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| Homily XXIX on Acts xiii. 16, 17. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Homily XXIX.
Acts XIII. 16, 17
“Then Paul stood up, and
beckoning with his hand said, Men of Israel, and ye that fear God, give
audience. The God of this people of Israel chose our fathers, and
exalted the people when they dwelt as strangers in the land of Egypt,
and with an high arm brought He them out of it.”
Behold Barnabas giving place to Paul—how should it be
otherwise?—to him whom he brought from Tarsus; just as we find
John on all occasions giving way to Peter: and yet Barnabas was more
looked up to than Paul: true, but they had an eye only to the common
advantage. “Then Paul stood up,” it says;—this661
661 i.e.
for one of the congregation to expound or preach: or perhaps rather, to
preach standing, not sitting, as Christian bishops did for their
sermons. We have transposed the comment to its proper place.—Mod.
text adds, “Wherefore he too in accordance with this discourses
to them.” | was a custom of the Jews—“and
beckoned with his hand.” And see how he prepares the way
beforehand for his discourse: having first praised them, and showed his
great regard for them in the words, “ye that fear God,” he
so begins his discourse. And he says not, Ye proselytes, since it was a
term of disadvantage.662
662 ὅπερ
ἦν συμφορᾶς
ὄνομα, in regard that
a proselyte might be deemed inferior to a Jew of genuine descent,
“a Hebrew of the Hebrews.” | “The God of
this people chose our fathers: and the people”—See, he
calls God Himself their God peculiarly, Who is the common God of
men; and shows how great from the first were His benefits, just as
Stephen does. This they do to teach them, that now also God has acted
after the same custom, in sending His own Son; (Luke xx. 13): as (Christ)
Himself (does) in the parable of the vineyard—“And the
people,” he says, “He exalted when it sojourned in the land
of Egypt”—and yet the contrary was the case:663
663 καὶ μὴν
τοὐναντίον
γέγονεν.
Here also we have transposed the comment to the clause to which it
belongs. In the Edd. it comes after “And with a high arm,”
etc. whence Ben. mistaking its reference says, “i.e., if I
mistake not, God brought them out of Egypt, that he might bring them
into the Land of Promise: but, for their wickedness, the contrary
befell: for the greatest part of them perished in the
wilderness.” It plainly refers to ὕψωσεν—i.e.
how is it said, that He exalted them in Egypt, where, on the contrary,
they were brought low? This is true—but He did exalt them by
increasing them into a great multitude, and by the miracles which He
wrought on their behalf. | true, but they increased in numbers;
moreover, the miracles were wrought on their account: “and with
an high arm brought He them out of it.” Of these things (the
wonders) which were done in Egypt, the prophets are continually making
mention. And observe, how he passes over the times of their calamities,
and nowhere brings forward their faults, but only God’s kindness,
leaving those for themselves to think over. “And about the time
of forty years suffered He their manners in the wilderness.”
(v. 18.) Then the settlement.
“And when he had destroyed seven nations in the land of Canaan,
He divided their land to them by lot.” (v. 19.) And the time was long; four hundred and fifty years.
“And after that He gave unto them judges about the space of four
hundred and fifty years, until Samuel the prophet.”664
664 Upon
the reading of the T. R. (A.V.) the period of the Judges is here stated
to have been 450 years. This agrees with the chronology of the book of
Judges and of Josephus, but conflicts with 1 Kings vi. 1 where we are told
that “in the four hundred and eightieth year after the children
of Israel were come out of the land of Egypt, in the fourth year of
Solomon’s reign over Israel, he began to build the house of the
Lord.” This would give but 331 years for the period of the
Judges. It is the view of many critics that Paul has here followed a
different chronology from that of 1 Kings which was also in use among
the Jews and was followed by Josephus (so Meyer.) But if the reading of
Tischendorf, Lechler, and Westcott and Hort (R.V.) is adopted—and
it is sustained by A. B. C. א—the difficulty, so far as Acts xiii. 21 is concerned,
disappears. This reading places μετὰ ταῦτα
after ὡς ἔτεσιν sq. and inserts a period after πεντήκοντα. Then the translation would be, “He gave them their
land for an inheritance for about four hundred and fifty years. And
after these things He gave them judges,” etc. On this reading the
450 years is the period of their inheritance, approximately stated, up
to the time of the judges. The point from which Paul reckoned is not
stated and is uncertain. This is the preferable reading and
explanation.—G.B.S. | (v.
