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| St. Paul's method of dealing with erring brethren. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
37.
This action is yours, my brother, yours alone. It is clear that no one
in the church has been your companion or confederate in it, but only
that Barabbas whom you mention so frequently. What other spirit than
that of the Jews would dare to tamper with the records of the church
which have been handed down from the Apostles? It is they, my brother,
you who were most dear to me before you were taken captive by the Jews,
it is they who are hurrying you into this abyss of evil. It is their
doing that those books of yours are put forth in which you brand your
Christian brethren, not sparing even the martyrs, and heap up
accusations speakable and unspeakable against Christians of every
degree, and mar our peace, and cause a scandal to the church. It is
they who cause you to pass sentence upon yourself and your own writings
as upon words which you once spoke as a Christian. We all of us have
become worthless in your eyes, while they and their evil acts are all
your delight. If you had but listened to Paul where he says in his
Epistle:2992 “If any brother be overtaken
in a fault ye who are spiritual restore such a one in the spirit of
meekness,” you would never have let your passions swell up so as
altogether to break through the order of our spiritual
discipline. Suppose that I had written something which was injurious to you;
suppose that I had done some injustice to you a man of the highest
eloquence, who were my brother and my brother presbyter, whom also I
had pronounced worthy of imitation in your method of translation: even
so, this was the first complaint which you had received of any injury
on my part since friendship had been restored between us, and that with
difficulty and much trouble. But suppose that you had reason to be
offended at the fact that, in my translation of Origen, I passed over
some things which appeared to me unedifying in point of
doctrine—though in this I only did what you had done. Possibly I
was deserving of blame and correction for this. You say that some of
the brethren sent letters to you demanding that the faults of the
translator should be pointed out. What then did you do, you who are a
man of spiritual attainments? What a model, what an example of conduct
in such matters is this which you have given! You not only blazen forth
the shame of your brother’s nakedness to those who are without,
but you yourself tear away the covering of his nakedness. Suppose even
that what I did was not done as you had done it, suppose that, through
some access of drunkenness creeping unawares upon me, I had laid bare
my own shame as the Patriarch did; would it have been a curse which you
would have incurred if you had walked backward and made your reply like
a soft cloak to cover my reproach, if the letter of the brother who was
wide-awake had veiled the brother who lay exposed through his own
drowsiness in writing?E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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