Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| Homily XIII on Rom. vii. 14. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Homily XIII.
Rom. VII. 14
“For we know that the Law
is spiritual: but I am carnal, sold under sin.”
After having said that great evils had taken place, and that sin, taking
occasion by the commandment, had grown stronger, and the opposite of
what the Law mainly aimed at had been the result, and after having
thrown the hearer into a great deal of perplexity, he goes on next to
give the rationale of these events, after first clearing the Law of any
ill suspicion. For lest—upon hearing that it was through the
commandment that sin took that occasion, and that it was when it came
that sin revived, and through it deceived and killed—any one
should suppose the Law to be the source of these evils, he first sets
forth its defence with considerable advantage, not clearing it from
accusation only, but encircling it also with the utmost praise. And
this he lays down, not as granting it for his own part, but as
declaring a universal judgment. “For we know,” he says,
“that the Law is spiritual.” As if he had said, This is an
allowed thing, and self-evident, that it “is spiritual,” so
far is it from being the cause of sin, or to blame for the evils that
have happened. And observe, that he not only clears it of accusation,
but bestows exceeding great praise upon it. For by calling it
spiritual, he shows it to be a teacher of virtue and hostile to vice;
for this is what being spiritual means, leading off from sin of every
kind. And this the Law did do, by frightening, admonishing, chastening,
correcting, recommending every kind of virtue. Whence then, was sin
produced, if the teacher was so admirable? It was from the listlessness
of its disciples. Wherefore he went on to say, “but I am
carnal;” giving us a sketch now of man, as comporting himself in
the Law, and before the Law.1390
1390 Chrys. gives no hint of any controversy as to the interpretation
of the passage vii.
14–25. In modern times the question has been greatly disputed:
Whom does the apostle represent by the “I” who is waging
such an unsuccessful combat with sin? Passing by the views that he
refers to himself personally (Hofmann) and that he refers to the Jewish
people under the old dispensation (Grotius, Reiche), two opinions have
prevailed among interpreters (1) that he is representing the
regenerate man. (For the arguments by which this view is
supported see Hodge on Romans in loco). (2) That he is here
personating the unregenerate man who, however, has become
awakened under the law to a sense of his sinful condition. This view is
preferred on the following grounds. (1) The connection of 14–25 with the argument
of 7–13, which shows the power
of the law to awaken the consciousness of sin and can therefore apply
only to the Jew aroused by the law. (2) The relation of the passage
to chap. viii. In vii. 25the apostle mounts to
the Christian plane and in ch.
viii.
exults in the liberation from the conflict just described which Christ
brings to the soul. (3) Much of the language of vii. 14–25 is inconsistent with
the consciousness of a regenerate man and especially with Paul’s
joyous and triumphant view of the Christian life. (4) The language
throughout is appropriate, not, indeed, to the morally indifferent man,
but to the unconverted Jew whom the law has awakened to a knowledge of
his sin and need, and this is precisely the subject under consideration
in the earlier verses of the Chap. So Tholuck, De Wette, Alford,
Olshausen, Lange, Meyer, Weiss, Godet). Chrys. rather takes for
granted, than states the same view, in saying that it is “a
sketch of man as comporting himself in the law and before the
law.”—G.B.S. | “Sold under
sin.” Because with death (he means) the throng of passions also
came in. For when the body had become mortal, it was henceforth a
necessary thing for it to receive concupiscence, and anger, and pain,
and all the other passions, which required a great deal of wisdom
(φιλοσοφίας) to prevent their flooding us, and sinking reason in the
depth of sin. For in themselves they were not sin,1391
1391 The words of the Fathers on this subject become more definite
after the Pelagian Controversy. St. Aug. contr. Julianum, i. 2,
§32. (Ben. t. 10), speak thus of concupiscence, (not in act, but
as an inherited habit). “It is not however called sin in the
sense of making one guilty, but in that it is caused by the guilt of
the first man, and in that it rebels, and strives to draw us into guilt
except grace aid us.” | but, when their extravagancy was
unbridled, it wrought this effect. Thus (that I may take one of them
and examine it as a specimen) desire is not sin: but when it has run
into extravagance, being not minded to keep within the laws of
marriage,1392 but springing even upon other
men’s wives; then the thing henceforward becomes adultery, yet
not by reason of the desire, but by reason of its exorbitancy. And
observe the wisdom of Paul. For after praising the Law, he hastens
immediately to the earlier period, that he may show the state of our
race, both then and at the time it received the Law, and make it plain
how necessary the presence of grace was, a thing he labored on every
occasion to prove. For when he says, “sold under sin,” he
means it not of those who were under the Law only, but of those who had
lived before the Law also, and of men from the very first. Next he
mentions the way in which they were sold and made over.
Ver.
15.
“For that which I do, I know not.”
What does the “I know
not” mean?—I am ignorant. And when could this ever happen?
For nobody ever sinned in ignorance. Seest thou, that if we do not
receive his words with the proper caution, and keep looking to the
object of the Apostle, countless incongruities will follow? For if they
sinned through ignorance, then they did not deserve to be punished. As
then he said above, “for without the Law sin is dead,” not
meaning that they did not know they were sinning, but that they knew
indeed, but not so distinctly; wherefore they were punished, but not so
severely: and again; “I should not have known lust;” not
meaning an entire ignorance of it, but referring to the most distinct
knowledge of it; and said, that it also “wrought in me all manner
of concupiscence,” not meaning to say that the commandment made
the concupiscence, but that sin through the commandment introduces an
intense degree of concupiscence; so here it is not absolute ignorance
that he means by saying, “For what I do, I know not;” since
how then would he have pleasure in the law of God in his inner man?
What then is this, “I know not?” I get dizzy, he means, I
feel carried away,1393
1393 ἐμποδισμὸς
ταῖς
βουλήσεσι. Arist. Rhet. ii. | I find a
violence done to me, I get tripped up without knowing how. Just as we
often say, Such an one came and carried me away with him, without my
knowing how; when it is not ignorance we mean as an excuse, but to show
a sort of deceit, and circumvention, and plot. “For what I would,
that I do not: but what I hate, that I do.” How then canst thou
be said not to know what thou art doing? For if thou willest the good,
and hatest the evil, this requires a perfect knowledge. Whence it
appears that he says, “that I would not,” not as denying
free will, or as adducing any constrained necessity. For if it was not
willingly, but by compulsion, that we sinned, then the punishments that
took place before would not be justifiable. But as in saying “I
know not,” it was not ignorance he set before us, but what we
have said; so in adding the “that I would not,” it is no
necessity he signifies, but the disapproval he felt of what was done.1394
1394 This seems to have been Plato’s view of free-will. See
Tenneman, Plat. Philos. iv. p. 34, οὐδεὶς ἕκων
πονηρὸς,
etc. | Since if this was not his meaning in
saying, “That which I would not, that I do:” he would else
have gone on, “But I do what I am compelled and enforced
to.” For this is what is opposed to willing and power
(ἐξουσί& 139·). But now he does not say this, but in the place of it he has put
the word, “that I hate,” that you might learn how when he
says, “that I would not,” he does not deny the power. Now,
what does the “that I would not” mean? It means, what I
praise not, what I do not approve, what I love not. And in
contradistinction to this, he adds what follows; “But what I
hate, that I do.”
