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| Chapter XXVI. How the promise of an hundredfold in this life is made to those whose renunciation is perfect. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XXVI.
How the promise of an hundredfold in this life is made
to those whose renunciation is perfect.
Further also that
recompense of reward, wherein the Lord promises an hundredfold in this
life to those whose renunciation is perfect, and says: “And
everyone that hath left house or brethren or sisters or father or
mother or wife or children or lands for My name’s sake, shall
receive an hundredfold in the present time and shall inherit eternal
life,”2349 is rightly and
truly taken in the same sense without any disturbance of faith. For
many taking occasion by this saying, insist with crass intelligence
that these things will be given carnally in the millennium, though they
must certainly admit that age, which they say will be after the
resurrection cannot possibly be understood as present. It is then more
credible and much clearer that one, who at the persuasion of Christ has
made light of any worldly affections or goods, receives from the
brethren and partners of his life, who are joined to him by a spiritual
tie, even in this life a love which is an hundred times better: since
it is certain that among parents and children and brothers, wives and
relations, where either the tie is merely formed by intercourse, or the
bond of union by the claims of relationship, the love is tolerably
short lived and easily broken. Finally even good and duteous children
when they have grown up, are sometimes shut out by their parents from
their homes and property, and sometimes for a really good reason the
tie of matrimony is severed, and a quarrelsome division destroys the
property of brothers. Monks alone maintain a lasting union in intimacy,
and possess all things in common, as they hold that everything that
belongs to their brethren is their own, and that everything which is
their own is their brethren’s. If then the grace of our love is
compared to those affections where the bond of union is a carnal love,
certainly it is an hundred times sweeter and finer. There will indeed
also be gained from conjugal continence a pleasure that is an hundred
times greater than that which arises from the union of the sexes. And
instead of that joy, which a man experiences from the possession of a
single field of house, he will enjoy a delight in riches a hundred
times greater, if he passes over to the adoption of sons of God, and
possesses as his own all things which belong to the eternal Father, and
asserts in heart and soul after the fashion
of that true Son: “All things
that the Father hath are mine;”2350
and if no longer tried by that criminal anxiety in distractions and
cares, but free from care and glad at heart he succeeds everywhere to
his own, hearing daily the announcement made to him by the Apostle:
“For all things are yours, whether the world, or things present,
or things to come;” and by Solomon: “The faithful man has a
whole world of riches.”2351 You have then
that recompense of an hundredfold brought out by the greatness of the
value, and the difference of the character that cannot be estimated.
For if for a fixed weight of brass or iron or some still commoner
metal, one had given in exchange the same weight only in gold, he would
appear to have given much more than an hundredfold. And so when for the
scorn of delights and earthly affections there is made a recompense of
spiritual joy and the gladness of a most precious love, even if the
actual amount be the same, yet it is an hundred times better and
grander. And to make this plainer by frequent repetition: I used
formerly to have a wife in the lustful passion of desire: I now have
one in honourable sanctification and the true love of Christ. The woman
is but one, but the value of the love has increased an hundredfold. But
if instead of distrusting anger and wrath you have regard to constant
gentleness and patience, instead of the stress of anxiety and trouble,
peace and freedom from care, instead of the fruitless and criminal
vexation of this world the salutary fruits of sorrow, instead of the
vanity of temporal joy the richness of spiritual delights, you will see
in the change of these feelings a recompense of an hundredfold. And if
we compare with the short-lived and fleeting pleasure of each sin the
benefits of the opposite virtues the increased delights will prove that
these are an hundred times better. For in counting on your fingers you
transfer the number of an hundred from the left hand to the right and
though you seem to keep the same arrangement of the fingers yet there
is a great increase in the amount of the quantity.2352
2352 The practice
alludes to the counting on the fingers, in which all the tens up to
ninety were reckoned on the fingers of the left hand, but with
the number of a hundred the reckoning began with the same arrangement
of the fingers on the right hand. S. Jerome had a similar
allusion to the practice in his work against Jovian I. i. and compare
also Juvenal Satire. X. l. 247, 248. | For the result will be that we who
seemed to bear the form of the goats on the left hand, will be removed
and gain the reward of the sheep on the right hand. Now let us pass on
to consider the nature of those things which Christ gives back to us in
this world for our scorn of worldly advantages, more particularly
according to the Gospel of Mark who says: “There is no man who
hath left house or brethren or sisters or mother or children or lands
for My sake and the gospel’s sake, who shall not receive an
hundred times as much now in this time: houses and brethren and sisters
and mothers and children and lands, with persecutions, and in the world
to come life eternal.”2353 For he who for
the sake of Christ’s name disregards the love of a single father
or mother or child, and gives himself over to the purest love of all
who serve Christ, will receive an hundred times the amount of brethren
and kinsfolk; since instead of but one he will begin to have so many
fathers and brethren bound to him by a still more fervent and admirable
affection. He also will be enriched with an increased possession of
lands, who has given up a single house for the love of Christ, and
possesses countless homes in monasteries as his own, to whatever part
of the world he may retire, as to his own house. For how can he fail to
receive an hundredfold, and, if it is not wrong to add somewhat to our
Lord’s words, more than an hundredfold, who gives up the
faithless and compulsory service of ten or twenty slaves and relies on
the spontaneous attendance of so many noble and free born men? And that
this is so you could prove by your own experience, as since you have
each left but one father and mother and home, you have gained without
any effort or care, in any part of the world to which you have come,
countless fathers and mothers and brethren, as well as houses and lands
and most faithful servants, who receive you as their masters, and
welcome, and respect, and take care of you with the utmost attention.
