called) and to hold communion with
God, and be associated, as far as man's nature can attain, with
the purest Light, blessed is he, both from his ascent from hence,
and for his deification there, which is conferred by true
philosophy, and by rising superior to the dualism of matter,
through the unity which is perceived in the Trinity. And
whosoever has been depraved by being knit to the flesh, and so
far oppressed by the clay that he cannot look at the rays of
truth, nor rise above things below, though he is born from above,
and called to things above, I hold him to be miserable in his
blindness, even though he may abound in things of this world; and
all the more, because he is the sport of his abundance, and is
persuaded by it that something else is beautiful instead of that
which is really beautiful, reaping, as the poor fruit of his poor
opinion, the sentence of darkness, or the seeing Him to be fire,
Whom he did not recognize as light.
3. Such has been the philosophy of few,
both nowadays and of old-for few are the men of God, though all
are His handiwork,-among lawgivers, generals, priests, Prophets,
Evangelists, Apostles, shepherds, teachers, and all the spiritual
host and band-and, among them all, of him whom now we praise. And
whom do I mean by these? Men like Enoch, Noah, Abraham, Isaac,
Jacob, the twelve Patriarchs, Moses, Aaron, Joshua, the Judges,
Samuel, David, to some extent Solomon, Elijah, Elisha, the
Prophets before the captivity, those after the captivity, and,
though last in order, first in truth, those who were concerned
with Christ's Incarnation or taking of our nature, the lamp
before the Light, the voice before the Word, the mediator before
the Mediator, the mediator between the old covenant and the new,
the famous John, the disciples of Christ, those after Christ, who
were set over the people, or illustrious in word, or conspicuous
for miracles, or made perfect through their blood.
4. With some of these Athanasius vied, by
some he was slightly excelled, and others, if it is not bold to
say so, he surpassed: some he made his models in mental power,
others in activity, others in meekness, others in zeal, others in
dangers, others in most respects, others in all, gathering from
one and another various forms of beauty (like men who paint
figures of ideal excellence), and combining them in his single
soul, he made one perfect form of virtue out of all, excelling in
action men of intellectual capacity, in intellect men of action;
or, if you will, surpassing in intellect men renowned for
intellect, in action those of the greatest active power;
outstripping those who had moderate reputation in both respects,
by his eminence in either, and those who stood highest in one or
other, by his powers in both; and, if it is a great thing for
those who have received an example, so to use it as to attach
themselves to virtue, he has no inferior title to fame, who for
our advantage has set an example to those who come after
him.
5. To speak of and admire him fully, would
perhaps be too long a task for the present purpose of my
discourse, and would take the form of a history rather than of a
panegyric: a history which it has been the object of my desires
to commit to writing for the pleasure and instruction of
posterity, as he himself wrote the life of the divine Antony, and
set forth, in the form of a narrative, the laws of the monastic
life. Accordingly, after entering into a few of the many details
of his history, such as memory suggests at the moment as most
noteworthy, in order both to satisfy my own longing and fulfil
the duty which befits the festival, we will leave the many others
to those who know them. For indeed, it is neither pious nor safe,
while the lives of the ungodly are honoured by recollection, to
pass by in silence those who have lived piously, especially in a
city which could hardly be saved by many examples of virtue,
making sport, as it does, of Divine things, no less than of the
horse-race and the theatre.
6. He was brought up, from the first, in
religious habits and practices, after a brief study of literature
and philosophy, so that he might not be utterly unskilled in such
subjects, or ignorant of matters which he had determined to
despise. For his generous and eager soul could not brook being
occupied in vanities, like unskilled athletes, who beat the air
instead of their antagonists and lose the prize. From meditating
on every book of the Old and New Testament, with a depth such as
none else has applied even to one of them, he grew rich in
contemplation, rich in splendour of life, combining them in
wondrous sort by that golden bond which few can weave; using life
as the guide of contemplation, contemplation as the seal of life.
For the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom, and, so to
say, its first swathing band; but, when wisdom has burst the
bonds of fear and risen up to love, it makes us friends of God,
and sons instead of bondsmen.
7. Thus brought up and trained, as even now
those should be who are to preside over the people, and take the
direction of the mighty body of Christ, according to the will and
foreknowledge of God, which lays long before the foundations of
great deeds, he was invested with this important ministry, and
made one of those who draw near to the God Who draws near to us,
and deemed worthy of the holy office and rank, and, after passing
through the entire series of orders, he was (to make my story
short) entrusted with the chief rule over the people, in other
words, the charge of the whole world: nor can I say whether he
received the priesthood as the reward of virtue, or to be the
fountain and life of the Church. For she, like Ishmael, fainting
from her thirst for the truth, needed to be given to drink, or,
like Elijah, to be refreshed from the brook, when the land was
parched by drought; and, when but faintly breathing, to be
restored to life and left as a seed to Israel, that we might not
become like Sodom and Gomorrah, whose destruction by the rain of
fire and brimstone is only more notorious than their wickedness.
Therefore, when we were cast down, a horn of salvation was raised
up for us, and a chief corner stone, knitting us to itself and to
one another, was laid in due season, or a fire to purify our base
and evil matter, or a farmer's fan to winnow the light from the
weighty in doctrine, or a sword to cut out the roots of
wickedness; and so the Word finds him as his own ally, and the
Spirit takes possession of one who will breathe on His
behalf.
8. Thus, and for these reasons, by the vote
of the whole people, not in the evil fashion which has since
prevailed, nor by means of bloodshed and oppression, but in an
apostolic and spiritual manner, he is led up to the throne of
Saint Mark, to succeed him in piety, no less than in office; in
the latter indeed at a great distance from him, in the former,
which is the genuine right of succession, following him closely.
For unity in doctrine deserves unity in office; and a rival
teacher sets up a rival throne; the one is a successor in
reality, the other but in name. For it is not the intruder, but
he whose rights are intruded upon, who is the successor, not the
lawbreaker, but the lawfully appointed, not the man of contrary
opinions, but the man of the same faith; if this is not what we
mean by successor, he succeeds in the same sense as disease to
health, darkness to light, storm to calm, and frenzy to sound
sense.
9. The duties of his office he discharged
in the same spirit as that in which he had been preferred to it.
For he did not at once, after taking possession of his throne,
like men who have unexpectedly seized upon some sovereignty or
inheritance, grow insolent from intoxication. This is the conduct
of illegitimate and intrusive priests, who are unworthy of their
vocation; whose preparation for the priesthood has cost them
nothing, who have endured no inconvenience for the sake of
virtue, who only begin to study religion when appointed to teach
it, and undertake the cleansing of others before being cleansed
themselves; yesterday sacrilegious, to-day sacerdotal; yesterday
excluded from the sanctuary, to-day its officiants; proficient in
vice, novices in piety; the product of the favour of man, not of
the grace of the Spirit; who, having run through the whole gamut
of violence, at last tyrannize over even piety; who, instead of
gaining credit for their office by their character, need for
their character the credit of their office, thus subverting the
due relation between them; who ought to offer more sacrifices for
themselves than for the ignorances of the people; who inevitably
fall into one of two errors, either, from their own need of
indulgence, being excessively indulgent, and so even teaching,
instead of checking, vice, or cloaking their own sins under the
harshness of their rule. Both these extremes he avoided; he was
sublime in action, lowly in mind; inaccessible in virtue, most
accessible in intercourse; gentle, free from anger, sympathetic,
sweet in words, sweeter in disposition; angelic in appearance,
more angelic in mind; calm in rebuke, persuasive in praise,
without spoiling the good effect of either by excess, but
rebuking with the tenderness of a father, praising with the
dignity of a ruler, his tenderness was not dissipated, nor his
severity sour; for the one was reasonable, the other prudent, and
both truly wise; his disposition sufficed for the training of his
spiritual children, with very little need of words; his words
with very little need of the rod, and his moderate use of the rod
with still less for the knife.
10. But why should I paint for you the
portrait of the man? St. Paul has sketched him by anticipation.
This he does, when he sings the praises of the great High-priest,
who hath passed through the heavens (for I will venture to say
even this, since Scripture can call those who live according to
Christ by the name of Christs): and again when by the rules in
his letter to Timothy, he gives a model for future Bishops: for
if you will apply the law as a test to him who deserves these
praises, you will clearly perceive his perfect exactness. Come
then to aid me in my panegyric; for I am labouring heavily in my
speech, and though I desire to pass by point after point, they
seize upon me one after another, and I can find no surpassing
excellence in a form which is in all respects well proportioned
and beautiful; for each as it occurs to me seems fairer than the
rest and so takes by storm my speech. Come then I pray, you who
have been his admirers and witnesses, divide among yourselves his
excellences, contend bravely with one another, men and women
alike, young men and maidens, old men and children, priests and
people, solitaries and cenobites, men of simple or of exact life,
contemplatives or practically minded. Let one praise him in his
fastings and prayers as if he had been disembodied and
immaterial, another his unweariedness and zeal for vigils and
psalmody, another his patronage of the needy, another his
dauntlessness towards the powerful, or his condescension to the
lowly. Let the virgins celebrate the friend of the Bridegroom;
those under the yoke their restrainer, hermits him who lent wings
to their course, cenobites their lawgiver, simple folk their
guide, contemplatives the divine, the joyous their bridle, the
unfortunate their consolation, the hoary-headed their staff,
youths their instructor, the poor their resource, the wealthy
their steward. Even the widows will, methinks, praise their
protector, even the orphans their father, even the poor their
benefactor, strangers their entertainer, brethren the man of
brotherly love, the sick their physician, in whatever sickness or
treatment you will, the healthy the guard of health, yea all men
him who made himself all things to all men that he might gain
almost, if not quite, all.
11. On these grounds, as I have said, I
leave others, who have leisure to admire the minor details of his
character, to admire and extol him. I call them minor details
only in comparing him and his character with his own standard,
for that which hath been made glorious hath not been made
glorious, even though it be exceeding splendid by reason of the
glory that surpasseth, as we are told; for indeed the minor
points of his excellence would suffice to win celebrity for
others. But since it would be intolerable for me to leave the
word and serve less important details, I must turn to that which
is his chief characteristic; and God alone, on Whose behalf I am
speaking, can enable me to say anything worthy of a soul so noble
and so mighty in the word.
12. In the palmy days of the Church, when
all was well, the present elaborate, far-fetched and artificial
treatment of Theology had not made its way into the schools of
divinity, but playing with pebbles which deceive the eye by the
quickness of their changes, or dancing before an audience with
varied and effeminate contortions, were looked upon as all one
with speaking or hearing of God in a way unusual or frivolous.
But since the Sextuses and Pyrrhos, and the antithetic style,
like a dire and malignant disease, have infected our churches,
and babbling is reputed culture, and, as the book of the Acts
says of the Athenians, we spend our time in nothing else but
either to tell or to hear some new thing. O what Jeremiah will
bewail our confusion and blind madness; he alone could utter
lamentations befitting our misfortunes.
13. The beginning of this madness was Arius
(whose name is derived from frenzy ), who paid the penalty of his
unbridled tongue by his death in a profane spot, brought about by
prayer not by disease, when he like Judas burst asunder for his
similar treachery to the Word. Then others, catching the
infection, organized an art of impiety, and, confining Deity to
the Unbegotten, expelled from Deity not only the Begotten, but
also the Proceeding one, and honoured the Trinity with communion
in name alone, or even refused to retain this for it. Not so that
blessed one, Who was indeed a man of God and a mighty trumpet of
truth: but being aware that to contract the Three Persons to a
numerical Unity is heretical, and the innovation of Sabellius,
who first devised a contraction of Deity; and that to sever the
Three Persons by a distinction of nature, is an unnatural
mutilation of Deity; he both happily preserved the Unity, which
belongs to the Godhead, and religiously taught the Trinity, which
refers to Personality, neither confounding the Three Persons in
the Unity, nor dividing the Substance among the Three Persons,
but abiding within the bounds of piety, by avoiding excessive
inclination or opposition to either side.
14. And therefore, first in the holy Synod
of Nicaea, the gathering of the three hundred and eighteen chosen
men, united by the Holy Ghost, as far as in him lay, he stayed
the disease. Though not yet ranked among the Bishops, he held the
first rank among the members of the Council, for preference was
given to virtue just as much as to office. Afterwards, when the
flame had been fanned by the blasts of the evil one, and had
spread very widely (hence came the tragedies of which almost the
whole earth and sea are full), the fight raged fiercely around
him who was the noble champion of the Word. For the assault is
hottest upon the point of resistance, while various dangers
surround it on every side: for impiety is skilful in designing
evils, and excessively daring in taking them in hand: and how
would they spare men, who had not spared the Godhead? Yet one of
the assaults was the most dangerous of all: and I myself
contribute somewhat to this scene; yea, let me plead for the
innocence of my dear fatherland, for the wickedness was not due
to the land that bore them, but to the men who undertook it. For
holy indeed is that land, and everywhere noted for its piety, but
these men are unworthy of the Church which bore them, and ye have
heard of a briar growing in a vine; and the traitor was Judas,
one of the disciples.
15. There are some who do not excuse even
my namesake from blame; who, living at Alexandria at the time for
the sake of culture, although he had been most kindly treated by
him, as if the dearest of his children, and received his special
confidence, yet joined in the revolutionary plot against his
father and patron: for, though others took the active part in it,
the hand of Absalom was with them, as the saying goes. If any of
you had heard of the hand which was produced by fraud against the
Saint, and the corpse of the living man, and the unjust
banishment, he knows what I mean. But this I will gladly forget.
For on doubtful points, I am disposed to think we ought to
incline to the charitable side, and acquit rather than condemn
the accused. For a bad man would speedily condemn even a good
man, while a good man would not be ready to condemn even a bad
one. For one who is not ready to do ill, is not inclined even to
suspect it. I come now to what is matter of fact, not of report,
what is vouched for as truth instead of unverified
suspicion.
16. There was a monster from Cappadocia,
born on our farthest confines, of low birth, and lower mind,
whose blood was not perfectly free, but mongrel, as we know that
of mules to be; at first, dependent on the table of others, whose
price was a barley cake, who had learnt to say and do everything
with an eye to his stomach, and, at last, after sneaking into
public life, and filling its lowest offices, such as that of
contractor for swine's flesh, the soldiers' rations, and then
having proved himself a scoundrel for the sake of greed in this
public trust, and been stripped to the skin, contrived to escape,
and after passing, as exiles do, from country to country and city
to city, last of all, in an evil hour for the Christian
community, like one of the plagues of Egypt, he reached
Alexandria. There, his wanderings being stayed, he began his
villany. Good for nothing in all other respects, without culture,
without fluency in conversation, without even the form and
pretence of reverence, his skill in working villany and confusion
was unequalled.
17. His acts of insolence towards the saint
you all know in full detail. Often were the righteous given into
the hands of the wicked, not that the latter might be honoured,
but that the former might be tested: and though the wicked come,
as it is written, to an awful death, nevertheless for the present
the godly are a laughing stock, while the goodness of God and the
great treasuries of what is in store for each of them hereafter
are concealed. Then indeed word and deed and thought will be
weighed in the just balances of God, as He arises to judge the
earth, gathering together counsel and works, and revealing what
He had kept sealed up. Of this let the words and sufferings of
Job convince thee, who was a truthful, blameless, just,
godfearing man, with all those other qualities which are
testified of him, and yet was smitten with such a succession of
remarkable visitations, at the hands of him who begged for power
over him, that, although many have often suffered in the whole
course of time, and some even have, as is probable, been
grievously afflicted, yet none can be compared with him in
misfortunes. For he not only suffered, without being allowed
space to mourn for his losses in their rapid succession, the loss
of his money, his possessions, his large and fair family,
blessings for which all men care; but was at last smitten with an
incurable disease horrible to look upon, and, to crown his
misfortunes, had a wife whose only comfort was evil counsel. For
his surpassing troubles were those of his soul added to those of
the body. He had also among his friends truly miserable
comforters, as he calls them, who could not help him. For when
they saw his suffering, in ignorance of its hidden meaning, they
supposed his disaster to be the punishment of vice and not the
touchstone of virtue. And they not only thought this, but were
not even ashamed to reproach him with his lot, at a time when,
even if he had been suffering for vice, they ought to have
treated his grief with words of consolation.
18. Such was the lot of Job: such at first
sight his history. In reality it was a contest between virtue and
envy: the one straining every nerve to overcome the good, the
other enduring everything, that it might abide unsubdued; the one
striving to smooth the way for vice, by means of the chastisement
of the upright, the other to retain its hold upon the good, even
if they do exceed others in misfortunes. What then of Him who
answered Job out of the whirlwind and cloud, Who is slow to
chastise and swift to help, Who suffers not utterly the rod of
the wicked to come into the lot of the righteous, lest the
righteous should learn iniquity? At the end of the contests He
declares the victory of the athlete in a splendid proclamation
and lays bare the secret of his calamities, saying: "Thinkest
thou that I have dealt with thee for any other purpose than the
manifestation of thy righteousness?" This is the balm for his
wounds, this is the crown of the contest, this the reward for his
patience. For perhaps his subsequent prosperity was small, great
as it may seem to some, and ordained for the sake of small minds,
even though he received again twice as much as he had
lost.
19. In this case then it is not wonderful,
if George had the advantage of Athanasius; nay it would be more
wonderful, if the righteous were not tried in the fire of
contumely; nor is this very wonderful, as it would have been had
the flames availed for more than this. Then he was in retirement,
and arranged his exile most excellently, for he betook himself to
the holy and divine homes of contemplation in Egypt, where,
secluding themselves from the world, and welcoming the desert,
men live to God more than all who exist in the body. Some
struggle on in an utterly monastic and solitary life, speaking to
themselves alone and to God, and all the world they know is what
meets their eyes in the desert. Others, cherishing the law of
love in community, are at once Solitaries and Coenobites, dead to
all other men and to the eddies of public affairs which whirl us
and are whirled about themselves and make sport of us in their
sudden changes, being the world to one another and whetting the
edge of their love in emulation. During his intercourse with
them, the great Athanasius, who was always the mediator and
reconciler of all other men, like Him Who made peace through His
blood between things which were at variance, reconciled the
solitary with the community life: by showing that the Priesthood
is capable of contemplation, and that contemplation is in need of
a spiritual guide.
20. Thus he combined the two, and so united
the partisans of both calm action and of active calm, as to
convince them that the monastic life is characterised by
steadfastness of disposition rather than by bodily retirement.
Accordingly the great David was a man of at once the most active
and most solitary life, if any one thinks the verse, I am in
solitude, till I pass away, of value and authority in the
exposition of this subject. Therefore, though they surpass all
others in virtue, they fell further short of his mind than others
fell short of their own, and while contributing little to the
perfection of his priesthood, they gained in return greater
assistance in contemplation. Whatever he thought, was a law for
them, whatever on the contrary he disapproved, they abjured: his
decisions were to them the tables of Moses, and they paid him
more reverence than is due from men to the Saints. Aye, and when
men came to hunt the Saint like a wild beast, and, after
searching for him everywhere, failed to find him, they vouchsafed
these emissaries not a single word, and offered their necks to
the sword, as risking their lives for Christ's sake, and
considering the most cruel sufferings on behalf of Athanasius to
be an important step to contemplation, and far more divine and
sublime than the long fasts and hard lying and mortifications in
which they constantly revel.
21. Such were his surroundings when he
approved the wise counsel of Solomon that there is a time to
every purpose: so he hid himself for a while, escaping during the
time of war, to show himself when the time of peace came, as it
did soon afterwards. Meanwhile George, there being absolutely no
one to resist him, overran Egypt, and desolated Syria, in the
might of ungodliness. He seized upon the East also as far as he
could, ever attracting the weak, as torrents roll down objects in
their course, and assailing the unstable or faint-hearted. He won
over also the simplicity of the Emperor, for thus I must term his
instability, though I respect his pious motives. For, to say the
truth, he had zeal, but not according to knowledge. He purchased
those in authority who were lovers of money rather than lovers of
Christ-for he was well supplied with the funds for the poor,
which he embezzled-especially the effeminate and unmanly men, of
doubtful sex, but of manifest impiety; to whom, I know not how or
why, Emperors of the Romans entrusted authority over men, though
their proper function was the charge of women. In this lay the
power of that servant of the wicked one, that sower of tares,
that forerunner of Antichrist; foremost in speech of the orators
of his time among the Bishops; if any one likes to call him an
orator who was not so much an impious, as he was a hostile and
contentious reasoner,-his name I will gladly pass by: he was the
hand of his party, perverting the truth by the gold subscribed
for pious uses, which the wicked made an instrument of their
impiety.
22. The crowning feat of this faction was
the council which sat first at Seleucia, the city of the holy and
illustrious virgin Thekla, and afterwards at this mighty city,
thus connecting their names, no longer with noble associations,
but with these of deepest disgrace; whether we must call that
council, which subverted and disturbed everything, a tower of
Chalane, which deservedly confounded the tongues-would that
theirs had been confounded for their harmony in evil!-or a
Sanhedrim of Caiaphas where Christ was condemned, or some other
like name. The ancient and pious doctrine which defended the
Trinity was abolished, by setting up a palisade and battering
down the Consubstantial: opening the door to impiety by means of
what is written, using as their pretext, their reverence for
Scripture and for the use of approved terms, but really
introducing unscriptural Arianism. For the phrase "like,
according to the Scriptures," was a bait to the simple,
concealing the hook of impiety, a figure seeming to look in the
direction of all who passed by, a boot fitting either foot, a
winnowing with every wind, gaining authority from the newly
written villany and device against the truth. For they were wise
to do evil, but to do good they had no knowledge.
23. Hence came their pretended condemnation
of the heretics, whom they renounced in words, in order to gain
plausibility for their efforts, but in reality furthered;
charging them not with unbounded impiety, but with exaggerated
language. Hence came the profane judges of the Saints, and the
new combination, and public view and discussion of mysterious
questions, and the illegal enquiry into the actions of life, and
the hired informers, and the purchased sentences. Some were
unjustly deposed from their sees, others intruded, and among
other necessary qualifications, made to sign the bonds of
iniquity: the ink was ready, the informer at hand. This the
majority even of us, who were not overcome, had to endure, not
falling in mind, though prevailed upon to sign, and so uniting
with men who were in both respects wicked, and involving
ourselves in the smoke, if not in the flame. Over this I have
often wept, when contemplating the confusion of impiety at that
time, and the persecution of the orthodox teaching which now
arose at the hands of the patrons of the Word.
24. For in reality, as the Scripture says,
the shepherds became brutish, and many shepherds destroyed My
vineyard, and defiled my pleasant portion, I mean the Church of
God, which has been gathered together by the sweat and blood of
many toilers and victims both before and after Christ, aye, even
the great sufferings of God for us. For with very few exceptions,
and these either men who from their insignificance were
disregarded, or from their virtue manfully resisted, being left
unto Israel, as was ordained, for a seed and root, to blossom and
come to life again amid the streams of the Spirit, everyone
yielded to the influences of the time, distinguished only by the
fact that some did so earlier, some later, that some became the
champions and leaders of impiety, while such others were assigned
a lower rank, as had been shaken by fear, enslaved by need,
fascinated by flattery, or beguiled in ignorance; the last being
the least guilty, if indeed we can allow even this to be a valid
excuse for men entrusted with the leadership of the people. For
just as the force of lions and other animals, or of men and of
women, or of old and of young men is not the same, but there is a
considerable difference due to age or species-so it is also with
rulers and their subjects. For while we might pardon laymen in
such a case, and often they escape, because not put to the test,
yet how can we excuse a teacher, whose duty it is, unless he is
falsely so-called, to correct the ignorance of others. For is it
not absurd, while no one, however great his boorishness and want
of education, is allowed to be ignorant of the Roman law, and
while there is no law in favour of sins of ignorance, that the
teachers of the mysteries of salvation should be ignorant of the
first principles of salvation, however simple and shallow their
minds may be in regard to other subjects. But, even granting
indulgence to them who erred in ignorance, what can be said for
the rest, who lay claim to subtlety of intellect, and yet yielded
to the court-party for the reasons I have mentioned, and after
playing the part of piety for a long while, failed in the hour of
trial.
25. "Yet once more," I hear the Scripture
say that the heaven and the earth shall be shaken, inasmuch as
this has befallen them before, signifying, as I suppose, a
manifest renovation of all things. And we must believe S. Paul
when he says that this last shaking is none other than the second
coming of Christ, and the transformation and changing of the
universe to a condition of stability which cannot be shaken. And
I imagine that this present shaking, in which the contemplatives
and lovers of God, who before the time exercise their heavenly
citizenship, are shaken from us, is of no less consequence than
any of former days. For, however peaceful and moderate in other
respects these men are, yet they cannot bear to carry their
reasonableness so far as to be traitors to the cause of God for
quietness' sake: nay on this point they are excessively warlike
and sturdy in fight; such is the heat of their zeal, that they
would sooner proceed to excess in disturbance, than fail to
notice anything that is amiss. And no small portion of the people
is breaking away with them, flying away, as a flock of birds
does, with those who lead the flight, and even now does not cease
to fly with them.
26. Such was Athanasius to us, when
present, the pillar of the Church; and such, even when he retired
before the insults of the wicked. For those who have plotted the
capture of some strong fort, when they see no other easy means of
approaching or taking it, betake themselves to arts, and then,
after seducing the commander by money or guile, without any
effort possess themselves of the stronghold, or, if you will, as
those who plotted against Samson first cut off his hair, in which
his strength lay, and then seized upon the judge, and made sport
of him at will, to requite him for his former power: so did our
foreign foes, after getting rid of our source of strength, and
shearing off the glory of the Church, revel in like manner in
utterances and deeds of impiety. Then the supporter and patron of
the hostile shepherd died, crowning his reign, which had not been
evil, with an evil close, and unprofitably repenting, as they
say, with his last breath, when each man, in view of the higher
judgement seat, is a prudent judge of his own conduct. For of
these three evils, which were unworthy of his reign, he said that
he was conscious, the murder of his kinsmen, the proclamation of
the Apostate, and the innovation upon the faith; and with these
words he is said to have departed. Thus there was once more
authority to teach the word of truth, and those who had suffered
violence had now undisturbed freedom of speech, while jealousy
was whetting the weapons of its wrath. Thus it was with the
people of Alexandria, who, with their usual impatience of the
insolent, could not brook the excesses of the man, and therefore
marked his wickedness by an unusual death, and his death by an
unusual ignominy. For you know that camel, and its strange
burden, and the new form of elevation, and the first and, I
think, the only procession, with which to this day the insolent
are threatened.
27. But when from this hurricane of
unrighteousness, this corrupter of godliness, this precursor of
the wicked one, such satisfaction had been exacted, in a way I
cannot praise, for we must consider not what he ought to have
suffered, but what we ought to do: exacted however it was, as the
result of the public anger and excitement: and thereupon, our
champion was restored from his illustrious banishment, for so I
term his exile on behalf of, and under the blessing of, the
Trinity, amid such delight of the people of the city and of
almost all Egypt, that they ran together from every side, from
the furthest limits of the country, simply to hear the voice of
Athanasius, or feast their eyes upon the sight of him, nay even,
as we are told of the Apostles, that they might be hallowed by
the shadow and unsubstantial image of his body: so that, many as
are the honours, and welcomes bestowed on frequent occasions in
the course of time upon various individuals, not only upon public
rulers and bishops, but also upon the most illustrious of private
citizens, not one has been recorded more numerously attended or
more brilliant than this. And only one honour can be compared
with it by Athanasius himself, which had been conferred upon him
on his former entrance into the city, when returning from the
same exile for the same reasons.
28. With reference to this honour there was
also current some such report as the following; for I will take
leave to mention it, even though it be superfluous, as a kind of
flavouring to my speech, or a flower scattered in honour of his
entry. After that entry, a certain officer, who had been twice
Consul, was riding into the city; he was one of us, among the
most noted of Cappadocians. I am sure that you know that I mean
Philagrius, who won upon our affections far beyond any one else,
and was honoured as much as he was loved, if I may thus briefly
set forth all his distinctions: who had been for a second time
entrusted with the government of the city, at the request of the
citizens, by the decision of the Emperor. Then one of the common
people present, thinking the crowd enormous, like an ocean whose
bound no eye can see, is reported to have said to one of his
comrades and friends-as often happens in such a case-"Tell me, my
good fellow, have you ever before seen the people pour out in
such numbers and so enthusiastically to do honour to any one
man?" "No!" said the young man, "and I fancy that not even
Constantius himself would be so treated;" indicating, by the
mention of the Emperor, the climax of possible honour. "Do you
speak of that," said the other with a sweet and merry laugh, "as
something wonderfully great? I can scarcely believe that even the
great Athanasius would be welcomed like this," adding at the same
time one of our native oaths in confirmation of his words. Now
the point of what he said, as I suppose you also plainly see, is
this, that he set the subject of our eulogy before the Emperor
himself.
29. So great was the reverence of all for
the man, and so amazing even now seems the reception which I have
described. For if divided according to birth, age and profession,
(and the city is most usually arranged in this way, when a public
honour is bestowed on anyone) how can I set forth in words that
mighty spectacle? They formed one river, and it were indeed a
poet's task to describe that Nile, of really golden stream and
rich in crops, flowing back again from the city to the Chaereum,
a day's journey, I take it, and more. Permit me to revel a while
longer in my description: for I am going there, and it is not
easy to bring back even my words from that ceremony. He rode upon
a colt, almost, blame me not for folly, as my Jesus did upon that
other colt, whether it were the people of the Gentiles, whom He
mounts in kindness, by setting it free from the bonds of
ignorance, or something else, which the Scripture sets forth. He
was welcomed with branches of trees, and garments with many
flowers and of varied hue were torn off and strewn before him and
under his feet: there alone was all that was glorious and costly
and peerless treated with dishonour. Like, once more, to the
entry of Christ were those that went before with shouts and
followed with dances; only the crowd which sung his praises was
not of children only, but every tongue was harmonious, as men
contended only to outdo one another. I pass by the universal
cheers, and the pouring forth of unguents, and the nightlong
festivities, and the whole city gleaming with light, and the
feasting in public and at home, and all the means of testifying
to a city's joy, which were then in lavish and incredible
profusion bestowed upon him. Thus did this marvellous man, with
such a concourse, regain his own city.
30. He lived then as becomes the rulers of
such a people, but did he fail to teach as he lived? Were his
contests out of harmony with his teaching? Were his dangers less
than those of men who have contended for any truth? Were his
honours inferior to the objects for which he contended? Did he
after his reception in any way disgrace that reception? By no
means. Everything was harmonious, as an air upon a single lyre,
and in the same key; his life, his teaching, his struggles, his
dangers, his return, and his conduct after his return. For
immediately on his restoration to his Church, he was not like
those who are blinded by unrestrained passion, who, under the
dominion of their anger, thrust away or strike at once whatever
comes in their way, even though it might well be spared. But,
thinking this to be a special time for him to consult his
reputation, since one who is ill-treated is usually restrained,
and one who has the power to requite a wrong is ungoverned, he
treated so mildly and gently those who had injured him, that even
they themselves, if I may say so, did not find his restoration
distasteful.
31. He cleansed the temple of those who
made merchandise of God, and trafficked in the things of Christ,
imitating Christ in this also; only it was with persuasive words,
not with a twisted scourge that this was wrought. He reconciled
also those who were at variance, both with one another and with
him, without the aid of any coadjutor. Those who had been wronged
he set free from oppression, making no distinction as to whether
they were of his own or of the opposite party. He restored too
the teaching which had been overthrown: the Trinity was once more
boldly spoken of, and set upon the lampstand, flashing with the
brilliant light of the One Godhead into the souls of all. He
legislated again for the whole world, and brought all minds under
his influence, by letters to some, by invitations to others,
instructing some, who visited him uninvited, and proposing as the
single law to all-Good will. For this alone was able to conduct
them to the true issue. In brief, he exemplified the virtues of
two celebrated stones-for to those who assailed him he was
adamant, and to those at variance a magnet, which by some secret
natural power draws iron to itself, and influences the hardest of
substances.
32. But yet it was not likely that envy
could brook all this, or see the Church restored again to the
same glory and health as in former days, by the speedy healing
over, as in the body, of the wounds of separation. Therefore it
was, that he raised up against Athanasius the Emperor, a rebel
like himself, and his peer in villany, inferior to him only from
lack of time, the first of Christian Emperors to rage against
Christ, bringing forth all at once the basilisk of impiety with
which he had long been in labour, when he obtained an
opportunity, and shewing himself, at the time when he was
proclaimed Emperor, to be a traitor to the Emperor who had
entrusted him with the empire, and a traitor double dyed to the
God who had saved him. He devised the most inhuman of all the
persecutions by blending speciousness with cruelty, in his envy
of the honour won by the martyrs in their struggles; and so he
called in question their repute for courage, by making verbal
twists and quibbles a part of his character, or to speak the real
truth, devoting himself to them with an eagerness born of his
natural disposition, and imitating in varied craft the Evil one
who dwelt within him. The subjugation of the whole race of
Christians he thought a simple task; but found it a great one to
overcome Athanasius and the power of his teaching over us. For he
saw that no success could be gained in the plot against us,
because of this man's resistance and opposition; the places of
the Christians cut down being at once filled up, surprising
though it seems, by the accession of Gentiles and the prudence of
Athanasius. In full view therefore of this, the crafty perverter
and persecutor, clinging no longer to his cloak of illiberal
sophistry, laid bare his wickedness and openly banished the
Bishop from the city. For the illustrious warrior must needs
conquer in three struggles and thus make good his perfect title
to fame.
33. Brief was the interval before Justice
pronounced sentence, and handed over the offender to the
Persians: sending him forth an ambitious monarch-and bringing him
back a corpse for which no one even felt pity; which, as I have
heard, was not allowed to rest in the grave, but was shaken out
and thrown up by the earth which he had shaken: a prelude-I take
it-to his future chastisement. Then another king arose, not
shameless in countenance like the former, nor an oppressor of
Israel with cruel tasks and taskmasters, but most pious and
gentle. In order to lay the best of foundations for his empire,
and begin, as is right, by an act of justice, he recalled from
exile all the Bishops, but in the first place him who stood first
in virtue and had conspicuously championed the cause of piety.
Further, he inquired into the truth of our faith which had been
torn asunder, confused, and parcelled out into various opinions
and portions by many; with the intention, if it were possible, of
reducing the whole world to harmony and union by the co-operation
of the Spirit: and, should he fail in this, of attaching himself
to the best party, so as to aid and be aided by it, thus giving
token of the exceeding loftiness and magnificence of his ideas on
questions of the greatest moment. Here too was shown in a very
high degree the simple-mindedness of Athanasius, and the
steadfastness of his faith in Christ. For, when all the rest who
sympathised with us were divided into three parties, and many
were faltering in their conception of the Son, and still more in
that of the Holy Ghost, (a point on which to be only slightly in
error was to be orthodox) and few indeed were sound upon both
points, he was the first and only one, or with the concurrence of
but a few, to venture to confess in writing, with entire
clearness and distinctness, the Unity of Godhead and Essence of
the Three Persons, and thus to attain in later days, under the
influence of inspiration, to the same faith in regard to the Holy
Ghost, as had been bestowed at an earlier time on most of the
Fathers in regard to the Son. This confession, a truly royal and
magnificent gift, he presented to the Emperor, opposing to the
unwritten innovation, a written account the orthodox faith, so
that an emperor might be overcome by an emperor, reason by
reason, treatise by treatise.
34. This confession was, it seems, greeted
with respect by all, both in West and East, who were capable of
life; some cherishing piety within their own bosoms, if we may
credit what they say, but advancing no further, like a still-born
child which dies within its mother's womb; others kindling to
some extent, as it were, sparks, so far as to escape the
difficulties of the time, arising either from the more fervent of
the orthodox, or the devotion of the people; while others spoke
the truth with boldness, on whose side I would be, for I dare
make no further boast; no longer consulting my own fearfulness-in
other words, the views of men more unsound than myself (for this
we have done enough and to spare, without either gaining anything
from others, or guarding from injury that which was our own, just
as bad stewards do) but bringing forth to light my offspring,
nourishing it with eagerness, and exposing it, in its constant
growth, to the eyes of all.
35. This, however, is less admirable than
his conduct. What wonder that he, who had already made actual
ventures on behalf of the truth, should confess it in writing?
Yet this point I will add to what has been said, as it seems to
me especially wonderful and cannot with impunity be passed over
in a time so fertile in disagreements as this. For his action, if
we take note of him, will afford instruction even to the men of
this day. For as, in the case of one and the same quantity of
water, there is separated from it, not only the residue which is
left behind by the hand when drawing it, but also those drops,
once contained in the hand, which trickle out through the
fingers; so also there is a separation between us and, not only
those who hold aloof in their impiety, but also those who are
most pious, and that both in regard to such doctrines as are of
small consequence (a matter of less moment) and also in regard to
expressions intended to bear the same meaning. We use in an
orthodox sense the terms one Essence and three Hypostases, the
one to denote the nature of the Godhead, the other the properties
of the Three; the Italians mean the same, but, owing to the
scantiness of their vocabulary, and its poverty of terms, they
are unable to distinguish between Essence and Hypostases, and
therefore introduce the term Persons, to avoid being understood
to assert three Essences. The result, were it not piteous, would
be laughable. This slight difference of sound was taken to
indicate a difference of faith. Then, Sabellianism was suspected
in the doctrine of Three Persons, Arianism in that of Three
Hypostases, both being the offspring of a contentious spirit. And
then, from the gradual but constant growth of irritation (the
unfailing result of contentiousness) there was a danger of the
whole world being torn asunder in the strife about syllables.
Seeing and hearing this, our blessed one, true man of God and
great steward of souls as he was, felt it inconsistent with his
duty to overlook so absurd and unreasonable a rending of the
word, and applied his medicine to the disease. In what manner? He
conferred in his gentle and sympathetic way with both parties,
and after he had carefully weighed the meaning of their
expressions, and found that they had the same sense, and were in
nowise different in doctrine, by permitting each party to use its
own terms, he bound them together in unity of action.
36. This in itself was more profitable than
the long course of labours and teaching on which all writers
enlarge, for in it somewhat of ambition mingled, and
consequently, perhaps, somewhat of novelty in expressions. This
again was of more value than his many vigils and acts of
discipline, the advantage of which is limited to those who
perform them. This was worthy of our hero's famous banishments
and flights; for the object, in view of which he chose to endure
such sufferings, he still pursued when the sufferings were past.
Nor did he cease to cherish the same ardour in others, praising
some, gently rebuking others; rousing the sluggishness of these,
restraining the passion of those; in some cases eager to prevent
a fall, in others devising means of recovery after a fall; simple
in disposition, manifold in the arts of government; clever in
argument, more clever still in mind; condescending to the more
lowly, outsoaring the more lofty; hospitable, protector of
suppliants, averted of evils, really combining in himself alone
the whole of the attributes parcelled out by the sons of Greece
among their deities. Further he was the patron of the wedded and
virgin state alike, both peaceable and a peacemaker, and
attendant upon those who are passing from hence. Oh, how many a
title does his virtue afford me, if I would detail its many-sided
excellence.
37. After such a course, as taught and
teacher, that his life and habits form the ideal of an
Episcopate, and his teaching the law of orthodoxy, what reward
does he win for his piety? It is not indeed right to pass this
by. In a good old age he closed his life, and was gathered to his
fathers, the Patriarchs, and Prophets, and Apostles, and Martyrs,
who contended for the truth. To be brief in my epitaph, the
honours at his departure surpassed even those of his return from
exile; the object of many tears, his glory, stored up in the
minds of all, outshines all its visible tokens. Yet, O thou dear
and holy one, who didst thyself, with all thy fair renown, so
especially illustrate the due proportions of speech and of
silence, do thou stay here my words, falling short as they do of
thy true meed of praise, though they have claimed the full
exercise of all my powers. And mayest thou cast upon us from
above a propitious glance, and conduct this people in its perfect
worship of the perfect Trinity, which, as Father, Son, Holy
Ghost, we contemplate and adore. And mayest thou, if my lot be
peaceful, possess and aid me in my pastoral charge, or if it pass
through struggles, uphold me, or take me to thee, and set me with
thyself and those like thee (though I have asked a great thing)
in Christ Himself, our Lord, to whom be all glory, honour, and
power for evermore. Amen.
Oration XXVII
The First Theological Oration
A Preliminary Discourse Against the
Eunomians.
I. I am to speak against persons who pride
themselves on their eloquence; so, to begin with a text of
Scripture, "Behold, I am against thee, O thou proud one," not
only in thy system of teaching, but also in thy hearing, and in
thy tone of mind. For there are certain persons who have not only
their ears and their tongues, but even, as I now perceive, their
hands too, itching for our words; who delight in profane
babblings, and oppositions of science falsely so called, and
strifes about words, which tend to no profit; for so Paul, the
Preacher and Establisher of the "Word cut short," the disciple
and teacher of the Fishermen, calls all that is excessive or
superfluous in discourse. But as to those to whom we refer, would
that they, whose tongue is so voluble and clever in applying
itself to noble and approved language, would likewise pay some
attention to actions. For then perhaps in a little while they
would become less sophistical, and less absurd and strange
acrobats of words, if I may use a ridiculous expression about a
ridiculous subject.
II. But since they neglect every path of
righteousness, and look only to this one point, namely, which of
the propositions submitted to them they shall bind or loose,
(like those persons who in the theatres perform wrestling matches
in public, but not that kind of wrestling in which the victory is
won according to the rules of the sport, but a kind to deceive
the eyes of those who are ignorant in such matters, and to catch
applause), and every marketplace must buzz with their talking;
and every dinner party be worried to death with silly talk and
boredom; and every festival be made unfestive and full of
dejection, and every occasion of mourning be consoled by a
greater calamity-their questions-and all the women's apartments
accustomed to simplicity be thrown into confusion and be robbed
of its flower of modesty by the torrent of their words . . .
since, I say this is so, the evil is intolerable and not to be
borne, and our Great Mystery is in danger of being made a thing
of little moment. Well then, let these spies bear with us, moved
as we are with fatherly compassion, and as holy Jeremiah says,
torn in our hearts; let them bear with us so far as not to give a
savage reception to our discourse upon this subject; and let
them, if indeed they can, restrain their tongues for a short
while and lend us their ears. However that may be, you shall at
any rate suffer no loss. For either we shall have spoken in the
ears of them that will hear, and our words will bear some fruit,
namely an advantage to you (since the Sower soweth the Word upon
every kind of mind; and the good and fertile bears fruit), or
else you will depart despising this discourse of ours as you have
despised others, and having drawn from it further material for
gainsaying and railing at us, upon which to feast yourselves yet
more.
And you must not be astonished if I speak a
language which is strange to you and contrary to your custom, who
profess to know everything and to teach everything in a too
impetuous and generous manner . . . not to pain you by saying
ignorant and rash.
III. Not to every one, my friends, does it
belong to philosophize about God; not to every one; the Subject
is not so cheap and low; and I will add, not before every
audience, nor at all times, nor on all points; but on certain
occasions, and before certain persons, and within certain
limits.
Not to all men, because it is permitted
only to those who have been examined, and are passed masters in
meditation, and who have been previously purified in soul and
body, or at the very least are being purified. For the impure to
touch the pure is, we may safely say, not safe, just as it is
unsafe to fix weak eyes upon the sun's rays. And what is the
permitted occasion? It is when we are free from all external
defilement or disturbance, and when that which rules within us is
not confused with vexatious or erring images; like persons mixing
up good writing with bad, or filth with the sweet odours of
unguents. For it is necessary to be truly at leisure to know God;
and when we can get a convenient season, to discern the straight
road of the things divine. And who are the permitted persons?
They to whom the subject is of real concern, and not they who
make it a matter of pleasant gossip, like any other thing, after
the races, or the theatre, or a concert, or a dinner, or still
lower employments. To such men as these, idle jests and pretty
contradictions about these subjects are a part of their
amusement.
IV. Next, on what subjects and to what
extent may we philosophize? On matters within our reach, and to
such an extent as the mental power and grasp of our audience may
extend. No further, lest, as excessively loud sounds injure the
hearing, or excess of food the body, or, if you will, as
excessive burdens beyond the strength injure those who bear them,
or excessive rains the earth; so these too, being pressed down
and overweighted by the stiffness, if I may use the expression,
of the arguments should suffer loss even in respect of the
strength they originally possessed.
V. Now, I am not saying that it is not
needful to remember God at all times; . . . I must not be
misunderstood, or I shall be having these nimble and quick people
down upon me again. For we ought to think of God even more often
than we draw our breath; and if the expression is permissible, we
ought to do nothing else. Yea, I am one of those who entirely
approve that Word which bids us meditate day and night, and tell
at eventide and morning and noon day, and praise the Lord at
every time; or, to use Moses' words, whether a man lie down, or
rise up, or walk by the way, or whatever else he be doing-and by
this recollection we are to be moulded to purity. So that it is
not the continual remembrance of God that I would hinder, but
only the talking about God; nor even that as in itself wrong, but
only when unseasonable; nor all teaching, but only want of
moderation. As of even honey repletion and satiety, though it be
of honey, produce vomiting; and, as Solomon says and I think,
there is a time for every thing, and that which is good ceases to
be good if it be not done in a good way; just as a flower is
quite out of season in winter, and just as a man's dress does not
become a woman, nor a woman's a man; and as geometry is out of
place in mourning, or tears at a carousal; shall we in this
instance alone disregard the proper time, in a matter in which
most of all due season should be respected? Surely not, my
friends and brethren (for I will still call you Brethren, though
you do not behave like brothers). Let us not think so nor yet,
like hot tempered and hard mouthed horses, throwing off our rider
Reason, and casting away Reverence, that keeps us within due
limits, run far away from the turning point, but let us
philosophize within our proper bounds, and not be carried away
into Egypt, nor be swept down into Assyria , nor sing the Lord's
song in a strange land, by which I mean before any kind of
audience, strangers or kindred, hostile or friendly, kindly or
the reverse, who watch what we do with over great care, and would
like the spark of what is wrong in us to become a flame, and
secretly kindle and fan it and raise it to heaven with their
breath and make it higher than the Babylonian flame which burnt
up every thing around it. For since their strength lies not in
their own dogmas, they hunt for it in our weak points. And
therefore they apply themselves to our-shall I say "misfortunes"
or "failings"?-like flies to wounds. But let us at least be no
longer ignorant of ourselves, or pay too little attention to the
due order in these matters. And if it be impossible to put an end
to the existing hostility, let us at least agree upon this, that
we will utter Mysteries under our breath, and holy things in a
holy manner, and we will not cast to ears profane that which may
not be uttered, nor give evidence that we possess less gravity
than those who worship demons, and serve shameful fables and
deeds; for they would sooner give their blood to the uninitiated
than certain words. But let us recognize that as in dress and
diet and laughter and demeanour there is a certain decorum, so
there is also in speech and silence; since among so many titles
and powers of God, we pay the highest honour to The Word. Let
even our disputings then be kept within bounds.
VI. Why should a man who is a hostile
listener to such words be allowed to hear about the Generation of
God, or his creation, or how God was made out of things which had
no existence, or of section and analysis and division? Why do we
make our accusers judges? Why do we put swords into the hands of
our enemies? How, thinkest thou, or with what temper, will the
arguments about such subjects be received by one who approves of
adulteries, and corruption of children, and who worships the
passions and cannot conceive of aught higher than the body . . .
who till very lately set up gods for himself, and gods too who
were noted for the vilest deeds? Will it not first be from a
material standpoint, shamefully and ignorantly, and in the sense
to which he has been accustomed? Will he not make thy Theology a
defence for his own gods and passions? For if we ourselves
wantonly misuse these words, it will be a long time before we
shall persuade them to accept our philosophy. And if they are in
their own persons inventors of evil things, how should they
refrain from grasping at such things when offered to them? Such
results come to us from mutual contest. Such results follow to
those who fight for the Word beyond what the Word approves; they
are behaving like mad people, who set their own house on fire, or
tear their own children, or disavow their own parents, taking
them for strangers.
VII. But when we have put away from the
conversation those who are strangers to it, and sent the great
legion on its way to the abyss into the herd of swine, the next
thing is to look to ourselves, and polish our theological self to
beauty like a statue. The first point to be considered is-What is
this great rivalry of speech and endless talking? What is this
new disease of insatiability? Why have we tied our hands and
armed our tongues? We do not praise either hospitality, or
brotherly love, or conjugal affection, or virginity; nor do we
admire liberality to the poor, or the chanting of Psalms, or
nightlong vigils, or tears. We do not keep under the body by
fasting, or go forth to God by prayer; nor do we subject the
worse to the better-I mean the dust to the spirit-as they would
do who form a just judgment of our composite nature; we do not
make our life a preparation for death; nor do we make ourselves
masters of our passions, mindful of our heavenly nobility; nor
tame our anger when it swells and rages, nor our pride that
bringeth to a fall, nor unreasonable grief, nor unchastened
pleasure, nor meretricious laughter, nor undisciplined eyes, nor
insatiable ears, nor excessive talk, nor absurd thoughts, nor
aught of the occasions which the Evil One gets against us from
sources within ourselves; bringing upon us the death that comes
through the windows, as Holy Scripture saith; that is, through
the senses. Nay we do the very opposite, and have given liberty
to the passions of others, as kings give releases from service in
honour of a victory, only on condition that they incline to our
side, and make their assault upon God more boldly, or more
impiously. And we give them an evil reward for a thing which is
not good, license of tongue for their impiety.
VIII. And yet, O talkative Dialectician, I
will ask thee one small question, and answer thou me, as He saith
to Job, Who through whirlwind and cloud giveth Divine
admonitions. Are there many mansions in God's House, as thou hast
heard, or only one? Of course you will admit that there are many,
and not only one. Now, are they all to be filled, or only some,
and others not; so that some will be left empty, and will have
been prepared to no purpose? Of course all will be filled, for
nothing can be in vain which has been done by God. And can you
tell me what you will consider this Mansion to be? Is it the rest
and glory which is in store There for the Blessed, or something
else?-No, not anything else. Since then we are agreed upon this
point, let us further examine another also. Is there any thing
that procures these Mansions, as I think there is; or is there
nothing?-Certainly there is-What is it? Is it not that there are
various modes of conduct, and various purposes, one leading one
way, another another way, according to the proportion of faith,
and these we call Ways? Must we, then, travel all, or some of
these Ways . . . the same individual along them all, if that be
possible; or, if not, along as many as may be; or else along some
of them? And even if this may not be, it would still be a great
thing, at least as it appears to me, to travel excellently along
even one.-"You are right in your conception."-What then when you
hear there is but One way, and that a narrow one, does the word
seem to you to shew? That there is but one on account of its
excellence. For it is but one, even though it be split into many
parts. And narrow because of its difficulties, and because it is
trodden by few in comparison with the multitude of the
adversaries, and of those who travel along the road of
wickedness. "So I think too." Well, then, my good friend, since
this is so, why do you, as though condemning our doctrine for a
certain poverty, rush headlong down that one which leads through
what you call arguments and speculations, but I frivolities and
quackeries? Let Paul reprove you with those bitter reproaches, in
which, after his list of the Gifts of Grace, he says, Are all
Apostles? Are all Prophets? etc.
IX. But, be it so. Lofty thou art, even
beyond the lofty, even above the clouds, if thou wilt, a
spectator of things invisible, a hearer of things unspeakable;
one who hast ascended after Elias, and who after Moses hast been
deemed worthy of the Vision of God, and after Paul hast been
taken up into heaven; why dost thou mould the rest of thy fellows
in one day into Saints, and ordain them Theologians, and as it
were breathe into them instruction, and make them many councils
of ignorant oracles? Why dost thou entangle those who are weaker
in thy spider's web, if it were something great and wise? Why
dost thou stir up wasps' nests against the Faith? Why dost thou
suddenly spring a flood of dialectics upon us, as the fables of
old did the Giants? Why hast thou collected all that is frivolous
and unmanly among men, like a rabble, into one torrent, and
having made them more effeminate by flattery, fashioned a new
workshop, cleverly making a harvest for thyself out of their want
of understanding? Dost thou deny that this is so, and are the
other matters of no account to thee? Must thy tongue rule at any
cost, and canst thou not restrain the birthpang of thy speech?
Thou mayest find many other honourable subjects for discussion.
To these turn this disease of thine with some advantage. Attack
the silence of Pythagoras, and the Orphic beans, and the novel
brag about "The Master said." Attack the ideas of Plato, and the
transmigrations and courses of our souls, and the reminiscences,
and the unlovely loves of the soul for lovely bodies. Attack the
atheism of Epicurus, and his atoms, and his unphilosophic
pleasure; or Aristotle's petty Providence, and his artificial
system, and his discourses about the mortality of the soul, and
the humanitarianism of his doctrine. Attack the superciliousness
of the Stoa, or the greed and vulgarity of the Cynic. Attack the
"Void and Full" (what nonsense), and all the details about the
gods and the sacrifices and the idols and demons, whether
beneficent or malignant, and all the tricks that people play with
divination, evoking of gods, or of souls, and the power of the
stars. And if these things seem to thee unworthy of discussion as
petty and already often confuted, and thou wilt keep to thy line,
and seek the satisfaction of thy ambition in it; then here too I
will provide thee with broad paths. Philosophize about the world
or worlds; about matter; about soul; about natures endowed with
reason, good or bad; about resurrection, about judgment, about
reward, or the Sufferings of Christ. For in these subjects to hit
the mark is not useless, and to miss it is not dangerous. But
with God we shall have converse, in this life only in a small
degree; but a little later, it may be, more perfectly, in the
Same, our Lord Jesus Christ, to Whom be glory for ever.
Amen.
Oration XXVIII
The Second Theological Oration
I. In the former Discourse we laid down
clearly with respect to the Theologian, both what sort of
character he ought to bear, and on what kind of subject he may
philosophize, and when, and to what extent. We saw that he ought
to be, as far as may be, pure, in order that light may be
apprehended by light; and that he ought to consort with serious
men, in order that his word be not fruitless through falling on
an unfruitful soil; and that the suitable season is when we have
a calm within from the whirl of outward things; so as not like
madmen to lose our breath; and that the extent to which we may go
is that to which we have ourselves advanced, or to which we are
advancing. Since then these things are so, and we have broken up
for ourselves the fallows of Divinity , so as not to sow upon
thorns, and have made plain the face of the ground, being moulded
and moulding others by Holy Scripture . . . let us now enter upon
Theological questions, setting at the head thereof the Father,
the Son, and the Holy Ghost, of Whom we are to treat; that the
Father may be well pleased, and the Son may help us, and the Holy
Ghost may inspire us; or rather that one illumination may come
upon us from the One God, One in diversity, diverse in Unity,
wherein is a marvel.
II. Now when I go up eagerly into the
Mount-or, to use a truer expression, when I both eagerly long,
and at the same time am afraid (the one through my hope and the
other through my weakness) to enter within the Cloud, and hold
converse with God, for so God commands; if any be an Aaron, let
him go up with me, and let him stand near, being ready, if it
must be so, to remain outside the Cloud. But if any be a Nadad or
an Abihu, or of the Order of the Elders, let him go up indeed,
but let him stand afar off, according to the value of his
purification. But if any be of the multitude, who are unworthy of
this height of contemplation, if he be altogether impure let him
not approach at all, for it would be dangerous to him; but if he
be at least temporarily purified, let him remain below and listen
to the Voice alone, and the trumpet, the bare words of piety, and
let him see the Mountain smoking and lightening, a terror at once
and a marvel to those who cannot get up. But if any is an evil
and savage beast, and altogether incapable of taking in the
subject matter of Contemplation and Theology, let him not
hurtfully and malignantly lurk in his den among the woods, to
catch hold of some dogma or saying by a sudden spring, and to
tear sound doctrine to pieces by his misrepresentations, but let
him stand yet afar off and withdraw from the Mount, or he shall
be stoned and crushed, and shall perish miserably in his
wickedness. For to those who are like wild beasts true and sound
discourses are stones. If he be a leopard let him die with his
spots. If a ravening and roaring lion, seeking what he may devour
of our souls or of our words; or a wild boar, trampling under
foot the precious and translucent pearls of the Truth; or an
Arabian and alien wolf, or one keener even than these in tricks
of argument; or a fox, that is a treacherous and faithless soul,
changing its shape according to circumstances or necessities,
feeding on dead or putrid bodies, or on little vineyards when the
large ones have escaped them; or any other carnivorous beast,
rejected by the Law as unclean for food or enjoyment; our
discourse must withdraw from such and be engraved on solid tables
of stone, and that on both sides because the Law is partly
visible, and partly hidden; the one part belonging to the mass
who remain below, the other to the few who press upward into the
Mount.
III. What is this that has happened to me,
O friends, and initiates, and fellow-lovers of the truth? I was
running to lay hold on God, and thus I went up into the Mount,
and drew aside the curtain of the Cloud, and entered away from
matter and material things, and as far as I could I withdrew
within myself. And then when I looked up, I scarce saw the back
parts of God; although I was sheltered by the Rock, the Word that
was made flesh for us. And when I looked a little closer, I saw,
not the First and unmingled Nature, known to Itself-to the
Trinity, I mean; not That which abideth within the first veil,
and is hidden by the Cherubim; but only that Nature, which at
last even reaches to us. And that is, as far as I can learn, the
Majesty, or as holy David calls it, the Glory which is manifested
among the creatures, which It has produced and governs. For these
are the Back Parts of God, which He leaves behind Him, as tokens
of Himself like the shadows and reflection of the sun in the
water, which shew the sun to our weak eyes, because we cannot
look at the sun himself, for by his unmixed light he is too
strong for our power of perception. In this way then shalt thou
discourse of God; even wert thou a Moses and a god to Pharaoh;
even wert thou caught up like Paul to the Third Heaven, and hadst
heard unspeakable words; even wert thou raised above them both,
and exalted to Angelic or Archangelic place and dignity. For
though a thing be all heavenly, or above heaven, and far higher
in nature and nearer to God than we, yet it is farther distant
from God, and from the complete comprehension of His Nature, than
it is lifted above our complex and lowly and earthward sinking
composition.
IV. Therefore we must begin again thus. It
is difficult to conceive God but to define Him in words is an
impossibility, as one of the Greek teachers of Divinity taught,
not unskilfully, as it appears to me; with the intention that he
might be thought to have apprehended Him; in that he says it is a
hard thing to do; and yet may escape being convicted of ignorance
because of the impossibility of giving expression to the
apprehension. But in my opinion it is impossible to express Him,
and yet more impossible to conceive Him. For that which may be
conceived may perhaps be made clear by language, if not fairly
well, at any rate imperfectly, to any one who is not quite
deprived of his hearing, or slothful of understanding. But to
comprehend the whole of so great a Subject as this is quite
impossible and impracticable, not merely to the utterly careless
and ignorant, but even to those who are highly exalted, and who
love God, and in like manner to every created nature; seeing that
the darkness of this world and the thick covering of the flesh is
an obstacle to the full understanding of the truth. I do not know
whether it is the same with the higher natures and purer
Intelligences which because of their nearness to God, and because
they are illumined with all His Light, may possibly see, if not
the whole, at any rate more perfectly and distinctly than we do;
some perhaps more, some less than others, in proportion to their
rank.
V. But enough has been said on this point.
As to what concerns us, it is not only the Peace of God which
passeth all understanding and knowledge, nor only the things
which God hath stored up in promise for the righteous, which "eye
hath not seen, nor ear heard, nor mind conceived" except in a
very small degree, nor the accurate knowledge of the Creation.
For even of this I would have you know that you have only a
shadow when you hear the words, "I will consider the heavens, the
work of Thy fingers, the moon and the stars," and the settled
order therein; not as if he were considering them now, but as
destined to do so hereafter. But far before them is That nature
Which is above them, and out of which they spring, the
Incomprehensible and Illimitable-not, I mean, as to the fact of
His being, but as to Its nature. For our preaching is not empty,
nor our Faith vain, nor is this the doctrine we proclaim; for we
would not have you take our candid statement as a starting point
for a quibbling denial of God, or of arrogance on account of our
confession of ignorance. For it is one thing to be persuaded of
the existence of a thing, and quite another to know what it
is.
VI. Now our very eyes and the Law of Nature
teach us that God exists and that He is the Efficient and
Maintaining Cause of all things: our eyes, because they fall on
visible objects, and see them in beautiful stability and
progress, immovably moving and revolving if I may so say; natural
Law, because through these visible things and their order, it
reasons back to their Author. For how could this Universe have
come into being or been put together, unless God had called it
into existence, and held it together? For every one who sees a
beautifully made lute, and considers the skill with which it has
been fitted together and arranged, or who hears its melody, would
think of none but the lutemaker, or the luteplayer, and would
recur to him in mind, though he might not know him by sight. And
thus to us also is manifested That which made and moves and
preserves all created things, even though He be not comprehended
by the mind. And very wanting in sense is he who will not
willingly go thus far in following natural proofs; but not even
this which we have fancied or formed, or which reason has
sketched for us, proves the existence of a God. But if any one
has got even to some extent a comprehension of this, how is God's
Being to be demonstrated? Who ever reached this extremity of
wisdom? Who was ever deemed worthy of so great a gift? Who has
opened the mouth of his mind and drawn in the Spirit, so as by
Him that searcheth all things, yea the deep thing of God, to take
in God, and no longer to need progress, since he already
possesses the Extreme Object of desire, and That to which all the
social life and all the intelligence of the best men press
forward?
VII. For what will you conceive the Deity
to be, if you rely upon all the approximations of reason? Or to
what will reason carry you, O most philosophic of men and best of
Theologians, who boast of your familiarity with the Unlimited? Is
He a body? How then is He the Infinite and Limitless, and
formless, and intangible, and invisible? or are these attributes
of a body? What arrogance for such is not the nature of a body!
Or will you say that He has a body, but not these attributes? O
stupidity, that a Deity should possess nothing more than we do.
For how is He an object of worship if He be circumscribed? Or how
shall He escape being made of elements, and therefore subject to
be resolved into them again, or even altogether dissolved? For
every compound is a starting point of strife, and strife of
separation, and separation of dissolution. But dissolution is
altogether foreign to God and to the First Nature. Therefore
there can be no separation, that there may be no dissolution, and
no strife that there may be no separation, and no composition
that there may be no strife. Thus also there must be no body,
that there may be no composition, and so the argument is
established by going back from last to first.
VIII. And how shall we preserve the truth
that God pervades all things and fills all, as it is written "Do
not I fill heaven and earth? saith the Lord," and "The Spirit of
the Lord filleth the world," if God partly contains and partly is
contained? For either He will occupy an empty Universe, and so
all things will have vanished for us, with this result, that we
shall have insulted God by making Him a body, and by robbing Him
of all things which He has made; or else He will be a body
contained in other bodies, which is impossible; or He will be
enfolded in them, or contrasted with them, as liquids are mixed,
and one divides and is divided by another;-a view which is more
absurd and anile than even the atoms of Epicurus and so this
argument concerning the body will fall through, and have no body
and no solid basis at all. But if we are to assert that He is
immaterial (as for example that Fifth Element which some have
imagined), and that He is carried round in the circular movement
. . . let us assume that He is immaterial, and that He is the
Fifth Element; and, if they please, let Him be also bodiless in
accordance with the independent drift and arrangement of their
argument; for I will not at present differ with them on this
point; in what respect then will He be one of those things which
are in movement and agitation, to say nothing of the insult
involved in making the Creator subject to the same movement as
the creatures, and Him That carries all (if they will allow even
this) one with those whom He carries. Again, what is the force
that moves your Fifth Element, and what is it that moves all
things, and what moves that, and what is the force that moves
that? And so on ad infinitum. And how can He help being
altogether contained in space if He be subject to motion? But if
they assert that He is something other than this Fifth Element;
suppose it is an angelic nature that they attribute to Him, how
will they shew that Angels are corporeal, or what sort of bodies
they have? And how far in that case could God, to Whom the Angels
minister, be superior to the Angels? And if He is above them,
there is again brought in an irrational swarm of bodies, and a
depth of nonsense, that has no possible basis to stand
upon.
IX. And thus we see that God is not a body.
For no inspired teacher has yet asserted or admitted such a
notion, nor has the sentence of our own Court allowed it. Nothing
then remains but to conceive of Him as incorporeal. But this term
Incorporeal, though granted, does not yet set before us-or
contain within itself His Essence, any more than Unbegotten, or
Unoriginate, or Unchanging, or Incorruptible, or any other
predicate which is used concerning God or in reference to Him.
For what effect is produced upon His Being or Substance by His
having no beginning, and being incapable of change or limitation?
Nay, the whole question of His Being is still left for the
further consideration and exposition of him who truly has the
mind of God and is advanced in contemplation. For just as to say
"It is a body," or "It was begotten," is not sufficient to
present clearly to the mind the various objects of which these
predicates are used, but you must also express the subject of
which you use them, if you would present the object of your
thought clearly and adequately (for every one of these
predicates, corporeal, begotten, mortal, may be used of a man, or
a cow, or a horse). Just so he who is eagerly pursuing the nature
of the Self-existent will not stop at saying what He is not, but
must go on beyond what He is not, and say what He is; inasmuch as
it is easier to take in some single point than to go on disowning
point after point in endless detail, in order, both by the
elimination of negatives and the assertion of positives to arrive
at a comprehension of this subject.
But a man who states what God is not
without going on to say what He is, acts much in the same way as
one would who when asked how many twice five make, should answer,
"Not two, nor three, nor four, nor five, nor twenty, nor thirty,
nor in short any number below ten, nor any multiple of ten;" but
would not answer "ten," nor settle the mind of his questioner
upon the firm ground of the answer. For it is much easier, and
more concise to shew what a thing is not from what it is, than to
demonstrate what it is by stripping it of what it is not. And
this surely is evident to every one.
X. Now since we have ascertained that God
is incorporeal, let us proceed a little further with our
examination. Is He Nowhere or Somewhere. For if He is Nowhere,
then some person of a very inquiring turn of mind might ask, How
is it then that He can even exist? For if the non-existent is
nowhere, then that which is nowhere is also perhaps non-existent.
But if He is Somewhere, He must be either in the Universe, or
above the Universe. And if He is in the Universe, then He must be
either in some part or in the whole. If in some part, then He
will be circumscribed by that part which is less than Himself;
but if everywhere, then by one which is further and greater-I
mean the Universal, which contains the Particular; if the
Universe is to be contained by the Universe, and no place is to
be free from circumscription. This follows if He is contained in
the Universe. And besides, where was He before the Universe was
created, for this is a point of no little difficulty. But if He
is above the Universe, is there nothing to distinguish this from
the Universe, and where is this above situated? And how could
this Transcendence and that which is transcended be distinguished
in thought, if there is not a limit to divide and define them? Is
it not necessary that there shall be some mean to mark off the
Universe from that which is above the Universe? And what could
this be but Place, which we have already rejected? For I have not
yet brought forward the point that God would be altogether
circumscript, if He were even comprehensible in thought: for
comprehension is one form of circumscription.
XI. Now, why have I gone into all this,
perhaps too minutely for most people to listen to, and in
accordance with the present manner of discourse, which despises
noble simplicity, and has introduced a crooked and intricate
style? That the tree may be known by its fruits; I mean, that the
darkness which is at work in such teaching may be known by the
obscurity of the arguments. For my purpose in doing so was, not
to get credit for myself for astonishing utterances, or excessive
wisdom, through tying knots and solving difficulties (this was
the great miraculous gift of Daniel), but to make clear the point
at which my argument has aimed from the first. And what was this?
That the Divine Nature cannot be apprehended by human reason, and
that we cannot even represent to ourselves all its greatness. And
this not out of envy, for envy is far from the Divine Nature,
which is passionless, and only good and Lord of all; especially
envy of that which is the most honourable of all His creatures.
For what does the Word prefer to the rational and speaking
creatures? Why, even their very existence is a proof of His
supreme goodness. Nor yet is this incomprehensibility for the
sake of His own glory and honour, Who is full, as if His
possession of His glory and majesty depended upon the
impossibility of approaching Him. For it is utterly sophistical
and foreign to the character, I will not say of God, but of any
moderately good man, who has any right ideas about himself, to
seek his own supremacy by throwing a hindrance in the way of
another.
XII. But whether there be other causes for
it also, let them see who are nearer God, and are eye witnesses
and spectators of His unsearchable judgments; if there are any
who are so eminent in virtue, and who walk in the paths of the
Infinite, as the saying is. As far, however, as we have attained,
who measure with our little measure things hard to be understood,
perhaps one reason is to prevent us from too readily throwing
away the possession because it was so easily come by. For people
cling tightly to that which they acquire with labour; but that
which they acquire easily they quickly throw away, because it can
be easily recovered. And so it is turned into a blessing, at
least to all men who are sensible, that this blessing is not too
easy. Or perhaps it is in order that we may not share the fate of
Lucifer, who fell, and in consequence of receiving the full light
make our necks stiff against the Lord Almighty, and suffer a
fall, of all things most pitiable, from the height we had
attained. Or perhaps it may be to give a greater reward hereafter
for their labour and glorious life to those who have here been
purified, and have exercised long patience in respect of that
which they desired.
Therefore this darkness of the body has
been placed between us and God, like the cloud of old between the
Egyptians and the Hebrews; and this is perhaps what is meant by
"He made darkness His secret place," namely our dulness, through
which few can see even a little. But as to this point, let those
discuss it whose business it is; and let them ascend as far as
possible in the examination. To us who are (as Jeremiah saith),
"prisoners of the earth," and covered with the denseness of
carnal nature, this at all events is known, that as it is
impossible for a man to step over his own shadow, however fast he
may move (for the shadow will always move on as fast as it is
being overtaken) or, as it is impossible for the eye to draw near
to visible objects apart from the intervening air and light, or
for a fish to glide about outside of the waters; so it is quite
impracticable for those who are in the body to be conversant with
objects of pure thought apart altogether from bodily objects. For
something in our own environment is ever creeping in, even when
the mind has most fully detached itself from the visible, and
collected itself, and is attempting to apply itself to those
invisible things which are akin to itself.
XIII. This will be made clear to you as
follows:-Are not Spirit, and Fire, and Light, Love, and Wisdom,
and Righteousness, and Mind and Reason, and the like, the names
of the First Nature? What then? Can you conceive of Spirit apart
from motion and diffusion; or of Fire without its fuel and its
upward motion, and its proper colour and form? Or of Light
unmingled with air, and loosed from that which is as it were its
father and source? And how do you conceive of a mind? Is it not
that which is inherent in some person not itself, and are not its
movements thoughts, silent or uttered? And Reason . . . what else
can you think it than that which is either silent within
ourselves, or else outpoured (for I shrink from saying loosed)?
And if you conceive of Wisdom, what is it but the habit of mind
which you know as such, and which is concerned with
contemplations either divine or human? And Justice and Love, are
they not praiseworthy dispositions, the one opposed to injustice,
the other to hate, and at one time intensifying themselves, at
another relaxed, now taking possession of us, now leaving us
alone, and in a word, making us what we are, and changing us as
colours do bodies? Or are we rather to leave all these things,
and to look at the Deity absolutely, as best we can, collecting a
fragmentary perception of It from Its images? What then is this
subtile thing, which is of these, and yet is not these, or how
can that Unity which is in its Nature uncomposite and
incomparable, still be all of these, and each one of them
perfectly? Thus our mind faints to transcend corporeal things,
and to consort with the Incorporeal, stripped of all clothing of
corporeal ideas, as long as it has to look with its inherent
weakness at things above its strength. For every rational nature
longs for God and for the First Cause, but is unable to grasp
Him, for the reasons I have mentioned. Faint therefore with the
desire, and as it were restive and impatient of the disability,
it tries a second course, either to look at visible things, and
out of some of them to make a god . . . (a poor contrivance, for
in what respect and to what extent can that which is seen be
higher and more godlike than that which sees, that this should
worship that?) or else through the beauty and order of visible
things to attain to that which is above sight; but not to suffer
the loss of God through the magnificence of visible
things.