20.)
Here he shows that God varied His dispensations towards them (at divers
times). “And afterward they desired a king:” and (still)
not a word of their ingratitude, but throughout he speaks of the
kindness of God. “And God gave unto them Saul the son of Cis, a
man of the tribe of Benjamin, by the space of forty years.”
(v. 21.) “And when he
had removed him, He raised up unto them David to be their king: to whom
also He gave testimony, and said, I have found David the son of Jesse,
a man after Mine own heart, which shall fulfil all My will. Of this
man’s seed hath God according to His promise raised unto Israel a
Saviour, Jesus.” (v. 22,
23.)
This was no small thing that Christ should be from David. Then John
bears witness to this: “When John had first preached before His
coming the baptism of repentance to all the people of Israel. And as
John fulfilled his course, he said, Whom think ye that I am? I am not
He. But, behold, there cometh one after me, whose shoes of His feet I
am not worthy to loose.” (v. 24,
25.)
And John too not merely bears witness (to the fact), but (does it in
such sort that) when men were bringing the glory to him, he declines
it: for it is one thing (not to affect) an honor which nobody thinks of
offering; and another, to reject it when all men are ready to give it,
and not only to reject it, but to do so with such humility. “Men
and brethren, children of the stock of Abraham, and whosoever among you
feareth God, to you is the word of this salvation sent. For they that
dwell at Jerusalem, and their rulers, because they knew Him not, nor
yet the voices of the prophets which are read every sabbath day, they
have fulfilled them in condemning Him. And though they found no cause
of death in Him, yet desired they Pilate that He should be
slain.” (v.
26–28.) On all occasions we find them making a great point of
showing this, that the blessing is peculiarly theirs, that they may not
flee (from Christ), as thinking they had nothing to do with Him,
because they had crucified Him. “Because they knew Him
not,” he says: so that the sin was one of ignorance. See how he
gently makes an apology even on behalf of those (crucifiers). And not
only this: but he adds also, that thus it must needs be. And665
665 Καὶ πόθεν
ὅτι ἀνέστη
φησι καὶ
μάρτυρες
εἰσιν. Εἶτα
πάλιν ἀπὸ
τῶν γραφῶν, followed by v.
29–37. We read, καὶ πόθεν; ὅτι τὰς
φωνὰς τῶν
προφ.,
κρίναντες
τοῦτον
ἐπλήρωσαν.
Εἶτα πάλιν
ἀπὸ τ. γρ. v. 29–31, ending,
καὶ
μάρτυρες
αὐτοῦ εἰσιν
πρὸς τὸν λαὸν
ὅτι ἀνέστη. The mod. text “And that no man may say, And whence
is this manifest that He rose again? He says that (word), And are His
witnesses. Then again He presses them from the Scriptures, v. 29–37.” | how so? “By condemning Him, they
fulfilled the voices of the prophets.” Then again from the
Scriptures. “And when they had fulfilled all that was written of
Him, they took Him down from the tree, and laid Him in a sepulchre. But
God raised Him from the dead. And He was seen many days of them which
came up with Him from Galilee to Jerusalem, who are His witnesses unto
the people—”(v.
29–31) that He rose again. “And we declare unto you glad
tidings, how that the promise which was made unto the fathers, God hath
fulfilled the same unto us their children, in that He hath raised up
Jesus again; as it is also written in the second Psalm, Thou art My
Son, this day have I begotten Thee. And as concerning that He raised
Him up from the dead, now no more to return to corruption, He said on
this wise, I will give you the sure mercies of David. Wherefore he
saith also in another Psalm, Thou shalt not suffer Thine Holy One to
see corruption. For David, after he had served his own generation by
the will of God, fell on sleep, and was laid unto his fathers, and saw
corruption: but He, Whom God raised again, saw no corruption. Be it
known unto you therefore, men and brethren, that through this Man is
preached unto you the forgiveness of sins: and by Him all that believe
are justified from all things, from which ye could not be justified by
the law of Moses.” (v.
32–39.) Observe666
666 This
comment, which in the mss. and Edd. is
inserted after v.
