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Chapter
XXIII.
Now the
details of the life of him who has chosen to live in such a philosophy
as this, the things to be avoided, the exercises to be engaged in, the
rules of temperance, the whole method of the training, and all the
daily regimen which contributes towards this great end, has been dealt
with in certain written manuals of instruction for the benefit of those
who love details. Yet there is a plainer guide to be found than verbal
instruction; and that is practice: and there is nothing vexatious in
the maxim that when we are undertaking a long journey or voyage we
should get an instructor. “But,” says the Apostle1505 , “the word is nigh thee;” the
grace begins at home; there is the manufactory of all the virtues;
there this life has become exquisitely refined by a continual progress
towards consummate perfection; there, whether men are silent or whether
they speak, there is large opportunity for being instructed in this
heavenly citizenship through the actual practice of it. Any theory
divorced from living examples, however admirably it may be dressed out,
is like the unbreathing statue, with its show of a blooming complexion
impressed in tints and colours; but the man who acts as well as
teaches, as the Gospel tells us, he is the man who is truly living, and
has the bloom of beauty, and is efficient and stirring. It is to him
that we must go, if we mean, according to the saying1506 of Scripture, to “retain”
virginity. One who wants to learn a foreign language is not a competent
instructor of himself; he gets himself taught by experts, and can then
talk with foreigners. So, for this high life, which does not advance in
nature’s groove, but is estranged from her by the novelty of its
course, a man cannot be instructed thoroughly unless he puts himself
into the hands of one who has himself led it in perfection; and indeed
in all the other professions of life the candidate is more likely to
achieve success if he gets from tutors a scientific knowledge of each
part of the subject of his choice, than if he undertook to study it by
himself; and this particular profession1507
1507 οὐ γὰρ
ἐναργές ἐστι
τὸ
ἐπιτήδευμα
τοῦτο, ὥστε
κατ᾽ ἀνάγκην,
κ.τ.λ. The alternative reading
is ἐν ἀρχαῖς. It has been suggested to read, ὅτε
γὰρ…τότε (for
τοῦτο), and understand an aposiopesis in the next sentence;
thus—“For when our undertaking is clear and simple, then we
must entrust to ourselves the decision of what is best. But when the
attempt at the unknown is not unattended with risk—(then we want
a guide).” Billius. But this is very awkward. | is
not one where everything is so clear that judgment as to our best
course in it is necessarily left to ourselves; it is one where to
hazard a step into the unknown at once brings us into danger. The
science of medicine once did not exist; it has come into being by the
experiments which men have made, and has gradually been revealed
through their various observations; the healing and the harmful drug
became known from the attestation of those who had tried them, and this
distinction was adopted into the theory of the art, so that the close
observation of former practitioners became a precept for those who
succeeded; and now any one who studies to attain this art is under no
necessity to ascertain at his own peril the power of any drug, whether
it be a poison or a medicine; he has only to learn from others the
known facts, and may then practise with success. It is so also with
that medicine of the soul, philosophy, from which we learn the remedy
for every weakness that can touch the soul. We need not hunt after a
knowledge of these remedies by dint of guess-work and surmisings; we
have abundant means of learning them from him who by a long and rich
experience has gained the possession which we seek. In any matter youth
is generally a giddy1508
1508 Livineius had conjectured that ἐπισφαλὴς must be supplied, from a quotation of this passage in
Antonius Monachus, Sententiæ, serm. 20, and in Abbas
Maximus, Capita, serm. 41; and this is confirmed by Codd. Reg.
and Morell. | guide; and it would
not be easy to find anything of importance succeeding, in which gray hairs have
not been called in to share in the deliberations. Even in all other
undertakings we must, in proportion to their greater importance, take
the more precaution against failure; for in them too the thoughtless
designs of youth have brought loss; on property, for instance; or have
compelled the surrender of a position in the world, and even of renown.