XIV. From this cause some have made a god
of the Sun, others of the Moon, others of the host of Stars,
others of heaven itself with all its hosts, to which they have
attributed the guiding of the Universe, according to the quality
or quantity of their movement. Others again of the Elements,
earth, air, water, fire, because of their useful nature, since
without them human life cannot possibly exist. Others again have
worshipped any chance visible objects, setting up the most
beautiful of what they saw as their gods. And there are those who
worship pictures and images, at first indeed of their own
ancestors-at least, this is the case with the more affectionate
and sensual-and honour the departed with memorials; and
afterwards even those of strangers are worshipped by men of a
later generation separated from them by a long interval; through
ignorance of the First Nature, and following the traditional
honour as lawful and necessary; for usage when confirmed by time
was held to be Law. And I think that some who were courtiers of
arbitrary power and extolled bodily strength and admired beauty,
made a god in time out of him whom they honoured, perhaps getting
hold of some fable to help on their imposture.
XV. And those of them who were most subject
to passion deified their passions, or honoured them among their
gods; Anger and Blood-thirstiness, Lust and Drunkenness, and
every similar wickedness; and made out of this an ignoble and
unjust excuse for their own sins. And some they left on earth,
and some they hid beneath the earth (this being the only sign of
wisdom about them), and some they raised to heaven. O ridiculous
distribution of inheritance! Then they gave to each of these
concepts the name of some god or demon, by the authority and
private judgment of their error, and set up statues whose
costliness is a snare, and thought to honour them with blood and
the steam of sacrifices, and sometimes even by most shameful
actions, frenzies and manslaughter. For such honours were the
fitting due of such gods. And before now men have insulted
themselves by worshipping monsters, and fourfooted beasts, and
creeping things, and of the very vilest and most absurd, and have
made an offering to them of the glory of God; so that it is not
easy to decide whether we ought most to despise the worshippers
or the objects of their worship. Probably the worshippers are far
the most contemptible, for though they are of a rational nature,
and have received grace from God, they have set up the worse as
the better. And this was the trick of the Evil One, who abused
good to an evil purpose, as in most of his evil deeds. For he
laid hold of their desire in its wandering in search of God, in
order to distort to himself the power, and steal the desire,
leading it by the hand, like a blind man asking a road; and he
hurled down and scattered some in one direction and some in
another, into one pit of death and destruction.
XVI. This was their course. But reason
receiving us in our desire for God, and in our sense of the
impossibility of being without a leader and guide, and then
making us apply ourselves to things visible and meeting with the
things which have been since the beginning, doth not stay its
course even here. For it was not the part of Wisdom to grant the
sovereignty to things which are, as observation tells us, of
equal rank. By these then it leads to that which is above these,
and by which being is given to these. For what is it which
ordered things in heaven and things in earth, and those which
pass through air, and those which live in water; or rather the
things which were before these, heaven and earth, air and water?
Who mingled these, and who distributed them? What is it that each
has in common with the other, and their mutual dependence and
agreement? For I commend the man, though he was a heathen, who
said, What gave movement to these, and drives their ceaseless and
unhindered motion? Is it not the Artificer of them Who implanted
reason in them all, in accordance with which the Universe is
moved and controlled? Is it not He who made them and brought them
into being? For we cannot attribute such a power to the
Accidental. For, suppose that its existence is accidental, to
what will you let us ascribe its order? And if you like we will
grant you this: to what then will you ascribe its preservation
and protection in accordance with the terms of its first
creation. Do these belong to the Accidental, or to something
else? Surely not to the Accidental. And what can this Something
Else be but God? Thus reason that proceeds from God, that is
implanted in all from the beginning and is the first law in us,
and is bound up in all, leads us up to God through visible
things. Let us begin again, and reason this out.
XVII. What God is in nature and essence, no
man ever yet has discovered or can discover. Whether it will ever
be discovered is a question which he who will may examine and
decide. In my opinion it will be discovered when that within us
which is godlike and divine, I mean our mind and reason, shall
have mingled with its Like, and the image shall have ascended to
the Archetype, of which it has now the desire. And this I think
is the solution of that vexed problem as to "We shall know even
as we are known." But in our present life all that comes to us is
but a little effluence, and as it were a small effulgence from a
great Light. So that if anyone has known God, or has had the
testimony of Scripture to his knowledge of God, we are to
understand such an one to have possessed a degree of knowledge
which gave him the appearance of being more fully enlightened
than another who did not enjoy the same degree of illumination;
and this relative superiority is spoken of as if it were absolute
knowledge, not because it is really such, but by comparison with
the power of that other.
XVIII. Thus Enos "hoped to call upon the
Name of the Lord." Hope was that for which he is commended; and
that, not that he should know God, but that he should call upon
him. And Enoch was translated, but it is not yet clear whether it
was because he already comprehended the Divine Nature, or in
order that he might comprehend it. And Noah's glory was that he
was pleasing to God; he who was entrusted with the saving of the
whole world from the waters, or rather of the Seeds of the world,
escaped the Deluge in a small Ark. And Abraham, great Patriarch
though he was, was justified by faith, and offered a strange
victim, the type of the Great Sacrifice. Yet he saw not God as
God, but gave Him food as a man. He was approved because he
worshipped as far as he comprehended. And Jacob dreamed of a
lofty ladder and stair of Angels, and in a mystery anointed a
pillar-perhaps to signify the Rock that was anointed for our
sake-and gave to a place the name of The House of God in honour
of Him whom he saw; and wrestled with God in human form; whatever
this wrestling of God with man may mean . . . possibly it refers
to the comparison of man's virtue with God's; and he bore on his
body the marks of the wrestling, setting forth the defeat of the
created nature; and for a reward of his reverence he received a
change of his name; being named, instead of Jacob, Israel-that
great and honourable name. Yet neither he nor any one on his
behalf, unto this day, of all the Twelve Tribes who were his
children, could boast that he comprehended the whole nature or
the pure sight of God.
XIX. To Elias neither the strong wind, nor
the fire, nor the earthquake, as you learn from the story, but a
light breeze adumbrated the Presence of God, and not even this
His Nature. And who was this Elias? The man whom a chariot of
fire took up to heaven, signifying the superhuman excellency of
the righteous man. And are you not amazed at Manoah the Judge of
yore, and at Peter the disciple in later days; the one being
unable to endure the sight even of one in whom was a
representation of God; and saying, "We are undone, O wife, we
have seen God;" speaking as though even a vision of God could not
be grasped by human beings, let alone the Nature of God; and the
other unable to endure the Presence of Christ in his boat and
therefore bidding Him depart; and this though Peter was more
zealous than the others for the knowledge of Christ, and received
a blessing for this, and was entrusted with the greatest gifts.
What would you say of Isaiah or Ezekiel, who was an eyewitness of
very great mysteries, and of the other Prophets; for one of these
saw the Lord of Sabaoth sitting on the Throne of glory, and
encircled and praised and hidden by the sixwinged Seraphim, and
was himself purged by the live coal, and equipped for his
prophetic office. And the other describes the Cherubic Chariot of
God, and the Throne upon them, and the Firmament over it, and Him
that shewed Himself in the Firmament, and Voices, and Forces, and
Deeds. And whether this was an appearance by day, only visible to
Saints, or an unerring vision of the night, or an impression on
the mind holding converse with the future as if it were the
present; or some other ineffable form of prophecy, I cannot say;
the God of the Prophets knoweth, and they know who are thus
inspired. But neither these of whom I am speaking, nor any of
their fellows ever stood before the Council and Essence of God,
as it is written, or saw, or proclaimed the Nature of
God.
XX. If it had been permitted to Paul to
utter what the Third Heaven contained, and his own advance, or
ascension, or assumption thither, perhaps we should know
something more about God's Nature, if this was the mystery of the
rapture. But since it was ineffable, we too will honour it by
silence. Thus much we will hear Paul say about it, that we know
in part and we prophesy in part. This and the like to this are
the confessions of one who is not rude in knowledge, who
threatens to give proof of Christ speaking in him, the great
doctor and champion of the truth. Wherefore he estimates all
knowledge on earth only as through a glass darkly, as taking its
stand upon little images of the truth. Now, unless I appear to
anyone too careful, and over anxious about the examination of
this matter, perhaps it was of this and nothing else that the
Word Himself intimated that there were things which could not now
be borne, but which should be borne and cleared up hereafter, and
which John the Forerunner of the Word and great Voice of the
Truth declared even the whole world could not contain.
XXI. The truth then, and the whole Word is
full of difficulty and obscurity; and as it were with a small
instrument we are undertaking a great work, when with merely
human wisdom we pursue the knowledge of the Self-existent, and in
company with, or not apart from, the senses, by which we are
borne hither and thither, and led into error, we apply ourselves
to the search after things which are only to be grasped by the
mind, and we are unable by meeting bare realities with bare
intellect to approximate somewhat more closely to the truth, and
to mould the mind by its concepts.
Now the subject of God is more hard to come
at, in proportion as it is more perfect than any other, and is
open to more objections, and the solutions of them are more
laborious. For every objection, however small, stops and hinders
the course of our argument, and cuts off its further advance,
just like men who suddenly check with the rein the horses in full
career, and turn them right round by the unexpected shock. Thus
Solomon, who was the wisest of all men, whether before him or in
his own time, to whom God gave breadth of heart, and a flood of
contemplation, more abundant than the sand, even he, the more he
entered into the depth, the more dizzy he became, and declared
the furthest point of wisdom to be the discovery of how very far
off she was from him. Paul also tries to arrive at, I will not
say the nature of God, for this he knew was utterly impossible,
but only the judgments of God; and since he finds no way out, and
no halting place in the ascent, and moreover, since the earnest
searching of his mind after knowledge does not end in any
definite conclusion, because some fresh unattained point is being
continually disclosed to him (O marvel, that I have a like
experience), he closes his discourse with astonishment, and calls
this the riches of God, and the depth, and confesses the
unsearchableness of the judgments of God, in almost the very
words of David, who at one time calls God's judgments the great
deep whose foundations cannot be reached by measure or sense; and
at another says that His knowledge of him and of his own
constitution was marvellous, and had attained greater strength
than was in his own power or grasp.
XXII. For if, he says, I leave everything
else alone, and consider myself and the whole nature and
constitution of man, and how we are mingled, and what is our
movement, and how the mortal was compounded with the immortal,
and how it is that I flow downwards, and yet am borne upwards,
and how the soul is circumscribed; and how it gives life and
shares in feelings; and how the mind is at once circumscribed and
unlimited, abiding in us and yet travelling over the Universe in
swift motion and flow; how it is both received and imparted by
word, and passes through air, and enters with all things; how it
shares in sense, and enshrouds itself away from sense. And even
before these questions-what was our first moulding and
composition in the workshop of nature, and what is our last
formation and completion? What is the desire for and imparting of
nourishment, and who brought us spontaneously to those first
springs and sources of life? How is the body nourished by food,
and the soul by reason? What is the drawing of nature, and the
mutual relation between parents and children, that it should be
held together by a spell of love? How is it that species are
permanent, and are different in their characteristics, although
there are so many that their individual marks cannot be
described? How is it that the same animal is both mortal and
immortal , the one by decease, the other by coming into being?
For one departs, and another takes its place, just like the flow
of a river, which is never still, yet ever constant. And you
might discuss many more points concerning men's members and
parts, and their mutual adaptation both for use and beauty, and
how some are connected and others disjoined, some are more
excellent and others less comely, some are united and others
divided, some contain and others are contained, according to the
law and reason of Nature. Much too might be said about voices and
ears. How is it that the voice is carried by the vocal organs,
and received by the ears, and both are joined by the smiting and
resounding of the medium of the air? Much too of the eyes, which
have an indescribable communion with visible objects, and which
are moved by the will alone, and that together, and are affected
exactly as is the mind. For with equal speed the mind is joined
to the objects of thought, the eye to those of sight. Much too
concerning the other senses, not objects of the research of
reason. And much concerning our rest in sleep, and the figments
of dreams, and of memory and remembrance; of calculation, and
anger, and desire; and in a word, all by which this little world
called Man is swayed.
XXIII. Shall I reckon up for you the
differences of the other animals, both from us and from each
other,-differences of nature, and of production, and of
nourishment, and of region, and of temper, and as it were of
social life? How is it that some are gregarious and others
solitary, some herbivorous and others carnivorous, some fierce
and others tame, some fond of man and domesticated, others
untamable and free? And some we might call bordering on reason
and power of learning, while others are altogether destitute of
reason, and incapable of being taught. Some with fuller senses,
others with less; some immovable, and some with the power of
walking, and some very swift, and some very slow; some surpassing
in size or beauty, or in one or other of these respects; others
very small or very ugly, or both; some strong, others weak, some
apt at self-defence, others timid and crafty and others again are
unguarded. Some are laborious and thrifty, others altogether idle
and improvident. And before we come to such points as these, how
is it that some are crawling things, and others upright; some
attached to one spot, some amphibious; some delight in beauty and
others are unadorned; some are married and some single; some
temperate and others intemperate; some have numerous offspring
and others not; some are long-lived and others have but short
lives? It would be a weary discourse to go through all the
details.
XXIV. Look also at the fishy tribe gliding
through the waters, and as it were flying through the liquid
element, and breathing its own air, but in danger when in contact
with ours, as we are in the waters; and mark their habits and
dispositions, their intercourse and their births, their size and
their beauty, and their affection for places, and their
wanderings, and their assemblings and departings, and their
properties which so nearly resemble those of the animals that
dwell on land; in some cases community, in others contrast of
properties, both in name and shape. And consider the tribes of
birds, and their varieties of form and colour, both of those
which are voiceless and of songbirds. What is the reason of their
melody, and from whom came it? Who gave to the grasshopper the
lute in his breast, and the songs and chirruping on the branches,
when they are moved by the sun to make their midday music, and
sing among the groves, and escort the wayfarer with their voices?
Who wove the song for the swan when he spreads his wings to the
breezes, and makes melody of their rustling? For I will not speak
of the forced voices, and all the rest that art contrives against
the truth. Whence does the peacock, that boastful bird of Media,
get his love of beauty and of praise (for he is fully conscious
of his own beauty), so that when he sees any one approaching, or
when, as they say, he would make a show before his hens, raising
his neck and spreading his tail in circle around him, glittering
like gold and studded with stars, he makes a spectacle of his
beauty to his lovers with pompous strides? Now Holy Scripture
admires the cleverness in weaving even of women, saying, Who gave
to woman skill in weaving and cleverness in the art of
embroidery? This belongeth to a living creature that hath reason,
and exceedeth in wisdom and maketh way even as far as the things
of heaven.
XXV. But I would have you marvel at the
natural knowledge even of irrational creatures, and if you can,
explain its cause. How is it that birds have for nests rocks and
trees and roofs, and adapt them both for safety and beauty, and
suitably for the comfort of their nurslings? Whence do bees and
spiders get their love of work and art, by which the former plan
their honeycombs, and join them together by hexagonal and
co-ordinate tubes, and construct the foundation by means of a
partition and an alternation of the angles with straight lines;
and this, as is the case, in such dusky hives and dark combs; and
the latter weave their intricate webs by such light and almost
airy threads stretched in divers ways, and this from almost
invisible beginnings, to be at once a precious dwelling, and a
trap for weaker creatures with a view to enjoyment of food? What
Euclid ever imitated these, while pursuing philosophical
enquiries with lines that have no real existence, and wearying
himself with demonstrations? From what Palamedes came the
tactics, and, as the saying is, the movements and configurations
of cranes, and the systems of their movement in ranks and their
complicated flight? Who were their Phidiae and Zeuxides, and who
were the Parrhasii and Aglaophons who knew how to draw and mould
excessively beautiful things? What harmonious Gnossian chorus of
Daedalus, wrought for a girl to the highest pitch of beauty? What
Cretan Labyrinth, hard to get through, hard to unravel, as the
poets say, and continually crossing itself through the tricks of
its construction? I will not speak of the ants' storehouses and
storekeepers, and of their treasurings of wood in quantities
corresponding to the time for which it is wanted, and all the
other details which we know are told of their marches and leaders
and their good order in their works.
XXVI. If this knowledge has come within
your reach and you are familiar with these branches of science,
look at the differences of plants also, up to the artistic
fashion of the leaves, which is adapted both to give the utmost
pleasure to the eye, and to be of the greatest advantage to the
fruit. Look too at the variety and lavish abundance of fruits,
and most of all at the wondrous beauty of such as are most
necessary. And consider the power of roots, and juices, and
flowers, and odours, not only so very sweet, but also serviceable
as medicines; and the graces and qualities of colours; and again
the costly value, and the brilliant transparency of precious
stones. Since nature has set before you all things as in an
abundant banquet free to all, both the necessaries and the
luxuries of life, in order that, if nothing else, you may at any
rate know God by His benefits, and by your own sense of want be
made wiser than you were. Next, I pray you, traverse the length
and breadth of earth, the common mother of all, and the gulfs of
the sea bound together with one another and with the land, and
the beautiful forests, and the rivers and springs abundant and
perennial, not only of waters cold and fit for drinking, and on
the surface of the earth; but also such as running beneath the
earth, and flowing under caverns, are then forced out by a
violent blast, and repelled, and then filled with heat by this
violence of strife and repulsion, burst out by little and little
wherever they get a chance, and hence supply our need of hot
baths in many parts of the earth, and in conjunction with the
cold give us a healing which is without cost and spontaneous.
Tell me how and whence are these things? What is this great web
unwrought by art? These things are no less worthy of admiration,
in respect of their mutual relations than when considered
separately.
How is it that the earth stands solid and
unswerving? On what is it supported? What is it that props it up,
and on what does that rest? For indeed even reason has nothing to
lean upon, but only the Will of God. And how is it that part of
it is drawn up into mountain summits, and part laid down in
plains, and this in various and differing ways? And because the
variations are individually small, it both supplies our needs
more liberally, and is more beautiful by its variety; part being
distributed into habitations, and part left uninhabited, namely
all the great height of Mountains, and the various clefts of its
coast line cut off from it. Is not this the clearest proof of the
majestic working of God?
XXVII. And with respect to the Sea even if
I did not marvel at its greatness, yet I should have marvelled at
its gentleness, in that although loose it stands within its
boundaries; and if not at its gentleness, yet surely at its
greatness; but since I marvel at both, I will praise the Power
that is in both. What collected it? What bounded it? How is it
raised and lulled to rest, as though respecting its neighbour
earth? How, moreover, does it receive all the rivers, and yet
remain the same, through the very superabundance of its
immensity, if that term be permissible? How is the boundary of
it, though it be an element of such magnitude, only sand? Have
your natural philosophers with their knowledge of useless details
anything to tell us, those men I mean who are really endeavouring
to measure the sea with a wineglass, and such mighty works by
their own conceptions? Or shall I give the really scientific
explanation of it from Scripture concisely, and yet more
satisfactorily and truly than by the longest arguments? "He hath
fenced the face of the water with His command." This is the chain
of fluid nature. And how doth He bring upon it the Nautilus that
inhabits the dry land (i.e., man) in a little vessel, and with a
little breeze (dost thou not marvel at the sight of this,-is not
thy mind astonished?), that earth and sea may be bound together
by needs and commerce, and that things so widely separated by
nature should be thus brought together into one for man? What are
the first fountains of springs? Seek, O man, if you can trace out
or find any of these things. And who was it who cleft the plains
and the mountains for the rivers, and gave them an unhindered
course? And how comes the marvel on the other side, that the Sea
never overflows, nor the Rivers cease to flow? And what is the
nourishing power of water, and what the difference therein; for
some things are irrigated from above, and others drink from their
roots, if I may luxuriate a little in my language when speaking
of the luxuriant gifts of God.
XXVIII. And now, leaving the earth and the
things of earth, soar into the air on the wings of thought, that
our argument may advance in due path; and thence I will take you
up to heavenly things, and to heaven itself, and things which are
above heaven; for to that which is beyond my discourse hesitates
to ascend, but still it shall ascend as far as may be. Who poured
forth the air, that great and abundant wealth, not measured to
men by their rank or fortunes; not restrained by boundaries; not
divided out according to people's ages; but like the distribution
of the Manna, received in sufficiency, and valued for its
equality of distribution; the chariot of the winged creation; the
seat of the winds; the moderator of the seasons; the quickener of
living things, or rather the preserver of natural life in the
body; in which bodies have their being, and by which we speak; in
which is the light and all that it shines upon, and the sight
which flows through it? And mark, if you please, what follows. I
cannot give to the air the whole empire of all that is thought to
belong to the air. What are the storehouses of the winds? What
are the treasuries of the snow? Who, as Scripture hath said, hath
begotten the drops of dew? Out of Whose womb came the ice? and
Who bindeth the waters in the clouds, and, fixing part in the
clouds (O marvel!) held by His Word though its nature is to flow,
poureth out the rest upon the face of the whole earth, and
scattereth it abroad in due season, and in just proportions, and
neither suffereth the whole substance of moisture to go out free
and uncontrolled (for sufficient was the cleansing in the days of
Noah; and He who cannot lie is not forgetful of His own
covenant); . . . nor yet restraineth it entirely that we should
not again stand in need of an Elias to bring the drought to an
end. If He shall shut up heaven, it saith, who shall open it? If
He open the floodgates, who shall shut them up? Who can bring an
excess or withhold a sufficiency of rain, unless he govern the
Universe by his own measures and balances? What scientific laws,
pray, can you lay down concerning thunder and lightning, O you
who thunder from the earth, and cannot shine with even little
sparks of truth? To what vapours from earth will you attribute
the creation of cloud, or is it due to some thickening of the
air, or pressure or crash of clouds of excessive rarity, so as to
make you think the pressure the cause of the lightning, and the
crash that which makes the thunder? Or what compression of wind
having no outlet will account to you for the lightning by its
compression, and for the thunder by its bursting out?
Now if you have in your thought passed
through the air and all the things of air, reach with me to
heaven and the things of heaven. And let faith lead us rather
than reason, if at least you have learnt the feebleness of the
latter in matters nearer to you, and have known reason by knowing
the things that are beyond reason, so as not to be altogether on
the earth or of the earth, because you are ignorant even of your
ignorance.
XXIX. Who spread the sky around us, and set
the stars in order? Or rather, first, can you tell me, of your
own knowledge of the things in heaven, what are the sky and the
stars; you who know not what lies at your very feet, and cannot
even take the measure of yourself, and yet must busy yourself
about what is above your nature, and gape at the illimitable?
For, granted that you understand orbits and periods, and waxings
and wanings, and settings and risings, and some degrees and
minutes, and all the other things which make you so proud of your
wonderful knowledge; you have not arrived at comprehension of the
realities themselves, but only at an observation of some
movement, which, when confirmed by longer practice, and drawing
the observations of many individuals into one generalization, and
thence deducing a law, has acquired the name of Science (just as
the lunar phenomena have become generally known to our sight),
being the basis of this knowledge. But if you are very scientific
on this subject, and have a just claim to admiration, tell me
what is the cause of this order and this movement. How came the
sun to be a beacon-fire to the whole world, and to all eyes like
the leader of some chorus, concealing all the rest of the stars
by his brightness, more completely than some of them conceal
others. The proof of this is that they shine against him, but he
outshines them and does not even allow it to be perceived that
they rose simultaneously with him, fair as a bridegroom, swift
and great as a giant for I will not let his praises be sung from
any other source than my own Scriptures-so mighty in strength
that from one end to the other of the world he embraces all
things in his heat, and there is nothing hid from the feeling
thereof, but it fills both every eye with light, and every
embodied creature with heat; warming, yet not burning, by the
gentleness of its temper, and the order of its movement, present
to all, and equally embracing all.
XXX. Have you considered the importance of
the fact that a heathen writer speaks of the sun as holding the
same position among material objects as God does among objects of
thought? For the one gives light to the eyes, as the Other does
to the mind; and is the most beautiful of the objects of sight,
as God is of those of thought. But who gave him motion at first?
And what is it which ever moves him in his circuit, though in his
nature stable and immovable, truly unwearied, and the giver and
sustainer of life, and all the rest of the titles which the poets
justly sing of him, and never resting in his course or his
benefits? How comes he to be the creator of day when above the
earth, and of night when below it? or whatever may be the right
expression when one contemplates the sun? What are the mutual
aggressions and concessions of day and night, and their regular
irregularities-to use a somewhat strange expression? How comes he
to be the maker and divider of the seasons, that come and depart
in regular order, and as in a dance interweave with each other,
or stand apart by a law of love on the one hand, and of order on
the other, and mingle little by little, and steal on their
neighbour, just as nights and days do, so as not to give us pain
by their suddenness. This will be enough about the
sun.
Do you know the nature and phenomena of the
Moon, and the measures and courses of light, and how it is that
the sun bears rule over the day, and the moon presides over the
night; and while She gives confidence to wild beasts, He stirs
Man up to work, raising or lowering himself as may be most
serviceable? Know you the bond of Pleiades, or the fence of Orion
as He who counteth the number of the stars and calleth them all
by their names? Know you the differences of the glory of each,
and the order of their movement, that I should trust you, when by
them you weave the web of human concerns, and arm the creature
against the Creator?
XXXI. What say you? Shall we pause here,
after discussing nothing further than matter and visible things,
or, since the Word knows the Tabernacle of Moses to be a figure
of the whole creation-I mean the entire system of things visible
and invisible-shall we pass the first veil, and stepping beyond
the realm of sense, shall we look into the Holy Place, the
Intellectual and Celestial creation? But not even this can we see
in an incorporeal way, though it is incorporeal, since it is
called-or is-Fire and Spirit. For He is said to make His Angels
spirits, and His Ministers a flame of fire . . . though perhaps
this "making" means preserving by that Word by which they came
into existence. The Angel then is called spirit and fire; Spirit,
as being a creature of the intellectual sphere; Fire, as being of
a purifying nature; for I know that the same names belong to the
First Nature. But, relatively to us at least, we must reckon the
Angelic Nature incorporeal, or at any rate as nearly so as
possible. Do you see how we get dizzy over this subject, and
cannot advance to any point, unless it be as far as this, that we
know there are Angels and Archangels, Thrones, Dominions,
Princedoms, Powers, Splendours, Ascents, Intelligent Powers or
Intelligencies, pure natures and unalloyed, immovable to evil, or
scarcely movable; ever circling in chorus round the First Cause
(or how should we sing their praises?) illuminated thence with
the purest Illumination, or one in one degree and one in another,
proportionally to their nature and rank . . . so conformed to
beauty and moulded that they become secondary Lights, and can
enlighten others by the overflowings and largesses of the First
Light? Ministrants of God's Will, strong with both inborn and
imparted strength, traversing all space, readily present to all
at any place through their zeal for ministry and the agility of
their nature . . . different individuals of them embracing
different parts of the world, or appointed over different
districts of the Universe, as He knoweth who ordered and
distributed it all. Combining all things in one, solely with a
view to the consent of the Creator of all things; Hymners of the
Majesty of the Godhead, eternally contemplating the Eternal
Glory, not that God may thereby gain an increase of glory, for
nothing can be added to that which is full-to Him, who supplies
good to all outside Himself but that there may never be a
cessation of blessings to these first natures after God. If we
have told these things as they deserve, it is by the grace of the
Trinity, and of the one Godhead in Three Persons; but if less
perfectly than we have desired, yet even so our discourse has
gained its purpose. For this is what we were labouring to shew,
that even the secondary natures surpass the power of our
intellect; much more then the First and (for I fear to say merely
That which is above all), the only Nature.
Oration XXIX
The Third Theological Oration. On the Son
I. This then is what might be said to cut
short our opponents' readiness to argue and their hastiness with
its consequent insecurity in all matters, but above all in those
discussions which relate to God. But since to rebuke others is a
matter of no difficulty whatever, but a very easy thing, which
any one who likes can do; whereas to substitute one's own belief
for theirs is the part of a pious and intelligent man; let us,
relying on the Holy Ghost, Who among them is dishonoured, but
among us is adored, bring forth to the light our own conceptions
about the Godhead, whatever these may be, like some noble and
timely birth. Not that I have at other times been silent; for on
this subject alone I am full of youthful strength and daring; but
the fact is that under present circumstances I am even more bold
to declare the truth, that I may not (to use the words of
Scripture) by drawing back fall into the condemnation of being
displeasing to God. And since every discourse is of a twofold
nature, the one part establishing one's own, and the other
overthrowing one's opponents' position; let us first of all state
our own position, and then try to controvert that of our
opponents;-and both as briefly as possible, so that our arguments
may be taken in at a glance (like those of the elementary
treatises which they have devised to deceive simple or foolish
persons), and that our thoughts may not be scattered by reason of
the length of the discourse, like water which is not contained in
a channel, but flows to waste over the open land.
II. The three most ancient opinions
concerning God are Anarchia, Polyarchia, and Monarchia. The first
two are the sport of the children of Hellas, and may they
continue to be so. For Anarchy is a thing without order; and the
Rule of Many is factious, and thus anarchical, and thus
disorderly. For both these tend to the same thing, namely
disorder; and this to dissolution, for disorder is the first step
to dissolution.
But Monarchy is that which we hold in
honour. It is, however, a Monarchy that is not limited to one
Person, for it is possible for Unity if at variance with itself
to come into a condition of plurality; but one which is made of
an equality of Nature and a Union of mind, and an identity of
motion, and a convergence of its elements to unity-a thing which
is impossible to the created nature-so that though numerically
distinct there is no severance of Essence. Therefore Unity having
from all eternity arrived by motion at Duality, found its rest in
Trinity. This is what we mean by Father and Son and Holy Ghost.
The Father is the Begetter and the Emitter; without passion of
course, and without reference to time, and not in a corporeal
manner. The Son is the Begotten, and the Holy Ghost the Emission;
for I know not how this could be expressed in terms altogether
excluding visible things. For we shall not venture to speak of
"an overflow of goodness," as one of the Greek Philosophers dared
to say, as if it were a bowl overflowing, and this in plain words
in his Discourse on the First and Second Causes. Let us not ever
look on this Generation as involuntary, like some natural
overflow, hard to be retained, and by no means befitting our
conception of Deity. Therefore let us confine ourselves within
our limits, and speak of the Unbegotten and the Begotten and That
which proceeds from the Father, as somewhere God the Word Himself
saith.
III. When did these come into being? They
are above all "When." But, if I am to speak with something more
of boldness,-when the Father did. And when did the Father come
into being. There never was a time when He was not. And the same
thing is true of the Son and the Holy Ghost. Ask me again, and
again I will answer you, When was the Son begotten? When the
Father was not begotten. And when did the Holy Ghost proceed?
When the Son was, not proceeding but, begotten-beyond the sphere
of time, and above the grasp of reason; although we cannot set
forth that which is above time, if we avoid as we desire any
expression which conveys the idea of time. For such expressions
as "when" and "before" and "after" and "from the beginning" are
not timeless, however much we may force them; unless indeed we
were to take the AEon, that interval which is coextensive with
the eternal things, and is not divided or measured by any motion,
or by the revolution of the sun, as time is measured.
How then are They not alike unoriginate, if
They are coeternal? Because They are from Him, though not after
Him. For that which is unoriginate is eternal, but that which is
eternal is not necessarily unoriginate, so long as it may be
referred to the Father as its origin. Therefore in respect of
Cause They are not unoriginate; but it is evident that the Cause
is not necessarily prior to its effects, for the sun is not prior
to its light. And yet They are in some sense unoriginate, in
respect of time, even though you would scare simple minds with
your quibbles, for the Sources of Time are not subject to
time.
IV. But how can this generation be
passionless? In that it is incorporeal. For if corporeal
generation involves passion, incorporeal generation excludes it.
And I will ask of you in turn, How is He God if He is created?
For that which is created is not God. I refrain from reminding
you that here too is passion if we take the creation in a bodily
sense, as time, desire, imagination, thought, hope, pain, risk,
failure, success, all of which and more than all find a place in
the creature, as is evident to every one. Nay, I marvel that you
do not venture so far as to conceive of marriages and times of
pregnancy, and dangers of miscarriage, as if the Father could not
have begotten at all if He had not begotten thus; or again, that
you did not count up the modes of generation of birds and beasts
and fishes, and bring under some one of them the Divine and
Ineffable Generation, or even eliminate the Son out of your new
hypothesis. And you cannot even see this, that as His Generation
according to the flesh differs from all others (for where among
men do you know of a Virgin Mother?), so does He differ also in
His spiritual Generation; or rather He, Whose Existence is not
the same as ours, differs from us also in His
Generation.
V. Who then is that Father Who had no
beginning? One Whose very Existence had no beginning; for one
whose existence had a beginning must also have begun to be a
Father. He did not then become a Father after He began to be, for
His being had no beginning. And He is Father in the absolute
sense, for He is not also Son; just as the Son is Son in the
absolute sense, because He is not also Father. These names do not
belong to us in the absolute sense, because we are both, and not
one more than the other; and we are of both, and not of one only;
and so we are divided, and by degrees become men, and perhaps not
even men, and such as we did not desire, leaving and being left,
so that only the relations remain, without the underlying
facts.
But, the objector says, the very form of
the expression "He begat" and "He was begotten," brings in the
idea of a beginning of generation. But what if you do not use
this expression, but say, "He had been begotten from the
beginning" so as readily to evade your far-fetched and
time-loving objections? Will you bring Scripture against us, as
if we were forging something contrary to Scripture and to the
truth? Why, every one knows that in practice we very often find
tenses interchanged when time is spoken of; and especially is
this the custom of Holy Scripture, not only in respect of the
past tense, and of the present; but even of the future, as for
instance "Why did the heathen rage?" when they had not yet raged
and "they shall cross over the river on foot," where the meaning
is they did cross over. It would be a long task to reckon up all
the expressions of this kind which students have
noticed.
VI. So much for this point. What is their
next objection, how full of contentiousness and impudence? He,
they say, either voluntarily begat the Son, or else
involuntarily. Next, as they think, they bind us on both sides
with cords; these however are not strong, but very weak. For,
they say, if it was involuntarily He was under the sway of some
one, and who exercised this sway? And how is He, over whom it is
exercised, God? But if voluntarily, the Son is a Son of Will; how
then is He of the Father?-and they thus invent a new sort of
Mother for him,-the Will,-in place of the Father. There is one
good point which they may allege about this argument of theirs;
namely, that they desert Passion, and take refuge in Will. For
Will is not Passion.
Secondly, let us look at the strength of
their argument. And it were best to wrestle with them at first at
close quarters. You yourself, who so recklessly assert whatever
takes your fancy; were you begotten voluntarily or involuntarily
by your father? If involuntarily, then he was under some tyrant's
sway (O terrible violence!) and who was the tyrant? You will
hardly say it was nature,-for nature is tolerant of chastity. If
it was voluntarily, then by a few syllables your father is done
away with, for you are shewn to be the son of Will, and not of
your father. But I pass to the relation between God and the
creature, and I put your own question to your own wisdom. Did God
create all things voluntarily or under compulsion? If under
compulsion, here also is the tyranny, and one who played the
tyrant; if voluntarily, the creatures also are deprived of their
God, and you before the rest, who invent such arguments and
tricks of logic. For a partition is set up between the Creator
and the creatures in the shape of Will. And yet I think that the
Person who wills is distinct from the Act of willing; He who
begets from the Act of begetting; the Speaker from the speech, or
else we are all very stupid. On the one side we have the mover,
and on the other that which is, so to speak, the motion. Thus the
thing willed is not the child of will, for it does not always
result therefrom; nor is that which is begotten the child of
generation, nor that which is heard the child of speech, but of
the Person who willed, or begat, or spoke. But the things of God
are beyond all this, for with Him perhaps the Will to beget is
generation, and there is no intermediate action (if we may accept
this altogether, and not rather consider generation superior to
will).
VII. Will you then let me play a little
upon this word Father, for your example encourages me to be so
bold? The Father is God either willingly or unwillingly; and how
will you escape from your own excessive acuteness? If willingly,
when did He begin to will? It could not have been before He began
to be, for there was nothing prior to Him. Or is one part of Him
Will and another the object of Will? If so, He is divisible. So
the question arises, as the result of your argument, whether He
Himself is not the Child of Will. And if unwillingly, what
compelled Him to exist, and how is He God if He was compelled-and
that to nothing less than to be God? How then was He begotten,
says my opponent. How was He created, if as you say, He was
created? For this is a part of the same difficulty. Perhaps you
would say, By Will and Word. You have not yet solved the whole
difficulty; for it yet remains for you to shew how Will and Word
gained the power of action. For man was not created in this
way.
VIII. How then was He begotten? This
Generation would have been no great thing, if you could have
comprehended it who have no real knowledge even of your own
generation, or at least who comprehend very little of it, and of
that little you are ashamed to speak; and then do you think you
know the whole? You will have to undergo much labour before you
discover the laws of composition, formation, manifestation, and
the bond whereby soul is united to body,-mind to soul, and reason
to mind; and movement, increase, assimilation of food, sense,
memory, recollection, and all the rest of the parts of which you
are compounded; and which of them belongs to the soul and body
together, and which to each independently of the other, and which
is received from each other. For those parts whose maturity comes
later, yet received their laws at the time of conception. Tell me
what these laws are? And do not even then venture to speculate on
the Generation of God; for that would be unsafe. For even if you
knew all about your own, yet you do not by any means know about
God's. And if you do not understand your own, how can you know
about God's? For in proportion as God is harder to trace out than
man, so is the heavenly Generation harder to comprehend than your
own. But if you assert that because you cannot comprehend it,
therefore He cannot have been begotten, it will be time for you
to strike out many existing things which you cannot comprehend;
and first of all God Himself. For you cannot say what He is, even
if you are very reckless, and excessively proud of your
intelligence. First, cast away your notions of flow and divisions
and sections, and your conceptions of immaterial as if it were
material birth, and then you may perhaps worthily conceive of the
Divine Generation. How was He begotten?-I repeat the question in
indignation. The Begetting of God must be honoured by silence. It
is a great thing for you to learn that He was begotten. But the
manner of His generation we will not admit that even Angels can
conceive, much less you. Shall I tell you how it was? It was in a
manner known to the Father Who begat, and to the Son Who was
begotten. Anything more than this is hidden by a cloud, and
escapes your dim sight.
IX. Well, but the Father begat a Son who
either was or was not in existence. What utter nonsense! This is
a question which applies to you or me, who on the one hand were
in existence, as for instance Levi in the loins of Abraham; and
on the other hand came into existence; and so in some sense we
are partly of what existed, and partly of what was nonexistent;
whereas the contrary is the case with the original matter, which
was certainly created out of what was non-existent,
notwithstanding that some pretend that it is unbegotten. But in
this case "to be begotten," even from the beginning, is
concurrent with "to be." On what then will you base this captious
question? For what is older than that which is from the
beginning, if we may place there the previous existence or
non-existence of the Son? In either case we destroy its claim to
be the Beginning. Or perhaps you will say, if we were to ask you
whether the Father was of existent or non-existent substance,
that he is twofold, partly pre-existing, partly existing; or that
His case is the same with that of the Son; that is, that He was
created out of non-existing matter, because of your ridiculous
questions and your houses of sand, which cannot stand against the
merest ripple.
I do not admit either solution, and I
declare that your question contains an absurdity, and not a
difficulty to answer. If however you think, in accordance with
your dialectic assumptions, that one or other of these
alternatives must necessarily be true in every case, let me ask
you one little question: Is time in time, or is it not in time?
If it is contained in time, then in what time, and what is it but
that time, and how does it contain it? But if it is not contained
in time, what is that surpassing wisdom which can conceive of a
time which is timeless? Now, in regard to this expression, "I am
now telling a lie," admit one of these alternatives, either that
it is true, or that it is a falsehood, without qualification (for
we cannot admit that it is both). But this cannot be. For
necessarily he either is lying, and so is telling the truth, or
else he is telling the truth, and so is lying. What wonder is it
then that, as in this case contraries are true, so in that case
they should both be untrue, and so your clever puzzle prove mere
foolishness? Solve me one more riddle. Were you present at your
own generation, and are you now present to yourself, or is
neither the case? If you were and are present, who were you, and
with whom are you present? And how did your single self become
thus both subject and object? But if neither of the above is the
case, how did you get separated from yourself, and what is the
cause of this disjoining? But, you will say, it is stupid to make
a fuss about the question whether or no a single individual is
present to himself; for the expression is not used of oneself but
of others. Well, you may be certain that it is even more stupid
to discuss the question whether That which was begotten from the
beginning existed before its generation or not. For such a
question arises only as to matter divisible by time.
X. But they say, The Unbegotten and the
Begotten are not the same; and if this is so, neither is the Son
the same as the Father. It is clear, without saying so, that this
line of argument manifestly excludes either the Son or the Father
from the Godhead. For if to be Unbegotten is the Essence of God,
to be begotten is not that Essence; if the opposite is the case,
the Unbegotten is excluded. What argument can contradict this?
Choose then whichever blasphemy you prefer, my good inventor of a
new theology, if indeed you are anxious at all costs to embrace a
blasphemy. In the next place, in what sense do you assert that
the Unbegotten and the Begotten are not the same? If you mean
that the Uncreated and the created are not the same, I agree with
you; for certainly the Unoriginate and the created are not of the
same nature. But if you say that He That begat and That which is
begotten are not the same, the statement is inaccurate. For it is
in fact a necessary truth that they are the same. For the nature
of the relation of Father to Child is this, that the offspring is
of the same nature with the parent. Or we may argue thus again.
What do you mean by Unbegotten and Begotten, for if you mean the
simple fact of being unbegotten or begotten, these are not the
same; but if you mean Those to Whom these terms apply, how are
They not the same? For example, Wisdom and Unwisdom are not the
same in themselves, but yet both are attributes of man, who is
the same; and they mark not a difference of essence, but one
external to the essence. Are immortality and innocence and
immutability also the essence of God? If so God has many essences
and not one; or Deity is a compound of these. For He cannot be
all these without composition, if they be essences.
XI. They do not however assert this, for
these qualities are common also to other beings. But God's
Essence is that which belongs to God alone, and is proper to Him.
But they, who consider matter and form to be unbegotten, would
not allow that to be unbegotten is the property of God alone (for
we must cast away even further the darkness of the Manichaeans).
But suppose that it is the property of God alone. What of Adam?
Was he not alone the direct creature of God? Yes, you will say.
Was he then the only human being? By no means. And why, but
because humanity does not consist in direct creation? For that
which is begotten is also human. Just so neither is He Who is
Unbegotten alone God, though He alone is Father. But grant that
He Who is Begotten is God; for He is of God, as you must allow,
even though you cling to your Unbegotten. Then how do you
describe the Essence of God? Not by declaring what it is, but by
rejecting what it is not. For your word signifies that He is not
begotten; it does not present to you what is the real nature or
condition of that which has no generation. What then is the
Essence of God? It is for your infatuation to define this, since
you are so anxious about His Generation too; but to us it will be
a very great thing, if ever, even in the future, we learn this,
when this darkness and dulness is done away for us, as He has
promised Who cannot lie. This then may be the thought and hope of
those who are purifying themselves with a view to this. Thus much
we for our part will be bold to say, that if it is a great thing
for the Father to be Unoriginate, it is no less a thing for the
Son to have been Begotten of such a Father. For not only would He
share the glory of the Unoriginate, since he is of the
Unoriginate, but he has the added glory of His Generation, a
thing so great and august in the eyes of all those who are not
altogether grovelling and material in mind.
XII. But, they say, if the Son is the Same
as the Father in respect of Essence, then if the Father is
unbegotten, the Son must be so likewise. Quite so-if the Essence
of God consists in being unbegotten; and so He would be a strange
mixture, begottenly unbegotten. If, however, the difference is
outside the Essence, how can you be so certain in speaking of
this? Are you also your father's father, so as in no respect to
fall short of your father, since you are the same with him in
essence? Is it not evident that our enquiry into the Nature of
the Essence of God, if we make it, will leave Personality
absolutely unaffected? But that Unbegotten is not a synonym of
God is proved thus. If it were so, it would be necessary that
since God is a relative term, Unbegotten should be so likewise;
or that since Unbegotten is an absolute term, so must God be. . .
. God of no one. For words which are absolutely identical are
similarly applied. But the word Unbegotten is not used
relatively. For to what is it relative? And of what things is God
the God? Why, of all things. How then can God and Unbegotten be
identical terms? And again, since Begotten and Unbegotten are
contradictories, like possession and deprivation, it would follow
that contradictory essences would co-exist, which is impossible.
Or again, since possessions are prior to deprivations, and the
latter are destructive of the former, not only must the Essence
of the Son be prior to that of the Father, but it must be
destroyed by the Father, on your hypothesis.
XIII. What now remains of their invincible
arguments? Perhaps the last they will take refuge in is this. If
God has never ceased to beget, the Generation is imperfect; and
when will He cease? But if He has ceased, then He must have
begun. Thus again these carnal minds bring forward carnal
arguments. Whether He is eternally begotten or not, I do not yet
say, until I have looked into the statement, "Before all the
hills He begetteth Me," more accurately. But I cannot see the
necessity of their conclusion. For if, as they say, everything
that is to come to an end had also a beginning, then surely that
which has no end had no beginning. What then will they decide
concerning the soul, or the Angelic nature? If it had a
beginning, it will also have an end; and if it has no end, it is
evident that according to them it had no beginning. But the truth
is that it had a beginning, and will never have an end. Their
assertion, then, that which will have an end had also a
beginning, is untrue. Our position, however, is, that as in the
case of a horse, or an ox, or a man, the same definition applies
to all the individuals of the same species, and whatever shares
the definition has also a right to the Name; so in the very same
way there is One Essence of God, and One Nature, and One Name;
although in accordance with a distinction in our thoughts we use
distinct Names and that whatever is properly called by this Name
really is God; and what He is in Nature, That He is truly
called-if at least we are to hold that Truth is a matter not of
names but of realities. But our opponents, as if they were afraid
of leaving any stone unturned to subvert the Truth, acknowledge
indeed that the Son is God when they are compelled to do so by
arguments and evidences; but they only mean that He is God in an
ambiguous sense, and that He only shares the Name.
XIV. And when we advance this objection
against them, "What do you mean to say then? That the Son is not
properly God, just as a picture of an animal is not properly an
animal? And if not properly God, in what sense is He God at all?"
They reply, Why should not these terms be ambiguous, and in both
cases be used in a proper sense? And they will give us such
instances as the land-dog and the dogfish; where the word Dog is
ambiguous, and yet in both cases is properly used, for there is
such a species among the ambiguously named, or any other case in
which the same appellative is used for two things of different
nature. But, my good friend, in this case, when you include two
natures under the same name, you do not assert that either is
better than the other, or that the one is prior and the other
posterior, or that one is in a greater degree and the other in a
lesser that which is predicated of them both, for there is no
connecting link which forces this necessity upon them. One is not
a dog more than the other, and one less so; either the dogfish
more than the land-dog, or the land-dog than the dogfish. Why
should they be, or on what principle? But the community of name
is here between things of equal value, though of different
nature. But in the case of which we are speaking, you couple the
Name of God with adorable Majesty, and make It surpass every
essence and nature (an attribute of God alone), and then you
ascribe this Name to the Father, while you deprive the Son of it,
and make Him subject to the Father, and give Him only a secondary
honour and worship; and even if in words you bestow on Him one
which is Equal, yet in practice you cut off His Deity, and pass
malignantly from a use of the same Name implying an exact
equality, to one which connects things which are not equal. And
so the pictured and the living man are in your mouth an apter
illustration of the relations of Deity than the dogs which I
instanced. Or else you must concede to both an equal dignity of
nature as well as a common name-even though you introduced these
natures into your argument as different; and thus you destroy the
analogy of your dogs, which you invented as an instance of
inequality. For what is the force of your instance of ambiguity,
if those whom you distinguish are not equal in honour? For it was
not to prove an equality but an inequality that you took refuge
in your dogs. How could anybody be more clearly convicted of
fighting both against his own arguments, and against the
Deity?
XV. And if, when we admit that in respect
of being the Cause the Father is greater than the Son, they
should assume the premiss that He is the Cause by Nature, and
then deduce the conclusion that He is greater by Nature also, it
is difficult to say whether they mislead most themselves or those
with whom they are arguing. For it does not absolutely follow
that all that is predicated of a class can also be predicated of
all the individuals composing it; for the different particulars
may belong to different individuals. For what hinders me, if I
assume the same premiss, namely, that the Father is greater by
Nature, and then add this other, Yet not by nature in every
respect greater nor yet Father-from concluding, Therefore the
Greater is not in every respect greater, nor the Father in every
respect Father? Or, if you prefer it, let us put it in this way:
God is an Essence: But an Essence is not in every case God; and
draw the conclusion for yourself-Therefore God is not in every
case God. I think the fallacy here is the arguing from a
conditioned to an unconditioned use of a term, to use the
technical expression of the logicians. For while we assign this
word Greater to His Nature viewed as a Cause, they infer it of
His Nature viewed in itself. It is just as if when we said that
such a one was a dead man they were to infer simply that he was a
Man.
XVI. How shall we pass over the following
point, which is no less amazing than the rest? Father, they say,
is a name either of an essence or of an Action, thinking to bind
us down on both sides. If we say that it is a name of an essence,
they will say that we agree with them that the Son is of another
Essence, since there is but one Essence of God, and this,
according to them, is preoccupied by the Father. On the other
hand, if we say that it is the name of an Action, we shall be
supposed to acknowledge plainly that the Son is created and not
begotten. For where there is an Agent there must also be an
Effect. And they will say they wonder how that which is made can
be identical with That which made it. I should myself have been
frightened with your distinction, if it had been necessary to
accept one or other of the alternatives, and not rather put both
aside, and state a third and truer one, namely, that Father is
not a name either of an essence or of an action, most clever
sirs. But it is the name of the Relation in which the Father
stands to the Son, and the Son to the Father. For as with us
these names make known a genuine and intimate relation, so, in
the case before us too, they denote an identity of nature between
Him That is begotten and Him That begets. But let us concede to
you that Father is a name of essence, it will still bring in the
idea of Son, and will not make it of a different nature,
according to common ideas and the force of these names. Let it
be, if it so please you, the name of an action; you will not
defeat us in this way either. The Homoousion would be indeed the
result of this action, or otherwise the conception of an action
in this matter would be absurd. You see then how, even though you
try to fight unfairly, we avoid your sophistries. But now, since
we have ascertained how invincible you are in your arguments and
sophistries, let us look at your strength in the Oracles of God,
if perchance you may choose to persuade us out of
them.
XVII. For we have learnt to believe in and
to teach the Deity of the Son from their great and lofty
utterances. And what utterances are these? These: God-The Word-He
That Was In The Beginning and With The Beginning, and The
Beginning. "In the Beginning was The Word, and the Word was with
God, and the Word was God," and "With Thee is the Beginning," and
"He who calleth her The Beginning from generations." Then the Son
is Only-begotten: The only "begotten Son which is in the bosom of
the Father, it says, He hath declared Him." The Way, the Truth,
the Life, the Light. "I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life;" and
"I am the Light of the World." Wisdom and Power, "Christ, the
Wisdom of God, and the Power of God." The Effulgence, the
Impress, the Image, the Seal; "Who being the Effulgence of His
glory and the Impress of His Essence," and "the Image of His
Goodness," and "Him hath God the Father sealed." Lord, King, He
That Is, The Almighty. "The Lord rained down fire from the Lord;"
and "A sceptre of righteousness is the sceptre of Thy Kingdom;"
and "Which is and was and is to come, the Almighty"-all which are
clearly spoken of the Son, with all the other passages of the
same force, none of which is an afterthought, or added later to
the Son or the Spirit, any more than to the Father Himself. For
Their Perfection is not affected by additions. There never was a
time when He was without the Word, or when He was not the Father,
or when He was not true, or not wise, or not powerful, or devoid
of life, or of splendour, or of goodness.
But in opposition to all these, do you
reckon up for me the expressions which make for your ignorant
arrogance, such as "My God and your God," or greater, or created,
or made, or sanctified; Add, if you like, Servant and Obedient
and Gave and Learnt, and was commanded, was sent, can do nothing
of Himself, either say, or judge, or give, or will. And further
these,-His ignorance, subjection, prayer, asking, increase, being
made perfect. And if you like even more humble than these; such
as speak of His sleeping, hungering, being in an agony, and
fearing; or perhaps you would make even His Cross and Death a
matter of reproach to Him. His Resurrection and Ascension I fancy
you will leave to me, for in these is found something to support
our position. A good many other things too you might pick up, if
you desire to put together that equivocal and intruded god of
yours, Who to us is True God, and equal to the Father. For every
one of these points, taken separately, may very easily, if we go
through them one by one, be explained to you in the most reverent
sense, and the stumbling-block of the letter be cleaned away-that
is, if your stumbling at it be honest, and not wilfully
malicious. To give you the explanation in one sentence. What is
lofty you are to apply to the Godhead, and to that Nature in Him
which is superior to sufferings and incorporeal; but all that is
lowly to the composite condition of Him who for your sakes made
Himself of no reputation and was Incarnate-yes, for it is no
worse thing to say, was made Man, and afterwards was also
exalted. The result will be that you will abandon these carnal
and grovelling doctrines, and learn to be more sublime, and to
ascend with His Godhead, and you will not remain permanently
among the things of sight, but will rise up with Him into the
world of thought, and come to know which passages refer to His
Nature, and which to His assumption of Human Nature.
XIX. For He Whom you now treat with
contempt was once above you. He Who is now Man was once the
Uncompounded. What He was He continued to be; what He was not He
took to Himself. In the beginning He was, uncaused; for what is
the Cause of God? But afterwards for a cause He was born. And
that cause was that you might be saved, who insult Him and
despise His Godhead, because of this, that He took upon Him your
denser nature, having converse with Flesh by means of Mind. While
His inferior Nature, the Humanity, became God, because it was
united to God, and became One Person because the Higher Nature
prevailed in order that I too might be made God so far as He is
made Man. He was born-but He had been begotten: He was born of a
woman-but she was a Virgin. The first is human, the second
Divine. In His Human nature He had no Father, but also in His
Divine Nature no Mother. Both these belong to Godhead. He dwelt
in the womb-but He was recognized by the Prophet, himself still
in the womb, leaping before the Word, for Whose sake He came into
being. He was wrapped in swaddling clothes-but He took off the
swathing bands of the grave by His rising again. He was laid in a
manger-but He was glorified by Angels, and proclaimed by a star,
and worshipped by the Magi. Why are you offended by that which is
presented to your sight, because you will not look at that which
is presented to your mind? He was driven into exile into
Egypt-but He drove away the Egyptian idols. He had no form nor
comeliness in the eyes of the Jews-but to David He is fairer than
the children of men. And on the Mountain He was bright as the
lightning, and became more luminous than the sun, initiating us
into the mystery of the future.
XX. He was baptized as Man-but He remitted
sins as God-not because He needed purificatory rites Himself, but
that He might sanctify the element of water. He was tempted as
Man, but He conquered as God; yea, He bids us be of good cheer,
for He has overcome the world. He hungered-but He fed thousands;
yea, He is the Bread that giveth life, and That is of heaven. He
thirsted-but He cried, If any man thirst, let him come unto Me
and drink. Yea, He promised that fountains should flow from them
that believe. He was wearied, but He is the Rest of them that are
weary and heavy laden. He was heavy with sleep, but He walked
lightly over the sea. He rebuked the winds, He made Peter light
as he began to sink. He pays tribute, but it is out of a fish;
yea, He is the King of those who demanded it. He is called a
Samaritan and a demoniac;-but He saves him that came down from
Jerusalem and fell among thieves; the demons acknowledge Him, and
He drives out demons and sinks in the sea legions of foul
spirits, and sees the Prince of the demons falling like
lightning. He is stoned, but is not taken. He prays, but He hears
prayer. He weeps, but He causes tears to cease. He asks where
Lazarus was laid, for He was Man; but He raises Lazarus, for He
was God. He is sold, and very cheap, for it is only for thirty
pieces of silver; but He redeems the world, and that at a great
price, for the Price was His own blood. As a sheep He is led to
the slaughter, but He is the Shepherd of Israel, and now of the
whole world also. As a Lamb He is silent, yet He is the Word, and
is proclaimed by the Voice of one crying in the wilderness. He is
bruised and wounded, but He healeth every disease and every
infirmity. He is lifted up and nailed to the Tree, but by the
Tree of Life He restoreth us; yea, He saveth even the Robber
crucified with Him; yea, He wrapped the visible world in
darkness. He is given vinegar to drink mingled with gall. Who? He
who turned the water into wine , who is the destroyer of the
bitter taste, who is Sweetness and altogether desire. He lays
down His life, but He has power to take it again; and the veil is
rent, for the mysterious doors of Heaven are opened; the rocks
are cleft, the dead arise. He dies, but He gives life, and by His
death destroys death. He is buried, but He rises again; He goes
down into Hell, but He brings up the souls; He ascends to Heaven,
and shall come again to judge the quick and the dead, and to put
to the test such words as yours. If the one give you a starting
point for your error, let the others put an end to it.
XXI. This, then, is our reply to those who
would puzzle us; not given willingly indeed (for light talk and
contradictions of words are not agreeable to the faithful, and
one Adversary is enough for us), but of necessity, for the sake
of our assailants (for medicines exist because of diseases), that
they may be led to see that they are not all-wise nor invincible
in those superfluous arguments which make void the Gospel. For
when we leave off believing, and protect ourselves by mere
strength of argument, and destroy the claim which the Spirit has
upon our faith by questionings, and then our argument is not
strong enough for the importance of the subject (and this must
necessarily be the case, since it is put in motion by an organ of
so little power as is our mind), what is the result? The weakness
of the argument appears to belong to the mystery, and thus
elegance of language makes void the Cross, as Paul also thought.
For faith is that which completes our argument. But may He who
proclaimeth unions and looseth those that are bound, and who
putteth into our minds to solve the knots of their unnatural
dogmas, if it may be, change these men and make them faithful
instead of rhetoricians, Christians instead of that which they
now are called. This indeed we entreat and beg for Christ's sake.
Be ye reconciled to God, and quench not the Spirit; or rather,
may Christ be reconciled to you, and may the Spirit enlighten
you, though so late. But if you are too fond of your quarrel, we
at any rate will hold fast to the Trinity, and by the Trinity may
we be saved, remaining pure and without offence, until the more
perfect shewing forth of that which we desire, in Him, Christ our
Lord, to Whom be the glory for ever. Amen.
Oration XXX
The Fourth Theological Oration, Which is the Second
Concerning the Son
I. Since I have by the power of the Spirit
sufficiently overthrown the subtleties and intricacies of the
arguments, and already solved in the mass the objections and
oppositions drawn from Holy Scripture, with which these
sacrilegious robbers of the Bible and thieves of the sense of its
contents draw over the multitude to their side, and confuse the
way of truth; and that not without clearness, as I believe all
candid persons will say; attributing to the Deity the higher and
diviner expressions, and the lower and more human to Him Who for
us men was the Second Adam, and was God made capable of suffering
to strive against sin; yet we have not yet gone through the
passages in detail, because of the haste of our argument. But
since you demand of us a brief explanation of each of them, that
you may not be carried away by the plausibilities of their
arguments, we will therefore state the explanations summarily,
dividing them into numbers for the sake of carrying them more
easily in mind.
II. In their eyes the following is only too
ready to hand "The Lord created me at the beginning of His ways
with a view to His works." How shall we meet this? Shall we bring
an accusation against Solomon, or reject his former words because
of his fall in after-life? Shall we say that the words are those
of Wisdom herself, as it were of Knowledge and the Creator-word,
in accordance with which all things were made? For Scripture
often personifies many even lifeless objects; as for instance,
"The Sea said" so and so; and, "The Depth saith, It is not in
me;" and "The Heavens declare the glory of God;" and again a
command is given to the Sword; and the Mountains and Hills are
asked the reason of their skipping. We do not allege any of
these, though some of our predecessors used them as powerful
arguments. But let us grant that the expression is used of our
Saviour Himself, the true Wisdom. Let us consider one small point
together. What among all things that exist is unoriginate? The
Godhead. For no one can tell the origin of God, that otherwise
would be older than God. But what is the cause of the Manhood,
which for our sake God assumed? It was surely our Salvation. What
else could it be? Since then we find here clearly both the
Created and the Begetteth Me, the argument is simple. Whatever we
find joined with a cause we are to refer to the Manhood, but all
that is absolute and unoriginate we are to reckon to the account
of His Godhead. Well, then, is not this "Created" said in
connection with a cause? He created Me, it so says, as the
beginning of His ways, with a view to his works. Now, the Works
of His Hands are verity and judgment; for whose sake He was
anointed with Godhead; for this anointing is of the Manhood; but
the "He begetteth Me" is not connected with a cause; or it is for
you to shew the adjunct. What argument then will disprove that
Wisdom is called a creature, in connection with the lower
generation, but Begotten in respect of the first and more
incomprehensible?
III. Next is the fact of His being called
Servant and serving many well, and that it is a great thing for
Him to be called the Child of God. For in truth He was in
servitude to flesh and to birth and to the conditions of our life
with a view to our liberation, and to that of all those whom He
has saved, who were in bondage under sin. What greater destiny
can befall man's humility than that he should be intermingled
with God, and by this intermingling should be deified, and that
we should be so visited by the Dayspring from on high, that even
that Holy Thing that should be born should be called the Son of
the Highest, and that there should be bestowed upon Him a Name
which is above every name? And what else can this be than
God?-and that every knee should bow to Him That was made of no
reputation for us, and That mingled the Form of God with the form
of a servant, and that all the House of Israel should know that
God hath made Him both Lord and Christ? For all this was done by
the action of the Begotten, and by the good pleasure of Him That
begat Him.
IV. Well, what is the second of their great
irresistible passages? "He must reign," till such and such a time
. . . and "be received by heaven until the time of restitution,"
and "have the seat at the Right Hand until the overthrow of His
enemies." But after this? Must He cease to be King, or be removed
from Heaven? Why, who shall make Him cease, or for what cause?
What a bold and very anarchical interpreter you are; and yet you
have heard that Of His Kingdom there shall be no end. Your
mistake arises from not understanding that Until is not always
exclusive of that which comes after, but asserts up to that time,
without denying what comes after it. To take a single
instance-how else would you understand, "Lo, I am with you
always, even unto the end of the world?" Does it mean that He
will no longer be so afterwards. And for what reason? But this is
not the only cause of your error; you also fail to distinguish
between the things that are signified. He is said to reign in one
sense as the Almighty King, both of the willing and the
unwilling; but in another as producing in us submission, and
placing us under His Kingship as willingly acknowledging His
Sovereignty. Of His Kingdom, considered in the former sense,
there shall be no end. But in the second sense, what end will
there be? His taking us as His servants, on our entrance into a
state of salvation. For what need is there to Work Submission in
us when we have already submitted? After which He arises to judge
the earth, and to separate the saved from the lost. After that He
is to stand as God in the midst of gods, that is, of the saved,
distinguishing and deciding of what honour and of what mansion
each is worthy.
V. Take, in the next place, the subjection
by which you subject the Son to the Father. What, you say, is He
not now subject, or must He, if He is God, be subject to God? You
are fashioning your argument as if it concerned some robber, or
some hostile deity. But look at it in this manner: that as for my
sake He was called a curse, Who destroyed my curse; and sin, who
taketh away the sin of the world; and became a new Adam to take
the place of the old, just so He makes my disobedience His own as
Head of the whole body. As long then as I am disobedient and
rebellious, both by denial of God and by my passions, so long
Christ also is called disobedient on my account. But when all
things shall be subdued unto Him on the one hand by
acknowledgment of Him, and on the other by a reformation, then He
Himself also will have fulfilled His submission, bringing me whom
He has saved to God. For this, according to my view, is the
subjection of Christ; namely, the fulfilling of the Father's
Will. But as the Son subjects all to the Father, so does the
Father to the Son; the One by His Work, the Other by His good
pleasure, as we have already said. And thus He Who subjects
presents to God that which he has subjected, making our condition
His own. Of the same kind, it appears to me, is the expression,
"My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" It was not He who
was forsaken either by the Father, or by His own Godhead, as some
have thought, as if It were afraid of the Passion, and therefore
withdrew Itself from Him in His Sufferings (for who compelled Him
either to be born on earth at all, or to be lifted up on the
Cross?) But as I said, He was in His own Person representing us.
For we were the forsaken and despised before, but now by the
Sufferings of Him Who could not suffer, we were taken up and
saved. Similarly, He makes His own our folly and our
transgressions; and says what follows in the Psalm, for it is
very evident that the Twenty-first Psalm refers to
Christ.
VI. The same consideration applies to
another passage, "He learnt obedience by the things which He
suffered," and to His "strong crying and tears," and His
"Entreaties," and His "being heard," and His" Reverence," all of
which He wonderfully wrought out, like a drama whose plot was
devised on our behalf. For in His character of the Word He was
neither obedient nor disobedient. For such expressions belong to
servants, and inferiors, and the one applies to the better sort
of them, while the other belongs to those who deserve punishment.
But, in the character of the Form of a Servant, He condescends to
His fellow servants, nay, to His servants, and takes upon Him a
strange form, bearing all me and mine in Himself, that in Himself
He may exhaust the bad, as fire does wax, or as the sun does the
mists of earth; and that I may partake of His nature by the
blending. Thus He honours obedience by His action, and proves it
experimentally by His Passion. For to possess the disposition is
not enough, just as it would not be enough for us, unless we also
proved it by our acts; for action is the proof of
disposition.
And perhaps it would not be wrong to assume
this also, that by the art of His love for man He gauges our
obedience, and measures all by comparison with His own
Sufferings, so that He may know our condition by His own, and how
much is demanded of us, and how much we yield, taking into the
account, along with our environment, our weakness also. For if
the Light shining through the veil upon the darkness, that is
upon this life, was persecuted by the other darkness (I mean, the
Evil One and the Tempter), how much more will the darkness be
persecuted, as being weaker than it? And what marvel is it, that
though He entirely escaped, we have been, at any rate in part,
overtaken? For it is a more wonderful thing that He should have
been chased than that we should have been captured;-at least to
the minds of all who reason aright on the subject. I will add yet
another passage to those I have mentioned, because I think that
it clearly tends to the same sense. I mean "In that He hath
suffered being tempted, He is able to succour them that are
tempted." But God will be all in all in the time of restitution;
not in the sense that the Father alone will Be; and the Son be
wholly resolved into Him, like a torch into a great pyre, from
which it was reft away for a little space, and then put back (for
I would not have even the Sabellians injured by such an
expression); but the entire Godhead . . . when we shall be no
longer divided (as we now are by movements and passions), and
containing nothing at all of God, or very little, but shall be
entirely like.
VII. As your third point you count the Word
Greater; and as your fourth, To My God and your God. And indeed,
if He had been called greater, and the word equal had not
occurred, this might perhaps have been a point in their favour.
But if we find both words clearly used what will these gentlemen
have to say? How will it strengthen their argument? How will they
reconcile the irreconcilable? For that the same thing should be
at once greater than and equal to the same thing is an
impossibility; and the evident solution is that the Greater
refers to origination, while the Equal belongs to the Nature; and
this we acknowledge with much good will. But perhaps some one
else will back up our attack on your argument, and assert, that
That which is from such a Cause is not inferior to that which has
no Cause; for it would share the glory of the Unoriginate,
because it is from the Unoriginate. And there is, besides, the
Generation, which is to all men a matter so marvellous and of
such Majesty. For to say that he is greater than the Son
considered as man, is true indeed, but is no great thing. For
what marvel is it if God is greater than man? Surely that is
enough to say in answer to their talk about Greater.
VIII. As to the other passages, My God
would be used in respect, not of the Word, but of the Visible
Word. For how could there be a God of Him Who is properly God? In
the same way He is Father, not of the Visible, but of the Word;
for our Lord was of two Natures; so that one expression is used
properly, the other improperly in each of the two cases; but
exactly the opposite way to their use in respect of us. For with
respect to us God is properly our God, but not properly our
Father. And this is the cause of the error of the Heretics,
namely the joining of these two Names, which are interchanged
because of the Union of the Natures. And an indication of this is
found in the fact that wherever the Natures are distinguished in
our thoughts from one another, the Names are also distinguished;
as you hear in Paul's words, "The God of our Lord Jesus Christ,
the Father of Glory." The God of Christ, but the Father of glory.
For although these two terms express but one Person, yet this is
not by a Unity of Nature, but by a Union of the two. What could
be clearer?
IX. Fifthly, let it be alleged that it is
said of Him that He receives life, judgment, inheritance of the
Gentiles, or power over all flesh, or glory, or disciples, or
whatever else is mentioned. This also belongs to the Manhood; and
yet if you were to ascribe it to the Godhead, it would be no
absurdity. For you would not so ascribe it as if it were newly
acquired, but as belonging to Him from the beginning by reason of
nature, and not as an act of favour.
X. Sixthly, let it be asserted that it is
written, The Son can do nothing of Himself, but what He seeth the
Father do. The solution of this is as follows:-Can and Cannot are
not words with only one meaning, but have many meanings. On the
one hand they are used sometimes in respect of deficiency of
strength, sometimes in respect of time, and sometimes relatively
to a certain object; as for instance, A Child cannot be an
Athlete, or, A Puppy cannot see, or fight with so and so. Perhaps
some day the child will be an athlete, the puppy will see, will
fight with that other, though it may still be unable to fight
with Any other. Or again, they may be used of that which is
Generally true. For instance,-A city that is set on a hill cannot
be hid; while yet it might possibly be hidden by another higher
hill being in a line with it. Or in another sense they are used
of a thing which is not reasonable; as, Can the Children of the
Bridechamber fast while the Bridegroom is with them; whether He
be considered as visible in bodily form (for the time of His
sojourning among us was not one of mourning, but of gladness),
or, as the Word. For why should they keep a bodily fast who are
cleansed by the Word? Or, again, they are used of that which is
contrary to the will; as in, He could do no mighty works there
because of their unbelief,-i.e. of those who should receive them.
For since in order to healing there is need of both faith in the
patient and power in the Healer, when one of the two failed the
other was impossible. But probably this sense also is to be
referred to the head of the unreasonable. For healing is not
reasonable in the case of those who would afterwards be injured
by unbelief. The sentence The world cannot hate you, comes under
the same head, as does also How can ye, being evil, speak good
things? For in what sense is either impossible, except that it is
contrary to the will? There is a somewhat similar meaning in the
expressions which imply that a thing impossible by nature is
possible to God if He so wills; as that a man cannot be born a
second time, or that a needle will not let a camel through it.
For what could prevent either of these things happening, if God
so willed?
XI. And besides all this, there is the
absolutely impossible and inadmissible, as that which we are now
examining. For as we assert that it is impossible for God to be
evil, or not to exist-for this would be indicative of weakness in
God rather than of strength-or for the non-existent to exist, or
for two and two to make both four and ten, so it is impossible
and inconceivable that the Son should do anything that the Father
doeth not. For all things that the Father hath are the Son's; and
on the other hand, all that belongs to the Son is the Father's.
Nothing then is peculiar, because all things are in common. For
Their Being itself is common and equal, even though the Son
receive it from the Father. It is in respect of this that it is
said I live by the Father; not as though His Life and Being were
kept together by the Father, but because He has His Being from
Him beyond all time, and beyond all cause. But how does He see
the Father doing, and do likewise? Is it like those who copy
pictures and letters, because they cannot attain the truth unless
by looking at the original, and being led by the hand by it? But
how shall Wisdom stand in need of a teacher, or be incapable of
acting unless taught? And in what sense does the Father "Do" in
the present or in the past? Did He make another world before this
one, or is He going to make a world to come? And did the Son look
at that and make this? Or will He look at the other, and make one
like it? According to this argument there must be Four worlds,
two made by the Father, and two by the Son. What an absurdity! He
cleanses lepers, and delivers men from evil spirits, and
diseases, and quickens the dead, and walks upon the sea, and does
all His other works; but in what case, or when did the Father do
these acts before Him? Is it not clear that the Father impressed
the ideas of these same actions, and the Word brings them to
pass, yet not in slavish or unskilful fashion, but with full
knowledge and in a masterly way, or, to speak more properly, like
the Father? For in this sense I understand the words that
whatsoever is done by the Father, these things doeth the Son
likewise; not, that is, because of the likeness of the things
done, but in respect of the Authority. This might well also be
the meaning of the passage which says that the Father worketh
hitherto and the Son also; and not only so but it refers also to
the government and preservation of the things which He has made;
as is shewn by the passage which says that He maketh His Angels
Spirits, and that the earth is founded upon its steadfastness
(though once for all these things were fixed and made) and that
the thunder is made firm and the wind created. Of all these
things the Word was given once, but the Action is continuous even
now.