37,
refers to the following verses
38, 39, i.e. to what is there said of the insufficiency of the Law for
justification: we have therefore transposed it. | how Paul here is
more vehement in his discourse: we nowhere find Peter saying this. Then
too he adds the terrifying words: “Beware therefore, lest that
come upon you, which is spoken of in the prophets; Behold, ye
despisers, and wonder, and perish: for I work a work in your days, a
work which ye shall in no wise believe, though a man declare it unto
you.” (v. 40, 41.)
(a) Observe667
667 In
the old text the parts lie in the order here shown by the letters a,
b, etc. The confusion may be explained by the scribe’s
copying in the wrong order from the four pages of his tablets: viz. in
the first place, in the order 1, 3, 2, 4: then 2, 4, 1, 3: and lastly,
2, 1. In the modern text, a different arrangement is attempted by which
all is thrown into worse confusion. Thus it was not perceived that
Chrys. having in a cursory way read through v. 24–41, begins his exposition
in detail with the remark of the Apostle’s passing and repassing
from the Old to the New Test. and vice versa, viz. alleging
first the Promise, then John, then the Prophets, then the Apostles,
then David and Isaiah, v.
24–34; then comments upon the matters contained in these and the
following verses, and then as usual goes over the whole again in a
second exposition. Now the innovator makes the recapitulation begin
immediately after (a), commencing it at v. 26, and collecting the comments in this order: v. 26–32: v.
24–36: v. 17–41. | how he twines (the thread of) his
discourse (alternately) from things present, from the prophets. Thus,
“from668
668 The transposition of the part (c), makes this read in the
mss. and Edd. as if it were parallel
with ἀπὸ τῶν
παρόντων (i.e. New Testament facts), ἀπὸ
τῶν
Προφητῶν (Old Testament testimonies). | (this man’s) seed according
to the promise”—(v.
23):
(c) the name of David was dear to them; well then, is it not (a
thing to be desired) that a son of his, he says, should be their
king?—(b) then he adduces John: then again the prophets,
where he says, “By condemning they fulfilled,” and again,
“All that was written:” then the Apostles as witnesses of
the Resurrection: then David bearing witness. For neither the Old
Testament proofs seemed so cogent when taken by themselves as they are
in this way, nor yet the latter testimonies apart from the former:
wherefore he makes them mutually confirm each other. “Men and
brethren,” etc. (v.
26.)
For since they were possessed by fear, as having slain Him, and
conscience made them aliens (the Apostles), discourse not with them as
unto Christicides, neither as putting into their hands a good which was
not theirs, but one peculiarly their own. (d) “For they
that dwell at Jerusalem, and their rulers:” as much as to say,
not ye, but they:669
669 It
is probable that Chrys. has pointed out the true connection of thought
as established by γὰρ (27). “The word of this salvation is sent unto you (of
the dispersion) on the ground that the Jews at Jerusalem have rejected
it.” (So Meyer, Gloag.) The more common explanation is: The word
is sent unto you because the Jews have fulfilled the prophecies which
spoke of the rejection of the Messiah and have thus proved that He is
the Messiah. (De Wette, Hackett, Lechler.)—G.B.S. | and again,
apologizing even for those, “Because they knew Him not, and the
voices of the Prophets which are read every sabbath day, in condemning
Him, they fulfilled them.” A great charge it is against them that
they continually hearing heeded not. But no marvel: for what was said
above concerning Egypt and the wilderness, was enough to show their
ingratitude. And observe how this Apostle also, as one moved by the
Spirit Himself,670
670 i.e.
