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| Homily X on Rom. v. 12. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Homily X.
Rom. V. 12
“Wherefore as by one
man sin entered into the world, and death by sin, and so death passed
upon (διἥλθεν6 mss. εἴς…) all men, for that all have sinned.”
As the
best physicians always take great pains to discover the source of
diseases, and go to the very fountain of the mischief, so doth the
blessed Paul also. Hence after having said that we were justified, and
having shown it from the Patriarch, and from the Spirit, and from the
dying of Christ (for He would not have died unless He intended to
justify), he next confirms from other sources also what he had at such
length demonstrated. And he confirms his proposition from things
opposite, that is, from death and sin. How, and in what way? He
enquires whence death came in, and how it prevailed. How then did death
come in and prevail? “Through the sin of one.” But what
means, “for that all have sinned?” This; he having once
fallen, even they that had not eaten of the tree did from him, all of
them, become mortal.1339
1339 This whole passage is introduced to show the glory and power of
Christ’s salvation as able to conquer the power of sin and death.
The case of Adam’s sin is not introduced for its own sake but as
a background on which to exhibit the greatness of God’s grace.
Two erroneous assumptions are often made in respect to this passage (1)
that Adam’s sin and not God’s grace in Christ is the chief
theme, and (2) that the Apostle intends here to set forth a theory of
original sin. This verse contains four points (1) Sin came into the
world by the agency of one man—Adam. (2) In consequence of sin
came death. (3) In virtue of the causal relation between sin and death,
the latter extended itself to all men, for the reason (4) that all
sinned. The ὥσπερshows
that this is used as an illustrative parallel to magnify the greatness
of grace which is mightier than sin (cf. πολλῷ
μᾶλλον vv. 15–17).—G.B.S. |
Ver.
13.
“For until the Law sin was in the world, but sin is not imputed
where there is no law.”
The phrase “till the
Law” some think he used of the time before the giving of the
Law—that of Abel, for instance, or of Noah, or of
Abraham—till Moses was born. What was the sin in those days, at
this rate? some say he means that in Paradise. For hitherto it was not
done away, (he would say,) but the fruit of it was yet in vigor. For it
had borne that death whereof all partake, which prevailed and lorded
over us. Why then does he proceed, “But sin is not imputed when
there is no law?” It was by way of objection from the Jews, say
they who have spoken on our side,1340
1340 οἱ τὰ
ἡμέτερα
εἰρηκότες. The passage is corrupt in Savile: most mss. read φασὶν and
λέγοντα. | that he laid
this position down and said, if there be no sin without the Law, how
came death to consume all those before the Law? But to me it seems that
the sense presently to be given has more to be said for it, and suits
better with the Apostle’s meaning. And what sense is this? In
saying, that “till the Law sin was in the world,” what he
seems to me to mean is this, that after the Law was given the sin
resulting from the transgression of it prevailed, and prevailed too so
long as the Law existed. For sin, he says, can have no existence if
there be no law.1341
1341 The apostle does not say that there can be no sin if there is no
law. He says the exact contrary. He elsewhere says (iv. 15) that where there is no law there is no
transgression. By “law” here he means positive,
statutory commands and prohibitions. His meaning here is: God does not
reckon ἁμαρτία as παράβασις
where there is no explicit commandment. But sin was in
the world during all this period previous to the Mosaic law, as proved
by the reign of death. It extended its sway and penalty even to those
who had not sinned, as Adam did, against positive enactment. We know
well on what principle the apostle justifies his position that there is
sin even where no written commandment is transgressed. The principle
has been already developed viz.: there is a moral law implanted in the
human heart (i. 19, 21; ii.
15).
To offend against this is sin (though not transgression, which implies
positive law) and induces death as its
consequence.—G.B.S. | If then it was
this sin, he means, from the transgression of the Law that brought
forth death, how was it that all before the Law died? For if it is in
sin that death hath its origin, but when there is no law, sin is not
imputed, how came death to prevail? From whence it is clear, that it
was not this sin, the transgression, that is, of the Law, but that of
Adam’s disobedience, which marred all things. Now what is the
proof of this? The fact that even before the Law all died: for
“death reigned,” he says, “from Adam to Moses, even
over them that had not sinned.”