XII. Let them quote in the seventh place
that The Son came down from Heaven, not to do His own Will, but
the Will of Him That sent Him. Well, if this had not been said by
Himself Who came down, we should say that the phrase was modelled
as issuing from the Human Nature, not from Him who is conceived
of in His character as the Saviour, for His Human Will cannot be
opposed to God, seeing it is altogether taken into God; but
conceived of simply as in our nature, inasmuch as the human will
does not completely follow the Divine, but for the most part
struggles against and resists it. For we understand in the same
way the words, Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from
Me; Nevertheless let not what I will but Thy Will prevail. For it
is not likely that He did not know whether it was possible or
not, or that He would oppose will to will. But since, as this is
the language of Him Who assumed our Nature (for He it was Who
came down), and not of the Nature which He assumed, we must meet
the objection in this way, that the passage does not mean that
the Son has a special will of His own, besides that of the
Father, but that He has not; so that the meaning would be, "not
to do Mine own Will, for there is none of Mine apart from, but
that which is common to, Me and Thee; for as We have one Godhead,
so We have one Will." For many such expressions are used in
relation to this Community, and are expressed not positively but
negatively; as, e.g., God giveth not the Spirit by measure, for
as a matter of fact He does not give the Spirit to the Son, nor
does He measure It, for God is not measured by God; or again, Not
my transgression nor my sin. The words are not used because He
has these things, but because He has them not. And again, Not for
our righteousness which we have done, for we have not done any.
And this meaning is evident also in the clauses which follow. For
what, says He, is the Will of My Father? That everyone that
believeth on the Son should be saved, and obtain the final
Resurrection. Now is this the Will of the Father, but not of the
Son? Or does He preach the Gospel, and receive men's faith
against His will? Who could believe that? Moreover, that passage,
too, which says that the Word which is heard is not the Son's but
the Father's has the same force. For I cannot see how that which
is common to two can be said to belong to one alone, however much
I consider it, and I do not think any one else can. If then you
hold this opinion concerning the Will, you will be right and
reverent in your opinion, as I think, and as every right-minded
person thinks.
XIII. The eighth passage is, That they may
know Thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ Whom Thou hast
sent; and There is none good save one, that is, God. The solution
of this appears to me very easy. For if you attribute this only
to the Father, where will you place the Very Truth? For if you
conceive in this manner of the meaning of To the only wise God,
or Who only hath Immortality, Dwelling in the light which no man
can approach unto, or of to the king of the Ages, immortal,
invisible, and only wise God, then the Son has vanished under
sentence of death, or of darkness, or at any rate condemned to be
neither wise nor king, nor invisible, nor God at all, which sums
up all these points. And how will you prevent His Goodness, which
especially belongs to God alone, from perishing with the rest? I,
however, think that the passage That they may know Thee the only
true God, was said to overthrow those gods which are falsely so
called, for He would not have added and Jesus Christ Whom Thou
hast sent, if The Only True God were contrasted with Him, and the
sentence did not proceed upon the basis of a common Godhead. The
"None is Good" meets the tempting Lawyer, who was testifying to
His Goodness viewed as Man. For perfect goodness, He says, is
God's alone, even if a man is called perfectly good. As for
instance, A good man out of the good treasure of his heart
bringeth forth good things. And, I will give the kingdom to one
who is good above Thee. . . . Words of God, speaking to Saul
about David. Or again, Do good, O Lord, unto the good . . . and
all other like expressions concerning those of us who are
praised, upon whom it is a kind of effluence from the Supreme
Good, and has come to them in a secondary degree. It will be best
of all if we can persuade you of this. But if not, what will you
say to the suggestion on the other side, that on your hypothesis
the Son has been called the only God. In what passage? Why, in
this:-This is your God; no other shall be accounted of in
comparison with Him, and a little further on, after this did He
shew Himself upon earth, and conversed with men. This addition
proves clearly that the words are not used of the Father, but of
the Son; for it was He Who in bodily form companied with us, and
was in this lower world. Now, if we should determine to take
these words as said in contrast with the Father, and not with the
imaginary gods, we lose the Father by the very terms which we
were pressing against the Son. And what could be more disastrous
than such a victory?
XIV. Ninthly, they allege, seeing He ever
liveth to make intercession for us. O, how beautiful and mystical
and kind. For to intercede does not imply to seek for vengeance,
as is most men's way (for in that there would be something of
humiliation), but it is to plead for us by reason of His
Mediatorship, just as the Spirit also is said to make
intercession for us. For there is One God, and One Mediator
between God and Man, the Man Christ Jesus. For He still pleads
even now as Man for my salvation; for He continues to wear the
Body which He assumed, until He make me God by the power of His
Incarnation; although He is no longer known after the flesh-I
mean, the passions of the flesh, the same, except sin, as ours.
Thus too, we have an Advocate, Jesus Christ, not indeed
prostrating Himself for us before the Father, and falling down
before Him in slavish fashion . . . Away with a suspicion so
truly slavish and unworthy of the Spirit! For neither is it
seemly for the Father to require this, nor for the Son to submit
to it; nor is it just to think it of God. But by what He suffered
as Man, He as the Word and the Counsellor persuades Him to be
patient. I think this is the meaning of His Advocacy.
XV. Their tenth objection is the ignorance,
and the statement that Of the last day and hour knoweth no man,
not even the Son Himself, but the Father. And yet how can Wisdom
be ignorant of anything-that is, Wisdom Who made the worlds, Who
perfects them, Who remodels them, Who is the Limit of all things
that were made, Who knoweth the things of God as the spirit of a
man knows the things that are in him? For what can be more
perfect than this knowledge? How then can you say that all things
before that hour He knows accurately, and all things that are to
happen about the time of the end, but of the hour itself He is
ignorant? For such a thing would be like a riddle; as if one were
to say that he knew accurately all that was in front of the wall,
but did not know the wall itself; or that, knowing the end of the
day, he did not know the beginning of the night-where knowledge
of the one necessarily brings in the other. Thus everyone must
see that He knows as God, and knows not as Man;-if one may
separate the visible from that which is discerned by thought
alone. For the absolute and unconditioned use of the Name "The
Son" in this passage, without the addition of whose Son, gives us
this thought, that we are to understand the ignorance in the most
reverent sense, by attributing it to the Manhood, and not to the
Godhead.
XVI. If then this argument is sufficient,
let us stop here, and not enquire further. But if not, our second
argument is as follows:-Just as we do in all other instances, so
let us refer His knowledge of the greatest events, in honour of
the Father, to The Cause. And I think that anyone, even if he did
not read it in the way that one of our own Students did, would
soon perceive that not even the Son knows the day or hour
otherwise than as the Father does. For what do we conclude from
this? That since the Father knows, therefore also does the Son,
as it is evident that this cannot be known or comprehended by any
but the First Nature. There remains for us to interpret the
passage about His receiving commandment, and having kept His
Commandments, and done always those things that please Him; and
further concerning His being made perfect, and His exaltation,
and His learning obedience by the things which He suffered; and
also His High Priesthood, and His Oblation, and His Betrayal, and
His prayer to Him That was able to save Him from death, and His
Agony and Bloody Sweat and Prayer, and such like things; if it
were not evident to every one that such words are concerned, not
with That Nature Which is unchangeable and above all capacity of
suffering, but with the passible Humanity. This, then, is the
argument concerning these objections, so far as to be a sort of
foundation and memorandum for the use of those who are better
able to conduct the enquiry to a more complete working out. It
may, however, be worth while, and will be consistent with what
has been already said, instead of passing over without remark the
actual Titles of the Son (there are many of them, and they are
concerned with many of His Attributes), to set before you the
meaning of each of them, and to point out the mystical meaning of
the names.
XVII. We will begin thus. The Deity cannot
be expressed in words. And this is proved to us, not only by
argument, but by the wisest and most ancient of the Hebrews, so
far as they have given us reason for conjecture. For they
appropriated certain characters to the honour of the Deity, and
would not even allow the name of anything inferior to God to be
written with the same letters as that of God, because to their
minds it was improper that the Deity should even to that extent
admit any of His creatures to a share with Himself. How then
could they have admitted that the invisible and separate Nature
can be explained by divisible words? For neither has any one yet
breathed the whole air, nor has any mind entirely comprehended,
or speech exhaustively contained the Being of God. But we sketch
Him by His Attributes, and so obtain a certain faint and feeble
and partial idea concerning Him, and our best Theologian is he
who has, not indeed discovered the whole, for our present chain
does not allow of our seeing the whole, but conceived of Him to a
greater extent than another, and gathered in himself more of the
Likeness or adumbration of the Truth, or whatever we may call
it.
XVIII. As far then as we can reach, He Who
Is, and God, are the special names of His Essence; and of these
especially He Who Is, not only because when He spake to Moses in
the mount, and Moses asked what His Name was, this was what He
called Himself, bidding him say to the people "I Am hath sent
me," but also because we find that this Name is the more strictly
appropriate. For the Name Theos (God), even if, as those who are
skilful in these matters say, it were derived from Theein (to
run) or from Aithein (to blaze), from continual motion, and
because He consumes evil conditions of things (from which fact He
is also called A Consuming Fire), would still be one of the
Relative Names, and not an Absolute one; as again is the case
with Lord, which also is called a name of God. I am the Lord Thy
God, He says, that is My name; and, The Lord is His name. But we
are enquiring into a Nature Whose Being is absolute and not into
Being bound up with something else. But Being is in its proper
sense peculiar to God, and belongs to Him entirely, and is not
limited or cut short by any Before or After, for indeed in him
there is no past or future.
XIX. Of the other titles, some are
evidently names of His Authority, others of His Government of the
world, and of this viewed under a twofold aspect, the one before
the other in the Incarnation. For instance the Almighty, the King
of Glory, or of The Ages, or of The Powers, or of The Beloved, or
of Kings. Or again the Lord of Sabaoth, that is of Hosts, or of
Powers, or of Lords; these are clearly titles belonging to His
Authority. But the God either of Salvation or of Vengeance, or of
Peace, or of Righteousness; or of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and
of all the spiritual Israel that seeth God,-these belong to His
Government. For since we are governed by these three things, the
fear of punishment, the hope of salvation and of glory besides,
and the practice of the virtues by which these are attained, the
Name of the God of Vengeance governs fear, and that of the God of
Salvation our hope, and that of the God of Virtues our practice;
that whoever attains to any of these may, as carrying God in
himself, press on yet more unto perfection, and to that affinity
which arises out of virtues. Now these are Names common to the
Godhead, but the Proper Name of the Unoriginate is Father, and
that of the unoriginately Begotten is Son, and that of the
unbegottenly Proceeding or going forth is The Holy Ghost. Let us
proceed then to the Names of the Son, which were our starting
point in this part of our argument.
XX. In my opinion He is called Son because
He is identical with the Father in Essence; and not only for this
reason, but also because He is Of Him. And He is called
Only-Begotten, not because He is the only Son and of the Father
alone, and only a Son; but also because the manner of His Sonship
is peculiar to Himself and not shared by bodies. And He is called
the Word, because He is related to the Father as Word to Mind;
not only on account of His passionless Generation, but also
because of the Union, and of His declaratory function. Perhaps
too this relation might be compared to that between the
Definition and the Thing defined since this also is called Logos.
For, it says, he that hath mental perception of the Son (for this
is the meaning of Hath Seen) hath also perceived the Father; and
the Son is a concise demonstration and easy setting forth of the
Father's Nature. For every thing that is begotten is a silent
word of him that begat it. And if any one should say that this
Name was given Him because He exists in all things that are, he
would not be wrong. For what is there that consists but by the
word? He is also called Wisdom, as the Knowledge of things divine
and human. For how is it possible that He Who made all things
should be ignorant of the reasons of what He has made? And Power,
as the Sustainer of all created things, and the Furnisher to them
of power to keep themselves together. And Truth, as being in
nature One and not many (for truth is one and falsehood is
manifold), and as the pure Seal of the Father and His most
unerring Impress. And the Image as of one substance with Him, and
because He is of the Father, and not the Father of Him. For this
is of the Nature of an Image, to be the reproduction of its
Archetype, and of that whose name it bears; only that there is
more here. For in ordinary language an image is a motionless
representation of that which has motion; but in this case it is
the living reproduction of the Living One, and is more exactly
like than was Seth to Adam, or any son to his father. For such is
the nature of simple Existences, that it is not correct to say of
them that they are Like in one particular and Unlike in another;
but they are a complete resemblance, and should rather be called
Identical than Like. Moreover he is called Light as being the
Brightness of souls cleansed by word and life. For if ignorance
and sin be darkness, knowledge and a godly life will be Light. .
. . And He is called Life, because He is Light, and is the
constituting and creating Power of every reasonable soul. For in
Him we live and move and have our being, according to the double
power of that Breathing into us; for we were all inspired by Him
with breath, and as many of us as were capable of it, and in so
far as we open the mouth of our mind, with God the Holy Ghost. He
is Righteousness, because He distributes according to that which
we deserve, and is a righteous Arbiter both for those who are
under the Law and for those who are under Grace, for soul and
body, so that the former should rule, and the latter obey, and
the higher have supremacy over the lower; that the worse may not
rise in rebellion against the better. He is Sanctification, as
being Purity, that the Pure may be contained by Purity. And
Redemption, because He sets us free, who were held captive under
sin, giving Himself a Ransom for us, the Sacrifice to make
expiation for the world. And Resurrection, because He raises up
from hence, and brings to life again us, who were slain by
sin.
XXI. These names however are still common
to Him Who is above us, and to Him Who came for our sake. But
others are peculiarly our own, and belong to that nature which He
assumed. So He is called Man, not only that through His Body He
may be apprehended by embodied creatures, whereas otherwise this
would be impossible because of His incomprehensible nature; but
also that by Himself He may sanctify humanity, and be as it were
a leaven to the whole lump; and by uniting to Himself that which
was condemned may release it from all condemnation, becoming for
all men all things that we are, except sin;-body, soul, mind and
all through which death reaches-and thus He became Man, who is
the combination of all these; God in visible form, because He
retained that which is perceived by mind alone. He is Son of Man,
both on account of Adam, and of the Virgin from Whom He came;
from the one as a forefather, from the other as His Mother, both
in accordance with the law of generation, and apart from it. He
is Christ, because of His Godhead. For this is the Anointing of
His Manhood, and does not, as is the case with all other Anointed
Ones, sanctify by its action, but by the Presence in His Fulness
of the Anointing One; the effect of which is that That which
anoints is called Man, and makes that which is anointed God. He
is The Way, because He leads us through Himself; The Door, as
letting us in; the Shepherd, as making us dwell in a place of
green pastures, and bringing us up by waters of rest, and leading
us there, and protecting us from wild beasts, converting the
erring, bringing back that which was lost, binding up that which
was broken, guarding the strong, and bringing them together in
the Fold beyond, with words of pastoral knowledge. The Sheep, as
the Victim: The Lamb, as being perfect: the Highpriest, as the
Offerer; Melchisedec, as without Mother in that Nature which is
above us, and without Father in ours; and without genealogy above
(for who, it says, shall declare His generation?) and moreover,
as King of Salem, which means Peace, and King of Righteousness,
and as receiving tithes from Patriarchs, when they prevail over
powers of evil. They are the titles of the Son. Walk through
them, those that are lofty in a godlike manner; those that belong
to the body in a manner suitable to them; or rather, altogether
in a godlike manner, that thou mayest become a god, ascending
from below, for His sake Who came down from on high for ours. In
all and above all keep to this, and thou shalt never err, either
in the loftier or the lowlier names; Jesus Christ is the Same
yesterday and to-day in the Incarnation, and in the Spirit for
ever and ever. Amen.
The Fifth Theological
Oration
On the Holy Spirit
I. Such then is the account of the Son, and
in this manner He has escaped those who would stone Him, passing
through the midst of them. For the Word is not stoned, but casts
stones when He pleases; and uses a sling against wild beasts-that
is, words-approaching the Mount in an unholy way. But, they go
on, what have you to say about the Holy Ghost? From whence are
you bringing in upon us this strange God, of Whom Scripture is
silent? And even they who keep within bounds as to the Son speak
thus. And just as we find in the case of roads and rivers, that
they split off from one another and join again, so it happens
also in this case, through the superabundance of impiety, that
people who differ in all other respects have here some points of
agreement, so that you never can tell for certain either where
they are of one mind, or where they are in conflict.
II. Now the subject of the Holy Spirit
presents a special difficulty, not only because when these men
have become weary in their disputations concerning the Son, they
struggle with greater heat against the Spirit (for it seems to be
absolutely necessary for them to have some object on which to
give expression to their impiety, or life would appear to them no
longer worth living), but further because we ourselves also,
being worn out by the multitude of their questions, are in
something of the same condition with men who have lost their
appetite; who having taken a dislike to some particular kind of
food, shrink from all food; so we in like manner have an aversion
from all discussions. Yet may the Spirit grant it to us, and then
the discourse will proceed, and God will be glorified. Well then,
we will leave to others who have worked upon this subject for us
as well as for themselves, as we have worked upon it for them,
the task of examining carefully and distinguishing in how many
senses the word Spirit or the word Holy is used and understood in
Holy Scripture, with the evidence suitable to such an enquiry;
and of shewing how besides these the combination of the two
words-I mean, Holy Spirit-is used in a peculiar sense; but we
will apply ourselves to the remainder of the subject.
III. They then who are angry with us on the
ground that we are bringing in a strange or interpolated God,
viz.:-the Holy Ghost, and who fight so very hard for the letter,
should know that they are afraid where no fear is; and I would
have them clearly understand that their love for the letter is
but a cloak for their impiety, as shall be shewn later on, when
we refute their objections to the utmost of our power. But we
have so much confidence in the Deity of the Spirit Whom we adore,
that we will begin our teaching concerning His Godhead by fitting
to Him the Names which belong to the Trinity, even though some
persons may think us too bold. The Father was the True Light
which lighteneth every man coming into the world. The Son was the
True Light which lighteneth every man coming into the world. The
Other Comforter was the True Light which lighteneth every man
coming into the world. Was and Was and Was, but Was One Thing.
Light thrice repeated; but One Light and One God. This was what
David represented to himself long before when he said, In Thy
Light shall we see Light. And now we have both seen and proclaim
concisely and simply the doctrine of God the Trinity,
comprehending out of Light (the Father), Light (the Son), in
Light (the Holy Ghost). He that rejects it, let him reject it;
and he that doeth iniquity, let him do iniquity; we proclaim that
which we have understood. We will get us up into a high mountain,
and will shout, if we be not heard, below; we will exalt the
Spirit; we will not be afraid; or if we are afraid, it shall be
of keeping silence, not of proclaiming.
IV. If ever there was a time when the
Father was not, then there was a time when the Son was not. If
ever there was a time when the Son was not, then there was a time
when the Spirit was not. If the One was from the beginning, then
the Three were so too. If you throw down the One, I am bold to
assert that you do not set up the other Two. For what profit is
there in an imperfect Godhead? Or rather, what Godhead can there
be if It is not perfect? And how can that be perfect which lacks
something of perfection? And surely there is something lacking if
it hath not the Holy, and how would it have this if it were
without the Spirit? For either holiness is something different
from Him, and if so let some one tell me what it is conceived to
be; or if it is the same, how is it not from the beginning, as if
it were better for God to be at one time imperfect and apart from
the Spirit? If He is not from the beginning, He is in the same
rank with myself, even though a little before me; for we are both
parted from Godhead by time. If He is in the same rank with
myself, how can He make me God, or join me with
Godhead?
V. Or rather, let me reason with you about
Him from a somewhat earlier point, for we have already discussed
the Trinity. The Sadducees altogether denied the existence of the
Holy Spirit, just as they did that of Angels and the
Resurrection; rejecting, I know not upon what ground, the
important testimonies concerning Him in the Old Testament. And of
the Greeks those who are more inclined to speak of God, and who
approach nearest to us, have formed some conception of Him, as it
seems to me, though they have differed as to His Name, and have
addressed Him as the Mind of the World, or the External Mind, and
the like. But of the wise men amongst ourselves, some have
conceived of him as an Activity, some as a Creature, some as God;
and some have been uncertain which to call Him, out of reverence
for Scripture, they say, as though it did not make the matter
clear either way. And therefore they neither worship Him nor
treat Him with dishonour, but take up a neutral position, or
rather a very miserable one, with respect to Him. And of those
who consider Him to be God, some are orthodox in mind only, while
others venture to be so with the lips also. And I have heard of
some who are even more clever, and measure Deity; and these agree
with us that there are Three Conceptions; but they have separated
these from one another so completely as to make one of them
infinite both in essence and power, and the second in power but
not in essence, and the third circumscribed in both; thus
imitating in another way those who call them the Creator, the
Co-operator, and the Minister, and consider that the same order
and dignity which belongs to these names is also a sequence in
the facts.
VI. But we cannot enter into any discussion
with those who do not even believe in His existence, nor with the
Greek babblers (for we would not be enriched in our argument with
the oil of sinners). With the others, however, we will argue
thus. The Holy Ghost must certainly be conceived of either as in
the category of the Self-existent, or as in that of the things
which are contemplated in another; of which classes those who are
skilled in such matters call the one Substance and the other
Accident. Now if He were an Accident, He would be an Activity of
God, for what else, or of whom else, could He be, for surely this
is what most avoids composition? And if He is an Activity, He
will be effected, but will not effect and will cease to exist as
soon as He has been effected, for this is the nature of an
Activity. How is it then that He acts and says such and such
things, and defines, and is grieved, and is angered, and has all
the qualities which belong clearly to one that moves, and not to
movement? But if He is a Substance and not an attribute of
Substance, He will be conceived of either as a Creature of God,
or as God. For anything between these two, whether having nothing
in common with either, or a compound of both, not even they who
invented the goat-stag could imagine. Now, if He is a creature,
how do we believe in Him, how are we made perfect in Him? For it
is not the same thing to believe IN a thing and to believe About
it. The one belongs to Deity, the other to-any thing. But if He
is God, then He is neither a creature, nor a thing made, nor a
fellow servant, nor any of these lowly appellations.
VII. There-the word is with you. Let the
slings be let go; let the syllogism be woven. Either He is
altogether Unbegotten, or else He is Begotten. If He is
Unbegotten, there are two Unoriginates. If he is Begotten, you
must make a further subdivision. He is so either by the Father or
by the Son. And if by the Father, there are two Sons, and they
are Brothers. And you may make them twins if you like, or the one
older and the other younger, since you are so very fond of the
bodily conceptions. But if by the Son, then such a one will say,
we get a glimpse of a Grandson God, than which nothing could be
more absurd. For my part however, if I saw the necessity of the
distinction, I should have acknowledged the facts without fear of
the names. For it does not follow that because the Son is the Son
in some higher relation (inasmuch as we could not in any other
way than this point out that He is of God and Consubstantial), it
would also be necessary to think that all the names of this lower
world and of our kindred should be transferred to the Godhead. Or
may be you would consider our God to be a male, according to the
same arguments, because he is called God and Father, and that
Deity is feminine, from the gender of the word, and Spirit
neuter, because It has nothing to do with generation; But if you
would be silly enough to say, with the old myths and fables, that
God begat the Son by a marriage with His own Will, we should be
introduced to the Hermaphrodite god of Marcion and Valentinus who
imagined these newfangled AEons.
VIII. But since we do not admit your first
division, which declares that there is no mean between Begotten
and Unbegotten, at once, along with your magnificent division,
away go your Brothers and your Grandsons, as when the first link
of an intricate chain is broken they are broken with it, and
disappear from your system of divinity. For, tell me, what
position will you assign to that which Proceeds, which has
started up between the two terms of your division, and is
introduced by a better Theologian than you, our Saviour Himself?
Or perhaps you have taken that word out of your Gospels for the
sake of your Third Testament, The Holy Ghost, which proceedeth
from the Father; Who, inasmuch as He proceedeth from That Source,
is no Creature; and inasmuch as He is not Begotten is no Son; and
inasmuch as He is between the Unbegotten and the Begotten is God.
And thus escaping the toils of your syllogisms, He has manifested
himself as God, stronger than your divisions. What then is
Procession? Do you tell me what is the Unbegottenness of the
Father, and I will explain to you the physiology of the
Generation of the Son and the Procession of the Spirit, and we
shall both of us be frenzy-stricken for prying into the mystery
of God. And who are we to do these things, we who cannot even see
what lies at our feet, or number the sand of the sea, or the
drops of rain, or the days of Eternity, much less enter into the
Depths of God, and supply an account of that Nature which is so
unspeakable and transcending all words?
IX. What then, say they, is there lacking
to the Spirit which prevents His being a Son, for if there were
not something lacking He would be a Son? We assert that there is
nothing lacking-for God has no deficiency. But the difference of
manifestation, if I may so express myself, or rather of their
mutual relations one to another, has caused the difference of
their Names. For indeed it is not some deficiency in the Son
which prevents His being Father (for Sonship is not a
deficiency), and yet He is not Father. According to this line of
argument there must be some deficiency in the Father, in respect
of His not being Son. For the Father is not Son, and yet this is
not due to either deficiency or subjection of Essence; but the
very fact of being Unbegotten or Begotten, or Proceeding has
given the name of Father to the First, of the Son to the Second,
and of the Third, Him of Whom we are speaking, of the Holy Ghost
that the distinction of the Three Persons may be preserved in the
one nature and dignity of the Godhead. For neither is the Son
Father, for the Father is One, but He is what the Father is; nor
is the Spirit Son because He is of God, for the Only-begotten is
One, but He is what the Son is. The Three are One in Godhead, and
the One Three in properties; so that neither is the Unity a
Sabellian one, nor does the Trinity countenance the present evil
distinction.
X. What then? Is the Spirit God? Most
certainly. Well then, is He Consubstantial? Yes, if He is God.
Grant me, says my opponent, that there spring from the same
Source One who is a Son, and One who is not a Son, and these of
One Substance with the Source, and I admit a God and a God. Nay,
if you will grant me that there is another God and another nature
of God I will give you the same Trinity with the same name and
facts. But since God is One and the Supreme Nature is One, how
can I present to you the Likeness? Or will you seek it again in
lower regions and in your own surroundings? It is very shameful,
and not only shameful, but very foolish, to take from things
below a guess at things above, and from a fluctuating nature at
the things that are unchanging, and as Isaiah says, to seek the
Living among the dead. But yet I will try, for your sake, to give
you some assistance for your argument, even from that source. I
think I will pass over other points, though I might bring forward
many from animal history, some generally known, others only known
to a few, of what nature has contrived with wonderful art in
connection with the generation of animals. For not only are likes
said to beget likes, and things diverse to beget things diverse,
but also likes to be begotten by things diverse, and things
diverse by likes. And if we may believe the story, there is yet
another mode of generation, when an animal is self-consumed and
self-begotten. There are also creatures which depart in some sort
from their true natures, and undergo change and transformation
from one creature into another, by a magnificence of nature. And
indeed sometimes in the same species part may be generated and
part not; and yet all of one substance; which is more like our
present subject. I will just mention one fact of our own nature
which every one knows, and then I will pass on to another part of
the subject.
XI. What was Adam? A creature of God. What
then was Eve? A fragment of the creature. And what was Seth? The
begotten of both. Does it then seem to you that Creature and
Fragment and Begotten are the same thing? Of course it does not.
But were not these persons consubstantial? Of course they were.
Well then, here it is an acknowledged fact that different persons
may have the same substance. I say this, not that I would
attribute creation or fraction or any property of body to the
Godhead (let none of your contenders for a word be down upon me
again), but that I may contemplate in these, as on a stage,
things which are objects of thought alone. For it is not possible
to trace out any image exactly to the whole extent of the truth.
But, they say, what is the meaning of all this? For is not the
one an offspring, and the other a something else of the One? Did
not both Eve and Seth come from the one Adam? And were they both
begotten by him? No; but the one was a fragment of him, and the
other was begotten by him. And yet the two were one and the same
thing; both were human beings; no one will deny that. Will you
then give up your contention against the Spirit, that He must be
either altogether begotten, or else cannot be consubstantial, or
be God; and admit from human examples the possibility of our
position? I think it will be well for you, unless you are
determined to be very quarrelsome, and to fight against what is
proved to demonstration.
XII. But, he says, who in ancient or modern
times ever worshipped the Spirit? Who ever prayed to Him? Where
is it written that we ought to worship Him, or to pray to Him,
and whence have you derived this tenet of yours? We will give the
more perfect reason hereafter, when we discuss the question of
the unwritten; for the present it will suffice to say that it is
the Spirit in Whom we worship, and in Whom we pray. For Scripture
says, God is a Spirit, and they that worship Him must worship Him
in Spirit and in truth. And again,-We know not what we should
pray for as we ought; but the Spirit Itself maketh intercession
for us with groanings which cannot be uttered; and I will pray
with the Spirit and I will pray with the understanding also;-that
is, in the mind and in the Spirit. Therefore to adore or to pray
to the Spirit seems to me to be simply Himself offering prayer or
adoration to Himself. And what godly or learned man would
disapprove of this, because in fact the adoration of One is the
adoration of the Three, because of the equality of honour and
Deity between the Three? So I will not be frightened by the
argument that all things are said to have been made by the Son;
as if the Holy Spirit also were one of these things. For it says
all things that were made, and not simply all things. For the
Father was not, nor were any of the things that were not made.
Prove that He was made, and then give Him to the Son, and number
Him among the creatures; but until you can prove this you will
gain nothing for your impiety from this comprehensive phrase. For
if He was made, it was certainly through Christ; I myself would
not deny that. But if He was not made, how can He be either one
of the All, or through Christ? Cease then to dishonour the Father
in your opposition to the Only-begotten (for it is no real
honour, by presenting to Him a creature to rob Him of what is
more valuable, a Son), and to dishonour the Son in your
opposition to the Spirit. For He is not the Maker of a Fellow
servant, but He is glorified with One of co-equal honour. Rank no
part of the Trinity with thyself, lest thou fall away from the
Trinity; cut not off from Either the One and equally august
Nature; because if thou overthrow any of the Three thou wilt have
overthrown the whole. Better to take a meagre view of the Unity
than to venture on a complete impiety.
XIII. Our argument has now come to its
principal point; and I am grieved that a problem that was long
dead, and that had given way to faith, is now stirred up afresh;
yet it is necessary to stand against these praters, and not to
let judgment go by default, when we have the Word on our side,
and are pleading the cause of the Spirit. If, say they, there is
God and God and God, how is it that there are not Three Gods, or
how is it that what is glorified is not a plurality of
Principles? Who is it who say this? Those who have reached a more
complete ungodliness, or even those who have taken the secondary
part; I mean who are moderate in a sense in respect of the Son.
For my argument is partly against both in common, partly against
these latter in particular. What I have to say in answer to these
is as follows:-What right have you who worship the Son, even
though you have revolted from the Spirit, to call us Tritheists?
Are not you Ditheists? For if you deny also the worship of the
Only Begotten, you have clearly ranged yourself among our
adversaries. And why should we deal kindly with you as not quite
dead? But if you do worship Him, and are so far in the way of
salvation, we will ask you what reasons you have to give for your
ditheism, if you are charged with it? If there is in you a word
of wisdom answer, and open to us also a way to an answer. For the
very same reason with which you will repel a charge of Ditheism
will prove sufficient for us against one of Tritheism. And thus
we shall win the day by making use of you our accusers as our
Advocates, than which nothing can be more generous.
XIV. What is our quarrel and dispute with
both? To us there is One God, for the Godhead is One, and all
that proceedeth from Him is referred to One, though we believe in
Three Persons. For one is not more and another less God; nor is
One before and another after; nor are They divided in will or
parted in power; nor can you find here any of the qualities of
divisible things; but the Godhead is, to speak concisely,
undivided in separate Persons; and there is one mingling of
Light, as it were of three suns joined to each other. When then
we look at the Godhead, or the First Cause, or the Monarchia,
that which we conceive is One; but when we look at the Persons in
Whom the Godhead dwells, and at Those Who timelessly and with
equal glory have their Being from the First Cause-there are Three
Whom we worship.
XV. What of that, they will say perhaps; do
not the Greeks also believe in one Godhead, as their more
advanced philosophers declare? And with us Humanity is one,
namely the entire race; but yet they have many gods, not One,
just as there are many men. But in this case the common nature
has a unity which is only conceivable in thought; and the
individuals are parted from one another very far indeed, both by
time and by dispositions and by power. For we are not only
compound beings, but also contrasted beings, both with one
another and with ourselves; nor do we remain entirely the same
for a single day, to say nothing of a whole lifetime, but both in
body and in soul are in a perpetual state of flow and change. And
perhaps the same may be said of the Angels and the whole of that
superior nature which is second to the Trinity alone; although
they are simple in some measure and more fixed in good, owing to
their nearness to the highest Good.
XVI. Nor do those whom the Greeks worship
as gods, and (to use their own expression) daemons, need us in
any respect for their accusers, but are convicted upon the
testimony of their own theologians, some as subject to passion,
some as given to faction, and full of innumerable evils and
changes, and in a state of opposition, not only to one another,
but even to their first causes, whom they call Oceani and Tethyes
and Phanetes, and by several other names; and last of all a
certain god who hated his children through his lust of rule, and
swallowed up all the rest through his greediness that he might
become the father of all men and gods whom he miserably devoured,
and then vomited forth again. And if these are but myths and
fables, as they say in order to escape the shamefulness of the
story, what will they say in reference to the dictum that all
things are divided into three parts, and that each god presides
over a different part of the Universe, having a distinct province
as well as a distinct rank? But our faith is not like this, nor
is this the portion of Jacob, says my Theologian. But each of
these Persons possesses Unity, not less with that which is United
to it than with itself, by reason of the identity of Essence and
Power. And this is the account of the Unity, so far as we have
apprehended it. If then this account is the true one, let us
thank God for the glimpse He has granted us; if it is not let us
seek for a better.
XVII. As for the arguments with which you
would overthrow the Union which we support, I know not whether we
should say you are jesting or in earnest. For what is this
argument? "Things of one essence, you say, are counted together,"
and by this "counted together," you mean that they are collected
into one number. But things which are not of one essence are not
thus counted . . . so that you cannot avoid speaking of three
gods, according to this account, while we do not run any risk at
all of it, inasmuch as we assert that they are not
consubstantial. And so by a single word you have freed yourselves
from trouble, and have gained a pernicious victory, for in fact
you have done something like what men do when they hang
themselves for fear of death. For to save yourselves trouble in
your championship of the Monarchia you have denied the Godhead,
and abandoned the question to your opponents. But for my part,
even if labor should be necessary, I will not abandon the Object
of my adoration. And yet on this point I cannot see where the
difficulty is.
XVIII. You say, Things of one essence are
counted together, but those which are not consubstantial are
reckoned one by one. Where did you get this from? From what
teachers of dogma or mythology? Do you not know that every number
expresses the quantity of what is included under it, and not the
nature of the things? But I am so old fashioned, or perhaps I
should say so unlearned, as to use the word Three of that number
of things, even if they are of a different nature, and to use One
and One and One in a different way of so many units, even if they
are united in essence, looking not so much at the things
themselves as at the quantity of the things in respect of which
the enumeration is made. But since you hold so very close to the
letter (although you are contending against the letter), pray
take your demonstrations from this source. There are in the Book
of Proverbs three things which go well, a lion, a goat, and a
cock; and to these is added a fourth;-a King making a speech
before the people, to pass over the other sets of four which are
there counted up, although things of various natures. And I find
in Moses two Cherubim counted singly. But now, in your
technology, could either the former things be called three, when
they differ so greatly in their nature, or the latter be treated
as units when they are so closely connected and of one nature?
For if I were to speak of God and Mammon, as two masters,
reckoned under one head, when they are so very different from
each other, I should probably be still more laughed at for such a
connumeration.
XIX. But to my mind, he says, those things
are said to be connumerated and of the same essence of which the
names also correspond, as Three Men, or Three gods, but not Three
this and that. What does this concession amount to? It is
suitable to one laying down the law as to names, not to one who
is asserting the truth. For I also will assert that Peter and
James and John are not three or consubstantial, so long as I
cannot say Three Peters, or Three Jameses, or Three Johns; for
what you have reserved for common names we demand also for proper
names, in accordance with your arrangement; or else you will be
unfair in not conceding to others what you assume for yourself.
What about John then, when in his Catholic Epistle he says that
there are Three that bear witness, the Spirit and the Water and
the Blood? Do you think he is talking nonsense? First, because he
has ventured to reckon under one numeral things which are not
consubstantial, though you say this ought to be done only in the
case of things which are consubstantial. For who would assert
that these are consubstantial? Secondly, because he has not been
consistent in the way he has happened upon his terms; for after
using Three in the masculine gender he adds three words which are
neuter, contrary to the definitions and laws which you and your
grammarians have laid down. For what is the difference between
putting a masculine Three first, and then adding One and One and
One in the neuter, or after a masculine One and One and One to
use the Three not in the masculine but in the neuter, which you
yourself disclaim in the case of Deity? What have you to say
about the Crab, which may mean either an animal, or an
instrument, or a constellation? And what about the Dog, now
terrestrial, now aquatic, now celestial? Do you not see that
three crabs or dogs are spoken of? Why of course it is so. Well
then, are they therefore of one substance? None but a fool would
say that. So you see how completely your argument from
connumeration has broken down, and is refuted by all these
instances. For if things that are of one substance are not always
counted under one numeral, and things not of one substance are
thus counted, and the pronunciation of the name once for all is
used in both cases, what advantage do you gain towards your
doctrine?
XX. I will look also at this further point,
which is not without its bearing on the subject. One and One
added together make Two; and Two resolved again becomes One and
One, as is perfectly evident. If, however, elements which are
added together must, as your theory requires, be consubstantial,
and those which are separate be heterogeneous, then it will
follow that the same things must be both consubstantial and
heterogeneous. No: I laugh at your Counting Before and your
Counting After, of which you are so proud, as if the facts
themselves depended upon the order of their names. If this were
so, according to the same law, since the same things are in
consequence of the equality of their nature counted in Holy
Scripture, sometimes in an earlier, sometimes in a later place,
what prevents them from being at once more honourable and less
honourable than themselves? I say the same of the names God and
Lord, and of the prepositions Of Whom, and By Whom, and In Whom,
by which you describe the Deity according to the rules of art for
us, attributing the first to the Father, the second to the Son,
and the third to the Holy Ghost. For what would you have done, if
each of these expressions were constantly allotted to Each
Person, when, the fact being that they are used of all the
Persons, as is evident to those who have studied the question,
you even so make them the ground of such inequality both of
nature and dignity. This is sufficient for all who are not
altogether wanting in sense. But since it is a matter of
difficulty for you after you have once made an assault upon the
Spirit, to check your rush, and not rather like a furious boar to
push your quarrel to the bitter end, and to thrust yourself upon
the knife until you have received the whole wound in your own
breast; let us go on to see what further argument remains to
you.
XXI. Over and over again you turn upon us
the silence of Scripture. But that it is not a strange doctrine,
nor an afterthought, but acknowledged and plainly set forth both
by the ancients and many of our own day, is already demonstrated
by many persons who have treated of this subject, and who have
handled the Holy Scriptures, not with indifference or as a mere
pastime, but have gone beneath the letter and looked into the
inner meaning, and have been deemed worthy to see the hidden
beauty, and have been irradiated by the light of knowledge. We,
however in our turn will briefly prove it as far as may be, in
order not to seem to be over-curious or improperly ambitious,
building on another's foundation. But since the fact, that
Scripture does not very clearly or very often write Him God in
express words (as it does first the Father and afterwards the
Son), becomes to you an occasion of blasphemy and of this
excessive wordiness and impiety, we will release you from this
inconvenience by a short discussion of things and names, and
especially of their use in Holy Scripture.
XXII. Some things have no existence, but
are spoken of; others which do exist are not spoken of; some
neither exist nor are spoken of, and some both exist and are
spoken of. Do you ask me for proof of this? I am ready to give
it. According to Scripture God sleeps and is awake, is angry,
walks, has the Cherubim for His Throne. And yet when did He
become liable to passion, and have you ever heard that God has a
body? This then is, though not really fact, a figure of speech.
For we have given names according to our own comprehension from
our own attributes to those of God. His remaining silent apart
from us, and as it were not caring for us, for reasons known to
Himself, is what we call His sleeping; for our own sleep is such
a state of inactivity. And again, His sudden turning to do us
good is the waking up; for waking is the dissolution of sleep, as
visitation is of turning away. And when He punishes, we say He is
angry; for so it is with us, punishment is the result of anger.
And His working, now here now there, we call walking; for walking
is change from one place to another. His resting among the Holy
Hosts, and as it were loving to dwell among them, is His sitting
and being enthroned; this, too, from ourselves, for God resteth
nowhere as He doth upon the Saints. His swiftness of moving is
called flying, and His watchful care is called His Face, and his
giving and bestowing is His hand; and, in a word, every other of
the powers or activities of God has depicted for us some other
corporeal one.
XXIII. Again, where do you get your
Unbegotten and Unoriginate, those two citadels of your position,
or we our Immortal? Show me these in so many words, or we shall
either set them aside, or erase them as not contained in
Scripture; and you are slain by your own principle, the names you
rely on being overthrown, and therewith the wall of refuge in
which you trusted. Is it not evident that they are due to
passages which imply them, though the words do not actually
occur? What are these passages?-I am the first, and I am the
last, and before Me there was no God, neither shall there be
after Me. For all that depends on that Am makes for my side, for
it has neither beginning nor ending. When you accept this, that
nothing is before Him, and that He has not an older Cause, you
have implicitly given Him the titles Unbegotten and Unoriginate.
And to say that He has no end of Being is to call Him Immortal
and Indestructible. The first pairs, then, that I referred to are
accounted for thus. But what are the things which neither exist
in fact nor are said? That God is evil; that a sphere is square;
that the past is present; that man is not a compound being. Have
you ever known a man of such stupidity as to venture either to
think or to assert any such thing? It remains to shew what are
the things which exist, both in fact and in language. God, Man,
Angel, Judgment, Vanity (viz., such arguments as yours), and the
subversion of faith and emptying of the mystery.
XXIV. Since, then, there is so much
difference in terms and things, why are you such a slave to the
letter, and a partisan of the Jewish wisdom, and a follower of
syllables at the expense of facts? But if, when you said twice
five or twice seven, I concluded from your words that you meant
Ten or Fourteen; or if, when you spoke of a rational and mortal
animal, that you meant Man, should you think me to be talking
nonsense? Surely not, because I should be merely repeating your
own meaning; for words do not belong more to the speaker of them
than to him who called them forth. As, then, in this case, I
should have been looking, not so much at the terms used, as at
the thoughts they were meant to convey; so neither, if I found
something else either not at all or not clearly expressed in the
Words of Scripture to be included in the meaning, should I avoid
giving it utterance, out of fear of your sophistical trick about
terms. In this way, then, we shall hold our own against the
semi-orthodox-among whom I may not count you. For since you deny
the Titles of the Son, which are so many and so clear, it is
quite evident that even if you learnt a great many more and
clearer ones you would not be moved to reverence. But now I will
take up the argument again a little way further back, and shew
you, though you are so clever, the reason for this entire system
of secresy.
XXV. There have been in the whole period of
the duration of the world two conspicuous changes of men's lives,
which are also called two Testaments, or, on account of the wide
fame of the matter, two Earthquakes; the one from idols to the
Law, the other from the Law to the Gospel. And we are taught in
the Gospel of a third earthquake, namely, from this Earth to that
which cannot be shaken or moved. Now the two Testaments are alike
in this respect, that the change was not made on a sudden, nor at
the first movement of the endeavour. Why not (for this is a point
on which we must have information)? That no violence might be
done to us, but that we might be moved by persuasion. For nothing
that is involuntary is durable; like streams or trees which are
kept back by force. But that which is voluntary is more durable
and safe. The former is due to one who uses force, the latter is
ours; the one is due to the gentleness of God, the other to a
tyrannical authority. Wherefore God did not think it behoved Him
to benefit the unwilling, but to do good to the willing. And
therefore like a Tutor or Physician He partly removes and partly
condones ancestral habits, conceding some little of what tended
to pleasure, just as medical men do with their patients, that
their medicine may be taken, being artfully blended with what is
nice. For it is no very easy matter to change from those habits
which custom and use have made honourable. For instance, the
first cut off the idol, but left the sacrifices; the second,
while it destroyed the sacrifices did not forbid circumcision.
Then, when once men had submitted to the curtailment, they also
yielded that which had been conceded to them; in the first
instance the sacrifices, in the second circumcision; and became
instead of Gentiles, Jews, and instead of Jews, Christians, being
beguiled into the Gospel by gradual changes. Paul is a proof of
this; for having at one time administered circumcision, and
submitted to legal purification, he advanced till he could say,
and I, brethren, if I yet preach circumcision, why do I yet
suffer persecution? His former conduct belonged to the temporary
dispensation, his latter to maturity.
XXVI. To this I may compare the case of
Theology except that it proceeds the reverse way. For in the case
by which I have illustrated it the change is made by successive
subtractions; whereas here perfection is reached by additions.
For the matter stands thus. The Old Testament proclaimed the
Father openly, and the Son more obscurely. The New manifested the
Son, and suggested the Deity of the Spirit. Now the Spirit
Himself dwells among us, and supplies us with a clearer
demonstration of Himself. For it was not safe, when the Godhead
of the Father was not yet acknowledged, plainly to proclaim the
Son; nor when that of the Son was not yet received to burden us
further (if I may use so bold an expression) with the Holy Ghost;
lest perhaps people might, like men loaded with food beyond their
strength, and presenting eyes as yet too weak to bear it to the
sun's light, risk the loss even of that which was within the
reach of their powers; but that by gradual additions, and, as
David says, Goings up, and advances and progress from glory to
glory, the Light of the Trinity might shine upon the more
illuminated. For this reason it was, I think, that He gradually
came to dwell in the Disciples, measuring Himself out to them
according to their capacity to receive Him, at the beginning of
the Gospel, after the Passion, after the Ascension, making
perfect their powers, being breathed upon them, and appearing in
fiery tongues. And indeed it is by little and little that He is
declared by Jesus, as you will learn for yourself if you will
read more carefully. I will ask the Father, He says, and He will
send you another Comforter, even the spirit of Truth. This He
said that He might not seem to be a rival God, or to make His
discourses to them by another authority. Again, He shall send
Him, but it is in My Name. He leaves out the I will ask, but He
keeps the Shall send, then again, I will send,-His own dignity.
Then shall come, the authority of the Spirit.
XXVII. You see lights breaking upon us,
gradually; and the order of Theology, which it is better for us
to keep, neither proclaiming things too suddenly, nor yet keeping
them hidden to the end. For the former course would be
unscientific, the latter atheistical; and the former would be
calculated to startle outsiders, the latter to alienate our own
people. I will add another point to what I have said; one which
may readily have come into the mind of some others, but which I
think a fruit of my own thought. Our Saviour had some things
which, He said, could not be borne at that time by His disciples
(though they were filled with many teachings), perhaps for the
reasons I have mentioned; and therefore they were hidden. And
again He said that all things should be taught us by the Spirit
when He should come to dwell amongst us. Of these things one, I
take it, was the Deity of the Spirit Himself, made clear later on
when such knowledge should be seasonable and capable of being
received after our Saviour's restoration, when it would no longer
be received with incredulity because of its marvellous character.
For what greater thing than this did either He promise, or the
Spirit teach. If indeed anything is to be considered great and
worthy of the Majesty of God, which was either promised or
taught.
XXVIII. This, then, is my position with
regard to these things, and I hope it may be always my position,
and that of whosoever is dear to me; to worship God the Father,
God the Son, and God the Holy Ghost, Three Persons, One Godhead,
undivided in honour and glory and substance and kingdom, as one
of our own inspired philosophers not long departed shewed. Let
him not see the rising of the Morning Star, as Scripture saith,
nor the glory of its brightness, who is otherwise minded, or who
follows the temper of the times, at one time being of one mind
and of another at another time, and thinking unsoundly in the
highest matters. For if He is not to be worshipped, how can He
deify me by Baptism? but if He is to be worshipped, surely He is
an Object of adoration, and if an Object of adoration He must be
God; the one is linked to the other, a truly golden and saving
chain. And indeed from the Spirit comes our New Birth, and from
the New Birth our new creation, and from the new creation our
deeper knowledge of the dignity of Him from Whom it is
derived.
XXIX. This, then, is what may be said by
one who admits the silence of Scripture. But now the swarm of
testimonies shall burst upon you from which the Deity of the Holy
Ghost shall be shewn to all who are not excessively stupid, or
else altogether enemies to the Spirit, to be most clearly
recognized in Scripture. Look at these facts:-Christ is born; the
Spirit is His Forerunner. He is baptized; the Spirit bears
witness. He is tempted; the Spirit leads Him up. He works
miracles; the Spirit accompanies them. He ascends; the Spirit
takes His place. What great things are there in the idea of God
which are not in His power? What titles which belong to God are
not applied to Him, except only Unbegotten and Begotten? For it
was needful that the distinctive properties of the Father and the
Son should remain peculiar to Them, lest there should be
confusion in the Godhead Which brings all things, even disorder
itself, into due arrangement and good order. Indeed I tremble
when I think of the abundance of the titles, and how many Names
they outrage who fall foul of the Spirit. He is called the Spirit
of God, the Spirit of Christ, the Mind of Christ, the Spirit of
The Lord, and Himself The Lord, the Spirit of Adoption, of Truth,
of Liberty; the Spirit of Wisdom, of Understanding, of Counsel,
of Might, of Knowledge, of Godliness, of the Fear of God. For He
is the Maker of all these, filling all with His Essence,
containing all things, filling the world in His Essence, yet
incapable of being comprehended in His power by the world; good,
upright, princely, by nature not by adoption; sanctifying, not
sanctified; measuring, not measured; shared, not sharing;
filling, not filled; containing, not contained; inherited,
glorified, reckoned with the Father and the Son; held out as a
threat; the Finger of God; fire like God; to manifest, as I take
it, His consubstantiality); the Creator-Spirit, Who by Baptism
and by Resurrection creates anew; the Spirit That knoweth all
things, That teacheth, That bloweth where and to what extent He
listeth; That guideth, talketh, sendeth forth, separateth, is
angry or tempted; That revealeth, illumineth, quickeneth, or
rather is the very Light and Life; That maketh Temples; That
deifieth; That perfecteth so as even to anticipate Baptism, yet
after Baptism to be sought as a separate gift; That doeth all
things that God doeth; divided into fiery tongues; dividing
gifts; making Apostles, Prophets, Evangelists, Pastors, and
Teachers; understanding manifold, clear, piercing, undefiled,
unhindered, which is the same thing as Most wise and varied in
His actions; and making all things clear and plain; and of
independent power, unchangeable, Almighty, all-seeing,
penetrating all spirits that are intelligent, pure, most subtle
(the Angel Hosts I think); and also all prophetic spirits and
apostolic in the same manner and not in the same places; for they
lived in different places; thus showing that He is
uncircumscript.
XXX. They who say and teach these things,
and moreover call Him another Paraclete in the sense of another
God, who know that blasphemy against Him alone cannot be
forgiven, and who branded with such fearful infamy Ananias and
Sapphira for having lied to the Holy Ghost, what do you think of
these men? Do they proclaim the Spirit God, or something else?
Now really, you must be extraordinarily dull and far from the
Spirit if you have any doubt about this and need some one to
teach you. So important then, and so vivid are His Names. Why is
it necessary to lay before you the testimony contained in the
very words? And whatever in this case also is said in more lowly
fashion, as that He is Given, Sent, Divided; that He is the Gift,
the Bounty, the Inspiration, the Promise, the Intercession for
us, and, not to go into any further detail, any other expressions
of the sort, is to be referred to the First Cause, that it may be
shewn from Whom He is, and that men may not in heathen fashion
admit Three Principles. For it is equally impious to confuse the
Persons with the Sabellians, or to divide the Natures with the
Arians.
XXXI. I have very carefully considered this
matter in my own mind, and have looked at it in every point of
view, in order to find some illustration of this most important
subject, but I have been unable to discover any thing on earth
with which to compare the nature of the Godhead. For even if I
did happen upon some tiny likeness it escaped me for the most
part, and left me down below with my example. I picture to myself
an eye, a fountain, a river, as others have done before, to see
if the first might be analogous to the Father, the second to the
Son, and the third to the Holy Ghost. For in these there is no
distinction in time, nor are they torn away from their connexion
with each other, though they seem to be parted by three
personalities. But I was afraid in the first place that I should
present a flow in the Godhead, incapable of standing still; and
secondly that by this figure a numerical unity would be
introduced. For the eye and the spring and the river are
numerically one, though in different forms.
XXXII. Again I thought of the sun and a ray
and light. But here again there was a fear lest people should get
an idea of composition in the Uncompounded Nature, such as there
is in the Sun and the things that are in the Sun. And in the
second place lest we should give Essence to the Father but deny
Personality to the Others, and make Them only Powers of God,
existing in Him and not Personal. For neither the ray nor the
light is another sun, but they are only effulgences from the Sun,
and qualities of His essence. And lest we should thus, as far as
the illustration goes, attribute both Being and Not-being to God,
which is even more monstrous. I have also heard that some one has
suggested an illustration of the following kind. A ray of the Sun
flashing upon a wall and trembling with the movement of the
moisture which the beam has taken up in mid air, and then, being
checked by the hard body, has set up a strange quivering. For it
quivers with many rapid movements, and is not one rather than it
is many, nor yet many rather than one; because by the swiftness
of its union and separating it escapes before the eye can see
it.
XXXIII. But it is not possible for me to
make use of even this; because it is very evident what gives the
ray its motion; but there is nothing prior to God which could set
Him in motion; for He is Himself the Cause of all things, and He
has no prior Cause. And secondly because in this case also there
is a suggestion of such things as composition, diffusion, and an
unsettled and unstable nature . . . none of which we can suppose
in the Godhead. In a word, there is nothing which presents a
standing point to my mind in these illustrations from which to
consider the Object which I am trying to represent to myself,
unless one may indulgently accept one point of the image while
rejecting the rest. Finally, then, it seems best to me to let the
images and the shadows go, as being deceitful and very far short
of the truth; and clinging myself to the more reverent
conception, and resting upon few words, using the guidance of the
Holy Ghost, keeping to the end as my genuine comrade and
companion the enlightenment which I have received from Him, and
passing through this world to persuade all others also to the
best of my power to worship Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, the One
Godhead and Power. To Him belongs all glory and honour and might
for ever and ever. Amen.
Oration XXXIII
Against The Arians, and Concerning Himself
Delivered at Constantinople about the
middle of the year 380.
I. Where are they who reproach us with our
poverty, and boast themselves of their own riches; who define the
Church by numbers, and scorn the little flock; and who measure
Godhead, and weigh the people in the balance, who honour the
sand, and despise the luminaries of heaven; who treasure pebbles
and overlook pearls; for they know not that sand is not in a
greater degree more abundant than stars, and pebbles than
lustrous stones-that the former are purer and more precious than
the latter? Are you again indignant? Do you again arm yourselves?
Do you again insult us? Is this a new faith? Restrain your
threats a little while that I may speak. We will not insult you,
but we will convict you; we will not threaten, but we will
reproach you; we will not strike, but we will heal. This too
appears an insult! What pride! Do you here also regard your equal
as your slave? If not, permit me to speak openly; for even a
brother chides his brother if he has been defrauded by
him.
II. Would you like me to utter to you the
words of God to Israel, stiff-necked and hardened? "O my people
what have I done unto thee, or wherein have I injured thee, or
wherein have I wearied thee?" This language indeed is fitter from
me to you who insult me. It is a sad thing that we watch for
opportunities against each other, and having destroyed our
fellowship of spirit by diversities of opinion have become almost
more inhuman and savage to one another than even the barbarians
who are now engaged in war against us, banded together against us
by the Trinity whom we have separated; with this difference that
we are not foreigners making forays and raids upon foreigners,
nor nations of different language, which is some little
consolation in the calamity, but are making war upon one another,
and almost upon those of the same household; or if you will, we
the members of the same body are consuming and being consumed by
one another. Nor is this, bad though it be, the extent of our
calamity, for we even regard our diminution as a gain. But since
we are in such a condition, and regulate our faith by the times,
let us compare the times with one another; you your Emperor, and
I my Sovereigns; you Ahab and I Josias. Tell me of your
moderation, and I will proclaim my violence. But indeed yours is
proclaimed by many books and tongues, which I think future ages
will accept as an immortal pillory for your actions and I will
declare my own.
III. What tumultuous mob have I led against
you? What soldiers have I armed? What general boiling with rage,
and more savage than his employers, and not even a Christian, but
one who offers his impiety against us as his private worship to
his own gods? Whom have I besieged while engaged in prayer and
lifting up their hands to God? When have I put a stop to psalmody
with trumpets? or mingled the Sacramental Blood with blood of
massacre? What spiritual sighs have I put an end to by cries of
death, or tears of penitence by tears of tragedy? What House of
prayer have I made a burialplace? What liturgical vessels which
the multitude may not touch have I given over to the hands of the
wicked, of a Nebuzaradan, chief of the cooks, or of a Belshazzar,
who wickedly used the sacred vessels for his revels, and then
paid a worthy penalty for his madness? "Altars beloved" as Holy
Scripture saith, but "now defiled." And what licentious youth has
insulted you for our sake with shameful writhings and
contortions? O precious Throne, seat and rest of precious men,
which hast been occupied by a succession of pious Priests, who
from ancient times have taught the divine Mysteries, what heathen
popular speaker and evil tongue hath mounted thee to inveigh
against the Christian's faith? O modesty and majesty of Virgins,
that cannot endure the looks of even virtuous men, which of us
hath shamed thee, and outraged thee by the exposure of what may
not be seen, and showed to the eyes of the impious a pitiable
sight, worthy of the fires of Sodom? I say nothing of deaths,
which were more endurable than this shame.
IV. What wild beasts have we let loose upon
the bodies of Saints,-like some who have prostituted human
nature,-on one single accusation, that of not consenting to their
impiety; or defiled ourselves by communion with them, which we
avoid like the poison of a snake, not because it injures the
body, but because it blackens the depths of the soul? Against
whom have we made it a matter of criminal accusation that they
buried the dead, whom the very beasts reverenced? And what a
charge, worthy of another theatre and of other beasts! What
Bishop's aged flesh have we carded with hooks in the presence of
their disciples, impotent to help them save by tears, hung up
with Christ, conquering by suffering, and sprinkling the people
with their precious blood, and at last carried away to death, to
be both crucified and buried and glorified with Christ; with
Christ Who conquered the world by such victims and sacrifices?
What priests have those contrary elements fire and water divided,
raising a strange beacon over the sea, and set on fire together
with the ship in which they put to sea? Who (to cover the more
numerous part of our woes with a veil of silence) have been
accused of inhumanity by the very magistrates who conferred such
favour on them? For even if they did obey the lusts of those men,
yet at any rate they hated the cruelty of their purpose. The one
was opportunism, the other calculation; the one came of the
lawlessness of the Emperor, the other of a consciousness of the
laws by which they had to judge.
V. And to speak of older things, for they
too belong to the same fraternity; whose hands living or dead
have I cut off-to bring a lying accusation against Saints, and to
triumph over the faith by bluster? Whose exiles have I numbered
as benefits, and failed to reverence even the sacred colleges of
sacred philosophers, whence I sought their suppliants? Nay the
very contrary is the case; I have reckoned as Martyrs those who
incurred anger for the truth. Upon whom have I, whom you accuse
of licentiousness of language, brought harlots when they were
almost fleshless and bloodless? Which of the faithful have I
exiled from their country and given over to the hands of lawless
men, that they might be kept like wild beasts in rooms without
light, and (for this is the saddest part of the tragedy) left
separated from each other to endure the hardships of hunger and
thirst, with food measured out to them, which they had to receive
through narrow openings, so that they might not be permitted even
to see their companions in misery. And what were they who
suffered thus? Men of whom the world was not worthy. Is it thus
that you honour faith? Is this your kind treatment of it? Ye know
not the greater part of these things, and that reasonably,
because of the number of these facts and the pleasure of the
action. But he who suffers has a better memory. There have been
even some more cruel than the times themselves, like wild boars
hurled against a fence. I demand your victim of yesterday the old
man, the Abraham-like Father, whom on his return from exile you
greeted with stones in the middle of the day and in the middle of
the city. But we, if it is not invidious to say so, begged off
even our murderers from their danger. God says somewhere in
Scripture, How shall I pardon thee for this? Which of these
things shall I praise; or rather for which shall I bind a wreath
upon you?
VI. Now since your antecedents are such, I
should be glad if you too will tell me of my crimes, that I may
either amend my life or be put to shame. My greatest wish is that
I may be found free from wrong altogether; but if this may not
be, at least to be converted from my crime; for this is the
second best portion of the prudent. For if like the just man I do
not become my own accuser in the first instance, yet at any rate
I gladly receive healing from another. "Your City, you say to me,
is a little one, or rather is no city at all, but only a village,
arid, without beauty, and with few inhabitants." But, my good
friend, this is my misfortune, rather than my fault;-if indeed it
be a misfortune; and if it is against my will, I am to be pitied
for my bad luck, if I may put it so; but if it be willingly, I am
a philosopher. Which of these is a crime? Would anyone abuse a
dolphin for not being a land animal, or an ox because it is not
aquatic, or a lamprey because it is amphibious? But we, you go
on, have walls and theatres and racecourses and palaces, and
beautiful great Porticoes, and that marvellous work the
underground and overhead river, and the splendid and admired
column, and the crowded marketplace and a restless people, and a
famous senate of highborn men.
VII. Why do you not also mention the
convenience of the site, and what I may call the contest between
land and sea as to which owns the City, and which adorns our
Royal City with all their good things? This then is our crime,
that while you are great and splendid, we are small and come from
a small place? Many others do you this wrong, indeed all those
whom you excel; and must we die because we have not reared a
city, nor built walls around it, nor can boast of our racecourse,
or our stadia, and pack of hounds, and all the follies that are
connected with these things; nor have to boast of the beauty and
splendour of our baths, and the costliness of their marbles and
pictures and golden embroideries of all sorts of species, almost
rivalling nature? Nor have we yet rounded off the sea for
ourselves, or mingled the seasons, as of course you, the new
Creators, have done, that we may live in what is at once the
pleasantest and the safest way. Add if you like other charges,
you who say, The silver is mine and the gold is mine, those words
of God. We neither think much of riches, on which, if they
increase, our Law forbids us to set our hearts, nor do we count
up yearly and daily revenues; nor do we rival one another in
loading our tables with enchantments for our senseless belly. For
neither do we highly esteem those things which after we have
swallowed them are all of the same worth, or rather I should say
worthlessness, and are rejected. But we live so simply and from
hand to mouth, as to differ but little from beasts whose
sustenance is without apparatus and inartificial.
VIII. Do you also find fault with the
raggedness of my dress, and the want of elegance in the
disposition of my face? for these are the points upon which I see
that some persons who are very insignificant pride themselves.
Will you leave my head alone, and not jeer at it, as the children
did at Elissaeus? What followed I will not mention. And will you
leave out of your allegations my want of education, and what
seems to you the roughness and rusticity of my elocution? And
where will you put the fact that I am not full of small talk, nor
a jester popular with company, nor great hunter of the
marketplace, nor given to chatter and gossip with any chance
people upon all sorts of subjects, so as to make even
conversation grievous; nor a frequenter of Zeuxippus, that new
Jerusalem; nor one who strolls from house to house flattering and
stuffing himself; but for the most part staying at home, of low
spirits and with a melancholy cast of countenance, quietly
associating with myself, the genuine critic of my actions; and
perhaps worthy of imprisonment for my uselessness? How is it that
you pardon me for all this, and do not blame me for it? How sweet
and kind you are.
IX. But I am so old fashioned and such a
philosopher as to believe that one heaven is common to all; and
that so is the revolution of the sun and the moon, and the order
and arrangement of the stars; and that all have in Common an
equal share and profit in day and night, and also change of
seasons, rains, fruits, and quickening power of the air; and that
the flowing rivers are a common and abundant wealth to all; and
that one and the same is the Earth, the mother and the tomb, from
which we were taken, and to which we shall return, none having a
greater share than another. And further, above this, we have in
common reason, the Law, the Prophets, the very Sufferings of
Christ, by which we were all without exception created anew, who
partake of the same Adam, and were led astray by the serpent and
slain by sin, and are saved by the heavenly Adam and brought back
by the tree of shame to the tree of life from whence we had
fallen.
X. I was deceived too by the Ramah of
Samuel, that little fatherland of the great man; which was no
dishonour to the Prophet, for it drew its honour not so much from
itself as from him; nor was he hindered on its account from being
given to God before his birth, or from uttering oracles, and
foreseeing the future; nor only so, but also anointing Kings and
Priests, and judging the men of illustrious cities. I heard also
of Saul, how while seeking his father's asses he found a kingdom.
And even David himself was taken from the sheepfolds to be the
shepherd of Israel. What of Amos? Was he not, while a goatherd
and scraper of sycamore fruit entrusted with the gifts of
prophecy? How is it that I have passed over Joseph, who was both
a slave and the giver of corn to Egypt, and the father of many
myriads who were promised before to Abraham? Aye and I was
deceived by the Carmel of Elias, who received the car of fire;
and by the sheepskin of Elissaeus that had more power than a
silken web or than gold forced into garments. I was deceived by
the desert of John, which held the greatest among them that are
born of women, with that clothing, that food, that girdle, which
we know. And I ventured even beyond these, and found God Himself
the Patron of my rusticity. I will range myself with Bethlehem,
and will share the ignominy of the Manger; for since you refuse
on this account honour to God, it is no wonder that on the same
account you despise His herald also. And I will bring up to you
the Fishermen, and the poor to whom the Gospel is preached, as
preferred before many rich. Will you ever leave off priding
yourselves upon your cities? Will you ever revere that wilderness
which you abominate and despise? I do not yet say that gold has
its birthplace in sand; nor that translucent stones are the
product and gifts of rocks; for if to these I should oppose all
that is dishonourable in cities perhaps it would be to no good
end that I should use my freedom of speech.
XI. But perhaps some one who is very
circumscribed and carnally minded will say, "But our herald is a
stranger and a foreigner." What of the Apostles? Were not they
strangers to the many nations and cities among whom they were
divided, that the Gospel might have free course everywhere, that
nothing might miss the illumination of the Threefold Light, or be
unenlightened by the Truth; but that the night of ignorance might
be dissolved for those who sat in darkness and the shadow of
death? You have heard the words of Paul, "that we might go the
Gentiles, and they to the Circumcision." Be it that Judaea is
Peter's home; what has Paul in common with the Gentiles, Luke
with Achaia, Andrew with Epirus, John with Ephesus, Thomas with
India, Marc with Italy, or the rest, not to go into particulars,
with those to whom they went? So that you must either blame them
or excuse me, or else prove that you, the ambassadors of the true
Gospel, are being insulted by trifling. But since I have argued
with you in a petty way about these matters, I will now proceed
to take a larger and more philosophic view of them.
XII. My friend, every one that is of high
mind has one Country, the Heavenly Jerusalem, in which we store
up our Citizenship. All have one family-if you look at what is
here below the dust-or if you look higher, that Inbreathing of
which we are partakers, and which we were bidden to keep, and
with which I must stand before my Judge to give an account of my
heavenly nobility, and of the Divine Image. Everyone then is
noble who has guarded this through virtue and consent to his
Archetype. On the other hand, everyone is ignoble who has mingled
with evil, and put upon himself another form, that of the
serpent. And these earthly countries and families are the
playthings of this our temporary life and scene. For our country
is whatever each may have first occupied, either as tyrant, or in
misfortune; and in this we are all alike strangers and pilgrims,
however much we may play with names. And the family is accounted
noble which is either rich from old days, or is recently raised;
and of ignoble birth that which is of poor parents, either owing
to misfortune or to want of ambition. For how can a nobility be
given from above which is at one time beginning and at another
coming to an end; and which is not given to some, but is bestowed
on others by letters patent? Such is my mind on this matter.
Therefore I leave it to you to pride yourself on tombs or in
myths, and I endeavour as far as I can, to purify myself from
deceits, that I may keep if possible my nobility, or else may
recover it.
XIII. It is thus then and for these reasons
that I, who am small and of a country without repute, have come
upon you, and that not of my own accord, nor self-sent, like many
of those who now seize upon the chief places; but because I was
invited, and compelled, and have followed the scruples of my
conscience and the Call of the Spirit. If it be otherwise, may I
continue to fight here to no purpose, and deliver no one from his
error, but may they obtain their desire who seek the barrenness
of my soul, if I lie. But since I am come, and perchance with no
contemptible power (if I may boast myself a little of my folly),
which of those who are insatiable have I copied, what have I
emulated of opportunism, although I have such examples, even
apart from which it is hard and rare not to be bad? Concerning
what churches or property have I disputed with you; though you
have more than enough of both, and the others too little? What
imperial edict have we rejected and emulated? What rulers have we
fawned upon against you? Whose boldness have we denounced? And
what has been done on the other side against me? "Lord, lay not
this sin to their charge," even then I said, for I remembered in
season the words of Stephen, and so I pray now. Being reviled, we
bless: being blasphemed we retreat.
XIV. And if I am doing wrong in this, that
when tyrannized over I endure it, forgive me this wrong; I have
borne to be tyrannized over by others too; and I am thankful that
my moderation has brought upon me the charge of folly. For I
reckon thus, using considerations altogether higher than any of
yours; what a mere fraction are these trials of the spittings and
blows which Christ, for Whom and by Whose aid we encounter these
dangers, endured. I do not count them, taken altogether, worth
the one crown of thorns which robbed our conqueror of his crown,
for whose sake also I learn that I am crowned for the hardness of
life. I do not reckon them worth the one reed by which the rotten
empire was destroyed; of the gall alone, the vinegar alone, by
which we were cured of the bitter taste; of the gentleness alone
which He shewed in His Passion. Was He betrayed with a kiss? He
reproves with a kiss, but smites not. Is he suddenly arrested? He
reproaches indeed, but follows; and if through zeal thou cuttest
off the ear of Malchus with the sword, He will be angry, and will
restore it. And if one flee in a linen sheet, he will defend him.
And if you ask for the fire of Sodom upon his captors, he will
not pour it forth; and if he take a thief hanging upon the cross
for his crime he will bring him into Paradise through His
Goodness. Let all the acts of one that loves men be loving, as
were all the sufferings of Christ, to which we could add nothing
greater than, when God even died for us, to refuse on our part to
forgive even the smallest wrongs of our fellowmen.
XV. Moreover this also I reckoned and still
reckon with myself; and do you see if it is not quite correct. I
have often discussed it with you before. These men have the
houses, but we the Dweller in the house; they the Temples, we the
God; and besides it is ours to be living temples of the Living
God, lively sacrifices, reasonable burnt-offerings, perfect
sacrifices, yea, gods through the adoration of the Trinity. They
have the people, we the Angels; they rash boldness, we faith;
they threatenings, we prayer; they smiting, we endurance; they
gold and silver, we the pure word. "Thou hast built for thyself a
wide house and large chambers (recognize the words of Scripture),
a house celled and pierced with windows." But not yet is this
loftier than my faith, and than the heavens to which I am being
borne onwards. Is mine a little flock? But it is not being
carried over a precipice. Is mine a narrow fold? But it is
unapproachable by wolves; it cannot be entered by a robber, nor
climbed by thieves and strangers. I shall yet see it, I know
well, wider. And many of those who are now wolves, I must reckon
among my sheep, and perhaps even amongst the shepherds. This is
the glad tidings brought me by the Good Shepherd, for Whose sake
I lay down my life for the sheep. I fear not for the little
flock; for it is seen at a glance. I know my sheep and am known
of mine. Such are they that know God and are known of God. My
sheep hear my voice, which I have heard from the oracles of God,
which I have been taught by the Holy Fathers, which I have taught
alike on all occasions, not conforming myself to the fortune, and
which I will never cease to teach; in which I was born, and in
which I will depart.