Though not one of the original witnesses, v. 31, yet, being one who has been moved or raised up,
κεκινημένον, by the Spirit of Christ Himself, he preaches as they did,
insisting much on the Passion, etc. | continually
preaches the Passion, the Burial. (g) “Having taken Him
down from the tree.” Observe, what a great point they make of
this. He speaks of the manner of His death. Moreover they bring Pilate
(conspicuously) forward, that (the fact of) the Passion may be proved
by the mention of the tribunal (by which he was condemned), but at the
same time, for the greater impeachment of those (His crucifiers),
seeing they delivered Him up to an alien. And he does not say, They
made a complaint (against Him), (ἐνέτυχον, al. ἐντυγχάνει) but, “They desired, though having found no cause of
death” (in Him), “that He should be slain. (e) Who
appeared,” he says, “for many days to them that came up
with Him from Galilee to Jerusalem.” (Rom. xi. 2.) Instead of671
671 ᾽Αντὶ τοῦ, Οἱ
ἄνδρες οἱ
συναναβάντες
κ. τ. λ. Perhaps the sense may
be supplied thus: ᾽Αντὶ τοῦ,
Οὗ πάντες
ἡμεῖς ἐσμεν
μάρτυρες, ii. 32, οὗ ἡμεῖς
μάρτ. ἐσμεν, iii. 15. Instead of saying as
Peter does, “Whereof we are witnesses.” | ** he says, “Who are His witnesses
unto the people,” to wit, “The men which came up with Him
from Galilee to Jerusalem.” Then he produces David and Esaias
bearing witness. “The faithful (mercies),” the abiding
(mercies), those which never perish. (h) Paul loved them
exceedingly. And observe, he does not enlarge on the ingratitude of the
fathers, but puts before them what they must fear. For Stephen
indeed with good reason does this, seeing he was about to be put to
death, not teaching them; and showing them, that the Law is even now on
the point of being abolished: (ch.
vii.)
but not so Paul; he does but threaten and put them in fear. (f)
And he does not dwell long on these,672
672 Καὶ οὐκ
ἐγχρονίζει
τούτοις, as
in the recapitulation on v. 40,
41. καὶ
ὅρα, τραχὺ ὂν
πῶς
ὑποτέμνεται. Hence it is clear that τούτοις refers not to “the sure mercies of David,” as in mss. and Edd. (end of e), but to the threats
and terrors (end of h). Below, for ἀλλ᾽
ἐπιτείνει
τὴν κόλασιν
the sense of ἐπιτείνει (not as Ben. minatur, but intentat,
“makes much of, aggravates, dwells upon the greatness of)”,
and the whole scope of the passage, require us to read οὐδὲ. Then, καὶ
μετέρχεται
with the negative extending to the whole clause,
“and (like Stephen) assail that which is dear to them, (viz.
their preëminence as Jews,) by showing the Law on the point of
being cast out:” then, ἀλλὰ (so we restore
for καὶ) τῷ
συμφ.
ἐνδιατρ.,
but dwells, etc. | as taking it
for granted that the word is of course believed; nor enlarge upon the
greatness of their punishment, and assail that which they
affectionately love, by showing the Law about to be cast out: but
dwells upon that which is for their good (telling them), that great
shall be the blessings for them being obedient, and great the evils
being disobedient.
But let us look over again what
has been said. “Ye men of Israel,” etc. (v. 16–21.) The Promise
then, he says, the fathers received; ye, the reality. (j) And
observe, he nowhere mentions right deeds of theirs, but (only) benefits
on God’s part: “He chose: Exalted: Suffered their
manners:” these are no matters of praise to them: “They
asked, He gave.” But David he does praise (and him) only, because
from him the Christ was to come. “I have found David, the son of
Jesse, a man after Mine own heart, which shall fulfil all My
will.” (v. 22.) (i) Observe
also; it is with praise (that he says of him), “David after that
he had served the will of God:” just as Peter—seeing it was
then the beginning of the Gospel—making mention of him, said,
“Let it be permitted me to speak freely of the patriarch
David.” (ch. ii.
29.)
Also, he does not say, Died, but, “was added to his fathers.
(k) Of this man’s seed,” etc. “When
John,” he says, “had first preached before His
entry”—by entry he means the
Incarnation—“the baptism of repentance to all the people of
Israel.” (v.
23–25.) Thus also John, writing his Gospel, continually has
recourse to him: for his name was much thought of in all parts of the
world. And observe, he does not say it “Of this man’s
seed,” etc. from himself, but brings John’s
testimony.
“Men and brethren,
children of the stock of Abraham”—he also calls them after
their father—“unto you was the word of this salvation
sent.” (v. 26.) Here the expression,
“Unto you,” does not mean, Unto (you) Jews, but it gives
them a right to sever themselves from those who dared that murder. And
what he adds, shows this plainly. “For,” he says,
“they that dwell at Jerusalem, because they know Him not.”