How did it reign? “After
the similitude of Adam’s transgression, who is the figure of Him
that was to come.” Now this is why Adam is a type of Christ. How
a type? it will be said. Why in that, as the former became to those who
were sprung from him, although they had not eaten of the tree, the
cause of that death which by his eating was introduced; thus also did
Christ become to those sprung from Him, even though they had not
wrought righteousness, the Provider1342 of that
righteousness which through His Cross1343
1343 The comparison of the two Trees is very frequent in the Fathers;
see St. Cyr. Cat. xiii. §19, p. 152, O.T. Tert. adv.
Judæos, §13. | He graciously bestowed on us all. For
this reason, at every turn he keeps to the “one,” and is
continually bringing it before us, when he says, “As by one man
sin entered into the world”—and, “If through the
offence of one many be dead:” and, “Not as it was by one
that sinned, so is the gift;” and, “The judgment was by one
to condemnation:” and again, “If by one (or, the one)
man’s offence death reigned by one;” and “Therefore
as by the offence of one.” And again, “As by one
man’s disobedience many (or, the many) were made sinners.”
And so he letteth not go of the one, that when the Jew says to thee,
How came it, that by the well-doing of this one Person, Christ, the
world was saved? thou mightest be able to say to him, How by the
disobedience of this one person, Adam, came it to be condemned? And yet
sin and grace are not equivalents, death and life are not equivalents,
the Devil and God are not equivalents, but there is a boundless space
between them. When then as well from the nature of the thing as from
the power of Him that transacteth it, and from the very suitableness
thereof (for it suiteth much better with God to save than to punish),
the preëminence and victory is upon this side, what one word have
you to say for unbelief, tell me? However, that what had been done was
reasonable, he shows in the following words.
Ver.
15.
“But not as the offence, so is also the free gift. For if through
the offence of one many be dead, much more the grace of God, and the
gift by grace, which is by one man, Jesus Christ, hath abounded unto
the many.”
For what he says is somewhat of
this kind. If sin had so extensive effects, and the sin of one man too;
how can grace, and that the grace of God, not the Father only, but also
the Son, do otherwise than be the more abundant of the two? For the
latter is far the more reasonable supposition. For that one man should
be punished on account of another does not seem to be much in
accordance with reason. But for one to be saved on account of another
is at once more suitable and more reasonable. If then the former took
place, much more may the latter. Hence he has shown from these grounds
the likelihood and reasonableness of it. For when the former had been
made good, this would then be readily admitted. But that it is even
necessarily so, he makes good from what follows. How then does he make
it good?
Ver.
16.
“And not as it was by one that sinned, so is the gift. For the
judgment was by one to condemnation, but the free gift is of many
offences unto justification.”
And what is this that he is
speaking of? It is that sin had power to bring in death and
condemnation; but grace did not do away that one sin only, but also
those that followed after in its train. Lest then the words
“as” and “so” might seem to make the measure of
the blessings and the evils equal, and that you might not think, upon
hearing of Adam, that it was only that sin which he had brought in
which was done away with, he says that it was from many offences that
an indemnity was brought about. How is this plain? Because after the
numberless sins committed after that in paradise, the matter issued in
justification. But where righteousness is, there of necessity follows
by all means life, and the countless blessings, as does death where sin
was. For righteousness is more than life, since it is even the root of
life. That there were several goods then brought in, and that it was
not that sin only that was taken away, but all the rest along with it,
he points out when he says, that “the gift was of many offences
unto justification.” In which a proof is necessarily included,
that death was also torn up by the roots. But since he had said, that
the second was greater than the first, he is obliged to give further
grounds again for this same thing. For, before, he had said that if one
man’s sin slew all, much more will the grace of One have the
power to save. After that he shows that it was not that sin only that
was done away by the grace, but all the rest too, and that it was not
that the sins were done away only, but that righteousness was given.
