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| Oration Concerning Simeon and Anna On the Day that They Met in the Temple. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Oration
Concerning Simeon and Anna
On the Day that They Met in the
Temple.2986
2986
The oration likewise treats of the Holy Theotocos.
[Published by Pantinus, 1598, and obviously corrupt. Dupin states
that it is “not mentioned by the ancients, nor even by
Photius.” The style resembles that of Methodius in many
places.] |
————————————
I. Although I have
before, as briefly as possible, in my dialogue on chastity,
sufficiently laid the foundations, as it were, for a discourse on
virginity, yet to-day the season has brought forward the entire subject
of the glory of virginity, and its incorruptible crown, for the
delightful consideration of the Church’s foster-children.
For to-day the council chamber of the divine oracles is opened wide,
and the signs prefiguring this glorious day, with its effects and
issues, are by the sacred preachers read over to the assembled
Church. Today the accomplishment of that ancient and true counsel
is, in fact and deed, gloriously manifested to the world. Today,
without any covering,2987 and with unveiled face, we see, as in
a mirror, the glory of the Lord, and the majesty of the divine ark
itself. To-day, the most holy assembly, bearing upon its
shoulders the heavenly joy that was for generations expected, imparts
it to the race of man. “Old things are passed
away”2988 —things new burst forth into
flowers, and such as fade not away. No longer does the stern
decree of the law bear sway, but the grace of the Lord reigneth,
drawing all men to itself by saving long-suffering. No second
time is an Uzziah2989 invisibly
punished, for daring to touch what may not be touched; for God Himself
invites, and who will stand hesitating with fear? He says:
“Come unto Me, all ye that labour and are heavy
laden.”2990 Who, then,
will not run to Him? Let no Jew contradict the truth, looking at
the type which went before the house of Obededom.2991 The Lord has “manifestly
come to His own.”2992
2992
John i. 11; Ps. l.
3. ἦλθεν—ἐμφανῶς. The text
plainly requires this connection with evident allusion to Ps. l. “Our God will manifestly
come” ἐμφανῶς
ἥξει, which passage our author connects
with another from John
i.—Tr. | And sitting on a living and not
inanimate ark, as upon the mercy-seat, He comes forth in solemn
procession upon the earth. The publican, when he touches this
ark, comes away just; the harlot, when she approaches this, is
remoulded, as it were, and becomes chaste; the leper, when he touches
this, is restored whole without pain. It repulses none; it
shrinks from none; it imparts the gifts of healing, without itself
contracting any disease; for the Lord, who loves and cares for man, in
it makes His resting-place. These are the gifts of this new
grace. This is that new and strange thing that has happened under
the sun2993 —a thing
that never had place before, nor will have place again. That
which God of His compassion toward us foreordained has come to pass, He
hath given it fulfilment because of that love for man which is so
becoming to Him. With good right, therefore, has the sacred
trumpet sounded, “Old things are passed away, behold all things
are become new.”2994 And what shall I conceive, what
shall I speak worthy of this day? I am struggling to reach the
inaccessible, for the remembrance of this holy virgin far transcends
all words of mine. Wherefore, since the greatness of the
panegyric required completely puts to shame our limited powers, let us
betake ourselves to that hymn which is not beyond our faculties, and
boasting in our own2995
2995
τὴν
ἀκίνητον
ἧτταν
ἐγκαυχησάμενοι.
It seems better to retain this. Pantinus would substitute
ἀνίκητον for
ἀκίνητον, and render
less happily “invicto hoc certamine victos.” |
unalterable defeat, let us join the rejoicing chorus of Christ’s
flock, who are keeping holy-day. And do you, my divine and
saintly auditors, keep strict silence, in order that through the narrow
channel of ears, as into the harbour of the understanding, the vessel
freighted with truth may peacefully sail. We keep festival, not
according to the vain customs of the Greek mythology; we keep a feast
which brings with it no ridiculous or frenzied banqueting2996
2996 [See
p. 309, note 1, supra, and the reflection upon even the
Banquet of Philosophers, the Symposium of
Plato.] | of the gods,
but which teaches us the wondrous condescension to us men of the awful
glory of Him who is God over all.2997
II.
Come, therefore, Isaiah, most solemn of preachers and greatest of
prophets, wisely unfold to the Church the mysteries of the congregation
in glory, and incite our excellent guests abundantly, to satiate
themselves with enduring dainties, in order that, placing the reality
which we possess over against that mirror of thine, truthful prophet as
thou art, thou mayest joyfully clap thine hands at the issue of thy
predictions. It came to pass, he says, “in the year in
which king Uzziah died, I saw the Lord sitting upon a throne, high and
lifted up; and the house was full of His glory. And the seraphim
stood round about him: each one had six wings. And one
cried unto another, and said, Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord of
hosts: the whole earth is full of His glory. And the posts
of the door were moved at the voice of him that cried, and the house
was filled with smoke. And I said, Woe is me! I am pricked
to the heart, for I am a man of unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst
of a people of unclean lips: for mine eyes have seen the King,
the Lord of hosts. And one of the seraphim was sent unto me,
having a live coal in his hand, which he had taken with the tongs from
off the altar. And he touched my mouth, and said, Lo, this hath
touched thy lips; and thine iniquity is taken away, and thy sin is
purged. Also I heard the voice of the Lord, saying, Whom shall I
send, and who will go unto this people? Then said I, Here am I;
send me. And He said, Go, and tell this people, Hear ye indeed,
but understand not; and see ye indeed, but perceive
not.”2998 These
are the proclamations made beforehand by the prophet through the
Spirit. Do thou, dearly beloved, consider the force of these
words. So shalt thou understand the issue of these
sacramental2999
2999
μυστήριον
is, in the Greek Fathers, equivalent to the Latin
Sacramentum.—Tr. | symbols, and
know both what and how great this assembling together of ourselves
is. And since the prophet has before spoken of this miracle, come
thou, and with the greatest ardour and exultation, and alacrity of
heart, together with the keenest sagacity of thine intelligence, and
therewith approach Bethlehem the renowned, and place before thy mind an
image clear and distinct, comparing the prophecy with the actual issue
of events. Thou wilt not stand in need of many words to come to a
knowledge of the matter; only fix thine eyes on the things which are
taking place there. “All things truly are plain to them
that understand, and right to them that find knowledge.”3000 For, behold,
as a throne high and lifted up by the glory of Him that fashioned it,
the virgin-mother is there made ready, and that most evidently for the
King, the Lord of hosts. Upon this, consider the Lord now coming
unto thee in sinful flesh. Upon this virginal throne, I say,
worship Him who now comes to thee by this new and ever-adorable
way. Look around thee with the eye of faith, and thou wilt find
around Him, as by the ordinance of their courses,3001
3001
ἱεράτευμα.