XVI. These I call by name (for they are not
nameless like the stars which are numbered and have names), and
they follow me, for I rear them up beside the waters of rest; and
they follow every such shepherd, whose voice they love to hear,
as you see; but a stranger they will not follow, but will flee
from him, because they have a habit of distinguishing the voice
of their own from that of strangers. They will flee from
Valentinus with his division of one into two, refusing to believe
that the Creator is other than the Good. They will flee from
Depth and Silence, and the mythical AEons, that are verily worthy
of Depth and Silence. They will flee from Marcion's god,
compounded of elements and numbers; from Montanus' evil and
feminine spirit; from the matter and darkness of Manes; from
Novatus' boasting and wordy assumption of purity; from the
analysis and confusion of Sabellius, and if I may use the
expression, his absorption, contracting the Three into One,
instead of defining the One in Three Personalities; from the
difference of natures taught by Arius and his followers, and
their new Judaism, confining the Godhead to the Unbegotten; from
Photinus earthly Christ, who took his beginning from Mary. But
they worship the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost, One
Godhead; God the Father, God the Son and (do not be angry) God
the Holy Ghost, One Nature in Three Personalities, intellectual,
perfect, Self-existent, numerically separate, but not separate in
Godhead.
XVII. These words let everyone who
threatens me to-day concede to me; the rest let whoever will
claim. The Father will not endure to be deprived of the Son, nor
the Son of the Holy Ghost. Yet that must happen if They are
confined to time, and are created Beings . . . for that which is
created is not God. Neither will I bear to be deprived of my
consecration; One Lord, One Faith, One Baptism. If this be
cancelled, from whom shall I get a second? What say you, you who
destroy Baptism or repeat it? Can a man be spiritual without the
Spirit? Has he a share in the Spirit who does not honour the
Spirit? Can he honour Him who is baptized into a creature and a
fellow-servant? It is not so; it is not so; for all your talk. I
will not play Thee false, O Unoriginate Father, or Thee O
Only-begotten Word, or Thee O Holy Ghost. I know Whom I have
confessed, and whom I have renounced, and to Whom I have joined
myself. I will not allow myself, after having been taught the
words of the faithful, to learn also those of the unfaithful; to
confess the truth, and then range myself with falsehood; to come
down for consecration and to go back even less hallowed; having
been baptised that I might live, to be killed by the water, like
infants who die in the very birthpangs, and receive death
simultaneously with birth. Why make me at once blessed and
wretched, newly enlightened and unenlightened, Divine and
godless, that I may make shipwreck even of the hope of
regeneration? A few words will suffice. Remember your confession.
Into what were you baptised? The Father? Good but Jewish still.
The Son? . . . good . . . but not yet perfect. The Holy Ghost? .
. . Very good . . . this is perfect. Now was it into these
simply, or some common name of Them? The latter. And what was the
common Name? Why, God. In this common Name believe, and ride on
prosperously and reign, and pass on from hence into the Bliss of
Heaven. And that is, as I think, the more distinct apprehension
of These; to which may we all come, in the same Christ our God,
to Whom be the glory and the might, with the Unoriginate Father,
and the Lifegiving Spirit, now and for ever and to ages of ages.
Amen.
Oration XXXIV
On the Arrival of the Egyptians
I. I will address myself as is right to
those who have come from Egypt; for they have come here eagerly,
having overcome illwill by zeal, from that Egypt which is
enriched by the River, raining out of the earth, and like the sea
in its season,-if I too may follow in my small measure those who
have so eloquently spoken of these matters; and which is also
enriched by Christ my Lord, Who once was a fugitive into Egypt,
and now is supplied by Egypt; the first, when He fled from
Herod's massacre of the children; and now by the love of the
fathers for their children, by Christ the new Food of those who
hunger after good; the greatest alms of corn of which history
speaks and men believe; the Bread which came down from heaven and
giveth life to the world, that life which is indestructible and
indissoluble, concerning Whom I now seem to hear the Father
saying, Out of Egypt have I called My Son.
II. For from you hath sounded forth the
Word to all men; healthfully believed and preached; and you are
the best bringers of fruit of all men, specially of those who now
hold the right faith, as far as I know, who am not only a lover
of such food, but also its distributor, and not at home only but
also abroad. For you indeed supply bodily food to peoples and
cities so far as your lovingkindness reaches; and you supply
spiritual food also, not to a particular people, nor to this or
that city, circumscribed by narrow boundaries, though its people
may think it very illustrious, but to almost the whole world. And
you bring the remedy not for famine of bread or thirst of water,
which is no very terrible famine-and to avoid it is easy; but to
a famine of hearing the Word of the Lord, which it is most
miserable to suffer, and a most laborious matter to cure at the
present time, because iniquity hath abounded, and scarce anywhere
do I find its genuine healers.
III. Such was Joseph your Superintendent of
corn measures, whom I may call ours also; who by his surpassing
wisdom was able both to foresee the famine and to cure it by
decrees of government, healing the ill-favoured and starving kine
by means of the fair and fat. And indeed you may understand by
Joseph which you will, either the great lover and creator and
namesake of immortality or his successor in throne and word and
hoary hair, our new Peter, not inferior in virtue or fame to him
by whom the middle course was destroyed and crushed, though it
still wriggles a little weakly, like the tail of a snake after it
is cut off; the one of whom, after having departed this life in a
good old age after many conflicts and wrestlings, looks upon us
from above, I well know, and reaches a hand to those who are
labouring for the right: and this the more, in proportion as he
is freed from his bonds; and the other is hastening to the same
end or dissolution of life, and is already drawing near the
dwellers in heaven, but is still so far in the flesh as is needed
to give the last aids to the Word, and to take his journey with
richer provision.
IV. Of these great men and doctors and
soldiers of the truth and victors, you are the nurslings and
offspring; of these neither times nor tyrants, reason nor envy,
nor fear, nor accuser, nor slanderer, whether waging open war
against them, or plotting secretly; nor any who appeared to be of
our side, nor any stranger, nor gold-that hidden tyrant, through
which now almost everything is turned upside down and made to
depend on the hazard of a die; nor flatteries nor threats, nor
long and distant exiles (for they only could not be affected by
confiscation, because of their great riches, which were-to
possess nothing) nor anything else, whether absent or present or
expected, could induce to take the worse part, and to be anywise
traitor to the Trinity, or to suffer loss of the Godhead. On the
contrary indeed, they grew strong by dangers, and became more
zealous for true religion. For to suffer thus for Christ adds to
one's love, and is as it were an earnest to high-souled men of
further conflicts. These, O Egypt, are thy present tales and
wonders.
V. Once thou didst praise me thy Mendesian
Goats, and thy Memphite Apis, a fatted and fleshy calf, and the
rites of Isis, and the mutilations of Osiris, and thy venerable
Serapis, a log that was honoured by myths and ages and the
madness of its worshippers, as some unknown and heavenly matter,
however it may have been aided by falsehood; and things yet more
shameful than these, multiform images of monstrous beasts and
creeping things, all of which Christ and the heralds of Christ
have conquered, both the others who have been illustrious in
their own times, and also the Fathers whom I have named just now;
by whom, O admirable country, thou art more famous today than all
others put together, whether in ancient or modern
history.
VI. Wherefore I embrace and salute thee, O
noblest of peoples and most Christian, and of warmest piety, and
worthy of thy leaders; for I can find nothing greater to say of
thee than this, nor anything by which better to welcome thee. And
I greet thee, to a small extent with my tongue, but very heartily
with the movements of my affections. O my people, for I call you
mine, as of one mind and one faith, instructed by the same
Fathers, and adoring the same Trinity. My people, for mine thou
art, though it seem not so to those who envy me. And that they
who are in this case may be the deeper wounded, see, I give the
right hand of fellowship before so many witnesses, seen and
unseen. And I put away the old calumny by this new act of
kindness. O my people, for mine thou art, though in saying so I,
who am least of all men, am claiming for myself that which is
greatest. For such is the grace of the Spirit that it makes of
equal honour those who are of one mind. O my people, for mine
thou art, though it be afar, because we are divinely joined
together, and in a manner wholly different to the unions of
carnal people; for bodies are united in place, but souls are
fitted together by the Spirit. O my people, who didst formerly
study how to suffer for Christ, but now if thou wilt hearken unto
me, wilt study not to do aught, but to consider the power of
doing to be a sufficient gain, and to deem that thou art offering
a sacrifice to Christ, as in those days of thy endurance so in
these of meekness. O people to whom the Lord hath prepared
Himself to do good, as to do evil to thine enemies. O people,
whom the Lord hath chosen to Himself out of all peoples; O people
who art graven upon the hands of the Lord, to whom saith the
Lord, Thou art My Will; and, Thy gates are carved work, and all
the rest that is said to them that are being saved. O
people;-nay, marvel not at my insatiability that I repeat your
name so often; for I delight in this continual naming of you,
like those who can never have enough of their enjoyment of
certain spectacles or sounds.
VII. But, O people of God and mine,
beautiful also was your yesterday's assembly, which you held upon
the sea, and pleasant, if any sight ever was, to the eyes, when I
saw the sea like a forest, and hidden by a cloud made with hands,
and the beauty and speed of your ships, as though ordered for a
procession, and the slight breeze astern, as though purposely
escorting you, and wafting to the City your city of the Sea. Yet
the present assembly which we now behold is more beautiful and
more magnificent. For you have not hastened to mingle with the
larger number, nor have you reckoned religion by numbers, nor
endured to be a mere unorganized rabble, rather than a people
purified by the Word of God; but having, as is right, rendered to
Caesar the things that are Caesar's, ye have offered besides to
God the things that are God's; to the former Custom, to the
latter Fear; and after feeding the people with your cargoes, you
yourselves have come to be fed by us. For we also distribute
corn, and our distribution is perhaps not worth less than yours.
Come eat of my Bread and drink of the Wine which I have mingled
for you. I join with Wisdom in bidding you to my table. For I
commend your good feeling, and I hasten to meet your ready mind,
because ye came to us as to your own harbour, running to your
like; and ye valued the kindred Faith, and thought it monstrous
that, while they who insult higher things are in harmony with
each other and think alike, and think to make good each man's
individual falsehood by their common conspiracy, like ropes which
get strength from being twisted together; yet you should not meet
nor combine with those who are of the same mind, with whom it is
more reasonable that you should associate, for we gather in the
Godhead also. And that you may see that not in vain have you come
to us, and that you have not brought up in a port among strangers
and foreigners, but amongst your own people, and have been well
guided by the Holy Ghost; we will discourse to you briefly
concerning God; and do you recognize your own, like those who
distinguish their kindred by the ensigns of their
arms.
VIII. I find two highest differences in
things that exist, viz.:-Rule, and Service; not such as among us
either tyranny has cut or poverty has severed, but which nature
has distinguished, if any like to use this word. For That which
is First is also above nature. Of these the former is creative,
and originating, and unchangeable; but the other is created, and
subject and changing; or to speak yet more plainly, the one is
above time, and the other subject to time. The Former is called
God, and subsists in Three Greatest, namely, the Cause, the
Creator, and the Perfecter; I mean the Father, the Son, and the
Holy Ghost, who are neither so separated from one another as to
be divided in nature, nor so contracted as to be circumscribed by
a single person; the one alternative being that of the Arian
madness, the other that of the Sabellian heresy; but they are on
the one hand more single than what is altogether divided, and on
the other more abundant than what is altogether singular. The
other division is with us, and is called Creation, though one may
be exalted above another according to the proportion of their
nearness to God.
IX. This being so, if any be on the Lord's
side let him come with us, and let us adore the One Godhead in
the Three; not ascribing any name of humiliation to the
unapproachable Glory, but having the exaltations of the Triune
God continually in our mouth. For since we cannot properly
describe even the greatness of Its Nature, on account of Its
infinity and undefinableness, how can we assert of It
humiliation? But if any one be estranged from God, and therefore
divideth the One Supreme Substance into an inequality of Natures,
it were marvellous if such an one were not cut in sunder by the
sword, and his portion appointed with the unbelievers, reaping
any evil fruit of his evil thought both now and
hereafter.
X. What must we say of the Father, Whom by
common consent all who have been preoccupied with natural
conceptions share, although He hath endured the beginnings of
dishonour, having been first divided by ancient innovation into
the Good and the Creator. And of the Son and of the Holy Ghost,
see how simply and concisely we shall discourse. If any one could
say of Either that He was mutable or subject to change; or that
either in time, or place, or power, or energy He could be
measured; or that He was not naturally good, or not Self-moved,
or not a free agent, or a Minister, or a Hymnsinger; or that He
feared, or was a recipient of freedom, or was not counted with
God; let him prove this and we will acquiesce, and will be
glorified by the Majesty of our Fellow Servants, though we lose
our God. But if all that the Father has belongs likewise to the
Son, except Causality; and all that is the Son's belongs also to
the Spirit, except His Sonship, and whatsoever is spoken of Him
as to Incarnation for me a man, and for my salvation, that,
taking of mine, He may impart His own by this new commingling;
then cease your babbling, though so late, O ye sophists of vain
talk that falls at once to the ground; for why will ye die O
House of Israel?-if I may mourn for you in the words of
Scripture.
XI. For my part I revere also the Titles of
the Word, which are so many, and so high and great, which even
the demons respect. And I revere also the Equal Rank of the Holy
Ghost; and I fear the threat pronounced against those who
blaspheme Him. And blasphemy is not the reckoning Him God, but
the severing Him from the Godhead. And here you must remark that
That which is blasphemed is Lord, and That which is avenged is
the Holy Ghost, evidently as Lord. I cannot bear to be
unenlightened after my Enlightenment, by marking with a different
stamp any of the Three into Whom I was baptized; and thus to be
indeed buried in the water, and initiated not into Regeneration,
but into death.
XII. I dare to utter something, O Trinity;
and may pardon be granted to my folly, for the risk is to my
soul. I too am an Image of God, of the Heavenly Glory, though I
be placed on earth. I cannot believe that I am saved by one who
is my equal. If the Holy Ghost is not God, let Him first be made
God, and then let Him deify me His equal. But now what deceit
this is on the part of grace, or rather of the givers of grace,
to believe in God and to come away godless; by one set of
questions and confessions leading to another set of conclusions.
Alas for this fair fame, if after the Laver I am blackened, if I
am to see those who are not yet cleansed brighter than myself; if
I am cheated by the heresy of my Baptizer; if I seek for the
stronger Spirit and find Him not. Give me a second Font before
you think evil of the first. Why do you grudge me a complete
regeneration? Why do you make me, who am the Temple of the Holy
Ghost as of God, the habitation of a creature? Why do you honour
part of what belongs to me, and dishonour part, judging falsely
of the Godhead, to cut me off from the Gift, or rather to cut me
in two by the gift? Either honour the Whole, or dishonour the
Whole, O new Theologian, that, if you are wicked, you may at any
rate be consistent with yourself, and not judge unequally of an
equal nature.
XIII. To sum up my discourse:-Glorify Him
with the Cherubim, who unite the Three Holies into One Lord, and
so far indicate the Primal Substance as their wings open to the
diligent. With David be enlightened, who said to the Light, In
Thy Light shall we see Light, that is, in the Spirit we shall see
the Son; and what can be of further reaching ray? With John
thunder, sounding forth nothing that is low or earthly concerning
God, but what is high and heavenly, Who is in the beginning, and
is with God, and is God the Word, and true God of the true
Father, and not a good fellow-servant honoured only with the
title of Son; and the Other Comforter (other, that is, from the
Speaker, Who was the Word of God). And when you read, I and the
Father are One, keep before your eyes the Unity of Substance; but
when you see, "We will come to him, and make Our abode with him,"
remember the distinction of Persons; and when you see the Names,
Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, think of the Three
Personalities.
XIV. With Luke be inspired as you study the
Acts of the Apostles. Why do you range yourself with Ananias and
Sapphira, those vain embezzlers (if indeed the theft of one's own
property be a vain thing) and that by appropriating, not silver
nor any other cheap and worthless thing, like a wedge of gold, or
a didrachma, as did of old a rapacious soldier; but stealing the
Godhead Itself, and lying, not to men but to God, as you have
heard. What? Will you not reverence even the authority of the
Spirit Who breathes upon whom, and when, and as He wills? He
comes upon Cornelius and his companions before Baptism, to others
after Baptism, by the hands of the Apostles; so that from both
sides, both from the fact that He comes in the guise of a Master
and not of a Servant, and from the fact of His being sought to
make perfect, the Godhead of the Spirit is testified.
XV. Speak of God with Paul, who was caught
up to the third Heaven, and who sometimes counts up the Three
Persons, and that in varied order, not keeping the same order,
but reckoning one and the same Person now first, now second, now
third; and for what purpose? Why, to shew the equality of the
Nature. And sometimes he mentions Three, sometimes Two or One,
became That which is not mentioned is included. And sometimes he
attributes the operation of God to the Spirit, as in no respect
different from Him, and sometimes instead of the Spirit he brings
in Christ; and at times he separates the Persons saying, "One
God, of whom are all things, and we in Him; and one Lord Jesus
Christ, by whom are all things, and we by Him;" at other times he
brings together the one Godhead, "For of Him and through Him and
in Him are all things;" that is, through the Holy Ghost, as is
shown by many places in Scripture. To Him be glory for ever and
ever. Amen.
Oration XXXVII
On the Words of the Gospel, "When Jesus Had Finished These
Sayings," Etc.-S. Matt. xix. 1
I. Jesus Who Chose The Fishermen, Himself
also useth a net, and changeth place for place. Why? Not only
that He may gain more of those who love God by His visitation;
but also, as it seems to me, that He may hallow more places. To
the Jews He becomes as a Jew that He may gain the Jews; to them
that are under the Law as under the Law, that He may redeem them
that are under the Law; to the weak as weak, that He may save the
weak. He is made all things to all men that He may gain all. Why
do I say, All things to all men? For even that which Paul could
not endure to say of himself I find that the Saviour suffered.
For He is made not only a Jew, and not only doth He take to
Himself all monstrous and vile names, but even that which is most
monstrous of all, even very sin and very curse; not that He is
such, but He is called so. For how can He be sin, Who setteth us
free from sin; and how can He be a curse, Who redeemeth us from
the curse of the Law? But it is in order that He may carry His
display of humility even to this extent, and form us to that
humility which is the producer of exaltation. As I said then, He
is made a Fisherman; He condescendeth to all; He casteth the net;
He endureth all things, that He may draw up the fish from the
depths, that is, Man who is swimming in the unsettled and bitter
waves of life.
II. Therefore now also, when He had
finished these sayings He departed from Galilee and came into the
coasts of Judea beyond Jordan; He dwelleth well in Galilee, in
order that the people which sat in darkness may see great Light.
He removeth to Judea in order that He may persuade people to rise
up from the Letter and to follow the Spirit. He teacheth, now on
a mountain; now He discourseth on a plain; now He passeth over
into a ship; now He rebuketh the surges. And perhaps He goes to
sleep, in order that He may bless sleep also; perhaps He is tired
that He may hallow weariness also; perhaps He weeps that He may
make tears blessed. He removeth from place to place, Who is not
contained in any place; the timeless, the bodiless, the
uncircumscript, the same Who was and is; Who was both above time,
and came under time, and was invisible and is seen. He was in the
beginning and was with God, and was God. The word Was occurs the
third time to be confirmed by number. What He was He laid aside;
what He was not He assumed; not that He became two, but He
deigned to be One made out of the two. For both are God, that
which assumed, and that which was assumed; two Natures meeting in
One, not two Sons (let us not give a false account of the
blending). He who is such and so great-but what has befallen me?
I have fallen into human language. For how can So Great be said
of the Absolute, and how can That which is without quantity be
called Such? But pardon the word, for I am speaking of the
greatest things with a limited instrument. And That great and
long-suffering and formless and bodiless Nature will endure this,
namely, my words as if of a body, and weaker than the truth. For
if He condescended to Flesh, He will also endure such
language.
III. And great multitudes followed Him, and
He healed them there, where the multitude was greater. If He had
abode upon His own eminence, if He had not condescended to
infirmity, if He had remained what He was, keeping Himself
unapproachable and incomprehensible, a few perhaps would have
followed Him-perhaps not even a few, possibly only Moses-and He
only so far as to see with difficulty the Back Parts of God. For
He penetrated the cloud, either being placed outside the weight
of the body or being withdrawn from his senses; for how could he
have gazed upon the subtlety, or the incorporeity, or I know not
how one should call it, of God, being incorporate and using
material eyes? But inasmuch as He strips Himself for us, inasmuch
as He comes down (and speak of an exinanition, as it were, a
laying aside and a diminution of His glory), He becomes by this
comprehensible.
IV. And pardon me meanwhile that I again
suffer a human affection. I am filled with indignation and grief
for my Christ (and would that you might sympathize with me) when
I see my Christ dishonoured on this account on which He most
merited honour. Is He on this account to be dishonoured, tell me,
that for you He was humble? Is He therefore a Creature, because
He careth for the creature? Is He therefore subject to time,
because He watches over those who are subject to time? Nay, He
beareth all things, He endureth all things. And what marvel? He
put up with blows, He bore spittings, He tasted gall for my
taste. And even now He bears to be stoned, not only by those who
deal despitefully with Him, but also by ourselves who seem to
reverence Him. For to use corporeal names when discoursing of the
incorporeal is perhaps the part of those who deal despitefully
and stone Him; but pardon, I say again to our infirmity, for I do
not willingly stone Him; but having no other words to use, we use
what we have. Thou art called the Word, and Thou art above Word;
Thou art above Light, yet art named Light; Thou art called Fire
not as perceptible to sense, but because Thou purgest light and
worthless matter; a Sword, because Thou severest the worse from
the better; a Fan, because Thou purgest the threshing-floor, and
blowest away all that is light and windy, and layest up in the
garner above all that is weighty and full; an Axe, because Thou
cuttest down the worthless fig-tree, after long patience, because
Thou cuttest away the roots of wickedness; the Door, because Thou
bringest in; the Way, because we go straight; the Sheep, because
Thou art the Sacrifice; the High Priest, because Thou offerest
the Body the Son, because Thou art of the Father. Again I stir
men's tongues; again some men rave against Christ, or rather
against me, who have been deemed worthy to be a herald of the
Word. I am like John, The Voice of one crying in the wilderness-a
wilderness that once was dry, but now is only too
populous.
V. But, as I was saying, to return to my
argument; for this reason great multitudes followed Him, because
He condescended to our infirmities. What next? The Pharisees
also, it says, came unto Him, tempting Him, and saying unto Him,
is it lawful for a man to put away his wife for every cause?
Again the Pharisees tempt Him; again they who read the Law do not
know the Law; again they who are expounders of the Law need
others to teach them. It was not enough that Sadducees should
tempt Him concerning the Resurrection, and Lawyers question Him
about perfection, and the Herodians about the poll-tax, and
others about authority; but some one must also ask about Marriage
at Him who cannot be tempted, the Creator of wedlock, Him who
from the First Cause made this whole race of mankind. And He
answered and said unto them, Have ye not read that He which made
them at the beginning made them male and female? He knoweth how
to solve some of their questions and to bridle others. When He is
asked, By what authority doest thou these things? He Himself,
because of the utter ignorance of those who asked Him, replies
with another question; The baptism of John, was it from Heaven or
of men? He on both sides entangles His questioners, so that we
also are able, following the example of Christ, sometimes to
check those who argue with us over-officiously, and with still
more absurd questions to solve the absurdity of their questions.
For we too are wise in vanity at times, if I may boast of the
things of folly. But when He sees a question that calls for
reasoning, then He does not deem His questioners unworthy of
prudent answers.
VI. The question which you have put seems
to me to do honour to chastity, and to demand a kind reply.
Chastity, in respect of which I see that the majority of men are
ill-disposed, and that their laws are unequal and irregular. For
what was the reason why they restrained the woman, but indulged
the man, and that a woman who practises evil against her
husband's bed is an adulteress, and the penalties of the law for
this are very severe; but if the husband commits fornication
against his wife, he has no account to give? I do not accept this
legislation; I do not approve this custom. They who made the Law
were men, and therefore their legislation is hard on women, since
they have placed children also under the authority of their
fathers, while leaving the weaker sex uncared for. God doth not
so; but saith Honour thy father and thy mother, which is the
first commandment with promise; that it may be well with thee;
and, He that curseth father or mother, let him die the death.
Similarly He gave honour to good and punishment to evil. And, The
blessing of a father strengtheneth the houses of children, but
the curse of a mother uprooteth the foundations. See the equality
of the legislation. There is one Maker of man and woman; one debt
is owed by children to both their parents.
VII. How then dost thou demand Chastity,
while thou dost not thyself observe it? How dost thou demand that
which thou dost not give? How, though thou art equally a body,
dost thou legislate unequally? If thou enquire into the worse-The
Woman Sinned, and so did Adam. The serpent deceived them both;
and one was not found to be the stronger and the other the
weaker. But dost thou consider the better? Christ saves both by
His Passion. Was He made flesh for the Man? So He was also for
the woman. Did He die for the Man? The Woman also is saved by His
death. He is called of the seed of David; and so perhaps you
think the Man is honoured; but He is born of a Virgin, and this
is on the Woman's side. They two, He says, shall be one Flesh; so
let the one flesh have equal honour. And Paul legislates for
chastity by His example. How, and in what way? This Sacrament is
great, he says, But I speak concerning Christ and the Church. It
is well for the wife to reverence Christ through her husband: and
it is well for the husband not to dishonor the Church through his
wife. Let the wife, he says, see that she reverence her husband,
for so she does Christ; but also he bids the husband cherish his
wife, for so Christ does the Church. Let us, then, give further
consideration to this saying.
VIII. Churn milk and it will be butter;
examine this and perhaps you may find something more nourishing
in it. For I think that the Word here seems to deprecate second
marriage. For, if there were two Christs, there may be two
husbands or two wives; but if Christ is One, one Head of the
Church, let there be also one flesh, and let a second be
rejected; and if it hinder the second what is to be said for a
third? The first is law, the second is indulgence, the third is
transgression, and anything beyond this is swinish, such as has
not even many examples of its wickedness. Now the Law grants
divorce for every cause; but Christ not for every cause; but He
allows only separation from the whore; and in all other things He
commands patience. He allows to put away the fornicatress,
because she corrupts the offspring; but in all other matters let
us be patient and endure; or rather be ye enduring and patient,
as many as have received the yoke of matrimony. If you see lines
or marks upon her, take away her ornaments; if a hasty tongue,
restrain it; if a meretricious laugh, make it modest; if
immoderate expenditure or drink, reduce it; if unseasonable going
out, shackle it; if a lofty eye, chastise it. It is uncertain
which is in danger, the separator or the separated. Let thy
fountain of water, it says, be only thine own, and let no
stranger share it with thee; and, let the colt of thy favours and
the stag of thy love company with thee; do thou then take care
not to be a strange river, nor to please others better than thine
own wife. But if thou be carried elsewhere, then thou makest a
law of lewdness for thy partner also. Thus saith the
Saviour.
IX. But what of the Pharisees? To them this
word seems harsh. Yes, for they are also displeased at other
noble words-both the older Pharisees, and the Pharisees of the
present day. For it is not only race, but disposition also that
makes a Pharisee. Thus also I reckon as an Assyrian or an
Egyptian him who is ranged among these by his character. What
then say the Pharisees? If the case of the man be so with his
wife, it is not good to marry. Is it only now, O Pharisee, that
thou understandest this, It is not good to marry? Didst thou not
know it before when thou sawest widowhoods, and orphanhoods, and
untimely deaths, and mourning succeeding to shouting, and
funerals coming upon weddings, and childlessness, and all the
comedy or tragedy that is connected with this? Either is most
appropriate language. It is good to marry; I too admit it, for
marriage is honourable in all, and the bed undefiled. It is good
for the temperate, not for those who are insatiable, and who
desire to give more than due honour to the flesh. When marriage
is only marriage and conjunction and the desire for a succession
of children, marriage is honourable, for it brings into the world
more to please God. But when it kindles matter, and surrounds us
with thorns, and as it were discovers the way of vice, then I too
say, It is not good to marry.
X. Marriage is honourable; but I cannot say
that it is more lofty than virginity; for virginity were no great
thing if it were not better than a good thing. Do not however be
angry, ye women that are subject to the yoke. We must obey God
rather than man. But be ye bound together, both virgins and
wives, and be one in the Lord, and each others' adornment. There
would be no celibate if there were no marriage. For whence would
the virgin have passed into this life? Marriage would not have
been venerable unless it had borne virgin fruit to God and to
life. Honour thou also thy mother, of whom thou wast born. Honour
thou also her who is of a mother and is a mother. A mother she is
not, but a Bride of Christ she is. The visible beauty is not
hidden, but that which is unseen is visible to God. All the glory
of the King's Daughter is within, clothed with golden fringes,
embroidered whether by actions or by contemplation. And she who
is under the yoke, let her also in some degree be Christ's; and
the virgin altogether Christ's. Let the one be not entirely
chained to the world, and let the other not belong to the world
at all. For that which is a part to the yoked, is to the virgin
all in all. Hast thou chosen the life of Angels? Art thou ranked
among the unyoked? Sink not down to the flesh; sink not down to
matter; be not wedded to matter, while otherwise thou remainest
unwedded. A lascivious eye guardeth not virginity; a meretricious
tongue mingles with the Evil One; feet that walk disorderly
accuse of disease or danger. Let the mind also be virgin; let it
not rove about; let it not wander; let it not carry in itself
forms of evil things (for the form is a part of harlotry); let it
not make idols in its soul of hateful things.
XI. But He said unto them, All men cannot
receive this saying, save they to whom it is given. Do you see
the sublimity of the matter? It is found to be nearly
incomprehensible. For surely it is more than carnal that that
which is born of flesh should not beget to the flesh. Surely it
is Angelic that she who is bound to flesh should live not
according to flesh, but be loftier than her nature. The flesh
bound her to the world, but reason led her up to God. The flesh
weighed her down, but reason gave her wings; the flesh bound her,
but desire loosed her. With thy whole soul, O Virgin, be intent
upon God (I give this same injunction to men and to women); and
do not take the same view in other respects of what is honourable
as the mass of men do; of family, of wealth, of throne, of
dynasty, of that beauty which shews itself in complexion and
composition of members, the plaything of time and disease. If
thou hast poured out upon God the whole of thy love; if thou hast
not two objects of desire, both the passing and the abiding, both
the visible and the invisible, then thou hast been so pierced by
the arrow of election, and hast so learned the beauty of the
Bridegroom, that thou too canst say with the bridal drama and
song, thou art sweetness and altogether loveliness.
XII. You see how streams confined in lead
pipes, through being much compressed and carried to one point,
often so far depart from the nature of water that that which is
pushed from behind will often flow constantly upwards. So if thou
confine thy desire, and be wholly joined to God, thou wilt not
fall downward; thou wilt not be dissipated; thou wilt remain
entirely Christ's, until thou see Christ thy Bridegroom. Keep
thyself unapproachable, both in word and work and life, and
thought and action. From all sides the Evil One interferes with
thee; he spies thee everywhere, where he may strike, where wound
thee; let him not find anything bared and ready to his stroke.
The purer he sees thee, the more he strives to stain thee, for
the stains on a shining garment are more conspicuous. Let not eye
draw eye, nor laughter, nor familiarity night, lest night bring
destruction. For that which is gradually drawn away and stolen,
works a mischief which is unperceived at the time, but yet
attains to the consummation of wickedness.
XIII. All men, He saith, cannot receive
this saying, but they to whom it is given. When you hear this, It
is given, do not understand it in a heretical fashion, and bring
in differences of nature, the earthly and the spiritual and the
mixed. For there are people so evilly disposed as to think that
some men are of an utterly ruined nature, and some of a nature
which is saved, and that others are of such a disposition as
their will may lead them to, either to the better, or to the
worse. For that men may have a certain aptitude, one more,
another less, I too admit; but not that this aptitude alone
suffices for perfection, but that it is reason which calls this
out, that nature may proceed to action, just as fire is produced
when a flint is struck with iron. When you hear To whom it is
given, add, And it is given to those who are called and to those
who incline that way. For when you hear, Not of him that willeth,
nor of him that runneth, but of God that sheweth mercy, I counsel
you to think the same. For since there are some who are so proud
of their successes that they attribute all to themselves and
nothing to Him that made them and gave them wisdom and supplied
them with good; such are taught by this word that even to wish
well needs help from God; or rather that even to choose what is
right is divine and a gift of the mercy of God. For it is
necessary both that we should be our own masters and also that
our salvation should be of God. This is why He saith not of him
that willeth; that is, not of him that willeth only, nor of him
that runneth only, but also of God. That sheweth mercy. Next;
since to will also is from God, he has attributed the whole to
God with reason. However much you may run, however much you may
wrestle, yet you need one to give the crown. Except the Lord
build the house, they laboured in vain that built it: Except the
Lord keep the city, in vain they watched that keep it. I know, He
says, that the race is not to the swift, nor the battle to the
strong, nor the victory to the fighters, nor the harbours to the
good sailors; but to God it belongs both to work victory, and to
bring the barque safe to port.
XIV. In another place it is also said and
understood, and perhaps it is necessary that I should add it as
follows to what has already been said, in order that I may impart
to you also my wealth. The Mother of the Sons of Zebedee, in an
impulse of parental affection, asked a thing in ignorance of the
measure of what she was asking, but pardonably, through the
excess of her love and of the kindness due to her children. For
there is nothing more affectionate than a Mother,-and I speak of
this that I may lay down a law for honouring Mothers. Their
mother, then, asked Jesus that they might sit, the one on His
right hand, the other on his left. But what saith the Saviour? He
first asks if they can drink the Cup Which He Himself was about
to drink; and when this was professed, and the Saviour accepted
the profession (for He knew that they were being perfected by the
same, or rather that they would be perfected thereby); what saith
He? "They shall drink the cup; but to sit on My right hand and on
My left-it is not Mine, He saith, to give this, but to whom it
hath been given." Is then the ruling mind nothing? Nothing the
labour? Nothing the reasoning? Nothing the philosophy? Nothing
the fasting? Nothing the vigils, the sleeping on the ground, the
shedding floods of tears? Is it for nothing of these, but in
accordance with some election by lot, that a Jeremias is
sanctified, and others are estranged from the womb?
XV. I fear lest some monstrous reasoning
may come in, as of the soul having lived elsewhere, and then
having been bound to this body, and that it is from that other
life that some receive the gift of prophecy, and others are
condemned, namely, those who lived badly. But since such a
conception is too absurd, and contrary to the traditions of the
Church (others if they like may play with such doctrines, but it
is unsafe for us to play with them); we must in this place too
add to the words "To whom it hath been given," this, "who are
worthy;" who have not only received this character from the
Father, but have given it to themselves.
XVI. For there are eunuchs which were made
eunuchs from their mother's womb, etc. I should very much like to
be able to say something bold about eunuchs. Be not proud, ye who
are eunuchs by nature. For, in point of self-restraint, this is
perhaps unwilling. For it has not come to the test, nor has your
self-restraint been proved by trial. For the good which is by
nature is not a subject of merit; that which is the result of
purpose is laudable. What merit has fire for burning, for it is
its nature to burn? What merit has water for falling, a property
given to it by its Maker? What thanks does the snow get for its
coldness, or the sun for its shining?-It shines even if it does
not wish. Claim merit if you please by willing the better things.
You will claim it if, being carnal, you make yourself spiritual;
if, while drawn down by the leaden flesh, you receive wings from
reason; if though lowly born, you are found to be heavenly; if
while chained down to the flesh, you shew yourself superior to
the flesh.
XVII. Since then, natural chastity is not
meritorious, I demand something else from the eunuchs. Do not go
a whoring in respect of the Godhead. Having been wedded to
Christ, do not dishonour Christ. Being perfected by the spirit,
do not make the Spirit your own equal. If I yet pleased men, says
Paul, I should not be the servant of Christ. If I worshipped a
creature, I should not be called a Christian. For why is
Christianity precious? Is it not that Christ is God, unless my
mingling with Him in love is a mere human passion? And yet I
honour Peter, but I am not called a Petrine; and Paul, but have
never been called a Pauline. I cannot allow myself to be named
after a man, who am born of God. So then, if it is because you
believe Him to be God that you are called a Christian, may you
ever be so called, and may you remain in both the name and the
thing; but if you are called from Christ only because you have an
affection for Him, you attribute no more to him than other names
which are given from some practice or fact.
XVIII. Consider those men who are devoted
to horse racing. They are named after the colours and the sides
on which they have placed themselves. You know the names without
my mentioning them. If it is thus that you have got the name of
Christian, the mere title is a very small thing even though you
pride yourself upon it. But if it is because you believe Him to
be God, shew your faith by your works. If the Son is a creature,
even now also you are worshipping the creature instead of the
Creator. If the Holy Ghost is a creature, you are baptized in
vain, and are only sound on two sides, or rather not even on
them; but on one you are altogether in danger. Imagine the
Trinity to be a single pearl, alike on all sides and equally
glistening. If any part of the pearl be injured; the whole beauty
of the stone is gone. So when you dishonour the Son in order to
honour the Father, He does not accept your honour. The Father
doth not glory in the dishonour of the Son. If a wise Son maketh
a glad Father, how much more doth the honour of the Son become
that of the Father! And if you also accept this saying, My Son,
glory not in the dishonour of thy Father, similarly the Father
doth not glory in the Son's dishonour. If you dishonour the Holy
Ghost, the Son receiveth not your honour. For though He be not of
the Father in the same way as the Son, yet He is of the same
Father. Either honour the whole or dishonour the whole, so as to
have a consistent mind. I cannot accept your half piety. I would
have you altogether pious, but in the way that I desire. Pardon
my affection: I am grieved even for those who hate me. You were
one of my members, even though you are now cut off: perhaps you
will again become a member; and therefore I speak kindly. Thus
much for the sake of the Eunuchs, that they may be chaste in
respect of the Godhead.
XIX. For it is not only bodily sin which is
called fornication and adultery, but any sin you have committed,
and especially transgression against that which is divine.
Perhaps you ask how we can prove this:-They went a whoring, it
says, with their own inventions. Do you see an impudent act of
fornication? And again, They committed adultery in the wood. See
you a kind of adulterous religion? Do not then commit spiritual
adultery, while keeping your bodies chaste. Do not shew that it
is unwillingly you are chaste in body, by not being chaste where
you can commit fornication. Why have you done your impiety? Why
are you hurried to vice, so that it is all one to call a man a
Eunuch or a villain? Place yourselves on the side of men, and,
even though so late, have some manly thoughts. Avoid the women's
apartments; do not let the disgrace of proclamation be added to
the disgrace of the name. Would you have us persevere a little
longer in this discourse, or are you tired with what we have
said? Nay, by what follows let even the eunuchs be honoured. For
the word is one of praise.
XX. There are, He says, some eunuchs which
were so born from their mother's womb; and there are some eunuchs
which were made eunuchs of men; and there be eunuchs which have
made themselves eunuchs for the Kingdom of Heaven's sake. He that
is able to receive it, let him receive it. I think that the
discourse would sever itself from the body, and represent higher
things by bodily figures; for to stop the meaning at bodily
eunuchs would be small and very weak, and unworthy of the Word;
and we must understand in addition something worthy of the
Spirit. Some, then, seem by nature to incline to good. And when I
speak of nature, I am not slighting free will, but supposing
both-an aptitude for good, and that which brings the natural
aptitude to effect. And there are others whom reason cleanses, by
cutting them off from the passions. These I imagine to be meant
by those whom men have made Eunuchs, when the word of teaching
distinguishing the better from the worse and rejecting the one
and commanding the other (like the verse, Depart from evil and do
good), works spiritual chastity. This sort of making eunuchs I
approve; and I highly praise both teachers and taught, that the
one have nobly effected, and the other still more nobly endured,
the cutting off.
XXI. And there be eunuchs which have made
themselves eunuchs for the Kingdom of Heaven's sake. Others, too,
who have not met with teachers, have been laudable teachers to
themselves. No father nor mother, no Priest or Bishop, nor any of
those commissioned to teach, taught you your duty; but by moving
reason in yourself and by kindling the spark of good by your free
will, you made yourself a eunuch, and acquired such a habit of
virtue that impulse to vice became almost an impossibility to
you. Therefore I praise this kind of Eunuch-making also, and
perhaps even above the others. He that is able to receive it let
him receive it. Choose which part you will; either follow the
Teacher or be your own teacher. One thing alone is shameful-that
the passions be not extirpated. It matters not how they are
extirpated. The teacher is God's creature; and you also have the
same origin; and whether the teacher grasp this grace, or the
good be your own-it is equally good.
XXII. Only let us cut ourselves off from
passion, lest any root of bitterness springing up trouble us;
only let us follow the image; only let us reverence our
Archetype. Cut off the bodily passions; cut off also the
spiritual. For by how much the soul is more precious than the
body, by so much more precious is it to cleanse the soul than the
body. And if cleansing of the body be a praiseworthy act, see, I
pray you, how much greater and higher is that of the soul. Cut
away the Arian impiety; cut away the false opinion of Sabellius;
do not join more than is right, or wrongly sever; do not either
confuse the Three Persons into One, or make Three diversities of
Nature. The One is praiseworthy if rightly understood; and the
Three when rightly divided, when the division is of Persons, not
of Godhead.
XXIII. I enact this for Laymen too, and I
enjoin it also upon all Priests, and upon those commissioned to
rule. Come to the aid of the Word, all of you to whom God has
given power to aid. It is a great thing to check murder, to
punish adultery, to chastise theft; much more to establish piety
by law, and to bestow sound doctrine. My word will not be able to
do as much in fighting for the Holy Trinity as your Edict, if you
will bridle the ill disposed, if you will help the persecuted, if
you will check the slayers, and prevent people from being slain.
I am speaking not merely of bodily but of spiritual slaughter.
For all sin is the death of the soul. Here let my discourse
end.
XXIV. But it remains that I speak a prayer
for those who are assembled. Husbands alike and wives, rulers and
ruled, old men, and young men, and maidens, every sort of age,
bear ye every loss whether of money or of body, but one thing
alone do not endure-to lose the Godhead. I adore the Father, I
adore the Son, I adore the Holy Ghost; or rather We adore them;
I, who am speaking, before all and after all and with all, in the
same Christ our Lord, to whom be the glory and the might for
ever. Amen.
Oration XXXVIII
On the Theophany, or Birthday of Christ
I. Christ is born, glorify ye Him. Christ
from heaven, go ye out to meet Him. Christ on earth; be ye
exalted. Sing unto the Lord all the whole earth; and that I may
join both in one word, Let the heavens rejoice, and let the earth
be glad, for Him Who is of heaven and then of earth. Christ in
the flesh, rejoice with trembling and with joy; with trembling
because of your sins, with joy because of your hope. Christ of a
Virgin; O ye Matrons live as Virgins, that ye may be Mothers of
Christ. Who doth not worship Him That is from the beginning? Who
doth not glorify Him That is the Last?
II. Again the darkness is past; again Light
is made; again Egypt is punished with darkness; again Israel is
enlightened by a pillar. The people that sat in the darkness of
ignorance, let it see the Great Light of full knowledge. Old
things are passed away, behold all things are become new. The
letter gives way, the Spirit comes to the front. The shadows flee
away, the Truth comes in upon them. Melchisedec is concluded. He
that was without Mother becomes without Father (without Mother of
His former state, without Father of His second). The laws of
nature are upset; the world above must be filled. Christ commands
it, let us not set ourselves against Him. O clap your hands
together all ye people, because unto us a Child is born, and a
Son given unto us, Whose Government is upon His shoulder (for
with the Cross it is raised up), and His Name is called The Angel
of the Great Counsel of the Father. Let John cry, Prepare ye the
way of the Lord: I too will cry the power of this Day. He Who is
not carnal is Incarnate; the Son of God becomes the Son of Man,
Jesus Christ the Same yesterday, and to-day, and for ever. Let
the Jews be offended, let the Greeks deride; let heretics talk
till their tongues ache. Then shall they believe, when they see
Him ascending up into heaven; and if not then, yet when they see
Him coming out of heaven and sitting as Judge.
III. Of these on a future occasion; for the
present the Festival is the Theophany or Birth-day, for it is
called both, two titles being given to the one thing. For God was
manifested to man by birth. On the one hand Being, and eternally
Being, of the Eternal Being, above cause and word, for there was
no word before The Word; and on the other hand for our sakes also
Becoming, that He Who gives us our being might also give us our
Well-being, or rather might restore us by His Incarnation, when
we had by wickedness fallen from wellbeing. The name Theophany is
given to it in reference to the Manifestation, and that of
Birthday in respect of His Birth.
IV. This is our present Festival; it is
this which we are celebrating to-day, the Coming of God to Man,
that we might go forth, or rather (for this is the more proper
expression) that we might go back to God-that putting off the old
man, we might put on the New; and that as we died in Adam, so we
might live in Christ, being born with Christ and crucified with
Him and buried with Him and rising with Him. For I must undergo
the beautiful conversion, and as the painful succeeded the more
blissful, so must the more blissful come out of the painful. For
where sin abounded Grace did much more abound; and if a taste
condemned us, how much more doth the Passion of Christ justify
us? Therefore let us keep the Feast, not after the manner of a
heathen festival, but after a godly sort; not after the way of
the world, but in a fashion above the world; not as our own but
as belonging to Him Who is ours, or rather as our Master's; not
as of weakness, but as of healing; not as of creation, but of
re-creation.
V. And how shall this be? Let us not adorn
our porches, nor arrange dances, nor decorate the streets; let us
not feast the eye, nor enchant the ear with music, nor enervate
the nostrils with perfume, nor prostitute the taste, nor indulge
the touch, those roads that are so prone to evil and entrances
for sin; let us not be effeminate in clothing soft and flowing,
whose beauty consists in its uselessness, nor with the glittering
of gems or the sheen of gold or the tricks of colour, belying the
beauty of nature, and invented to do despite unto the image of
God; Not in rioting and drunkenness, with which are mingled, I
know well, chambering and wantonness, since the lessons which
evil teachers give are evil; or rather the harvests of worthless
seeds are worthless. Let us not set up high beds of leaves,
making tabernacles for the belly of what belongs to debauchery.
Let us not appraise the bouquet of wines, the kickshaws of cooks,
the great expense of unguents. Let not sea and land bring us as a
gift their precious dung, for it is thus that I have learnt to
estimate luxury; and let us not strive to outdo each other in
intemperance (for to my mind every superfluity is intemperance,
and all which is beyond absolute need),-and this while others are
hungry and in want, who are made of the same clay and in the same
manner.
VI. Let us leave all these to the Greeks
and to the pomps and festivals of the Greeks, who call by the
name of gods beings who rejoice in the reek of sacrifices, and
who consistently worship with their belly; evil inventors and
worshippers of evil demons. But we, the Object of whose adoration
is the Word, if we must in some way have luxury, let us seek it
in word, and in the Divine Law, and in histories; especially such
as are the origin of this Feast; that our luxury may be akin to
and not far removed from Him Who hath called us together. Or do
you desire (for to-day I am your entertainer) that I should set
before you, my good Guests, the story of these things as
abundantly and as nobly as I can, that ye may know how a
foreigner can feed the natives of the land, and a rustic the
people of the town, and one who cares not for luxury those who
delight in it, and one who is poor and homeless those who are
eminent for wealth?
We will begin from this point; and let me
ask of you who delight in such matters to cleanse your mind and
your ears and your thoughts, since our discourse is to be of God
and Divine; that when you depart, you may have had the enjoyment
of delights that really fade not away. And this same discourse
shall be at once both very full and very concise, that you may
neither be displeased at its deficiencies, nor find it unpleasant
through satiety.
VII. God always was, and always is, and
always will be. Or rather, God always Is. For Was and Will be are
fragments of our time, and of changeable nature, but He is
Eternal Being. And this is the Name that He gives to Himself when
giving the Oracle to Moses in the Mount. For in Himself He sums
up and contains all Being, having neither beginning in the past
nor end in the future; like some great Sea of Being, limitless
and unbounded, transcending all conception of time and nature,
only adumbrated by the mind, and that very dimly and scantily . .
. not by His Essentials, but by His Environment; one image being
got from one source and another from another, and combined into
some sort of presentation of the truth, which escapes us before
we have caught it, and takes to flight before we have conceived
it, blazing forth upon our Master-part, even when that is
cleansed, as the lightning flash which will not stay its course,
does upon our sight . . . in order as I conceive by that part of
it which we can comprehend to draw us to itself (for that which
is altogether incomprehensible is outside the bounds of hope, and
not within the compass of endeavour), and by that part of It
which we cannot comprehend to move our wonder, and as an object
of wonder to become more an object of desire, and being desired
to purify, and by purifying to make us like God; so that when we
have thus become like Himself, God may, to use a bold expression,
hold converse with us as Gods, being united to us, and that
perhaps to the same extent as He already knows those who are
known to Him. The Divine Nature then is boundless and hard to
understand; and all that we can comprehend of Him is His
boundlessness; even though one may conceive that because He is of
a simple nature He is therefore either wholly incomprehensible,
or perfectly comprehensible. For let us further enquire what is
implied by "is of a simple nature." For it is quite certain that
this simplicity is not itself its nature, just as composition is
not by itself the essence of compound beings.
VIII. And when Infinity is considered from
two points of view, beginning and end (for that which is beyond
these and not limited by them is Infinity), when the mind looks
to the depth above, not having where to stand, and leans upon
phenomena to form an idea of God, it calls the Infinite and
Unapproachable which it finds there by the name of Unoriginate.
And when it looks into the depths below, and at the future, it
calls Him Undying and Imperishable. And when it draws a
conclusion from the whole it calls Him Eternal (aionios). For
Eternity (haion) is neither time nor part of time; for it cannot
be measured. But what time, measured by the course of the sun, is
to us, that Eternity is to the Everlasting, namely, a sort of
time-like movement and interval co-extensive with their
existence. This, however, is all I must now say about God; for
the present is not a suitable time, as my present subject is not
the doctrine of God, but that of the Incarnation. But when I say
God, I mean Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. For Godhead is neither
diffused beyond these, so as to bring in a mob of gods; nor yet
is it bounded by a smaller compass than these, so as to condemn
us for a poverty-stricken conception of Deity; either Judaizing
to save the Monarchia, or falling into heathenism by the
multitude of our gods. For the evil on either side is the same,
though found in contrary directions. This then is the Holy of
Holies, which is hidden even from the Seraphim, and is glorified
with a thrice repeated Holy, meeting in one ascription of the
Title Lord and God, as one of our predecessors has most
beautifully and loftily pointed out.
IX. But since this movement of
self-contemplation alone could not satisfy Goodness, but Good
must be poured out and go forth beyond Itself to multiply the
objects of Its beneficence, for this was essential to the highest
Goodness, He first conceived the Heavenly and Angelic Powers. And
this conception was a work fulfilled by His Word, and perfected
by His Spirit. And so the secondary Splendours came into being,
as the Ministers of the Primary Splendour; whether we are to
conceive of them as intelligent Spirits, or as Fire of an
immaterial and incorruptible kind, or as some other nature
approaching this as near as may be. I should like to say that
they were incapable of movement in the direction of evil, and
susceptible only of the movement of good, as being about God, and
illumined with the first rays from God-for earthly beings have
but the second illumination; but I am obliged to stop short of
saying that, and to conceive and speak of them only as difficult
to move because of him, who for his splendour was called Lucifer,
but became and is called Darkness through his pride; and the
apostate hosts who are subject to him, creators of evil by their
revolt against good and our inciters.
X. Thus, then, and for these reasons, He
gave being to the world of thought, as far as I can reason upon
these matters, and estimate great things in my own poor language.
Then when His first creation was in good order, He conceives a
second world, material and visible; and this a system and
compound of earth and sky, and all that is in the midst of
them-an admirable creation indeed, when we look at the fair form
of every part, but yet more worthy of admiration when we consider
the harmony and the unison of the whole, and how each part fits
in with every other, in fair order, and all with the whole,
tending to the perfect completion of the world as a Unit. This
was to shew that He could call into being, not only a Nature akin
to Himself, but also one altogether alien to Himself. For akin to
Deity are those natures which are intellectual, and only to be
comprehended by mind; but all of which sense can take cognisance
are utterly alien to It; and of these the furthest removed are
all those which are entirely destitute of soul and of power of
motion. But perhaps some one of those who are too festive and
impetuous may say, What has all this to do with us? Spur your
horse to the goal. Talk to us about the Festival, and the reasons
for our being here to-day. Yes, this is what I am about to do,
although I have begun at a somewhat previous point, being
compelled to do so by love, and by the needs of my
argument.
XI. Mind, then, and sense, thus
distinguished from each other, had remained within their own
boundaries, and bore in themselves the magnificence of the
Creator-Word, silent praisers and thrilling heralds of His mighty
work. Not yet was there any mingling of both, nor any mixtures of
these opposites, tokens of a greater Wisdom and Generosity in the
creation of natures; nor as yet were the whole riches of Goodness
made known. Now the Creator-Word, determining to exhibit this,
and to produce a single living being out of both-the visible and
the invisible creations, I mean-fashions Man; and taking a body
from already existing matter, and placing in it a Breath taken
from Himself which the Word knew to be an intelligent soul and
the Image of God, as a sort of second world. He placed him, great
in littleness on the earth; a new Angel, a mingled worshipper,
fully initiated into the visible creation, but only partially
into the intellectual; King of all upon earth, but subject to the
King above; earthly and heavenly; temporal and yet immortal;
visible and yet intellectual; half-way between greatness and
lowliness; in one person combining spirit and flesh; spirit,
because of the favour bestowed on him; flesh, because of the
height to which he had been raised; the one that he might
continue to live and praise his Benefactor, the other that he
might suffer, and by suffering be put in remembrance, and
corrected if he became proud of his greatness. A living creature
trained here, and then moved elsewhere; and, to complete the
mystery, deified by its inclination to God. For to this, I think,
tends that Light of Truth which we here possess but in measure,
that we should both see and experience the Splendour of God,
which is worthy of Him Who made us, and will remake us again
after a loftier fashion.
XII. This being He placed in Paradise,
whatever the Paradise may have been, having honoured him with the
gift of Free Will (in order that God might belong to him as the
result of his choice, no less than to Him who had implanted the
seeds of it), to till the immortal plants, by which is meant
perhaps the Divine Conceptions, both the simpler and the more
perfect; naked in his simplicity and inartificial life, and
without any covering or screen; for it was fitting that he who
was from the beginning should be such. Also He gave him a Law, as
a material for his Free Will to act upon. This Law was a
Commandment as to what plants he might partake of, and which one
he might not touch. This latter was the Tree of Knowledge; not,
however, because it was evil from the beginning when planted; nor
was it forbidden because God grudged it to us . . . Let not the
enemies of God wag their tongues in that direction, or imitate
the Serpent . . . But it would have been good if partaken of at
the proper time, for the tree was, according to my theory,
Contemplation, upon which it is only safe for those who have
reached maturity of habit to enter; but which is not good for
those who are still somewhat simple and greedy in their habit;
just as solid food is not good for those who are yet tender, and
have need of milk. But when through the Devil's malice and the
woman's caprice, to which she succumbed as the more tender, and
which she brought to bear upon the man, as she was the more apt
to persuade, alas for my weakness! (for that of my first father
was mine), he forgot the Commandment which had been given to him;
he yielded to the baleful fruit; and for his sin he was banished,
at once from the Tree of Life, and from Paradise, and from God;
and put on the coats of skins . . . that is, perhaps, the coarser
flesh, both mortal and contradictory. This was the first thing
that he learnt-his own shame; and he hid himself from God. Yet
here too he makes a gain, namely death, and the cutting off of
sin, in order that evil may not be immortal. Thus his punishment
is changed into a mercy; for it is in mercy, I am persuaded, that
God inflicts punishment.
XIII. And having been first chastened by
many means (because his sins were many, whose root of evil sprang
up through divers causes and at sundry times), by word, by law,
by prophets, by benefits, by threats, by plagues, by waters, by
fires, by wars, by victories, by defeats, by signs in heaven and
signs in the air and in the earth and in the sea, by unexpected
changes of men, of cities, of nations (the object of which was
the destruction of wickedness), at last he needed a stronger
remedy, for his diseases were growing worse; mutual slaughters,
adulteries, perjuries, unnatural crimes, and that first and last
of all evils, idolatry and the transfer of worship from the
Creator to the Creatures. As these required a greater aid, so
also they obtained a greater. And that was that the Word of God
Himself-Who is before all worlds, the Invisible, the
Incomprehensible, the Bodiless, Beginning of Beginning, the Light
of Light, the Source of Life and Immortality, the Image of the
Archetypal Beauty, the immovable Seal, the unchangeable Image,
the Father's Definition and Word, came to His own Image, and took
on Him flesh for the sake of our flesh, and mingled Himself with
an intelligent soul for my soul's sake, purifying like by like;
and in all points except sin was made man. Conceived by the
Virgin, who first in body and soul was purified by the Holy Ghost
(for it was needful both that Childbearing should be honoured,
and that Virginity should receive a higher honour), He came forth
then as God with that which He had assumed, One Person in two
Natures, Flesh and Spirit, of which the latter deified the
former. O new commingling; O strange conjunction; the
Self-Existent comes into being, the Uncreate is created, That
which cannot be contained is contained, by the intervention of an
intellectual soul, mediating between the Deity and the corporeity
of the flesh. And He Who gives riches becomes poor, for He
assumes the poverty of my flesh, that I may assume the richness
of His Godhead. He that is full empties Himself, for He empties
Himself of His glory for a short while, that I may have a share
in His Fulness. What is the riches of His Goodness? What is this
mystery that is around me? I had a share in the image; I did not
keep it; He partakes of my flesh that He may both save the image
and make the flesh immortal. He communicates a second Communion
far more marvellous than the first, inasmuch as then He imparted
the better Nature, whereas now Himself partakes of the worse.
This is more godlike than the former action, this is loftier in
the eyes of all men of understanding.
XIV. To this what have those cavillers to
say, those bitter reasoners about Godhead, those detractors of
all that is praiseworthy, those darkeners of light, uncultured in
respect of wisdom, for whom Christ died in vain, those unthankful
creatures, the work of the Evil One? Do you turn this benefit
into a reproach to God? Wilt thou deem Him little on this
account, that He humbled Himself for thee; because the Good
Shepherd, He who lays down His life for His sheep, came to seek
for that which had strayed upon the mountains and the hills, on
which thou wast then sacrificing, and found the wanderer; and
having found it, took it upon His shoulders-on which He also took
the Wood of the Cross; and having taken it, brought it back to
the higher life; and having carried it back, numbered it amongst
those who had never strayed. Because He lighted a candle-His own
Flesh-and swept the house, cleansing the world from sin; and
sought the piece of money, the Royal Image that was covered up by
passions. And He calls together His Angel friends on the finding
of the coin, and makes them sharers in His joy, whom He had made
to share also the secret of the Incarnation? Because on the
candle of the Forerunner there follows the light that exceeds in
brightness; and to the Voice the Word succeeds; and to the
Bridegroom's friend the Bridegroom; to him that prepared for the
Lord a peculiar people, cleansing them by water in preparation
for the Spirit? Dost thou reproach God with all this? Dost thou
on this account deem Him lessened, because He girds Himself with
a towel and washes His disciples' feet, and shows that
humiliation is the best road to exaltation? Because for the soul
that was bent to the ground He humbles Himself, that He may raise
up with Himself the soul that was tottering to a fall under a
weight of sin? Why dost thou not also charge upon Him as a crime
the fact that He eats with Publicans and at Publicans' tables,
and that He makes disciples of Publicans, that He too may gain
somewhat . . . and what? . . . the salvation of sinners. If so,
we must blame the physician for stooping over sufferings, and
enduring evil odours that he may give health to the sick; or one
who as the Law commands bent down into a ditch to save a beast
that had fallen into it.
XV. He was sent, but as man, for He was of
a twofold Nature; for He was wearied, and hungered, and was
thirsty, and was in an agony, and shed tears, according to the
nature of a corporeal being. And if the expression be also used
of Him as God, the meaning is that the Father's good pleasure is
to be considered a Mission, for to this He refers all that
concerns Himself; both that He may honour the Eternal Principle,
and because He will not be taken to be an antagonistic God. And
whereas it is written both that He was betrayed, and also that He
gave Himself up and that He was raised up by the Father, and
taken up into heaven; and on the other hand, that He raised
Himself and went up; the former statement of each pair refers to
the good pleasure of the Father, the latter to His own Power. Are
you then to be allowed to dwell upon all that humiliates Him,
while passing over all that exalts Him, and to count on your side
the fact that He suffered, but to leave out of the account the
fact that it was of His own will? See what even now the Word has
to suffer. By one set He is honoured as God, but is confused with
the Father, by another He is dishonoured as mere flesh and
severed from the Godhead. With which of them will He be most
angry, or rather, which shall He forgive, those who injuriously
confound Him or those who divide Him? For the former ought to
have distinguished, and the latter to have united Him; the one in
number, the other in Godhead. Stumblest Thou at His flesh? So did
the Jews. Or dost thou call Him a Samaritan, and . . . I will not
say the rest. Dost thou disbelieve in His Godhead? This did not
even the demons, O thou who art less believing than demons and
more stupid than Jews. Those did perceive that the name of Son
implies equality of rank; these did know that He who drove them
out was God, for they were convinced of it by their own
experience. But you will admit neither the equality nor the
Godhead. It would have been better for you to have been either a
Jew or a demoniac (if I may utter an absurdity), than in
uncircumcision and in sound health to be so wicked and ungodly in
your attitude of mind.
XVI. A little later on you will see Jesus
submitting to be purified in the River Jordan for my
Purification, or rather, sanctifying the waters by His
Purification (for indeed He had no need of purification Who
taketh away the sin of the world) and the heavens cleft asunder,
and witness borne to him by the Spirit That is of one nature with
Him; you shall see Him tempted and conquering and served by
Angels, and healing every sickness and every disease, and giving
life to the dead (O that He would give life to you who are dead
because of your heresy), and driving out demons, sometimes
Himself, sometimes by his disciples; and feeding vast multitudes
with a few loaves; and walking dryshod upon seas; and being
betrayed and crucified, and crucifying with Himself my sin;
offered as a Lamb, and offering as a Priest; as a Man buried in
the grave, and as God rising again; and then ascending, and to
come again in His own glory. Why what a multitude of high
festivals there are in each of the mysteries of the Christ; all
of which have one completion, namely, my perfection and return to
the first condition of Adam.
XVII. Now then I pray you accept His
Conception, and leap before Him; if not like John from the womb,
yet like David, because of the resting of the Ark. Revere the
enrolment on account of which thou wast written in heaven, and
adore the Birth by which thou wast loosed from the chains of thy
birth, and honour little Bethlehem, which hath led thee back to
Paradise; and worship the manger through which thou, being
without sense, wast fed by the Word. Know as Isaiah bids thee,
thine Owner, like the ox, and like the ass thy Master's crib; if
thou be one of those who are pure and lawful food, and who chew
the cud of the word and are fit for sacrifice. Or if thou art one
of those who are as yet unclean and uneatable and unfit for
sacrifice, and of the gentile portion, run with the Star, and
bear thy Gifts with the Magi, gold and frankincense and myrrh, as
to a King, and to God, and to One Who is dead for thee. With
Shepherds glorify Him; with Angels join in chorus; with
Archangels sing hymns. Let this Festival be common to the powers
in heaven and to the powers upon earth. For I am persuaded that
the Heavenly Hosts join in our exultation and keep high Festival
with us to-day . . . because they love men, and they love God
just like those whom David introduces after the Passion ascending
with Christ and coming to meet Him, and bidding one another to
lift up the gates.
XVIII. One thing connected with the Birth
of Christ I would have you hate . . . the murder of the infants
by Herod. Or rather you must venerate this too, the Sacrifice of
the same age as Christ, slain before the Offering of the New
Victim. If He flees into Egypt, joyfully become a companion of
His exile. It is a grand thing to share the exile of the
persecuted Christ. If He tarry long in Egypt, call Him out of
Egypt by a reverent worship of Him there. Travel without fault
through every stage and faculty of the Life of Christ. Be
purified; be circumcised; strip off the veil which has covered
thee from thy birth. After this teach in the Temple, and drive
out the sacrilegious traders. Submit to be stoned if need be, for
well I wot thou shalt be hidden from those who cast the stones;
thou shalt escape even through the midst of them, like God. If
thou be brought before Herod, answer not for the most part. He
will respect thy silence more than most people's long speeches.
If thou be scourged, ask for what they leave out. Taste gall for
the taste's sake; drink vinegar; seek for spittings; accept
blows, be crowned with thorns, that is, with the hardness of the
godly life; put on the purple robe, take the reed in hand, and
receive mock worship from those who mock at the truth; lastly, be
crucified with Him, and share His Death and Burial gladly, that
thou mayest rise with Him, and be glorified with Him and reign
with Him. Look at and be looked at by the Great God, Who in
Trinity is worshipped and glorified, and Whom we declare to be
now set forth as clearly before you as the chains of our flesh
allow, in Jesus Christ our Lord, to Whom be the glory for ever.
Amen.
Oration XXXIX
Oration on the Holy Lights
I. Again My Jesus, and again a mystery; not
deceitful nor disorderly, nor belonging to Greek error or
drunkenness (for so I call their solemnities, and so I think will
every man of sound sense); but a mystery lofty and divine, and
allied to the Glory above. For the Holy Day of the Lights, to
which we have come, and which we are celebrating to-day, has for
its origin the Baptism of my Christ, the True Light That
lighteneth every man that cometh into the world, and effecteth my
purification, and assists that light which we received from the
beginning from Him from above, but which we darkened and confused
by sin.
II. Therefore listen to the Voice of God,
which sounds so exceeding clearly to me, who am both disciple and
master of these mysteries, as would to God it may sound to you; I
Am The Light Of The World. Therefore approach ye to Him and be
enlightened, and let not your faces be ashamed, being signed with
the true Light. It is a season of new birth, let us be born
again. It is a time of reformation, let us receive again the
first Adam. Let us not remain what we are, but let us become what
we once were. The Light Shineth In Darkness, in this life and in
the flesh, and is chased by the darkness, but is not overtaken by
it:-I mean the adverse power leaping up in its shamelessness
against the visible Adam, but encountering God and being
defeated;-in order that we, putting away the darkness, may draw
near to the Light, and may then become perfect Light, the
children of perfect Light. See the grace of this Day; see the
power of this mystery. Are you not lifted up from the earth? Are
you not clearly placed on high, being exalted by our voice and
meditation? and you will be placed much higher when the Word
shall have prospered the course of my words.
III. Is there any such among the shadowy
purifications of the Law, aiding as it did with temporary
sprinklings, and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean;
or do the gentiles celebrate any such thing in their mysteries,
every ceremony and mystery of which to me is nonsense, and a dark
invention of demons, and a figment of an unhappy mind, aided by
time, and hidden by fable? For what they worship as true, they
veil as mythical. But if these things are true, they ought not to
be called myths, but to be proved not to be shameful; and if they
are false, they ought not to be objects of wonder; nor ought
people so inconsiderately to hold the most contrary opinions
about the same thing, as if they were playing in the market-place
with boys or really ill-disposed men, not engaged in discussion
with men of sense, and worshippers of the Word, though despisers
of this artificial plausibility.
IV. We are not concerned in these mysteries
with birth of Zeus and thefts of the Cretan Tyrant (though the
Greeks may be displeased at such a title for him), nor with the
name of Curetes, and the armed dances, which were to hide the
wailings of a weeping god, that he might escape from his father's
hate. For indeed it would be a strange thing that he who was
swallowed as a stone should be made to weep as a child. Nor are
we concerned with Phrygian mutilations and flutes and Corybantes,
and all the ravings of men concerning Rhea, consecrating people
to the mother of the gods, and being initiated into such
ceremonies as befit the mother of such gods as these. Nor have we
any carrying away of the Maiden, nor wandering of Demeter, nor
her intimacy with Celei and Triptolemi and Dragons; nor her
doings and sufferings . . . for I am ashamed to bring into
daylight that ceremony of the night, and to make a sacred mystery
of obscenity. Eleusis knows these things, and so do those who are
eyewitnesses of what is there guarded by silence, and well worthy
of it. Nor is our commemoration one of Dionysus, and the thigh
that travailed with an incomplete birth, as before a head had
travailed with another; nor of the hermaphrodite god, nor a
chorus of the drunken and enervated host; nor of the folly of the
Thebans which honours him; nor the thunderbolt of Semele which
they adore. Nor is it the harlot mysteries of Aphrodite, who, as
they themselves admit, was basely born and basely honoured; nor
have we here Phalli and Ithyphalli, shameful both in form and
action; nor Taurian massacres of strangers; nor blood of Laconian
youths shed upon the altars, as they scourged themselves with the
whips; and in this case alone use their courage badly, who honour
a goddess, and her a virgin. For these same people both honour
effeminacy, and worship boldness.
V. And where will you place the butchery of
Pelops, which feasted hungry gods, that bitter and inhuman
hospitality? Where the horrible and dark spectres of Hecate, and
the underground puerilities and sorceries of Trophonius, or the
babblings of the Dodonaean Oak, or the trickeries of the Delphian
tripod, or the prophetic draught of Castalia, which could
prophesy anything, except their own being brought to silence? Nor
is it the sacrificial art of Magi, and their entrail forebodings,
nor the Chaldaean astronomy and horoscopes, comparing our lives
with the movements of the heavenly bodies, which cannot know even
what they are themselves, or shall be. Nor are these Thracian
orgies, from which the word Worship (threskeia) is said to be
derived; nor rites and mysteries of Orpheus, whom the Greeks
admired so much for his wisdom that they devised for him a lyre
which draws all things by its music. Nor the tortures of Mithras
which it is just that those who can endure to be initiated into
such things should suffer; nor the manglings of Osiris, another
calamity honoured by the Egyptians; nor the ill-fortunes of Isis
and the goats more venerable than the Mendesians, and the stall
of Apis, the calf that luxuriated in the folly of the Memphites,
nor all those honours with which they outrage the Nile, while
themselves proclaiming it in song to be the Giver of fruits and
corn, and the measurer of happiness by its cubits.
VI. I pass over the honours they pay to
reptiles, and their worship of vile things, each of which has its
peculiar cultus and festival, and all share in a common
devilishness; so that, if they were absolutely bound to be
ungodly, and to fall away from honouring God, and to be led
astray to idols and works of art and things made with hands, men
of sense could not imprecate anything worse upon themselves than
that they might worship just such things, and honour them in just
such a way; that, as Paul says, they might receive in themselves
that recompense of their error which was meet, in the very
objects of their worship; not so much honouring them as suffering
dishonour by them; abominable because of their error, and yet
more abominable from the vileness of the objects of their
adoration and worship; so that they should be even more without
understanding than the objects of their worship; being as
excessively foolish as the latter are vile.
VII. Well, let these things be the
amusement of the children of the Greeks and of the demons to whom
their folly is due, who turn aside the honour of God to
themselves, and divide men in various ways in pursuit of shameful
thoughts and fancies, ever since they drove us away from the Tree
of Life, by means of the Tree of Knowledge unseasonably and
improperly imparted to us, and then assailed us as now weaker
than before; carrying clean away the mind, which is the ruling
power in us, and opening a door to the passions. For, being of a
nature envious and man-hating, or rather having become so by
their own wickedness, they could neither endure that we who were
below should attain to that which is above, having themselves
fallen from above upon the earth; nor that such a change in their
glory and their first natures should have taken place. This is
the meaning of their persecution of the creature. For this God's
Image was outraged; and as we did not like to keep the
Commandments, we were given over to the independence of our
error. And as we erred we were disgraced by the objects of our
worship. For there was not only this calamity, that we who were
made for good works to the glory and praise of our Maker, and to
imitate God as far as might be, were turned into a den of all
sorts of passions, which cruelly devour and consume the inner
man; but there was this further evil, that man actually made gods
the advocates of his passions, so that sin might be reckoned not
only irresponsible, but even divine, taking refuge in the objects
of his worship as his apology.
VIII. But since to us grace has been given
to flee from superstitious error and to be joined to the truth
and to serve the living and true God, and to rise above creation,
passing by all that is subject to time and to first motion; let
us look at and reason upon God and things divine in a manner
corresponding to this Grace given us. But let us begin our
discussion of them from the most fitting point. And the most
fitting is, as Solomon laid down for us; us; The beginning of
wisdom, he says, is to get wisdom. And what this is he tells us;
the beginning of wisdom is fear. For we must not begin with
contemplation and leave off with fear (for an unbridled
contemplation would perhaps push us over a precipice), but we
must be grounded and purified and so to say made light by fear,
and thus be raised to the height. For where fear is there is
keeping of commandments; and where there is keeping of
commandments there is purifying of the flesh, that cloud which
covers the soul and suffers it not to see the Divine Ray. And
where there is purifying there is Illumination; and Illumination
is the satisfying of desire to those who long for the greatest
things, or the Greatest Thing, or That Which surpasses all
greatness.