And Christ did not merely do the same amount of good that Adam did of
harm, but far more and greater good. Since then he had made such
declarations as these, he wants again here also further confirmation of
these. And how does he give this confirmation? He says,
Ver.
17.
“For if by one man’s offence death reigned by one, much
more they which receive abundance of grace and of the gift and (so
Field with most mss.) of righteousness shall
reign in life by one, Jesus Christ.”
What he says, amounts to this
nearly. What armed death against the world? The one man’s eating
from the tree only. If then death attained so great power from one
offence, when it is found that certain received a grace and
righteousness out of all proportion to that sin, how shall they still
be liable to death? And for this cause, he does not here say
“grace,” but “superabundance of grace.” For it
was not as much as we must have to do away the sin only, that we
received of His grace, but even far more. For we were at once freed
from punishment, and put off all iniquity, and were also born again
from above (John iii. 3) and rose again with
the old man buried, and were redeemed, justified, led up to adoption,
sanctified, made brothers of the Only-begotten, and joint heirs and of
one Body with Him, and counted for His Flesh, and even as a Body with
the Head, so were we united unto Him! All these things then Paul calls
a “superabundance” of grace, showing that what we received
was not a medicine only to countervail the wound, but even health, and
comeliness, and honor, and glory and dignities far transcending our
natural state. And of these each in itself was enough to do away with
death, but when all manifestly run together in one, there is not the
least vestige of it left, nor can a shadow of it be seen, so entirely
is it done away. As then if any one were to cast a person who owed ten
mites (ὀβόλους) into prison, and not the man himself only, but wife and children
and servants for his sake; and another were to come and not to pay down
the ten mites only, but to give also ten thousand talents of gold, and
to lead the prisoner into the king’s courts, and to the throne of
the highest power, and were to make him partaker of the highest honor
and every kind of magnificence, the creditor would not be able to
remember the ten mites; so hath our case been. For Christ hath paid
down far more than we owe, yea as much more as the illimitable ocean is
than a little drop. Do not then, O man, hesitate as thou seest so great
a store of blessings, nor enquire how that mere spark of death and sin
was done away, when such a sea of gifts was brought in upon it. For
this is what Paul intimated by saying that “they who have
received the abundance of the grace and righteousness shall reign in
life.” And as he had now clearly demonstrated this, he again
makes use of his former argument, clenching it by taking up the same
word afresh, and saying that if for that offence all were punished,
then they may be justified too by these means.1344
1344 Chrys. has well apprehended v.
15–17 as an argument a fortiori. Here are three contrasts
between the principles of sin and grace to show the superior power of
the latter: (1) It is a much more reasonable and supposable case that
many should find life in one man’s act than that many should
suffer death in consequence of one man’s sin, v. 15. (2) The condemnation has in it (so to speak) only the
power of one sin; the gracious gift overcomes many trespasses,
v. 16. (3) Life in Christ
must be greater than death in Adam.—G.B.S. | And so he says,
Ver.
18.
“Therefore as by the offence of one judgment came upon all men to
condemnation; even so by the righteousness of One the free gift came
upon all men unto justification of life.”
And he insists again upon it,
saying,
Ver.
19.
“For as by one man’s disobedience many were made sinners,
so by the obedience of One shall many be made righteous.
What he says seems indeed to
involve no small question: but if any one attends to it diligently,
this too will admit of an easy solution. What then is the question? It
is the saying that through the offence of one many were made sinners.