Perhaps less definitely priesthood. Acc. Arist. it is ἡ περὶ τοὺς
θεοὺς
ἐπιμέλεια.
The cult and ordinances of religion to be observed especially by the
priests, whose business it is to celebrate the excellence of
God.—Tr. | the royal and priestly company of the
seraphim. These, as His bodyguard, are ever wont to attend the
presence of their king. Whence also in this place they are not
only said to hymn with their praises the divine substance of the divine
unity, but also the glory to be adored by all of that one of the sacred
Trinity, which now, by the appearance of God in the flesh, hath even
lighted upon earth. They say: “The whole earth is
full of His glory.” For we believe that, together with the
Son, who was made man for our sakes, according to the good pleasure of
His will,3002
3002
κατὰ
τὴν
εὐδοκίαν.
Allusion is made to Eph. i.
5, According to the good
pleasure of God, and His decree for the salvation of man. Less
aptly Pantinus renders, ob propensam secæm in nos
voluntatem.—Tr. | was also present
the Father, who is inseparable from Him as to His divine nature, anal
also the Spirit, who is of one and the same essence with Him.3003
3003
“One and the same essence.” This is the famous
ὁμοουσιοςof
the Nicene Council.—Tr. | For, as
says Paul, the interpreter of the divine oracle,3004 “God was in Christ reconciling the
world unto Himself, not imputing their trespasses unto
them.”3005 He thus shows
that the Father was in the Son, because that one and the same will
worked in them.
III. Do thou, therefore, O lover of this
festival, when thou hast considered well the glorious mysteries of
Bethlehem, which were brought to pass for thy sake, gladly join thyself
to the heavenly host, which is celebrating magnificently thy
salvation.3006 As once
David did before the ark, so do thou, before this virginal throne,
joyfully lead the dance. Hymn with gladsome song the Lord, who is
always and everywhere present, and Him who from Teman,3007 as says the
prophet, hath thought fit to appear, and that in the flesh, to the race
of men. Say, with Moses, “He is my God, and I will glorify
Him; my father’s God, and I will exalt Him.”3008 Then,
after thine hymn of thanksgiving, we shall usefully inquire what cause
aroused the King of Glory to appear in Bethlehem. His compassion
for us compelled Him, who cannot be compelled, to be born in a human
body at Bethlehem. But what necessity was there that He, when a
suckling infant,3009
3009
ὑποτίτθιον
τυγχάνοντα.
It is an aggravation, so to speak, that He not only willed to become an
infant, and to take upon Him, of necessity, the infirmities of infancy,
but even at that tender age to be banished from His country, and to
make a forcible change of residence, μέτοικος
γενέσθαν.
μέτοικοι are
those who, at the command of their princes, are transferred, by way of
punishment, to another State. Their lands are confiscated.
They are sometimes called ἀνάσπαστοι.
Like to the condition of these was that of Jesus, who fled into Egypt
soon after His birth. For the condition of the μέτοικοι
at Athens, see Art. Smith’s Dict.
Antiq.—Tr. | that
He who, though both in time,
was not limited by time, that He, who though wrapped in swaddling
clothes, was not by them held fast, what necessity was there that He
should be an exile and a stranger from His country? Should you,
forsooth, wish to know this, ye congregation most holy, and upon whom
the Spirit of God hath breathed, listen to Moses proclaiming plainly to
the people, stimulating them, as it were, to the knowledge of this
extraordinary nativity, and saying, “Every male that openeth the
womb, shall be called holy to the Lord.”3010 O wondrous circumstance!
“O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of
God!”3011 It became
indeed the Lord of the law and the prophets to do all things in
accordance with His own law, and not to make void the law, but to
fulfil it, and rather to connect with the fulfilment of the law the
beginning of His grace. Therefore it is that the mother, who was
superior to the law, submits to the law. And she, the holy and
undefiled one, observes that time of forty days that was appointed for
the unclean. And He who makes us free from the law, became
subject to the law; and there is offered for Him, who hath sanctified
us, a pair of clean birds,3012
in testimony of those who approach clean and blameless. Now that
that parturition was unpolluted, and stood not in need of expiatory
victims, Isaiah is our witness, who proclaims distinctly to the whole
earth under the sun: “Before she travailed,” he says,
“she brought forth; before her pains came, she escaped, and
brought forth a man-child.”3013 Who hath heard such a thing?
Who hath seen such things? The must holy virgin mother,
therefore, escaped entirely the manner of women even before she brought
forth: doubtless, in order that the Holy Spirit, betrothing her
unto Himself, and sanctifying her, she might conceive without
intercourse with man. She hath brought forth her first-born Son,
even the only-begotten Son of God, Him, I say, who in the heavens above
shone forth as the only-begotten, without mother, from out His
Father’s substance, and preserved the virginity of His natural
unity undivided and inseparable; and who on earth, in the
virgin’s nuptial chamber, joined to Himself the nature of Adam,
like a bridegroom, by an inalienable union, and preserved His
mother’s purity uncorrupt and uninjured—Him, in short, who
in heaven was begotten without corruption, and on earth brought forth
in a manner quite unspeakable. But to return to our
subject.