Ver.
16.
“If then I do that which I would not, I consent unto the Law,
that it is good.”
You see here, that the
understanding is not yet perverted, but keeps up its own noble
character even during the action. For even if it does pursue vice,
still it hates it the while, which would be great commendation, whether
of the natural or the written Law. For that the Law is good, is (he
says) plain, from the fact of my accusing myself, when I disobey the
Law, and hate what has been done. And yet if the Law was to blame for
the sin, how comes it that he felt a delight in it, yet hated what it
orders to be done? For, “I consent,” he says, “unto
the Law, that it is good.”
Ver 17,
18.
“Now then it is no more I that do it, but sin that dwelleth in
me. For I know that in me, that is, in my flesh, dwelleth no good
thing.”
On this text, those who find
fault with the flesh, and contend it was no part of God’s
creation, attack us. What are we to say then? Just what we did before,
when discusssing the Law: that as there he makes sin answerable for
everything so here also. For he does not say, that the flesh worketh
it, but just the contrary, “it is not I that do it, but sin that
dwelleth in me.” But if he does say that “there dwelleth no
good thing in it,” still this is no charge against the flesh. For
the fact that “no good thing dwelleth in it,” does not show
that it is evil itself. Now we admit, that the flesh is not so great as
the soul, and is inferior to it, yet not contrary, or opposed to it, or
evil; but that it is beneath the soul, as a harp beneath a harper, and
as a ship under the pilot. And these are not contrary to those who
guide and use them, but go with them entirely, yet are not of the same
honor with the artist. As then a person who says, that the art resides
not in the harp or the ship, but in the pilot or harper, is not finding
fault with the instruments, but pointing out the great difference
between them1395
1395 So
the mss. Sav. has τῆς
τέχνης, which
seems to have been put in to show that it was not the maker, but the
user of the instrument, that was meant. | and the artist; so Paul in saying,
that “in my flesh dwelleth no good thing,” is not finding
fault with the body, but pointing out the soul’s superiority. For
this it is that has the whole duty or pilotage put into its hands, and
that of playing. And this Paul here points out, giving the governing
power to the soul, and after dividing man into these two things, the
soul and the body, he says, that the flesh has less of reason, and is
destitute of discretion, and ranks among things to be led, not among
things that lead. But the soul has more wisdom, and can see what is to
be done and what not, yet is not equal to pulling in the horse as it
wishes. And this would be a charge not against the flesh only, but
against the soul also, which knows indeed what it ought to do, but
still does not carry out in practice what seems best to it. “For
to will,” he says, “is present with me; but how to perform
that which is good, I find not.” Here again in the words,
“I find not,” he does not speak of any ignorance or
perplexity, but a kind of thwarting and crafty assault made by sin,
which he therefore points more clearly out in the next
words.
Ver. 19,
20.
“For the good that I would I do not: but the evil which I would
not that I do. Now if I do that I would not, it is no more I that do it
but sin that dwelleth in me.”
Do you see, how he acquits the
essence of the soul, as well as the essence of the flesh, from
accusation, and removes it entirely to sinful actions? For if the soul
willeth not the evil, it is cleared: and if he does not work it
himself, the body too is set free, and the whole may be charged upon
the evil moral choice. Now the essence of the soul and body and of that
choice are not the same, for the two first are God’s works, and
the other is a motion from ourselves towards whatever we please to
direct it. For willing is indeed natural (ἕμφυτον), and
is from God: but willing on this wise is our own, and from our own
mind.
Ver.
21.
“I find then a law, that when I would do good, evil is present
with me.”
What he says is not very clear.
What then is it that is said? I praise the law, he says, in my
conscience, and I find it pleads on my side so far as I am desirous of
doing what is right, and that it invigorates this wish. For as I feel a
pleasure in it, so does it yield praise to my decision. Do you see how
he shows, that the knowledge of what is good and what is not such is an
original and fundamental part of our nature, and that the Law of Moses
praises it, and getteth praise from it? For above he did not say so
much as I get taught by the Law, but “I consent to the
Law;” nor further on that I get instructed by it, but “I
delight in” it. Now what is “I delight?” It is, I
agree with it as right, as it does with me when wishing to do what is
good. And so the willing what is good and the not willing what is evil
was made a fundamental part of us from the first. But the Law, when it
came, was made at once a stronger accuser in what was bad, and a
greater praiser in what was good. Do you observe that in every place he
bears witness to its having a kind of intensitiveness and additional
advantage, yet nothing further? For though it praises and I delight in
it, and wish what is good the “evil is” still
“present with me,” and the agency of it has not been
abolished. And thus the Law, with a man who determines upon doing
anything good, only acts so far as auxiliary to him, as that it has the
same wish as himself. Then since he had stated it indistinctly, as he
goes on he gives a yet more distinct interpretation, by showing how the
evil is present, how too the Law is a law to such a person only who has
a mind to do what is good.
Ver.
22.
“For I delight,” he says, “in the law of God after
the inward man.”
He means, for I knew even before
this what was good, but when I find it set down in writing, I praise
it.
Ver.
23.
“But I see another law warring against the law of my
mind.”
Here again he calls sin a law
warring against the other, not in respect of good order, but from the
strict obedience yielded to it by those who comply with it. As then it
gives the name of master (κύριον Matt. vi. 24; Luke xvi.
13)
to Mammon, and of god (Phil. iii. 19) to the belly,
not because of their intrinsically deserving it, but because of the
extreme obsequiousness of their subjects; so here he calls sin a law,
owing to those who are so obsequious to it, and are afraid to leave it,
just as those who have received the Law dread leaving the Law. This
then, he means, is opposed to the law of nature; for this is what is
meant by “the law of my mind.” And he next represents an
array and battle, and refers1396
1396 Ver. and Sav. Marg. ἐντίθησι, which makes much the same sense; his conj. and 2 mss. ἀντιτίθησι, “sets in opposition.” | the whole
struggle to the law of nature. For that of Moses was subsequently added
over and above: yet still both the one and the other, the one as
teaching, the other as praising what was right, wrought no great
effects in this battle; so great was the thraldom of sin, overcoming
and getting the upper hand as it did. And this Paul setting forth, and
showing the decided (κατὰ
κράτος) victory
it had, says, “I see another law warring against the law of my
mind, and bringing me into captivity.” He does not use the word
conquering only, but “bringing me into captivity to the law of
sin.” He does not say the bent of the flesh, or the nature of the
flesh, but “the law of sin.” That is, the thrall, the
power. In what sense then does he say, “Which is in my
members?” Now what is this? Surely it does not make the members
to be sin, but makes them as distinct from sin as possible. For that
which is in a thing is diverse from that wherein it is. As then the
commandment also is not evil, because by it sin took occasion, so
neither is the nature of the flesh, even if sin subdues us by means of
it. For in this way the soul will be evil, and much more so too, since
it has authority in matters of action. But these things are not so,
certainly they are not. Since neither if a tyrant and a robber were to
take possession of a splendid mansion and a king’s court, would
the circumstance be any discredit to the house, inasmuch as the entire
blame would come on those who contrived such an act. But the enemies of
the truth, along with their impiety, fall unawares also into great
unreasonableness. For they do not accuse the flesh only, but they also
disparage the Law. And yet if the flesh were evil, the Law would be
good. For it wars against the Law, and opposes it. If, however, the Law
be not good, then the flesh is good.1397
1397 It is peculiarly interesting to see how vigorously Chrys. combats
the idea that the flesh is essentially evil, as if it were a current
notion of his time. This view—derived from heathen
sources—exerted a powerful influence in the Church from early
times and became the fruitful source of ascetic
rigors.—G.B.S. | For it
wars and fights against it even by their own account. How come they
then to assert that both belong to the devil, putting things opposed to
each other before us? Do you see, along with their impiety, how great
is their unreasonableness also? But such doctrines as these are not the
Church’s, for it is the sin only that she condemns; and both the
Laws which God has given, both that of nature and that of Moses, she
says are hostile to this, and not to the flesh; for the flesh she
denies to be sin, for it is a work of God’s, and one very useful
too in order to virtue, if we live soberly.