For the fact that when he had sinned and become mortal, those who were
of him should be so also, is nothing unlikely. But how would it follow
that from his disobedience another would become a sinner? For at this
rate a man of this sort will not even deserve punishment, if, that is,
it was not from his own self that he became a sinner. What then does
the word “sinners” mean here? To me it seems to mean liable
to punishment and condemned to death. Now that by Adam’s death we
all became mortals, he had shown clearly and at large. But the question
now is, for what purpose was this done? But this he does not go on to
add: for it contributed nothing to his present object. For it is
against a Jew that the contest is, who doubted and made scorn of the
righteousness by One. And for this reason after showing that the
punishment too was brought in by one upon all, the reason why this was
so he has not added. For he is not for superfluities, but keeps merely
to what is necessary. For this is what the principles of disputation
did not oblige him to say any more than the Jew; and therefore he
leaves it unsolved. But if any of you were to enquire with a view to
learn, we should give this answer: That we are so far from taking any
harm from this death and condemnation1345 , if we be sober-minded, that we are the
gainers even by having become mortal, first, because it is not an
immortal body in which we sin; secondly, because we get numberless
grounds for being religious (φιλοσοφίας). For to be moderate, and to be temperate, and to be
subdued, and to keep ourselves clear of all wickedness, is what death
by its presence and by its being expected persuades us to. But
following with these, or rather even before these, it hath introduced
other greater blessings besides. For it is from hence that the crowns
of the martyrs come, and the rewards of the Apostles. Thus was Abel
justified, thus was Abraham, in having slain his son, thus was John,
who for Christ’s sake was taken off, thus were the Three
Children, thus was Daniel. For if we be so minded, not death only, but
even the devil himself will be unable to hurt us. And besides there is
this also to be said, that immortality awaits us, and after having been
chastened a little while, we shall enjoy the blessings to come without
fear, being as if in a sort of school in the present life, under
instruction by means of disease, tribulation, temptations, and poverty,
and the other apparent evils, with a view to our becoming fit for the
reception of the blessings of the world to come.
Ver.
20.
“Moreover the Law entered: that the offence might
abound.”
Since then he had shown that the
world was condemned from Adam, but from Christ was saved and freed from
condemnation, he now seasonably enters upon the discussion of the Law,
here again undermining the high notions of it. For it was so far from
doing any good, he means, or from being any way helpful, but the
disorder was only increased by its having come in. But the particle
“that” again does not assign the cause, but the result. For
the purpose of its being given was not “in order that” it
might abound, for it was given to diminish and destroy the offence. But
it resulted the opposite way, not owing to the nature of the Law, but
owing to the listlessness of those who received it.1346
1346 The Author’s view of ἵνα
πλεονάσῃ cannot be exegetically justified. Paul teaches that it was the
purpose of the dispensation of law which came in between Adam and
Christ to make transgression abound (cf. Gal. iii. 9). The meaning is
not that its purpose in coming in alongside (παρεισῆλθεν) of this reign of sin was to increase sin; but to make sin
appear as such, to exhibit it as transgression and to reveal it in its
true character to the consciousness of men. Only through the law could
sin appear as transgression and thus be apprehended by men in the
clearest manner as contrary to God’s will (cf. iv. 15 and v. 13).—G.B.S. | But why did he not say the Law was
given, but “the Law entered by the way?” It was to show
that the need of it was temporary, and not absolute or imperative. And
this he says also to the Galatians, showing the very same thing another
way. “For before faith came,” he says, “we were kept
under the Law, shut up unto the faith which should afterwards be
revealed.” And so it was not for itself, but for another, that it
kept the flock. For since the Jews were somewhat gross-minded, and
enervated, and indifferent to the gifts themselves, this was why the
Law was given, that it might convict them the more, and clearly teach
them their own condition, and by increasing the accusation might the
more repress them. But be not thou afraid, for it was not that the
punishment might be greater that this was done, but that the grace
might be seen to be greater. And this is why he proceeds,
“But where sin abounded,
grace did much more abound.”
He does not say did abound, but
“did much more abound.” For it was not remission from
punishment only that He gave us, but that from sins, and life also. As
if any were not merely to free a man with a fever from his disease, but
to give him also beauty, and strength, and rank; or again, were not to
give one an hungered nourishment only, but were to put him in
possession of great riches, and were to set him in the highest
authority. And how did sin abound? some will say. The Law gave
countless commands. Now since they transgressed them all, trangression
became more abundant. Do you see what a great difference there is
between grace and the Law? For the one became an addition to the
condemnation, but the other, a further abundance of gifts. Having then
mentioned the unspeakable munificence, he again discusses the beginning
and the root both of death and of life. What then is the root of death?