IV. Therefore the prophet brought the virgin
from Nazareth, in order that she might give birth at Bethlehem to her
salvation-bestowing child, and brought her back again to Nazareth, in
order to make manifest to the world the hope of life. Hence it
was that the ark of God removed from the inn at Bethlehem, for there He
paid to the law that debt of the forty days, due not to justice but to
grace, and rested upon the mountains of Sion, and receiving into His
pure bosom as upon a lofty throne, and one transcending the nature of
man, the Monarch of all,3014
she presented Him there to God the Father, as the joint-partner of His
throne and inseparable from His nature, together with that pure and
undefiled flesh which he had of her substance assumed. The holy
mother goes up to the temple to exhibit to the law a new and strange
wonder, even that child long expected, who opened the virgin’s
womb, and yet did not burst the barriers of virginity; that child,
superior to the law, who yet fulfilled the law; that child that was at
once before the law, and yet after it; that child, in short, who was of
her incarnate beyond the law of nature.3015
3015 [Here
seems to me a deep and true insight regarding the scriptural topics and
events touched upon.] | For in other cases every womb being
first opened by connection with a man, and, being impregnated by his
seed, receives the beginning of conception, and by the pangs which make
perfect parturition, doth at length bring forth to light its offspring
endowed with reason, and with its nature consistent, in accordance with
the wise provision of God its Creator. For God said, “Be
fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth.” But the
womb of this virgin, without being opened before, or being impregnated
with seed, gave birth to an offspring that transcended nature, while at
the same time it was cognate to it, and that without detriment to the
indivisible unity, so that the miracle was the more stupendous, the
prerogative of virginity likewise remaining intact. She goes up,
therefore to the temple, she who was more exalted than the temple,
clothed with a double glory—the glory, I say, of undefiled
virginity, and that of ineffable fecundity, the benediction of the law,
and the sanctification of grace. Wherefore he says who saw
it: “And the whole house was full of His glory, and the
seraphim stood round about him; and one cried unto another, and said,
Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord of hosts: the whole earth is full
of His glory.”3016 As also the blessed prophet Habakkuk
has charmingly sung, saying, “In the midst of two living
creatures thou shalt be known: as the years draw nigh
thou shalt be
recognised—when the time is come thou shalt be shown
forth.”3017
3017
The quotation from the prophet Habakkuk is from the LXX.
version.—Tr. | See, I
pray you, the exceeding accuracy of the Spirit. He speaks of
knowledge, recognition, showing forth. As to the first of
these: “In the midst of two living creatures thou shalt be
known,”3018 he refers to
that overshadowing of the divine glory which, in the time of the law,
rested in the Holy of holies upon the covering of the ark, between the
typical cherubim, as He says to Moses, “There will I be known to
thee.”3019 But He
refers likewise to that concourse of angels, which hath now come to
meet us, by the divine and ever adorable manifestation of the Saviour
Himself in the flesh, although He in His very nature cannot be beheld
by us, as Isaiah has even before declared. But when He says,
“As the years draw nigh, thou shalt be recognised,” He
means, as has been said before, that glorious recognition of our
Saviour, God in the flesh, who is otherwise invisible to mortal eye; as
somewhere Paul, that great interpreter of sacred mysteries, says:
“But when the fulness of the time was come, God sent forth His
Son, made of a woman, made under the law, to redeem them that were
under the law, that we might receive the adoption of
sons.”3020 And then, as
to that which is subjoined, “When the time is come, Thou shalt be
shown forth,” what exposition doth this require, if a man
diligently direct the eye of his mind to the festival which we are now
celebrating? “For then shalt Thou be shown forth,” He
says, “as upon a kingly charger, by Thy pure and chaste mother,
in the temple, and that in the grace and beauty of the flesh assumed by
Thee.” All these things the prophet, summing up for the
sake of greater clearness, exclaims in brief: “The Lord is
in His holy temple;”3021
“Fear before Him all the earth.”3022
V. Tremendous, verily, is the mystery
connected with thee, O virgin mother, thou spiritual throne, glorified
and made worthy of God.3023
3023
[Note “made worthy;” so “found
grace” and “my Saviour,” in St. Luke.
Hence not immaculate by nature.] | Thou hast brought forth, before
the eyes of those in heaven and earth, a pre-eminent wonder. And
it is a proof of this, and an irrefragable argument, that at the
novelty of thy supernatural child-bearing, the angels sang on earth,
“Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good-will
towards men,”3024
by their threefold song bringing in a threefold holiness.3025
3025
τὸν
τῆιπλασιασμὸν
τὴς
ἁγιότητος,
Pantinus translates triplicem sanctitatis rationem, but
this is hardly theological. Allusion is made to the song of the
seraphim, Isa. vi.; and our author contends that the threefold hymn
sung by the angels at Christ’s birth answers to that threefold
acclamation of theirs in sign of the triune Deity.—Tr. | Blessed art
thou among the generations of women, O thou of God most blessed, for by
thee the earth has been filled with that divine glory of God; as in the
Psalms it is sung: “Blessed be the Lord God of Israel, and
the whole earth shall be filled with His glory. Amen.
Amen.”3026 And the
posts of the door, says the prophet, moved at the voice of him that
cried, by which is signified the veil of the temple drawn before the
ark of the covenant, which typified thee, that the truth might be laid
open to me, and also that I might be taught, by the types and figures
which went before, to approach with reverence and trembling to do
honour to the sacred mystery which is connected with thee; and that by
means of this prior shadow-painting of the law I might be restrained
from boldly and irreverently contemplating with fixed gaze Him who, in
His incomprehensibility, is seated far above all.3027
3027
τὸν τὰ
πάντα ἐν
ἀκαταληψίᾳ
ὑπεριδρυμένον. Cf. 1
Tim. vi. 16, φῶς οἰκῶν
ἀπρόσιτον, ὃν
εἶδεν οὐδεὶς
ἀνθρώπων
οὐδὲ ἰδεῖν
δύναται.—Tr. | For if to the ark, which was the
image and type of thy sanctity, such honour was paid of God that to no
one but to the priestly order only was the access to it open, or
ingress allowed to behold it, the veil separating it off, and keeping
the vestibule as that of a queen, what, and what sort of veneration is
due to thee from us who are of creation the least, to thee who art
indeed a queen; to thee, the living ark of God, the Lawgiver; to thee,
the heaven that contains Him who can be contained of none? For
since thou, O holy virgin,3028
3028
[This apostrophe is not prayer nor worship. (See
sec. xiv., infra.) It may be made by any
orator. See Burgon’s pertinent references to Legh Richmond
and Bishop Horne, Lett. from Rome, pp. 237, 238.] | hast dawned as a bright day upon the
world and hast brought forth the Sun of Righteousness, that hateful
horror of darkness has been chased away; the power of the tyrant has
been broken, death hath been destroyed, hell swallowed up, and all
enmity dissolved before the face of peace; noxious diseases depart now
that salvation looks forth; and the whole universe has been filled with
the pure and clear light of truth. To which things Solomon
alludes in the Book of Canticles, and begins thus: “My
beloved is mine, and I am his; he feedeth among the lilies until the
day break, and the shadows flee away.”3029 Since then, the God of gods hath
appeared in Sion, and the splendour of His beauty hath appeared in
Jerusalem; and “a light has sprung up for the righteous, and joy
for those who are true of heart.”3030 According to the blessed David, the
Perfecter and Lord of the perfected3031
3031
ὁ τῶν
τελουμένων
τελειωτής,
initiator, consummator. διὰ τοῦ
Πνεύματος
ἁγίου is to be referred to
συνεκάλεσεν,
rather than to τῶν
πραττομένων
.—Tr. | hath, by the Holy Spirit, called the
teacher and minister of the
law to minister and testify of those things which were done.