Ver.
24.
“O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of
this death?”
Do you notice what a great
thraldom that of vice is, in that it overcomes even a mind that
delighted in the Law? For no one can rejoin, he means, that I hate the
Law and abhor it, and so sin overcomes me. For “I delight in it,
and consent to it,” and flee for refuge to it, yet still it had
not the power of saving one who had fled to it. But Christ saved even
one that fled from Him. See what a vast advantage grace has! Yet the
Apostle has not stated it thus; but with a sigh only, and a great
lamentation, as if devoid of any to help him, he points out by his
perplexity the might of Christ, and says, “O wretched man that I
am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death?” The Law
has not been able: conscience has proved unequal to it, though it
praised what was good, and did not praise it only, but even fought
against the contrary of it. For by the very words “warreth
against” he shows that he was marshalled against it for his part.
From what quarter then is one to hope for salvation?
Ver.
25.
“I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord.”
Observe how he shows the
necessity of having grace present with us, and that the well-doings
herein belong alike to the Father and the Son. For if it is the Father
Whom he thanketh, still the Son is the cause of this thanksgiving. But
when you hear him say, “Who shall deliver me from the body of
this death?” do not suppose him to be accusing the flesh. For he
does not say “body of sin,” but “body of
death:” that is, the mortal body—that which hath been
overcome by death, not that which gendered death. And this is no proof
of the evil of the flesh, but of the marring (ἐπηρείας, thwarting) it has undergone. As if any one who was take captive
by the savages were to be said to belong to the savages, not as being a
savage, but as being detained by them: so the body is said to be of
death, as being held down thereby, not as producing it. Wherefore also
it is not the body that he himself wishes to be delivered from, but the
mortal body, hinting, as I have often said, that from its becoming
subject to suffering,1398
1398 παθητὸν, which may also mean liable to passions. | it also
became an easy prey to sin. Why then, it may be said, the thraldom of
sin being so great before the times of grace, were men punished for
sinning? Because they had such commands given them as might even under
sin’s dominion be accomplished. For he did not draw them to the
highest kind of conversation, but allowed them to enjoy wealth, and did
not forbid having several wives, and to gratify anger in a just cause,
and to make use of luxury within bounds.1399
1399 He is speaking of the actual precepts. Men under the Law were
encouraged to higher aims, but it was in looking beyond the
letter. | (Matt. v. 38.) And so great
was this condescension, that the written Law even required less than
the law of nature. For the law of nature ordered one man to associate
with one woman throughout. And this Christ shows in the words,
“He which made them at the beginning, made them male and
female.” (ib. xix.
4.)
But the Law of Moses neither forbade the putting away of one and the
taking in of another, nor prohibited the having of two1400
1400 The
typical fitness of this permission is illustrated by the case of Sarah
and Hagar; the coincidence of typical with moral fitness is in many
cases above our understanding. | at once! (ib. v. 31.) And besides this
there are also many other ordinances of the Law, that one might see
those who were before its day fully performing, being instructed by the
law of nature. They therefore who lived under the old dispensation had
no hardship done them by so moderate a system of laws being imposed
upon them. But if they were not, on these terms, able to get the upper
hand, the charge is against their own listlessness. Wherefore Paul
gives thanks, because Christ, without any rigorousness about these
things, not only demanded no account of this moderate amount,1401
1401 So
Field from 1 ms.: others “past
sins:” Vulg. “our doings.” | but even made us able to have a greater race
set before us. And therefore he says, “I thank my God through
Jesus Christ.” And letting the salvation which all agreed about
pass, he goes from the points he had already made good, to another
further point, in which he states that it was not our former sins only
that we were freed from, but we were also made invincible for the
future. For “there is,” he says, “now no condemnation
to them which are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh.”
Yet he did not say it before he had first recalled to mind our former
condition again in the words, “So then with the mind I myself
serve the law of God, but with the flesh the law of
sin.”
Chap. viii.
ver. 1. “There is therefore no condemnation to them which are in
Christ Jesus.”
Then as the fact that many fall
into sin even after baptism presented a difficulty (ἀντέπιπτεν), he consequently hastened to meet it, and says not merely
“to them that are in Christ Jesus,” but adds, “who
walk not after the flesh;” so showing that all afterward comes of
our listlessness. For now we have the power of walking not after the
flesh, but then it was a difficult task. Then he gives another proof of
it by the sequel, in the words,
Ver.
2.
“For the law of the Spirit of life hath made me
free.”
It is the Spirit he is here
calling the law of the Spirit. For as he calls sin the law of sin, so
he here calls the Spirit the law of the Spirit. And yet he named that
of Moses as such, where he says, “For we know that the Law is
spiritual.” What then is the difference? A great and unbounded
one. For that was spiritual, but this is a law of the Spirit. Now what
is the distinction between this and that? The other was merely given by
the Spirit, but this even furnisheth those that receive it with the
Spirit in large measure. Wherefore also he called it the law of life1402
1402 It
may be right to consider τῆς ζωῆς as forming part of the attribute of νόμος in
conformity with the Hebr. idiom; see Lee’s Gram. Art. 224,
8. | in contradistinction to that of sin, not
that of Moses. For when he says, It freed me1403
1403 “Thee” most mss., and Edd.
before Field. |
from the law of sin and death, it is not the law of Moses that he is
here speaking of, since in no case does he style it the law of sin: for
how could he one that he had called “just and holy” so
often, and destructive of sin too? but it is that which warreth against
the law of the mind. For this grievous war did the grace of the Spirit
put a stop to, by slaying sin, and making the contest light to us and
crowning us at the outstart, and then drawing us to the struggle with
abundant help. Next as it is ever his wont to turn from the Spirit to
the Son and the Father, and to reckon all our estate to lean upon the
Trinity,1404
1404 τῇ τριάδι
πάντα τὰ παῤ
ἡμῶν
λογιζόμενος, or “imputing all things (done) by us to the
Trinity.” | so doth he here also. For after
saying, “Who shall deliver me from the body of this death,”
he pointed at the Father as doing this by the Son, then again at the
Holy Spirit along with the Son. “For the law of the Spirit of
Life in Christ Jesus hath made me free, he says. Then again, at the
Father and the Son;
Ver.