It is sin. Wherefore also he saith,
Ver.
21.
“That as sin reigned unto death, even so might grace reign
through righteousness unto eternal life, through our Lord Jesus
Christ.”
This he says to show that the
latter ranks as a king, the former, death, as a soldier, being
marshalled under the latter, and armed by it. If then the latter (i.e.
sin) armed death, it is plain enough that the righteousness destructive
hereof, which by grace was introduced, not only disarms death, but even
destroys it, and undoes entirely the dominion thereof, in that it is
the greatest of the two, as being brought in not by man and the devil,
but by God and grace, and leading our life unto a goodlier estate, and
to blessings unlimited. For of it there will never be any end (to give
you a view of its superiority from this also). For the other cast us
out of our present life, but grace, when it came, gave us not the
present life, but the immortal and eternal one. But for all these
things Christ is our voucher. Doubt not then for thy life if thou hast
righteousness, for righteousness is greater than life as being mother
of it.
Chap. vi.
ver. 1. “What then? shall we continue in sin, that grace may
abound? God forbid.”
He is again turning off to
exhortation, yet introducing it not directly, lest he should seem to
many to be irksome and vexing, but as if it rose out of the doctrines.
For if, even so diversifying his address, he was afraid of their being
offended at what he said, and therefore said, “I have written the
more boldly unto you in some sort,” (Rom. xv. 15) much more would
he have seemed to them, had he not done so, to be too harsh. Since then
he showed the greatness of the grace by the greatness of the sins it
healed, and owing to this it seemed in the eyes of the unthinking to be
an encouragement to sin (for if the reason, they would say, why greater
grace was shown, was because we had done great sins, let us not give
over sinning, that grace may be more displayed still), now that they
might not say this or suspect it, see how he turns the objection back
again. First he does it by his deprecation. “God forbid.”
And this he is in the habit of doing at things confessed on all hands
to be absurd. And then he lays down an irrefragable argument. And what
is it?
Ver.
2.
“How shall we,” he says, “that are dead to sin, live
any longer therein?”
What does “we are
dead” mean? Does it mean that as for that, and as far as it goes,
we have all received the sentence1347
1347 ἀπόφασιν
ἐδεξάμεθα, see the same phrase, Hom. vii. p. 382. | of death?
or, that we became dead to it by believing any being1348
1348 i.e. baptized, St. Cyr. Cat. Intr. §1. p. 1,
O.T. | enlightened. This is what one should
rather say, since the sequel makes this clearly right. But what is
becoming dead to it? The not obeying it in anything any more. For this
baptism effected once for all, it made us dead to it. But this must of
our own earnestness thenceforth continually be maintained, so that,
although sin issue countless commands to us, we may never again obey
it, but abide unmovable as a dead man doth. And indeed he elsewhere
saith that sin itself is dead. But there he sets that down as wishing
to show that virtue is easy, (Rom. vii. 8?) But here, as he
earnestly desires to rouse the hearer, he puts the death on his side.
Next, since what was said was obscure, he again explains, using what he
had said also in the way of reproof.
Ver. 3,
4.
“Know ye not,” he says, “my brethren, that so many of
us as were baptized into Christ were baptized into His death? therefore
we are buried with Him by baptism into death.”
What does being “baptized
into His Death” mean? That it is with a view to our dying as He
did. For Baptism is the Cross. What the Cross then, and Burial, is to
Christ, that Baptism hath been to us, even if not in the same respects.
For He died Himself and was buried in the Flesh, but we have done both
to sin. Wherefore he does not say, planted together in His Death, but
in the likeness of His Death. For both the one and the other is a
death, but not of the same subject; since the one is of the Flesh, that
of Christ; the other of sin, which is our own. As then that is real, so
is this. But if it be real, then1349
1349 Or “still,” εἰ καὶ
ἀληθὴς. | what is of
our part again must be contributed. And so he proceeds,
“That as Christ was raised
up from the dead by the Glory of the Father, even so we also should
walk in newness of life.”
