Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| Of the Effects of the Death of Christ, of His Triumph After It, and of the Removal by His Death of the Sins of Men. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
37. Of the Effects of the Death of Christ, of His Triumph
After It, and of the Removal by His Death of the Sins of
Men.
We have lingered over this subject of the martyrs and
over the record of those who died on account of pestilence, because
this lets us see the excellence of Him who was led as a sheep to the
slaughter and was dumb as a lamb before the shearer. For if there
is any point in these stories of the Greeks, and if what we have said
of the martyrs is well founded,—the Apostles, too, were for the
same reason the filth of the world and the offscouring of all
things,4969 —what and how
great things must be said of the Lamb of God, who was sacrificed for
this very reason, that He might take away the sin not of a few but of
the whole world, for the sake of which also He suffered? If any
one sin, we read,4970 “We have an
advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous; and He is the
propitiation for our sins, and not for ours only, but for those of the
whole world,” since He is the Saviour of all men,4971 especially of them that believe,
who4972 blotted out the written bond that was
against us by His own blood, and took it out of the way, so that not
even a trace, not even of our blotted-out sins, might still be found,
and nailed it to His cross; who having put off from Himself the
principalities and powers, made a show of them openly, triumphing over
them by His cross. And we are taught to rejoice when we suffer
afflictions in the world, knowing the ground of our rejoicing to be
this, that the world has been conquered and has manifestly been
subjected to its conqueror. Hence all the nations, released from
their former rulers, serve Him, because He4973
saved the poor from his tyrant by His own passion, and the needy who
had no helper. This Saviour, then, having humbled the calumniator
by humbling Himself, abides with the visible sun before His illustrious
church, tropically called the moon, from generation to
generation. And having by His passion destroyed His enemies, He
who is strong in battle and a mighty Lord4974
required after His mighty deeds a purification which could only be
given Him by His Father alone; and this is why He forbids Mary to touch
Him, saying,4975 “Touch Me
not, for I am not yet ascended to My Father; but go and tell My
disciples, I go to My Father and your Father, to My God and your
God.” And when He comes, loaded with victory and with
trophies, with His body which has risen from the dead,—for what
other meaning can we see in the words, “I am not yet ascended to
My Father,” and “I go unto My Father,”—then
there are certain powers which say, Who is this that cometh from Edom,
red garments from Bosor; this that is beautiful?4976 Then those who escort Him say to those
that are upon the heavenly gates,4977 “Lift up
your gates, ye rulers, and be ye lifted up, ye everlasting doors, and
the king of glory shall come in.” But they ask again,
seeing as it were His right hand red with blood and His whole person
covered with the marks of His valour, “Why are Thy garments red,
and Thy clothes like the treading of the full winefat when it is
trodden?” And to this He answers, “I have crushed
them.” For this cause He had need to wash “His robe
in wine, and His garment in the blood of the grape.”4978 For when He had taken up our
infirmities and carried our
diseases, and had borne the sin of the whole world, and had conferred
blessings on so many, then, perhaps, He received that baptism which is
greater than any that could ever be conceived among men, and of which I
think He speaks when He says,4979 “I have a
baptism to be baptized with, and how am I straitened till it be
accomplished?” I enquire here with boldness and I challenge
the ideas put forward by most writers. They say that the greatest
baptism, beyond which no greater can be conceived, is His
passion. But if this be so, why should He say to Mary after it,
“Touch Me not”? He should rather have offered Himself
to her touch, when by His passion He had received His perfect
baptism. But if it was the case, as we said before, that after
all His deeds of valour done against His enemies, He had need to wash
“His robe in wine, His garment in the blood of the grape,”
then He was on His way up to the husbandman of the true vine, the
Father, so that having washed there and after having gone up on high,
He might lead captivity captive and come down bearing manifold
gifts—the tongues, as of fire, which were divided to the
Apostles, and the holy angels which are to be present with them in each
action and to deliver them. For before these economies they were
not yet cleansed and angels could not dwell with them, for they too
perhaps do not desire to be with those who have not prepared themselves
nor been cleansed by Jesus. For it was of Jesus’ benignity
alone that He ate and drank with publicans and sinners, and suffered
the penitent woman who was a sinner to wash His feet with her tears,
and went down even to death for the ungodly, counting it not robbery to
be equal with God, and emptied Himself, assuming the form of a
servant. And in accomplishing all this He fulfils rather the will
of the Father who gave Him up for sinners than His own. For the
Father is good, but the Saviour is the image of His goodness; and doing
good to the world in all things, since God was in Christ reconciling
the world to Himself, which formerly for its wickedness was all enemy
to Him, He accomplishes His good deeds in order and succession, and
does not all at once take all His enemies for His footstool. For
the Father says to Him, to the Lord of us all,4980
“Sit Thou on My right hand, until I make Thy enemies the
footstool of Thy feet.” And this goes on till the last
enemy, Death, is overcome by Him. And if we consider what is
meant by this subjection to Christ and find an explanation of this
mainly from the saying,4981 “When all
things shall have been put under Him, then shall the Son Himself be
subjected to Him who put all things under Him,” then we shall see
how the conception agrees with the goodness of the God of all, since it
is that of the Lamb of God, taking away the sin of the world. Not
all men’s sin, however, is taken away by the Lamb of God, not the
sin of those who do not grieve and suffer affliction till it be taken
away. For thorns are not only fixed but deeply rooted in the hand
of every one who is intoxicated by wickedness and has parted with
sobriety, as it is said in the Proverbs,4982
“Thorns grow in the hand of the drunkard,” and what pain
they must cause him who has admitted such growth in the substance of
his soul, it is hard even to tell. Who has allowed wickedness to
establish itself so deeply in his soul as to be a ground full of
thorns, he must be cut down by the quick and powerful word of God,
which is sharper than a two-edged sword, and which is more caustic than
any fire. To such a soul that fire must be sent which finds out
thorns, and by its divine virtue stands where they are and does not
also burn up the threshing-floors or standing corn. But of the
Lamb which takes away the sin of the world and begins to do so by His
own death there are several ways, some of which are capable of being
clearly understood by most, but others are concealed from most, and are
known to those only who are worthy of divine wisdom. Why should
we count up all the ways by which we come to believe among men?
That is a thing which every one living in the body is able to see for
himself. And in the ways in which we believe in these also, sin
is taken away; by afflictions and evil spirits and dangerous diseases
and grievous sicknesses. And who knows what follows after
this? So much as we have said was not unnecessary—we could
not neglect the thought which is so clearly connected with that of the
words, “Behold the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the
world,” and had therefore to attend somewhat closely to this part
of our subject. This has brought us to see that God convicts some
by His wrath and chastens them by His anger, since His love to men is
so great that He will not leave any without conviction and chastening;
so that we should do what in us lies to be spared such conviction and such chastening by the sorest
trials.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|