3.
“For what the Law could not do,” he saith, “in that
it was weak through the flesh, God sending His own Son in the likeness
of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in the
flesh.”
Again, he seems indeed to be
disparaging the Law. But if any one attends strictly, he even highly
praises it, by showing that it harmonizes with Christ, and gives
preference to the same things. For he does not speak of the badness of
the Law, but of “what it could not do;” and so again,
“in that it was weak,” not, “in that it was
mischievous, or designing.” And even weakness he does not ascribe
to it, but to the flesh, as he says, “in that it was weak through
the flesh,” using the word “flesh” here again not for
the essence and subsistency itself, but giving its name to the more
carnal sort of mind. In which way he acquits both the body and the Law
of any accusation. Yet not in this way only, but by what comes next
also. For supposing the Law to be of the contrary part, how was it
Christ came to its assistance, and fulfilled its requisitions, and lent
it a helping hand by condemning sin in the flesh? For this was what was
lacking, since in the soul the Lord had condemned it long ago. What
then? is it the greater thing that the Law accomplished, but the less
that the Only-Begotten did? Surely not. For it was God that was the
principal doer of that also, in that He gave us the law of nature, and
added the written one to it. Again, there were no use of the greater,
if the lesser had not been supplied. For what good is it to know what
things ought to be done, if a man does not follow it out? None, for it
were but a greater condemnation. And so He that hath saved the soul it
is, Who hath made the flesh also easy to bridle. For to teach is easy,
but to show besides a way in which these things were easily done, this
is the marvel. Now it was for this that the Only-Begotten came, and did
not depart before He had set us free from this difficulty. But what is
greater, is the method of the victory; for He took none other flesh,
but this very one which was beset with troubles. So it is as if any one
were to see in the street a vile woman of the baser sort being beaten,
and were to say he was her son, when he was the king’s, and so to
get her free from those who ill treated her. And this He really did, in
that He confessed that He was the Son of Man, and stood by it (i.e. the
flesh), and condemned the sin. However, He did not endure to smite it
besides; or rather, He smote it with the blow of His death, but in this
very act it was not the smitten flesh which was condemned and perished,
but the sin which had been smiting. And this is the greatest possible
marvel. For if it were not in the flesh that the victory took place, it
would not be so astonishing, since this the Law also wrought. But the
wonder is, that it was with the flesh (μετὰ
σαρκὸς) that His
trophy was raised, and that what had been overthrown numberless times
by sin, did itself get a glorious victory over it. For behold what
strange things there were that took place! One was, that sin did not
conquer the flesh; another, that sin was conquered, and conquered by it
too. For it is not the same thing not to get conquered, and to conquer
that which was continually overthrowing us. A third is, that it not
only conquered it, but even chastised it. For by not sinning it kept
from being conquered, but by dying also, He overcame and condemned it,
having made the flesh, that before was so readily made a mock of by it,
a plain object of fear to it. In this way then, He at once unnerved its
power, and abolished the death by it introduced. For so long as it took
hold of sinners, it with justice kept pressing to its end. But after
finding a sinless body, when it had given it up to death, it was
condemned as having acted unjustly. Do you observe, how many proofs of
victory there are? The flesh not being conquered by sin, Its even
conquering and condemning it, Its not condemning it barely, but
condemning it as having sinned. For after having convicted it of
injustice, he proceeds to condemn it, and that not by power and might
barely, but even by the rules of justice. For this is what he means by
saying, “for sin condemned sin in the flesh.” As if he had
said that he had convicted it of great sin, and then condemned it. So
you see it is sin that getteth condemned everywhere, and not the flesh,
for this is even crowned with honor, and has to give sentence against
the other. But if he does say that it was “in the likeness”
of flesh that he sent the Son, do not therefore suppose that His flesh
was of a different kind. For as he called it “sinful,” this
was why he put the word “likeness.”1405
1405 The
Fathers lay great stress upon this phrase of the Apostles. August.
contr. Faust. xiv. 5, argues, that this likeness consisted in
our Lord’s flesh being mortal; death being the penalty of sin:
vid. also de Nuptiis et Concupisc. 1. 12. vid. also Basil, Ep.
261, where writing against the Apollinarians, he interprets this text
to mean, that whereas Christ had all affections of human nature, which
implied the reality of His assumption of it, He had not those which
infringe our nature, i.e. which arise from sin. Athanasius, writing
against the same heretics, observes, that Christ’s sinlessness
was like Adam’s before the fall (In Apoll. ii. 6): or as St.
Cyril observes, greater than before the fall because He has a physical
inability to sin, arising from His personality being Divine, vid. Cyr.
Alex. in Esai. l. i. Orat. 4, fin. At the same time He
took the flesh, not of Adam unfallen, but fallen, such as ours. Vid.
Leont. contra Nest. et Eutych. lib. 2 apud Canis. vol. i. p.
568. Gall. xii. 681. Fulgent. Ep. ad. Regin. Tertull. de Carn.
Christi. xvi. |
For sinful flesh it was not that Christ had, but like indeed to our
sinful flesh, yet sinless, and in nature the same with us. And so even
from this it is plain that by nature the flesh was not evil. For it was
not by taking a different one instead of the former, nor by changing
this same one in substance, that Christ caused it to regain the
victory: but He let it abide in its own nature, and yet made it bind on
the crown of victory over sin, and then after the victory raised it up,
and made it immortal. What then, it may be said, is this to me, whether
it was this flesh that these things happened in? Nay, it concerns thee
very much. Wherefore also he proceeds:
Ver.
4.
“That the righteousness1406
1406 Aristotle defines δικαίωμα to be τὸ
δίκαιον ὅταν
πραχθῇ· but
rather in the sense of correcting wrong than in the more general
meaning: Eth. b. v. c. 7, §7. It may mean here what the Law
claims of right. | of the Law might
be fulfilled in us, who walk not after the flesh.”
What meaneth this word,
righteousness? Why, the end, the scope, the well-doing. For what was
its design, and what did it enjoin? To be without sin. This then is
made good to us (κατώρθωται
ἡμἵν) now through Christ.
And the making a stand against it, and the getting the better of it,
came from Him. But it is for us to enjoy the victory. Then shall we
never sin henceforth? We never shall unless we have become exceedingly
relaxed and supine. And this is why he added, “to them that walk
not after the flesh.” For lest, after hearing that Christ hath
delivered thee from the war of sin, and that the requisition
(δικαίωμα) of the Law is fulfilled in thee, by sin having been
“condemned in the flesh,” thou shouldest break up all thy
defences; therefore, in that place also, after saying, “there is
therefore no condemnation,” he added, “to them that walk
not after the flesh;” and here also, “that the requisition
of the Law might be fulfilled in us,” he proceeds with the very
same thing; or rather, not with it only, but even with a much stronger
thing.1407
1407 St.
Chr. evidently used a text which read in v. 1 μὴ κατὰ
σάρκα
περιπ., but
omitted ἀλλὰ κατὰ
Πνεῦμα. Most
mss. of the N.T. and all recent critical
editions, omit both clauses there: here there is no doubt of
either. | For after saying, “that the
righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us that walk not after
the flesh,” he proceeds, “but after the
Spirit.”