Here he hints, along with the
duty of a careful walk, at the subject of the resurrection. In what
way? Do you believe, he means, that Christ died, and that He was raised
again? Believe then the same of thyself. For this is like to the other,
since both Cross and Burial is thine. For if thou hast shared in Death
and Burial, much more wilt thou in Resurrection and Life. For now the
greater is done away with, the sin I mean, it is not right to doubt any
longer about the lesser, the doing away of death.
But this he leaves for the
present to the conscience of his hearers to reason out, but himself,
after the resurrection to come had been set before us, demands of us
another, even the new conversation, which is brought about in the
present life by a change of habits.1350
1350 St.
Gr. Naz. Jamb. xx; 271, p. 228 (in Ed. Ben. xxiv. 277, p. 508).
B. What? have I not the cleansing laver yet? A. You have, but mind! B.
Mind what? A. Not for your habits, but for past transgressions. B. Nay,
but for habits! What? A. Only if thou be first at work to cleanse them.
See Tert. de Pœn. §6, 7, and the beginning of the next
Homily. | When then the
fornicator becomes chaste, the covetous man merciful, the harsh
subdued, even here a resurrection has taken place, the prelude to the
other. And how is it a resurrection? Why, because sin is mortified, and
righteousness hath risen again, and the old life hath been made to
vanish, and this new and angelic one is being lived in. But when you
hear of a new life, look for a great alteration, a wide change. But
tears come into my eyes, and I groan deeply to think how great
religiousness (φιλοσοφίαν) Paul requires of us, and what listlessness we have
yielded ourselves up to, going back after our baptism to the oldness we
before had, and returning to Egypt, and remembering the garlic after
the manna. (Num. xi. 5.) For ten or twenty
days at the very time of our Illumination, we undergo a change, but
then take up our former doings again. But it is not for a set number of
days, but for our whole life, that Paul requires of us such a
conversation. But we go back to our former vomit, thus after the youth
of grace building up the old age of sins. For either the love of money,
or the slavery to desires not convenient, or any other sin whatsoever,
useth to make the worker thereof old. “Now that which decayeth
and waxeth old is ready to vanish away.” (Heb. viii. 13.) For there is no
body, there surely is none, to be seen as palsied by length of time, as
a soul is decayed and tottering with many sins. Such an one gets
carried on to the last degree of doting, yielding indistinct sounds,
like men that are very old and crazed, being surcharged with rheum, and
great distortion of mind, and forgetfulness, and with scales upon its
eyes, and1351
1351 Mar. φανεῖται, 4 mss. φαινομένη. | disgustful to men, and an easy prey
to the devil. Such then are the souls of sinners; not so those of the
righteous, for they are youthful and well-favored, and are in the very
prime of life throughout, ever ready for any fight or struggle. But
those of sinners, if they receive even a small shock, straightway fall
and are undone. And it was this the Prophet made appear, when he said,
that like as the chaff which the wind scattereth from the face of the
earth (Ps. i. 4), thus are they that live in sin whirled to and fro, and
exposed to every sort of harm. For they neither see like a healthy
person, nor hear with simplicity, they speak not articulately, but are
oppressed with great shortness of breath. They have their mouth
overflowing with spittle. And would it were but spittle, and nothing
offensive! But now they send forth words more fetid than any mire, and
what is worst, they have not power even to spit this saliva of words
away from them, but taking it in their hand with much lewdness, they
smear it on again, so as to be coagulating, and hard to perspire
through.1352
1352 διατμέω. ap. Hipp. p. 505. 10. Liddell & Scott, sub. v. or to
cut through, from διατέμνω. | Perhaps ye are sickened with this
description. Ought ye not, then to be more so at the reality? For if
these things when happening in the body are disgustful, much more when
in the soul. Such was that son who wasted out all his share, and was
reduced to the greatest wretchedness, and was in a feebler state than
any imbecile or disordered person. But when he was willing, he became
suddenly young by his decision alone and his change. For as soon as he
had said, “I will return to my Father,” this one word
conveyed to him all blessings; or rather not the bare word, but the
deed which he added to the word. For he did not say, “Let me go
back,” and then stay there; but said, Let me go back, and went
back, and returned the whole of that way. Thus let us also do; and even
if we have gotten carried beyond the boundary, let us go up to our
Father’s house, and not stay lingering over the length of the
journey. For if we be willing, the way back again is easy and very
speedy. Only let us leave the strange and foreign land; for this is
what sin is, drawing us far away from our Father’s house; let us
leave her then, that we may speedily return to the house of our Father.
