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| Basil to Urbicius the monk, concerning continency. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Letter CCCLXVI.3294
3294 Introduced by
the Ben. with the following preface: “En magni
Basilii epistolam, ex prisco codicelxi. f. 324,
a me exscriptam quæ olim clarissimis quoque viris
Marcianæ bibliothecæ descriptoribus Zannetro atque
Morellio inedita visa est; atque utrum sit alicubi postremis his
annis edita, mihi non constat, sed certe in plenissima Garnerii
editione desideratur. Ea scribitur ad Urbicum monachum, ad
quem aliæ duæ Basilii epistolæ exstant,
nempe 123 and 262, in Garneriana editione.
Argumentum titulusque est De Continentia, neque vero scriptum hoc
Basilianum diutius ego celandum arbitror præsertim quia Suidas
ac Photius nihil præstantius aut epistolari characteri
accommodatius Basilii epistolis esse judicarunt. Mai,
biblioth. nov. patr. iii. 450. |
Basil to Urbicius the monk, concerning continency.
You do well in making exact
definitions for us, so that we may recognise not only continency, but
its fruit. Now its fruit is the companionship of God. For
not to be corrupted, is to have part with God; just as to be corrupted
is the companionship of the world. Continency is denial of the
body, and confession to God. It withdraws from anything mortal,
like a body which has the Spirit of God. It is without rivalry
and envy, and causes us to be united to God. He who loves a body
envies another. He who has not admitted the disease of corruption
into his heart, is for the future strong enough to endure any labour,
and though he have died in the body, he lives in incorruption.
Verily, if I rightly apprehend the matter, God seems to me to be
continency, because He desires nothing, but has all things in
Himself. He reaches after nothing, nor has any sense in eyes or
ears; wanting nothing, He is
in all respects complete and full. Concupiscence is a disease of
the soul; but continency is its health. And continency must not
be regarded only in one species, as, for instance, in matters of
sensual love. It must be regarded in everything which the soul
lusts after in an evil manner, not being content with what is needful
for it. Envy is caused for the sake of gold, and innumerable
wrongs for the sake of other lusts. Not to be drunken is
continency. Not to overeat one’s self is continency.
To subdue the body is continency, and to keep evil thoughts in
subjection, whenever the soul is disturbed by any fancy false and bad,
and the heart is distracted by vain cares. Continency makes men
free, being at once a medicine and a power, for it does not teach
temperance; it gives it. Continency is a grace of God.
Jesus seemed to be continency, when He was made light to land and sea;
for He was carried neither by earth nor ocean, and just as He walked on
the sea, so He did not weigh down the earth. For if death comes
of corruption, and not dying comes of not having corruption, then Jesus
wrought not mortality but divinity.3295
3295 θεότητα
οὐ
θνητότητα. | He ate
and drank in a peculiar manner, without rendering his food.3296
3296 The Ben. note
is: “Hac super re reverentissime theologiceque
scribit Athanasius Corinthi episcopus in fragmento quod nos
edidimus A.A. class l. x. p. 499–500,
quod incipit: Ζητοῦμεν,
εἰ ἡ
πλήρωσις
τῶν
βρωμάτων
ἐπὶ Χριστοῦ
ἐκέκτητο
καὶ
κένωσιν. Erat
enim hæc quoque una ex objectionibus hæreticorum.
Definit autem, corpus Christi hac in re fuisse cæteris
superius, sicuti etiam in insolita nativitate. Utitur quoque
Athanasius exemplo trinitatis illius apud Abrahamum convivantis,
neque tamen naturali necessitati obtemperantis; quod item de Christo
post resurrectionem edente intelligendum dicit. | So mighty a power in Him was
continency, that His food was not corrupted in Him, since He had no
corruption. If only there be a little continency in us, we are
higher than all. We have been told that angels were ejected from
heaven because of concupiscence and became incontinent. They were
vanquished; they did not come down. What could that plague have
effected there, if an eye such as I am thinking of had been
there? Wherefore I said, If we have a little patience, and do not
love the world, but the life above, we shall be found there where we
direct our mind. For it is the mind, apparently, which is the eye
that seeth unseen things. For we say “the mind sees;”
“the mind hears.” I have written at length, though it
may seem little to you. But there is meaning in all that I have
said, and, when you have read it, you will see
it.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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