So showing, that it is not only
binding upon us to keep ourselves from evil deeds, but also to be
adorned (κομᾅν) with
good. For to give thee the crown is His; but it is thine to hold it
fast when given. For the righteousness of the Law, that one should not
become liable to its curse, Christ has accomplished for thee. Be not a
traitor then to so great a gift, but keep guarding this goodly
treasure. For in this passage he shows that the Font will not suffice
to save us, unless, after coming from it, we display a life worthy of
the Gift. And so he again advocates the Law in saying what he does. For
when we have once become obedient to Christ, we must use all ways and
plans so that its righteousness, which Christ fulfilled, may abide in
us, and not come to naught.
Ver.
5.
“For they that are after the flesh do mind the things of the
flesh.”
Yet even this is no disparaging
of the flesh. For so long as it keeps its own place, nothing amiss
cometh to pass. But when we let it have its own will in everything, and
it passes over its proper bounds, and rises up against the soul, then
it destroys and corrupts everything, yet not owing to its own nature,
but to its being out of proportion, and the disorder thereupon ensuing.
“But they that are after the Spirit do mind the things of the
Spirit.”
Ver.
6.
“For to be carnally minded is death.” He does not speak of
the nature of the flesh, or the essence of the body, but of being
carnally “minded,” which may be set right again, and
abolished. And in saying thus, he does not ascribe to the flesh any
reasoning power of its own. Far from it. But to set forth the grosser
motion of the mind, and giving this a name from the inferior part, and
in the same way as he often is in the habit of calling man in his
entireness, and viewed as possessed of a soul, flesh. “But to be
spiritually minded.” Here again he speaks of the spiritual mind,
in the same way as he says further on, “But He that searcheth the
hearts knoweth what is the mind of the spirit” (ver. 27); and he points out
many blessings resulting from this, both in the present life, and in
that which is to come. For as the evils which being carnally minded
introduces, are far outnumbered by those blessings which a spiritual
mind affords. And this he points out in the words “life and
peace.” The one is in contraposition to the first—for death
is what he says to be carnally minded is. And the other in
contraposition to the following. For after mentioning peace, he goes
on,
Ver.
7.
“Because the carnal mind is enmity against God:” and this
is worse than death. Then to show how it is at once death and enmity;
“for it is not subject to the Law of God,” he says,
“neither indeed can be.” But be not troubled at hearing the
“neither indeed can be.” For this difficulty admits of an
easy solution. For what he here names “carnal mindedness”
is the reasoning (or “way of thinking,” λογισμὸν) that is earthly, gross, and eager-hearted after the things
of this life and its wicked doings. It is of this he says
“neither yet can” it “be subject” to God. And
what hope of salvation is there left, if it be impossible for one who
is bad to become good? This is not what he says. Else how would Paul
have become such as he was? how would the (penitent) thief, or
Manasses, or the Ninevites, or how would David after falling have
recovered himself? How would Peter after the denial have raised himself
up? (1 Cor. v. 5.) How could he that had lived in fornication have been enlisted
among Christ’s fold? (2 Cor. ii. 6–11.) How could the Galatians who had “fallen from grace”
(Gal. v. 4), have attained their former dignity again? What he says then is
not that it is impossible for a man that is wicked to become good, but
that it is impossible for one who continues wicked to be subject to
God. Yet for a man to be changed, and so become good, and subject to
Him, is easy. For he does not say that man cannot be subject to God,
but, wicked doing cannot be good. As if he had said, fornication cannot
be chastity, nor vice virtue. And this it says in the Gospel also,
“A corrupt tree cannot bring forth good fruit”
(Matt.
vii. 18), not to bar the change from virtue to vice, but to say how
incapable continuance in vice is of bringing forth good fruits. For He
does not say that an evil tree cannot become a good one, but that bring
forth good fruit it cannot, while it continues evil. For that it can be
changed, He shows from this passage, and from another parable, when He
introduces the tares as becoming wheat, on which score also He forbids
their being rooted up; “Lest,” He says, “ye root up
also the wheat with them” (ib. xiii.
29);
that is, that which will spring (γίνεσθαι, 4 mss. τίκτεσθαι) from them. It is vice then he means by carnal mindedness,
and by spiritual mindedness the grace given, and the working of it
discernible in the right determination of mind, not discussing in any
part of this passage, a substance and an entity, but virtue and vice.
For that which thou hadst no power to do under the Law, now, he means,
thou wilt be able to do, to go on uprightly, and with no intervening
fall, if thou layest hold of the Spirit’s aid. For it is not
enough not to walk after the flesh, but we must also go after the
Spirit, since turning away from what is evil will not secure our
salvation, but we must also do what is good. And this will come about,
if we give our souls up to the Spirit, and persuade our flesh to get
acquainted with its proper position, for in this way we shall make it
also spiritual; as also if we be listless we shall make our soul
carnal. For since it was no natural necessity which put the gift into
us, but the freedom1408
1408 i.e. as exercised in coming to the font. Field proposes to soften
the strong expression by reading, “it was by no natural necessity
that He put, etc., but by freedom of choice He placed
it.” | of choice placed
it in our hands, it rests with thee henceforward whether this shall be
or the other. For He, on His part, has performed everything. For sin no
longer warreth against the law of our mind, neither doth it lead us
away captive as heretofore, for all that state has been ended and
broken up, and the affections cower in fear and trembling at the grace
of the Spirit. But if thou wilt quench the light, and cast out the
holder of the reins, and chase the helmsman away, then charge the
tossing thenceforth upon thyself. For since virtue hath been now made
an easier thing (for which cause also we are under far stricter
obligations of religious living), consider how men’s condition
lay when the Law prevailed, and how at present, since grace hath shone
forth. The things which aforetime seemed not possible to any one,
virginity, and contempt of death, and of other stronger sufferings, are
now in full vigor through every part of the world, and it is not with
us alone, but with the Scythians, and Thracians, and Indians, and
Persians, and several other barbarous nations, that there are companies
of virgins, and clans of martyrs, and congregations of monks, and these
now grown even more numerous than the married, and strictness of
fasting, and the utmost renunciation of property. Now these are things
which, with one or two exceptions, persons who lived under the Law
never conceived even in a dream. Since thou seest then the real state
of things voiced with a shriller note than any trumpet, let not thyself
grow soft and treacherous to so great a grace. Since not even after the
faith is it possible for a listless man to be saved! For the wrestlings
are made easy that thou mayest strive and conquer, nor that thou
shouldest sleep, or abuse the greatness of the grace by making it a
reason for listlessness, so wallowing again in the former mire. And so
he goes on to say,
Ver.
8.