IX. Wherefore we must purify ourselves
first, and then approach this converse with the Pure; unless we
would have the same experience as Israel, who could not endure
the glory of the face of Moses, and therefore asked for a veil;
or else would feel and say with Manoah "We are undone O wife, we
have seen God," although it was God only in his fancy; or like
Peter would send Jesus out of the boat, as being ourselves
unworthy of such a visit; and when I say Peter, I am speaking of
the man who walked upon the waves; or like Paul would be stricken
in eyes, as he was before he was cleansed from the guilt of his
persecution, when he conversed with Him Whom he was
persecuting-or rather with a short flash of That great Light; or
like the Centurion would seek for healing, but would not, through
a praiseworthy fear, receive the Healer into his house. Let each
one of us also speak so, as long as he is still uncleansed, and
is a Centurion still, commanding many in wickedness, and serving
in the army of Caesar, the World-ruler of those who are being
dragged down; "I am not worthy that thou shouldest come under my
roof." But when he shall have looked upon Jesus, though he be
little of stature like Zaccheus of old, and climb up on the top
of the sycamore tree by mortifying his members which are upon the
earth, and having risen above the body of humiliation, then he
shall receive the Word, and it shall be said to him, This day is
salvation come to this house. Then let him lay hold on the
salvation, and bring forth fruit more perfectly, scattering and
pouring forth rightly that which as a publican he wrongly
gathered.
X. For the same Word is on the one hand
terrible through its nature to those who are unworthy, and on the
other through its loving kindness can be received by those who
are thus prepared, who have driven out the unclean and worldly
spirit from their souls, and have swept and adorned their own
souls by self-examination, and have not left them idle or without
employment, so as again to be occupied with greater armament by
the seven spirits of wickedness . . . the same number as are
reckoned of virtue (for that which is hardest to fight against
calls for the sternest efforts) . . . but besides fleeing from
evil, practise virtue, making Christ entirely, or at any rate to
the greatest extent possible, to dwell within them, so that the
power of evil cannot meet with any empty place to fill it again
with himself, and make the last state of that man worse than the
first, by the greater energy of his assault, and the greater
strength and impregnability of the fortress. But when, having
guarded our soul with every care, and having appointed goings up
in our heart, and broken up our fallow ground, and sown unto
righteousness, as David and Solomon and Jeremiah bid us, let us
enlighten ourselves with the light of knowledge, and then let us
speak of the Wisdom of God that hath been hid in a mystery, and
enlighten others. Meanwhile let us purify ourselves, and receive
the elementary initiation of the Word, that we may do ourselves
the utmost good, making ourselves godlike, and receiving the Word
at His coming; and not only so, but holding Him fast and shewing
Him to others.
XI. And now, having purified the theatre by
what has been said, let us discourse a little about the Festival,
and join in celebrating this Feast with festal and pious souls.
And, since the chief point of the Festival is the remembrance of
God, let us call God to mind. For I think that the sound of those
who keep Festival There, where is the dwelling of all the
Blissful, is nothing else than this, the hymns and praises of
God, sung by all who are counted worthy of that City. Let none be
astonished if what I have to say contains some things that I have
said before; for not only will I utter the same words, but I
shall speak of the same subjects, trembling both in tongue and
mind and thought when I speak of God for you too, that you may
share this laudable and blessed feeling. And when I speak of God
you must be illumined at once by one flash of light and by three.
Three in Individualities or Hypostases, if any prefer so to call
them, or persons, for we will not quarrel about names so long as
the syllables amount to the same meaning; but One in respect of
the Substance-that is, the Godhead. For they are divided without
division, if I may so say; and they are united in division. For
the Godhead is one in three, and the three are one, in whom the
Godhead is, or to speak more accurately, Who are the Godhead.
Excesses and defects we will omit, neither making the Unity a
confusion, nor the division a separation. We would keep equally
far from the confusion of Sabellius and from the division of
Arius, which are evils diametrically opposed, yet equal in their
wickedness. For what need is there heretically to fuse God
together, or to cut Him up into inequality?
XII. For to us there is but One God, the
Father, of Whom are all things, and One Lord Jesus Christ, by
Whom are all things; and One Holy Ghost, in Whom are all things;
yet these words, of, by, in, whom, do not denote a difference of
nature (for if this were the case, the three prepositions, or the
order of the three names would never be altered), but they
characterize the personalities of a nature which is one and
unconfused. And this is proved by the fact that They are again
collected into one, if you will read-not carelessly-this other
passage of the same Apostle, "Of Him and through Him and to Him
are all things; to Him be glory forever, Amen." The Father is
Father, and is Unoriginate, for He is of no one; the Son is Son,
and is not unoriginate, for He is of the Father. But if you take
the word Origin in a temporal sense, He too is Unoriginate, for
He is the Maker of Time, and is not subject to Time. The Holy
Ghost is truly Spirit, coming forth from the Father indeed, but
not after the manner of the Son, for it is not by Generation but
by Procession (since I must coin a word for the sake of clearness
); for neither did the Father cease to be Unbegotten because of
His begetting something, nor the Son to be begotten because He is
of the Unbegotten (how could that be?), nor is the Spirit changed
into Father or Son because He proceeds, or because He is
God-though the ungodly do not believe it. For Personality is
unchangeable; else how could Personality remain, if it were
changeable, and could be removed from one to another? But they
who make "Unbegotten" and "Begotten" natures of equivocal gods
would perhaps make Adam and Seth differ in nature, since the
former was not born of flesh (for he was created), but the latter
was born of Adam and Eve. There is then One God in Three, and
These Three are One, as we have said.
XIII. Since then these things are so, or
rather since This is so; and His Adoration ought not to be
rendered only by Beings above, but there ought to be also
worshippers on earth, that all things may be filled with the
glory of God (forasmuch as they are filled with God Himself);
therefore man was created and honored with the hand and Image of
God. But to despise man, when by the envy of the Devil and the
bitter taste of sin he was pitiably severed from God his
Maker-this was not in the Nature of God. What then was done, and
what is the great Mystery that concerns us? An innovation is made
upon nature, and God is made Man. "He that rideth upon the Heaven
of Heavens in the East" of His own glory and Majesty, is
glorified in the West of our meanness and lowliness. And the Son
of God deigns to become and to be called Son of Man; not changing
what He was (for It is unchangeable); but assuming what He was
not (for He is full of love to man), that the Incomprehensible
might be comprehended, conversing with us through the mediation
of the Flesh as through a veil; since it was not possible for
that nature which is subject to birth and decay to endure His
unveiled Godhead. Therefore the Unmingled is mingled; and not
only is God mingled with birth and Spirit with flesh, and the
Eternal with time, and the Uncircumscribed with measure; but also
Generation with Virginity, and dishonour with Him who is higher
than all honour; He who is impassible with Suffering, and the
Immortal with the corruptible. For since that Deceiver thought
that he was unconquerable in his malice, after he had cheated us
with the hope of becoming gods, he was himself cheated by God's
assumption of our nature; so that in attacking Adam as he
thought, he should really meet with God, and thus the new Adam
should save the old, and the condemnation of the flesh should be
abolished, death being slain by flesh.
XIV. At His birth we duly kept Festival,
both I, the leader of the Feast, and you, and all that is in the
world and above the world. With the Star we ran, and with the
Magi we worshipped, and with the Shepherds we were illuminated,
and with the Angels we glorified Him, and with Simeon we took Him
up in our arms, and with Anna the aged and chaste we made our
responsive confession. And thanks be to Him who came to His own
in the guise of a stranger, because He glorified the stranger.
Now, we come to another action of Christ, and another mystery. I
cannot restrain my pleasure; I am rapt into God. Almost like John
I proclaim good tidings; for though I be not a Forerunner, yet am
I from the desert. Christ is illumined, let us shine forth with
Him. Christ is baptized, let us descend with Him that we may also
ascend with Him. Jesus is baptized; but we must attentively
consider not only this but also some other points. Who is He, and
by whom is He baptized, and at what time? He is the All-pure; and
He is baptized by John; and the time is the beginning of His
miracles. What are we to learn and to be taught by this? To
purify ourselves first; to be lowly minded; and to preach only in
maturity both of spiritual and bodily stature. The first has a
word especially for those who rush to Baptism off hand, and
without due preparation, or providing for the stability of the
Baptismal Grace by the disposition of their minds to good. For
since Grace contains remission of the past (for it is a grace),
it is on that account more worthy of reverence, that we return
not to the same vomit again. The second speaks to those who rebel
against the Stewards of this Mystery, if they are their superiors
in rank. The third is for those who are confident in their youth,
and think that any time is the right one to teach or to preside.
Jesus is purified, and dost thou despise purification? . . . and
by John, and dost thou rise up against thy herald? . . . and at
thirty years of age, and dost thou before thy beard has grown
presume to teach the aged, or believe that thou teachest them,
though thou be not reverend on account of thine age, or even
perhaps for thy character? But here it may be said, Daniel, and
this or that other, were judges in their youth, and examples are
on your tongues; for every wrongdoer is prepared to defend
himself. But I reply that that which is rare is not the law of
the Church. For one swallow does not make a summer, nor one line
a geometrician, nor one voyage a sailor.
XV. But John baptizes, Jesus comes to Him .
. . perhaps to sanctify the Baptist himself, but certainly to
bury the whole of the old Adam in the water; and before this and
for the sake of this, to sanctify Jordan; for as He is Spirit and
Flesh, so He consecrates us by Spirit and water. John will not
receive Him; Jesus contends. "I have need to be baptized of Thee"
says the Voice to the Word, the Friend to the Bridegroom; he that
is above all among them that are born of women, to Him Who is the
Firstborn of every creature; he that leaped in the womb, to Him
Who was adored in the womb; he who was and is to be the
Forerunner to Him Who was and is to be manifested. "I have need
to be baptized of Thee;" add to this "and for Thee;" for he knew
that he would be baptized by Martyrdom, or, like Peter, that he
would be cleansed not only as to his feet. "And comest Thou to
me?" This also was prophetic; for he knew that after Herod would
come the madness of Pilate, and so that when he had gone before
Christ would follow him. But what saith Jesus? "Suffer it to be
so now," for this is the time of His Incarnation; for He knew
that yet a little while and He should baptize the Baptist. And
what is the "Fan?" The Purification. And what is the "Fire?" The
consuming of the chaff, and the heat of the Spirit. And what the
"Axe?" The excision of the soul which is incurable even after the
dung. And what the Sword? The cutting of the Word, which
separates the worse from the better, and makes a division between
the faithful and the unbeliever; and stirs up the son and the
daughter and the bride against the father and the mother and the
mother in law, the young and fresh against the old and shadowy.
And what is the Latchet of the shoe, which thou John who
baptizest Jesus mayest not loose? thou who art of the desert, and
hast no food, the new Elias, the more than Prophet, inasmuch as
thou sawest Him of Whom thou didst prophesy, thou Mediator of the
Old and New Testaments. What is this? Perhaps the Message of the
Advent, and the Incarnation, of which not the least point may be
loosed, I say not by those who are yet carnal and babes in
Christ, but not even by those who are like John in
spirit.
XVI. But further-Jesus goeth up out of the
water . . . for with Himself He carries up the world . . . and
sees the heaven opened which Adam had shut against himself and
all his posterity, as the gates of Paradise by the flaming sword.
And the Spirit bears witness to His Godhead, for he descends upon
One that is like Him, as does the Voice from Heaven (for He to
Whom the witness is borne came from thence), and like a Dove, for
He honours the Body (for this also was God, through its union
with God) by being seen in a bodily form; and moreover, the Dove
has from distant ages been wont to proclaim the end of the
Deluge. But if you are to judge of Godhead by bulk and weight,
and the Spirit seems to you a small thing because He came in the
form of a Dove, O man of contemptible littleness of thought
concerning the greatest of things, you must also to be consistent
despise the Kingdom of Heaven, because it is compared to a grain
of mustard seed; and you must exalt the adversary above the
Majesty of Jesus, because he is called a great Mountain, and
Leviathan and King of that which lives in the water, whereas
Christ is called the Lamb, and the Pearl, and the Drop and
similar names.
XVII. Now, since our Festival is of
Baptism, and we must endure a little hardness with Him Who for
our sake took form, and was baptized, and was crucified; let us
speak about the different kinds of Baptism, that we may come out
thence purified. Moses baptized but it was in water, and before
that in the cloud and in the sea. This was typical as Paul saith;
the Sea of the water, and the Cloud of the Spirit; the Manna, of
the Bread of Life; the Drink, of the Divine Drink. John also
baptized; but this was not like the baptism of the Jews, for it
was not only in water, but also "unto repentance." Still it was
not wholly spiritual, for he does not add "And in the Spirit."
Jesus also baptized, but in the Spirit. This is the perfect
Baptism. And how is He not God, if I may digress a little, by
whom you too are made God? I know also a Fourth Baptism-that by
Martyrdom and blood, which also Christ himself underwent:-and
this one is far more august than all the others, inasmuch as it
cannot be defiled by after-stains. Yes, and I know of a Fifth
also, which is that of tears, and is much more laborious,
received by him who washes his bed every night and his couch with
tears; whose bruises stink through his wickedness; and who goeth
mourning and of a sad countenance; who imitates the repentance of
Manasseh and the humiliation of the Ninevites upon which God had
mercy; who utters the words of the Publican in the Temple, and is
justified rather than the stiff-necked Pharisee; who like the
Canaanite woman bends down and asks for mercy and crumbs, the
food of a dog that is very hungry.
XVIII. I, however, for I confess myself to
be a man,-that is to say, an animal shifty and of a changeable
nature,-both eagerly receive this Baptism, and worship Him Who
has given it me, and impart it to others; and by shewing mercy
make provision for mercy. For I know that I too am compassed with
infirmity, and that with what measure I mete it shall be measured
to me again. But what sayest thou, O new Pharisee pure in title
but not in intention, who dischargest upon us the sentiments of
Novatus, though thou sharest the same infirmities? Wilt thou not
give any place to weeping? Wilt thou shed no tear? Mayest thou
not meet with a Judge like thyself? Art thou not ashamed by the
mercy of Jesus, Who took our infirmities and bare our sicknesses;
Who came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance; Who
will have mercy rather than sacrifice; who forgiveth sins till
seventy times seven. How blessed would your exaltation be if it
really were purity, not pride, making laws above the reach of
men, and destroying improvement by despair. For both are alike
evil, indulgence not regulated by prudence, and condemnation that
will never forgive; the one because it relaxes all reins, the
other because it strangles by its severity. Shew me your purity,
and I will approve your boldness. But as it is, I fear that being
full of sores you will render them incurable. Will you not admit
even David's repentance, to whom his penitence preserved even the
gift of prophecy? nor the great Peter himself, who fell into
human weakness at the Passion of our Saviour? Yet Jesus received
him, and by the threefold question and confession healed the
threefold denial. Or will you even refuse to admit that he was
made perfect by blood (for your folly goes even as far as that)?
Or the transgressor at Corinth? But Paul confirmed love towards
him when he saw his amendment, and gives the reason, "that such
an one be not swallowed up by overmuch sorrow," being overwhelmed
by the excess of the punishment. And will you refuse to grant
liberty of marriage to young widows on account of the liability
of their age to fall? Paul ventured to do so; but of course you
can teach him; for you have been caught up to the Fourth heaven,
and to another Paradise, and have heard words more unspeakable,
and comprehend a larger circle in your Gospel.
XIX. But these sins were not after Baptism,
you will say. Where is your proof? Either prove it-or refrain
from condemning; and if there be any doubt, let charity prevail.
But Novatus, you say, would not receive those who lapsed in the
persecution. What do you mean by this? If they were unrepentant
he was right; I too would refuse to receive those who either
would not stoop at all or not sufficiently, and who would refuse
to make their amendment counterbalance their sin; and when I do
receive them, I will assign them their proper place; but if he
refused those who wore themselves away with weeping, I will not
imitate him. And why should Novatus's want of charity be a rule
for me? He never punished covetousness, which is a second
idolatry; but he condemned fornication as though he himself were
not flesh and body. What say you? Are we convincing you by these
words? Come and stand here on our side, that is, on the side of
humanity. Let us magnify the Lord together. Let none of you, even
though he has much confidence in himself, dare to say, Touch me
not for I am pure, and who is so pure as I? Give us too a share
in your brightness. But perhaps we are not convincing you? Then
we will weep for you. Let these men then if they will, follow our
way, which is Christ's way; but if they will not, let them go
their own. Perhaps in it they will be baptized with Fire, in that
last Baptism which is more painful and longer, which devours wood
like grass, and consumes the stubble of every evil.
XX. But let us venerate to-day the Baptism
of Christ; and let us keep the feast well, not in pampering the
belly, but rejoicing in spirit. And how shall we luxuriate? "Wash
you, make you clean." If ye be scarlet with sin and less bloody,
be made white as snow; if ye be red, and men bathed in blood, yet
be ye brought to the whiteness of wool. Anyhow be purified, and
you shall be clean (for God rejoices in nothing so much as in the
amendment and salvation of man, on whose behalf is every
discourse and every Sacrament), that you may be like lights in
the world, a quickening force to all other men; that you may
stand as perfect lights beside That great Light, and may learn
the mystery of the illumination of Heaven, enlightened by the
Trinity more purely and clearly, of Which even now you are
receiving in a measure the One Ray from the One Godhead in Christ
Jesus our Lord; to Whom be the glory and the might for ever and
ever. Amen.
Oration XL
The Oration on Holy Baptism
I. Yesterday we kept high Festival on the
illustrious Day of the Holy Lights; for it was fitting that
rejoicings should be kept for our Salvation, and that far more
than for weddings and birthdays, and namedays, and
house-warmings, and registrations of children, and anniversaries,
and all the other festivities that men observe for their earthly
friends. And now to-day let us discourse briefly concerning
Baptism, and the benefits which accrue to us therefrom, even
though our discourse yesterday spoke of it cursorily; partly
because the time pressed us hard, and partly because the sermon
had to avoid tediousness. For too great length in a sermon is as
much an enemy to people's ears, as too much food is to their
bodies. . . . It will be worth your while to apply your minds to
what we say, and to receive our discourse on so important a
subject not perfunctorily, but with ready mind, since to know the
power of this Sacrament is itself Enlightenment.
II. The Word recognizes three Births for
us; namely, the natural birth, that of Baptism, and that of the
Resurrection. Of these the first is by night, and is servile, and
involves passion; but the second is by day, and is destructive of
passion, cutting off all the veil that is derived from birth, and
leading on to the higher life; and the third is more terrible and
shorter, bringing together in a moment all mankind, to stand
before its Creator, and to give an account of its service and
conversation here; whether it has followed the flesh, or whether
it has mounted up with the spirit, and worshipped the grace of
its new creation. My Lord Jesus Christ has showed that He
honoured all these births in His own Person; the first, by that
first and quickening Inbreathing; the second by His Incarnation
and the Baptism wherewith He Himself was baptized; and the third
by the Resurrection of which He was the Firstfruits;
condescending, as He became the Firstborn among many brethren, so
also to become the Firstborn from the dead.
III. Concerning two of these births, the
first and the last, we have not to speak on the present occasion.
Let us discourse upon the second, which is now necessary for us,
and which gives its name to the Feast of the Lights. Illumination
is the splendour of souls, the conversion of the life, the
question put to the Godward conscience. It is the aid to our
weakness, the renunciation of the flesh, the following of the
Spirit, the fellowship of the Word, the improvement of the
creature, the overwhelming of sin, the participation of light,
the dissolution of darkness. It is the carriage to God, the dying
with Christ, the perfecting of the mind, the bulwark of Faith,
the key of the Kingdom of heaven, the change of life, the removal
of slavery, the loosing of chains, the remodelling of the whole
man. Why should I go into further detail? Illumination is the
greatest and most magnificent of the Gifts of God. For just as we
speak of the Holy of Holies, and the Song of Songs, as more
comprehensive and more excellent than others, so is this called
Illumination, as being more holy than any other illumination
which we possess.
IV. And as Christ the Giver of it is called
by many various names, so too is this Gift, whether it is from
the exceeding gladness of its nature (as those who are very fond
of a thing take pleasure in using its name), or that the great
variety of its benefits has reacted for us upon its names. We
call it, the Gift, the Grace, Baptism, Unction, Illumination, the
Clothing of Immortality, the Laver of Regeneration, the Seal, and
everything that is honourable. We call it the Gift, because it is
given to us in return for nothing on our part; Grace, because it
is conferred even on debtors; Baptism, because sin is buried with
it in the water; Unction, as Priestly and Royal, for such were
they who were anointed; Illumination, because of its splendour;
Clothing, because it hides our shame; the Laver, because it
washes us; the Seal because it preserves us, and is moreover the
indication of Dominion. In it the heavens rejoice; it is
glorified by Angels, because of its kindred splendour. It is the
image of the heavenly bliss. We long indeed to sing out its
praises, but we cannot worthily do so.
V. God is Light: the highest, the
unapproachable, the ineffable, That can neither be conceived in
the mind nor uttered with the lips, That giveth life to every
reasoning creature. He is in the world of thought, what the sun
is in the world of sense; presenting Himself to our minds in
proportion as we are cleansed; and loved in proportion as He is
presented to our mind; and again, conceived in proportion as we
love Him; Himself contemplating and comprehending Himself, and
pouring Himself out upon what is external to Him. That Light, I
mean, which is contemplated in the Father and the Son and the
Holy Ghost, Whose riches is Their unity of nature, and the one
outleaping of Their brightness. A second Light is the Angel, a
kind of outflow or communication of that first Light, drawing its
illumination from its inclination and obedience thereto; and I
know not whether its illumination is distributed according to the
order of its state, or whether its order is due to the respective
measures of its illumination. A third Light is man; a light which
is visible to external objects. For they call man light because
of the faculty of speech in us. And the name is applied again to
those of us who are more like God, and who approach God more
nearly than others. I also acknowledge another Light, by which
the primeval darkness was driven away or pierced. It was the
first of all the visible creation to be called into existence;
and it irradiates the whole universe, the circling orbit of the
stars, and all the heavenly beacon fires.
VI. Light was also the firstborn
commandment given to the firstborn man (for the commandment of
the Law is a lamp and a light; and again, Because Thy judgments
are a light upon the earth); although the envious darkness crept
in and wrought wickedness. And a Light typical and proportionate
to those who were its subjects was the written law, adumbrating
the truth and the sacrament of the great Light, for Moses' face
was made glorious by it. And, to mention more Lights-it was Light
that appeared out of Fire to Moses, when it burned the bush
indeed, but did not consume it, to shew its nature and to declare
the power that was in it. And it was Light that was in the pillar
of fire that led Israel and tamed the wilderness. It was Light
that carried up Elias in the car of fire, and yet did not burn
him as it carried him. It was Light that shone round the
Shepherds when the Eternal Light was mingled with the temporal.
It was Light that was the beauty of the Star that went before to
Bethlehem to guide the Wise Men's way, and to be the escort of
the Light That is above us, when He came amongst us. Light was
That Godhead Which was shewn upon the Mount to the disciples-and
a little too strong for their eyes. Light was That Vision which
blazed out upon Paul, and by wounding his eyes healed the
darkness of his soul. Light is also the brilliancy of heaven to
those who have been purified here, when the righteous shall shine
forth as the Sun, and God shall stand in the midst of them, gods
and kings, deciding and distinguishing the ranks of the
Blessedness of heaven. Light beside these in a special sense is
the illumination of Baptism of which we are now speaking; for it
contains a great and marvellous sacrament of our
salvation.
VII. For since to be utterly sinless
belongs to God, and to the first and uncompounded nature (for
simplicity is peaceful, and not subject to dissension), and I
venture to say also that it belongs to the Angelic nature too; or
at least, I would affirm that nature to be very nearly sinless,
because of its nearness to God; but to sin is human and belongs
to the Compound on earth (for composition is the beginning of
separation); therefore the master did not think it right to leave
His creature unaided, or to neglect its danger of separation from
Himself; but on the contrary, just as He gave existence to that
which did not exist, so He gave new creation to that which did
exist, a diviner creation and a loftier than the first, which is
to those who are beginning life a Seal, and to those who are more
mature in age both a gift and a restoration of the image which
had fallen through sin, that we may not, by becoming worse
through despair, and ever being borne downward to that which is
more evil, fall altogether from good and from virtue, through
despondency; and having fallen into a depth of evil (as it is
said) despise Him; but that like those who in the course of a
long journey make a brief rest from labour at an inn, we should
be enabled to accomplish the rest of the road fresh and full of
courage. Such is the grace and power of baptism; not an
overwhelming of the world as of old, but a purification of the
sins of each individual, and a complete cleansing from all the
bruises and stains of sin.
VIII. And since we are double-made, I mean
of body and soul, and the one part is visible, the other
invisible, so the cleansing also is twofold, by water and the
spirit; the one received visibly in the body, the other
concurring with it invisibly and apart from the body; the one
typical, the other real and cleansing the depths. And this which
comes to the aid of our first birth, makes us new instead of old,
and like God instead of what we now are; recasting us without
fire, and creating us anew without breaking us up. For, to say it
all in one word, the virtue of Baptism is to be understood as a
covenant with God for a second life and a purer conversation. And
indeed all need to fear this very much, and to watch our own
souls, each one of us, with all care, that we do not become liars
in respect of this profession. For if God is called upon as a
Mediator to ratify human professions, how great is the danger if
we be found transgressors of the covenant which we have made with
God Himself; and if we be found guilty before the Truth Himself
of that lie, besides our other transgressions . . . and that when
there is no second regeneration, or recreation, or restoration to
our former state, even though we seek it with all our might, and
with many sighs and tears, by which it is cicatrized over (with
great difficulty in my opinion, though we all believe that it may
be cicatrized). Yet if we might wipe away even the scars I should
be glad, since I too have need of mercy. But it is better not to
stand in need of a second cleansing, but to stop at the first,
which is, I know, common to all, and involves no labour, and is
of equal price to slaves, to masters, to poor, to rich, to
humble, to exalted, to gentle, to simple, to debtors, to those
who are free from debt; like the breathing of the air, and the
pouring forth of the light, and the changes of the seasons, and
the sight of creation, that great delight which we all share
alike, and the equal distribution of the faith.
IX. For it is a strange thing to substitute
for a painless remedy one which is more painful; to cast away the
grace of mercy, and owe a debt of punishment; and to measure our
amendment against sin. For how many tears must we contribute
before they can equal the fount of baptism; and who will be
surety for us that death shall wait for our cure, and that the
judgment seat shall not summon us while still debtors, and
needing the fire of the other world? You perhaps, as a good and
pitiful husbandman, will entreat the Master still to spare the
figtree, and not yet to cut it down, though accused of
unfruitfulness; but to allow you to put dung about it in the
shape of tears, sighs, invocations, sleepings on the ground,
vigils, mortifications of soul and body, and correction by
confession and a life of humiliation. But it is uncertain if the
Master will spare it, inasmuch as it cumbers the ground of
another asking for mercy, and becoming deteriorated by the
longsuffering shewn to this one. Let us then be buried with
Christ by Baptism, that we may also rise with Him; let us descend
with Him, that we may also be exalted with Him; let us ascend
with Him, that we may also be glorified together.
X. If after baptism the persecutor and
tempter of the light assail you (for he assailed even the Word my
God through the veil, the hidden Light through that which was
manifested), you have the means to conquer him. Fear not the
conflict; defend yourself with the Water; defend yourself with
the Spirit, by Which all the fiery darts of the wicked shall be
quenched. It is Spirit, but That Spirit which rent the Mountains.
It is Water, but that which quenches fire. If he assail you by
your want (as he dared to assail Christ), and asks that stones
should be made bread, do not be ignorant of his devices. Teach
him what he has not learnt. Defend yourself with the Word of
life, Who is the Bread sent down from heaven, and giving life to
the world. If he plot against you with vain glory (as he did
against Christ when he led Him up to the pinnacle of the temple
and said to Him, Cast Thyself down as a proof of Thy Godhead), be
not overborne by elation. If you be taken by this he will not
stop here. For he is insatiable, he grasps at every thing. He
fawns upon you with fair pretences, but he ends in evil; this is
the manner of his fighting. Yes, and the robber is skilled in
Scripture. On the one side was that It is written about the
Bread, and on the other that it Is written about the Angels. It
is written, quoth he, He shall give His Angels charge concerning
thee, and they shall bear thee in their hands. O vile sophist!
how was it that thou didst suppress the words that follow, for I
know it well, even if thou passest it by in silence? I will make
thee to go upon the asp and basilisk, and I will tread upon
serpents and scorpions, being fenced by the Trinity. If he
wrestle against thee to a fall through avarice, shewing thee all
the Kingdoms at one instant and in the twinkling of an eye, as
belonging to himself, and demand thy worship, despise him as a
beggar. Say to him relying on the Seal, "I am myself the Image of
God; I have not yet been cast down from the heavenly Glory, as
thou wast through thy pride; I have put on Christ; I have been
transformed into Christ by Baptism; worship thou me." Well do I
know that he will depart, defeated and put to shame by this; as
he did from Christ the first Light, so he will from those who are
illumined by Christ. Such blessings does the laver bestow on
those who apprehend it; such is the rich feast which it provides
for those who hunger aright.
XI. Let us then be baptized that we may win
the victory; let us partake of the cleansing waters, more
purifying than hyssop, purer than the legal blood, more sacred
than the ashes of the heifer sprinkling the unclean, and
providing a temporary cleansing of the body, but not a complete
taking away of sin; for if once purged, why should they need
further purification? Let us be baptized today, that we suffer
not violence to-morrow; and let us not put off the blessing as if
it were an injury, nor wait till we get more wicked that more may
be forgiven us; and let us not become sellers and traffickers of
Christ, lest we become more heavily burdened than we are able to
bear, that we be not sunk with all hands and make shipwreck of
the Gift, and lose all because we expected too much. While thou
art still master of thy thoughts run to the Gift. While thou art
not yet sick in body or in mind, nor seemest so to those who are
with thee (though thou art really of sound mind); while thy good
is not yet in the power of others, but thou thyself art still
master of it; while thy tongue is not stammering or parched, or
(to say no more) deprived of the power of pronouncing the
sacramental words; while thou canst still be made one of the
faithful, not conjecturally but confessedly; and canst still
receive not pity but congratulation; while the Gift is still
clear to thee, and there is no doubt about it; while the grace
can reach the depth of thy soul, and it is not merely thy body
that is washed for burial; and before tears surround thee
announcing thy decease-and even these restrained perhaps for thy
sake-and thy wife and children would delay thy departure, and are
listening for thy dying words; before the physician is powerless
to help thee, and is giving thee but hours to live-hours which
are not his to give-and is balancing thy salvation with the nod
of his head, and discoursing learnedly on thy disease after thou
art dead, or making his charges heavier by withdrawals, or
hinting at despair; before there is a struggle between the man
who would baptize thee and the man who seeks thy money, the one
striving that thou mayest receive thy Viaticum, the other that he
may be inscribed in thy Will as heir-and there is no time for
both.
XII. Why wait for a fever to bring you this
blessing, and refuse it from God? Why will you have it through
lapse of time, and not through reason? Why will you owe it to a
plotting friend, and not to a saving desire? Why will you receive
it of force and not of free will; of necessity rather than of
liberty? Why must you hear of your death from another, rather
than think of it as even now present? Why do you seek for drugs
which will do no good, or the sweat of the crisis, when the sweat
of death is perhaps upon you? Heal yourself before your
extremity; have pity upon yourself the only true healer of your
disease; apply to yourself the really saving medicine; while you
are still sailing with a favouring breeze fear shipwreck, and you
will be in less danger of it, if you make use of your terror as a
helper. Give yourself occasion to celebrate the Gift with
feasting, not with mourning; let the talent be cultivated, not
buried in the ground; let some time intervene between the grace
and death, that not only may the account of sins be wiped out,
but something better may be written in its place; that you may
have not only the Gift, but also the Reward; that you may not
only escape the fire, but may also inherit the glory, which is
bestowed by cultivation of the Gift. For to men of little soul it
is a great thing to escape torment; but men of great soul aim
also at attaining reward.
XIII. I know of three classes among the
saved; the slaves, the hired servants, the sons. If you are a
slave, be afraid of the whip; if you are a hired servant, look
only to receive your hire; if you are more than this, a son,
revere Him as a Father, and work that which is good, because it
is good to obey a Father; and even though no reward should come
of it for you, this is itself a reward, that you please your
Father. Let us then take care not to despise these things. How
absurd it would be to grasp at money and throw away health; and
to be lavish of the cleansing of the body, but economical over
the cleansing of the soul; and to seek for freedom from earthly
slavery, but not to care about heavenly freedom; and to make
every effort to be splendidly housed and dressed, but to have
never a thought how you yourself may become really very precious;
and to be zealous to do good to others, without any desire to do
good to yourself. And if good could be bought, you would spare no
money; but if mercy is freely at your feet, you despise it for
its cheapness. Every time is suitable for your ablution, since
any time may be your death. With Paul I shout to you with that
loud voice, "Behold now is the accepted time; behold Now is the
day of salvation;" and that Now does not point to any one time,
but is every present moment. And again "Awake, thou that
sleepest, and Christ shall give thee light," dispelling the
darkness of sin. For as Isaiah says, In the night hope is evil,
and it is more profitable to be received in the
morning.
XIV. Sow in good season, and gather
together, and open thy barns when it is the time to do so; and
plant in season, and let the clusters be cut when they are ripe,
and launch boldly in spring, and draw thy ship on shore again at
the beginning of winter, when the sea begins to rage. And let
there be to thee also a time for war and a time for peace; a time
to marry, and a time to abstain from marrying; a time for
friendship, and a time for discord, if this be needed; and in
short a time for everything, if you will follow Solomon's advice.
And it is best to do so, for the advice is profitable. But the
work of your salvation is one upon which you should be engaged at
all times; and let every time be to you the definite one for
Baptism. If you are always passing over to-day and waiting for
to-morrow, by your little procrastinations you will be cheated
without knowing it by the Evil One, as his manner is. Give to me,
he says, the present, and to God the future; to me your youth,
and to God old age; to me your pleasures, and to Him your
uselessness. How great is the danger that surrounds you. How many
the unexpected mischances. War has expended you; or an earthquake
overwhelmed you; or the sea swallowed you up; or a wild beast
carried you off; or a sickness killed you; or a crumb going the
wrong way (a most insignificant thing, but what is easier than
for a man to die, though you are so proud of the divine image);
or a too freely indulged drinking bout; or a wind knocked you
down; or a horse ran away with you; or a drug maliciously
scheming against you, or perhaps found to be deleterious when
meant to be wholesome; or an inhuman judge; or an inexorable
executioner; or any of the things which make the change swiftest
and beyond the power of human aid.
XV. But if you would fortify yourself
beforehand with the Seal, and secure yourself for the future with
the best and strongest of all aids, being signed both in body and
in soul with the unction, as Israel was of old with that blood
and unction of the firstborn at night that guarded him, what then
can happen to you, and what has been wrought out for you? Listen
to the Proverbs. "If thou sittest, he says, thou shalt be without
fear; and if thou sleepest, thy sleep shall be sweet." And listen
to David giving thee the good news, "Thou shalt not be afraid for
the terror by night, for mischance or noonday demon." This, even
while you live, will greatly contribute to your sense of safety
(for a sheep that is sealed is not easily snared, but that which
is unmarked is an easy prey to thieves), and at your death a
fortunate shroud, more precious than gold, more magnificent than
a sepulchre, more reverent than fruitless libations, more
seasonable than ripe firstfruits, which the dead bestow on the
dead, making a law out of custom. Nay, if all things forsake
thee, or be taken violently away from thee; money, possessions,
thrones, distinctions, and everything that belongs to this early
turmoil, yet you will be able to lay down your life in safety,
having suffered no loss of the helps which God gave you unto
salvation.
XVI. But are you afraid lest you should
destroy the Gift, and do you therefore put off your cleansing,
because you cannot have it a second time? What? Would you not be
afraid of danger in time of persecution, and of losing the most
precious Thing you have-Christ? Would you then on this account
avoid becoming a Christian? Perish the thought. Such a fear is
not for a sane man; such an argument argues insanity. O
incautious caution, if I may so. O trick of the Evil One! Truly
he is darkness and pretends to be light; and when he can no
longer prevail in open war, he lays snares in secret, and gives
advice, apparently good, really evil, if by some trick at least
he may prevail, and we find no escape from his plotting. And this
is clearly what he is aiming at in this instance. For, being
unable to persuade you to despise Baptism, he inflicts loss upon
you through a fictitious security; that in consequence of your
fear you may suffer unconsciously the very thing you are afraid
of; and because you fear to destroy the Gift, you may for this
very reason fail of the Gift altogether. This is his character;
and he will never cease his duplicity as long as he sees us
pressing onwards towards heaven from which he has fallen.
Wherefore, O man of God, do thou recognize the plots of thine
adversary; for the battle is against him that hath, and it is
concerned with the most important interests. Take not thine enemy
to be thy counsellor; despise not to be and to be called
Faithful. As long as you are a Catechumen you are but in the
porch of Religion; you must come inside, and cross the court, and
observe the Holy Things, and look into the Holy of Holies, and be
in company with the Trinity. Great are the interests for which
you are fighting, great too the stability which you need. Protect
yourself with the shield of faith. He fears you, if you fight
armed with this weapon, and therefore he would strip you of the
Gift, that he may the more easily overcome you unarmed and
defenceless. He assails every age, and every form of life; he
must be repelled by all.
XVII. Art thou young? stand against thy
passions; be numbered with the alliance in the army of God: do
valiantly against Goliath. Take your thousands or your myriads;
thus enjoy your manhood; but do not allow your youth to be
withered, being killed by the imperfection of your faith. Are you
old and near the predestined necessity? Aid your few remaining
days. Entrust the purification to your old age. Why do you fear
youthful passion in deep old age and at your last breath? Or will
you wait to be washed till you are dead, and not so much the
object of pity as of dislike? Are you regretting the dregs of
pleasure, being yourself in the dregs of life? It is a shameful
thing to be past indeed the flower of your age, but not past your
wickedness; but either to be involved in it still, or at least to
seem so by delaying your purification. Have you an infant child?
Do not let sin get any opportunity, but let him be sanctified
from his childhood; from his very tenderest age let him be
consecrated by the Spirit. Fearest thou the Seal on account of
the weakness of nature? O what a small-souled mother, and of how
little faith! Why, Anna even before Samuel was born promised him
to God, and after his birth consecrated him at once, and brought
him up in the priestly habit, not fearing anything in human
nature, but trusting in God. You have no need of amulets or
incantations, with which the Devil also comes in, stealing
worship from God for himself in the minds of vainer men. Give
your child the Trinity, that great and noble Guard.
XVIII. What more? Are you living in
Virginity? Be sealed by this purification; make this the sharer
and companion of your life. Let this direct your life, your
words, every member, every movement, every sense. Honour it, that
it may honour you; that it may give to your head a crown of
graces, and with a crown of delights may shield you. Art thou
bound by wedlock? Be bound also by the Seal; make it dwell with
you as a guardian of your continence, safer than any number of
eunuchs or of doorkeepers. Art thou not yet wedded to flesh? Fear
not this consecration; thou art pure even after marriage. I will
take the risk of that. I will join you in wedlock. I will dress
the bride. We do not dishonour marriage because we give a higher
honour to virginity. I will imitate Christ, the pure Grooms-man
and Bridegroom, as He both wrought a miracle at a wedding, and
honours wedlock with His Presence. Only let marriage be pure and
unmingled with filthy lusts. This only I ask; receive safety from
the Gift, and give to the Gift the oblation of chastity in its
due season, when the fixed time of prayer comes round, and that
which is more precious than business. And do this by common
consent and approval. For we do not command, we exhort; and we
would receive something of you for your own profit, and the
common security of you both. And in one word, there is no state
of life and no occupation to which Baptism is not profitable. You
who are a free man, be curbed by it; you who are in slavery, be
made of equal rank; you who are in grief, receive comfort; let
the gladsome be disciplined; the poor receive riches that cannot
be taken away; the rich be made capable of being good stewards of
their possessions. Do not play tricks or lay plots against your
own salvation. For even if we can delude others we cannot delude
ourselves. And so to play against oneself is very dangerous and
foolish.
XIX. But you have to live in the midst of
public affairs, and are stained by them; and it would be a
terrible thing to waste this mercy. The answer is simple. Flee,
if you can, even from the forum, along with the good company,
making yourself the wings of an eagle, or, to speak more
suitably, of a dove . . . for what have you to do with Caesar or
the things of Caesar? . . . until you can rest where there is no
sin, and no blackening, and no biting snake in the way to hinder
your godly steps. Snatch your soul away from the world; flee from
Sodom; flee from the burning; travel on without turning back,
lest you should be fixed as a pillar of salt. Escape to the
Mountain lest you be destroyed with the plain. But if you are
already bound and constrained by the chain of necessity, reason
thus with yourself; or rather let me reason thus with you. It is
better both to attain the good and to keep the purification. But
if it be impossible to do both it is surely better to be a little
stained with your public affairs than to fall altogether short of
grace; just as I think it better to undergo a slight punishment
from father or master than to be put out of doors; and to be a
little beamed upon than to be left in total darkness. And it is
the part of wise men to choose, as in good things the greater and
more perfect, so in evils the lesser and lighter. Wherefore do
not overmuch dread the purification. For our success is always
judged by comparison with our place in life by our just and
merciful Judge; and often one who is in public life and has had
small success has had a greater reward than one who in the
enjoyment of liberty has not completely succeeded; as I think it
more marvellous for a man to advance a little in fetters, than
for one to run who is not carrying any weight; or to be only a
little spattered in walking through mud, than to be perfectly
clean when the road is clean. To give you a proof of what I have
said:-Rahab the harlot was justified by one thing alone, her
hospitality, though she receives no praise for the rest of her
conduct; and the Publican was exalted by one thing, his humility,
though he received no testimony for anything else; so that you
may learn not easily to despair concerning yourself.
XX. But some will say, What shall I gain,
if, when I am preoccupied by baptism, and have cut off myself by
my haste from the pleasures of life, when it was in my power to
give the reins to pleasure, and then to obtain grace? For the
labourers in the vineyard who had worked the longest time gained
nothing thereby, for equal wages were given to the very last. You
have delivered me from some trouble, whoever you are who say
this, because you have at last with much difficulty told the
secret of your delay; and though I cannot applaud your
shiftiness, I do applaud your confession. But come hither and
listen to the interpretation of the parable, that you may not be
injured by Scripture for want of information. First of all, there
is no question here of baptism, but of those who believe at
different times and enter the good vineyard of the Church. For
from the day and hour at which each believed, from that day and
hour he is required to work. And then, although they who entered
first contributed more to the measure of the labour yet they did
not contribute more to the measure of the purpose; nay perhaps
even more was due to the last in respect of this, though the
statement may seem paradoxical. For the cause of their later
entrance was their later call to the work of the vineyard. In all
other respects let us see how different they are. The first did
not believe or enter till they had agreed on their hire; but the
others came forward to do the work without an agreement, which is
a proof of greater faith. And the first were found to be of an
envious and murmuring nature, but no such charge is brought
against the others. And to the first, that which was given was
wages, though they were worthless fellows; to the last it was the
free gift. So that the first were convicted of folly, and with
reason deprived of the greater reward. Let us see what would have
happened to them if they had been late. Why, the equal pay,
evidently. How then can they blame the employer as unjust because
of their equality? For all these things take away the merit of
their labour from the first, although they were at work first;
and therefore it turns out that the distribution of equal pay was
just, if you measure the good will against the labour.
XXI. But supposing that the Parable does
sketch the power of the font according to your interpretation,
what would prevent you, if you entered first, and bore the heat,
from avoiding envy of the last, that by this very lovingkindness
you might obtain more, and receive the reward, not as of grace
but as of debt? And next, the workmen who receive the wages are
those who have entered, not those who have missed, the vineyard;
which last is like to be your case. So that if it were certain
that you would obtain the Gift, though you are of such a mind,
and maliciously keep back some of the labour, you might be
forgiven for taking refuge in such arguments, and desiring to
make unlawful gain out of the kindness of the master; though I
might assure you that the very fact of being able to labour is a
greater reward to any who is not altogether of a huckstering
mind. But since there is a risk of your being altogether shut out
of the vineyard through your bargaining, and losing the capital
through stopping to pick up little gains, do let yourselves be
persuaded by my words to forsake the false interpretations and
contradictions, and to come forward without arguing to receive
the Gift, lest you should be snatched away before you realize
your hopes, and should find out that it was to your own loss that
you devised these sophistries.
XXII. But then, you say, is not God
merciful, and since He knows our thoughts and searches out our
desires, will He not take the desire of Baptism instead of
Baptism? You are speaking in riddles, if what you mean is that
because of God's mercy the unenlightened is enlightened in His
sight; and he is within the kingdom of heaven who merely desires
to attain to it, but refrains from doing that which pertains to
the kingdom. I will, however, speak out boldly my opinion on
these matters; and I think that all other sensible men will range
themselves on my side. Of those who have received the gift, some
were altogether alien from God and from salvation, both addicted
to all manner of sin, and desirous to be bad; others were
semivicious, and in a kind of mean state between good and bad;
others again, while they did that which was evil, yet did not
approve their own action, just as men in a fever are not pleased
with their own sickness. And others even before they were
illuminated were worthy of praise; partly by nature, and partly
by the care with which they prepared themselves for Baptism.
These after their initiation became evidently better, and less
liable to fall; in the one case with a view to procuring good,
and in the other in order to preserve it. And amongst these,
those who gave in to some evil are better than those who were
altogether bad; and better still than those who yielded a little,
are those who were more zealous, and broke up their fallow ground
before Baptism; they have the advantage over the others of having
already laboured; for the font does not do away with good deeds
as it does with sins. But better even than these are they who are
also cultivating the Gift, and are polishing themselves to the
utmost possible beauty.
XXIII. And so also in those who fail to
receive the Gift, some are altogether animal or bestial,
according as they are either foolish or wicked; and this, I
think, has to be added to their other sins, that they have no
reverence at all for this Gift, but look upon it as a mere
gift-to be acquiesced in if given them, and if not given them,
then to be neglected. Others know and honour the Gift, but put it
off; some through laziness, some through greediness. Others are
not in a position to receive it, perhaps on account of infancy,
or some perfectly involuntary circumstance through which they are
prevented from receiving it, even if they wish. As then in the
former case we found much difference, so too in this. They who
altogether despise it are worse than they who neglect it through
greed or carelessness. These are worse than they who have lost
the Gift through ignorance or tyranny, for tyranny is nothing but
an involuntary error. And I think that the first will have to
suffer punishment, as for all their sins, so for their contempt
of baptism; and that the second will also have to suffer, but
less, because it was not so much through wickedness as through
folly that they wrought their failure; and that the third will be
neither glorified nor punished by the righteous Judge, as
unsealed and yet not wicked, but persons who have suffered rather
than done wrong. For not every one who is not bad enough to be
punished is good enough to be honoured; just as not every one who
is not good enough to be honoured is bad enough to be punished.
And I look upon it as well from another point of view. If you
judge the murderously disposed man by his will alone, apart from
the act of murder, then you may reckon as baptized him who
desired baptism apart from the reception of baptism. But if you
cannot do the one how can you do the other? I cannot see it. Or,
if you like, we will put it thus:-If desire in your opinion has
equal power with actual baptism, then judge in the same way in
regard to glory, and you may be content with longing for it, as
if that were itself glory. And what harm is done you by your not
attaining the actual glory, as long as you have the desire for
it?
XXIV. Therefore since you have heard these
words, come forward to it, and be enlightened, and your faces
shall not be ashamed through missing the Grace. Receive then the
Enlightenment in due season, that darkness pursue you not, and
catch you, and sever you from the Illumining. The night cometh
when no man can work after our departure hence. The one is the
voice of David, the other of the True Light which lighteth every
man that cometh into the world. And consider how Solomon reproves
you who are too idle or lethargic, saying, How long wilt thou
sleep, O sluggard, and when wilt thou arise out of thy sleep? You
rely upon this or that, and "pretend pretences in sins;" am
waiting for Epiphany; I prefer Easter; I will wait for Pentecost.
It is better to be baptized with Christ, to rise with Christ on
the Day of His Resurrection, to honour the Manifestation of the
Spirit. And what then? The end will come suddenly in a day for
which thou lookest not, and in an hour that thou art not aware
of; and then you will have for a companion lack of grace; and you
will be famished in the midst of all those riches of goodness,
though you ought to reap the opposite fruit from the opposite
course, a harvest by diligence, and refreshment from the font,
like the thirsty hart that runs in haste to the spring, and
quenches the labour of his race by water; and not to be in
Ishmael's case, dried up for want of water, or as the fable has
it, punished by thirst in the midst of a spring. It is a sad
thing to let the market day go by and then to seek for work. It
is a sad thing to let the Manna pass and then to long for food.
It is a sad thing to take a counsel too late, and to become
sensible of the loss only when it is impossible to repair it;
that is, after our departure hence, and the bitter closing of the
acts of each man's life, and the punishment of sinners, and the
glory of the purified. Therefore do not delay in coming to grace,
but hasten, lest the robber outstrip you, lest the adulterer pass
you by, lest the insatiate be satisfied before you, lest the
murderer seize the blessing first, or the publican or the
fornicator, or any of these violent ones who take the Kingdom of
heaven by force. For it suffers violence willingly, and is
tyrannized over through goodness.
XXV. Take my advice, my friend, and be slow
to do evil, but swift to your salvation; for readiness to evil
and tardiness to good are equally bad. If you are invited to a
revel, be not swift to go; if to apostasy, leap away; if a
company of evildoers say to you, "Come with us, share our
bloodguiltiness, let us hide in the earth a righteous man
unjustly," do not lend them even your ears. Thus you will make
two very great gains; you will make known to the other his sin,
and you will deliver yourself from evil company. But if David the
Great say unto you, Come and let us rejoice in the Lord; or
another Prophet, Come and let us ascend into the Mountain of the
Lord; or our Saviour Himself, Come unto me all ye that labour and
are heavy laden, and I will give you rest; or, Arise, let us go
hence, shining brightly, glittering above snow, whiter than milk,
shining above the sapphire stone; let us not resist or delay. Let
us be like Peter and John, and let us hasten; as they did to the
Sepulchre and the Resurrection, so we to the Font; running
together, racing against each other, striving to be first to
obtain this Blessing. And say not, "Go away, and come again, and
tomorrow I will be baptized," when you may have the blessing
today. "I will have with me father, mother, brothers, wife,
children, friends, and all whom I value, and then I will be
saved; but it is not yet the fitting time for me to be made
bright;" for if you say so, there is reason to fear lest you
should have as sharers of your sorrow those whom you hoped to
have as sharers of your joy. If they will be with you, well;-but
do not wait for them. For it is base to say, "But where is my
offering for my baptism, and where is my baptismal robe, in which
I shall be made bright, and where is what is wanted for the
entertainment of my baptizers, that in these too I may become
worthy of notice? For, as you see, all these things are
necessary, and on account of this the Grace will be lessened." Do
not thus trifle with great things, or allow yourself to think so
basely. The Sacrament is greater than the visible environment.
Offer yourself; clothe yourself with Christ, feast me with your
conduct; I rejoice to be thus affectionately treated, and God Who
gives these great gifts rejoices thus. Nothing is great in the
sight of God, but what the poor may give, so that the poor may
not here also be outrun, for they cannot contend with the rich.
In other matters there is a distinction between poor and rich,
but here the more willing is the richer.
XXVI. Let nothing hinder you from going on,
nor draw you away from your readiness. While your desire is still
vehement, seize upon that which you desire. While the iron is
hot, let it be tempered by the cold water, lest anything should
happen in the interval, and put an end to your desire. I am
Philip; do you be Candace's Eunuch. Do you also say, "See, here
is water, what doth hinder me to be baptized?" Seize the
opportunity; rejoice greatly in the blessing; and having spoken
be baptized; and having been baptized be saved; and though you be
an Ethiopian body, be made white in soul. Do not say, "A Bishop
shall baptize me,-and he a Metropolitan,-and he of Jerusalem (for
the Grace does not come of a place, but of the Spirit),-and he of
noble birth, for it would be a sad thing for my nobility to be
insulted by being baptized by a man of no family." Do not say, "I
do not mind a mere Priest, if he is a celibate, and a religious,
and of angelic life; for it would be a sad thing for me to be
defiled even in the moment of my cleansing." Do not ask for
credentials of the preacher or the baptizer. For another is his
judge, and the examiner of what thou canst not see. For man
looketh on the outward appearance, but the Lord looketh on the
heart. But to thee let every one be trustworthy for purification,
so only he is one of those who have been approved, not of those
who are openly condemned, and not a stranger to the Church. Do
not judge your judges, you who need healing; and do not make nice
distinctions about the rank of those who shall cleanse you, or be
critical about your spiritual fathers. One may be higher or lower
than another, but all are higher than you. Look at it this way.
One may be golden, another iron, but both are rings and have
engraved on them the same royal image; and thus when they impress
the wax, what difference is there between the seal of the one and
that of the other? None. Detect the material in the wax, if you
are so very clever. Tell me which is the impression of the iron
ring, and which of the golden. And how do they come to be one?
The difference is in the material and not in the seal. And so
anyone can be your baptizer; for though one may excel another in
his life, yet the grace of baptism is the same, and any one may
be your consecrator who is formed in the same faith.
XXVII. Do not disdain to be baptized with a
poor man, if you are rich; or if you are noble, with one who is
lowborn; or if you are a master, with one who is up to the
present time your slave. Not even so will you be humbling
yourself as Christ, unto Whom you are baptized today, Who for
your sake took upon Himself even the form of a slave. From the
day of your new birth all the old marks were effaced, and Christ
was put upon all in one form. Do not disdain to confess your
sins, knowing how John baptized, that by present shame you may
escape from future shame (for this too is a part of the future
punishment); and prove that you really hate sin by making a shew
of it openly, and triumphing over it as worthy of contempt. Do
not reject the medicine of exorcism, nor refuse it because of its
length. This too is a touchstone of your right disposition for
grace. What labour have you to do compared with that of the Queen
of Ethiopia, who arose and came from the utmost part of the earth
to see the wisdom of Solomon? And behold a Greater than Solomon
is here in the judgment of those who reason maturely. Do not
hesitate either at length of journey, or distance by sea; or
fire, if this too lies before you; or of any other, small or
great, of the hindrances that you may attain to the gift. But if
without any labour and trouble at all you may obtain that which
you desire, what folly it is to put off the gift: "Ho, every one
that thirsteth, come ye to the waters," Esaias invites you, "and
he that hath no money, come buy wine and milk, without money and
without price." O swiftness of His mercy: O easiness of the
Covenant: This blessing may be bought by you merely for willing
it; He accepts the very desire as a great price; He thirsts to be
thirsted for; He gives to drink to all who desire to drink; He
takes it as a kindness to be asked for the kindness; He is ready
and liberal; He gives with more pleasure than others receive.
Only let us not be condemned for frivolity by asking for little,
and for what is unworthy of the Giver. Blessed is he from whom
Jesus asks drink, as He did from that Samaritan woman, and gives
a well of water springing up unto eternal life. Blessed is he
that soweth beside all waters, and upon every soul, tomorrow to
be ploughed and watered, which today the ox and the ass tread,
while it is dry and without water, and oppressed with unreason.
And blessed is he who, though he be a "valley of rushes," is
watered out of the House of the Lord; for he is made fruitbearing
instead of rushbearing, and produces that which is for the food
of man, not that which is rough and unprofitable. And for the
sake of this we must be very careful not to miss the
Grace.
XXVIII. Be it so, some will say, in the
case of those who ask for Baptism; what have you to say about
those who are still children, and conscious neither of the loss
nor of the grace? Are we to baptize them too? Certainly, if any
danger presses. For it is better that they should be
unconsciously sanctified than that they should depart unsealed
and uninitiated.
A proof of this is found in the
Circumcision on the eighth day, which was a sort of typical seal,
and was conferred on children before they had the use of reason.
And so is the anointing of the doorposts, which preserved the
firstborn, though applied to things which had no consciousness.
But in respect of others I give my advice to wait till the end of
the third year, or a little more or less, when they may be able
to listen and to answer something about the Sacrament; that, even
though they do not perfectly understand it, yet at any rate they
may know the outlines; and then to sanctify them in soul and body
with the great sacrament of our consecration. For this is how the
matter stands; at that time they begin to be responsible for
their lives, when reason is matured, and they learn the mystery
of life (for of sins of ignorance owing to their tender years
they have no account to give), and it is far more profitable on
all accounts to be fortified by the Font, because of the sudden
assaults of danger that befall us, stronger than our
helpers.
XXIX. But, one says, Christ was thirty
years old when He was baptized, and that although He was God; and
do you bid us hurry our Baptism?-You have solved the difficulty
when you say He was God. For He was absolute cleansing; He had no
need of cleansing; but it was for you that He was purified, just
as it was for you that, though He had not flesh, yet He is
clothed with flesh. Nor was there any danger to Him from putting
off Baptism, for He had the ordering of His own Passion as of His
own Birth. But in your case the danger is to no small interests,
if you were to depart after a birth to corruption alone, and
without being clothed with incorruption. And there is this
further point for me to consider, that that particular time of
baptism was a necessity for Him, but your case is not the same.
He manifested Himself in the thirtieth year after His birth and
not before; first, in order that He might not appear
ostentatious, which is a condition belonging to vulgar minds; and
next, because that age tests virtue thoroughly, and is the right
time to teach. And since it was needful for Him to undergo the
passion which saves the world, it was needful also that all
things which belong to the passion should fit into the passion;
the Manifestation, the Baptism, the Witness from Heaven, the
Proclamation, the concourse of the multitude, the Miracles; and
that they should be as it were one body, not torn asunder, nor
broken apart by intervals. For out of the Baptism and
Proclamation arose that earthquake of people coming together, for
so Scripture calls that time; and out of the multitude arose the
shewing of the signs and the miracles that lead up to the Gospel.
And out of these came the jealousy, and from this the hatred, and
out of the hatred the circumstance of the plot against Him, and
the betrayal; and out of these the Cross, and the other events by
which our Salvation has been effected. Such are the reasons in
the case of Christ so far as we can attain to them. And perhaps
another more secret reason might be found.
XXX. But for you, what necessity is there
that by following the examples which are far above you, you
should do a thing so ill-advised for yourself? For there are many
other details of the Gospel History which are quite different to
what happens nowadays, and the seasons of which do not
correspond. For instance Christ fasted a little before His
temptation, we before Easter. As far as the fasting days are
concerned it is the same, but the difference in the seasons is no
little one. He armed Himself with them against temptation; but to
us this fast is symbolical of dying with Christ, and it is a
purification in preparation for the festival. And He fasted
absolutely for forty days, for He was God; but we measure our
fasting by our power, even though some are led by zeal to rush
beyond their strength. Again, He gave the Sacrament of the
Passover to His Disciples in an upper chamber, and after supper,
and one day before He suffered; but we celebrate it in Houses of
Prayer, and before food, and after His resurrection. He rose
again the third day; our resurrection is not till after a long
time. But matters which have to do with Him are neither abruptly
separated from us, nor yet yoked together with those which
concern us in point of time; but they were handed down to us just
so far as to be patterns of what we should do, and then they
carefully avoided an entire and exact resemblance.
XXXI. If then you will listen to me, you
will bid a long farewell to all such arguments, and you will jump
at this Blessing, and begin to struggle in a twofold conflict;
first, to prepare yourself for baptism by purifying yourself; and
next, to preserve the baptismal gift; for it is a matter of equal
difficulty to obtain a blessing which we have not, and to keep it
when we have gained it. For often what zeal has acquired sloth
has destroyed; and what hesitation has lost diligence has
regained. A great assistance to the attainment of what you desire
are vigils, fasts, sleeping on the ground, prayers, tears, pity
of and almsgiving to those who are in need. And let these be your
thanksgiving for what you have received, and at the same time
your safeguard of them. You have the benefit to remind you of
many commandments; so do not transgress them. Does a poor man
approach you? Remember how poor you once were, and how rich you
were made. One in want of bread or of drink, perhaps another
Lazarus, is cast at your gate; respect the Sacramental Table to
which you have approached, the Bread of Which you have partaken,
the Cup in Which you have communicated, being consecrated by the
Sufferings of Christ. If a stranger fall at your feet, homeless
and a foreigner, welcome in him Him who for your sake was a
stranger, and that among His own, and who came to dwell in you by
His grace, and who drew you towards the heavenly dwelling place.
Be a Zaccheus, who yesterday was a Publican, and is to-day of
liberal soul; offer all to the coming in of Christ, that though
small in bodily stature you may show yourself great, nobly
contemplating Christ. A sick or a wounded man lies before you;
respect your own health, and the wounds from which Christ
delivered you. If you see one naked clothe him, in honour of your
own garment of incorruption, which is Christ, for as many as were
baptized into Christ have put on Christ. If you find a debtor
falling at your feet, tear up every document, whether just or
unjust. Remember the ten thousand talents which Christ forgave
you, and be not a harsh exactor of a smaller debt-and that from
whom? From your fellow servant, you who were forgiven so much
more by the Master. Otherwise you will have to give satisfaction
to His mercy, which you would not imitate and take as your
copy.
XXXII. Let the laver be not for your body
only, but also for the image of God in you; not merely a washing
away of sins in you, but also a correction of your temper; let it
not only wash away the old filth, but let it purify the
fountainhead. Let it not only move you to honourable acquisition,
but let it teach you also honourably to lose possession; or,
which is more easy, to make restitution of what you have
wrongfully acquired. For what profit is it that your sin should
have been forgiven you, but the loss which you have inflicted
should not be repaired to him whom you have injured? Two sins are
on your conscience, the one that you made a dishonest gain, the
other that you retained the gains; you received forgiveness for
the one, but in respect of the other you are still in sin, for
you have still possession of what belongs to another; and your
sin has not been put to an end, but only divided by the time
which has elapsed. Part of it was perpetrated before your
Baptism, but part remains after your Baptism; for Baptism carries
forgiveness of Past, not of Present sins; and its purification
must not be played with, but be genuinely impressed upon you; you
must be made perfectly bright, and not be merely coloured; you
must receive the gift, not of a mere covering of your sins, but
of a taking them clean away. Blessed are they whose iniquities
are forgiven . . . this is done by the complete cleansing . . .
and whose sins are hidden . . . this belongs to those who are not
yet healed in their deepest soul. Blessed is the man to whom the
Lord will not impute sin. . . . This is a third class of sinners,
whose actions are not praiseworthy, but who are innocent of
intention.
XXXIII. What say I then, and what is my
argument? Yesterday you were a Canaanite soul bent together by
sin; today you have been made straight by the Word. Do not be
bent gain, and condemned to the earth, as if weighed down by the
Devil with a wooden collar, nor get an incurable curvature.
Yesterday you were being dried up by an abundant haemorrhage, for
you were pouring out crimson sin; today stanched and flourishing
again, for you have touched the hem of Christ and your issue has
been stayed. Guard, I pray you, the cleansing lest you should
again have a haemorrhage, and not be able to lay hold of Christ
to steal salvation; for Christ does not like to be stolen from
often, though He is very merciful. Yesterday you were flung upon
a bed, exhausted and paralyzed, and you had no one when the water
should be troubled to put you into the pool. Today you have Him
Who is in one Person Man and God, or rather God and Man. You were
raised up from your bed, or rather you took up your bed, and
publicly acknowledged the benefit. Do not again be thrown upon
your bed by sinning, in the evil rest of a body paralyzed by its
pleasures. But as you now are, so walk, mindful of the command,
Behold thou art made whole; sin no more lest a worse thing happen
unto thee if thou prove thyself bad after the blessing thou hast
received. You have heard the loud voice, Lazarus, come forth, as
you lay in the tomb; not, however, after four days, but after
many days; and you were loosed from the bonds of your
graveclothes. Do not again become dead, nor live with those who
dwell in the tombs; nor bind yourself with the bonds of your own
sins; for it is uncertain whether you will rise again from the
tomb till the last and universal resurrection, which will bring
every work into judgment, not to be healed, but to be judged, and
to give account of all which for good or evil it has treasured
up.
XXXIV. If you were full of leprosy, that
shapeless evil, yet you scraped off the evil matter, and received
again the Image whole. Shew your cleansing to me your Priest,
that I may recognize how much more precious it is than the legal
one. Do not range yourself with the nine unthankful men, but
imitate the tenth. For although he was a Samaritan, yet he was of
better mind than the others. Make certain that you will not break
out again with evil ulcers, and find the indisposition of your
body hard to heal. Yesterday meanness and avarice were withering
your hand; to-day let liberality and kindness stretch it out. It
is a noble cure for a weak hand to disperse abroad, to give to
the poor, to pour out the things which we possess abundantly,
till we reach the very bottom; and perhaps this will gush forth
food for you, as for the woman of Sarepta, and especially if you
happen to be feeding an Elias, to recognize that it is a good
abundance to be needy for the sake of Christ, Who for our sakes
became poor. If you were deaf and dumb, let the Word sound in
your ears, or rather keep there Him Who hath sounded. Do not shut
your ears to the Instruction of the Lord, and to His Counsel,
like the adder to charms. If you are blind and unenlightened,
lighten your eyes that you sleep not in death. In God's Light see
light, and in the Spirit of God be enlightened by the Son, That
Threefold and Undivided Light. If you receive all the Word, you
will bring therewith upon your own soul all the healing powers of
Christ, with which separately these individuals were healed. Only
be not ignorant of the measure of grace; only let not the enemy,
while you sleep, maliciously sow tares. Only take care that as by
your cleansing you have become an object of enmity to the Evil
One, you do not again make yourself an object of pity by sin.
Only be careful lest, while rejoicing and lifted up above measure
by the blessing, you fall again through pride. Only be diligent
as to your cleansing, "setting ascensions in your heart," and
keep with all diligence the remission which you have received as
a gift, in order that, while the remission comes from God, the
preservation of it may come from yourself also.
XXXV. How shall this be? Remember always
the parable, and so will you best and most perfectly help
yourself. The unclean and malignant spirit is gone out of you,
being chased by baptism. He will not submit to the expulsion, he
will not resign himself to be houseless and homeless: He goes
through waterless places, dry of the Divine Stream, and there he
desires to abide. He wanders, seeking rest; he finds none. He
lights on baptized souls, whose sins the font has washed away. He
fears the water; he is choked with the cleansing, as the Legion
were in the sea. Again he returns to the house whence he came
out. He is shameless, he is contentious, he makes a fresh assault
upon it, he makes a new attempt. If he finds that Christ has
taken up His abode there, and has filled the place which he had
vacated, he is driven back again, and goes off without success
and is become an object of pity in his wandering state. But if he
finds in you a place, swept and garnished indeed, but empty and
idle, equally ready to take in this or that which shall first
occupy it, he makes a leap into it, he takes up his abode there
with a larger train; and the last state is worse than the first,
inasmuch as then there was a hope of amendment and safety, but
now the evil is rampant, and drags in sin by its flight from
good, and therefore the possession is more secure to him who
dwells there.
XXXVI. I will remind you again about
Illuminations, and that often, and will reckon them up from Holy
Scripture. For I myself shall be happier for remembering them
(for what is sweeter than light to those who have tasted light?)
and I will dazzle you with my words. There is sprung up a light
for the righteous, and its partner joyful gladness. And, The
light of the righteous is everlasting; and Thou art shining
wondrously from the everlasting mountains, is said to God, I
think of the Angelic powers which aid our efforts after good. And
you have heard David's words; The Lord is my Light and my
Salvation, whom then shall I fear? And now he asks that the Light
and the Truth may be sent forth for him, now giving thanks that
he has a share in it, in that the Light of God is marked upon
him; that is, that the signs of the illumination given are
impressed upon him and recognized. One light alone let us
shun-that which is the offspring of the baleful fire; let us not
walk in the light of our fire, and in the flame which we have
kindled. For I know a cleansing fire which Christ came to send
upon the earth, and He Himself is anagogically called a Fire.
This Fire takes away whatsoever is material and of evil habit;
and this He desires to kindle with all speed, for He longs for
speed in doing us good, since He gives us even coals of fire to
help us. I know also a fire which is not cleansing, but avenging;
either that fire of Sodom which He pours down on all sinners,
mingled with brimstone and storms, or that which is prepared for
the Devil and his Angels or that which proceeds from the face of
the Lord, and shall burn up his enemies round about; and one even
more fearful still than these, the unquenchable fire which is
ranged with the worm that dieth not but is eternal for the
wicked. For all these belong to the destroying power; though some
may prefer even in this place to take a more merciful view of
this fire, worthily of Him That chastises.
XXXVII. And as I know of two kinds of fire,
so also do I of light. The one is the light of our ruling power
directing our steps according to the will of God; the other is a
deceitful and meddling one, quite contrary to the true light,
though pretending to be that light, that it may cheat us by its
appearance. This really is darkness, yet has the appearance of
noonday, the high perfection of light. And so I read that passage
of those who continually flee in darkness at noonday; for this is
really night, and yet is thought to be bright light by those who
have been ruined by luxury. For what saith David? "Night was
around me and I knew it not, for I thought that my luxury was
enlightenment." But such are they, and in this condition; but let
us kindle for ourselves the light of knowledge. This will be done
by sowing unto righteousness, and reaping the fruit of life, for
action is the patron of contemplation, that amongst other things
we may learn also what is the true light, and what the false, and
be saved from falling unawares into evil wearing the guise of
good. Let us be made light, as it was said to the disciples by
the Great Light, ye are the light of the world. Let us be made
lights in the world, holding forth the Word of Life; that is, let
us be made a quickening power to others. Let us lay hold of the
Godhead; let us lay hold of the First and Brightest Light. Let us
walk towards Him shining, before our feet stumble upon dark and
hostile mountains. While it is day let us walk honestly as in the
day, not in rioting and drunkenness, not in chambering and
wantonness, which are the dishonesties of the night.
XXXVIII. Let us cleanse every member,
Brethren, let us purify every sense; let nothing in us be
imperfect or of our first birth; let us leave nothing
unilluminated. Let us enlighten our eyes, that we may look
straight on, and not bear in ourselves any harlot idol through
curious and busy sight; for even though we might not worship
lust, yet our soul would be defiled. If there be beam or mote,
let us purge it away, that we may be able to see those of others
also. Let us be enlightened in our ears; let us be enlightened in
our tongue, that we may hearken what the Lord God will speak, and
that He may cause us to hear His lovingkindness in the morning,
and that we may be made to hear of joy and gladness, spoken into
godly ears, that we may not be a sharp sword, nor a whetted
razor, nor turn under our tongue labour and toil, but that we may
speak the Wisdom of God in a mystery, even the hidden Wisdom,
reverencing the fiery tongues. Let us be healed also in the
smell, that we be not effeminate; and be sprinkled with dust
instead of sweet perfumes, but may smell the Ointment that was
poured out for us, spiritually receiving it; and so formed and
transformed by it, that from us too a sweet odour may be smelled.
Let us cleanse our touch, our taste, our throat, not touching
them over gently, nor delighting in smooth things, but handling
them as is worthy of Him, the Word That was made flesh for us;
and so far following the example of Thomas, not pampering them
with dainties and sauces, those brethren of a more baleful
pampering, but tasting and learning that the Lord is good, with
the better and abiding taste; and not for a short while
refreshing that baneful and thankless dust, which lets pass and
does not hold that which is given to it; but delighting it with
the words which are sweeter than honey.