But in this mighty and sublime ambition it is not property, or secular
glory lasting for its hour, or any external fortune, that is at
stake;—of such things1509
1509 ὧν
καὶ κατὰ
γνώμην καὶ ὡς
ἑτέρως
διοικουμένων
ὀλίγος τοῖς
σωφρονοῦσιν
ὁ λόγος. The
Latin here has “quas quidem res ego sane despicio, exiguamque
harum tanquam extrinsecus venientium)” &c.; evidently
καταγνοίην
must have been in the text used. | , whether they
settle themselves well or the reverse, the wise take small
account;—here rashness can affect the soul itself; and we run the
awful hazard, not of losing any of those other things whose recovery
even may perhaps be possible, but of ruining our very selves and making
the soul a bankrupt. A man who has spent or lost his patrimony does not
despair, as long as he is in the land of the living, of perchance
coming again through contrivances into his former competence; but the
man who has ejected himself from this calling, deprives himself as well
of all hope of a return to better things. Therefore, since most embrace
virginity while still young and unformed in understanding, this before
anything else should be their employment, to search out a fitting guide
and master of this way, lest, in their present ignorance, they should
wander from the direct route, and strike out new paths of their own in
trackless wilds1510
1510 ἀνοδίας
τινὰς
καινοτομήσωσιν
(ἀνοδί& 139·,
ἀνοδίαις, is frequent in Polybius; the word is not found elsewhere in
other cases). | . “Two are
better than one,” says the Preacher1511 ;
but a single one is easily vanquished by the foe who infests the path
which leads to God; and verily “woe to him that is alone when he
falleth, for he hath not another to help him up1512
1512 Ecclesiastes iv.
10.
Gregory supports the Vulgate, which has “quia cum ceciderit, non
habet sublevantem se.” | .” Some ere now in their enthusiasm for
the stricter life have shown a dexterous alacrity; but, as if in the
very moment of their choice they had already touched perfection, their
pride has had a shocking fall1513
1513 ἑτερῷ
πτώματι,
euphemistically. | , and they have been
tripped up from madly deluding themselves into thinking that that to
which their own mind inclined them was the true beauty. In this number
are those whom Wisdom calls the “slothful ones1514 ,” who bestrew their “way”
with “thorns”; who think it a moral loss to be anxious
about keeping the commandments; who erase from their own minds the
Apostolic teaching, and instead of eating the bread of their own honest
earning fix on that of others, and make their idleness itself into an
art of living. From this number, too, come the Dreamers, who put more
faith in the illusions of their dreams1515
1515 The
alternative reading is τῶν
θηρίων;
but ὀνείρων is confirmed by three of the Codd. Cf. Theodoret, lib. 4,
Hæretic. fab., of the Messaliani; and lib. 4,
Histor. c. 10, ὕπνῳ
δὲ σφᾶς
αὐτοὺς
ἐκδίδοντες
τὰς τῶν
ὀνείρων
φαντασίας
προφητείας
ἀποκαλοῦσι |
than in the Gospel teaching, and style their own phantasies
“revelations.” Hence, too, those who “creep into the
houses”; and again others who suppose virtue to consist in savage
bearishness, and have never known the fruits of long-suffering and
humility of spirit. Who could enumerate all the pitfalls into which any
one might slip, from refusing to have recourse to men of godly
celebrity? Why, we have known ascetics of this class who have persisted
in their fasting even unto death, as if “with such sacrifices God
were well pleased1516 ;” and, again,
others who rush off into the extreme diametrically opposite, practising
celibacy in name only and leading a life in no way different from the
secular; for they not only indulge in the pleasures of the table, but
are openly known to have a woman in their houses1517
1517 See
Chrysostom, Lib. Πρὸς τοὺς
συνεισάκτους
ἔχοντας. | ; and they call such a friendship a brotherly
affection, as if, forsooth, they could veil their own thought, which is
inclined to evil, under a sacred term. It is owing to them that this
pure and holy profession of virginity is “blasphemed amongst the
Gentiles1518 .”E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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