“So then they that are in the flesh cannot please
God.”
What then? Are we, it will be
said, to cut our bodies in pieces to please God, and to make our escape
from the flesh? and would you have us be homicides, and so lead us to
virtue? You see what inconsistencies are gendered by taking the words
literally. For by “the flesh” in this passage, he does not
mean the body, or the essence of the body, but that life which is
fleshly and worldly, and uses self-indulgence and extravagance to the
full, so making the entire man flesh. For as they that have the wings
of the Spirit, make the body also spiritual, so do they who bound off
from this, and are the slaves of the belly, and of pleasure, make the
soul also flesh, not that they change the essence of it, but that they
mar its noble birth. And this mode of speaking is to be met with in
many parts of the Old Testament also, to signify by flesh the gross and
earthly life, which is entangled in pleasures that are not convenient.
For to Noah He says, “My Spirit shall not always make its abode
in these men, because they are flesh.” (Gen. vi. 3 as the LXX. give
it.) And yet Noah was himself also compassed about with flesh. But this
is not the complaint, the being compassed about with the flesh, for
this is so by nature, but the having chosen a carnal life. Wherefore
also Paul saith, “But they that are in the flesh cannot please
God.” Then he proceeds:
Ver.
9.
“But ye are not in the flesh, but in the
Spirit.”
Here again, he does not mean
flesh absolutely, but such sort of flesh, that which was in a whirl and
thraldom of passions. Why then, it may be said, does he not say so, nor
state any difference? It is to rouse the hearer, and to show that he
that liveth aright is not even in the body. For inasmuch as it was in a
manner clear to every one that the spiritual man was not in sin, he
states the greater truth that it was not in sin alone, that the
spiritual man was not, but not even in the flesh was he henceforward,
having become from that very moment an Angel, and ascended into heaven,
and henceforward barely carrying the body about. Now if this be thy
reason for disparaging the flesh, because it is by its name that he
calls the fleshly life, at this rate you are also for disparaging the
world, because wickedness is often called after it, as Christ also said
to His disciples, “Ye are not of this world;” and again to
His brethren, He says, “The world cannot hate you, but me it
hateth.” (John xv. 19. ib. vii. 7.) And the soul too Paul
must afterwards be calling estranged from God, since to those that live
in error, he gives the name of men of the soul (1 Cor. ii. 14, ψυχικὸς
A.V. natural). But this is not so, indeed it is not
so. For we are not to look to the bare words, but always to the
sentiment of the speaker, and so come to a perfectly distinct knowledge
of what is said. For some things are good, some bad, and some
indifferent. Thus the soul and the flesh belong to things indifferent,
since each may become either the one or the other. But the spirit
belongs to things good, and at no time becometh any other thing. Again,
the mind of the flesh, that is, ill-doing, belongs to things always
bad. “For it is not subject to the law of God.” If then
thou yieldest thy soul and body to the better, thou wilt have become of
its part. If on the other hand thou yield to the worse, then art thou
made a partaker of the ruin therein, not owing to the nature of the
soul and the flesh, but owing to that judgment which has the power of
choosing either. And to show that these things are so, and that the
words do not disparage the flesh, let us take up the phrase itself
again, and sift it more thoroughly. “But ye are not in the flesh
but in the Spirit,” he says. What then? were they not in the
flesh, and did they go about without any bodies? What sense would this
be? You see that it is the carnal life that he intimates. And why did
he not say, But ye are not in sin? It is that you may come to know that
Christ hath not extinguished the tyranny of sin only, but hath even
made the flesh to weigh us down less, and to be more spiritual, not by
changing its nature, but rather by giving it wings. For as when fire
cometh in company with iron, the iron also becomes fire, though abiding
in its own nature still; thus with them that believe, and have the
Spirit, the flesh henceforth goeth over into that manner of working,
and becometh wholly spiritual, crucified in all parts, and flying with
the same wings as the soul, such as was the body of him who here
speaks. Wherefore all self-indulgence and pleasure he made scorn of,
and found his self-indulgence in hunger, and stripes, and prisons, and
did not even feel pain in undergoing them. (2 Cor. xi.) And it was to
show this that he said, “For our light affliction, which is but
for a moment,” etc. (ib. iv.
17.)
So well had he tutored even the flesh to be in harmony with the spirit.
“If so be that the Spirit of God dwell in you”
(εἴπερ.) He often
uses this “if so be,” not to express any doubt, but even
when he is quite persuaded of the thing, and instead of
“since,” as when he says, “If it is a righteous
thing,” for “seeing it is a righteous thing with God to
recompense tribulation to them that trouble you.” (2 Thess. i. 6.)
Again, “Have ye suffered so many things in vain, if it be yet in
vain?” (Gal. iii. 4.)
“Now if any man have not
the Spirit of Christ.” He does not say, if ye have not, but he
brings forward the distressing word, as applied to other persons.
“He is none of His,” he says.
Ver.
10.
“And if Christ be in you.”
Again, what is good he applies
to them,1409
1409 τὸ
χρηστὸν for τὸν
Χριστὸν Field, with the Catena and the Version of Musculus. | and the distressing part was short
and parenthetic. And that which is an object of desire, is on either
side of it, and put at length too, so as to throw the other into shade.
Now this he says, not as affirming that the Spirit is Christ, far from
it, but to show that he who hath the Spirit not only is called
Christ’s, but even hath Christ Himself. For it cannot but be that
where the Spirit is, there Christ is also. For wheresoever one Person
of the Trinity is, there the whole Trinity is present. For It is
undivided in Itself, and hath a most entire Oneness. What then, it may
be said, will happen, if Christ be in us? “The body is dead
because of sin; but the Spirit is life because of righteousness.”
You see the great evils that come of not having the Holy Spirit; death,
enmity against God, inability to satisfy His laws, not being
Christ’s as we should be, the want of His indwelling. Consider
now also what great blessings come of having the Spirit. Being
Christ’s, having Christ himself, vying with the Angels (for this
is what mortifying the flesh is), and living an immortal life, holding
henceforward the earnests of the Resurrection, running with ease the
race of virtue. For he does not say so little as that the body is
henceforward inactive for sin, but that it is even dead, so magnifying
the ease of the race. For such an one without troubles and labors gains
the crown. Then afterward for this reason he adds also, “to
sin,” that you may see that it is the viciousness, not the
essence of the body, that He hath abolished at once. For if the latter
had been done, many things even of a kind to be beneficial to the soul
would have been abolished also. This however is not what he says, but
while it is yet alive and abiding, he contends, it is dead. For this is
the sign of our having the Son, of the Spirit being in us, that our
bodies should be in no respect different from those that lie on the
bier with respect to the working of sin (so the mss. Sav. “of the body.” The preceding words
are slightly corrupt.) But be not affrighted at hearing of mortifying.
For in it you have what is really life, with no death to succeed it:
and such is that of the Spirit. It yieldeth not to death any more, but
weareth out death and consumeth it, and that which it receiveth, it
keepeth it immortal. And this is why after saying “the body is
dead,” he does not say, “but the Spirit
‘liveth,’” but, “is life,” to point out
that He (the Spirit) had the power of giving this to others also. Then
again to brace up his hearer, he tells him the cause of the Life, and
the proof of it. Now this is righteousness; for where there is no sin,
death is not to be seen either; but where death is not to be seen, life
is indissoluble.