(v. 27.) And how, you will
say, could they be ignorant, with John to tell them? What marvel,
seeing they were so, with the prophets continually crying aloud to
them? Then follows another charge: “And having found no cause of
death in Him:” in which ignorance had nothing to do. For let us
put the case, that they did not hold Him to be the Christ: why did they
also kill Him? And “they desired of Pilate, he says, that He
should be slain.” (v.
28.)
“And when they had fulfilled all that was written of Him.”
(v. 29.) Observe what a point
he makes of showing that the (whole) thing was a (Divine) Dispensation.
See,673
673 Edd. “But let us hear τί καὶ
λέγοντες οἱ
᾽Απόστ.
ἔπεισαν, ὅτι
ἐσταυρώθη, by saying what, by what announcement, the Apostles
persuaded (men) that He was crucified.” For τί τούτου
ἀπιθ. B. has τὸ τ. ἀ. “(yea), what is more incredible still.” Both clauses
must be read interrogatively. The scope of the whole passage (which is
obscure in the original) is, the supreme importance of the article of
the Resurrection. Leave that out, and see what the preaching of the
Apostles would have been; how it would have been received. | by saying what did they persuade men?
(By telling them) that He was crucified? Why, what could be less
persuasive than this? That He was buried—by them to whom it was
promised that He should be salvation? that He who was buried forgives
sins, yea, more than the Law (has power to do)? And (observe), he does
not say, From which ye would not but, “from which ye could not be
justified by the Law of Moses.” (v. 39.) “Every one,” he says: be who he may. For
those (ordinances) are of no use, unless there be some benefit
(accruing therefrom.) This is why he brings in forgiveness later: and
shows it to be greater, when, the thing being (otherwise) impossible,
yet this is effected. “Who are His witnesses,” he says,
“unto the people”—the people that slew Him. Who would
never have been so, were they not strengthened by a Divine Power: for
they would never have borne such witness to blood-thirsty men, to the
very persons that killed Him. But, “He hath raised up Jesus
again: This day,” he says, “I have begotten thee.”674
674 The
reading: “In the Second Psalm” is the best attested
and is followed by the T. R., R.V. and Wescott and Hort. Πρώτῳ is found in D. and is supported by the Fathers. It is the
more difficult reading and for this reason is preferred by Tischendorf,
Lachmann, Meyer, Alford and Gloag. If it is correct, we must suppose
that what we now call the first psalm was considered introductory and
that our second psalm was counted as the first. In some Heb. mss. this order actually occurs. The reading
δευτέρῳ, however, is better supported. The expression: “this day
have I begotten thee” refers evidently to the resurrection of
Christ. (Cf. Heb. i. 5; Rom. i. 4.) The resurrection is
conceived as the solemn inauguration of Christ into his office as
theocratic king represented under the figure of
begetting.—G.B.S. | (v.
33.)
Aye, upon this the rest follows of course. Why did he not allege some
text by which they would be persuaded that forgiveness of sins is by
Him? Because the great point with them was to show, in the first place,
that He was risen: this being acknowledged, the other was
unquestionable. “Through this man,” nay more, by Him,
“is remission of sins.” (v. 38.) And besides, he wished to bring them to a longing desire
of this great thing. Well then, His death was not dereliction, but
fulfilling of Prophecy.—For the rest, he puts them in mind of
historical facts, wherein they through ignorance suffered evils without
number. And this he hints in the conclusion, saying, “Look, ye
despisers, and behold.” And observe how, this being harsh, he
cuts it short. Let not that, he says, come upon you, which was spoken
for the others, that “I work a work which ye shall in no wise
believe, though one declare it unto you.” (v. 41.) Marvel not that it seems incredible: this very thing was
foretold from the first—(that it would not be believed).
“Behold, ye despisers,” as regards those who disbelieve in
the Resurrection.
This too might with reason be
said to us:675
675 We
have transposed this clause from before, “Behold,” etc.
preceding. | “Behold ye despisers.”