VI. Hence the aged Simeon, putting off the
weakness of the flesh, and putting on the strength of hope, in the face
of the law hastened to receive the Minister of the law, the
Teacher3032
3032
τὸν
αὐθέντην
διδάσκαλον.
The allusion is to Mark i.
22. | with authority,
the God of Abraham, the Protector of Isaac, the Holy One of Israel, the
Instructor of Moses; Him, I say, who promised to show him His divine
incarnation, as it were His hinder parts;3033 Him who, in the midst of poverty, was
rich; Him who in infancy was before the ages; Him who, though seen, was
invisible; Him who in comprehension was incomprehensible; Him who,
though in littleness, yet surpassed all magnitude—at one and the
same time in the temple and in the highest heavens—on a royal
throne, and on the chariot of the cherubim Him who is both above and
below continuously; Him who is in the form of a servant, and in the
form of God the Father; a subject, and yet King of all. He was
entirely given up to desire, to hope, to joy; he was no longer his own,
but His who had been looked for. The Holy Spirit had announced to
him the joyful tidings, and before he reached the temple, carried aloft
by the eyes of his understanding, as if even now he possessed what he
had longed for, he exulted with joy. Being thus led on, and in
his haste treading the air with his steps, he reaches the shrine
hitherto held sacred; but, not heeding the temple, he stretches out his
holy arms to the Ruler of the temple, chanting forth in song such
strains as become the joyous occasion: I long for Thee, O Lord
God of my fathers, and Lord of mercy, who hast deigned, of Thine own
glory and goodness, which provides for all, of Thy gracious
condescension, with which Thou inclinest towards us, as a Mediator
bringing peace, to establish harmony between earth and heaven. I
seek Thee, the Great Author of all. With longing I expect Thee
who, with Thy word, embracest all things. I wait for Thee, the
Lord of life and death. For Thee I look, the Giver of the law,
and the Successor of the law. I hunger for Thee, who quickenest
the dead; I thirst for Thee, who refreshest the weary; I desire Thee,
the Creator and Redeemer of the world.3034 Thou art our God, and Thee we
adore; Thou art our holy Temple, and in Thee we pray; Thou art our
Lawgiver, and Thee we obey; Thou art God of all things the First.
Before Thee was no other god begotten of God the Father; neither after
Thee shall there be any other son consubstantial and of one glory with
the Father. And to know Thee is perfect righteousness, and to
know Thy power is the root of immortality.3035 Thou art He who, for our salvation,
was made the head stone of the corner, precious and honourable,
declared before to Sion.3036
3036
Ps. cxviii. 22; Isa. xxviii.
16; 1 Pet. ii. 6. | For all things are placed under
Thee as their Cause and Author, as He who brought all things into being
out of nothing, and gave to what was unstable a firm coherence; as the
connecting Band and Preserver of that which has been brought into
being; as the Framer of things by nature different; as He who, with
wise and steady hand, holds the helm of the universe; as the very
Principle of all good order; as the irrefragable Bond of concord and
peace. For in Thee we live, and move, and have our
being.3037
Wherefore, O Lord my God, I will glorify Thee, I will praise Thy name;
for Thou hast done wonderful things; Thy counsels of old are
faithfulness and truth; Thou art clothed with majesty and
honour.3038
3038
Exod. xv. 2; Isa. xxv. 1; Ps.
civ. 1. | For
what is more splendid for a king than a purple robe embroidered around
with flowers, and a shining diadem? Or what for God, who delights
in man, is more magnificent than this merciful assumption of the
manhood, illuminating with its resplendent rays those who sit in
darkness and the shadow of death?3039 Fitly did that temporal king and
Thy servant once sing of Thee as the King Eternal, saying, Thou art
fairer than the children of men, who amongst men art very God and
man.3040
3040
1 Tim. i. 17; Ps. xlv.
2. | For Thou
hast girt, by Thy incarnation, Thy loins with righteousness, and
anointed Thy veins with faithfulness, who Thyself art very
righteousness and truth, the joy and exultation of all.3041 Therefore
rejoice with me this day, ye heavens, for the Lord hath showed mercy to
His people. Yea, let the clouds drop the dew of righteousness
upon the world; let the foundations of the earth sound a trumpet-blast
to those in Hades, for the resurrection of them that sleep is
come.3042 Let the
earth also cause compassion to spring up to its inhabitants; for I am
filled with comfort; I am exceeding joyful since I have seen Thee, the
Saviour of men.3043
VII. While the old man was thus exultant, and
rejoicing with exceeding great and holy joy, that which had before been
spoken of in a figure by the prophet Isaiah, the holy mother of God now
manifestly fulfilled. For taking, as from a pure and undefiled
altar, that coal living and ineffable, with man’s flesh invested,
in the embrace of her sacred hands, as it were with the tongs, she held
Him out to that just one, addressing and exhorting him, as it seems to
me, in words to this effect: Receive, O reverend senior, thou of
priests the most excellent,
receive the Lord, and reap the full fruition of that hope of thine
which is not left widowed and desolate. Receive, thou of men the
most illustrious, the unfailing treasure, and those riches which can
never be taken away. Take to thine embrace, O thou of men most
wise, that unspeakable might, that unsearchable power, which can alone
support thee. Embrace, thou minister of the temple, the Greatness
infinite, and the Strength incomparable. Fold thyself around Him
who is the very life itself, and live, O thou of men most
venerable. Cling closely to incorruption and be renewed, O thou
of men most righteous. Not too bold is the attempt; shrink not
from it then, O thou of men most holy. Satiate thyself with Him
thou hast longed for, and take thy delight in Him who has been given,
or rather who gives Himself to thee, O thou of men most divine.