Ver.
11.
“But if the Spirit of Him that raised up Jesus from the dead
dwell in you, He that raised up our Lord shall also quicken your mortal
bodies by His Spirit that dwelleth in you.”
Again, he touches the point of
the Resurrection, since this was the most encouraging1410
1410 ἤλειφεν, v.
p. 170, n. Sav. εἴληφεν. | hope to the hearer, and gave him a security
from what had happened unto Christ. Now be not thou afraid because thou
art compassed about with a dead body. Let it have the Spirit, and it
shall assuredly rise again. What then, shall the bodies which have not
the Spirit not rise? How then must “all stand before the
judgment-seat of Christ?” (Rom. xiv. 10) or how will the
account of hell be trustworthy? For if they that have not the Spirit
rise not, there will not be a hell at all. What then is it which is
said? All shall rise, yet not all to life, but some to punishment and
some to life. (John v. 29.) This is why he did
not say, shall raise up, but shall quicken. (Dan. xii. 2.) And this is a
greater thing than resurrection, and is given to the just only. And the
cause of this honor he adds in the words, “By His Spirit that
dwelleth in you.” And so if while here thou drive away the grace
of the Spirit, and do not depart with it still safe, thou wilt
assuredly perish, though thou dost rise again. For as He will not
endure then, if He see His Spirit shining in thee, to give thee up to
punishment, so neither will He allow them, if He see It quenched, to
bring thee into the Bride-chamber, even as He admitted not those
virgins. (Matt. xxv. 12.)
Suffer not thy body then to live
in this world, that it may live then! Make it die, that it die not. For
if it keep living, it will not live: but if it die, then shall it live.
And this is the case with resurrection in general. For it must die
first and be buried, and then become immortal. But this has been done
in the Font. It has therefore had first its crucifixion and burial, and
then been raised. This has also happened with the Lord’s Body.
For that also was crucified and buried (7 mss.
died) and rose again. This then let us too be doing: let us keep
continually mortifying it in its works. I do not mean in its
substance—far be it from me—but in its inclinations towards
evil doings. For this is a life too, or rather this only is life,
undergoing nothing that is common to man, nor being a slave to
pleasures. For he who has set himself under the rule of these, has no
power even to live through the low spirits, the fears, and the dangers,
and the countless throng of ills, that rise from them. For if death
must be expected, he hath died, before death, of fear. And if it be
disease he dreads, or affront, or poverty, or any of the other ills one
cannot anticipate, he is ruined and hath perished. What then can be
more miserable than a life of this sort? But far otherwise is he that
liveth to the Spirit, for he stands at once above fears and grief and
dangers and every kind of change: and that not by undergoing no such
thing, but, what is much greater, by thinking scorn of them when they
assail him. And how is this to be? It will be if the Spirit dwell in us
continually. For he does not speak of any short stay made thereby, but
of a continual indwelling. Hence he does not say “the Spirit
which” dwelt, but “which dwelleth in us,” so pointing
to a continual abiding. He then is most truly alive, who is dead to
this life. Hence he says, “The Spirit is life because of
righteousness.” And to make the thing clearer, let me bring1411
1411 See
Ernesti in v. παραγωγή. | before you two men, one who is given up to
extravagances and pleasures, and the deceitfulness of this life; and
the other made dead to all these; and let us see which is more really
the living one. For let one of these two be very rich and much looked
up to, keeping parasites and flatterers,1412
1412 The
Plutus evidently in his mind. |
and let us suppose him to spend the whole day upon this, in revelling
and drunkenness: and let the other live in poverty, and fasting, and
hard fare, and strict rules (φιλοσοφί&
139·), and at evening partake of necessary
food only; or if you will let him even pass two or three days without
food.1413
1413 This was not uncommon in warmer climates, Euseb. ii.
17. | Which then of these two think we (3 mss. you) is most really alive? Men in general will,
I know, reckon the former so, the man that takes his pleasure
(Sav. σκιρτὥντα, mss. τρυφὥντα) and squanders his goods. But we reckon the man that enjoys
the moderate fare. Now then since it is still a subject of contest and
opposition let us go into the houses of them both, and just at the very
time too when in your judgment the rich man is living in truest sense,
in the very season of self-indulgence, and when we have got in, let us
look and see the real condition of each of these men. For it is from
the actions that it appears which is alive and which dead. Shall we not
find the one among his books, or in prayer and fasting, or some other
necessary duty, awake and sober, and conversing with God? but the other
we shall see stupid in drunkenness, and in no better condition than a
dead man. And if we wait till the evening, we shall see this death
coming upon him more and more, and then sleep again succeeding to that:
but the other we shall see even in the night keeping from wine and
sleep. Which then shall we pronounce to be most alive, the man that
lies in a state of insensibility, and is an open laughing-stock to
everybody? or the man that is active, and conversing with God? For if
you go up to the one, and tell him something he ought to know, you will
not hear him say a word, any more than a dead man. But the latter,
whether you choose to be in his company at night or by day, you will
see to be an angel rather than a man, and will hear him speak wisdom
about things in Heaven. Do you see how one of them is alive above all
men living, and the other in a more pitiable plight even than the dead?
And even if he have a mind to stir he sees one thing instead of
another, and is like people that are mad, or rather is in a worse
plight even than they. For if any one were to do them any harm, we
should at once feel pity for the sufferer, and rebuke the doer of the
wrong. But this man, if we were to see a person trample on him, we
should not only be disinclined to pity, but should even give judgment
against him, now that he was fallen. And will you tell me this is life,
and not a harder lot than deaths unnumbered? So you see the
self-indulgent man is not only dead, but worse than dead, and more
miserable than a man possessed. For the one is the object of pity, the
other of hatred. And the one has allowance made him, the other suffers
punishment for his madness. But if externally he is so ridiculous, as
having his saliva tainted, and his breath stinking of wine, just
consider what case his wretched soul, inhumed as it were in a grave, in
such a body as this, is probably in. For one may look upon this as much
the same as if one were to permit a damsel, comely, chaste, free-born,
of good family, and handsome, to be trampled on, and every way insulted
by a serving woman, that was savage, and disgustful, and impure;
drunkenness being something of this sort. And who, being in his senses,
would not choose to die a thousand deaths, rather than live a single
day in this way? For even if at daylight he were to get up, and seem to
be sober from that revelling (or absurd show, κωμῳδίας, 1 ms. κώμου) of
his, still even then it is not the clear brightness of temperance which
he enjoys, since the cloud from the storm of drunkenness still is
hanging before his eyes. And even if we were to grant him the clearness
of sobriety, what were he the better? For this soberness would be of no
service to him, except to let him see his accusers. For when he is in
the midst of his unseemly deeds, he is so far a gainer in not
perceiving those that laugh at him. But when it is day he loses this
comfort even, and while his servants are murmuring, and his wife is
ashamed, and his friends accuse him, and his enemies make sport of him,
he knows it too. What can be more miserable than a life like this, to
be laughed at all day by everybody, and when it is evening to do the
same unseemly things afresh. But what if you would let me put the
covetous before you? For this is another, and even a worse
intoxication. But if it be an intoxication, then it must be a worse
death by far than the former, since the intoxication is more grievous.
