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| On the Fast of The Tenth Month, I. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Sermon XII.
On the Fast of The Tenth Month,
I.687
687 That is the
December or, as we should now call it, the Advent Embertide. Cf.
Serm. XIX. chap. 2, where the four seasons, as arranged in Leo’s
day, are clearly set forth. |
I. Restoration to the Divine image in
which we were made is only possible by our imitation of God’s will.
If, dearly beloved, we comprehend faithfully and
wisely the beginning of our creation, we shall find that man was made
in God’s image, to the end that he might
imitate his Creator, and that our race attains its highest natural
dignity, by the form of the Divine goodness being reflected in us, as
in a mirror. And assuredly to this form the Saviour’s grace
is daily restoring us, so long as that which, in the
first Adam fell, is raised up
again in the second. And the cause of our restoration is naught
else but the mercy of God, Whom we should not
have loved, unless He had first loved us, and dispelled the darkness of
our ignorance by the light of His truth. And the Lord foretelling this by the holy Isaiah says, “I
will bring the blind into a way that they knew not, and will make them
walk in paths which they were ignorant of. I will turn darkness
into light for them, and the crooked into the straight. These
words will I do for them, and not forsake them688 .” And again he says,
“I was found by them that sought Me not, and openly appeared to
them that asked not for Me689 .”
And the Apostle John teaches us how this has been fulfilled, when he
says, “We know that the Son of God is
come, and has given us an understanding, that we may know Him that is
true, and may be in Him that is true, even His Son690 ,” and again, “let us therefore
love God, because He first loved us691 .” Thus it is that God, by loving us, restores us to His image, and, in order
that He may find in us the form of His goodness, He gives us that
whereby we ourselves too may do the work that He does, kindling that is
the lamps of our minds, and inflaming us with the fire of His love,
that we may love not only Himself, but also whatever He loves.
For if between men that is the lasting friendship which is based upon
similarity of character notwithstanding that such identity of wills is
often directed to wicked ends, how ought we to yearn and strive to
differ in nothing from what is pleasing to God. Of which the prophet speaks, “for wrath
is in His indignation, and life in His pleasure692 ,” because we shall not otherwise
attain the dignity of the Divine Majesty, unless we imitate His
will.
II. We must love both God and our neighbour, and “our neighbour”
must be interpreted in its widest sense.
And so, when the Lord
says, “Thou shalt love the Lord thy
God, from all thy heart and from all thy
mind: and thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself693 ,” let the faithful soul put on the
unfading love of its Author and Ruler, and subject itself also entirely
to His will in Whose works and judgments true justice and
tender-hearted compassion never fail. For although a man be
wearied out with labours and many misfortunes, there is good reason for
him to endure all in the knowledge that adversity will either prove him
good or make him better. But this godly love cannot be perfect
unless a man love his neighbour also. Under which name must be
included not only those who are connected with us by friendship or
neighbourhood, but absolutely all men, with whom we have a common
nature, whether they be foes or allies, slaves or free. For the
One Maker fashioned us, the One Creator breathed life into us; we all
enjoy the same sky and air, the same days and nights, and, though some
be good, others bad, some righteous, others unrighteous, yet
God is bountiful to all, kind to all, as Paul
and Barnabas said to the Lycaonians concerning God’s Providence, “who in generations gone by
suffered all the nations to walk in their own ways. And yet He
left Himself not without witness, doing them good, giving rain from
heaven and fruitful seasons, and filling our hearts with food and
gladness694 .” But
the wide extent of Christian grace has given us yet greater reasons for
loving our neighbour, which, reaching to all parts of the whole world,
looks down on695
695
Despectat: others desperat (despairs of). | no one, and teaches
that no one is to be neglected. And full rightly does He command
us to love our enemies, and to pray to Him for our persecutors, who,
daily grafting shoots of the wild olive from among all nations upon the
holy branches of His own olive, makes men reconciled instead of
enemies, adopted sons instead of strangers, just instead of ungodly,
“that every knee may bow of things in heaven, of things on earth,
and of things under the earth, and every tongue confess that the
Lord Jesus Christ is in the glory of
God the Father696 .”
III. We must be thankful, and show our
thankfulness for what we have received, whether much or
little.
Accordingly, as God
wishes us to be good, because He is good, none of His judgments ought
to displease us. For not to give Him thanks in all things, what
else is it but to blame Him in some degree. Man’s folly too
often dares to murmur against his Creator, not only in time of want,
but also in time of plenty, so that, when something is not supplied, he
complains, and when certain things are in abundance he is
ungrateful. The lord of rich harvests thought scorn of his
well-filled garners, and groaned over his abundant
grape-gathering: he did not give thanks for the size of the crop,
but complained of its poorness697 . And if the
ground has been less prolific than its wont in the seed it has reared,
and the vines
and the
olives have failed in their supply of fruit, the year is accused, the
elements blamed, neither the air nor the sky is spared, whereas nothing
better befits and reassures the faithful and godly disciples of Truth
than the persistent and unwearied lifting of praise to God, as says the Apostle, “Rejoice alway, pray
without ceasing: in all things give thanks. For this is the
will of God in Christ Jesus in all things for
you698 .” But how shall we be
partakers of this devotion, unless vicissitudes of fortune train our
minds in constancy, so that the love directed towards God may not be puffed up in prosperity nor faint in
adversity. Let that which pleases God,
please us too. Let us rejoice in whatever measure of gifts He
gives. Let him who has used great possessions well, use small
ones also well. Plenty and scarcity may be equally for our good,
and even in spiritual progress we shall not be cast down at the
smallness of the results, if our minds become not dry and barren.
Let that spring from the soil of our heart, which the earth gave
not. To him that fails not in good will, means to give are ever
supplied. Therefore, dearly beloved, in all works of godliness
let us use what each year gives us, and let not seasons of difficulty
hinder our Christian benevolence. The Lord knows how to replenish the widow’s vessels,
which her pious deed of hospitality has emptied: He knows how to
turn water into wine: He knows how to satisfy 5,000 hungry
persons with a few loaves. And He who is fed in His poor, can
multiply when He takes what He increased when He gave.
IV. Prayer, fasting and almsgiving are
the three comprehensive duties of a Christian.
But there are three things which most belong to
religious actions, namely prayer, fasting, and almsgiving, in the
exercising of which while every time is accepted, yet that ought to be
more zealously observed, which we have received as hallowed by
tradition from the apostles: even as this tenth month brings
round again to us the opportunity when according to the ancient
practice we may give more diligent heed to those three things of which
I have spoken. For by prayer we seek to propitiate God, by fasting we extinguish the lusts of the flesh, by
alms we redeem our sins: and at the same time God’s image is throughout renewed in us, if we are
always ready to praise Him, unfailingly intent on our purification and
unceasingly active in cherishing our neighbour. This threefold
round of duty, dearly beloved, brings all other virtues into
action: it attains to God’s image
and likeness and unites us inseparably with the Holy Spirit.
Because in prayer faith remains stedfast, in fastings life remains
innocent, in almsgiving the mind remains kind. On Wednesday and
Friday therefore let us fast: and on Saturday let us keep vigil
with the most blessed Apostle Peter, who will deign to aid our
supplications and fast and alms with his own prayers through our
Lord Jesus Christ, who with the Father and the
Holy Ghost lives and reigns for ever and ever.
Amen. E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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