For our Father hath a natural yearning towards us, and will honor us if
we be changed, no less than those that are unattainted, if we change,
but even more, just as the father showed that son the greater honor.
For he had greater pleasure himself at receiving back his son. And how
am I to go back again? one may say. Do but put a beginning upon the
business, and the whole is done. Stay from vice, and go no farther into
it, and thou hast laid hold of the whole already. For as in the case of
the sick, being no worse may be a beginning of getting better, so is
the case with vice also. Go no further, and then your deeds of
wickedness will have an end. And if you do so for two days, you will
keep off on the third day more easily; and after three days you will
add ten, then twenty, then an hundred, then your whole life. (Cf. Hom.
xvii. on St. Matt. p. 267, O.T.) For the further thou goest on, the
easier wilt thou see the way to be, and thou wilt stand on the summit
itself, and wilt at once enjoy many goods. For so it was when the
prodigal came back, there were flutes, and harps, and dancings, and
feasts, and assemblings: and he who might have called his son to
account for his ill-timed extravagance, and flight to such a distance,
did nothing of the sort, but looked upon him as unattainted, and could
not find it in him even to use the language of reproach, or rather,
even to mention barely to him the former things, but threw himself upon
him, and kissed him, and killed the calf, and put a robe upon him, and
placed on him abundant honors. Let us then, as we have such examples
before us, be of good cheer and keep from despair. For He is not so
well pleased with being called Master, as Father, nor with having a
slave as with having a son. And this is what He liketh rather than
that. This then is why He did all that He has done; and “spared
not even His Only-begotten Son” (Rom. viii. 32), that we might
receive the adoption of sons, that we might love Him, not as a Master
only, but as a Father. And if He obtained this of us He taketh delight
therein as one that has glory given him, and proclaimeth it to all
though He needeth nothing of ours. This is what, in Abraham’s
case for instance, He everywhere does, using these words, “I am
the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.” And yet it was they of His
household who should have found an honor in this; but now it is the
Lord evidently who does this; for this is why He says to Peter,
“Lovest thou Me more than these?” (John xxi. 17) to show that He
seeketh nothing so much as this from us. For this too He bade Abraham
offer his son to Him, that He might make it known to all that He was
greatly beloved1353
1353 This passage is one among many which show how the fides
formata was that which the Fathers contemplated. | by the
patriarch. Now this desire to be loved exceedingly comes from loving
exceedingly. For this cause too He said to the Apostles, “He that
loveth father or mother more than Me, is not worthy of Me.”
(Matt.
x. 37.) For this cause He bids us esteem that even which is in the most
close connection with us, our soul (or, life, v. 39, and John xii.
25),
as second to the love of him, since He wisheth to be beloved by us with
exceeding entireness. For we too, if we have no strong feelings about a
person, have no strong desire for his friendship either, though he be
great and noble; whereas when we love any one warmly and really, though
the person loved be of low rank and humble, yet we esteem love from him
as a very great honor. And for this reason He Himself also called it
glory not to be loved by us only, but even to suffer those shameful
things in our behalf. (ib.
23.)