And indeed it is not so sad to be drunk with wine as with covetousness.
For in the former case, the penalty ends with the sufferings (several
ms. “sufferer,”) and results in
insensibility, and the drunkard’s own ruin. But in this case the
mischief passes on to thousands of souls, and kindles wars of sundry
kinds upon all sides. Come then and let us put this beside the other,
and let us see what are the points they have in common, and in what
again this is worse than it, and let us make a comparison of drunkards
to-day. For with that blissful man, who liveth to the Spirit, let them
not be put at all in comparison, but only tried by one another. And
again, let us bring the money-table before you, laden as it is with
blood. What then have they in common, and in what are they like each
other? It is in the very nature of the disease. For the species of
drunkenness is different, as one comes of wine, the other of money, but
its way of affecting them is similar, both being alike possessed with
an exorbitant desire. For he who is drunken with wine, the more glasses
he has drunk off, the more he longs for; and he that is in love with
money, the more he compasses, the more he kindles the flame of desire,
and the more importunate he renders his thirst. In this point then they
resemble each other. But in another the covetous man has the advantage
(in a bad sense). Now what is this? Why that the other’s
affection is a natural one. For the wine is hot, and adds to
one’s natural drought, and so makes drunkards thirsty. But what
is there to make the other man always keep desiring more? how comes it
that when he is increased in riches, then he is in the veriest poverty?
This complaint then is a perplexing one, and has more of paradox about
it. But if you please, we will take a view of them after the
drunkenness also. Or rather, there is no such thing as ever seeing the
covetous man after his drunkenness, so continual a state of
intoxication is he in! Let us then view them both in the state of
drunkenness, and let us get a distinct notion which is the most
ridiculous, and let us again figure to ourselves a correct sketch of
them. We shall see then the man who dotes with his wine at eventide
with his eyes open, seeing no one, but moving about at mere hap-hazard,
and stumbling against such as fall in his way, and spewing, and
convulsed, and exposing his nakedness in an unseemly manner.
(See Habak. ii. 16.) And if his wife be
there, or his daughter, or his maid-servant, or anybody else, they1414
1414 ἐγγελάσεται
mss., “he will be
laughed at” or rather “she (the supposed spectator) will
laugh at him.” Field reads ἐγελάσατε with one or two mss., and alters
the punctuation; so that the passage will run “exposing, etc.,
even if his wife be there….or anybody else. Do you laugh
heartily? Then let us bring before you,” etc. | will laugh at him heartily. And now let us
bring before you the covetous man. Here what happens is not deserving
of laughter only, but even of a curse, and exceeding wrath, and
thunderbolts without number. At present however let us look at the
ridiculous part, for this man as well as the other has an ignorance of
all, whether friend or foe. And like him too, though his eyes are open,
he is blinded. And as the former takes all he sees for wine, so does
this man take all for money. And his spewing is even more disgusting.
For it is not food that he vomits, but words of abuse, of insolence, of
war, of death, that draws upon his own head lightnings without number
from above. And as the body of the drunkard is livid and dissolving, so
also is the other’s soul. Or rather, even his body is not free
from this disorder, but it is taken even worse, care eating it away
worse than wine does (as do anger too and want of sleep), and by
degrees exhausting it entirely. And he that is seized with illness from
wine, after the night is over may get sober. But this person is always
drunken day and night, watching or sleeping, so paying a severer
penalty for it than any prisoner, or person at work in the mines, or
suffering any punishment more grievous than this, if such there be. Is
it then life pray, and not death? or rather, is it not a fate more
wretched than any death? For death gives the body rest, and sets it
free from ridicule, as well as disgrace and sins: but these drunken
fits plunge it into all these, stopping up the ears, dulling the
eyesight, keeping down the understanding in great darkness. For it will
not bear the mention of anything but interest, and interest upon
interest, and shameful gains, and odious traffickings, and
ungentlemanly and slavelike transactions, barking like a dog at
everybody, and hating everybody, averse to everybody, at war with
everybody, without any reason for it, rising up against the poor,
grudging at the rich, and civil to nobody. And if he have a wife, or
children, or friends, if he may not use them all towards getting gain,
these are to him more his enemies than natural enemies. What then can
be worse than madness of this sort, and what more wretched? when a man
is preparing rocks for his own self on every side, and shoals, and
precipices, and gulfs, and pits without number, while he has but one
body, and is the slave of one belly. And if any thrust thee into a
state office, thou wilt be a runaway, through fear of expense. Yet to
thyself thou art laying up countless charges far more distressing than
those, enlisting thyself for services not only more expensive, but also
more dangerous, to be done for mammon, and not paying this tyrant a
money contribution only, nor of bodily labor, torture to the soul, and
grief, but even of thy blood itself, that thou mayest have some
addition to thy property (miserable and sorrow-stricken man!) out of
this barbarous slavery. Do you not see those who are taken day by day
to the grave, how they are carried to tombs naked and destitute of all
things, unable to take with them aught that is in the house, but
bearing what clothes they have about them to the worm? Consider these
day by day, and perchance the malady will abate, unless you mean even
by such an occasion to be still more mad at the expensiveness of the
funeral rites—for the malady is importunate, the disease
terrible! This then is why we address you upon this subject at every
meeting, and constantly foment your hearing, that at all events by your
growing accustomed to such thoughts, some good many come. But be not
contentious, for it is not only at the Day to come, but even before it,
that this manifold malady brings with it sundry punishments. For if I
were to tell you of those who pass their days in chains, or of one
nailed to a lingering disease, or of one struggling with famine, or of
any other thing whatsoever, I could point out no one who suffers so
much as they do who love money. For what severer evil can befall one,
than being hated by all men, than hating all men, than not having
kindly feeling towards any, than being never satisfied, than being in a
continual thirst, than struggling with a perpetual hunger, and that a
more distressing one than what all men esteem such? than having pains
day by day, than being never sober, than being continually in worries
and harasses? For all these things, and more than these, are what the
covetous set their shoulder to; in the midst of their gaining having no
perception of pleasure, though scraping to themselves from all men,
because of their desiring more. But in the case of their incurring a
loss, if it be but of a farthing, they think they have suffered most
grievously, and have been cast out of life itself. What language then
can put these evils before you? And if their fate here be such,
consider also what comes after this life, the being cast out of the
kingdom, the pain that comes from hell, the perpetual chains, the outer
darkness, the venomous worm, the gnashing of teeth, the affliction, the
sore straitening, the rivers of fire, the furnaces that never get
quenched. And gathering all these together, and weighing them against
the pleasure of money, tear up now this disease root and branch, that
so receiving the true riches, and being set free from this grievous
poverty, thou mayest obtain the present blessings, and those to come,
by the grace and love toward man, etc.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|