For the Church indeed is in very evil case, although ye think her
affairs to be in peace. For the mischief of it is, that while we labor
under so many evils, we do not even know that we have any. “What
sayest thou? We are in possession of our Churches, our Church property,
and all the rest, the services are held, the congregation comes to
Church every day.”676
676 Mod. text needlessly adds, Καὶ
καταφρονοῦμεν; “And do we make light of these
things?” | True, but one is
not to judge of the state of a Church from these things. From what
then? Whether there be piety, whether we return home with profit each
day, whether reaping some fruit, be it much or little, whether we do it
not merely of routine and for the formal acquittance of a duty
(ἀφοσιούμενοι). Who has become a better man by attending (daily) service
for a whole month? That is the point: otherwise the very thing which
seems to bespeak a flourishing condition (of the Church,) does in fact
bespeak an ill condition, when all this is done, and nothing comes of
it. Would to God (that were all), that nothing comes of it: but indeed,
as things are, it turns out even for the worse. What fruit do ye get
from your services? Surely if you were getting any profit by them, ye
ought to have been long leading the life of true wisdom (τἥς
φιλοσοφίας), with so many Prophets twice in every week discoursing to
you, so many Apostles, and Evangelists, all setting forth the doctrines
of salvation, and placing before you with much exactness that which can
form the character aright. The soldier by going to his drill, becomes
more perfect in his tactics: the wrestler by frequenting the gymnastic
ground becomes more skilful in wrestling: the physician by attending on
his teacher becomes more accurate, and knows more, and learns more: and
thou—what hast thou gained? I speak not to those who have been
members of the Church only a year, but to those who from their earliest
age have been attending the services. Think you that to be religious is
to be constant in Church-going (παραβάλλειν
τᾕ συνάξει)? This is nothing, unless we reap some fruit for ourselves:
if (from the gathering together in Church) we do not gather
(συνάγωμεν) something for ourselves, it were better to remain at
home. For our forefathers built the Churches for us, not just to bring
us together from our private houses and show us one to another: since
this could have been done also in a market-place, and in baths, and in
a public procession:—but to bring together learners and teachers,
and make the one better by means of the other. With us it has all
become mere customary routine, and formal discharge of a duty: a thing
we are used to; that is all. Easter comes, and then great the stir,
great the hubbub, and crowding of—I had rather not call them
human beings, for their behavior is not commonly human. Easter goes,
the tumult abates, but then the quiet which succeeds is again fruitless
of good. “Vigils, and holy hymn-singing.”—And what is
got by these? Nay, it is all the worse. Many do so merely out of
vanity. Think how sick at heart it must make me, to see it all like (so
much water) poured into a cask with holes in it! But ye will assuredly
say to me, We know the Scriptures. And what of that? If ye exemplify
the Scriptures by your works, that is the gain, that the profit. The
Church is a dyer’s vat: if time after time perpetually ye go
hence without receiving any dye, what is the use of coming here
continually? Why, the mischief is all the greater. Who (of you) has
added ought to the customary practices he received from his fathers?
For example: such an one has a custom of observing the memorial of his
mother, or his wife, or his child: this he does whether he be told or
whether he be not told by us, drawn to it by force of habit and
conscience. Does this displease thee, you ask? God forbid: on the
contrary, I am glad of it with all my heart: only, I would wish that he
had gained some fruit also from our discoursing, and that the effect
which habit has, were also the effect as regards us677
677 Τοῦτο καὶ
ἐφ᾽ ἡμῶν
γενέσθαι,
ἑτέραν
ἐπεισαχθῆναι
συνήθειαν. Morel. Ben. ἀφ᾽
ἡμῶν, “By our
means,” idque unum probandum, Ed. Par. but ἐφ᾽ ἡμῶν is not as he renders it, in nobis; the meaning is,
“where habit works, this is the effect (in the case of habit):
wish it were so in the case of us (where we work).” | (your teachers)—the superinducing
of another habit. Else why do I weary myself in vain, and talk
uselessly, if ye are to remain in the same state, if the Church
services work no good in you? Nay, you will say, we pray. And what of
that? “Not every one that saith unto Me, Lord, Lord, shall enter
into the Kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of My Father
which is in heaven.” (Matt. vii. 21.) Many a time
have I determined to hold my peace, seeing no benefit accruing to you
from my words; or perhaps there does accrue some, but I, through
insatiableness and strong desire, am affected in the same way as those
that are mad after riches. For just as they, however much they may get,
think they have nothing; so I, because I ardently desire your
salvation, until I see you to have made good progress, think nothing
done, because of my exceeding eager desire that you should arrive at
the very summit. I would that this were the case, and that my eagerness
were in fault, not your sloth: but I fear I conjecture but too rightly.