However, those things were a glory owing to love only. But whatever we
suffer for Him, it is not for love alone; but even for the sake of the
greatness and dignity of Him we long for, that it would with good
reason both be called glory, and be so indeed. Let us then incur
dangers for Him as if running for the greatest crowns, and let us
esteem neither poverty, nor disease, nor affront, nor calumny, nor
death itself, to be heavy and burdensome, when it is for Him that we
suffer these things. For if we be right-minded, we are the greatest
possible gainers by these things, as neither from the contrary to these
shall we if not right-minded gain any advantage. But consider; does any
one affront thee and war against thee? Doth he not thereby set thee
upon thy guard, and give thee an opportunity of growing like unto God?
For if thou lovest him that plots against thee, thou wilt be like Him
that “maketh His Sun to rise upon the evil and good.”
(Matt.
v. 45.) Does another take thy money away? If thou bearest it nobly,
thou shalt receive the same reward as they who have spent all they have
upon the poor. For it says, “Ye took joyfully the spoiling of
your goods, knowing that ye have in heaven a better and an enduring
substance.” (Heb. x. 34.) Has any one
reviled thee and abused thee, whether truly or falsely, he weaves for
thee a very great crown if thou bearest meekly his contumely; since he
too, who calumniates, provides for us an abundant reward. For
“rejoice,” it says, “and be exceeding glad, when men
say all manner of evil against you falsely, because great is your
reward in Heaven.” (Matt. v. 12;
11.)
And he too that speaketh truth against us is of the greatest service,
if we do but bear meekly what is said. For the Pharisee spake evil of
the Publican, and with truth, still instead of a Publican he made him a
righteous man. (Luke xviii. 11.) And what need to go
into particular instances. For any one that will go to the conflicts of
Job may learn all these points accurately. And this is why Paul said,
“God for us, who against us?” (Rom. viii. 31.) As then by
being earnest, we gain even from things that vex us, so by being
listless, we do not even improve from things that favor us. For what
did Judas profit, tell me, by being with Christ? or what profit was the
Law to the Jew? or Paradise to Adam? or what did Moses profit those in
the wilderness? And so we should leave all, and look to one point only,
how we may husband aright our own resources. And if we do this, not
even the devil himself will ever get the better of us, but will make
our profiting the greater, by putting us upon being watchful. Now in
this way it is that Paul rouses the Ephesians, by describing his
fierceness. Yet we sleep and snore, though we have to do with so crafty
an enemy. And if we were aware of a serpent1354
nestling by our bed, we should make much ado to kill him. But when the
devil nestleth in our souls, we fancy that we take no harm, but lie at
our ease; and the reason is, that we see him not with the eyes of our
body. And yet this is why we should rouse us the more and be sober. For
against an enemy whom one can perceive, one may easily be on guard; but
one that cannot be seen, if we be not continually in arms, we shall not
easily escape. And the more so, because he hath no notion of open
combat (for he would surely be soon defeated), but often under the
appearance of friendship he insinuates the venom of his cruel malice.
In this way it was that he suborned Job’s wife, by putting on the
mask of natural affectionateness, to give that wretchless advice. And
so when conversing with Adam, he puts on the air of one concerned and
watching over his interests, and saith, that “your eyes shall be
opened in the day that ye eat of the tree.” (Gen. iii. 5.) Thus Jephtha
too he persuaded, under the pretext of religion, to slay his daughter,
and to offer the sacrifice the Law forbade. Do you see what his wiles
are, what his varying warfare? Be then on thy guard, and arm thyself at
all points with the weapons of the Spirit, get exactly acquainted with
his plans, that thou mayest both keep from being caught, and easily
catch him. For it was thus that Paul got the better of him, by getting
exactly acquainted with these. And so he says, “for we are not
ignorant of his devices.” (2 Cor. ii. 11.) Let us then
also be earnest in learning and avoiding his stratagems, that after
obtaining a victory over him, we may, whether in this present life or
in that which is to come, be proclaimed conquerors, and obtain those
unalloyed blessings, by the grace and love toward man, etc.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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