Joyfully draw thy light, O thou of men most pious, from the Sun of
Righteousness, that gleams around thee through the unsullied mirror of
the flesh. Fear not His gentleness, nor let His clemency terrify
thee, O thou of men most blessed. Be not afraid of His lenity,
nor shrink from His kindness, O thou of men most modest. Join
thyself to Him with alacrity, and delay not to obey Him. That
which is spoken to thee, and held out to thee, savours not of
over-boldness. Be not then reluctant, O thou of men the most
decorous. The flame of the grace of my Lord does not consume, but
illuminates thee, O thou of men most just.3044 Let the bush which set forth me in
type, with respect to the verity of that fire which yet had no
subsistence, teach thee this, O thou who art in the law the best
instructed.3045 Let that
furnace which was as it were a breeze distilling dew persuade thee, O
master, of the dispensation of this mystery. Then, beside all
this, let my womb be a proof to thee, in which He was contained, who in
nought else was ever contained, of the substance of which the incarnate
Word yet deigned to become incarnate. The blast3046 of the trumpet does not now terrify those
who approach, nor a second time does the mountain all on smoke cause
terror to those who draw nigh, nor indeed does the law punish
relentlessly3047 those who would
boldly touch. What is here present speaks of love to man; what is
here apparent, of the Divine condescension. Thankfully, then,
receive the God who comes to thee, for He shall take away thine
iniquities, and thoroughly purge thy sins. In thee, let the
cleansing of the world first, as in type, have place. In thee,
and by thee, let that justification which is of grace become known
beforehand to the Gentiles. Thou art worthy of the quickening
first-fruits. Thou hast made good use of the law. Use grace
henceforth. With the letter thou hast grown weary; in the spirit
be renewed. Put off that which is old, and clothe thyself with
that which is new. For of these matters I think not that thou art
ignorant.
VIII. Upon all this that righteous man,
waxing bold and yielding to the exhortation of the mother of God, who
is the handmaid of God in regard to the things which pertain to men,
received into his aged arms Him who in infancy was yet the Ancient of
days, and blessed God, and said, “Lord, now lettest Thou Thy
servant depart in peace, according to Thy word: for mine eyes
have seen Thy salvation, which Thou hast prepared before the face of
all people; a light to lighten the Gentiles, and the glory of Thy
people Israel.”3048 I have received from Thee a joy
unmixed with pain. Do thou, O Lord, receive me rejoicing, and
singing of Thy mercy and compassion. Thou hast given unto me this
joy of heart. I render unto Thee with gladness my tribute of
thanksgiving. I have known the power of the love of God.
Since, for my sake, God of Thee begotten, in a manner ineffable, and
without corruption, has become man. I have known the inexplicable
greatness of Thy love and care for us, for Thou hast sent forth Thine
own bowels to come to our deliverance. Now, at length, I
understand what I had from Solomon learned: “Strong as
death is love: for by it shall the sting of death be done away,
by it shall the dead see life, by it shall even death learn what death
is, being made to cease from that dominion which over us he
exercised. By it, also, shall the serpent, the author of our
evils, be taken captive and overwhelmed.”3049 Thou hast made known to us, O Lord,
Thy salvation,3050 causing to
spring up for us the plant of peace, and we shall no longer wander in
error. Thou hast made known to us, O Lord, that Thou hast not
unto the end overlooked Thy servants; neither hast Thou, O beneficent
One, forgotten entirely the works of Thine hands. For out of Thy
compassion for our low estate Thou hast shed forth upon us abundantly
that goodness of Thine which is inexhaustible, and with Thy very nature
cognate, having redeemed us by Thine only begotten Son, who is
unchangeably like to Thee, and of one substance with Thee; judging it
unworthy of Thy majesty and goodness to entrust to a servant the work
of saving and benefiting Thy servants, or to cause that those who had
offended should be reconciled by a minister. But by means of that
light, which is of one substance with Thee, Thou hast given light to
those that sat in darkness3051
3051
Isa. ix. 2; xlii. 7; Luke i.
79. |
and in the shadow of death, in order that in Thy light they
might see the light of knowledge;3052 and it has seemed good to Thee, by means
of our Lord and Creator, to fashion us again unto immortality; and Thou
hast graciously given unto us a return to Paradise by means of Him who
separated us from the joys of Paradise; and by means of Him who hath
power to forgive sins Thou hast3053 blotted out the handwriting which was
against us.3054 Lastly, by
means of Him who is a partaker of Thy throne and who cannot be
separated from Thy divine nature, Thou hast given unto us the gift of
reconciliation and access unto Thee with confidence in order that, by
the Lord who recognises the sovereign authority of none, by the true
and omnipotent God, the subscribed sanction, as it were, of so many and
such great blessings might constitute the justifying gifts of grace to
be certain and indubitable rights to those who have obtained
mercy. And this very thing the prophet before had announced in
the words: No ambassador, nor angel, but the Lord Himself saved
them; because He loved them, and spared them, and He took them up, and
exalted them.3055 And all this
was, not of works of righteousness3056 which we have done, nor because we loved
Thee,—for our first earthly forefather, who was honourably
entertained, in the delightful abode of Paradise, despised Thy divine
and saving commandment, and was judged unworthy of that life-giving
place, and mingling his seed with the bastard off-shoots of sin, he
rendered it very weak;—but Thou, O Lord, of Thine own self, and
of Thine ineffable love toward the creature of Thine hands, hast
confirmed Thy mercy toward us, and, pitying our estrangement from Thee,
hast moved Thyself at the sight of our degradation3057 to take us into compassion. Hence,
for the future, a joyous festival is established for us of the race of
Adam, because the first Creator of Adam of His own free-will has become
the Second Adam. And the brightness of the Lord our God hath come
down to sojourn with us, so that we see God face to face, and are
saved. Therefore, O Lord, I seek of Thee to be allowed to
depart. I have seen Thy salvation; let me be delivered from the
bent yoke of the letter. I have seen the King Eternal, to whom no
other succeeds; let me be set free from this servile and burdensome
chain. I have seen Him who is by nature my Lord and Deliverer;
may I obtain, then, His decree for my deliverance. Set me free
from the yoke of condemnation, and place me under the yoke of
justification. Deliver me from the yoke of the curse, and of the
letter that killeth;3058 and enrol me in the blessed company of
those who, by the grace of this Thy true Son, who is of equal glory and
power with Thee, have been received into the adoption of
sons.
