Anf-03 iv.iv.xiii Pg 6
John xvi. 20. It is observable that Tertullian here translates κόσμον by “seculum.”
If we rejoice with the world, there is reason to fear that with the world we shall grieve too. But when the world rejoices, let us grieve; and when the world afterward grieves, we shall rejoice. Thus, too, Eleazar258 258
Anf-03 iv.vi.xiii Pg 9
John xvi. 20.
And I think the Lord affirms, that those who mourn are happy, not those who are crowned. Marriage, too, decks the bridegroom with its crown; and therefore we will not have heathen brides, lest they seduce us even to the idolatry with which among them marriage is initiated. You have the law from the patriarchs indeed; you have the apostle enjoining people to marry in the Lord.435 435
Anf-03 iv.v.xxviii Pg 3
John xvi. 20.
Let us mourn, then, while the heathen are merry, that in the day of their sorrow we may rejoice; lest, sharing now in their gladness, we share then also in their grief. Thou art too dainty, Christian, if thou wouldst have pleasure in this life as well as in the next; nay, a fool thou art, if thou thinkest this life’s pleasures to be really pleasures. The philosophers, for instance, give the name of pleasure to quietness and repose; in that they have their bliss; in that they find entertainment: they even glory in it. You long for the goal, and the stage, and the dust, and the place of combat! I would have you answer me this question: Can we not live without pleasure, who cannot but with pleasure die? For what is our wish but the apostle’s, to leave the world, and be taken up into the fellowship of our Lord?375 375
Treasury of Scriptural Knowledge, Chapter 16
VERSE (20) - :6,33; 19:25-27 Mr 14:72; 16:10 Lu 22:45,62; 23:47-49; 24:17,21