But, I say that deservedly and confidently will the saints enjoy this
service, if they have first submitted themselves and everything they
have by a voluntary offering for the service of the brethren. For, as
the Lord says, they will freely receive back that which they themselves
have bestowed on others. But if a man has not first offered this with
true humility to his companions, how can he calmly endure to have it
offered to him by others, when he knows that he is burdened rather than
helped by their services, because he prefers to receive attention from
the brethren rather than to give it to them?
But all these things he will receive not with careless
slackness and a lazy delight, but, in accordance with the Lord’s
word, “with persecutions,” i.e., with the pressure of this
world, and terrible distress from his passions, because, as the wise
man testifies: “He who is easy going and without trouble shall
come
to want.”2354 For not the slothful, or the careless,
or the delicate, or the tender take the kingdom of heaven by force, but
the violent. Who then are the violent? Surely they are those who show a
splendid violence not to others, but to their own soul, who by a
laudable force deprive it of all delights in things present, and are
declared by the Lord’s mouth to be splendid plunderers, and by
rapine of this kind, violently seize upon the kingdom of heaven. For,
as the Lord says, “The kingdom of heaven suffereth violence and
the violent take it by force.”2355 Those are
certainly worthy of praise as violent, who do violence to their own
destruction, for, “A man,” as it is written, “that is
in sorrow laboureth for himself and does violence to his own
destruction.”2356 For our
destruction is delight in this present life, and to speak more
definitely, the performance of our own likes and desires, as, if a man
withdraws these from his soul and mortifies them, he straightway does
glorious and valuable violence to his own destruction, provided that he
refuses to it the pleasantest of its wishes which the Divine word often
rebukes by the prophet, saying: “For in the days of your fast
your own will is found;” and again: “If thou turn away thy
foot from the Sabbath, to do thy will on My holy day, and glorify him,
while thou dost not thy own ways, and thy own will is not found, to
speak a word.” And the great blessedness that is promised to him
is at once added by the prophet. “Then,” he says,
“shalt thou be delighted in the Lord, and I will lift thee up
above the high places of the earth, and will feed thee with the
inheritance of Jacob thy father. For the mouth of the Lord hath spoken
it.”2357
2357 Isa. lviii. 3, 13, 14. | And therefore
our Lord and Saviour, to give us an example of giving up our own wills,
says: “I came not to do My own will, but the will of Him that
sent Me;” and again: “Not as I will, but as Thou
wilt.”2358 And this good
quality those men in particular show who live in the Cœnobia and
are governed by the rule of the Elders, who do nothing of their own
choice, but their will depends upon the will of the Abbot. Finally to
bring this discussion to a close, I ask you, do not those who
faithfully serve Christ, most clearly receive grace an hundredfold in
this, while for His name’s sake they are honoured by the greatest
princes, and though they do not look for the praise of men, yet become
venerated in the trials of persecution whose humble condition would
perhaps have been looked down upon even by common folk, either because
of their obscure birth, or because of their condition as slaves, if
they had continued in their life in the world? But because of the
service of Christ no one will venture to raise a calumny against their
state of nobility, or to fling in their teeth the obscurity of their
origin. Nay rather, through the very opprobrium of a humble condition
by which others are shamed and confounded, the servants of Christ are
more splendidly ennobled, as we can clearly show by the case of Abbot
John who lives in the desert which borders on the town of Lycus. For he
sprang from obscure parents, but owing to the name of Christ has become
so well known to almost all mankind that the very lords of creation,
who hold the reins of this world and of empire, and are a terror to all
powers and kings, venerate him as their lord, and from distant
countries seek his advice, and entrust to his prayers and merits the
crown of their empire, and the state of safety, and the fortunes of
war.2359
2359 Cf. the note on
the Institutes IV. xxiii. |
In such terms the blessed Abraham discoursed on
the origin of and remedy for our illusion, and exposed to our eyes the
crafty thoughts which the devil had originated and suggested, and
kindled in us the desire of true mortification, wherewith we hope that
many also may be inflamed, even though all these things have been
written in a somewhat simple style. For though the dying embers of our
words cover up the glowing thoughts of the greatest fathers, yet we
hope that in the case of very many who try to remove the embers of our
words and to fan into a flame the hidden thoughts, their coldness will
be turned into heat. But, O holy brethren, I have not indeed been so
puffed up by the spirit of presumption as to give forth to you this
fire (which the Lord came to send upon the earth, and which He eagerly
longs to kindle2360 ) in order that
by the application of this warmth I might set on fire your purpose
which is already at a white heat, but in order that your authority with
your children might be greater, if in addition the precepts of the
greatest and most ancient fathers support what you are teaching not by
the dead sound of words but by your living example. It only remains
that I who have been till now tossed about by a most dangerous tempest,
should be wafted to the safe harbour of silence by the spiritual gales
of your prayers.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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