XXXIX. And in addition to what has been
said, it is good with our head cleansed, as the head which is the
workshop of the senses is cleansed, to hold fast the Head of
Christ, from which the whole body is fitly joined together and
compacted; and to cast down our sin that exalted itself, when it
would exalt us above our better part. It is good also for the
shoulder to be sanctified and purified that it may be able to
take up the Cross of Christ, which not everyone can easily do. It
is good for the hands to be consecrated, and the feet; the one
that they may in every place be lifted up holy; and that they may
lay hold of the discipline of Christ, lest the Lord at any time
be angered; and that the Word may gain credence by action, as was
the case with that which was given in the hand of a prophet; the
other, that they be not swift to shed blood, nor to run to evil,
but that they be prompt to run to the Gospel and the Prize of the
high Calling, and to receive Christ Who washes and cleanses them.
And if there be also a cleansing of that belly which receiveth
and digesteth the food of the Word, it were good also; not to
make it a god by luxury and the meat that perisheth, but rather
to give it all possible cleansing, and to make it more spare,
that it may receive the Word of God at the very heart, and grieve
honourably over the sins of Israel. I find also the heart and
inward parts deemed worthy of honour. David convinces me of this,
when he prays that a clean heart may be created in him, and a
right spirit renewed in his inward parts; meaning, I think, the
mind and its movements or thoughts.
XL. And what of the loins, or reins, for we
must not pass these over? Let the purification take hold of these
also. Let our loins be girded about and kept in check by
continence, as the Law bade Israel of old when partaking of the
Passover. For none comes out of Egypt purely, or escapes the
Destroyer, except he who has disciplined these. And let the reins
be changed by that good conversion by which they transfer all the
affections to God, so that they can say, Lord, all my desire is
before Thee, and the day of man have I not desired; for you must
be a man of desires, but they must be those of the spirit. For
thus you would destroy the dragon that carries the greater part
of his strength upon his navel and his loins, by slaying the
power that comes to him from these. Do not be surprised at my
giving a more abundant honour to our uncomely parts, mortifying
them and making them chaste by my speech, and standing up against
the flesh. Let us give to God all our members which are upon the
earth; let us consecrate them all; not the lobe of the liver or
the kidneys with the fat, nor some part of our bodies now this
now that (why should we despise the rest?); but let us bring
ourselves entire, let us be reasonable holocausts, perfect
sacrifices; and let us not make only the shoulder or the breast a
portion for the Priest to take away, for that would be a small
thing, but let us give ourselves entire, that we may receive back
ourselves entire; for this is to receive entirely, when we give
ourselves to God and offer as a sacrifice our own
salvation.
XLI. Besides all this and before all, keep
I pray you the good deposit, by which I live and work, and which
I desire to have as the companion of my departure; with which I
endure all that is so distressful, and despise all delights; the
confession of the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost. This I
commit unto you to-day; with this I will baptize you and make you
grow. This I give you to share, and to defend all your life, the
One Godhead and Power, found in the Three in Unity, and
comprising the Three separately, not unequal, in substances or
natures, neither increased nor diminished by superiorities or
inferiorities; in every respect equal, in every respect the same;
just as the beauty and the greatness of the heavens is one; the
infinite conjunction of Three Infinite Ones, Each God when
considered in Himself; as the Father so the Son, as the Son so
the Holy Ghost; the Three One God when contemplated together;
Each God because Consubstantial; One God because of the
Monarchia. No sooner do I conceive of the One than I am illumined
by the Splendour of the Three; no sooner do I distinguish Them
than I am carried back to the One. When I think of any One of the
Three I think of Him as the Whole, and my eyes are filled, and
the greater part of what I am thinking of escapes me. I cannot
grasp the greatness of That One so as to attribute a greater
greatness to the Rest. When I contemplate the Three together, I
see but one torch, and cannot divide or measure out the Undivided
Light.
XLII. Do you fear to speak of Generation
lest you should attribute aught of passion to the impassible God?
I on the other hand fear to speak of Creation, lest I should
destroy God by the insult and the untrue division, either cutting
the Son away from the Father, or from the Son the Substance of
the Spirit. For this paradox is involved, that not only is a
created Life foisted into the Godhead by those who measure
Godhead badly; but even this created life is divided against
itself. For as these low earthly minds make the Son subject to
the Father, so again is the rank of the Spirit made inferior to
that of the Son, until both God and created life are insulted by
the new Theology. No, my friends, there is nothing servile in the
Trinity, nothing created, nothing accidental, as I have heard one
of the wise say. If I yet pleased men I should not be the servant
of Christ, says the Apostle; and if I yet worshipped a creature,
or were baptized into a creature, I should not be made divine,
nor have changed my first birth. What shall I say to those who
worship Astarte or Chemosh, the abomination of the Sidonians, or
the likeness of a star, a god a little above them to these
idolaters, but yet a creature and a piece of workmanship, when I
myself either do not worship Two of Those into Whose united Name
I am baptized, or else worship my fellow-servants, for they are
fellow-servants, even if a little higher in the scale; for
differences must exist among fellow-servants.
XLIII. I should like to call the Father the
greater, because from him flows both the Equality and the Being
of the Equals (this will be granted on all hands), but I am
afraid to use the word Origin, lest I should make Him the Origin
of Inferiors, and thus insult Him by precedencies of honour. For
the lowering of those Who are from Him is no glory to the Source.
Moreover, I look with suspicion at your insatiate desire, for
fear you should take hold of this word Greater, and divide the
Nature, using the word Greater in all senses, whereas it does not
apply to the Nature, but only to Origination. For in the
Consubstantial Persons there is nothing greater or less in point
of Substance. I would honour the Son as Son before the Spirit,
but Baptism consecrating me through the Spirit does not allow of
this. But are you afraid of being reproached with Tritheism? Do
you take possession of this good thing, the Unity in the Three,
and leave me to fight the battle. Let me be the shipbuilder, and
do you use the ship; or if another is the builder of the ship,
take me for the architect of the house, and do you live in it
with safety, though you spent no labour upon it. You shall not
have a less prosperous voyage, or a less safe habitation than I
who built them, because you have not laboured upon them. See how
great is my indulgence; see the goodness of the Spirit; the war
shall be mine, yours the achievement; I will be under fire, and
you shall live in peace; but join with your defender in prayer,
and give me your hand by the Faith. I have three stones which I
will sling at the Philistine; I have three inspirations against
the son of the Sareptan, with which I will quicken the slain; I
have three floods against the faggots with which I will
consecrate the Sacrifice with water, raising the most unexpected
fire; and I will throw down the prophets of shame by the power of
the Sacrament.
XLIV. What need have I any more of speech?
It is the time for teaching, not for controversy. I protest
before God and the elect Angels, be thou baptized in this faith.
If thy heart is written upon in some other way than as my
teaching demands, come and have the writing changed; I am no
unskilled caligrapher of these truths. I write that which is
written upon my own heart; and I teach that which I have been
taught, and have kept from the beginning up to these hoar hairs.
Mine is the risk; be mine also the reward of being the Director
of your soul, and consecrating you by Baptism. But if you are
already rightly disposed, and marked with the good inscription,
see that you keep what is written, and remain unchanged in a
changing time concerning an unchanging Thing. Follow Pilate's
example in the better sense; you who are rightly written on,
imitate him who wrote wrongfully. Say to those who would persuade
you differently, what I have written, I have written. For indeed
I should be ashamed if, while that which was wrong remained
inflexible, that which is right should be so easily bent aside;
whereas we ought to be easily bent to that which is better from
that which is worse, but immovable from the better to the worse.
If it be thus, and according to this teaching that you come to
Baptism, lo I will not refrain my lips, lo I lend my hands to the
Spirit; let us hasten your salvation. The Spirit is eager, the
Consecrator is ready, the Gift is prepared. But if you still halt
and will not receive the perfectness of the Godhead, go and look
for someone else to baptize-or rather to drown you: I have no
time to cut the Godhead, and to make you dead in the moment of
your regeneration, that you should have neither the Gift nor the
Hope of Grace, but should in so short a time make shipwreck of
your salvation. For whatever you may subtract from the Deity of
the Three, you will have overthrown the whole, and destroyed your
own being made perfect.
XLV. But not yet perhaps is there formed
upon your soul any writing good or bad; and you want to be
written upon today, and formed by us unto perfection. Let us go
within the cloud. Give me the tables of your heart; I will be
your Moses, though this be a bold thing to say; I will write on
them with the finger of God a new Decalogue. I will write on them
a shorter method of salvation. And if there be any heretical or
unreasoning beast, let him remain below, or he will run the risk
of being stoned by the Word of truth. I will baptize you and make
you a disciple in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of
the Holy Ghost; and These Three have One common name, the
Godhead. And you shall know, both by appearances and by words
that you reject all ungodliness, and are united to all the
Godhead. Believe that all that is in the world, both all that is
seen and all that is unseen, was made out of nothing by God, and
is governed by the Providence of its Creator, and will receive a
change to a better state. Believe that evil has no substance or
kingdom, either unoriginate or self-existent or created by God;
but that it is our work, and the evil one's, and came upon us
through our heedlessness, but not from our Creator. Believe that
the Son of God, the Eternal Word, Who was begotten of the Father
before all time and without body, was in these latter days for
your sake made also Son of Man, born of the Virgin Mary ineffably
and stainlessly (for nothing can be stained where God is, and by
which salvation comes), in His own Person at once entire Man and
perfect God, for the sake of the entire sufferer, that He may
bestow salvation on your whole being, having destroyed the whole
condemnation of your sins: impassible in His Godhead, passible in
that which He assumed; as much Man for your sake as you are made
God for His. Believe that for us sinners He was led to death; was
crucified and buried, so far as to taste of death; and that He
rose again the third day, and ascended into heaven, that He might
take you with Him who were lying low; and that He will come again
with His glorious Presence to judge the quick and the dead; no
longer flesh, nor yet without a body, according to the laws which
He alone knows of a more godlike body, that He may be seen by
those who pierced Him, and on the other hand may remain as God
without carnality. Receive besides this the Resurrection, the
Judgment and the Reward according to the righteous scales of God;
and believe that this will be Light to those whose mind is
purified (that is, God-seen and known) proportionate to their
degree of purity, which we call the Kingdom of heaven; but to
those who suffer from blindness of their ruling faculty,
darkness, that is estrangement from God, proportionate to their
blindness here. Then, in the tenth place, work that which is good
upon this foundation of dogma; for faith without works is dead,
even as are works apart from faith. This is all that may be
divulged of the Sacrament, and that is not forbidden to the ear
of the many. The rest you shall learn within the Church by the
grace of the Holy Trinity; and those matters you shall conceal
within yourself, sealed and secure.
XLVI. But one thing more I preach unto you.
The Station in which you shall presently stand after your Baptism
before the Great Sanctuary is a foretype of the future glory. The
Psalmody with which you will be received is a prelude to the
Psalmody of Heaven; the lamps which you will kindle are a
Sacrament of the illumination there with which we shall meet the
Bridegroom, shining and virgin souls, with the lamps of our faith
shining, not sleeping through our carelessness, that we may not
miss Him that we look for if He come unexpectedly; nor yet unfed,
and without oil, and destitute of good works, that we be not cast
out of the Bridechamber. For I see how pitiable is such a case.
He will come when the cry demands the meeting, and they who are
prudent shall meet Him, with their light shining and its food
abundant, but the others seeking for oil too late from those who
possess it. And He will come with speed, and the former shall go
in with Him, but the latter shall be shut out, having wasted in
preparations the time of entrance; and they shall weep sore when
all too late they learn the penalty of their slothfulness, when
the Bride-chamber can no longer be entered by them for all their
entreaties, for they have shut it against themselves by their
sin, following in another fashion the example of those who missed
the Wedding feast with which the good Father feasts the good
Bridegroom; one on account of a newly wedded wife; another of a
newly purchased field; another of a yoke of oxen; which he and
they acquired to their misfortune, since for the sake of the
little they lose the great. For none are there of the disdainful,
nor of the slothful, nor of those who are clothed in filthy rags
and not in the Wedding garment even though here they may have
thought themselves worthy of wearing the bright robe there, and
secretly intruded themselves, deceiving themselves with vain
hopes. And then, What? When we have entered, then the Bridegroom
knows what He will teach us, and how He will converse with the
souls that have come in with Him. He will converse with them, I
think in teaching things more perfect and more pure. Of which may
we all, both Teachers and Taught, have share, in the Same Christ
our Lord, to Whom be the Glory and the Empire, for ever and ever.
Amen.
Oration XLI
On Pentecost
I. Let us reason a little about the
Festival, that we may keep it spiritually. For different persons
have different ways of keeping Festival; but to the worshipper of
the Word a discourse seems best; and of discourses, that which is
best adapted to the occasion. And of all beautiful things none
gives so much joy to the lover of the beautiful, as that the
lover of festivals should keep them spiritually. Let us look into
the matter thus. The Jew keeps festival as well as we, but only
in the letter. For while following after the bodily Law, he has
not attained to the spiritual Law. The Greek too keeps festival,
but only in the body, and in honour of his own gods and demons,
some of whom are creators of passion by their own admission, and
others were honoured out of passion. Therefore even their manner
of keeping festival is passionate, as though their very sin were
an honour to God, in Whom their passion takes refuge as a thing
to be proud of. We too keep festival, but we keep it as is
pleasing to the Spirit. And it is pleasing to Him that we should
keep it by discharging some duty, either of action or speech.
This then is our manner of keeping festival, to treasure up in
our soul some of those things which are permanent and will cleave
to it, not of those which will forsake us and be destroyed, and
which only tickle our senses for a little while; whereas they are
for the most part, in my judgment at least, harmful and ruinous.
For sufficient unto the body is the evil thereof. What need has
that fire of further fuel, or that beast of more plentiful food,
to make it more uncontrollable, and too violent for
reason?
II. Wherefore we must keep the feast
spiritually. And this is the beginning of our discourse; for we
must speak, even if our speech do seem a little too discursive;
and we must be diligent for the sake of those who love learning,
that we may as it were mix up some seasoning with our solemn
festival. The children of the Hebrews do honour to the number
Seven, according to the legislation of Moses (as did the
Pythagoreans in later days to the number Four, by which indeed
they were in the habit of swearing as the Simonians and
Marcionites do by the number Eight and the number Thirty,
inasmuch as they have given names to and reverence a system of
AEons of these numbers); I cannot say by what rules of analogy,
or in consequence of what power of this number; anyhow they do
honour to it. One thing indeed is evident, that God, having in
six days created matter, and given it form, and having arranged
it in all kinds of shapes and mixtures, and having made this
present visible world, on the seventh day rested from all His
works, as is shewn by the very name of the Sabbath, which in
Hebrew means Rest. If there be, however, any more lofty reason
than this, let others discuss it. But this honour which they pay
to it is not confined to days alone, but also extends to years.
That belonging to days the Sabbath proves, because it is
continually observed among them; and in accordance with this the
removal of leaven is for that number of days. And that belonging
to years is shewn by the seventh year, the year of Release; and
it consists not only of Hebdomads, but of Hebdomads of Hebdomads,
alike in days and years. The Hebdomads of days give birth to
Pentecost, a day called holy among them; and those of years to
what they call the Jubilee, which also has a release of land, and
a manumission of slaves, and a release of possessions bought. For
this nation consecrates to God, not only the firstfruits of
offspring, or of firstborn, but also those of days and years.
Thus the veneration paid to the number Seven gave rise also to
the veneration of Pentecost. For seven being multiplied by seven
generates fifty all but one day, which we borrow from the world
to come, at once the Eighth and the first, or rather one and
indestructible. For the present sabbatism of our souls can find
its cessation there, that a portion may be given to seven and
also to eight (so some of our predecessors have interpreted this
passage of Solomon).
III. As to the honour paid to Seven there
are many testimonies, but we will be content with a few out of
the many. For instance, seven precious spirits are named; for I
think Isaiah loves to call the activities of the Spirit spirits;
and the Oracles of the Lord are purified seven times according to
David, and the just is delivered from six troubles and in the
seventh is not smitten. But the sinner is pardoned not seven
times, but seventy times seven. And we may see it by the contrary
also (for the punishment of wickedness is to be praised), Cain
being avenged seven times, that is, punishment being exacted from
him for his fratricide, and Lamech seventy times seven, because
he was a murderer after the law and the condemnation. And wicked
neighbours receive sevenfold into their bosom; and the House of
Wisdom rests on seven pillars and the Stone of Zerubbabel is
adorned with seven eyes; and God is praised seven times a day.
And again the barren beareth seven, the perfect number, she who
is contrasted with her who is imperfect in her
children.
IV. And if we must also look at ancient
history, I perceive that Enoch, the seventh among our ancestors,
was honoured by translation. I perceive also that the
twenty-first, Abraham, was given the glory of the Patriarchate,
by the addition of a greater mystery. For the Hebdomad thrice
repeated brings out this number. And one who is very bold might
venture even to come to the New Adam, my God and Lord Jesus
Christ, Who is counted the Seventy-seventh from the old Adam who
fell under sin, in the backward genealogy according to Luke. And
I think of the seven trumpets of Jesus, the son of Nave, and the
same number of circuits and days and priests, by which the walls
of Jericho were shaken down. And so too the seven compassings of
the City; in the same way as there is a mystery in the threefold
breathings of Elias, the Prophet, by which he breathed life into
the son of the Sareptan widow, and the same number of his
floodings of the wood, when he consumed the sacrifice with fire
sent from God, and condemned the prophets of shame who could not
do the like at his challenge. And the sevenfold looking for the
cloud imposed upon the young servant; and Elissaeus stretching
himself that number of times upon the child of the Shunammite, by
which stretching the breath of life was restored. To the same
doctrine belongs, I think (if I may omit the seven-stemmed and
seven-lamped candlestick of the Temple ) that the ceremony of the
Priests' consecration lasted seven days; and seven that of the
purifying of a leper, and that of the Dedication of the Temple
the same number, and that in the seventieth year the people
returned from the Captivity; that whatever is in Units may appear
also in Decads, and the mystery of the Hebdomad be reverenced in
a more perfect number. But why do I speak of the distant past?
Jesus Himself who is pure perfection, could in the desert and
with five loaves feed five thousand, and again with seven loaves
four thousand. And the leavings after they were satisfied were in
the first case twelve baskets full, and in the other seven
baskets; neither, I imagine, without a reason or unworthy of the
Spirit. And if you read for yourself you may take note of many
numbers which contain a meaning deeper than appears on the
surface. But to come to an instance which is most useful to us on
the present occasion, not that for these reasons or others very
similar or yet more divine, the Hebrews honour the Day of
Pentecost, and we also honour it; just as there are other rites
of the Hebrews which we observe . . . they were typically
observed by them, and by us they are sacramentally reinstated.
And now having said so much by way of preface about the Day, let
us proceed to what we have to say further.
V. We are keeping the feast of Pentecost
and of the Coming of the Spirit, and the appointed time of the
Promise, and the fulfilment of our hope. And how great, how
august, is the Mystery. The dispensations of the Body of Christ
are ended; or rather, what belongs to His Bodily Advent (for I
hesitate to say the Dispensation of His Body, as long as no
discourse persuades me that it is better to have put off the body
), and that of the Spirit is beginning. And what were the things
pertaining to the Christ? The Virgin, the Birth, the Manger, the
Swaddling, the Angels glorifying Him, the Shepherds running to
Him, the course of the Star, the Magi worshipping Him and
bringing Gifts, Herod's murder of the children, the Flight of
Jesus into Egypt, the Return from Egypt, the Circumcision, the
Baptism, the Witness from Heaven, the Temptation, the Stoning for
our sake (because He had to be given as an Example to us of
enduring affliction for the Word), the Betrayal, the Nailing, the
Burial, the Resurrection, the Ascension; and of these even now He
suffers many dishonours at the hands of the enemies of Christ;
and He bears them, for He is longsuffering. But from those who
love Him He receives all that is honourable. And He defers, as in
the former case His wrath, so in ours His kindness; in their case
perhaps to give them the grace of repentance, and in ours to test
our love; whether we do not faint in our tribulations and
conflicts for the true Religion, as was from of old the order of
His Divine Economy, and of his unsearchable judgments, with which
He orders wisely all that concerns us. Such are the mysteries of
Christ. And what follows we shall see to be more glorious; and
may we too be seen. As to the things of the Spirit, may the
Spirit be with me, and grant me speech as much as I desire; or if
not that, yet as is in due proportion to the season. Anyhow He
will be with me as my Lord; not in servile guise, nor awaiting a
command, as some think. For He bloweth where He wills and on whom
He wills, and to what extent He wills. Thus we are inspired both
to think and to speak of the Spirit.
VI. They who reduce the Holy Spirit to the
rank of a creature are blasphemers and wicked servants, and worst
of the wicked. For it is the part of wicked servants to despise
Lordship, and to rebel against dominion, and to make That which
is free their fellow-servant. But they who deem Him God are
inspired by God and are illustrious in their mind; and they who
go further and call Him so, if to well disposed hearers are
exalted; if to the low, are not reserved enough, for they commit
pearls to clay, and the noise of thunder to weak ears, and the
sun to feeble eyes, and solid food to those who are still using
milk; whereas they ought to lead them little by little up to what
lies beyond them, and to bring them up to the higher truth;
adding light to light, and supplying truth upon truth. Therefore
we will leave the more mature discourse, for which the time has
not yet come, and will speak with them as follows.
VII. If, my friends, you will not
acknowledge the Holy Spirit to be uncreated, nor yet eternal;
clearly such a state of mind is due to the contrary
spirit-forgive me, if in my zeal I speak somewhat over boldly.
If, however, you are sound enough to escape this evident impiety,
and to place outside of slavery Him Who gives freedom to
yourselves, then see for yourselves with the help of the Holy
Ghost and of us what follows. For I am persuaded that you are to
some extent partakers of Him, so that I will go into the question
with you as kindred souls. Either shew me some mean between
lordship and servitude, that I may there place the rank of the
Spirit; or, if you shrink from imputing servitude to Him, there
is no doubt of the rank in which you must place the object of
your search. But you are dissatisfied with the syllables, and you
stumble at the word, and it is to you a stone of stumbling and a
rock of offence; for so is Christ to some minds. It is only human
after all. Let us meet one another in a spiritual manner; let us
be full rather of brotherly than of self love. Grant us the Power
of the Godhead, and we will give up to you the use of the Name.
Confess the Nature in other words for which you have greater
reverence, and we will heal you as infirm people, filching from
you some matters in which you delight. For it is shameful, yes,
shameful and utterly illogical, when you are sound in soul, to
draw petty distinctions about the sound, and to hide the
Treasure, as if you envied it to others, or were afraid lest you
should sanctify your own tongue too. But it is even more shameful
for us to be in the state of which we accuse you, and, while
condemning your petty distinctions of words to make petty
distinctions of letters.
VIII. Confess, my friends, the Trinity to
be of One Godhead; or if you will, of One Nature; and we will
pray the Spirit to give you this word God. He will give it to
you, I well know, inasmuch as He has already granted you the
first portion and the second; and especially if that about which
we are contending is some spiritual cowardice, and not the
devil's objection. Yet more clearly and concisely, let me say, do
not you call us to account for our loftier word (for envy has
nothing to do with this ascent), and we will not find fault with
what you have been able to attain, until by another road you are
brought up to the same resting place. For we are not seeking
victory, but to gain brethren, by whose separation from us we are
torn. This we concede to you in whom we do find something of
vital truth, who are sound as to the Son. We admire your life,
but we do not altogether approve your doctrine. Ye who have the
things of the Spirit, receive Himself in addition, that ye may
not only strive, but strive lawfully, which is the condition of
your crown. May this reward of your conversation be granted you,
that you may confess the Spirit perfectly and proclaim with us,
aye and before us, all that is His due. Yes, and I will venture
even more on your behalf; I will even utter the Apostle's wish.
So much do I cling to you, and so much do I revere your array,
and the colour of your continence, and those sacred assemblies,
and the august Virginity, and purification, and the Psalmody that
lasts all night and your love of the poor, and of the brethren,
and of strangers, that I could consent to be Anathema from
Christ, and even to suffer something as one condemned, if only
you might stand beside us, and we might glorify the Trinity
together. For of the others why should I speak, seeing they are
clearly dead (and it is the part of Christ alone to raise them,
Who quickeneth the dead by His own Power), and are unhappily
separated in place as they are bound together by their doctrine;
and who quarrel among themselves as much as a pair of squinting
eyes in looking at the same object, and differ with one another,
not in sight but in position-if indeed we may charge them only
with squinting, and not with utter blindness. And now that I have
to some extent laid down your position, come, let us return again
to the subject of the Spirit, and I think you will follow me
now.
IX. The Holy Ghost, then, always existed,
and exists, and always will exist. He neither had a beginning,
nor will He have an end; but He was everlastingly ranged with and
numbered with the Father and the Son. For it was not ever fitting
that either the Son should be wanting to the Father, or the
Spirit to the Son. For then Deity would be shorn of Its Glory in
its greatest respect, for It would seem to have arrived at the
consummation of perfection as if by an afterthought. Therefore He
was ever being partaken, but not partaking; perfecting, not being
perfected; sanctifying, not being sanctified; deifying, not being
deified; Himself ever the same with Himself, and with Those with
Whom He is ranged; invisible, eternal, incomprehensible,
unchangeable, without quality, without quantity, without form,
impalpable, self-moving, eternally moving, with free-will,
self-powerful, All-powerful (even though all that is of the
Spirit is referable to the First Cause, just as is all that is of
the Only-begotten); Life and Lifegiver; Light and Lightgiver;
absolute Good, and Spring of Goodness; the Right, the Princely
Spirit; the Lord, the Sender, the Separator; Builder of His own
Temple; leading, working as He wills; distributing His own Gifts;
the Spirit of Adoption, of Truth, of Wisdom, of Understanding, of
Knowledge, of Godliness, of Counsel, of Fear (which are ascribed
to Him ) by Whom the Father is known and the Son is glorified;
and by Whom alone He is known; one class, one service, worship,
power, perfection, sanctification. Why make a long discourse of
it? All that the Father hath the Son hath also, except the being
Unbegotten; and all that the Son hath the Spirit hath also,
except the Generation. And these two matters do not divide the
Substance, as I understand it, but rather are divisions within
the Substance.
X. Are you labouring to bring forth
objections? Well, so am I to get on with my discourse. Honour the
Day of the Spirit; restrain your tongue if you can a little. It
is the time to speak of other tongues-reverence them or fear
them, when you see that they are of fire. To-day let us teach
dogmatically; to-morrow we may discuss. To-day let us keep the
feast; to-morrow will be time enough to behave ourselves
unseemly-the first mystically, the second theatrically; the one
in the Churches, the other in the marketplace; the one among the
sober, the other among the drunken; the one as befits those who
vehemently desire, the other, as among those who make a joke of
the Spirit. Having then put an end to the element that is foreign
to us, let us now thoroughly furnish our own friends.
XI. He wrought first in the heavenly and
angelic powers, and such as are first after God and around God.
For from no other source flows their perfection and their
brightness, and the difficulty or impossibility of moving them to
sin, but from the Holy Ghost. And next, in the Patriarchs and
Prophets, of whom the former saw Visions of God, or knew Him, and
the latter also foreknew the future, having their master part
moulded by the Spirit, and being associated with events that were
yet future as if present, for such is the power of the Spirit.
And next in the Disciples of Christ (for I omit to mention Christ
Himself, in Whom He dwelt, not as energizing, but as accompanying
His Equal), and that in three ways, as they were able to receive
Him, and on three occasions; before Christ was glorified by the
Passion, and after He was glorified by the Resurrection; and
after His Ascension, or Restoration, or whatever we ought to call
it, to Heaven. Now the first of these manifests Him-the healing
of the sick and casting out of evil spirits, which could not be
apart from the Spirit; and so does that breathing upon them after
the Resurrection, which was clearly a divine inspiration; and so
too the present distribution of the fiery tongues, which we are
now commemorating. But the first manifested Him indistinctly, the
second more expressly, this present one more perfectly, since He
is no longer present only in energy, but as we may say,
substantially, associating with us, and dwelling in us. For it
was fitting that as the Son had lived with us in bodily form-so
the Spirit too should appear in bodily form; and that after
Christ had returned to His own place, He should have come down to
us-Coming because He is the Lord; Sent, because He is not a rival
God. For such words no less manifest the Unanimity than they mark
the separate Individuality.
XII. And therefore He came after Christ,
that a Comforter should not be lacking unto us; but Another
Comforter, that you might acknowledge His co-equality. For this
word Another marks an Alter Ego, a name of equal Lordship, not of
inequality. For Another is not said, I know, of different kinds,
but of things consubstantial. And He came in the form of Tongues
because of His close relation to the Word. And they were of Fire,
perhaps because of His purifying Power (for our Scripture knows
of a purifying fire, as any one who wishes can find out), or else
because of His Substance. For our God is a consuming Fire, and a
Fire burning up the ungodly; though you may again pick a quarrel
over these words, being brought into difficulty by the
Consubstantiality. And the tongues were cloven, because of the
diversity of Gifts; and they sat to signify His Royalty and Rest
among the Saints, and because the Cherubim are the Throne of God.
And it took place in an Upper Chamber (I hope I am not seeming to
any one over tedious), because those who should receive it were
to ascend and be raised above the earth; for also certain upper
chambers are covered with Divine Waters, by which the praise of
God are sung. And Jesus Himself in an Upper Chamber gave the
Communion of the Sacrament to those who were being initiated into
the higher Mysteries, that thereby might be shewn on the one hand
that God must come down to us, as I know He did of old to Moses;
and on the other that we must go up to Him, and that so there
should come to pass a Communion of God with men, by a coalescing
of the dignity. For as long as either remains on its own footing,
the One in His Glory the other in his lowliness, so long the
Goodness of God cannot mingle with us, and His lovingkindness is
incommunicable, and there is a great gulf between, which cannot
be crossed; and which separates not only the Rich Man from
Lazarus and Abraham's Bosom which he longs for, but also the
created and changing natures from that which is eternal and
immutable.
XIII. This was proclaimed by the Prophets
in such passages as the following:-The Spirit of the Lord is upon
me; and, There shall rest upon Him Seven Spirits; and The Spirit
of the Lord descended and led them; and The spirit of Knowledge
filling Bezaleel, the Master-builder of the Tabernacle; and, The
Spirit provoking to anger; and the Spirit carrying away Elias in
a chariot, and sought in double measure by Elissaeus; and David
led and strengthened by the Good and Princely Spirit. And He was
promised by the mouth of Joel first, who said, And it shall be in
the last days that I will pour out of My Spirit upon all flesh
(that is, upon all that believe), and upon your sons and upon
your daughters, and the rest; and then afterwards by Jesus, being
glorified by Him, and giving back glory to Him, as He was
glorified by and glorified the Father. And how abundant was this
Promise. He shall abide for ever, and shall remain with you,
whether now with those who in the sphere of time are worthy, or
hereafter with those who are counted worthy of that world, when
we have kept Him altogether by our life here, and not rejected
Him in so far as we sin.
XIV. This Spirit shares with the Son in
working both the Creation and the Resurrection, as you may be
shewn by this Scripture; By the Word of the Lord were the heavens
made, and all the power of them by the breath of His Mouth; and
this, The Spirit of God that made me, and the Breath of the
Almighty that teacheth me; and again, Thou shalt send forth Thy
Spirit and they shall be created, and Thou shalt renew the face
of the earth. And He is the Author of spiritual regeneration.
Here is your proof:-None can see or enter into the Kingdom,
except he be born again of the Spirit, and be cleansed from the
first birth, which is a mystery of the night, by a remoulding of
the day and of the Light, by which every one singly is created
anew. This Spirit, for He is most wise and most loving, if He
takes possession of a shepherd makes him a Psalmist, subduing
evil spirits by his song, and proclaims him King; if he possess a
goatherd and scraper of sycamore fruit, He makes him a Prophet.
Call to mind David and Amos. If He possess a goodly youth, He
makes him a Judge of Elders, even beyond his years, as Daniel
testifies, who conquered the lions in their den. If He takes
possession of Fishermen, He makes them catch the whole world in
the nets of Christ, taking them up in the meshes of the Word.
Look at Peter and Andrew and the Sons of Thunder, thundering the
things of the Spirit. If of Publicans, He makes gain of them for
discipleship, and makes them merchants of souls; witness Matthew,
yesterday a Publican, today an Evangelist. If of zealous
persecutors, He changes the current of their zeal, and makes them
Pauls instead of Sauls, and as full of piety as He found them of
wickedness. And He is the Spirit of Meekness, and yet is provoked
by those who sin. Let us therefore make proof of Him as gentle,
not as wrathful, by confessing His Dignity; and let us not desire
to see Him implacably wrathful. He too it is who has made me
today a bold herald to you;-if without rest to myself, God be
thanked; but if with risk, thanks to Him nevertheless; in the one
case, that He may spare those that hate us; in the other, that He
may consecrate us, in receiving this reward of our preaching of
the Gospel, to be made perfect by blood.
XV. They spoke with strange tongues, and
not those of their native land; and the wonder was great, a
language spoken by those who had not learnt it. And the sign is
to them that believe not, and not to them that believe, that it
may be an accusation of the unbelievers, as it is written, With
other tongues and other lips will I speak unto this people, and
not even so will they listen to Me saith the Lord. But they
heard. Here stop a little and raise a question, how you are to
divide the words. For the expression has an ambiguity, which is
to be determined by the punctuation. Did they each hear in their
own dialect so that if I may so say, one sound was uttered, but
many were heard; the air being thus beaten and, so to speak,
sounds being produced more clear than the original sound; or are
we to put the stop after "they Heard," and then to add "them
speaking in their own languages" to what follows, so that it
would be speaking in languages their own to the hearers, which
would be foreign to the speakers? I prefer to put it this latter
way; for on the other plan the miracle would be rather of the
hearers than of the speakers; whereas in this it would be on the
speakers' side; and it was they who were reproached for
drunkenness, evidently because they by the Spirit wrought a
miracle in the matter of the tongues.
XVI. But as the old Confusion of tongues
was laudable, when men who were of one language in wickedness and
impiety, even as some now venture to be, were building the Tower;
for by the confusion of their language the unity of their
intention was broken up, and their undertaking destroyed; so much
more worthy of praise is the present miraculous one. For being
poured from One Spirit upon many men, it brings them again into
harmony. And there is a diversity of Gifts, which stands in need
of yet another Gift to discern which is the best, where all are
praiseworthy. And that division also might be called noble of
which David says, Drown O Lord and divide their tongues. Why?
Because they loved all words of drowning, the deceitful tongue.
Where he all but expressly arraigns the tongues of the present
day which sever the Godhead. Thus much upon this
point.
XVII. Next, since it was to inhabitants of
Jerusalem, most devout Jews, Parthians, Medes, and Elamites,
Egyptians, and Libyans, Cretans too, and Arabians, and
Mesopotamians, and my own Cappadocians, that the tongues spake,
and to Jews (if any one prefer so to understand it), out of every
nation under heaven thither collected; it is worth while to see
who these were and of what captivity. For the captivity in Egypt
and Babylon was circumscribed, and moreover had long since been
brought to an end by the Return; and that under the Romans, which
was exacted for their audacity against our Saviour, was not yet
come to pass, though it was in the near future. It remains then
to understand it of the captivity under Antiochus, which happened
not so very long before this time. But if any does not accept
this explanation, as being too elaborate, seeing that this
captivity was neither ancient nor widespread over the world, and
is looking for a more reliable-perhaps the best way to take it
would be as follows. The nation was removed many times, as Esdras
related; and some of the Tribes were recovered, and some were
left behind; of whom probably (dispersed as they were among the
nations) some would have been present and shared the
miracle.
XVIII. These questions have been examined
before by the studious, and perhaps not without occasion; and
whatever else any one may contribute at the present day, he will
be joined with us. But now it is our duty to dissolve this
Assembly, for enough has been said. But the Festival is never to
be put an end to; but kept now indeed with our bodies; but a
little later on altogether spiritually there, where we shall see
the reasons of these things more purely and clearly, in the Word
Himself, and God, and our Lord Jesus Christ, the True Festival
and Rejoicing of the Saved-to Whom be the glory and the worship,
with the Father and the Holy Ghost, now and for ever.
Amen.
Oration XLII
The Last Farewell in the Presence of the One Hundred and
Fifty Bishops
1. What think ye of our affairs, dear
shepherds and fellow-shepherds: whose feet are beautiful, for you
bring glad tidings of peace and of the good things with which ye
have come; beautiful again in our eyes, to whom ye have come in
season, not to convert a wandering sheep, but to converse with a
pilgrim shepherd? What think ye of this our pilgrimage? And of
its fruit, or rather of that of the Spirit within us, by Whom we
are ever moved, and specially have now been moved, desiring to
have, and perhaps having, nothing of our own? Do you of
yourselves understand and perceive-and are you kindly critics of
our actions? Or must we, like those from whom a reckoning is
demanded as to their military command, or civil government, or
administration of the exchequer, publicly and in person submit to
you the accounts of our administration? Not indeed that we are
ashamed of being judged, for we are ourselves judges in turn, and
both with the same charity. But the law is an ancient one: for
even Paul communicated to the Apostles his Gospel: not for the
sake of ostentation, for the Spirit is far removed from all
ostentation, but in order to establish his success and correct
his failure, if indeed there were any such in his words or
actions, as he declares when writing of himself. Since even the
Spirits of the Prophets are subject to the prophets, according to
the order of the Spirit who regulates and divides all things
well. And do not wonder that, while he rendered his account
privately and to some, I do so publicly, and to all. For my need
is greater than his, of being aided by the freedom of my censors,
if I am proved to have failed in my duty, lest I should run, or
have run, in vain. And the only possible mode of self-defence is
speech in the presence of men who know the facts.
2. What then is my defence? If it be false,
you must convict me, but if true, you on behalf of whom and in
whose presence I speak, must bear witness to it. For you are my
defence, my witnesses, and my crown of rejoicing, if I also may
venture to boast myself a little in the Apostle's language. This
flock was, when it was small and poor, as far as appearances
went, nay, not even a flock, but a slight trace and relic of a
flock, without order, or shepherd, or bounds, with neither right
to pasturage, nor the defence of a fold, wandering upon the
mountains and in caves and dens of the earth, scattered and
dispersed hither and thither as each one could find shelter or
pasture, or could gratefully secure its own safety; like that
flock which was harassed by lions, dispersed by tempest, or
scattered in darkness, the lamentation of prophets who compared
it to the misfortunes of Israel, given up to the Gentiles; over
which we also lamented, so long as our lot was worthy of
lamentation. For in very deed we also were thrust out and cast
off, and scattered upon every mountain and hill, from the need of
a shepherd: and a dreadful storm fell upon the Church, and
fearful beasts assailed her, who do not even now, after the calm,
spare us, but without being ashamed of themselves, wield a
greater power than the time should allow; while a gloomy
darkness, far more oppressive than the ninth plague of Egypt, the
darkness which might be felt, enveloped and concealed everything,
so that we could scarcely even see one another.
3. To speak in a more feeling strain,
trusting in Him Who then forsook me, as in a Father, "Abraham has
been ignorant of us, Israel has acknowledged us not, but Thou art
our Father, and unto Thee do we look; beside Thee we know none
else, we make mention of Thy name." Therefore, says Jeremiah, I
will plead with Thee, I will reason the cause with Thee. We are
become as at the beginning, when Thou barest not rule over us,
and Thou hast forgotten Thy holy covenant, and shut up Thy
mercies from us. Therefore we, the worshippers of the Trinity,
the perfect suppliants of the perfect Deity, became a reproach to
Thy Beloved, neither daring to bring down to our own level any of
the things above us, nor in such wise to rise up against the
godless tongues which fought against God, as to make His Majesty
a fellow servant with ourselves; but, as is plain, we were
delivered up on account of our other sins, and because our
conduct had been unworthy of Thy commandments, and we had walked
after our own evil mind. For what other reason can there be for
our being delivered up to the most unrighteous and wicked men of
all the dwellers upon the earth? First Nebuchadnezzar afflicted
us, possessed during the Christian era with an anti-Christian
rage, hating Christ just because he had through Him gained
salvation, and having bartered the sacred books for sacrifices to
those who are no gods. He devoured me, he tore me in pieces, a
slight darkness enveloped me, if I may even in my lamentation
keep to the language of Scripture. If the Lord had not helped me,
and righteously delivered him to the hands of the lawless, by
casting him off (such are the judgments of God) to the Persians,
by whom his blood was righteously shed for his unholy sheddings
of blood, since in this case alone justice could not afford even
to be longsuffering, my soul had shortly dwelt in the grave. The
second no more kindly, if he were not even more grievous still,
for while he bore the name of Christ, he was a false Christ, and
at once a burden and a reproach to the Christians, for, while to
obey him was ungodly, to suffer at his hands was inglorious,
since they did not even seem to be wronged, nor to gain by their
sufferings the glorious title of martyr, inasmuch as the truth
was in this case perverted, for while they suffered as
Christians, they were supposed to be punished as heretics. Alas!
how rich we were in misfortunes, for the fire consumed the
beauties of the world. That which the palmerworm left did the
locust eat, and that which the locust left did the caterpillar
eat: then came the cankerworm, then, what next I know not, one
evil springing up after another. But for what purpose should I
give a tragic description of the evils of the time, and of the
penalty exacted from us, or, if I must rather call it so, the
testing and refining we endured? At any rate, we went through
fire and water, and have attained a place of refreshment by the
good pleasure of God our Saviour.
4. To return to my original startingpoint.
This was my field, when it was small and poor, unworthy not only
of God, Who has been, and is cultivating the whole world with the
fair seeds and doctrines of piety, but, apparently, even of any
poor and needy man of slender means. Nay it did not deserve to be
called a field, requiring neither barn nor threshing-floor, and
not even worthy of the sickle; with neither heap nor sheaves, or
small and untimely sheaves, like those on the housetop, which do
not fill the hand of the reaper, nor call forth a blessing from
them which go by. Such was my field, such my harvest; great and
well-eared and fat in the eyes of Him Who beholdeth hidden
things, and becoming such a husbandman, its abundance springing
from the valleys of souls well tilled with the Word: unrecognized
however in public, and not collected together, but gathered in
fragments, as an ear gleaned in the stubble, as gleaning-grapes
in the vintage, where there is no cluster left. I think I may
add, only too appropriately, I found Israel like a figtree in the
wilderness, and like one or two ripe grapes in an unripe cluster,
preserved as a blessing from the Lord, and a consecrated
firstfruit, though small as yet and scanty, and not filling the
mouth of the eater: and as an ensign on a hill, and as a beacon
on a mountain, or any other solitary thing visible only to few.
Such was its former poverty and dejection.
5. But since God, Who maketh poor and
maketh rich, Who killeth and maketh alive; Who maketh and
transformeth all things; Who turneth night into day, winter into
spring, storm into calm, drought into abundance of rain; and
often for the sake of the prayers of one righteous man sorely
persecuted; Who lifteth up the meek on high, and bringeth the
ungodly down to the ground; since God said to Himself, I have
surely seen the affliction of Israel; and they shall no longer be
further vexed with clay and brick-making; and when He spake He
visited, and in His visitation He saved, and led forth His people
with a mighty hand and outstretched arm, by the hand of Moses and
Aaron, His chosen-what is the result, and what wonders have been
wrought? Those which books and monuments contain. For besides all
the wonders by the way, and that mighty roar, to speak most
concisely, Joseph came into Egypt alone, and soon after six
hundred thousand depart from Egypt. What more marvellous than
this? What greater proof of the generosity of God, when from men
without means He wills to supply the means for public affairs?
And the land of promise is distributed through one who was hated,
and he who was sold dispossesses nations, and is himself made a
great nation, and that small offshoot becomes a luxuriant vine,
so great that it reaches to the river, and is stretched out to
the sea, and spreads from border to border, and hides the
mountains with the height of its glory and is exalted above the
cedars, even the cedars of God, whatever we are to take these
mountains and cedars to be.
6. Such then was once this flock, and such
it is now, so healthy and well grown, and if it be not yet in
perfection, it is advancing towards it by constant increase, and
I prophesy that it will advance. This is foretold me by the Holy
Spirit, if I have any prophetic instinct and insight into the
future. And from what has preceded I am able to be confident, and
recognize this by reasoning, being the nursling of reason. For it
was much more improbable that, from that condition, it should
reach its present development, than that, as it now is, it should
attain to the height of renown. For ever since it began to be
gathered together, by Him Who quickeneth the dead, bone to its
bone, joint to joint, and the Spirit of life and regeneration was
given to it in their dryness, its entire resurrection has been, I
know well, sure to be fulfilled: so that the rebellious should
not exalt themselves, and that those who grasp at a shadow, or at
a dream when one awaketh, or at the dispersing breezes, or at the
traces of a ship in the water, should not think that they have
anything. Howl, firtree, for the cedar is fallen! Let them be
instructed by the misfortunes of others, and learn that the poor
shall not alway be forgotten, and that the Deity will not
refrain, as Habakkuk says, from striking through the heads of the
mighty ones in His fury-the Deity, Who has been struck through
and impiously divided into Ruler and Ruled, in order to insult
the Deity in the highest degree by degrading It, and oppress a
creature by equality with Deity.
7. I seem indeed to hear that voice, from
Him Who gathers together those who are broken, and welcomes the
oppressed: Enlarge thy cords, break forth on the right hand and
on the left, drive in thy stakes, spare not thy curtains. I have
given thee up, and I will help thee. In a little wrath I smote
thee, but with everlasting mercy I will glorify thee. The measure
of His kindness exceeds the measure of His discipline. The former
things were owing to our wickedness, the present things to the
adorable Trinity: the former for our cleansing, the present for
My glory, Who will glorify them that glorify Me, and I will move
to jealousy them that move Me to jealousy. Behold this is sealed
up with Me, and this is the indissoluble law of recompense. But
thou didst surround thyself with walls and tablets and richly set
stones, and long porticos and galleries, and didst shine and
sparkle with gold, which thou didst, in part pour forth like
water, in part treasure up like sand; not knowing that better is
faith, with no other roof but the sky to cover it, than impiety
rolling in wealth, and that three gathered together in the Name
of the Lord count for more with God than tens of thousands of
those who deny the Godhead. Would you prefer the whole of the
Canaanites to Abraham alone? or the men of Sodom to Lot? or the
Midianites to Moses, when each of these was a pilgrim and a
stranger? How do the three hundred men with Gideon, who bravely
lapped, compare with the thousands who were put to flight? Or the
servants of Abraham, who scarcely exceeded them in number, with
the many kings and the army of tens of thousands whom, few as
they were, they overtook and defeated? Or how do you understand
the passage that though the number of the children of Israel be
as the sand of the sea, a remnant shall be saved? And again, I
have left me seven thousand men, who have not bowed the knee to
Baal? This is not the case; it is not? God has not taken pleasure
in numbers.
8. Thou countest tens of thousands, God
counts those who are in a state of salvation; thou countest the
dust which is without number, I the vessels of election. For
nothing is so magnificent in God's sight as pure doctrine, and a
soul perfect in all the dogmas of the truth.-For there is nothing
worthy of Him Who made all things, of Him by Whom are all things,
and for Whom are all things, so that it can be given or offered
to God: not merely the handiwork or means of any individual, but
even if we wished to honour Him, by uniting together all the
property and handiwork of all mankind. Do not I fill heaven and
earth? saith the Lord! and what house will ye build Me? or what
is the place of My rest? But, since man must needs fall short of
what is worthy, I ask of you, as approaching it most nearly,
piety, the wealth which is common to all and equal in My eyes,
wherein the poorest may, if he be nobleminded, surpass the most
illustrious. For this kind of glory depends upon purpose, not
upon affluence. These things be well assured, I will accept at
your hands. To tread My courts ye shall not proceed, but the feet
of the meek shall tread them, who have duly and sincerely
acknowledged Me, and My only-begotten Word, and the Holy Spirit.
How long will ye inherit My holy Mountain? How long shall My ark
be among the heathen? Now for a little longer ye indulge
yourselves in that which belongs to others, and gratify your
desires. For as ye have devised to reject Me, so will I also
reject you, saith the Lord Almighty.
9. This I seemed to hear Him say, and to
see Him do, and besides, to hear Him shouting to His people,
which once were few and scattered and miserable, and have now
become many, and compact enough and enviable, Go through My gates
and be ye enlarged. Must you always be in trouble and dwell in
tents, while those who vex you rejoice exceedingly? And to the
presiding Angels, for I believe, as John teaches me in his
Revelation, that each Church has its guardian, Prepare ye the way
of My people, and cast away the stones from the way, that there
may be no stumblingblock or hindrance for the people in the
divine road and entrance, now, to the temples made with hands,
but soon after, to Jerusalem above, and the Holy of holies there,
which will, I know, be the end of suffering and struggle to those
who here bravely travel on the way. Among whom are ye also called
to be Saints, a people of possession, a royal priesthood, the
most excellent portion of the Lord, a whole river from a drop, a
heavenly lamp from a spark, a tree from a grain of mustard seed,
on which the birds come and lodge.
10. These we present to you, dear
shepherds, these we offer to you, with these we welcome our
friends, and guests, and fellow pilgrims. We have nothing fairer
or more splendid to offer to you, for we have selected the
greatest of all our possessions, that you may see that, strangers
as we are, we are not in want, but though poor are making many
rich. If these things are small and unworthy of notice, I would
fain learn what is greater and of more account. For, if it be no
great thing to have established and strengthened with wholesome
doctrines a city which is the eye of the universe, in its
exceeding strength by sea and land, which is, as it were, the
link between the Eastern and Western shores, in which the
extremities of the world from every side meet together, and from
which, as the common mart of the faith, they take their rise, a
city borne hither and thither on the eddying currents of so many
tongues, it will be long ere anything be considered great or
worthy of esteem. But if it be indeed a subject for praise, allow
to us some glory on this account, since we have contributed in
some portion to these results which ye see.
11. Lift up thine eyes round about, and
see, thou critic of my words! See the crown which has been
platted in return for the hirelings of Ephraim and the crown of
insolence; see the assembly of the presbyters, honoured for years
and wisdom, the fair order of the deacons, who are not far from
the same Spirit, the good conduct of the readers, the people's
eagerness for teaching, both of men and women, who are equally
renowned for virtue: the men, whether philosophers or simple
folk, being alike wise in divine things, whether rulers or ruled,
being all in this respect duly under rule; whether soldiers or
nobles, students or men of letters, being all soldiers of God,
though in all other respects meek, ready to fight for the Spirit,
all reverencing the assembly above, to which we obtain an
entrance, not by the mere letter, but by the quickening Spirit,
all in very deed being men of reason, and worshippers of Him Who
is in truth the Word: the women, if married, being united by a
Divine rather than by a carnal bond; if unwedded and free, being
entirely dedicated to God; whether young or old, some honourably
advancing towards old age, others eagerly striving to remain
immortal, being renewed by the best of hopes.
12. To those who platted this crown-that
which I speak, I speak it not after the Lord, nevertheless I will
say it-I also have given assistance. Some of them are the result
of my words, not of those which we have uttered at random, but of
those which we have loved-nor again of those which are
meretricious, though the language and manners of the harlot have
been slanderously attributed to me, but of those which are most
grave. Some of them are the offspring and fruit of my Spirit, as
the Spirit can beget those who rise superior to the body. To this
I have no doubt that those who are kindly among you, nay all of
you, will testify, since I have been the husbandman of all: and
my sole reward is your confession. For we neither have, nor have
had, any other object. For virtue, that it may remain virtue, is
without reward, its eyes fixed alone on that which is
good.
13. Would you have me say something still
more venturesome? Do you see the tongues of the enemy made
gentle, and those who made war upon the Godhead against me
tranquillised? This also is the result of our Spirit, of our
husbandry. For we are not undisciplined in our exercise of
discipline, nor do we hurl insults, as many do, who assail not
the argument but the speaker, and sometimes strive by their
invective to hide the weakness of their reasoning; as the
cuttlefish are said to cast forth ink before them, in order to
escape from their pursuers, or themselves to hunt others when
unperceived. But we show that our warfare is in behalf of Christ
by fighting as Christ, the peaceable and meek, Who has borne our
infirmities, fought. Though peaceable, we do not injure the word
of truth, by yielding a jot, to gain a reputation for
reasonableness; for we do not pursue that which is good by means
of ill: and we are peaceable by the legitimate character of our
warfare, confined as it is to our own limits, and the rules of
the Spirit. Upon these points, this is my decision, and I lay
down the law for all stewards of souls and dispensers of the
Word: neither to exasperate others by their harshness, nor to
render them arrogant by submissiveness: but to be of good words
in treating of the Word, and in neither direction to overstep the
mean.
14. But you are perhaps longing for me to
give an exposition of the faith, in so far as I am able. For I
shall myself be sanctified by the effort of memory, and the
people also will be benefited, by its special delight in such
discussions, and you will fully acknowledge it-unless we are the
objects of groundless envy, as the rivals, in the manifestation
of the truth, of those whom we do not excel. For as, of deep
waters, some in the depths are utterly hidden, some foam against
any obstruction, and hesitate a while before breaking (as they
promise to our ears), some do actually break; so also, of those
who are professors of the Divine philosophy-setting aside the
utterly misguided-some keep their piety entirely secret and
hidden within themselves, some are not far from the birth pangs,
avoiding impiety, yet not speaking out their piety, either from
cautious reserve in their teaching, or under pressure of fear,
being themselves sound, as they say, in mind, but not making
sound their people, as if they had been entrusted with the
government of their own souls, but not of those of others; while
there are some who make public their treasure, unable to restrain
themselves from giving birth to their piety, and not considering
that to be salvation which saves themselves alone, without
bestowing upon others the overflow of their blessings. Among
these would I range myself, and all who by my side have nobly
dared to confess the truth.
15. One concise proclamation of our
teaching, an inscription intelligible to all, is this people,
which so sincerely worships the Trinity, that it would sooner
sever anyone from this life, than sever one of the three from the
Godhead: of one mind, of equal zeal, and united to one another,
to us and to the Trinity by unity of doctrine. Briefly to run
over its details: That which is without beginning, and is the
beginning, and is with the beginning, is one God. For the nature
of that which is without beginning does not consist in being
without beginning or being unbegotten, for the nature of anything
lies, not in what it is not but in what it is. It is the
assertion of what is, not the denial of what is not. And the
Beginning is not, because it is a beginning, separated from that
which has no beginning. For its beginning is not its nature, any
more than the being without beginning is the nature of the other.
For these are the accompaniments of the nature, not the nature
itself. That again which is with that which has no beginning, and
with the beginning, is not anything else than what they are. Now,
the name of that which has no beginning is the Father, and of the
Beginning the Son, and of that which is with the Beginning, the
Holy Ghost, and the three have one Nature-God. And the union is
the Father from Whom and to Whom the order of Persons runs its
course, not so as to be confounded, but so as to be possessed,
without distinction of time, of will, or of power. For these
things in our case produce a plurality of individuals, since each
of them is separate both from every other quality, and from every
other individual possession of the same quality. But to Those who
have a simple nature, and whose essence is the same, the term One
belongs in its highest sense.
16. Let us then bid farewell to all
contentious shiftings and balancings of the truth on either side,
neither, like the Sabellians, assailing the Trinity in the
interest of the Unity, and so destroying the distinction by a
wicked confusion; nor, like the Arians, assailing the Unity in
the interest of the Trinity, and by an impious distinction
overthrowing the Oneness. For our object is not to exchange one
evil for another, but to ensure our attainment of that which is
good. These are the playthings of the Wicked One, who is ever
swaying our fortunes towards the evil. But we, walking along the
royal road which lies between the two extremes, which is the seat
of the virtues, as the authorities say, believe in the Father,
the Son and the Holy Ghost, of one Substance and glory; in Whom
also baptism has its perfection, both nominally and really (thou
knowest who hast been initiated!); being a denial of atheism and
a confession of Godhead; and thus we are regenerated,
acknowledging the Unity in the Essence and in the undivided
worship, and the Trinity in the Hypostases or Persons (which term
some prefer.) And let not those who are contentious on these
points utter their scandalous taunts, as if our faith depended on
terms and not on realities. For what do you mean who assert the
three Hypostases? Do you imply three Essences by the term? I am
assured that you would loudly shout against those who do so. For
you teach that the Essence of the Three is One and the same. What
do you mean, who assert the Three Persons? Do you imagine a
single compound sort of being, with three faces, or of an
entirely human form? Perish the thought! You too will loudly
reply that he who thinks thus, will never see the face of God,
whatever it may be. What is the meaning of the Hypostases of the
one party, of the Persons of the other, to ask this further
question? That They are three, Who are distinguished not by
natures, but by properties. Excellent. How could men agree and
harmonize better than you do, even if there be a difference
between the syllables you use? You see what a reconciler I am,
bringing you back from the letter to the sense, as we do with the
Old and New Testaments.
17. But, to resume: let us speak of the
Unbegotten, the Begotten, and the Proceeding, if anyone likes to
create names: for we shall have no fear of bodily conceptions
attaching to Those who are not embodied, as the calumniators of
the Godhead think. For the creature must be called God's, and
this is for us a great thing, but God never. Otherwise I shall
admit that God is a creature, if I become God, in the strict
sense of the term. For this is the truth. If God, He is not a
creature; for the creature ranks with us who are not Gods. And if
a creature, he is not God, for he had a beginning in time. And
there was a time when he who had a beginning was not. And that of
which non-existence was its prior condition, has not being in the
strict sense of the term. And how can that, which strictly has
not being, be God? Not one single one, then, of the Three is a
creature, nor, what is worse, came into being for my sake; for in
that case he would be not only a creature, but inferior in honour
to us. For, if I am for the glory of God, and he is for my sake,
as the tongs for the waggon, the saw for the door, I am his
superior in causality. For in whatever degree God is superior to
creatures, in the same degree is he, who came into being for my
sake, inferior to me who exist for God's sake.
18. Moreover, the Moabites and Ammonites
must not even be allowed to enter into the Church of God, I mean
those sophistical, mischievous arguments which enquire curiously
into the generation and inexpressible procession of God, and
rashly set themselves in array against the Godhead: as if it were
necessary that those things which it is beyond the power of
language to set forth, must either be accessible to them alone,
or else have no existence because they have not comprehended
them. We however, following the Divine Scriptures, and removing
out of the way of the blind the stumbling blocks contained in
them, will cling to salvation, daring any and every thing rather
than arrogance against God. As for the evidences, we leave them
to others, since they have been set forth by many, and by
ourselves also with no little care. And indeed, it would be a
very shameful thing for me at this time to be gathering together
proofs for what has all along been believed. For it is not the
best order of things, first to teach and then to learn, even in
matters which are small and of no consequence, and much more in
those which are Divine and of such great importance. Nor, again,
is it proper to the present occasion to explain and disentangle
the difficulties of Scripture, a task requiring fuller and more
careful consideration than our present purpose will allow. Such
then, to sum up, is our teaching. I have entered into these
details, with no intention of contending against the adversaries:
for I have already often, even if it be imperfectly, fought out
the question with them: but in order that I might exhibit to you
the character of my teaching, that you might see whether I have
not a share in the defence of your own, and do not take my stand
on the same side, and opposed to the same enemies as
yourselves.
19. You have now, my friends, heard the
defence of my presence here: if it be deserving of praise, thanks
are due for it to God, and to you who called me; if it has fallen
below your expectation, I give thanks even on this behalf. For I
am assured that it has not been altogether deserving of censure,
and am confident that you also admit this. Have we at all made a
gain of this people? Have we consulted at all our own interests,
as I see is most often the case? Have we caused any vexation to
the Church? To others possibly, with whose idea that they had
gained judgment against us by default, we have joined issue in
our argument; but in no wise, as far as I am aware, to you. I
have taken no ox of yours, says the great Samuel, in his
contention against Israel on the subject of the king, nor any
propitiation for your souls, the Lord is witness among you, nor
this, nor that, proceeding at greater length, that I may not
count up every particular; but I have kept the priesthood pure
and unalloyed. And if I have loved power, or the height of a
throne, or to tread Kings' courts, may I never possess any
distinction, or if I gain it, may I be hurled from it.
20. What then do I mean? I am no proficient
in virtue without reward, having not attained to so high a degree
of virtue. Give me the reward of my labours. What reward? Not
that which some, prone to any suspicion would suppose, but that
which it is safe for me to seek. Give me a respite from my long
labours; give honour to my foreign service; elect another in my
place, the one who is being eagerly sought on your behalf,
someone who is clean of hands, someone who is not unskilled in
voice, someone who is able to gratify you on all points, and
share with you the ecclesiastical cares; for this is especially
the time for such. But behold, I pray you, the condition of this
body, so drained by time, by disease, by toil. What need have you
of a timid and unmanly old man, who is, so to speak, dying day by
day, not only in body, but even in powers of mind, who finds it
difficult to enter into these details before you? Disobey not the
voice of your teacher: for indeed you have never yet disobeyed
it. I am weary of being charged with my gentleness. I am weary of
being assailed in words and in envy by enemies, and by our own.
Some aim at my breast, and are less successful in their effort,
for an open enemy can be guarded against. Others lie in wait for
my back, and give greater pain, for the unsuspected blow is the
more fatal. If again I have been a pilot, I have been one of the
most skilful; the sea has been boisterous around us, boiling
about the ship, and there has been considerable uproar among the
passengers, who have always been fighting about something or
another, and roaring against one another and the waves. What a
struggle I have had, seated at the helm, contending alike with
the sea and the passengers, to bring the vessel safe to land
through this double storm? Had they in every way supported me,
safety would have been hardly won, and when they were opposed to
me, how has it been possible to avoid making
shipwreck?
21. What more need be said? But how can I
bear this holy war? For there has been said to be a holy, as well
as a Persian, war. How shall I unite and join together the
hostile occupants of sees, and hostile pastors, and the people
broken up along with, and opposed to them, as if by some chasms
caused by earthquakes between neighbouring and adjoining places;
or as, in pestilential diseases, befalls servants and members of
the family, when the sickness readily attacks in succession one
after another; and besides the very quarters of the globe are
affected by the spirit of faction, so that East and West are
arrayed on opposite sides, and bid fair to be severed in opinion
no less than in position. How long are parties to be mine and
yours, the old and the new, the more rational and the more
spiritual, the more noble and the more ignoble, the more and the
less numerous? I am ashamed of my old age, when, after being
saved by Christ, I am called by the name of others.
22. I cannot bear your horse races and
theatres, and this rage for rivalry in expense and party spirit.
We unharness, and harness ourselves on the other side, we neigh
against each other, we almost beat the air, as they do, and fling
the dust towards heaven, like those which are excited; and under
other masks satisfy our own rivalry, and become evil arbiters of
emulation, and senseless judges of affairs. To-day sharing the
same thrones and opinions, if our leaders thus carry us along;
to-morrow hostile alike in position and opinion, if the wind
blows in the contrary direction. Amid the variations of
friendship and hatred, our names also vary: and what is most
terrible, we are not ashamed to set forth contrary doctrines to
the same audience; nor are we constant to the same objects, being
rendered different at different times by our contentiousness.
They are like the ebb and flow of some narrow strait. For as when
the children are at play in the midst of the market place, it
would be most disgraceful and unbecoming for us to leave our
household business, and join them; for children's toys are not
becoming for old age: so, when others are contending, even if I
am better informed than the majority, I could not allow myself to
be one of them, rather than, as I now do, enjoy the freedom of
obscurity. For, besides all this, my feeling is that I do not, on
most points, agree with the majority, and cannot bear to walk in
the same way. Rash and stupid though it may be, such is my
feeling. That which is pleasant to others causes pain to me, and
I am pleased with what is painful to others. So that I should not
be surprised if I were even imprisoned as a disagreeable man, and
thought by most men to be out of my senses, as is said to have
been the case with one of the Greek philosophers, whose
moderation exposed him to the charge of madness, because he
laughed at everything, since he saw that the objects of the eager
pursuit of the majority were ridiculous; or even be thought full
of new wine as were in later days the disciples of Christ,
because they spoke with tongues, since men knew not that it was
the power of the Spirit, and not a distraction of
mind.
23. Now, consider the charges laid against
us. You have been ruler of the church, it is said, for so long,
and favoured by the course of time, and the influence of the
sovereign, a most important matter. What change have we been able
to notice? How many men have in days gone by used us
outrageously? What sufferings have we failed to undergo?
Ill-usage? Threats? Banishment? Plunder? Confiscation? The
burning of priests at sea? The desecration of temples by the
blood of the saints, till, instead of temples, they became
charnel-houses? The public slaughter of aged Bishops, to speak
more accurately, of Patriarchs? The denial of access to every
place in the case of the godly alone? In fact any kind of
suffering which could be mentioned? And for which of these have
we requited the wrongdoers? For the wheel of fortune gave us the
power of rightly treating those who so treated us, and our
persecutors ought to have received a lesson. Apart from all other
things, speaking only of our experiences, not to mention your
own, have we not been persecuted, maltreated, driven from
churches, houses, and, most terrible of all, even from the
deserts? Have we not had to endure an enraged people, insolent
governors, the disregard of Emperors and their decrees? What was
the result? We became stronger, and our persecutors took to
flight. That was actually the case. The power to requite them
seemed to me a sufficient vengeance on those who had wronged us.
These men thought otherwise; for they are exceedingly exact and
just in requiting: and accordingly they demand what the state of
things permits. What governor, they say, has been fined? What
populace chastised? What ringleaders of the populace? What fear
of ourselves have we been able to inspire for the
future?
24. Perhaps we may be reproached, as we
have been before, with the exquisite character of our table, the
splendour of our apparel, the officers who precede us, our
haughtiness to those who meet us. I was not aware that we ought
to rival the consuls, the governors, the most illustrious
generals, who have no opportunity of lavishing their incomes; or
that our belly ought to hunger for the enjoyment of the goods of
the poor, and to expend their necessaries on superfluities, and
belch forth over the altars. I did not know that we ought to ride
on splendid horses, and drive in magnificent carriages, and be
preceded by a procession and surrounded by applause, and have
everyone make way for us, as if we were wild beasts, and open out
a passage so that our approach might be seen afar. If these
sufferings have been endured, they have now passed away: Forgive
me this wrong. Elect another who will please the majority: and
give me my desert, my country life, and my God, Whom alone I may
have to please, and shall please by my simple life. It is a
painful thing to be deprived of speeches and conferences, and
public gatherings, and applause like that which now lends wings
to my thoughts, and relatives, and friends and honours, and the
beauty and grandeur of the city, and its brilliancy which dazzles
those who look at the surface without investigating the inner
nature of things; but yet not so painful as being clamoured
against and besmirched amid public disturbances and agitations,
which trim their sails to the popular breeze. For they seek not
for priests, but for orators, not for stewards of souls, but for
treasurers of money, not for pure offerers of the sacrifice, but
for powerful patrons. I will say a word in their defence: we have
thus trained them, by becoming all things to all men, whether to
save or destroy all, I know not.
25. What say you? Are you persuaded, have
you been overcome by my words? Or must I use stronger terms in
order to persuade you? Yea by the Trinity Itself, Whom you and I
alike worship, by our common hope, and for the sake of the unity
of this people, grant me this favour; dismiss me with your
prayers; let this be the proclamation of my contest; give me my
certificate of retirement, as sovereigns do to their soldiers;
and, if you will, with a favourable testimony, that I may enjoy
the honour of it; if not, just as you please; this will make no
difference to me, until God sees what my case really is. What
successor then shall we elect? God will provide Himself a
shepherd for the office, as He once provided a lamb for a
burnt-offering. I only make this further request,-let him be one
who is the object of envy, not the object of pity; not one who
yields everything to all, but one who can on some points offer
resistance for the sake of what is best: for though the one is
most pleasant, the other is most profitable. So do you prepare
for me your addresses of dismissal: I will now bid you
farewell.
26. Farewell my Anastasia, whose name is
redolent of piety: for thou hast raised up for us the doctrine
which was in contempt: farewell, scene of our common victory,
modern Shiloh, where the tabernacle was first fixed, after being
carried about in its wanderings for forty years in the
wilderness. Farewell likewise, grand and renowned temple, our new
inheritance, whose greatness is now due to the Word, which once
wast a Jebus, and hast now been made by us a Jerusalem. Farewell,
all ye others, inferior only to this in beauty, scattered through
the various parts of the city, like so many links, uniting
together each your own neighbourhood, which have been filled with
worshippers of whose existence we had despaired, not by me, in my
weakness, but by the grace which was with me. Farewell, ye
Apostles, noble settlers here, my masters in the strife; if I
have not often kept festival with you, it has been possibly due
to the Satan which I, like S. Paul, who was one of you, carry
about in my body for my own profit, and which is the cause of my
now leaving you. Farewell, my throne, envied and perilous height;
farewell assembly of high priests, honoured by the dignity and
age of its priests, and all ye others ministers of God round the
holy table, drawing nigh to the God Who draws nigh to you.
Farewell, choirs of Nazarites, harmonies of the Psalter,
night-long stations, venerable virgins, decorous matrons,
gatherings of widows and orphans, and ye eyes of the poor, turned
towards God and towards me. Farewell, hospitable and Christ-loved
dwellings, helpers of my infirmity. Farewell, ye lovers of my
discourses, in your eagerness and concourse, ye pencils seen and
unseen, and thou balustrade, pressed upon by those who thrust
themselves forward to hear the word. Farewell, Emperors, and
palace, and ministers and household of the Emperor, whether
faithful or not to him, I know not, but for the most part,
unfaithful to God. Clap your hands, shout aloud, extol your
orator to the skies. This pestilent and garrulous tongue has
ceased to speak to you. Though it will not utterly cease to
speak: for it will fight with hand and ink: but for the present
we have ceased to speak.
27. Farewell, mighty Christ-loving city. I
will testify to the truth, though thy zeal be not according to
knowledge. Our separation renders us more kindly. Approach the
truth: be converted at this late hour. Honour God more than you
have been wont to do. It is no disgrace to change, while it is
fatal to cling to evil. Farewell, East and West, for whom and
against whom I have had to fight; He is witness, Who will give
you peace, if but a few would imitate my retirement. For those
who resign their thrones will not also lose God, but will have
the seat on high, which is far more exalted and secure. Last of
all, and most of all, I will cry,-farewell ye Angels, guardians
of this church, and of my presence and pilgrimage, since our
affairs are in the hands of God. Farewell, O Trinity, my
meditation, and my glory. Mayest Thou be preserved by those who
are here, and preserve them, my people: for they are mine, even
if I have my place assigned elsewhere; and may I learn that Thou
art ever extolled and glorified in word and conduct. My children,
keep, I pray you, that which is committed to your trust. Remember
my stonings. The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all.
Amen.
Oration XLIII
Funeral Oration on the Great S. Basil, Bishop of Caesarea
in Cappadocia
1. It has then been ordained that the great
Basil, who used so constantly to furnish me with subjects for my
discourses, of which he was quite as proud as any other man of
his own, should himself now furnish me with the grandest subject
which has ever fallen to the lot of an orator. For I think that
if anyone desired, in making trial of his powers of eloquence, to
test them by the standard of that one of all his subjects which
he preferred (as painters do with epoch-making pictures), he
would choose that which stood first of all others, but would set
aside this as beyond the powers of human eloquence. So great a
task is the praise of such a man, not only to me, who have long
ago laid aside all thought of emulation, but even to those who
live for eloquence, and whose sole object is the gaining of glory
by subjects like this. Such is my opinion, and, as I persuade
myself, with perfect justice. But I know not what subject I can
treat with eloquence, if not this; or what greater favour I can
do to myself, to the admirers of virtue, or to eloquence itself,
than express our admiration for this man. To me it is the
discharge of a most sacred debt. And our speech is a debt beyond
all others due to those who have been gifted, in particular, with
powers of speech. To the admirers of virtue a discourse is at
once a pleasure and an incentive to virtue. For when I have
learned the praises of men, I have a distinct idea of their
progress: now, there is none of us all, within whose power it is
not to attain to any point whatsoever in that progress. As for
eloquence itself, in either case, all must go well with it. For,
if the discourse be almost worthy of its subject-eloquence will
have given an exhibition of its power: if it fall far short of
it, as must be the case when the praises of Basil are being set
forth, by an actual demonstration of its incapacity, it will have
declared the superiority of the excellences of its subject to all
expression in words.