IX. Let then, says he, what I have thus far
said in brief, suffice for the present as my offering of thanks to
God. But what shall I say to thee, O mother-virgin and
virgin-mother? For the praise even of her who is not man’s
work exceeds the power of man. Wherefore the dimness of my
poverty I will make bright with the splendour of the gifts of the
spirits that around thee shine, and offering to thee of thine own, from
the immortal meadows I will pluck a garland for thy sacred and divinely
crowned head. With thine ancestral hymns will I greet thee, O
daughter of David, and mother of the Lord and God of David. For
it were both base and inauspicious to adorn thee, who in thine own
glory excellest with that which belongeth unto another. Receive,
therefore, O lady most benignant, gifts precious, and such as are
fitted to thee alone, O thou who art exalted above all generations, and
who, amongst all created things, both visible and invisible, shinest
forth as the most honourable. Blessed is the root of Jesse, and
thrice blessed is the house of David, in which thou hast sprung
up.3059 God is in
the midst of thee, and thou shalt not be moved, for the Most High hath
made holy the place of His tabernacle. For in thee the covenants
and oaths made of God unto the fathers have received a most glorious
fulfilment, since by thee the Lord hath appeared, the God of hosts with
us. That bush which could not be touched,3060 which beforehand shadowed forth thy figure
endowed with divine majesty, bare God without being consumed, who
manifested Himself to the prophet just so far as He willed to be
seen. Then, again, that hard and rugged rock,3061 which imaged forth the grace and
refreshment which has sprung out from thee for all the world, brought
forth abundantly in the desert out of its thirsty sides a healing
draught for the fainting people. Yea, moreover, the rod of the
priest which, without culture, blossomed forth in fruit,3062 the pledge and
earnest of a perpetual priesthood, furnished no contemptible symbol of
thy supernatural child-bearing.3063 What, moreover? Hath not the
mighty Moses expressly declared, that on account of these types of
thee, hard to be understood,3064
he delayed longer on the mountain, in order that he might learn, O holy
one, the mysteries that with thee are connected? For being commanded
to build the ark as a sign and similitude of this thing, he was not
negligent in obeying the command, although a tragic occurrence happened
on his descent from the mount; but having made it in size five cubits
and a half, he appointed it to be the receptacle of the law, and
covered it with the wings of the cherubim, most evidently
pre-signifying thee, the mother of God, who hast conceived Him without
corruption, and in an ineffable manner brought forth Him who is
Himself, as it were, the very consistence of incorruption, and that
within the limits of the five and a half circles of the world. On
thy account, and the undefiled Incarnation of God, the Word, which by
thee had place for the sake of that flesh which immutably and
indivisibly remains with Him for ever.3065 The golden pot also, as a most
certain type, preserved the manna contained in it, which in other cases
was changed day by day, unchanged, and keeping fresh for ages.
The prophet Elijah3066
likewise, as prescient of thy chastity, and being emulous of it through
the Spirit, bound around him the crown of that fiery life, being by the
divine decree adjudged superior to death. Thee also, prefiguring
his successor Elisha,3067 having been instructed by a wise master,
and anticipating thy presence who wast not yet born, by certain sure
indications of the things that would have place hereafter,3068
3068
2 Kings ii. 20; iv. 41;
v. | ministered
help and healing to those who were in need of it, which was of a virtue
beyond nature; now with a new cruse, which contained healing salt,
curing the deadly waters, to show that the world was to be recreated by
the mystery manifested in thee; now with unleavened meal, in type
responding to thy child-bearing, without being defiled by the seed of
man, banishing from the food the bitterness of death; and then again,
by efforts which transcended nature, rising superior to the natural
elements in the Jordan, and thus exhibiting, in signs beforehand, the
descent of our Lord into Hades, and His wonderful deliverance of those
who were held fast in corruption. For all things yielded and
succumbed to that divine image which prefigured thee.
X. But why do I digress, and lengthen out my
discourse, giving it the rein with these varied illustrations, and that
when the truth of thy matter stands like a column before the eye, in
which it were better and more profitable to luxuriate and delight
in? Wherefore, bidding adieu to the spiritual narrations and
wondrous deeds of the saints throughout all ages, I pass on to thee who
art always to be had in remembrance, and who holdest the helm, as it
were, of this festival.3069
3069 [The
feast of the Purification. Here follows an impassioned
apostrophe, which apart from its Oriental extravagance is full of
poetical beauty. Its language, however, like that of other parts
of this Oration, suggests at least interpolation, subsequent to the
Nestorian controversy. Previously, there would have been no call
for such vehemence of protestation.] |
Blessed art thou, all-blessed, and to be desired
of all. Blessed of the Lord is thy name, full of divine grace,
and grateful exceedingly to God, mother of God, thou that givest light
to the faithful. Thou art the circumscription, so to speak, of
Him who cannot be circumscribed; the root3070 of the most beautiful flower; the mother
of the Creator; the nurse of the Nourisher; the circumference of Him
who embraces all things; the upholder of Him3071 who upholds all things by His word; the
gate through which God appears in the flesh;3072 the tongs of that cleansing
coal;3073 the bosom in
small of that bosom which is all-containing; the fleece of
wool,3074 the mystery of
which cannot be solved; the well of Bethlehem,3075 that reservoir of life which David longed
for, out of which the draught of immortality gushed forth; the
mercy-seat3076 from which God
in human form was made known unto men; the spotless robe of Him who
clothes Himself with light as with a garment.3077 Thou hast lent to God, who stands
in need of nothing, that flesh which He had not, in order that the
Omnipotent might become that which it was his good pleasure to
be. What is more splendid than this? What than this is more
sublime? He who fills earth and heaven,3078 whose are all things, has become in
need of thee, for thou hast lent to God that flesh which He had
not. Thou hast clad the Mighty One with that beauteous panoply of
the body by which it has become possible for Him to be seen by mine
eyes. And I, in order that I might freely approach to behold Him,
have received that by which all the fiery darts of the wicked shall be
quenched.3079 Hail!
hail! mother and handmaid of God. Hail! hail! thou to whom the
great Creditor of all is a debtor. We are all debtors to God, but
to thee He is Himself indebted.
