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| Fragments of the Fourth Book. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Fragments of the Fourth Book. 4776
4776 From the
Philocalia. |
(Three Leaves from the
Beginning.)
1. He who distinguishes in himself voice and
meaning and things for which the meaning stands, will not be offended
at rudeness of language if, on enquiry, he finds the things spoken of
to be sound. The more may this be so when we remember how the
holy men acknowledge their speech and their preaching to be not in
persuasion of the wisdom of words, but in demonstration of the Spirit
and of power.…
[Then, after speaking of the rudeness of style of the
Gospel, he proceeds: ]
2. The Apostles are not unaware that in some
things they give offence, and that in some respects their culture is
defective, and they confess themselves4777
accordingly to be rude in speech but not in knowledge; for we must
consider that the other Apostles would have said this, too, as well as
Paul. As for the text,4778 “But we have
this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of the power may
be of God and not of us,” we interpret it in this way. By
“treasures” we understand here, as in other passages, the
treasure of knowledge (gnosis) and of hidden wisdom. By
“earthen vessels” we understand the humble diction of the
Scriptures, which the Greek might so readily be led to despise, and in
which the excellency of God’s power appears so clearly. The
mystery of the truth and the power of the things said were not hindered
by the humble diction from travelling to the ends of the earth, nor
from subduing to the word of Christ, not only the foolish things of the
world, but sometimes its wise things, too. For we see our
calling,4779 not that no wise
man according to the flesh, but that not many wise according to the
flesh. But Paul, in his preaching of the Gospel, is a
debtor4780 to deliver the word
not to Barbarians only, but also to Greeks, and not only to the unwise,
who would easily agree with him, but also to the wise. For he was
made sufficient4781 by God to be a
minister of the New Covenant, wielding the demonstration of the spirit
and of power, so that when the believers agreed with him their belief
should not be in the wisdom of men,
but in the power of God. For, perhaps, if the Scripture
possessed, like the works the Greeks admire, elegance and command of
diction, then it would be open to suppose that not the truth of them
had laid hold of men, but that the apparent sequence and splendour of
language had carried off the hearers, and had carried them off by
guile.
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