2. These are the reasons which have urged
me to speak, and to address myself to this contest. And at my
late appearance, long after his praises have been set forth by so
many, who have publicly and privately done him honour, let no one
be surprised. Yea, may I be pardoned by that divine soul, the
object of my constant reverence! And as, when he was amongst us,
he constantly corrected me in many points, according to the
rights of a friend and the still higher law; for I am not ashamed
to say this, for he was a standard of virtue to us all; so now,
looking down upon me from above, he will treat me with
indulgence. I ask pardon too of any here who are among his
warmest admirers, if indeed anyone can be warmer than another,
and we are not all abreast in our zeal for his good fame. For it
is not contempt which has caused me to fall short of what might
have been expected of me: nor have I been so regardless of the
claims of virtue or of friendship; nor have I thought that to
praise him befitted any other more than me. No! my first reason
was, that I shrunk from this task, for I will say the truth, as
priests do, who approach their sacred duties before being
cleansed both in voice and mind. In the second place, I remind
you, though you know it well, of the task in which I was engaged
on behalf of the true doctrine, which had been properly forced
upon me, and had carried me from home, according, as I suppose,
to the will of God, and certainly according to the judgment of
our noble champion of the truth, the breath of whose life was
pious doctrine alone, such as promotes the salvation of the whole
world. As for my bodily health, I ought not, perhaps, to dare to
mention it, when my subject is a man so doughty in his conquest
of the body, even before his removal hence, and who maintained
that no powers of the soul should suffer hindrance from this our
fetter. So much for my defence. I do not think I need labour it
further, in speaking of him to you who know so clearly my
affairs. I must now proceed with my eulogy, commending myself to
his God, in order that my commendations may not prove an insult
to the man, and that I may not lag far behind all others; even
though we all equally fall as far short of his due, as those who
look upon the heavens or the rays of the Sun.
3. Had I seen him to be proud of his birth,
and the rights of birth, or any of those infinitely little
objects of those whose eyes are on the ground, we should have had
to inspect a new catalogue of the Heroes. What details as to his
ancestors might I not have laid under contribution! Nor would
even history have had any advantage over me, since I claim this
advantage, that his celebrity depends, not upon fiction or
legend, but upon actual facts attested by many witnesses. On his
father's side Pontus offers to me many details, in no wise
inferior to its wonders of old time, of which all history and
poesy are full; there are many others concerned with this my
native land, of illustrious men of Cappadocia, renowned for its
youthful progeny, no less than for its horses. Accordingly we
match with his father's family that of his mother. What family
owns more numerous, or more illustrious generals and governors,
or court officials, or again, men of wealth, and lofty thrones,
and public honours, and oratorical renown? If it were permitted
me to wish to mention them, I would make nothing of the Pelopidae
and Cecropidae, the Alcmaeonids, the AEacidae, and Heracleidae,
and other most noble families: inasmuch as they, in default of
public merit in their house, betake themselves to the region of
uncertainty, claiming demigods and divinities, merely mythical
personages, as the glory of their ancestors, whose most vaunted
details are incredible, and those which we can believe are an
infamy.
4. But since our subject is a man who has
maintained that each man's nobility is to be judged of according
to his own worth, and that, as forms and colours, and likewise
our most celebrated and most infamous horses, are tested by their
own properties, so we too ought not to be depicted in borrowed
plumes; after mentioning one or two traits, which, though
inherited from his ancestors, he made his own by his life, and
which are specially likely to give pleasure to my hearers, I will
then proceed to deal with the man himself. Different families and
individuals have different points of distinction and interest,
great or small, which, like a patrimony of longer or shorter
descent, come down to posterity: the distinction of his family on
either side was piety, which I now proceed to display.
5. There was a persecution, the most
frightful and severe of all; I mean, as you know, the persecution
of Maximinus, which, following closely upon those which
immediately preceded it, made them all seem gentle, by its
excessive audacity, and by its eagerness to win the crown of
violence in impiety. It was overcome by many of our champions,
who wrestled with it to the death, or well-nigh to the death,
with only life enough left in them to survive their victory, and
not pass away in the midst of the struggle; remaining to be
trainers in virtue, living witnesses, breathing trophies, silent
exhortations, among whose numerous ranks were found Basil's
paternal ancestors, upon whom, in their practice of every form of
piety, that period bestowed many a fair garland. So prepared and
determined were they to bear readily all those things on account
of which Christ crowns those who have imitated His struggle on
our behalf.
6. But since their strife must needs be
lawful, and the law of martyrdom alike forbids us voluntarily to
go to meet it (in consideration for the persecutors, and for the
weak) or to shrink from it if it comes upon us; for the former
shows foolhardiness, the latter cowardice; in this respect they
paid due honour to the Lawgiver; but what was their device, or
rather, to what were they led by the Providence which guided them
in all things? They betook themselves to a thicket on the
mountains of Pontus, of which there are many deep ones of
considerable extent, with very few comrades of their flight, or
attendants upon their needs. Let others marvel at the length of
time, for their flight was exceedingly prolonged, to about seven
years, or a little more, and their mode of life, delicately
nurtured as they were, was straitened and unusual, as may be
imagined, with the discomfort of its exposure to frost and heat
and rain: and the wilderness allowed no fellowship or converse
with friends: a great trial to men accustomed to the attendance
and honour of a numerous retinue. But I will proceed to speak of
what is still greater and more extraordinary: nor will anyone
fail to credit it, save those who, in their feeble and dangerous
judgment, think little of persecutions and dangers for Christ's
sake.
7. These noble men, suffering from the
lapse of time, and feeling a distaste for ordinary food, felt a
longing for something more appetising. They did not indeed speak
as Israel did, for they were not murmurers like them, in their
afflictions in the desert, after the escape from Egypt-that Egypt
would have been better for them than the wilderness, in the
bountiful supply of its flesh-pots, and other dainties which they
had left behind them there, for the brickmaking and the clay
seemed nothing to them then in their folly-but in a more pious
and faithful manner. For why, said they, is it incredible that
the God of wonders, who bountifully fed in the wilderness his
homeless and fugitive people, raining bread upon them, and
abounding in quails, nourishing them not only with necessaries,
but even with luxuries: that He, Who divided the sea, and stayed
the sun, and parted the river, with all the other things that He
has done; for under such circumstances the mind is wont to recur
to history, and sing the praises of God's many wonders: that He,
they went on, should feed us champions of piety with dainties
to-day? Many animals which have escaped the tables of the rich,
have their lairs in these mountains, and many eatable birds fly
over our longing heads, any of which can surely be caught at the
mere fiat of Thy will! At these words, their quarry lay before
them, with food come of its own accord, a complete banquet
prepared without effort, stags appearing all at once from some
place in the hills. How splendid they were! how fat! how ready
for the slaughter! It might almost be imagined that they were
annoyed at not having been summoned earlier. Some of them made
signs to draw others after them, the rest followed their lead.
Who pursued and drove them? No one. What riders? What kind of
dogs, what barking, or cry, or young men who had occupied the
exits according to the rules of the chase? They were the
prisoners of prayer and righteous petition. Who has known such a
hunt among men of this, or any day?
8. O what a wonder! They were themselves
stewards of the chase; what they would, was caught by the mere
will to do so; what was left, they sent away to the thickets, for
another meal. The cooks were extemporised, the dinner exquisite,
the guests were grateful for this wonderful foretaste of their
hopes. And hence they grew more earnest in their struggle, in
return for which they had received this blessing. Such is my
history. And do thou, my persecutor, in thy admiration for
legends, tell of thy huntresses, and Orions, and Actaeons, those
ill-fated hunters, and the hind substituted for the maiden, if
any such thing rouses thee to emulation, and if we grant that
this story is no legend. The sequel of the tale is too
disgraceful. For what is the benefit of the exchange, if a maiden
is saved to be taught to murder her guests, and learn to requite
humanity with inhumanity? Let this one instance, such as it is,
chosen out of many, represent the rest, as far as I am concerned.
I have not related it to contribute to his reputation: for
neither does the sea stand in need of the rivers which flow into
it, many and great though they be, nor does the present subject
of my praises need any contributions to his fair fame. No! my
object is to exhibit the character of his ancestors, and the
example before his eyes, which he so far excelled. For if other
men find it a great additional advantage to receive somewhat of
their honour from their forefathers, it is a greater thing for
him to have made such an addition to the original stock that the
stream seems to have run uphill.
9. The union of his parents, cemented as it
was by a community of virtue, no less than by cohabitation, was
notable for many reasons, especially for generosity to the poor,
for hospitality, for purity of soul as the result of
self-discipline, for the dedication to God of a portion of their
property, a matter not as yet so much cared for by most men, as
it now has grown to be, in consequence of such previous examples,
as have given distinction to it, and for all those other points,
which have been published throughout Pontus and Cappadocia, to
the satisfaction of many: in my opinion, however, their greatest
claim to distinction is the excellence of their children. Legend
indeed has its instances of men whose children were many and
beautiful, but it is practical experience which has presented to
us these parents, whose own character, apart from that of their
children, was sufficient for their fair fame, while the character
of their children would have made them, even without their own
eminence in virtue, to surpass all men by the excellence of their
children. For the attainment of distinction by one or two of
their offspring might be ascribed to their nature; but when all
are eminent, the honour is clearly due to those who brought them
up. This is proved by the blessed roll of priests and virgins,
and of those who, when married, have allowed nothing in their
union to hinder them from attaining an equal repute, and so have
made the distinction between them to consist in the condition,
rather than in the mode of their life.
10. Who has not known Basil, our
archbishop's father, a great name to everyone, who attained a
father's prayer, if anyone, I will not say as no one, ever did?
For he surpassed all in virtue, and was only prevented by his son
from gaining the first prize. Who has not known Emmelia, whose
name was a forecast of what she became, or else whose life was an
exemplification of her name? For she had a right to the name
which implies gracefulness, and occupied, to speak concisely, the
same place among women, as her husband among men. So that, when
it was decided that he, in whose honour we are met, should be
given to men to submit to the bondage of nature, as anyone of old
has been given by God for the common advantage, it was neither
fitting that he should be born of other parents, nor that they
should possess another son: and so the two things suitably
concurred. I have now, in obedience to the Divine law which bids
us to pay all honour to parents, bestowed the firstfruits of my
praises upon those whom I have commemorated, and proceed to treat
of Basil himself, premising this, which I think will seem true to
all who knew him, that we only need his own voice to pronounce
his eulogium. For he is at once a brilliant subject for praise,
and the only one whose powers of speech make him worthy of
treating it. Beauty indeed and strength and size, in which I see
that most men rejoice, I concede to anyone who will-not that even
in these points he was inferior to any of those men of small
minds who busy themselves about the body, while he was still
young, and had not yet reduced the flesh by austerity-but that I
may avoid the fate of unskilful athletes, who waste their
strength in vain efforts after minor objects, and so are worsted
in the crucial struggle, whose results are victory and the
distinction of the crown. The praise, then, which I shall claim
for him is based upon grounds which no one, I think, will
consider superfluous, or beyond the scope of my
oration.
11. I take it as admitted by men of sense,
that the first of our advantages is education; and not only this
our more noble form of it, which disregards rhetorical ornaments
and glory, and holds to salvation, and beauty in the objects of
our contemplation: but even that external culture which many
Christians ill-judgingly abhor, as treacherous and dangerous, and
keeping us afar from God. For as we ought not to neglect the
heavens, and earth, and air, and all such things, because some
have wrongly seized upon them, and honour God's works instead of
God: but to reap what advantage we can from them for our life and
enjoyment, while we avoid their dangers; not raising creation, as
foolish men do, in revolt against the Creator, but from the works
of nature apprehending the Worker, and, as the divine apostle
says, bringing into captivity every thought to Christ: and again,
as we know that neither fire, nor food, nor iron, nor any other
of the elements, is of itself most useful, or most harmful,
except according to the will of those who use it; and as we have
compounded healthful drugs from certain of the reptiles; so from
secular literature we have received principles of enquiry and
speculation, while we have rejected their idolatry, terror, and
pit of destruction. Nay, even these have aided us in our
religion, by our perception of the contrast between what is worse
and what is better, and by gaining strength for our doctrine from
the weakness of theirs. We must not then dishonour education,
because some men are pleased to do so, but rather suppose such
men to be boorish and uneducated, desiring all men to be as they
themselves are, in order to hide themselves in the general, and
escape the detection of their want of culture. But come now, and,
after this sketch of our subject and these admissions, let us
contemplate the life of Basil.
12. In his earliest years he was swathed
and fashioned, in that best and purest fashioning which the
Divine David speaks of as proceeding day by day, in contrast with
that of the night, under his great father, acknowledged in those
days by Pontus, as its common teacher of virtue. Under him then,
as life and reason grew and rose together, our illustrious friend
was educated: not boasting of a Thessalian mountain cave, as the
workshop of his virtue, nor of some braggart Centaur, the tutor
of the heroes of his day: nor was he taught under such tuition to
shoot hares, and run down fawns, or hunt stags, or excel in war,
or in breaking colts, using the same person as teacher and horse
at once; nor nourished on the fabulous marrows of stags and
lions, but he was trained in general education, and practised in
the worship of God, and, to speak concisely, led on by elementary
instructions to his future perfection. For those who are
successful in life or in letters only, while deficient in the
other, seem to me to differ in nothing from one-eyed men, whose
loss is great, but their deformity greater, both in their own
eyes, and in those of others. While those who attain eminence in
both alike, and are ambidextrous, both possess perfection, and
pass their life with the blessedness of heaven. This is what
befell him, who had at home a model of virtue in well-doing, the
very sight of which made him excellent from the first. As we see
foals and calves skipping beside their mothers from their birth,
so he too, running close beside his father in foal-like
wantonness, without being left far behind in his lofty impulses
toward virtue, or, if you will, sketching out and showing traces
of the future beauty of his virtue, and drawing the outlines of
perfection before the time of perfection arrived.
13. When sufficiently trained at home, as
he ought to fall short in no form of excellence, and not be
surpassed by the busy bee, which gathers what is most useful from
every flower, he set out for the city of Caesarea, to take his
place in the schools there, I mean this illustrious city of ours,
for it was the guide and mistress of my studies, the metropolis
of letters, no less than of the cities which she excels and
reigns over: and if any one were to deprive her of her literary
power, he would rob her of her fairest and special distinction.
Other cities take pride in other ornaments, of ancient or of
recent date, that they may have something to be described or to
be seen. Letters form our distinction here, and are our badge, as
if upon the field of arms or on the stage. His subsequent life
let those detail who trained him, or enjoyed his training, as to
what he was to his masters, what he was to his classmates,
equalling the former, surpassing the latter in every form of
culture, what renown he won in a short time from all, both of the
common people, and of the leaders of the state; by showing both a
culture beyond his years, and a steadfastness of character beyond
his culture. An orator among orators, even before the chair of
the rhetoricians, a philosopher among philosophers, even before
the doctrines of philosophers: highest of all a priest among
Christians even before the priesthood. So much deference was paid
to him in every respect by all. Eloquence was his by-work, from
which he culled enough to make it an assistance to him in
Christian philosophy, since power of this kind is needed to set
forth the objects of our contemplation. For a mind which cannot
express itself is like the motion of a man in a lethargy. His
pursuit was philosophy, and breaking from the world, and
fellowship with God, by concerning himself, amid things below,
with things above, and winning, where all is unstable and
fluctuating, the things which are stable and remain.
14. Thence to Byzantium, the imperial city
of the East, for it was distinguished by the eminence of its
rhetorical and philosophic teachers, whose most valuable lessons
he soon assimilated by the quickness and force of his powers:
thence he was sent by God, and by his generous craving for
culture, to Athens the home of letters. Athens, which has been to
me, if to any one, a city truly of gold, and the patroness of all
that is good. For it brought me to know Basil more perfectly,
though he had not been unknown to me before; and in my pursuit of
letters, I attained to happiness; and in another fashion had the
same experience as Saul, who, seeking his father's asses, found a
kingdom, and gained incidentally what was of more importance than
the object which he had in view. Hitherto my course has been
clear, leading me in my encomiums along a level and easy, in
fact, a king's highway: henceforth I know not how to speak or
whither to turn: for my task is becoming arduous. For here I am
anxious, and seize this opportunity to add from my own experience
somewhat to my speech, and to dwell a little upon the recital of
the causes and circumstances which originated our friendship, or
to speak more strictly, our unity of life and nature. For as our
eyes are not ready to turn from attractive objects, and, if we
violently tear them away, are wont to return to them again; so do
we linger in our description of what is most sweet to us. I am
afraid of the difficulty of the undertaking. I will try, however,
to use all possible moderation. And if I am at all overpowered by
my regret, pardon this most righteous of all feelings, the
absence of which would be a great loss, in the eyes of men of
feeling.
15. We were contained by Athens, like two
branches of some river-stream, for after leaving the common
fountain of our fatherland, we had been separated in our varying
pursuit of culture, and were now again united by the impulsion of
God no less than by our own agreement. I preceded him by a
little, but he soon followed me, to be welcomed with great and
brilliant hope. For he was versed in many languages, before his
arrival, and it was a great thing for either of us to outstrip
the other in the attainment of some object of our study. And I
may well add, as a seasoning to any speech, a short narrative,
which will be a reminder to those who know it, a source of
information to those who do not. Most of the young men at Athens
in their folly are mad after rhetorical skill-not only those who
are ignobly born and unknown, but even the noble and illustrious,
in the general mass of young men difficult to keep under control.
They are just like men devoted to horses and exhibitions, as we
see, at the horse-races; they leap, they shout, raise clouds of
dust, they drive in their seats, they beat the air, (instead of
the horses) with their fingers as whips, they yoke and unyoke the
horses, though they are none of theirs: they readily exchange
with one another drivers, horses, positions, leaders: and who are
they who do this? Often poor and needy fellows, without the means
of support for a single day. This is just how the students feel
in regard to their own tutors, and their rivals, in their
eagerness to increase their own numbers and thereby enrich them.
The matter is absolutely absurd and silly. Cities, roads,
harbours, mountain tops, coastlines, are seized upon-in short,
every part of Attica, or of the rest of Greece, with most of the
inhabitants; for even these they have divided between the rival
parties.
16. Whenever any newcomer arrives, and
falls into the hands of those who seize upon him, either by force
or willingly, they observe this Attic law, of combined jest and
earnest. He is first conducted to the house of one of those who
were the first to receive him, or of his friends, or kinsmen, or
countrymen, or of those who are eminent in debating power, and
purveyors of arguments, and therefore especially honoured among
them; and their reward consists in the gain of adherents. He is
next subjected to the raillery of any one who will, with the
intention I suppose, of checking the conceit of the newcomers,
and reducing them to subjection at once. The raillery is of a
more insolent or argumentative kind, according to the boorishness
or refinement of the railer: and the performance, which seems
very fearful and brutal to those who do not know it, is to those
who have experienced it very pleasant and humane: for its threats
are feigned rather than real. Next, he is conducted in procession
through the market place to the bath. The procession is formed by
those who are charged with it in the young man's honour, who
arrange themselves in two ranks separated by an interval, and
precede him to the bath. But when they have approached it, they
shout and leap wildly, as if possessed, shouting that they must
not advance, but stay, since the bath will not admit them; and at
the same time frighten the youth by furiously knocking at the
doors: then allowing him to enter, they now present him with his
freedom, and receive him after the bath as an equal, and one of
themselves. This they consider the most pleasant part of the
ceremony, as being a speedy exchange and relief from annoyances.
On this occasion I not only refused to put to shame my friend the
great Basil, out of respect for the gravity of his character, and
the ripeness of his reasoning powers, but also persuaded all the
rest of the students to treat him likewise, who happened not to
know him. For he was from the first respected by most of them,
his reputation having preceded him. The result was that he was
the only one to escape the general rule, and be accorded a
greater honour than belongs to a freshman's position.
17. This was the prelude of our friendship.
This was the kindling spark of our union: thus we felt the wound
of mutual love. Then something of this kind happened, for I think
it right not to omit even this. I find the Armenians to be not a
simple race, but very crafty and cunning. At this time some of
his special comrades and friends, who had been intimate with him
even in the early days of his father's instruction, for they were
members of his school, came up to him under the guise of
friendship, but with envious, and not kindly intent, and put to
him questions of a disputations rather than rational kind, trying
to overwhelm him at the first onset, having known his original
natural endowments, and unable to brook the honour he had then
received. For they thought it a strange thing that they who had
put on their gowns, and been exercised in shouting, should not
get the better of one who was a stranger and a novice. I also, in
my vain love for Athens, and trusting to their professions
without perceiving their envy, when they were giving way, and
turning their backs, since I was indignant that in their persons
the reputation of Athens should be destroyed, and so speedily put
to shame, supported the young men, and restored the argument; and
by the aid of my additional weight, for in such cases a small
addition makes all the difference, and, as the poet says, "made
equal their heads in the fray." But, when I perceived the secret
motive of the dispute, which could no longer be kept under, and
was at last clearly exposed, I at once drew back, and retired
from their ranks, to range myself on his side, and made the
victory decisive. He was at once delighted at what had happened,
for his sagacity was remarkable, and being filled with zeal, to
describe him fully in Homer's language, he pursued in confusion
with argument those valiant youths, and, smiting them with
syllogisms, only ceased when they were utterly routed, and he had
distinctly won the honours due to his power. Thus was kindled
again, no longer a spark, but a manifest and conspicuous blaze of
friendship.
18. Their efforts having thus proved
fruitless, while they severely blamed their own rashness, they
cherished such annoyance against me that it broke out into open
hostility, and a charge of treachery, not only to them, but to
Athens herself: inasmuch as they had been confuted and put to
shame at the first onset, by a single student, who had not even
had time to gain confidence. He moreover, according to that human
feeling, which makes us, when we have all at once attained to the
high hopes which we have cherished, look upon their results as
inferior to our expectation, he, I say, was displeased and
annoyed, and could take no delight in his arrival. He was seeking
for what he had expected, and called Athens an empty happiness. I
however tried to remove his annoyance, both by argumentative
encounter, and by the enchantments of reasoning; alleging, as is
true, that the disposition of a man cannot at once be detected,
without a long time and more constant association, and that
culture likewise is not made known to those who make trial of
her, after a few efforts and in a short time. In this way I
restored his cheerfulness, and by this mutual experience, he was
the more closely united to me.
19. And when, as time went on, we
acknowledged our mutual affection, and that philosophy was our
aim, we were all in all to one another, housemates, messmates,
intimates, with one object in life, or an affection for each
other ever growing warmer and stronger. Love for bodily
attractions, since its objects are fleeting, is as fleeting as
the flowers of spring. For the flame cannot survive, when the
fuel is exhausted, and departs along with that which kindles it,
nor does desire abide, when its incentive wastes away. But love
which is godly and under restraint, since its object is stable,
not only is more lasting, but, the fuller its vision of beauty
grows, the more closely does it bind to itself and to one another
the hearts of those whose love has one and the same object. This
is the law of our superhuman love. I feel that I am being unduly
borne away, and I know not how to enter upon this point, yet I
cannot restrain myself from describing it. For if I have omitted
anything, it seems, immediately afterwards, of pressing
importance, and of more consequence than what I had preferred to
mention. And if any one would carry me tyrannically forward, I
become like the polyps, which when they are being dragged from
their holes, cling with their suckers to the rocks, and cannot be
detached, until the last of these has had exerted upon it its
necessary share of force. If then you give me leave, I have my
request, if not I must take it from myself.
20. Such were our feelings for each other,
when we had thus supported, as Pindar has it, our "well-built
chamber with pillars of gold," as we advanced under the united
influences of God's grace and our own affection. Oh! how can I
mention these things without tears.
We were impelled by equal hopes, in a
pursuit especially obnoxious to envy, that of letters. Yet envy
we knew not, and emulation was of service to us. We struggled,
not each to gain the first place for himself, but to yield it to
the other; for we made each other's reputation to be our own. We
seemed to have one soul, inhabiting two bodies. And if we must
not believe those whose doctrine is "All things are in all;" yet
in our case it was worthy of belief, so did we live in and with
each other. The sole business of both of us was virtue, and
living for the hopes to come, having retired from this world,
before our actual departure hence. With a view to this, were
directed all our life and actions, under the guidance of the
commandment, as we sharpened upon each other our weapons of
virtue; and if this is not a great thing for me to say, being a
rule and standard to each other, for the distinction between what
was right and what was not. Our associates were not the most
dissolute, but the most sober of our comrades; not the most
pugnacious, but the most peaceable, whose intimacy was most
profitable: knowing that it is more easy to be tainted with vice,
than to impart virtue; just as we can more readily be infected
with a disease, than bestow health. Our most cherished studies
were not the most pleasant, but the most excellent; this being
one means of forming young minds in a virtuous or vicious
mould.
21. Two ways were known to us, the first of
greater value, the second of smaller consequence: the one leading
to our sacred buildings and the teachers there, the other to
secular instructors. All others we left to those who would pursue
them-to feasts, theatres, meetings, banquets. For nothing is in
my opinion of value, save that which leads to virtue and to the
improvement of its devotees. Different men have different names,
derived from their fathers, their families, their pursuits, their
exploits: we had but one great business and name-to be and to be
called Christians of which we thought more than Gyges of the
turning of his ring, if this is not a legend, on which depended
his Lydian sovereignty: or than Midas did of the gold through
which he perished, in answer to his prayer that all he had might
turn to gold-another Phrygian legend. For why should I speak of
the arrow of the Hyperborean Abaris, or of the Argive Pegasus, to
whom flight through the air was not of such consequence as was to
us our rising to God, through the help of, and with each other?
Hurtful as Athens was to others in spiritual things, and this is
of no slight consequence to the pious, for the city is richer in
those evil riches-idols-than the rest of Greece, and it is hard
to avoid being carried along with their devotees and adherents,
yet we, our minds being closed up and fortified against this,
suffered no injury. On the contrary, strange as it may seem, we
were thus the more confirmed in the faith, from our perception of
their trickery and unreality, which led us to despise these
divinities in the very home of their worship. And if there is, or
is believed to be, a river flowing with fresh water through the
sea, or an animal which can dance in fire, the consumer of all
things, such were we among all our comrades.
22. And, best of all, we were surrounded by
a far from ignoble band, under his instruction and guidance, and
delighting in the same objects, as we ran on foot beside that
Lydian car, his own course and disposition: and so we became
famous, not only among our own teachers and comrades, but even
throughout Greece, and especially in the eyes of its most
distinguished men. We even passed beyond its boundaries, as was
made clear by the evidence of many. For our instructors were
known to all who knew Athens, and all who knew them, knew us, as
the subject of conversation, being actually looked upon, or heard
of by report, as an illustrious pair. Orestes and Pylades were in
their eyes nothing to us, or the sons of Molione, the wonders of
the Homeric scroll, celebrated for their union in misfortune, and
their splendid driving, as they shared in reins and whip alike.
But I have been unawares betrayed into praising myself, in a
manner I would not have allowed in another. And it is no wonder
that I gained here in some advantage from his friendship, and
that, as in life he aided me in virtue, so since his departure he
has contributed to my renown. But I must return to my proper
course.
23. Who possessed such a degree of the
prudence of old age, even before his hair was gray? Since it is
by this that Solomon defines old age. Who was so respectful to
both old and young, not only of our contemporaries, but even of
those who long preceded him? Who, owing to his character, was
less in need of education? Yet who, even with his character, was
so imbued with learning? What branch of learning did he not
traverse; and that with unexampled success, passing through all,
as no one else passed through any one of them: and attaining such
eminence in each, as if it had been his sole study? The two great
sources of power in the arts and sciences, ability and
application, were in him equally combined. For, because of the
pains he took, he had but little need of natural quickness, and
his natural quickness made it unnecessary for him to take pains;
and such was the cooperation and unity of both, that it was hard
to see for which of the two he was more remarkable. Who had such
power in Rhetoric, which breathes with the might of fire,
different as his disposition was from that of rhetoricians? Who
in Grammar, which perfects our tongues in Greek and compiles
history, and presides over metres and legislates for poems? Who
in Philosophy, that really lofty and high reaching science,
whether practical and speculative, or in that part of it whose
oppositions and struggles are concerned with logical
demonstrations; which is called Dialectic, and in which it was
more difficult to elude his verbal toils, if need required, than
to escape from the Labyrinths? Of Astronomy, Geometry, and
numerical proportion he had such a grasp, that he could not be
baffled by those who are clever in such sciences: excessive
application to them he despised, as useless to those whose desire
is godliness: so that it is possible to admire what he chose more
than what he neglected, or what he neglected more than what he
chose. Medicine, the result of philosophy and laboriousness, was
rendered necessary for him by his physical delicacy, and his care
of the sick. From these beginnings he attained to a mastery of
the art, not only in its empirical and practical branches, but
also in its theory and principles. But what are these,
illustrious though they be, compared with the moral discipline of
the man? To those who have had experience of him, Minos and
Rhadamanthus were mere trifles, whom the Greeks thought worthy of
the meadows of Asphodel and the Elysian plains, which are their
representations of our Paradise, derived from those books of
Moses which are also ours, for though their terms are different,
this is what they refer to under other names.
24. Such was the case, and his galleon was
laden with all the learning attainable by the nature of man; for
beyond Cadiz there is no passage. There was left no other need
but that of rising to a more perfect life, and grasping those
hopes upon which we were agreed. The day of our departure was at
hand, with its attendant speeches of farewell, and of escort, its
invitations to return, its lamentations, embraces and tears. For
there is nothing so painful to any one, as is separation from
Athens and one another, to those who have been comrades there. On
that occasion was seen a piteous spectacle, worthy of record.
Around us were grouped our fellow students and classmates and
some of our teachers, protesting amid entreaties, violence, and
persuasion, that, whatever happened, they would not let us go;
saying and doing everything that men in distress could do. And
here I will bring an accusation against myself, and also, daring
though it be, against that divine and irreproachable soul. For
he, by detailing the reasons of his anxiety to return home, was
able to prevail over their desire to retain him, and they were
compelled, though with reluctance, to agree to his departure. But
I was left behind at Athens, partly, to say the truth, because I
had been prevailed on-partly because he had betrayed me, having
been persuaded to forsake and hand over to his captors one who
refused to forsake him. A thing incredible, before it happened.
For it was like cutting one body into two, to the destruction of
either part, or the severance of two bullocks who have shared the
same manger and the same yoke, amid pitiable bellowings after one
another in protest against the separation. However, my loss was
not of long duration, for I could not long bear to be seen in
piteous plight, nor to have to account to every one for our
separation: so, after a brief stay at Athens, my longing desire
made me, like the horse in Homer, to burst the bonds of those who
restrained me, and prancing o'er the plains, rush to my
mate.
25. Upon our return, after a slight
indulgence to the world and the stage, sufficient to gratify the
general desire, not from any inclination to theatrical display,
we soon became independent, and, after being promoted from the
rank of beardless boys to that of men, made bold advances along
the road of philosophy, for though no longer together, since envy
would not allow this, we were united by our eager desire. The
city of Caesarea took possession of him, as a second founder and
patron, but in course of time he was occasionally absent, as a
matter of necessity due to our separation, and with a view to our
determined course of philosophy. Dutiful attendance on my aged
parents, and a succession of misfortunes kept me apart from him,
perhaps without right or justice, but so it was. And to this
cause I am inclined to ascribe all the inconsistency and
difficulty which have befallen my life, and the hindrances in the
way of philosophy, which have been unworthy of my desire and
purpose. But as for my fate, let it lead whither God pleases,
only may its course be the better for his intercessions. As
regards himself, the manifold love of God toward man, and His
providential care for our race did, after shewing forth his
merits under many intervening circumstances with ever greater
brilliancy, set him up as a conspicuous and celebrated light for
the Church, by advancing him to the holy thrones of the
priesthood, to blaze forth, through the single city of Caesarea,
to the whole world. And in what manner? Not by precipitate
advancement, nor by at once cleansing and making him wise, as is
the wont of many present candidates for preferment: but bestowing
upon him the honour in the due order of spiritual
advancement.
26. For I do not praise the disorder and
irregularity which sometimes exist among us, even in those who
preside over the sanctuary. I do not venture, nor is it just, to
accuse them all. I approve the nautical custom, which first gives
the oar to the future steersman, and afterward leads him to the
stern, and entrusts him with the command, and seats him at the
helm, only after a long course of striking the sea and observing
the winds. As is the case again in military affairs: private,
captain, general. This order is the best and most advantageous
for their subordinates. And if it were so in our case, it would
be of great service. But, as it is, there is a danger of the
holiest of all offices being the most ridiculous among us. For
promotion depends not upon virtue, but upon villany; and the
sacred thrones fall not to the most Worthy, but to the most
powerful. Samuel, the seer into futurity, is among the prophets:
but Saul, the rejected one, is also there. Rehoboam, the son of
Solomon, is among the kings, but so also is Jeroboam, the slave
and apostate. And there is not a physician, or a painter who has
not first studied the nature of diseases, or mixed many colours,
or practised drawing: but a prelate is easily found, without
laborious training, with a reputation of recent date, being sown
and springing up in a moment, as the legend of the giants goes.
We manufacture those who are holy in a day, and bid those to be
wise, who have had no instruction, and have contributed nothing
before to their dignity, except the will. So one man is content
with an inferior position, and abides in his low estate, who is
worthy of a lofty one, and has meditated much on the inspired
words, and has reduced the flesh by many laws into subjection to
the spirit: while the other haughtily takes precedence, and
raises his eyebrow over his betters, and does not tremble at his
position, nor is he appalled at the sight, seeing the disciplined
man beneath him; and wrongly supposes himself to be his superior
in wisdom as well as in rank, having lost his senses under the
influence of his position.
27. Not so our great and illustrious Basil.
In this grace, as in all others, he was a public example. For he
first read to the people the sacred books, while already able to
expound them, nor did he deem himself worthy of this rank in the
sanctuary, and thus proceeded to praise the Lord in the seat of
the Presbyters, and next in that of the Bishops, attaining the
office neither by stealth nor by violence, instead of seeking for
the honour, being sought for by it, and receiving it not as a
human favour, but as from God and divine. The account of his
bishopric must be deferred: over his subordinate ministry let us
linger a while, for indeed it had almost escaped me, in the midst
of my discourse.
28. There arose a disagreement between him
and his predecessor in the rule over this Church: its source and
character it is best to pass over in silence, yet it arose. He
was a man in other respects far from ignoble, and admirable for
his piety, as was proved by the persecution of that time, and the
opposition to him, yet his feeling against Basil was one to which
men are liable. For Momus seizes not only upon the common herd,
but on the best of men, so that it belongs to God alone to be
utterly uninfluenced by and proof against such feelings. All the
more eminent and wise portion of the Church was roused against
him, if those are wiser than the majority who have separated
themselves from the world and consecrated their life to God. I
mean the Nazarites of our day, and those who devote themselves to
such pursuits. They were annoyed that their chief should be
neglected, insulted, and rejected, and they ventured upon a most
dangerous proceeding. They determined to revolt and break off
from the body of the Church, which admits of no faction, severing
along with themselves no small fraction of the people, both of
the lower ranks, and of those of position. This was most easy,
owing to three very strong reasons. In the first place, the man
was held in repute, beyond any other, I think, of the
philosophers of our time, and able, if he wished, to inspire with
courage the conspirators. Next, his opponent was suspected by the
city, in consequence of the tumult which accompanied his
institution, of having obtained his preferment in an arbitrary
manner, not according to the laws and canons. Also there were
present some of the bishops of the West, drawing to themselves
all the orthodox members of the Church.
29. What then did our noble friend, the
disciple of the Peaceable One? It was not his habit to resist his
traducers or partisans, nor was it his part to fight, or rend the
body of the Church, which was from other reasons the subject of
attack, and hardly bestead, from the great power of the heretics.
With my advice and earnest encouragement on the point, he set out
from the place with me into Pontus, and presided over the abodes
of contemplation there. He himself too founded one worthy of
mention, as he welcomed the desert together with Elijah and John,
those professors of austerity; thinking this to be more
profitable for him than to form any design in reference to the
present juncture unworthy of his philosophy, and to ruin in a
time of storm the straight course which he was making, where the
surges of disputation were lulled to a calm. Yet wonderfully
philosophic though his retirement was, we shall find his return
still more wonderful. For thus it was.
30. While we were thus engaged, there
suddenly arose a cloud full of hail, with destructive roar,
overwhelming every Church upon which it burst and seized: an
Emperor, most fond of gold and most hostile to Christ, infected
with these two most serious diseases, insatiate avarice and
blasphemy; a persecutor in succession to the persecutor, and, in
succession to the apostate, not indeed an apostate, though no
better to Christians, or rather, to the more devout and pure
party of Christians, who worship the Trinity, which I call the
only true devotion and saving doctrine. For we do not measure out
the Godhead into portions, nor banish from Itself by unnatural
estrangements the one and unapproachable Nature; nor cure one
evil by another, destroying the godless confusion of Sabellius by
a more impious severance and division; which was the error of
Arius, whose name declares his madness, the disturber and
destroyer of a great part of the Church. For he did not honour
the Father, by dishonouring His offspring with his unequal
degrees of Godhead. But we recognize one glory of the Father, the
equality of the Only-begotten; and one glory of the Son, that of
the Spirit. And we hold that, to subordinate any of the Three, is
to destroy the whole. For we worship and acknowledge Them as
Three in their properties, but One in their Godhead. He however
had no such idea, being unable to look up, but being debased by
those who led him, he dared to debase along with himself even the
Nature of the Godhead, and became a wicked creature reducing
Majesty to bondage, and aligning with creation the uncreated and
timeless Nature.
31. Such was his mind, and with such
impiety he took the field against us. For we must consider it to
be nothing else than a barbaric inroad which, instead of
destroying walls, cities and houses, and other things of little
worth, made with hands and capable of restoration, spent its
ravages upon men's souls. A worthy army joined in his assault,
the evil rulers of the Churches, the bitter governors of his
world-wide Empire. Some of the Churches they now held, some they
were assaulting, others they hoped to gain by the already
exercised influence of the Emperor, and the violence which he
threatened. But in their purpose of perverting our own, their
confidence was specially based on the smallness of mind of those
whom I have mentioned, the inexperience of our prelate, and the
infirmities which prevailed among us. The struggle would be
fierce: the zeal of numerous troops was far from ignoble, but
their array was weak, from the want of a leader and strategist to
contend for them with the might of the Word and of the Spirit.
What then did this noble and magnanimous and truly Christ-loving
soul? No need of many words to urge his presence and aid. At once
when he saw me on my mission, for the struggle on behalf of the
faith was common to us both, he yielded to my entreaty; and
decided by a most excellent distinction, based on spiritual
reasons, that the time for punctiliousness (if indeed we may give
way to such feelings at all) is a time of security, but that
forbearance is required in the hour of necessity. He immediately
returned with me from Pontus, and as a zealous volunteer took his
place in the fight for the endangered truth, and devoted himself
to the service of his mother, the Church.
32. Did then his actual efforts fall short
of his preliminary zeal? Were they directed by courage, but not
by prudence, or by skill, while he shrank from danger? Or, in
spite of their unexampled perfection on all these points, was
there left in him some trace of irritation? Far from it. He was
at once completely reconciled, and took part in every plan and
effort. He removed all the thorns and stumbling blocks which were
in our way, upon which the enemy relied in their attack upon us.
He took hold of one, grasped another, thrust away a third. He
became to some a stout wall and rampart, to others an axe
breaking the rock in pieces, or a fire among the thorns, as the
divine Scripture says, easily destroying those fagots who were
insulting the Godhead. And if his Barnabas, who speaks and
records these things, was of service to Paul in the struggle, it
is to Paul that thanks are due, for choosing and making him his
comrade in the strife.
33. Thus the enemy failed, and, base men as
they were, for the first time were then basely put to shame and
worsted, learning not to be ready to despise the Cappadocians, of
all men in the world, whose special qualities are firmness in the
faith, and loyal devotion to the Trinity; to Whom is due their
unity and strength, and from Whom they receive an even greater
and stronger assistance than they are able to give. Basil's next
business and purpose was to conciliate the prelate, to allay
suspicion, to persuade all men that the irritation which had been
felt was due to the temptation and effort of the Evil one, in his
envy of virtuous concord: carefully complying with the laws of
obedience and spiritual order. Accordingly he visited him, with
instruction and advice. While obedient to his wishes, he was
everything to him, a good counsellor, a skilful assistant, an
expounder of the Divine Will, a guide of conduct, a staff for his
old age, a support of the faith, most trusty of those within,
most practical of those without, in a word, as much inclined to
goodwill, as he had been thought to hostility. And so the power
of the Church came into his hands almost, if not quite, to an
equal degree with the occupant of the see. For in return for his
good-will, he was requited with authority. And their harmony and
combination of power was wonderful. The one was the leader of the
people, the other of their leader, like a lion-keeper, skilfully
soothing the possessor of power. For, having been recently
installed in the see, and still somewhat under the influence of
the world, and not yet furnished with the things of the Spirit,
in the midst of the eddying tide of enemies assaulting the
Church, he was in need of some one to take him by the hand and
support him. Accordingly he accepted the alliance, and imagined
himself the conqueror of one who had conquered him.
34. Of his care for and protection of the
Church, there are many other tokens; his boldness towards the
governors and other most powerful men in the city: the decisions
of disputes, accepted without hesitation, and made effective by
his simple word, his inclination being held to be decisive: his
support of the needy, most of them in spiritual, not a few also
in physical distress: for this also often influences the soul and
reduces it to subjection by its kindness; the support of the
poor, the entertainment of strangers, the care of maidens;
legislation written and unwritten for the monastic life:
arrangements of prayers, adornments of the sanctuary, and other
ways in which the true man of God, working for God, would benefit
the people: one being especially important and noteworthy. There
was a famine, the most severe one ever recorded. The city was in
distress, and there was no source of assistance, or relief for
the calamity. For maritime cities are able to bear such times of
need without difficulty, by an exchange of their own products for
what is imported: but an inland city like ours can neither turn
its superfluity to profit, nor supply its need, by either
disposing of what we have, or importing what we have not: but the
hardest part of all such distress is, the insensibility and
insatiability of those who possess supplies. For they watch their
opportunities, and turn the distress to profit, and thrive upon
misfortune: heeding not that he who shows mercy to the poor,
lendeth to the Lord, nor that he that withholdeth corn, the
people shall curse him: nor any other of the promises to the
philanthropic, and threats against the inhuman. But they are too
insatiate, in their ill-judged policy; for while they shut up
their bowels against their fellows, they shut up those of God
against themselves, forgetting that their need of Him is greater
than others' need of them. Such are the buyers and sellers of
corn, who neither respect their fellows, nor are thankful to God,
from Whom comes what they have, while others are
straitened.
35. He indeed could neither rain bread from
heaven by prayer, to nourish an escaped people in the wilderness,
nor supply fountains of food without cost from the depth of
vessels which are filled by being emptied, and so, by an amazing
return for her hospitality, support one who supported him; nor
feed thousands of men with five loaves whose very fragments were
a further supply for many tables. These were the works of Moses
and Elijah, and my God, from Whom they too derived their power.
Perhaps also they were characteristic of their time and its
circumstances: since signs are for unbelievers not for those who
believe. But he did devise and execute with the same faith things
which correspond to them, and tend in the same direction. For by
his word and advice he opened the stores of those who possessed
them, and so, according to the Scripture dealt food to the
hungry, and satisfied the poor with bread, and fed them in the
time of dearth, and filled the hungry souls with good things. And
in what way? for this is no slight addition to his praise. He
gathered together the victims of the famine with some who were
but slightly recovering from it, men and women, infants, old men,
every age which was in distress, and obtaining contributions of
all sorts of food which can relieve famine, set before them
basins of soup and such meat as was found preserved among us, on
which the poor live. Then, imitating the ministry of Christ, Who,
girded with a towel, did not disdain to wash the disciples' feet,
using for this purpose the aid of his own servants, and also of
his fellow servants, he attended to the bodies and souls of those
who needed it, combining personal respect with the supply of
their necessity, and so giving them a double relief.
36. Such was our young furnisher of corn,
and second Joseph: though of him we can say somewhat more. For
the one made a gain from the famine, and bought up Egypt in his
philanthropy, by managing the time of plenty with a view to the
time of famine, turning to account the dreams of others for that
purpose. But the other's services were gratuitous, and his
succour of the famine gained no profit, having only one object,
to win kindly feelings by kindly treatment, and to gain by his
rations of corn the heavenly blessings. Further he provided the
nourishment of the Word, and that more perfect bounty and
distribution, which is really heavenly and from on high-if the
word be that bread of angels, wherewith souls are fed and given
to drink, who are a hungered for God, and seek for a food which
does not pass away or fail, but abides forever. This food he, who
was the poorest and most needy man whom I have known, supplied in
rich abundance to the relief not of a famine of bread, nor of a
thirst for water, but a longing for that Word which is really
lifegiving and nourishing, and causes to grow to spiritual
manhood him who is duly fed thereon.
37. After these and similar actions-why
need I stay to mention them all?-when the prelate whose name
betokened his godliness had passed away, having sweetly breathed
his last in Basil's arms, he was raised to the lofty throne of a
Bishop, not without difficulty or without the envious struggles
of the prelates of his native land, on whose side were found the
greatest scoundrels of the city. But the Holy Spirit must needs
win the day-and indeed the victory was decisive. For He brought
from a distance, to anoint him, men illustrious and zealous for
godliness, and with them the new Abraham, our Patriarch, I mean
my father, in regard to whom an extraordinary thing happened.
For, failing as he was from the number of his years, and worn
away almost to his last breath by disease, he ventured on the
journey to give assistance by his vote, relying on the aid of the
Spirit. In brief, he was placed in his litter, as a corpse is
laid in its tomb, to return in the freshness and strength of
youth, with head erect, having been strengthened by the
imposition of hands and unction, and, it is not too much to say
by the head of him who was anointed. This must be added to the
instances of old time, which prove that labour bestows health,
zealous purpose raises the dead, and old age leaps up when
anointed by the Spirit.
38. Having thus been deemed worthy of the
office of prelate, as it is seemly that men should who have lived
such a life, and won such favour and consideration, he did not
disgrace, by his subsequent conduct, either his own philosophy,
or the hopes of those who had trusted him. But he ever so far
surpassed himself as he has been shown hitherto to have surpassed
others, his ideas on this point being most excellent and
philosophic. For he held that, while it is virtuous in a private
individual to avoid vice, and be to some extent good, it is a
vice in a chief and ruler, especially in such an office, to fail
to surpass by far the majority of men, and by constant progress
to make his virtue correspond to his dignity and throne: for it
is difficult for one in high position to attain the mean, and by
his eminence in virtue raise up his people to the golden mean. Or
rather to treat this question more satisfactorily, I think that
the result is the same as I see in the case of our Saviour, and
of every specially wise man, I fancy, when He was with us in that
form which surpassed us and yet is ours. For He also, the gospel
says, increased in wisdom and favour, as well as in stature, not
that these qualities in Him were capable of growth: for how could
that which was perfect from the first become more perfect, but
that they were gradually disclosed and displayed? So I think that
the virtue of Basil, without being itself increased, obtained at
this time a wider exercise, since his power provided him with
more abundant material.
39. He first of all made it plain that his
office had been bestowed upon him, not by human favour, but by
the gift of God. This will also be shown by my conduct. For in
what philosophic research did he not, about that time, join with
me? So every one thought that I should run to meet him after what
had happened, and show my delight at it (as would, perhaps, have
been the case with any one else) and claim a share in his
authority, rather than rule beside him, according to the
inferences they drew from our friendship. But, in my exceeding
anxiety to avoid the annoyance and jealousy of the time, and
specially since his position was still a painful and troubled
one, I remained at home, and forcibly restrained my eager desire,
while, though he blamed me, Basil accepted my excuse. And when,
on my subsequent arrival, I refused, for the same reason the
honour of this chair, and a dignified position among the
Presbyters, he kindly refrained from blaming, nay he praised me,
preferring to be charged with pride by a small clique, in their
ignorance of our policy, rather than do anything contrary to
reason and his own resolutions. And indeed, how could a man have
better shown his soul to be superior to all fawning and flattery,
and his single object to be the law of right, than by thus
treating me, whom he acknowledged as among the first of his
friends and associates?
40. His next task was to appease, and allay
by magnanimous treatment, the opposition to himself: and that
without any trace of flattery or servility, but in a most
chivalrous and magnanimous way; with a view, not merely to
present exigencies, but also to the fostering of future
obedience. For, seeing that, while tenderness leads to laxity and
slackness, severity gives rise to stubbornness and self-will, he
was able to avoid the dangers of each course by a combination of
both, blending his correction with consideration, and gentleness
with firmness, influencing men in most cases principally by his
conduct rather than by argument: not enslaving them by art, but
winning them by good nature, and attracting them by the sparing
use, rather than by the constant exercise, of his power. And,
most important of all, they were brought to recognize the
superiority of his intellect and the inaccessibility of his
virtue, to consider their only safety to consist in being on his
side and under his command, their sole danger to be in opposition
to him, and to think that to differ from him involved
estrangement from God. Thus they willingly yielded and
surrendered, submitting themselves, as if in a thunder-clap, and
hastening to anticipate each other with their excuses, and
exchange the intensity of their hostility for an equal intensity
of goodwill, and advance in virtue, which they found to be the
one really effective defence. The few exceptions to this conduct
were passed by and neglected, because their ill-nature was
incurable, and they expended their powers in wearing out
themselves, as rust consumes itself together with the iron on
which it feeds.
41. Affairs at home being now settled to
his mind, in a way that faithless men who did not know him would
have thought impossible, his designs became greater and took a
loftier range. For, while all others had their eyes on the ground
before them, and directed attention to their own immediate
concerns, and, if these were safe, troubled themselves no
further, being incapable of any great and chivalrous design or
undertaking; he, moderate as he was in all other respects, could
not be moderate in this, but with head erect, casting his mental
eye about him, took in the whole world over which the word of
salvation has made its way. And when he saw the great heritage of
God, purchased by His own words and laws and sufferings, the holy
nation, the royal priesthood, in such evil plight that it was
torn asunder into ten thousand opinions and errors: and the vine
brought out of Egypt and transplanted, the Egypt of impious and
dark ignorance, which had grown to such beauty and boundless size
that the whole earth was covered with the shadow of it, while it
overtopped mountains and cedars, now being ravaged by that wicked
wild boar, the devil, he could not content himself with quietly
lamenting the misfortune, and merely lifting up his hands to God,
and seeking from Him the dispersion of the pressing misfortunes,
while he himself was asleep, but felt bound to come to her aid at
some expense to himself.
42. For what could be more distressing than
this calamity, or call more loudly on one whose eyes were raised
aloft for exertions on behalf of the common weal? The good or ill
success of an individual is of no consequence to the community,
but that of the community involves of necessity the like
condition of the individual. With this idea and purpose, he who
was the guardian and patron of the community (and, as Solomon
says with truth, a perceptive heart is a moth to the bones,
unsensitiveness is cheerily confident, while a sympathetic
disposition is a source of pain, and constant consideration
wastes away the heart), he, I say, was consequently in agony and
distress from many wounds; like Jonah and David, he wished in
himself to die and gave not sleep to his eyes, nor slumber to his
eyelids, he expended what was left of his flesh upon his
reflections, until he discovered a remedy for the evil: and
sought for aid from God and man, to stay the general
conflagration, and dissipate the gloom which was lowering over
us.
43. One of his devices was of the greatest
service. After a period of such recollection as was possible, and
private spiritual conference, in which, after considering all
human arguments, and penetrating into all the deep things of the
Scriptures, he drew up a sketch of pious doctrine, and by
wrestling with and attacking their opposition he beat off the
daring assaults of the heretics: overthrowing in hand to hand
struggles by word of mouth those who came to close quarters, and
striking those at a distance by arrows winged with ink, which is
in no wise inferior to inscriptions on tablets; not giving
directions for one small nation only like that of the Jews,
concerning meats and drinks, temporary sacrifices, and
purifications of the flesh; but for every nation and part of the
world, concerning the Word of truth, the source of our salvation.
Again, since unreasoning action and unpractical reasoning are
alike ineffectual, he added to his reasoning the succour which
comes from action; he paid visits, sent messages, gave
interviews, instructed, reproved, rebuked, threatened,
reproached, undertook the defence of nations, cities and
individuals, devising every kind of succour, and procuring from
every source specifics for disease: a second Bezaleel, an
architect of the Divine tabernacle, applying every material and
art to the work, and combining all in a harmonious and surpassing
beauty.
44. Why need I enter into further detail?
We were assailed again by the Anti-Christian Emperor, that tyrant
of the faith, with more abundant impiety and a hotter onset,
inasmuch as the dispute must be with a stronger antagonist, like
that unclean and evil spirit, who when sent forth upon his
wanderings from man, returns to take up his abode in him again
with a greater number of spirits, as we have heard in the
Gospels. This spirit he imitated, both in renewing the contest in
which he had formerly been worsted, and in adding to his original
efforts. He thought that it was a strange and insufferable thing
that he, who ruled over so many nations and had won so much
renown, and reduced under the power of impiety all those round
about him, and overcome every adversary, should be publicly
worsted by a single man, and a single city, and so incur the
ridicule not only of those patrons of ungodliness by whom he was
led, but also, as he supposed, of all men.
45. It is said that the King of Persia, on
his expedition into Greece, was not only urged to immoderate
threats, by elation at the numbers of every race of men which in
his wrath and pride he was leading against them: but thought to
terrify them the more, by making them afraid of him, in
consequence of his novel treatment of the elements. A strange
land and sea were heard of, the work of the new creator; and an
army which sailed over the dry land, and marched over the ocean,
while islands were carried off, and the sea was scourged, and all
the other mad proceedings of that army and expedition, which,
though they struck terror into the ignoble, were ridiculous in
the eyes of men of brave and steadfast hearts. There was no need
of anything of this kind in the expedition against us, but what
was still worse and more harmful, this was what the Emperor was
reported to say and do. He stretched forth his mouth unto heaven,
speaking blasphemy against the most High, and his tongue went
through the world. Excellently did the inspired David before our
days thus describe him who made heaven to stoop to earth, and
reckoned with the creation that supermundane nature, which the
creation cannot even contain, even though in kindness to man it
did to some extent come among us, in order to draw to itself us
who were lying upon the ground.
46. Furious indeed were his first acts of
wantonness, more furious still his final efforts against us. What
shall I speak of first? Exiles, banishments, confiscations, open
and secret plots, persuasion, where time allowed, violence, where
persuasion was impossible. Those who clung to the orthodox faith,
as we did, were extruded from their churches; others were
intruded, who agreed with the Imperial soul-destroying doctrines,
and begged for testimonials of impiety, and subscribed to
statements still harder than these. Burnings of Presbyters at
sea, impious generals, not those who conquered the Persians, or
subdued the Scythians, or reduced any other barbaric nation, but
those who assailed churches, and danced in triumph upon altars,
and defiled the unbloody sacrifices with the blood of man and
victims, and offered insult to the modesty of virgins. With what
object? The extrusion of the Patriarch Jacob, and the intrusion
in his place of Esau, who was hated, even before his birth. This
is the description of his first acts of wantonness, the mere
recollection and mention of which even now, rouses the tears of
most of us.
47. Accordingly, when, after passing
through all quarters, he made his attack in order to enslave this
impregnable and formidable mother of the Churches, the only still
remaining unquenched spark of the truth, he discovered that he
had been for the first time ill advised. For he was driven back
like a missile which strikes upon some stronger body, and
recoiled like a broken hawser. Such was the prelate of the Church
that he met with, such was the bulwark by which his efforts were
broken and dissipated. Other particulars may be heard from those
who tell and recount them, from their own experience-and none of
those who recount them is destitute of this full experience. But
all must be filled with admiration who are aware of the struggles
of that time, the assaults, the promises, the threats, the
commissioners sent before him to try to prevail upon us, men of
judicial and military rank, men from the harem, who are men among
women, women among men, whose only manliness consisted in their
impiety, and being incapable of natural licentiousness, commit
fornication in the only way they can, with their tongues; the
chief cook Nebuzaradan, who threatened us with the weapons of his
art, and was despatched by his own fire. But what especially
excites my wonder, and what I could not, even if I would, pass
by, I will describe as concisely as possible.
48. Who has not heard of the prefect of
those days, who, for his own part, treated us with such excessive
arrogance, having himself been admitted, or perhaps committed, to
baptism by the other party; and strove by exceeding the letter of
his instructions, and gratifying his master in every particular,
to guarantee and preserve his own possession of power. Though he
raged against the Church, and assumed a lion-like aspect, and
roared like a lion till most men dared not approach him, yet our
noble prelate was brought into or rather entered his court, as if
bidden to a feast, instead of to a trial. How can I fully
describe, either the arrogance of the prefect or the prudence
with which it was met by the Saint. "What is the meaning, Sir
Basil," he said, addressing him by name, and not as yet deigning
to term him Bishop, "of your daring, as no other dares, to resist
and oppose so great a potentate?" "In what respect?" said our
noble champion, "and in what does my rashness consist? For this I
have yet to learn." "In refusing to respect the religion of your
Sovereign, when all others have yielded and submitted
themselves?" "Because," said he, "this is not the will of my real
Sovereign; nor can I, who am the creature of God, and bidden
myself to be God, submit to worship any creature." "And what do
we," said the prefect, "seem to you to be? Are we, who give you
this injunction, nothing at all? What do you say to this? Is it
not a great thing to be ranged with us as your associates?" "You
are, I will not deny it," said he, "a prefect, and an illustrious
one, yet not of more honour than God. And to be associated with
you is a great thing, certainly; for you are yourself the
creature of God; but so it is to be associated with any other of
my subjects. For faith, and not personal importance, is the
distinctive mark of Christianity."
49. Then indeed the prefect became excited,
and rose from his seat, boiling with rage, and making use of
harsher language. "What?" said he, "have you no fear of my
authority? "Fear of what?" said Basil, "How could it affect me?"
"Of what? Of any one of the resources of my power." "What are
these?" said Basil, "pray, inform me." "Confiscation, banishment,
torture, death." "Have you no other threat?" said he, "for none
of these can reach me." "How indeed is that?" said the prefect.
"Because," he replied, "a man who has nothing, is beyond the
reach of confiscation; unless you demand my tattered rags, and
the few books, which are my only possessions. Banishment is
impossible for me, who am confined by no limit of place, counting
my own neither the land where I now dwell, nor all of that into
which I may be hurled; or, rather, counting it all God's, whose
guest and dependent I am. As for tortures, what hold can they
have upon one whose body has ceased to be? Unless you mean the
first stroke, for this alone is in your power. Death is my
benefactor, for it will send me the sooner to God, for Whom I
live, and exist, and have all but died, and to Whom I have long
been hastening."
50. Amazed at this language, the prefect
said, "No one has ever yet spoken thus, and with such boldness,
to Modestus." "Why, perhaps," said Basil, "you have not met with
a Bishop, or in his defence of such interests he would have used
precisely the same language. For we are modest in general, and
submissive to every one, according to the precept of our law. We
may not treat with haughtiness even any ordinary person, to say
nothing of so great a potentate. But where the interests of God
are at stake, we care for nothing else, and make these our sole
object. Fire and sword and wild beasts, and rakes which tear the
flesh, we revel in, and fear them not. You may further insult and
threaten us, and do whatever you will, to the full extent of your
power. The Emperor himself may hear this-that neither by violence
nor persuasion will you bring us to make common cause with
impiety, not even though your threats become still more
terrible."
51. At the close of this colloquy, the
prefect, having been convinced by the attitude of Basil, that he
was absolutely impervious to threats and influence, dismissed him
from the court, his former threatening manner being replaced by
somewhat of respect and deference. He himself with all speed
obtained an audience of the Emperor, and said: "We have been
worsted, Sire, by the prelate of this Church. He is superior to
threats, invincible in argument, uninfluenced by persuasion. We
must make trial of some more feeble character; and in this case
resort to open violence, or submit to the disregard of our
threatenings." Hereupon the Emperor, forced by the praises of
Basil to condemn his own conduct (for even an enemy can admire a
man's excellence), would not allow violence to be used against
him: and, like iron, which is softened by fire, yet still remains
iron, though turned from threatening to admiration, would not
enter into communion with him, being prevented by shame from
changing his course, but sought to justify his conduct by the
most plausible excuse he could, as the sequel will
show.
52. For he entered the Church attended by
the whole of his train; it was the festival of the Epiphany, and
the Church was crowded, and, by taking his place among the
people, he made a profession of unity. The occurrence is not to
be lightly passed over. Upon his entrance he was struck by the
thundering roll of the Psalms, by the sea of heads of the
congregation, and by the angelic rather than human order which
pervaded the sanctuary and its precincts: while Basil presided
over his people, standing erect, as the Scripture says of Samuel,
with body and eyes and mind undisturbed, as if nothing new had
happened, but fixed upon God and the sanctuary, as if, so to say,
he had been a statue, while his ministers stood around him in
fear and reverence. At this sight, and it was indeed a sight
unparalleled, overcome by human weakness, his eyes were affected
with dimness and giddiness, his mind with dread. This was as yet
unnoticed by most people. But when he had to offer the gifts at
the Table of God, which he must needs do himself, since no one
would, as usual, assist him, because it was uncertain whether
Basil would admit him, his feelings were revealed. For he was
staggering, and had not some one in the sanctuary reached out a
hand to steady his tottering steps, he would have sunk to the
ground in a lamentable fall. So much for this.
53. As for the wisdom of his conference
with the Emperor, who, in his quasi-communion with us entered
within the veil to see and speak to him, as he had long desired
to do, what else can I say but that they were inspired words,
which were heard by the courtiers and by us who had entered with
them? This was the beginning and first establishment of the
Emperor's kindly feeling towards us; the impression produced by
this reception put an end to the greater part of the persecution
which assailed us like a river.
54. Another incident is not of less
importance than those I have mentioned. The wicked were
victorious, and the decree for his banishment was signed, to the
full satisfaction of those who furthered it. The night had come,
the chariot was ready, our haters were exultant, the pious in
despair, we surrounded the zealous traveller, to whose honourable
disgrace nothing was wanting. What next? It was undone by God.
For He Who smote the first-born of Egypt, for its harshness
towards Israel, also struck the son of the Emperor with disease.
How great was the speed! There was the sentence of banishment,
here the decree of sickness: the hand of the wicked scribe was
restrained, and the saint was preserved, and the man of piety
presented to us, by the fever which brought to reason the
arrogance of the Emperor. What could be more just or more speedy
than this? This was the series of events: the Emperor's child was
sick and in bodily pain. The father was pained for it, for what
can the father do? On all sides he sought for aid in his
distress, he summoned the best physicians, he betook himself to
intercessions with the greatest fervour, and flung himself upon
the ground. Affliction humbles even emperors, and no wonder, for
the like sufferings of David in the case of his child are
recorded for us. But as no cure for the evil could anywhere be
found, he applied to the faith of Basil, not personally summoning
him, in shame for his recent ill treatment, but entrusting the
mission to others of his nearest and dearest friends. On his
arrival, without the delay or reluctance which any one else might
have shown, at once the disease relaxed, and the father cherished
better hopes; and had he not blended salt water with the fresh,
by trusting to the heterodox at the same time that he summoned
Basil, the child would have recovered his health and been
preserved for his father's arms. This indeed was the conviction
of those who were present at the time, and shared in the
distress.
55. The same mischance is said to have
befallen the prefect. He also was obliged by sickness to bow
beneath the hands of the Saint, and, in reality, to men of sense
a visitation brings instruction, and affliction is often better
than prosperity. He fell sick, was in tears, and in pain, he sent
for Basil, and entreated him, crying out, "I own that you were in
the right; only save me!" His request was granted, as he himself
acknowledged, and convinced many who had known nothing of it; for
he never ceased to wonder at and describe the powers of the
prelate. Such was his conduct in these cases, such its result.
Did he then treat others in a different way, and engage in petty
disputes about trifles, or fail to rise to the heights of
philosophy in a course of action which merits no praise and is
best passed over in silence? By no means. He who once stirred up
the wicked Hadad against Israel, stirred up against him the
prefect of the province of Pontus; nominally, from annoyance
connected with some poor creature of a woman, but in reality as a
part of the struggle of impiety against the truth. I pass by all
his other insults against Basil, or, for it is the same thing,
against God; for it is against Him and on His behalf that the
contest was waged. One instance of it, however, which brought
special disgrace upon the assailant, and exalted his adversary,
if philosophy and eminence for it be a great and lofty thing, I
will describe at length.
56. The assessor of a judge was attempting
to force into a distasteful marriage a lady of high birth whose
husband was but recently dead. At a loss to escape from this
high-handed treatment, she resorted to a device no less prudent
than daring. She fled to the holy table, and placed herself under
the protection of God against outrage. What, in the Name of the
Trinity Itself, if I may introduce into my panegyric somewhat of
the forensic style, ought to have been done, I do not say, by the
great Basil, who laid down the law for us all in such matters,
but by any one who, though far inferior to him, was a priest?
Ought he not to have allowed her claim, to have taken charge of,
and cared for, her; to have raised his hand in defence of the
kindness of God and the law which gives honour to the altar?
Ought he not to have been willing to do and suffer anything,
rather than take part in any inhuman design against her, and
outrage at once the holy table, and the faith in which she had
taken sanctuary? No! said the baffled judge, all ought to yield
to my authority, and Christians should betray their own laws. The
suppliant whom he demanded, was at all hazards retained.
Accordingly, in his rage, he at last sent some of the magistrates
to search the saint's bedchamber, with the purpose of
dishonouring him, rather than from any necessity. What! Search
the house of a man so free from passion, whom the angels revere,
at whom women do not venture even to look? And, not content with
this, he summoned him, and put him on his defence; and that, in
no gentle or kindly manner, but as if he were a convict. Upon
Basil's appearance, standing, like my Jesus, before the judgment
seat of Pilate, he presided at the trial, full of wrath and
pride. Yet the thunderbolts did not fall, and the sword of God
still glittered, and waited, while His bow, though bent, was
restrained. Such indeed is the custom of God.
57. Consider another struggle between our
champion and his persecutor. His ragged pallium having been
ordered to be torn away, "I will also, if you wish it, strip off
my coat," said he. His fleshless form was threatened with blows,
and he offered to submit to be torn with combs, and he said, "By
such laceration you will cure my liver, which, as you see, is
wearing me away." Such was their argument. But when the city
perceived the outrage and the common danger of all-for each one
considered this insolence a danger to himself, it became all on
fire with rage; and, like a hive roused by smoke, one after
another was stirred and arose, every race and every age, but
especially the men from the small-arms factory and from the
imperial weaving-sheds. For men at work in these trades are
specially hot-tempered and daring, because of the liberty allowed
them. Each man was armed with the tool he was using, or with
whatever else came to hand at the moment. Torch in hand, amid
showers of stones, with cudgel's ready, all ran and shouted
together in their united zeal. Anger makes a terrible soldier or
general. Nor were the women weaponless, when roused by such an
occasion. Their pins were their spears, and no longer remaining
women, they were by the strength of their eagerness endowed with
masculine courage. It is a short story. They thought that they
would share among themselves the piety of destroying him, and
held him to be most pious who first laid hands on one who had
dared such deeds. What then was the conduct of this haughty and
daring judge? He begged for mercy in a pitiable state of
distress, cringing before them to an unparalleled extent, until
the arrival of the martyr without bloodshed, who had won his
crown without blows, and now restrained the people by the force
of his personal influence, and delivered the man who had insulted
him and now sought his protection. This was the doing of the God
of Saints, Who worketh and changeth all things for the best, who
resisteth the proud, but giveth grace to the humble. And why
should not He, Who divided the sea and stayed the river, and
ruled the elements, and by stretching out set up a trophy, to
save His exiled people, why should not He have also rescued this
man from his perils?
58. This was the end and fortunate close,
in the Providence of God, of the war with the world, a close
worthy of his faith. But here at once is the beginning of the war
with the Bishops, and their allies, which involved great
disgrace, and still greater injury to their subjects. For who
could persuade others to be temperate, when such was the conduct
of their prelates? For a long time they had been unkindly
disposed towards him, on three grounds. They neither agreed with
him in the matter of the faith, except in so far as they were
absolutely obliged to yield to the majority of the faithful. Nor
had they altogether laid aside the grudge they owed him for his
election. And, what was most grievous of all to them, though they
would have been most ashamed to own it-he so far outshone them in
reputation. There was also a further cause of dissension which
stirred up again the others. When our country had been divided
into two provinces and metropolitical sees, and a great part of
the former was being added to the new one, this again roused
their factious spirit. The one thought it right that the
ecclesiastical boundaries should be settled by the civil ones:
and therefore claimed those newly added, as belonging to him, and
severed from their former metropolitan. The other clung to the
ancient custom, and to the division which had come down from our
fathers. Many painful results either actually followed, or were
struggling in the womb of the future. Synods were wrongfully
gathered by the new metropolitan, and revenues seized upon. Some
of the presbyters of the churches refused obedience, others were
won over. In consequence the affairs of the churches fell into a
sad state of dissension and division. Novelty indeed has a
certain charm for men, and they readily turn events to their own
advantage, and it is easier to overthrow something which is
already established, than to restore it when overthrown. What
however enraged him most was, that the revenues of the Taurus,
which passed along before his eyes, accrued to his rival, as also
the offerings at Saint Orestes,' of which he was greatly desirous
to reap the fruits. He even went so far as, on one occasion when
Basil was riding along his own road, to seize his mules by the
bridle and bar the passage with a robber band. And with how
specious a pretext, the care of his spiritual children and of the
souls entrusted to him, and the defence of the faith-pretexts
which veiled that most common vice, insatiable avarice-and
further, the wrongfulness of paying dues to heretics, a heretic
being any one who had displeased him.
59. The holy man of God however,
metropolitan as he was of the true Jerusalem above, was neither
carried away with the failure of those who fell, nor allowed
himself to overlook this conduct, nor did he desire any
inadequate remedy for the evil. Let us see how great and
wonderful it was, or, I would say, how worthy of his soul. He
made of the dissension a cause of increase to the Church, and the
disaster, under his most able management, resulted in the
multiplication of the Bishops of the country. From this ensued
three most desirable consequences; a greater care for souls, the
management by each city of its own affairs, and the cessation of
the war in this quarter. I am afraid that I myself was treated as
an appendage to this scheme. By no other term can I readily
describe the position. Greatly as I admire his whole conduct, to
an extent indeed beyond my powers of expression, of this single
particular I find it impossible to approve, for I will
acknowledge my feelings in regard to it, though these are from
other sources not unknown to most of you. I mean the change and
faithlessness of his treatment of myself, a cause of pain which
even time has not obliterated. For this is the source of all the
inconsistency and tangle of my life; it has robbed me of the
practice, or at least the reputation, of philosophy; of small
moment though the latter be. The defence, which you will perhaps
allow me to make for him, is this; his ideas were superhuman, and
having, before his death, become superior to worldly influences,
his only interests were those of the Spirit: while his regard for
friendship was in no wise lessened by his readiness then, and
then only, to disregard its claims, when they were in conflict
with his paramount duty to God, and when the end he had in view
was of greater importance than the interests he was compelled to
set aside.
60. I am afraid that, in avoiding the
imputation of indifference at the hands of those who desire to
know all that can be said about him, I shall incur a charge of
prolixity from those whose ideal is the golden mean. For the
latter Basil himself had the greatest respect, being specially
devoted to the adage "In all things the mean is the best," and
acting upon it throughout his life. Nevertheless, disregarding
alike those who desire undue conciseness or excessive prolixity,
I proceed thus with my speech. Different men attain success in
different ways, some applying themselves to one alone of the many
forms of excellence, but no one, of those hitherto known to me,
arriving at the highest eminence in all respects; he being in my
opinion the best, who has won his laurels on the widest field, or
gained the highest possible renown in some single particular.
Such however was the height of Basil's fame, that he became the
pride of human kind. Let us consider the matter thus. Is any one
devoted to poverty and a life devoid of property, and free from
superfluity? What did he possess besides his body, and the
necessary coverings of the flesh? His wealth was the having
nothing, and he thought the cross, with which he lived, more
precious than great riches. For no one, however much he may wish,
can obtain possession of all things, but any one can learn to
despise, and so prove himself superior to, all things. Such being
his mind, and such his life, he had no need of an altar and of
vainglory, nor of such a public announcement as "Crates sets
Crates the Theban free." For his aim was ever to be, not to seem,
most excellent. Nor did he dwell in a tub, and in the midst of
the market-place, and so by luxuriating in publicity turn his
poverty into riches: but was poor and unkempt, yet without
ostentation: and taking cheerfully the casting overboard of all
that he ever had, sailed lightly across the sea of
life.