For He who said, “Honour thy father and thy
mother,”3080 will have
most assuredly, as Himself willing to be proved by such proofs, kept
inviolate that grace, and His own decree towards her who ministered to
Him that nativity to which He voluntarily stooped, and will have
glorified with a divine honour her whom He, as being without a father,
even as she was without a husband, Himself has written down as
mother. Even so must these things be. For the
hymns3081
3081
[Apostrophes like the above; panegyrical, not odes of worship.] |
which we offer to thee, O
thou most holy and admirable habitation of God, are no merely useless
and ornamental words. Nor, again, is thy spiritual laudation mere
secular trifling, or the shoutings of a false flattery, O thou who of
God art praised; thou who to God gavest suck; who by nativity givest
unto mortals their beginning of being, but they are of clear and
evident truth. But the time would fail us, ages and succeeding
generations too, to render unto thee thy fitting salutation as the
mother of the King Eternal,3082 even as somewhere the illustrious
prophet says, teaching us how incomprehensible thou art.3083 How
great is the house of God, and how large is the place of His
possession! Great, and hath none end, high and
unmeasurable. For verily, verily, this prophetic oracle, and most
true saying, is concerning thy majesty; for thou alone hast been
thought worthy to share with God the things of God; who hast alone
borne in the flesh Him, who of God the Father was the Eternally and
Only-Begotten. So do they truly believe who hold fast to the pure
faith.3084
3084
[This must have been interpolated after the Council of Ephesus,
a.d. 431. The whole Oration is probably
after that date.] |
XI. But for the time that remains, my most
attentive hearers, let us take up the old man, the receiver of God, and
our pious teacher, who hath put in here, as it were, in safety from
that virginal sea, and let us refresh him, both satisfied as to his
divine longing, and conveying to us this most blessed theology; and let
us ourselves follow out the rest of our discourse, directing our course
unerringly with reference to our prescribed end, and that under the
guidance of God the Almighty, so shall we not be found altogether
unfruitful and unprofitable as to what is required of us. When,
then, to these sacred rites, prophecy and the priesthood had been
jointly called, and that pair of just ones elected of God—Simeon,
I mean, and Anna, bearing in themselves most evidently the images of
both peoples—had taken their station by the side of that glorious
and virginal throne,—for by the old man was represented the
people of Israel, and the law now waxing old; whilst the widow
represents the Church of the Gentiles, which had been up to this point
a widow,—the old man, indeed, as personating the law, seeks
dismissal; but the widow, as personating the Church, brought her joyous
confession of faith3085 and spake of Him to all that looked for
redemption in Jerusalem, even as the things that were spoken of both
have been appositely and excellently recorded, and quite in harmony
with the sacred festival. For it was fitting and necessary that
the old man who knew so accurately that decree of the law, in which it
is said: Hear Him, and every soul that will not hearken unto Him
shall be cut off from His people,3086 should seek a peaceful discharge from
the tutorship of the law; for in truth it were insolence and
presumption, when the king is present and addressing the people, for
one of his attendants to make a speech over against him, and that to
this man his subjects should incline their ears. It was
necessary, too, that the widow who had been increased with gifts beyond
measure, should in festal strains return her thanks to God; and so the
things which there took place were agreeable to the law. But, for
what remains, it is necessary to inquire how, since the prophetic types
and figures bear, as has been shown, a certain analogy and relation to
this prominent feast, it is said that the house was filled with
smoke. Nor does the prophet say this incidentally, but with
significance, speaking of that cry of the Thrice-Holy,3087 uttered by
the heavenly seraphs. You will discover the meaning of this, my
attentive hearer, if you do but take up and examine what follows upon
this narration: For hearing, he says, ye shall hear, and shall
not understand; and seeing, ye shall see, and not perceive.3088 When,
therefore, the foolish Jewish children had seen the glorious wonders
which, as David sang, the Lord had performed in the earth, and had seen
the sign from the depth3089
3089
Ps. xlvi. 8; Isa. vii.
11. | and from the height meeting together,
without division or confusion; as also Isaiah had before declared,
namely, a mother beyond nature, and an offspring beyond reason; an
earthly mother and a heavenly son; a new taking of man’s nature,
I say, by God, and a child-bearing without marriage; what in
creation’s circuit could be more glorious and more to be spoken
of than this! yet when they had seen this it was all one as if they had
not seen it; they closed their eyes, and in respect of praise were
supine. Therefore the house in which they boasted was filled with
smoke.
XII. And in addition to this, when besides the
spectacle, and even beyond the spectacle, they heard an old man, very
righteous, very worthy of credit, worthy also of emulation, inspired by
the Holy Spirit, a teacher of the law, honoured with the priesthood,
illustrious in the gift of prophecy, by the hope which he had conceived
of Christ, extending the limits of life, and putting off the debt of
death—when they saw him, I say, leaping for joy, speaking words
of good omen, quite transformed with gladness of heart, entirely rapt
in a divine and holy ecstasy; who from a man had been changed into an
angel by a godly change, and, for the immensity of his joy,
chanted his hymn of
thanksgiving, and openly proclaimed the “Light to lighten the
Gentiles, and the glory of Thy people Israel.”3090 Not even then were they willing to
hear what was placed within their hearing, and held in veneration by
the heavenly beings themselves; wherefore the house in which they
boasted was filled with smoke. Now smoke is a sign and sure
evidence of wrath; as it is written, “There went up a smoke in
His anger, and fire from His countenance devoured;”3091 and in another
place, “Amongst the disobedient people shall the fire
burn,”3092 which plainly,
in the revered Gospels, our Lord signified, when He said to the Jews,
“Behold your house is left unto you desolate.”3093 Also, in
another place, “The king sent forth his armies, and destroyed
those murderers, and burnt up their city.”3094 Of such a nature was the adverse
reward of the Jews for their unbelief, which caused them to refuse to
pay to the Trinity the tribute of praise. For after that the ends
of the earth were sanctified, and the mighty house of the Church was
filled, by the proclamation of the Thrice Holy, with the glory of the
Lord, as the great waters cover the seas,3095 there happened to them the things which
before had been declared, and the beginning of prophecy was confirmed
by its issue, the preacher of truth signifying, as has been said, by
the Holy Spirit, as it were in an example, the dreadful destruction
which was to come upon them, in the words: “In the year in
which king Uzziah died, I saw the Lord”—Uzziah, doubtless,
as an apostate, being taken as the representative of the whole apostate
body—the head of which he certainly was—who also, paying
the penalty due to his presumption, carried on his forehead, as upon a
brazen statue, the divine vengeance engraved, by the loathsomeness of
leprosy, exhibiting to all the retribution of their loathsome
impiety. Wherefore with divine wisdom did he, who had
foreknowledge of these events, oppose the bringing in of the thankful
Anna to the casting out of the ungrateful synagogue. Her very
name also pre-signifies the Church, that by the grace of Christ and God
is justified in baptism. For Anna is, by interpretation,
grace.