For ye must needs be persuaded, that if any benefit had arisen in all
this length of time, we ought ere now to have done speaking. In such
case, there were no need to you of words, since both in those already
spoken there had been enough said for you,678
678 Mod. text “Having been so sufficiently spoken, that ye are
able to correct others, εἴγε
ἀπόντων
ὠφέλειά τις
ὑμῖν
προσεγίνετο, since in their absence some benefit accrued to
you.” |
and you would be yourselves able to correct others. But the fact, that
there is still a necessity of our discoursing to you, only shows, that
matters with you are not in a state of high perfection. Then what would
we have to be brought about? for one must not merely find fault. I
beseech and entreat you not to think it enough to have invaded679
679 ὅπως
εἰς
᾽Εκκλησίαν
ἐμβάλητε,
ἀλλ᾽ ὅπως τι
καὶ λαβόντες
ἀναχωρῆτε. (Above we had the phrase παραβάλλειν
τῇ συνάξει.) Here the metaphor is taken from an invading army. So
below, p. 188, μη
ἐμβάλῃς εἰς
αγοράν. | the Church, but that ye also withdraw
hence, having taken somewhat, some medicine, for the curing of your own
maladies: and, if not from us, at any rate from the Scriptures, ye have
the remedies suitable for each. For instance, is any passionate? Let
him attend to the Scripture-readings, and he will of a surety find such
either in history or exhortation. In exhortation, when it is said,
“The sway of his fury is his destruction” (Ecclus. i. 22); and, “A
passionate man is not seemly” (Prov. xi. 25); and such like:
and again, “A man full of words shall not prosper”
(Ps. cxl. 11); and Christ again, “He that is angry with his brother
without a cause” (Matt. v. 22); and again the
Prophet, “Be ye angry, and sin not” (Ps. iv. 4); and,
“Cursed be their anger, for it was fierce.” (Gen. xlix. 7.)
And in histories, as when thou hearest of Pharaoh filled with much
wrath, and the Assyrian. Again, is any one taken captive by love of
money? let him hear, that “There is not a more wicked thing than
a covetous man: for this man setteth even his own soul for sale”
(Ecclus. ix. 9); and how Christ saith,
“Ye cannot serve God and mammon” (Matt. vi. 24); and the
Apostle, that “the love of money is a root of all evils”
(1 Tim. vi. 10); and the Prophet, “If riches flow in, set not your
heart upon them” (Ps. lxii. 10); and many other
like sayings. And from the histories thou hearest of Gehazi, Judas, the
chief scribes, and that “gifts blind the eyes of the wise.”
(Exod. xxiii. 8 and Deut. xvi.
19.)
Is another proud? Let him hear that “God resisteth the
proud” (James iv. 6); and, “Pride is
the beginning of sin” (Ecclus. x. 14) and, “Every one
that hath a high heart, is impure before the Lord.” (Prov. xvi. 5.)
And in the histories, the devil, and all the rest. In a word, since it
is impossible to recount all, let each choose out from the Divine
Scriptures the remedies for his own hurts.
So wash out, if not the whole at
once, a part at any rate, part today, and part tomorrow, and then the
whole. And with regard to repentance too, and confession, and
almsgiving, and justice also, and temperance, and all other things,
thou wilt find many examples. “For all these things,” says
the Apostle, “were written for our admonition.”