61. A wondrous thing is temperance, and
fewness of wants, and freedom from the dominion of pleasures, and
from the bondage of that cruel and degrading mistress, the belly.
Who was so independent of food, and, without exaggeration, more
free from the flesh? For he flung away all satiety and surfeit to
creatures destitute of reason, whose life is slavish and
debasing. He paid little attention to such things as, next to the
appetite, are of equal rank, but, as far as possible, lived on
the merest necessaries, his only luxury being to prove himself
not luxurious, and not, in consequence, to have greater needs:
but he looked to the lilies and the birds, whose beauty is
artless, and their food casual, according to the important advice
of my Christ, who made Himself poor in the flesh for our sakes,
that we might enjoy the riches of His Godhead. Hence came his
single coat and well worn cloak, and his bed on the bare ground,
his vigils, his unwashedness (such were his decorations) and his
most sweet food and relish, bread, and salt, his new dainty, and
the sober and plentiful drink, with which fountains supply those
who are free from trouble. The result, or the accompaniment, of
these things were the attendance on the sick and practice of
medicine, our common intellectual pursuit. For, though inferior
to him in all other respects, I must needs be his equal in
distress.
62. A great thing is virginity, and
celibacy, and being ranked with the angels, and with the single
nature; for I shrink from calling it Christ's, Who, though He
willed to be born for our sakes who are born, by being born of a
Virgin, enacted the law of virginity, to lead us away from this
life, and cut short the power of the world, or rather, to
transmit one world to another, the present to the future. Who
then paid more honour to virginity, or had more control of the
flesh, not only by his personal example, but in those under his
care? Whose are the convents, and the written regulations, by
which he subdued every sense, and regulated every member, and won
to the real practice of virginity, turning inward the view of
beauty, from the visible to the invisible; and by wasting away
the external, and withdrawing fuel from the flame, and revealing
the secrets of the heart to God, Who is the only bridegroom of
pure souls, and takes in with himself the watchful souls, if they
go to meet him with lamps burning and a plentiful supply of oil?
Moreover he reconciled most excellently and united the solitary
and the community life. These had been in many respects at
variance and dissension, while neither of them was in absolute
and unalloyed possession of good or evil: the one being more calm
and settled, tending to union with God, yet not free from pride,
inasmuch as its virtue lies beyond the means of testing or
comparison; the other, which is of more practical service, being
not free from the tendency to turbulence. He founded cells for
ascetics and hermits, but at no great distance from his cenobitic
communities, and, instead of distinguishing and separating the
one from the other, as if by some intervening wall, he brought
them together and united them, in order that the contemplative
spirit might not be cut off from society, nor the active life be
uninfluenced by the contemplative, but that, like sea and land,
by an interchange of their several gifts, they might unite in
promoting the one object, the glory of God.
63. What more? A noble thing is
philanthropy, and the support of the poor, and the assistance of
human weakness. Go forth a little way from the city, and behold
the new city, the storehouse of piety, the common treasury of the
wealthy, in which the superfluities of their wealth, aye, and
even their necessaries, are stored, in consequence of his
exhortations, freed from the power of the moth, no longer
gladdening the eyes of the thief, and escaping both the emulation
of envy, and the corruption of time: where disease is regarded in
a religious light, and disaster is thought a blessing, and
sympathy is put to the test. Why should I compare with this work
Thebes of the seen portals, and the Egyptian Thebes, and the
walls of Babylon, and the Carian tomb of Mausolus, and the
Pyramids, and the bronze without weight of the Colossus, or the
size and beauty of shrines that are no more, and all the other
objects of men's wonder, and historic record, from which their
founders gained no advantage, except a slight meed of fame. My
subject is the most wonderful of all, the short road to
salvation, the easiest ascent to heaven. There is no longer
before our eyes that terrible and piteous spectacle of men who
are living corpses, the greater part of whose limbs have
mortified, driven away from their cities and homes and public
places and fountains, aye, and from their own dearest ones,
recognizable by their names rather than by their features: they
are no longer brought before us at our gatherings and meetings,
in our common intercourse and union, no longer the objects of
hatred, instead of pity on account of their disease; composers of
piteous songs, if any of them have their voice still left to
them. Why should I try to express in tragic style all our
experiences, when no language can be adequate to their hard lot?
He however it was, who took the lead in pressing upon those who
were men, that they ought not to despise their fellowmen, nor to
dishonour Christ, the one Head of all, by their inhuman treatment
of them; but to use the misfortunes of others as an opportunity
of firmly establishing their own lot, and to lend to God that
mercy of which they stand in need at His hands. He did not
therefore disdain to honour with his lips this disease, noble and
of noble ancestry and brilliant reputation though he was, but
saluted them as brethren, not, as some might suppose, from
vainglory, (for who was so far removed from this feeling?) but
taking the lead in approaching to tend them, as a consequence of
his philosophy, and so giving not only a speaking, but also a
silent, instruction. The effect produced is to be seen not only
in the city, but in the country and beyond, and even the leaders
of society have vied with one another in their philanthropy and
magnanimity towards them. Others have had their cooks, and
splendid tables, and the devices and dainties of confectioners,
and exquisite carriages, and soft, flowing robes; Basil's care
was for the sick, and the relief of their wounds, and the
imitation of Christ, by cleansing leprosy, not by a word, but in
deed.
64. As to all this, what will be said by
those who charge him with pride and haughtiness? Severe critics
they are of such conduct, applying to him, whose life was a
standard, those who were not standards at all. Is it possible
that he who kissed the lepers, and humiliated himself to such a
degree, could treat haughtily those who were in health: and,
while wasting his flesh by abstinence, puff out his soul with
empty arrogance? Is it possible to condemn the Pharisee, and
expound the debasing effect of haughtiness, to know Christ, Who
condescended to the form of a slave, and ate with publicans, and
washed the disciples' feet, and did not disdain the cross, in
order to nail my sin to it: and, more incredible still, to see
God crucified, aye, along with robbers also, and derided by the
passers by, impassible, and beyond the reach of suffering as He
is; and yet, as his slanderers imagine, soar himself above the
clouds, and think that nothing can be on an equality with him.
Nay, what they term pride is, I fancy, the firmness and
steadfastness and stability of his character. Such persons would
readily, it seems to me, call bravery rashness, and the
circumspect a coward, and the temperate misanthropic, and the
just illiberal. For indeed this philosophic axiom is excellent,
which says that the vices are settled close to the virtues, and
are, in some sense, their next-door neighbours: and it is most
easy, for those whose training in such subjects has been
defective, to mistake a man for what he is not. For who honoured
virtue and castigated vice more than he, or showed himself more
kind to the upright, more severe to the wrong doers? His very
smile often amounted to praise, his silence to rebuke, racking
the evil in the secret conscience. And if a man have not been a
chatterer, and jester, and gossip, nor a general favourite,
because of having pleased others by becoming all things to all
men, what of that? Is he not in the eyes of sensible men worthy
of praise rather than of blame? Unless it is a fault in the lion
that he is terrible and royal, and does not look like an ape, and
that his spring is noble, and is valued for its wonderfulness:
while stage-players ought to win our admiration for their
pleasant and philanthropic characters, because they please the
vulgar, and raise a laugh by their sounding slaps in the face.
And if this indeed be our object, who was so pleasant when you
met him, as I know, who have had the longest experience? Who was
more kindly in his stories, more refined in his wit, more tender
in his rebukes? His reproofs gave rise to no arrogance, his
relaxation to no dissipation, but avoiding excess in either, he
made use of both in reason and season, according to the rules of
Solomon, who assigns to every business a season.
65. But what are these to his renown for
eloquence, and his powers of instruction, which have won the
favour of the ends of the world? As yet we have been compassing
the foot of the mountain, to the neglect of its summit, as yet we
have been crossing a strait, paying no heed to the mighty and
deep ocean. For I think that if any one ever has become, or can
become, a trumpet, in his far sounding resonance, or a voice of
God, embracing the universe, or an earthquake of the world, by
some unheard of miracle, it is his voice and intellect which
deserve these titles, for surpassing and excelling all men as
much as we surpass the irrational creatures. Who, more than he,
cleansed himself by the Spirit, and made himself worthy to set
forth divine things? Who was more enlightened by the light of
knowledge, and had a closer insight into the depths of the
Spirit, and by the aid of God beheld the things of God? Whose
language could better express intellectual truth, without, as
most men do, limping on one foot, by either failing to express
his ideas, or allowing his eloquence to outstrip his reasoning
powers? In both respects he won a like distinction, and showed
himself to be his own equal, and absolutely perfect. To search
all things, yea, the deep things of God is, according to the
testimony of S. Paul, the office of the Spirit, not because He is
ignorant of them, but because He takes delight in their
contemplation. Now all the things of the Spirit Basil had fully
investigated, and hence he drew his instructions for every kind
of character, his lessons in the sublime, and his exhortations to
quit things present, and adapt ourselves to things to
come.
66. The sun is extolled by David for its
beauty, its greatness, its swift course, and its power, splendid
as a bridegroom, majestic as a giant; while, from the extent of
its circuit, it has such power that it equally sheds its light
from one end of heaven to the other, and the heat thereof is in
no wise lessened by distance. Basil's beauty was virtue, his
greatness theology, his course the perpetual motion reaching even
to God by its ascents, and his power the sowing and distribution
of the Word. So that I will not hesitate to say even this, his
utterance went out into all lands, and the power of his words to
the ends of the world: as S. Paul says of the Apostles, borrowing
the words from David. What other charm is there in any gathering
to-day? What pleasure in banquets, in the courts, in the
churches? What delight in those in authority, and those beneath
them? What in the hermits, or the cenobites? What in the leisured
classes, or those busied in affairs? What in profane schools of
philosophy or in our own? There is one, which runs through all,
and is the greatest-his writings and labours. Nor do writers
require any supply of matter besides his teaching or writings.
All the laborious studies of old days in the Divine oracles are
silent, while the new ones are in everybody's mouth, and he is
the best teacher among us who has the deepest acquaintance with
his works, and speaks of them and explains them in our ears. For
he alone more than supplies the place of all others to those who
are specially eager for instruction.
67. I will only say this of him. Whenever I
handle his Hexaemeron, and take its words on my lips, I am
brought into the presence of the Creator, and understand the
words of creation, and admire the Creator more than before, using
my teacher as my only means of sight. Whenever I take up his
polemical works, I see the fire of Sodom, by which the wicked and
rebellious tongues are reduced to ashes, or the tower of Chalane,
impiously built, and righteously destroyed. Whenever I read his
writings on the Spirit, I find the God Whom I possess, and grow
bold in my utterance of the truth, from the support of his
theology and contemplation. His other treatises, in which he
gives explanations for those who are shortsighted, by a threefold
inscription on the solid tablets of his heart, lead me on from a
mere literal or symbolical interpretation to a still wider view,
as I proceed from one depth to another, calling upon deep after
deep, and finding light after light, until I attain the highest
pinnacle. When I study his panegyrics on our athletes, I despise
the body, and enjoy the society of those whom he is praising, and
rouse myself to the struggle. His moral and practical discourses
purify soul and body, making me a temple fit for God, and an
instrument struck by the Spirit, to celebrate by its strains the
glory and power of God. In fact, he reduces me to harmony and
order, and changes me by a Divine transformation.
68. Since I have mentioned theology, and
his most sublime treatises in this science, I will make this
addition to what I have already said. For it is of great service
to the community, to save them from being injured by an
unjustifiably low opinion of him. My remarks are directed against
those evil disposed persons who shelter their own vices under
cover of their calumnies against others. In his defence of
orthodox teaching, and of the union and coequal divinity of the
Holy Trinity, to use terms which are, I think, as exact and clear
as possible, he would have eagerly welcomed as a gain, and not a
danger, not only expulsion from his see, in which he had
originally no desire to be enthroned, but even exile, and death,
and its preliminary tortures. This is manifest from his actual
conduct and sufferings. For when he had been sentenced to
banishment on behalf of the truth, the only notice which he took
of it was, to bid one of his servants to take his writing tablet
and follow him. He held it necessary, according to the divine
David's advice, to guide his words with discretion, and to endure
for a while the time of war, and the ascendency of the heretics,
until it should be succeeded by a time of freedom and calm, which
would admit of freedom of speech. The enemy were on the watch for
the unqualified statement "the Spirit is God;" which, although it
is true, they and the wicked patron of their impiety imagined to
be impious; so that they might banish him and his power of
theological instruction from the city, and themselves be able to
seize upon the church, and make it the starting point and
citadel, from which they could overrun with their evil doctrine
the rest of the world. Accordingly, by the use of other terms,
and by statements which unmistakably had the same meaning, and by
arguments necessarily leading to this conclusion, he so
overpowered his antagonists, that they were left without reply,
and involved in their own admissions,-the greatest proof possible
of dialectical power and skill. His treatise on this subject
makes it further manifest, being evidently written by a pen
borrowed from the Spirit's store. He postponed for the time the
use of the exact term, begging as a favour from the Spirit
Himself and his earnest champions, that they would not be annoyed
at his economy, nor, by clinging to a single expression, ruin the
whole cause, from an uncompromising temper, at a crisis when
religion was in peril. He assured them that they would suffer no
injury from a slight change in their expressions, and from
teaching the same truth in other terms. For our salvation is not
so much a matter of words as of actions; for we would not reject
the Jews, if they desired to unite with us, and yet for a while
sought to use the term "Anointed" instead of "Christ:" while the
community would suffer a very serious injury, if the church were
seized upon by the heretics.
69. That he, no less than any other,
acknowledged that the Spirit is God, is plain from his often
having publicly preached this truth, whenever opportunity
offered, and eagerly confessed it when questioned in private. But
he made it more clear in his conversations with me, from whom he
concealed nothing during our conferences upon this subject. Not
content with simply asserting it, he proceeded, as he had but
very seldom done before, to imprecate upon himself that most
terrible fate of separation from the Spirit, if he did not adore
the Spirit as consubstantial and coequal with the Father and the
Son. And if any one would accept me as having been his fellow
labourer in this cause, I will set forth one point hitherto
unknown to most men. Under the pressure of the difficulties of
the period, he himself undertook the economy, while allowing
freedom of speech to me, whom no one was likely to drag from
obscurity to trial or banishment, in order that by our united
efforts our Gospel might be firmly established. I mention this,
not to defend his reputation, for the man is stronger than his
assailants, if there are any such; but to prevent men from
thinking that the terms found in his writings are the utmost
limit of the truth, and so have their faith weakened, and
consider that their own error is supported by his theology, which
was the joint result of the influences of the time and of the
Spirit, instead of considering the sense of his writings, and the
object with which they were written, so as to be brought closer
to the truth, and enabled to silence the partisans of impiety. At
any rate let his theology be mine, and that of all dear to me!
And so confident am I of his spotlessness in this respect, that I
take him for my partner in this, as in all else: and may what is
mine be attributed to him, what is his to me, both at the hands
of God, and of the wisest of men! For we would not say that the
Evangelists are at variance with one another, because some are
more occupied with the human side of the Christ, and others pay
attention to His Divinity; some having commenced their history
with what is within our own experience, others with what is above
us; and by thus sharing the substance of their message, they have
procured the advantage of those who receive it, and followed the
impressions of the Spirit Who was within them.
70. Come then, there have been many men of
old days illustrious for piety, as lawgivers, generals, prophets,
teachers, and men brave to the shedding of blood. Let us compare
our prelate with them, and thus recognize his merit. Adam was
honoured by the hand of God, and the delights of Paradise, and
the first legislation: but, unless I slander the reputation of
our first parent, he kept not the command. Now Basil both
received and observed it, and received no injury from the tree of
knowledge, and escaped the flaming sword, and, as I am well
assured, has attained to Paradise. Enos first ventured to call
upon the Lord. Basil both called upon Him himself, and, what is
far more excellent, preached Him to others. Enoch was translated,
attaining to his translation as the reward of a little piety (for
the faith was still in shadow) and escaped the peril of the
remainder of life, but Basil's whole life was a translation, and
he was completely tested in a complete life. Noah was entrusted
with the ark, and the seeds of a new world committed to a small
house of wood, in their preservation from the waters. Basil
escaped the deluge of impiety and made of his own city an ark of
safety, which sailed lightly over the heretics, and afterwards
recovered the whole world.
71. Abraham was a great man, a patriarch,
the offerer of the new sacrifice, by presenting to Him who had
given it the promised seed, as a ready offering, eager for
slaughter. But Basil's offering was no slight one, when he
offered himself to God, without any equivalent being given in his
stead, (for how could that have been possible?) so that his
sacrifice was consummated. Isaac was promised even before his
birth, Basil promised himself, and took for his spouse Rebekah, I
mean the Church, not fetched from a distance by the mission of a
servant, but bestowed upon and entrusted to him by God close at
home: nor was he outwitted in the preference of his children, but
bestowed upon each what was due to him, without any deception,
according to the judgment of the Spirit. I extol the ladder of
Jacob, and the pillar which he anointed to God, and his wrestling
with Him, whatever it was; and, in my opinion, it was the
contrast and opposition of the human stature to the height of
God, resulting in the tokens of the defeat of his race. I extol
also his clever devices and success in cattle-breeding, and his
children, the twelve Patriarchs, and the distribution of his
blessings, with their glorious prophecy of the future. But I
still more extol Basil for the ladder which he did not merely
see, but which he ascended by successive steps towards
excellence, and the pillar which he did not anoint, but which he
erected to God, by pillorying the teaching of the ungodly; and
the wrestling with which he wrestled, not with God, but, on
behalf of God, to the overthrow of the heretics; and his pastoral
care, whereby he grew rich, through gaining for himself a number
of marked sheep greater than that of the unmarked, and his
illustrious fruitfulness in spiritual children, and the blessing
with which he established many.
72. Joseph was a provider of corn, but in
Egypt only, and not frequently, and of bodily food. Basil did so
for all men, and at all times, and in spiritual food, and
therefore, in my opinion, his was the more honourable function.
Like Job, the man of Uz, he was both tempted, and overcame, and
at the close of his struggles gained splendid honour, having been
shaken by none of his many assailants, and having gained a
decisive victory over the efforts of the tempter, and put to
silence the unreason of his friends, who knew not the mysterious
character of his affliction. "Moses and Aaron among His priests."
Truly was Moses great, who inflicted the plagues upon Egypt, and
delivered the people among many signs and wonders, and entered
within the cloud, and sanctioned the double law, outward in the
letter, and inward in the Spirit. Aaron was Moses' brother, both
naturally and spiritually, and offered sacrifices and prayers for
the people, as the hierophant of the great and holy tabernacle,
which the Lord pitched, and not man. Of both of them Basil was a
rival, for he tortured, not with bodily but with spiritual and
mental plagues, the Egyptian race of heretics, and led to the
land of promise the people of possession, zealous of good works;
he inscribed laws, which are no longer obscure, but entirely
spiritual, on tables which are not broken but are preserved; he
entered the Holy of holies, not once a year, but often, I may say
every day, and thence he revealed to us the Holy Trinity; and
cleansed the people, not with temporary sprinklings, but with
eternal purifications: What is the special excellence of Joshua?
His generalship, and the distribution of the inheritance, and the
taking possession of the Holy Land. And was not Basil an Exarch?
Was he not a general of those who are saved by faith? Did he not
assign the different inheritances and abodes, according to the
will of God, among his followers? So that he too could use the
words, "The lot is fallen unto me in pleasant places; and "my
fortunes are in Thy hands," fortunes more precious than those
which come to us on earth, and can be snatched away.
73. Further, to run over the Judges, or the
most illustrious of the Judges, there is "Samuel among those that
call upon His Name," who was given to God before his birth, and
sanctified immediately after his birth, and the anointer with his
horn of kings and priests. But was not Basil as an infant
consecrated to God from the womb, and offered with a coat at the
altar, and was he not a seer of heavenly things, and anointed of
the Lord, and the anointer of those who are perfected by the
Spirit? Among the kings, David is celebrated, whose victories and
trophies gained from the enemy are on record, but his most
characteristic trait was his gentleness, and, before his kingly
office, his power with the harp, able to soothe even the evil
spirit. Solomon asked of God and obtained breadth of heart,
making the furthest possible progress in wisdom and
contemplation, so that he became the most famous man of his time.
Basil, in my opinion, was in no wise, or but little inferior, to
the one in gentleness, to the other in wisdom, so that he soothed
the arrogance of infuriated sovereigns; and did not merely bring
the queen of the south from the ends of the earth, or any other
individual, to visit him because of his renown for wisdom, but
made his wisdom known in all the ends of the world. I pass over
the rest of Solomon's life. Even if we spare it, it is evident to
all.
74. Do you praise the courage of Elijah in
the presence of tyrants, and his fiery translation? Or the fair
inheritance of Elisha, the sheepskin mantle, accompanied by the
spirit of Elijah? You must also praise the life of Basil, spent
in the fire. I mean in the multitude of temptations, and his
escape through fire, which burnt, but did not consume, the
mystery of "the bush," and the fair cloak of skin from on high,
his indifference to the flesh. I pass by the rest, the three
young men bedewed in the fire, the fugitive prophet praying in
the whale's belly, and coming forth from the creature, as from a
chamber; the just man in the den, restraining the lions' rage,
and the struggle of the seven Maccabees, who were perfected with
their father and mother in blood, and in all kinds of tortures.
Their endurance he rivalled, and won their glory.
75. I now turn to the New Testament, and
comparing his life with those who are here illustrious, I shall
find in the teachers a source of honour for their disciple. Who
was the forerunner of Jesus? John, the voice of the Word, the
lamp of the Light, before Whom he even leaped in the womb, and
Whom he preceded to Hades, whither he was despatched by the rage
of Herod, to herald even there Him who was coming. And, if my
language seems audacious to anyone, let me assure him beforehand,
that in making this comparison, I neither prefer Basil, nor imply
that he is equal to him who surpasses all who are born of women,
but only show that he was stirred to emulation, and possessed to
some extent his striking features. For it is no slight thing for
the earnest to imitate the greatest of men, even in a slight
degree. Is it not indeed manifest that Basil was a copy of John's
asceticism? He also lived in the wilderness, and wore in nightly
watchings a ragged garb, during his shrinking retirement; he also
loved a similar food, purifying himself for God by abstinence; he
also was thought worthy to be a herald, if not a forerunner, of
Christ, and there went out to him not only all the region round
about, but also that which was beyond its borders; he also stood
between the two covenants, abolishing the letter of the one by
administering the spirit of the other, and bringing about the
fulfilment of the hidden law through the dissolution of that
which was apparent.
76. He emulated the zeal of Peter, the
intensity of Paul, the faith of both these men of name and of
surname, the lofty utterance of the sons of Zebedee, the
frugality and simplicity of all the disciples. Therefore he was
also entrusted with the keys of the heavens, and not only from
Jerusalem and round about unto Illyricum, but he embraces a wider
circle in the Gospel; he is not named, but becomes, a Son of
thunder; and lying upon the breast of Jesus, he draws thence the
power of his word, and the depth of his thoughts. He was
prevented from becoming a Stephen, eager though he was, since
reverence stayed the hands of those who would have stoned him. I
am able to sum up still more concisely, to avoid treating in
detail on these points of each individual. In some respects he
discovered, in some he emulated, in others he surpassed the good.
In his many-sided virtues he excelled all men of this day. I have
but one thing left to say, and in few words.
77. So great was his virtue, and the
eminence of his fame, that many of his minor characteristics,
nay, even his physical defects, have been assumed by others with
a view to notoriety. For instance his paleness, his beard, his
gait, his thoughtful, and generally meditative, hesitation in
speaking, which, in the ill-judged, inconsiderate imitation of
many, took the form of melancholy. And besides, the style of his
dress, the shape of his bed, and his manner of eating, none of
which was to him a matter of consequence, but simply the result
of accident and chance. So you might see many Basils in outward
semblance, among these statues in outline, for it would be too
much to call them his distant echo. For an echo, though it is the
dying away of a sound, at any rate represents it with great
clearness, while these men fall too far short of him to satisfy
even their desire to approach him. Nor was it a slight thing, but
a matter with good reason held in the highest estimation, to
chance to have met him or done him some service, or to carry away
the souvenir of something which he had said or done in jest or in
earnest: as I know that I have myself often taken pride in doing;
for his improvisations were much more precious and brilliant than
the laboured efforts of other men.
78. But when, after he had finished his
course, and kept the faith, he longed to depart, and the time for
his crown was approaching, he did not hear the summons: "Get thee
up into the mountain and die," but "Die and come up to us." And
here again he wrought a wonder in no wise inferior to those
mentioned before. For when he was almost dead, and breathless,
and had lost the greater part of his powers; he grew stronger in
his last words, so as to depart with the utterances of religion,
and, by ordaining the most excellent of his attendants, bestowed
upon them both his hand and the Spirit: so that his disciples,
who had aided him in his priestly office, might not be defrauded
of the priesthood. The remainder of my task I approach, but with
reluctance, as it would fall more fully from the mouths of others
than from my own. For I cannot philosophise over my misfortune,
even if I greatly longed to do so, when I recollect that the loss
is common to us all, and that the misfortune has befallen the
whole world.
79. He lay, drawing his last breath, and
awaited by the choir on high, towards which he had long directed
his gaze. Around him poured the whole city, unable to bear his
loss, inveighing against his departure, as if it had been an
oppression, and clinging to his soul, as though it had been
capable of restraint or compulsion at their hands or their
prayers. Their suffering had driven them distracted, all were
eager, were it possible, to add to his life a portion of their
own. And when they failed, for it must needs be proved that he
was a man, and, with his last words "Into thy Hands I commend my
spirit," he had joyfully resigned his soul to the care of the
angels who carried him away; not without having some religious
instructions and injunctions for the benefit of those who were
present-then occurred a wonder more remarkable than any which had
happened before.
80. The saint was being carried out, lifted
high by the hands of holy men, and everyone was eager, some to
seize the hem of his garment, others only just to touch the
shadow, or the bier which bore his holy remains (for what could
be more holy or pure than that body), others to draw near to
those who were carrying it, others only to enjoy the sight, as if
even this were beneficial. Market places, porticos, houses of two
or three stories were filled with people escorting, preceding,
following, accompanying him, and trampling upon each other; tens
of thousands of every race and age, beyond all previous
experience. The psalmody was overborne by the lamentations,
philosophic resignation sank beneath the misfortune. Our own
people vied with strangers, Jews, Greeks, and foreigners, and
they with us, for a greater share in the benefit, by means of a
more abundant lamentation. To close my story, the calamity ended
in danger; many souls departed along with him, from the violence
of the pushing and confusion, who have been thought happy in
their end, departing together with him, "funeral victims,"
perhaps some fervid orator might call them. The body having at
last escaped from those who would seize it, and made its way
through those who went before it, was consigned to the tomb of
his fathers, the high priest being added to the priests, the
mighty voice which rings in my ears to the heralds, the martyr to
the martyrs. And now he is in heaven, where, if I mistake not, he
is offering sacrifices for us, and praying for the people, for
though, he has left us, he has not entirely left us. While I,
Gregory, who am half dead, and, cleft in twain, torn away from
our great union, and dragging along a life of pain which runs not
easily, as may be supposed, after separation from him, know not
what is to be my end now that I have lost my guidance. And even
now I am admonished and instructed in nightly visions, if ever I
fall short of my duty. And my present object is not so much to
mingle lamentations with my praises, or to portray the public
life of the man, or publish a picture of virtue common to all
time, and an example salutary to all churches, and to all souls,
which we may keep in view, as a living law, and so rightly direct
our lives as to counsel you, who have been completely initiated
into his doctrine, to fix your eyes upon him, as one who sees you
and is seen by you, and thus to be perfected by the
Spirit.
81. Come hither then, and surround me, all
ye members of his choir, both of the clergy and the laity, both
of our own country and from abroad; aid me in my eulogy, by each
supplying or demanding the account of some of his excellences.
Regard, ye occupants of the bench, the lawgiver; ye politicians,
the statesman; ye men of the people, his orderliness; ye men of
letters, the instructor; ye virgins, the leader of the bride; ye
who are yoked in marriage, the restrainer; ye hermits, him who
gave you wings; ye cenobites, the judge; ye simple men, the
guide; ye contemplatives, the divine; ye cheerful ones, the
bridle; ye unfortunate men, the consoler, the staff of hoar
hairs, the guide of youth, the relief of poverty, the steward of
abundance. Widows also will, I imagine, praise their protector,
orphans their father, poor men their friend, strangers their
entertainer, brothers the man of brotherly love, the sick their
physician, whatever be their sickness and the healing they need,
the healthy the preserver of health, and all men him who made
himself all things to all that he might gain the majority, if not
all.
82. This is my offering to thee, Basil,
uttered by the tongue which once was the sweetest of all to thee,
of him who was thy fellow in age and rank. If it have approached
thy deserts, thanks are due to thee, for it was from confidence
in thee that I undertook to speak of thee. But if it fall far
short of thy expectations, what must be our feelings, who are
worn out with age and disease and regret for thee? Yet God is
pleased, when we do what we can. Yet mayest thou gaze upon us
from above, thou divine and sacred person; either stay by thy
entreaties our thorn in the flesh, given to us by God for our
discipline, or prevail upon us to bear it boldly, and guide all
our life towards that which is most for our profit. And if we be
translated, do thou receive us there also in thine own
tabernacle, that, as we dwell together, and gaze together more
clearly and more perfectly upon the holy and blessed Trinity, of
Which we have now in some degree received the image, our longing
may at last be satisfied, by gaining this recompense for all the
battles we have fought and the assaults we have endured. Such are
our words on thy behalf: who will there be to praise us, since we
leave this life after thee, even if we offer any topic worthy of
words or praise in Christ Jesus our Lord, to Whom be glory
forever? Amen.
Oration XLV
The Second Oration on Easter
I. I will stand upon my watch, saith the
venerable Habakkuk; and I will take my post beside him today on
the authority and observation which was given me of the Spirit;
and I will look forth, and will observe what shall be said to me.
Well, I have taken my stand, and looked forth; and behold a man
riding on the clouds and he is very high, and his countenance is
as the countenance of Angel, and his vesture as the brightness of
piercing lightning; and he lifts his hand toward the East, and
cries with a loud voice. His voice is like the voice of a
trumpet; and round about Him is as it were a multitude of the
Heavenly Host; and he saith, Today is salvation come unto the
world, to that which is visible, and to that which is invisible.
Christ is risen from the dead, rise ye with Him. Christ is
returned again to Himself, return ye. Christ is freed from the
tomb, be ye freed from the bond of sin. The gates of hell are
opened, and death is destroyed, and the old Adam is put aside,
and the New is fulfilled; if any man be in Christ he is a new
creature; be ye renewed. Thus he speaks; and the rest sing out,
as they did before when Christ was manifested to us by His birth
on earth, their glory to God in the highest, on earth, peace,
goodwill among men. And with them I also utter the same words
among you. And would that I might receive a voice that should
rank with the Angel's, and should sound through all the ends of
the earth.
II. The Lord's Passover, the Passover, and
again I say the Passover to the honour of the Trinity. This is to
us a Feast of feasts and a Solemnity of solemnities as far
exalted above all others (not only those which are merely human
and creep on the ground, but even those which are of Christ
Himself, and are celebrated in His honour) as the Sun is above
the stars. Beautiful indeed yesterday was our splendid array, and
our illumination, in which both in public and private we
associated ourselves, every kind of men, and almost every rank,
illuminating the night with our crowded fires, formed after the
fashion of that great light, both that with which the heaven
above us lights its beacon fires, and that which is above the
heavens, amid the angels (the first luminous nature, next to the
first nature of all, because springing directly from it), and
that which is in the Trinity, from which all light derives its
being, parted from the undivided light and honoured. But today's
is more beautiful and more illustrious; inasmuch as yesterday's
light was a forerunner of the rising of the Great Light, and as
it were a kind of rejoicing in preparation for the Festival; but
today we are celebrating the Resurrection itself, no longer as an
object of expectation, but as having already come to pass, and
gathering the whole world unto itself. Let then different persons
bring forth different fruits and offer different offerings at
this season, smaller or greater . . . such spiritual offerings as
are dear to God . . . as each may have power. For scarcely Angels
themselves could offer gifts worthy of its rank, those first and
intellectual and pure beings, who are also eye-witnesses of the
Glory That is on high; if even these can attain the full strain
of praise. We will for our part offer a discourse, the best and
most precious thing we have-especially as we are praising the
Word for the blessing which He hath bestowed on the reasoning
creation. I will begin from this point. For I cannot endure, when
I am engaged in offering the sacrifice of the lips concerning the
Great Sacrifice and the greatest of days, to fail to recur to
God, and to take my beginning from Him. Therefore I pray you,
cleanse your mind and ears and thoughts, all you who delight in
such subjects, since the discourse will be concerning God, and
will be divine; that you may depart filled with delights of a
sort that do not pass away into nothingness. And it shall be at
once very full and very concise, so as neither to distress you by
its deficiencies, nor to displease you by satiety.
III. God always was and always is, and
always will be; or rather, God always Is. For Was and Will Be are
fragments of our time, and of changeable nature. But He is
Eternal Being; and this is the Name He gives Himself when giving
the Oracles to Moses in the Mount. For in Himself He sums up and
contains all Being, having neither beginning in the past nor end
in the future . . . like some great Sea of Being, limitless and
unbounded, transcending all conception of time and nature, only
adumbrated by the mind, and that very dimly and scantily . . .
not by His Essentials but by His Environment, one image being got
from one source and another from another, and combined into some
sort of presentation of the truth, which escapes us before we
have caught it, and which takes to flight before we have
conceived it, blazing forth upon our master-part, even when that
is cleansed, as the lightning flash which will not stay its
course does upon our sight . . . in order, as I conceive, by that
part of it which we can comprehend to draw us to itself (for that
which is altogether incomprehensible is outside the bounds of
hope, and not within the compass of endeavour); and by that part
of It which we cannot comprehend to move our wonder; and as an
object of wonder to become more an object of desire; and being
desired, to purify; and purifying to make us like God; so that,
when we have become like Himself, God may, to use a bold
expression, hold converse with us as God; being united to us, and
known by us; and that perhaps to the same extent as He already
knows those who are known to Him. The Divine Nature, then, is
boundless and hard to understand, and all that we can comprehend
of Him is His boundlessness; even though one may conceive that
because He is of a simple Nature He is therefore either wholly
incomprehensible or perfectly comprehensible. For let us farther
enquire what is implied by "is of a simple Nature?" For it is
quite certain that this simplicity is not itself its nature, just
as composition is not by itself the essence of compound
beings.
IV. And when Infinity is considered from
two points of view, beginning and end (for that which is beyond
these and not limited by them is Infinity), when the mind looks
into the depths above, not having where to stand, and leans upon
phaenomena to form an idea of God it calls the Infinite and
Unapproachable which it finds there by the name of Unoriginate.
And when it looks into the depth below and at the future, it
calls Him Undying and Imperishable. And when it draws a
conclusion from the whole, it calls Him Eternal. For Eternity is
neither time nor part of time; for it cannot be measured. But
what time measured by the course of the sun is to us, that
Eternity is to the Everlasting; namely a sort of timelike
movement and interval, coextensive with Their Existence. This
however is all that I must now say of God; for the present is not
a suitable time, as my present subject is not the doctrine of
God, but that of the Incarnation. And when I say God, I mean
Father, Son, and Holy Ghost; for Godhead is neither diffused
beyond These, so as to introduce a mob of gods, nor yet bounded
by a smaller compass than These, so as to condemn us for a
poverty stricken conception of Deity, either Judaizing to save
the Monarchia, or falling into heathenism by the multitude of our
gods. For the evil on either side is the same, though found in
contrary directions. Thus then is the Holy of Holies, Which is
hidden even from the Seraphim, and is glorified with a
thrice-repeated Holy meeting in one ascription of the title Lord
and God, as one of our predecessors has most beautifully and
loftily reasoned out.
V. But since this movement of
Self-contemplation alone could not satisfy Goodness, but Good
must be poured out and go forth beyond Itself, to multiply the
objects of Its beneficence (for this was essential to the highest
Goodness), He first conceived the Angelic and Heavenly Powers.
And this conception was a work fulfilled by His Word and
perfected by His Spirit. And so the Secondary Splendours came
into being, as the ministers of the Primary Splendour (whether we
are to conceive of them as intelligent Spirits, or as Fire of an
immaterial and incorporeal kind, or as some other nature
approaching this as near as may be). I should like to say that
they are incapable of movement in the direction of evil, and
susceptible only of the movement of good, as being about God and
illuminated with the first Rays from God (for earthly beings have
but the second illumination), but I am obliged to stop short of
saying that they are immovable, and to conceive and speak of them
as only difficult to move, because of him who for His Splendour
was called Lucifer, but became and is called Darkness through his
pride; and the Apostate Hosts who are subject to him, creators of
evil by their revolt against good, and our inciters.
VI. Thus then and for these reasons, He
gave being to the world of thought, as far as I can reason on
these matters, and estimate great things in my own poor language.
Then, when His first Creation was in good order, He conceives a
second world, material and visible; and this a system of earth
and sky and all that is in the midst of them; an admirable
creation indeed when we look at the fair form of every part, but
yet more worthy of admiration when we consider the harmony and
unison of the whole, and how each part fits in with every other
in fair order, and all with the whole, tending to the perfect
completion of the world as a Unit. This was to shew that He could
call into being not only a nature akin to Himself, but also one
altogether alien to Him. For akin to Deity are those natures
which are intellectual, and only to be comprehended by mind; but
all of which sense can take cognizance are utterly alien to It;
and of these the furthest removed from it are all those which are
entirely destitute of soul and power of motion.
VII. Mind then and sense, thus
distinguished from each other, had remained within their own
boundaries, and bore in themselves the magnificence of the
Creator-Word, silent praisers and thrilling heralds of His mighty
work. Not yet was there any mingling of both, nor any mixture of
these opposites, tokens of a greater wisdom and generosity in the
creation of natures; nor as yet were the whole riches of goodness
made known. Now the Creator-Word, determining to exhibit this,
and to produce a single living being out of both (the invisible
and the visible creation, I mean) fashions Man; and taking a body
from already existing matter, and placing in it a Breath taken
from Himself (which the Word knew to be an intelligent soul, and
the image of God), as a sort of second world, great in
littleness, He placed him on the earth, a new Angel, a mingled
worshipper, fully initiated into the visible creation, but only
partially into the intellectual; king of all upon earth, but
subject to the King above; earthly and heavenly; temporal and yet
immortal; visible and yet intellectual; halfway between greatness
and lowliness; in one person combining spirit and flesh; spirit
because of the favour bestowed on him, flesh on account of the
height to which he had been raised; the one that he might
continue to live and glorify his benefactor, the other that he
might suffer, and by suffering be put in remembrance, and be
corrected if he became proud in his greatness; a living creature,
trained here and then moved elsewhere; and to complete the
mystery, deified by its inclination to God . . . for to this, I
think, tends that light of Truth which here we possess but in
measure; that we should both see and experience the Splendour of
God, which is worthy of Him Who made us, and will dissolve us,
and remake us after a loftier fashion.
VIII. This being He placed in
paradise-whatever that paradise may have been (having honoured
him with the gift of free will, in order that good might belong
to him as the result of his choice, no less than to Him Who had
implanted the seeds of it)-to till the immortal plants, by which
is perhaps meant the Divine conceptions, both the simpler and the
more perfect; naked in his simplicity and inartificial life; and
without any covering or screen; for it was fitting that he who
was from the beginning should be such. And He gave Him a Law, as
material for his free will to act upon. This Law was a
commandment as to what plants he might partake of, and which one
he might not touch. This latter was the Tree of Knowledge; not,
however, because it was evil from the beginning when planted; nor
was it forbidden because God grudged it to men-let not the
enemies of God wag their tongues in that direction, or imitate
the serpent. But it would have been good if partaken of at the
proper time; for the Tree was, according to my theory,
Contemplation, which it is only safe for those who have reached
maturity of habit to enter upon; but which is not good for those
who are still somewhat simple and greedy; just as neither is
solid food good for those who are yet tender and have need of
milk. But when through the devil's malice and the woman's
caprice, to which she succumbed as the more tender, and which she
brought to bear upon the man, as she was the more apt to
persuade-alas for my weakness, for that of my first father was
mine; he forgot the commandment which had been given him, and
yielded to the baleful fruit; and for his sin was banished at
once from the tree of life, and from paradise, and from God; and
put on the coats of skins, that is, perhaps, the coarser flesh,
both mortal and contradictory. And this was the first thing which
he learnt-his own shame-and he hid himself from God. Yet here too
he makes a gain, namely death and the cutting off of sin, in
order that evil may not be immortal. Thus, his punishment is
changed into a mercy, for it is in mercy, I am persuaded, that
God inflicts punishment.
IX. And having first been chastened by many
means because his sins were many, whose root of evil sprang up
through divers causes and sundry times, by word, by law, by
prophets, by benefits, by threats, by plagues, by waters, by
fires, by wars, by victories, by defeats, by signs in heaven, and
signs in the air, and in the earth, and in the sea; by unexpected
changes of men, of cities, of nations (the object of which was
the destruction of wickedness) at last he needed a stronger
remedy, for his diseases were growing worse; mutual slaughters,
adulteries, perjuries, unnatural crimes, and that first and last
of all evils, idolatry, and the transfer of worship from the
Creator to the creatures. As these required a greater aid, so
they also obtained a greater. And that was that the Word of God
Himself, Who is before all worlds, the Invisible, the
Incomprehensible, the Bodiless, the Beginning of beginning, the
Light of Light, the Source of Life and Immortality, the Image of
the Archetype, the Immovable Seal, the Unchangeable Image, the
Father's Definition and Word, came to His own Image, and took on
Him Flesh for the sake of our flesh, and mingled Himself with an
intelligent soul for my soul's sake, purifying like by like; and
in all points except sin was made Man; conceived by the Virgin,
who first in body and soul was purified by the Holy Ghost, for it
was needful both That Child-bearing should be honoured and that
Virginity should receive a higher honour. He came forth then, as
God, with That which He had assumed; one Person in two natures,
flesh and Spirit, of which the latter deified the former. O new
commingling; O strange conjunction! the Self-existent comes into
Being, the Uncreated is created, That which cannot be contained
is contained by the intervention of an intellectual soul
mediating between the Deity and the corporeity of the flesh. And
He who gives riches becomes poor; for He assumes the poverty of
my flesh, that I may assume the riches of His Godhead. He that is
full empties Himself; for He empties Himself of His Glory for a
short while, that I may have a share in His Fulness. What is the
riches of His Goodness? What is this mystery that is around me? I
had a share in the Image and I did not keep it; He partakes of my
flesh that He may both save the Image and make the flesh
immortal. He communicates a Second Communion, far more marvellous
than the first, inasmuch as then He imparted the better nature,
but now He Himself assumes the worse. This is more godlike than
the former action; this is loftier in the eyes of all men of
understanding.
X. But perhaps some one of those who are
too impetuous and festive may say, "What has all this to do with
us? Spur on your horse to the goal; talk to us about the Festival
and the reasons for our being here to-day." Yes, this is what I
am about to do, although I have begun at a somewhat previous
point, being compelled to do so by the needs of my argument.
There will be no harm in the eyes of scholars and lovers of the
beautiful if we say a few words about the word Pascha itself, for
such an addition will not be useless in their ears. This great
and venerable Pascha is called Phaska by the Hebrews in their own
language; and the word means Passing Over. Historically, from
their flight and migration from Egypt into the Land of Canaan;
spiritually, from the progress and ascent from things below to
things above and to the Land of Promise. And we observe that a
thing which we often find to have happened in Scripture, the
change of certain nouns from an uncertain to a clearer sense, or
from a coarser to a more refined, has taken place in this
instance. For some people, supposing this to be a name of the
Sacred Passion, and in consequence Grecizing the word by changing
Phi and Kappa into Pi and Chi, called the Day Pascha. And custom
took it up and confirmed the word, with the help of the ears of
most people, to whom it had a more pious sound.
XI. But before our time the Holy Apostle
declared that the Law was but a shadow of things to come, which
are conceived by thought. And God too, who in still older times
gave oracles to Moses, said when giving laws concerning these
things, See thou make all things according to the pattern shewed
thee in the Mount, when He shewed him the visible things as an
adumbration of and design for the things that are invisible. And
I am persuaded that none of these things has been ordered in
vain, none without a reason, none in a grovelling manner or
unworthy of the legislation of God and the ministry of Moses,
even though it be difficult in each type to find a theory
descending to the most delicate details, to every point about the
Tabernacle itself, and its measures and materials, and the
Levites and Priests who carried them, and all the particulars
which were enacted about the Sacrifices and the purifications and
the Offerings; and though these are only to be understood by
those who rank with Moses in virtue, or have made the nearest
approach to his learning. For in that Mount itself God is seen by
men; on the one hand through His own descent from His lofty
abode, on the other through His drawing us up from our abasement
on earth, that the Incomprehensible may be in some degree, and as
far as is safe, comprehended by a mortal nature. For in no other
way is it possible for the denseness of a material body and an
imprisoned mind to come into consciousness of God, except by His
assistance. Then therefore all men do not seem to have been
deemed worthy of the same rank and position; but one of one place
and one of another, each, I think, according to the measure of
his own purification. Some have even been altogether driven away,
and only permitted to hear the Voice from on high, namely those
whose dispositions are altogether like wild beasts, and who are
unworthy of divine mysteries.
XII. But we, standing midway between those
whose minds are utterly dense on the one side, and on the other
those who are very contemplative and exalted, that we may neither
remain quite idle and immovable, nor yet be more busy than we
ought, and fall short of and be estranged from our purpose-for
the former course is Jewish and very low, and the latter is only
fit for the dream-soothsayer, and both alike are to be
condemned-let us say our say upon these matters, so far as is
within our reach, and not very absurd, or exposed to the ridicule
of the multitude. Our belief is that since it was needful that
we, who had fallen in consequence of the original sin, and had
been led away by pleasure, even as far as idolatry and unlawful
bloodshed, should be recalled and raised up again to our original
position through the tender mercy of God our Father, Who could
not endure that such a noble work of His own hands as Man should
be lost to Him; the method of our new creation, and of what
should be done, was this:-that all violent remedies were
disapproved, as not likely to persuade us, and as quite possibly
tending to add to the plague, through our chronic pride; but that
God disposed things to our restoration by a gentle and kindly
method of cure. For a crooked sapling will not bear a sudden
bending the other way, or violence from the hand that would
straighten it, but will be more quickly broken than straightened;
and a horse of a hot temper and above a certain age will not
endure the tyranny of the bit without some coaxing and
encouragement. Therefore the Law is given to us as an assistance,
like a boundary wall between God and idols, drawing us away from
one and to the Other. And it concedes a little at first, that it
may receive that which is greater. It concedes the Sacrifices for
a time, that it may establish God in us, and then when the
fitting time shall come may abolish the Sacrifices also; thus
wisely changing our minds by gradual removals, and bringing us
over to the Gospel when we have already been trained to a prompt
obedience.
XIII. Thus then and for this cause the
written Law came in, gathering us into Christ; and this is the
account of the Sacrifices as I account for them. And that you may
not be ignorant of the depth of His Wisdom and the riches of His
unsearchable judgments, He did not leave even these unhallowed
altogether, or useless, or with nothing in them but mere blood.
But that great, and if I may say so, in Its first nature
unsacrificeable Victim, was intermingled with the Sacrifices of
the Law, and was a purification, not for a part of the world, nor
for a short time, but for the whole world and for all time. For
this reason a Lamb was chosen for its innocence, and its clothing
of the original nakedness. For such is the Victim, That was
offered for us, Who is both in Name and fact the Garment of
incorruption. And He was a perfect Victim not only on account of
His Godhead, than which nothing is more perfect; but also on
account of that which He assumed having been anointed with Deity,
and having become one with That which anointed It, and I am bold
to say, made equal with God. A Male, because offered for Adam; or
rather the Stronger for the strong, when the first Man had fallen
under sin; and chiefly because there is in Him nothing feminine,
nothing unmanly; but He burst from the bonds of the
Virgin-Mother's womb with much power, and a Male was brought
forth by the Prophetess, as Isaiah declares the good tidings. And
of a year old, because He is the Sun of Righteousness setting out
from heaven, and circumscribed by His visible Nature, and
returning unto Himself. And "The blessed crown of
Goodness,"-being on every side equal to Himself and alike; and
not only this, but also as giving life to all the circle of the
virtues, gently commingled and intermixed with each other,
according to the Law of Love and Order. And Immaculate and
guileless, as being the Healer of faults, and of the defects and
taints that come from sin. For though He both took on Him our
sins and bare our diseases, yet He did not Himself suffer aught
that needed healing. For He was tempted in all points like as we
are yet without sin. For he that persecuted the Light that
shineth in darkness could not overtake Him.
XIV. What more? The First Month is
introduced, or rather the beginning of months, whether it was so
among the Hebrews from the beginning, or was made so later on
this account, and became the first in consequence of the Mystery;
and the tenth of the Month, for this is the most complete number,
of units the first perfect unit, and the parent of perfection.
And it is kept until the fifth day, perhaps because the Victim,
of Whom I am speaking, purifies the five senses, from which comes
falling into sin, and around which the war rages, inasmuch as
they are open to the incitements to sin. And it was chosen, not
only out of the lambs, but also out of the inferior species,
which are placed on the left hand-the kids; because He is
sacrificed not only for the righteous, but also for sinners; and
perhaps even more for these, inasmuch as we have greater need of
His mercy. And we need not be surprised that a lamb for a house
should be required as the best course, but if that could not be,
then one might be obtained by contributions (owing to poverty)
for the houses of a family; because it is clearly best that each
individual should suffice for his own perfecting, and should
offer his own living sacrifice holy unto God Who called him,
being consecrated at all times and in every respect. But if that
cannot be, then that those who are akin in virtue and of like
disposition should be made use of as helpers. For I think this
provision means that we should communicate of the Sacrifice to
those who are nearest, if there be need.
XV. Then comes the Sacred Night, the
Anniversary of the confused darkness of the present life, into
which the primaeval darkness is dissolved, and all things come
into life and rank and form, and that which was chaos is reduced
to order. Then we flee from Egypt, that is from sullen
persecuting sin; and from Pharaoh the unseen tyrant, and the
bitter taskmasters, changing our quarters to the world above; and
are delivered from the clay and the brickmaking, and from the
husks and dangers of this fleshly condition, which for most men
is only not overpowered by mere husklike calculations. Then the
Lamb is slain, and act and word are sealed with the Precious
Blood; that is, habit and action, the sideposts of our doors; I
mean, of course, of the movements of mind and opinion, which are
rightly opened and closed by contemplation, since there is a
limit even to thoughts. Then the last and gravest plague upon the
persecutors, truly worthy of the night; and Egypt mourns the
first-born of her own reasonings and actions which are also
called in the Scripture the Seed of the Chaldeans removed, and
the children of Babylon dashed against the rocks and destroyed;
and the whole air is full of the cry and clamour of the
Egyptians; and then the Destroyer of them shall withdraw from us
in reverence of the Unction. Then the removal of leaven; that is,
of the old and sour wickedness, not of that which is quickening
and makes bread; for seven days, a number which is of all the
most mystical, and is co-ordinate with this present world, that
we may not lay in provision of any Egyptian dough, or relic of
Pharisaic or ungodly teaching.
XVI. Well, let them lament; we will feed on
the Lamb toward evening-for Christ's Passion was in the
completion of the ages; because too He communicated His Disciples
in the evening with His Sacrament, destroying the darkness of
sin; and not sodden, but roast-that our word may have in it
nothing that is unconsidered or watery, or easily made away with;
but may be entirely consistent and solid, and free from all that
is impure and from all vanity. And let us be aided by the good
coals, kindling and purifying our minds from Him That cometh to
send fire on the earth, that shall destroy all evil habits, and
to hasten its kindling. Whatsoever then there be, of solid and
nourishing in the Word, shall be eaten with the inward parts and
hidden things of the mind, and shall be consumed and given up to
spiritual digestion; aye, from head to foot, that is, from the
first contemplations of Godhead to the very last thoughts about
the Incarnation. Neither let us carry aught of it abroad, nor
leave it till the morning; because most of our Mysteries may not
be carried out to them that are outside, nor is there beyond this
night any further purification; and procrastination is not
creditable to those who have a share in the Word. For just as it
is good and well-pleasing to God not to let anger last through
the day, but to get rid of it before sunset, whether you take
this of time or in a mystical sense, for it is not safe for us
that the Sun of Righteousness should go down upon our wrath; so
too we ought not to let such Food remain all night, nor to put it
off till to-morrow. But whatever is of bony nature and not fit
for food and hard for us even to understand, this must not be
broken; that is, badly divined and misconceived (I need not say
that in the history not a bone of Jesus was broken, even though
His death was hastened by His crucifiers on account of the
Sabbath); nor must it be stripped off and thrown away, lest that
which is holy should be given to the dogs, that is, to the evil
hearers of the Word; just as the glorious pearl of the Word is
not to be cast before swine; but it shall be consumed with the
fire with which the burnt offerings also are consumed, being
refined and preserved by the Spirit That searcheth and knoweth
all things, not destroyed in the waters, nor scattered abroad as
the calf's head which was hastily made by Israel was by Moses,
for a reproach for their hardness of heart.
XVII. Nor would it be right for us to pass
over the manner of this eating either, for the Law does not do
so, but carries its mystical labour even to this point in the
literal enactment. Let us consume the Victim in haste, eating It
with unleavened bread, with bitter herbs, and with our loins
girded, and our shoes on our feet, and leaning on staves like old
men; with haste, that we fall not into that fault which was
forbidden to Lot by the commandment, that we look not around, nor
stay in all that neighbourhood, but that we escape to the
mountain, that we be not overtaken by the strange fire of Sodom,
nor be congealed into a pillar of salt in consequence of our
turning back to wickedness; for this is the result of delay. With
bitter herbs, for a life according to the Will of God is bitter
and arduous, especially to beginners, and higher than pleasures.
For although the new yoke is easy and the burden light, as you
are told, yet this is on account of the hope and the reward,
which is far more abundant than the hardships of this life. If it
were not so, who would not say that the Gospel is more full of
toil and trouble than the enactments of the Law? For, while the
Law prohibits only the completed acts of sin, we are condemned
for the causes also, almost as if they were acts. The Law says,
Thou shalt not commit adultery; but you may not even desire,
kindling passion by curious and earnest looks. Thou shalt not
kill, says the Law; but you are not even to return a blow, but on
the contrary are to offer yourself to the smiter. How much more
ascetic is the Gospel than the Law! Thou shalt not forswear
thyself is the Law; but you are not to swear at all, either a
greater or a lesser oath, for an oath is the parent of perjury.
Thou shalt not join house to house, nor field to field,
oppressing the poor; but you are to set aside willingly even your
just possessions, and to be stripped for the poor, that without
encumbrance you may take up the Cross and be enriched with the
unseen riches.
XVIII. And let the loins of the unreasoning
animals be unbound and loose, for they have not the gift of
reason which can overcome pleasure (it is not needful to say that
even they know the limit of natural movement). But let that part
of your being which is the seat of passion, and which neighs, as
Holy Scripture calls it, when sweeping away this shameful
passion, be restrained by a girdle of continence, so that you may
eat the Passover purely, having mortified your members which are
upon the earth, and copying the girdle of John, the Hermit and
Forerunner and great Herald of the Truth. Another girdle I know,
the soldierly and manly one, I mean, from which the Euzoni of
Syria and certain Monozoni take their name. And it is in respect
of this too that God saith in an oracle to Job, "Nay, but gird up
thy loins like a man, and give a manly answer." With this also
holy David boasts that he is girded with strength from God, and
speaks of God Himself as clothed with strength and girded about
with power-against the ungodly of course-though perhaps some may
prefer to see in this a declaration of the abundance of His
power, and, as it were, its restraint, just as also He clothes
Himself with Light as with a garment. For who shall endure His
unrestrained power and light? Do I enquire what there is common
to the loins and to truth? What then is the meaning to S. Paul of
the expression, "Stand, therefore, having your loins girt about
with truth?" Is it perhaps that contemplation is to restrain
concupiscence, and not to allow it to be carried in another
direction? For that which is disposed to love in a particular
direction will not have the same power towards other
pleasures.
XIX. And as to shoes, let him who is about
to touch the Holy Land which the feet of God have trodden, put
them off, as Moses did upon the Mount, that he may bring there
nothing dead; nothing to come between Man and God. So too if any
disciple is sent to preach the Gospel, let him go in a spirit of
philosophy and without excess, inasmuch as he must, besides being
without money and without staff and with but one coat, also be
barefooted, that the feet of those who preach the Gospel of Peace
and every other good may appear beautiful. But he who would flee
from Egypt and the things of Egypt must put on shoes for safety's
sake, especially in regard to the scorpions and snakes in which
Egypt so abounds, so as not to be injured by those which watch
the heel which also we are bidden to tread under foot. And
concerning the staff and the signification of it, my belief is as
follows. There is one I know to lean upon, and another which
belongs to Pastors and Teachers, and which corrects human sheep.
Now the Law prescribes to you the staff to lean upon, that you
may not break down in your mind when you hear of God's Blood, and
His Passion, and His death; and that you may not be carried away
to heresy in your defence of God; but without shame and without
doubt may eat the Flesh and drink the Blood, if you are desirous
of true life, neither disbelieving His words about His Flesh, nor
offended at those about His Passion. Lean upon this, and stand
firm and strong, in nothing shaken by the adversaries nor carried
away by the plausibility of their arguments. Stand upon thy High
Place; in the Courts of Jerusalem place thy feet; lean upon the
Rock, that thy steps in God be not shaken.
XX. What sayest thou? Thus it hath pleased
Him that thou shouldest come forth out of Egypt, the iron
furnace; that thou shouldest leave behind the idolatry of that
country, and be led by Moses and his lawgiving and martial rule.
I give thee a piece of advice which is not my own, or rather
which is very much my own, if thou consider the matter
spiritually. Borrow from the Egyptians vessels of gold and
silver; with these take thy journey; supply thyself for the road
with the goods of strangers, or rather with thine own. There is
money owing to thee, the wages of thy bondage and of thy
brickmaking; be clever on thy side too in asking retribution; be
an honest robber. Thou didst suffer wrong there whilst thou wast
fighting with the clay (that is, this troublesome and filthy
body) and wast building cities foreign and unsafe, whose memorial
perishes with a cry. What then? Dost thou come out for nothing
and without wages? But why wilt thou leave to the Egyptians and
to the powers of thine adversaries that which they have gained by
wickedness, and will spend with yet greater wickedness? It does
not belong to them: they have ravished it, and have
sacrilegiously taken it as plunder from Him who saith, The silver
is Mine and the gold is Mine, and I give it to whom I will.
Yesterday it was theirs, for it was permitted to be so; to-day
the Master takes it and gives it to thee, that thou mayest make a
good and saving use of it. Let us make to ourselves friends of
the Mammon of unrighteousness, that when we fail, they may
receive us in the time of judgment.
XXI. If you are a Rachel or a Leah, a
patriarchal and great soul, steal whatever idols of your father
you can find; not, however, that you may keep them, but that you
may destroy them; and if you are a wise Israelite remove them to
the Land of the Promise, and let the persecutor grieve over the
loss of them, and learn through being outwitted that it was vain
for him to tyrannize over and keep in bondage better men than
himself. If thou doest this, and comest out of Egypt thus, I know
well that thou shalt be guided by the pillar of fire and cloud by
night and day. The wilderness shall be tamed for thee, and the
Sea divided; Pharaoh shall be drowned; bread shall be rained
down: the rock shall become a fountain; Amalek shall be
conquered, not with arms alone, but with the hostile hand of the
righteous forming both prayers and the invincible trophy of the
Cross; the River shall be cut off; the sun shall stand still; and
the moon be restrained; walls shall be overthrown even without
engines; swarms of hornets shall go before thee to make a way for
Israel, and to hold the Gentiles in check; and all the other
events which are told in the history after these and with these
(not to make a long story) shall be given thee of God. Such is
the feast thou art keeping to-day; and in this manner I would
have thee celebrate both the Birthday and the Burial of Him Who
was born for thee and suffered for thee. Such is the Mystery of
the Passover; such are the mysteries sketched by the Law and
fulfilled by Christ, the Abolisher of the letter, the Perfecter
of the Spirit, who by His Passion taught us how to suffer, and by
His glorification grants us to be glorified with Him.
XXII. Now we are to examine another fact
and dogma, neglected by most people, but in my judgment well
worth enquiring into. To Whom was that Blood offered that was
shed for us, and why was It shed? I mean the precious and famous
Blood of our God and High priest and Sacrifice. We were detained
in bondage by the Evil One, sold under sin, and receiving
pleasure in exchange for wickedness. Now, since a ransom belongs
only to him who holds in bondage, I ask to whom was this offered,
and for what cause? If to the Evil One, fie upon the outrage! If
the robber receives ransom, not only from God, but a ransom which
consists of God Himself, and has such an illustrious payment for
his tyranny, a payment for whose sake it would have been right
for him to have left us alone altogether. But if to the Father, I
ask first, how? For it was not by Him that we were being
oppressed; and next, On what principle did the Blood of His Only
begotten Son delight the Father, Who would not receive even
Isaac, when he was being offered by his Father, but changed the
sacrifice, putting a ram in the place of the human victim? Is it
not evident that the Father accepts Him, but neither asked for
Him nor demanded Him; but on account of the Incarnation, and
because Humanity must be sanctified by the Humanity of God, that
He might deliver us Himself, and overcome the tyrant, and draw us
to Himself by the mediation of His Son, Who also arranged this to
the honour of the Father, Whom it is manifest that He obeys in
all things? So much we have said of Christ; the greater part of
what we might say shall be reverenced with silence. But that
brazen serpent was hung up as a remedy for the biting serpents,
not as a type of Him that suffered for us, but as a contrast; and
it saved those that looked upon it, not because they believed it
to live, but because it was killed, and killed with it the powers
that were subject to it, being destroyed as it deserved. And what
is the fitting epitaph for it from us? "O death, where is thy
sting? O grave, where is thy victory?" Thou art overthrown by the
Cross; thou art slain by Him who is the Giver of life; thou art
without breath, dead, without motion, even though thou keepest
the form of a serpent lifted up on high on a pole.
XXIII. Now we will partake of a Passover
which is still typical; though it is plainer than the old one.
For that is ever new which is now becoming known. It is ours to
learn what is that drinking and that enjoyment, and His to teach
and communicate the Word to His disciples. For teaching is food,
even to the Giver of food. Come hither then, and let us partake
of the Law, but in a Gospel manner, not a literal one; perfectly,
not imperfectly; eternally, not temporarily. Let us make our
Head, not the earthly Jerusalem, but the heavenly City; not that
which is now trodden under foot by armies, but that which is
glorified by Angels. Let us sacrifice not young calves, nor lambs
that put forth horns and hoofs, in which many parts are destitute
of life and feeling; but let us sacrifice to God the sacrifice of
praise upon the heavenly Altar, with the heavenly dances; let us
hold aside the first veil; let us approach the second, and look
into the Holy of Holies. Shall I say that which is a greater
thing yet? Let us sacrifice ourselves to God; or rather let us go
on sacrificing throughout every day and at every moment. Let us
accept anything for the Word's sake. By sufferings let us imitate
His Passion: by our blood let us reverence His Blood: let us
gladly mount upon the Cross. Sweet are the nails, though they be
very painful. For to suffer with Christ and for Christ is better
than a life of ease with others.
XXIV. If you are a Simon of Cyrene, take up
the Cross and follow. If you are crucified with Him as a robber,
acknowledge God as a penitent robber. If even He was numbered
among the transgressors for you and your sin, do you become
law-abiding for His sake. Worship Him Who was hanged for you,
even if you yourself are hanging; make some gain even from your
wickedness; purchase salvation by your death; enter with Jesus
into Paradise, so that you may learn from what you have fallen.
Contemplate the glories that are there; let the murderer die
outside with his blasphemies; and if you be a Joseph of
Arimathaea, beg the Body from him that crucified Him, make thine
own that which cleanses the world. If you be a Nicodemus, the
worshipper of God by night, bury Him with spices. If you be a
Mary, or another Mary, or a Salome, or a Joanna, weep in the
early morning. Be first to see the stone taken away, and perhaps
you will see the Angels and Jesus Himself. Say something; hear
His Voice. If He say to you, Touch Me not, stand afar off;
reverence the Word, but grieve not; for He knoweth those to whom
He appeareth first. Keep the feast of the Resurrection; come to
the aid of Eve who was first to fall, of Her who first embraced
the Christ, and made Him known to the disciples. Be a Peter or a
John; hasten to the Sepulchre, running together, running against
one another, vying in the noble race. And even if you be beaten
in speed, win the victory of zeal; not Looking into the tomb, but
Going in. And if, like a Thomas, you were left out when the
disciples were assembled to whom Christ shews Himself, when you
do see Him be not faithless; and if you do not believe, then
believe those who tell you; and if you cannot believe them
either, then have confidence in the print of the nails. If He
descend into Hell, descend with Him. Learn to know the mysteries
of Christ there also, what is the providential purpose of the
twofold descent, to save all men absolutely by His manifestation,
or there too only them that believe.
XXV. And if He ascend up into Heaven,
ascend with Him. Be one of those angels who escort Him, or one of
those who receive Him. Bid the gates be lifted up, or be made
higher, that they may receive Him, exalted after His Passion.
Answer to those who are in doubt because He bears up with Him His
body and the tokens of His Passion, which He had not when He came
down, and who therefore inquire, "Who is this King of Glory?"
that it is the Lord strong and mighty, as in all things that He
hath done from time to time and does, so now in His battle and
triumph for the sake of Mankind. And give to the doubting of the
question the twofold answer. And if they marvel and say as in
Isaiah's drama Who is this that cometh from Edom and from the
things of earth? Or How are the garments red of Him that is
without blood or body, as of one that treads in the full
wine-press? set forth the beauty of the array of the Body that
suffered, adorned by the Passion, and made splendid by the
Godhead, than which nothing can be more lovely or more
beautiful.
XXVI. To this what will those cavillers
say, those bitter reasoners about Godhead, those detractors of
all things that are praiseworthy, those darkeners of Light,
uncultured in respect of Wisdom, for whom Christ died in vain,
unthankful creatures, the work of the Evil One. Do you turn this
benefit into a reproach to God? Will you deem Him little on this
account, that He humbled Himself for your sake, and because to
seek for that which had wandered the Good Shepherd, He who layeth
down His life for the sheep, came upon the mountains and hills
upon which you used to sacrifice, and found the wandering one;
and having found it, took it upon His shoulders, on which He also
bore the wood; and having borne it, brought it back to the life
above; and having brought it back, numbered it among those who
have never strayed. That He lit a candle, His own flesh, and
swept the house, by cleansing away the sin of the world, and
sought for the coin, the Royal Image that was all covered up with
passions, and calls together His friends, the Angelic Powers, at
the finding of the coin, and makes them sharers of His joy, as He
had before made them sharers of the secret of His Incarnation?
That the Light that is exceeding bright should follow the
Candle-Forerunner, and the Word, the Voice, and the Bridegroom,
the Bridegroom's friend, that prepared for the Lord a peculiar
people and cleansed them by the water in preparation for the
Spirit? Do you Reproach God with this? Do you conceive of Him as
less because He girds Himself with a towel and washes His
disciples, and shows that humiliation is the best road to
exaltation; because He humbles Himself for the sake of the soul
that is bent down to the ground, that He may even exalt with
Himself that which is bent double under a weight of sin? How
comes it that you do not also charge it upon Him as a crime that
He eateth with Publicans and at Publicans' tables, and makes
disciples of Publicans that He too may make some gain. And what
gain? The salvation of sinners. If so, one must blame the
physician for stooping over suffering and putting up with evil
smells in order to give health to the sick; and him also who
leans over the ditch, that he may, according to the Law, save the
beast that has fallen into it.
XXVII. He was sent, but sent according to
His Manhood (for He was of two Natures), since He was hungry and
thirsty and weary, and was distressed and wept, according to the
Laws of human nature. But even if He were sent also as God, what
of that? Consider the Mission to be the good pleasure of the
Father, to which He refers all that concerns Himself, both that
He may honour the Eternal Principle, and that He may avoid the
appearance of being a rival God. For He is said on the one hand
to have been betrayed, and on the other it is written that He
gave Himself up; and so too that He was raised and taken up by
the Father, and also that of His own power He rose and ascended.
The former belongs to the Good Pleasure, the latter to His own
Authority; but you dwell upon all that diminishes Him, while you
ignore all that exalts Him. For instance, you score that He
suffered, but you do not add "of His own Will." Ah, what things
has the Word even now to suffer! By some He is honoured as God
but confused with the Father; by others He is dishonoured as
Flesh, and is severed from God. With whom shall He be most
angry-or rather which shall He forgive-those who falsely contract
Him, or those who divide Him? For the former ought to have made a
distinction, and the latter to have made a Union, the one in
number, the other in Godhead. Do you stumble at His Flesh? So did
the Jews. Do you call Him a Samaritan, and the rest which I will
not utter? This did not even the demons, O man more unbelieving
than demons, and more stupid than Jews. The Jews recognized the
title Son as expressing equal rank; and the demons knew that He
who drove them out was God, for they were persuaded by their own
experience. But you will not either admit the equality or confess
the Godhead. It would have been better for you to have been
circumcised and a demoniac-to reduce the matter to an
absurdity-than in uncircumcision and robust health to be thus ill
and ungodly disposed. But for our war with such men, let it be
brought to an end by their returning, however late, to a sound
mind, if they will; or else if they will not, let it be postponed
to another occasion, if they continue as they are. Anyhow, we
will have no fear when contending for the Trinity with the help
of the Trinity.
XXVIII. It is now needful for us to sum up
our discourse as follows: We were created that we might be made
happy. We were made happy when we were created. We were entrusted
with Paradise that we might enjoy life. We received a Commandment
that we might obtain a good repute by keeping it; not that God
did not know what would take place, but because He had laid down
the law of Free Will. We were deceived because we were the
objects of envy. We were cast out because we transgressed. We
fasted because we refused to fast, being overpowered by the Tree
of Knowledge. For the Commandment was ancient, coeval with
ourselves, and was a kind of education of our souls and curb of
luxury, to which we were reasonably made subject, in order that
we might recover by keeping it that which we had lost by not
keeping it. We needed an Incarnate God, a God put to death, that
we might live. We were put to death together with Him, that we
might be cleansed; we rose again with Him because we were put to
death with Him; we were glorified with Him, because we rose again
with Him.
XXIX. Many indeed are the miracles of that
time: God crucified; the sun darkened and again rekindled; for it
was fitting that the creatures should suffer with their Creator;
the veil rent; the Blood and Water shed from His Side; the one as
from a man, the other as above man; the rocks rent for the Rock's
sake; the dead raised for a pledge of the final Resurrection of
all men; the Signs at the Sepulchre and after the Sepulchre,
which none can worthily celebrate; and yet none of these equal to
the Miracle of my salvation. A few drops of Blood recreate the
whole world, and become to all men what rennet is to milk,
drawing us together and compressing us into unity.
XXX. But, O Pascha, great and holy and
purifier of all the world-for I will speak to thee as to a living
person-O Word of God and Light and Life and Wisdom and Might-for
I rejoice in all Thy names-O Offspring and Expression and Signet
of the Great Mind; O Word conceived and Man contemplated, Who
bearest all things, binding them by the Word of Thy power;
receive this discourse, not now as firstfruits, but perhaps as
the completion of my offerings, a thanksgiving, and at the same
time a supplication, that we may suffer no evil beyond those
necessary and sacred cares in which our life has been passed; and
stay the tyranny of the body over us; (Thou seest, O Lord, how
great it is and how it bows me down) or Thine own sentence, if we
are to be condemned by Thee. But if we are to be released, in
accordance with our desire, and be received into the Heavenly
Tabernacle, there too it may be we shall offer Thee acceptable
Sacrifices upon Thine Altar, to Father and Word and Holy Ghost;
for to Thee belongeth all glory and honour and might, world
without end. Amen.