XIII. But here, as in port, putting in the
vessel that bears the ensign of the cross, let us reef the sails of our
oration, in order that it may be with itself commensurate. Only
first, in as few words as possible, let us salute the city of the Great
King3096
3096
Ps. xlviii. 2; Matt. v. 35;
Isa. i. 26. | together with
the whole body of the Church, as being present with them in spirit, and
keeping holy-day with the Father, and the brethren most held in honour
there. Hail, thou city of the Great King, in which the mysteries
of our salvation are consummated. Hail, thou heaven upon earth,
Sion, the city that is for ever faithful unto the Lord. Hail, and
shine thou Jerusalem, for thy light is come, the Light Eternal, the
Light for ever enduring, the Light Supreme, the Light Immaterial, the
Light of one substance with God and the Father, the Light which is in
the Spirit, and in which is the Father; the Light which illumines the
ages; the Light which gives light to mundane and supramundane things,
Christ our very God. Hail, city sacred and elect of the
Lord. Joyfully keep thy festal days, for they will not multiply
so as to wax old and pass away. Hail, thou city most happy, for
glorious things are spoken of thee; thy priest shall be clothed with
righteousness, and thy saints shall shout for joy, and thy poor shall
be satisfied with bread.3097
3097
Isa. lx. 1; Ps. lxxxvii. 3;
Ps. cxxxii. 16. | Hail! rejoice, O Jerusalem, for
the Lord reigneth in the midst of thee.3098 That Lord, I say, who in His
simple and immaterial Deity, entered our nature, and of the
virgin’s womb became ineffably incarnate; that Lord, who was
partaker of nothing else save the lump of Adam, who was by the serpent
tripped up. For the Lord laid not hold of the seed of
angels3099 —those, I
say, who fell not away from that beauteous order and rank that was
assigned to them from the beginning. To us He condescended, that
Word who was always with the Father co-existent God. Nor, again,
did He come into the world to restore; nor will He restore, as has been
imagined by some impious advocates of the devil, those wicked demons
who once fell from light; but when the Creator and Framer of all things
had, as the most divine Paul says, laid hold of the seed of Abraham,
and through him of the whole human race, He was made man for ever, and
without change, in order that by His fellowship with us, and our
joining on to Him, the ingress of sin into us might be stopped, its
strength being broken by degrees, and itself as wax being melted, by
that fire which the Lord, when He came, sent upon the earth.3100 Hail to thee,
thou Catholic Church,3101
3101 [Here
is an apostrophe to the Church, a hymn to “the Elect
Lady.” See, illustrating note 17, p. 390,
supra.] |
which hast been planted in all the earth, and do thou rejoice with
us. Fear not, little flock, the storms of the enemy,3102
3102
τρικυμίας, stormy waves. Latin, decumani
fluctus. Methodius perhaps alludes to Diocletian’s
persecution, in which he perished as a martyr.—Tr. | for it is your
Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom, and that you
should tread upon the necks of your enemies.3103 Hail, and rejoice, thou that wast
once barren, and without seed unto godliness, but who
hast now many children of
faith.3104 Hail, thou
people of the Lord, thou chosen generation, thou royal priesthood, thou
holy nation, thou peculiar people—show forth His praises who hath
called you out of darkness into His marvellous light; and for His
mercies glorify Him.3105
XIV. Hail to thee for ever, thou virgin
mother of God, our unceasing joy, for unto thee do I again
return.3106
3106 [He
again apostrophizes the Blessed Theotocos, but in language
hardly appropriate to the period preceding Cyril of Alexandria.] | Thou art
the beginning of our feast; thou art its middle and end;3107
3107
[Not so, for he ends with a noble strain of worship to the
Son of God. This expression suggests interpolation.] | the pearl of
great price that belongest unto the kingdom; the fat of every victim,
the living altar of the bread of life. Hail, thou treasure of the
love of God. Hail, thou fount of the Son’s love for
man. Hail, thou overshadowing mount3108 of the Holy Ghost. Thou gleamedst,
sweet gift-bestowing mother, of the light of the sun; thou gleamedst
with the insupportable fires of a most fervent charity, bringing forth
in the end that which was conceived of thee before the beginning,
making manifest the mystery hidden and unspeakable, the invisible Son
of the Father—the Prince of Peace, who in a marvellous manner
showed Himself as less than all littleness. Wherefore, we pray
thee, the most excellent among women, who boastest in the confidence of
thy maternal honours, that thou wouldest unceasingly keep us in
remembrance. O holy mother of God, remember us, I say, who make
our boast in thee, and who in hymns august celebrate the memory, which
will ever live, and never fade away. And do thou also, O honoured
and venerable Simeon, thou earliest host of our holy religion, and
teacher of the resurrection of the faithful, be our patron and advocate
with that Saviour God, whom thou wast deemed worthy to receive into
thine arms. We, together with thee, sing our praises to Christ,
who has the power of life and death, saying, Thou art the true Light,
proceeding from the true Light; the true God, begotten of the true God;
the one Lord, before Thine assumption of the humanity; that One
nevertheless, after Thine assumption of it, which is ever to be adored;
God of Thine own self and not by grace, but for our sakes also perfect
man; in Thine own nature the King absolute and sovereign, but for us
and for our salvation existing also in the form of a servant, yet
immaculately and without defilement. For Thou who art
incorruption hast come to set corruption free, that Thou mightest
render all things uncorrupt. For Thine is the glory, and the
power, and the greatness, and the majesty, with the Father and the Holy
Spirit, for ever. Amen.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|