(1 Cor. x. 11.) If then Scripture in all its discoursing is for our admonition,
let us attend to it as we ought. Why do we deceive ourselves in vain? I
fear it may be said of us also, that “our days have fallen short
in vanity, and our years with haste.” (Ps. lxxvii. 33.) Who from hearing us
has given up the theatres? Who has given up his covetousness? Who has
become more ready for almsgiving? I would wish to know this, not for
the sake of vainglory, but that I may be inspirited to more zeal,
seeing the fruit of my labors to be clearly evident. But as things now
are, how shall I put my hand to the work, when I see that for all the
rain of doctrine pouring down upon you shower after shower, still our
crops remain at the same measure, and the plants have waxed none the
higher? Anon the time of threshing is at hand (and) He with the fan. I
fear me, lest it be all stubble: I fear, lest we be all cast into the
furnace. The summer is past, the winter is come: we sit, both young and
old, taken captive by our own evil passions. Tell not me, I do not
commit fornication: for what art thou the better, if though thou be no
fornicator thou art covetous? It matters not to the sparrow caught in
the snare that he is not held tight in every part, but only by the
foot: he is a lost bird for all that; in the snare he is, and it
profits him not that he has his wings free, so long as his foot is held
tight. Just so, thou art caught, not by fornication, but by love of
money: but caught thou art nevertheless; and the point is, not
how thou art caught, but that thou art caught. Let not
the young man say, I am no money-lover: well, but perchance thou art a
fornicator: and then again what art thou the better? For the fact is,
it is not possible for all the passions to set upon us at one and the
same time of life: they are divided and marked off, and that, through
the mercy of God, that they may not by assailing us all at once become
insuperable, and so our wrestling with them be made more difficult.
What wretched inertness it shows, not to be able to conquer our
passions even when taken one by one, but to be defeated at each several
period of our life, and to take credit to ourselves for those which
(let us alone) not in consequence of our own hearty endeavors, but
merely because, by reason of the time of life, they are dormant? Look
at the chariot-drivers, do you not see how exceedingly careful and
strict they are with themselves in their training-practice, their
labors, their diet, and all the rest, that they may not be thrown down
from their chariots, and dragged along (by the reins)?—See what a
thing art is. Often even a strong man cannot master a single horse: but
a mere boy who has learnt the art shall often take the pair in hand,
and with ease lead them and drive them where he will. Nay, in India it
is said that a huge monster of an elephant shall yield to a stripling
of fifteen, who manages him with the utmost ease. To what purpose have
I said all this? To show that, if by dint of study and practice we can
throttle into submission (ἄγχομεν) even
elephants and wild horses, much more the passions within us. Whence is
it that throughout life we continually fail (in every encounter)? We
have never practised this art: never in a time of leisure when there is
no contest, talked over with ourselves what shall be useful for us. We
are never to be seen in our place on the chariot, until the time for
the contest is actually come. Hence the ridiculous figure we make
there. Have I not often said, Let us practise ourselves upon those of
our own family before the time of trial? With our servants
(παἵδας) at
home we are often exasperated, let us there quell our anger, that in
our intercourse with our friends we may come to have it easily under
control. And so, in the case of all the other passions, if we practised
ourselves beforehand, we should not make a ridiculous figure in the
contests themselves. But now we have our implements and our exercises
and our trainings for other things, for arts and feats of the
palæstra, but for virtue nothing of the sort. The husbandman would
not venture to meddle with a vine, unless he had first been practised
in the culture of it: nor the pilot to sit by the helm, unless he had
first practised himself well at it: but we, in all respects
unpractised, wish for the first prizes! It were good to be silent, good
to have no communication with any man in act or word, until we were
able to charm (κατεπᾴδειν) the wild beast that is within us. The wild beast, I say:
for indeed is it not worse than the attack of any wild beast, when
wrath and lust make war upon us? Beware of invading the market-place
(Μὴ ἐμβάλῃς εἰς
ἀγοράν) with
these beasts, until thou have got the muzzle well upon their mouths,
until thou have tamed and made them tractable. Those who lead about
their tame lions in the market-place, do you not see what a gain they
make of it, what admiration they get, because in the irrational beast
they have succeeded in producing such tameness—but, should the
lion suddenly take a savage fit, how he scares all the people out of
the market-place, and then both the man that leads him about is himself
in danger, and if there be loss of life to others, it is his doing?
Well then do thou also first tame thy lion, and so lead him about, not
for the purpose of receiving money, but that thou mayest acquire a
gain, to which there is none equal. For there is nothing equal to
gentleness, which both to those that possess it, and to those who are
its objects, is exceeding useful. This then let us follow after, that
having kept in the way of virtue, and with all diligence finished our
course therein, we may be enabled to attain unto the good things
eternal, through the grace and mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ, with
Whom to the Father and the Holy Ghost together be glory, might, honor,
now and ever, world without end. Amen. E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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