Sermons of Pope Leo the Great
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SERMON I: PREACHED ON HIS
BIRTHDAY, OR DAY OF ORDINATION.
Having been elected in
absence he returns thanks for the kindness and earnestly demands the
prayers of his church.
"Let my mouth speak the
praise or the Lord," and my breath and spirit, my flesh and tongue
bless His holy Name. For it is a sign, not of a modest, but an ungrateful
mind, to keep silence on the kindnesses of GOD: and it is very meet to begin
our duty as consecrated pontiff with the sacrifices of the LORD'S praise.
Because "in our humility" the LORD "has been mindful of
us" and has blessed us: because "He alone has done great wonders
for me," so that your holy affection for me reckoned me present,
though my long journey had forced me to be absent. Therefore I give and always
shall give thanks to our GOD for all the things with which He has recompensed
me. Your favourable opinion also I acknowledge publicly, paying you the thanks
I owe, and thus showing that I understand how much respect, love and fidelity
your affectionate zeal could expend on me who long with a shepherd's anxiety
for the safety of your souls, who have passed so conscientious a judgment on
me, with absolutely no deserts of mine to guide you. I entreat you, therefore,
by the mercies of the LORD, aid with your prayers him whom you have sought out
by your solicitations that both the Spirit of grace may abide in me and that
your judgment may not change. May He who inspired you with such unanimity of
purpose, vouchsafe to us all in common the blessing of peace: so that all the
days of my life being ready for the service of Almighty Can, and for my duties
towards you, I may with confidence entreat the LORD: "Holy Father, keep
in Thy name those whom Thou hast given me:" and while you ever go on
unto salvation, may "my soul magnify the LORD," and in the
retribution of the judgment to come may the account of my priesthood so be
rendered to the just Judge that through your good deeds you may be my joy
and my crown, who by your good will have given an earnest testimony to me in
this present life.
SERMON II: ON HIS BIRTHDAY,
II
DELIVERED ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF HIS CONSECRATION.
I The LORD raises up the
weak and gives him grace according to his need.
The Divine condescension has
made this an honourable day for me, for it has shown by raising my
humbleness to the highest rank, that He despised not any of His own. And
hence, although one must be diffident of merit, yet it is one's bounden duty
to rejoice over the gift, since He who is the Imposer of the burden is
Himself the Aider in its execution: and lest the weak recipient should fall
beneath the greatness of the grace, He who conferred the dignity will also
give the power. As the day therefore returns in due course on which the LORD
purposed that I should begin my episcopal office, there is true cause for me
to rejoice to the glory of GOD, Who that I might love Him much, has forgiven
me much, and that I might make His Grace wonderful, has conferred His gifts
upon me in whom He found no recommendations of merit. And by this His work
what does the LORD suggest and commend to our hearts but that no one should
presume upon his own righteousness nor distrust GOD's mercy which shines out
more pre- eminently then, when the sinner is made holy and the downcast lifted
up. For the measure of heavenly gifts does not rest upon the quality of our
deeds, nor in this world, in which "all life is temptation," is
each one rewarded according to his deserving, for if the LORD were to take
count of a man's iniquities, no one could stand before His judgment.
II The mighty assemblage of
prelates testifies to men's loyal acceptance of Peter in Peter's unworthy
successor.
Therefore, dearly-beloved,
"magnify the LORD with me and let us exalt His name together,"
that the whole reason of to-day's concourse may be referred to the praise of
Him Who brought it to pass. For so far as my own feelings are concerned, I
confess that I rejoice most over the devotion of you all; and when I look upon
this splendid assemblage of my venerable brother-priests I feel that, where
so many saints are gathered, the very angels are amongst us. Nor do I doubt
that we are to-day visited by a more abundant outpouring of the Divine
Presence, when so many fair tabernacles of GOD, so many excellent members of
the Body of Christ are in one place and shine with one light. Nor yet I feel
sure, is the fostering condescension and true love of the most blessed Apostle
Peter absent from this congregation: he has not deserted your devotion, in
whose honour you are met together. And so he too rejoices over your good
feeling and welcomes your respect for the LORD'S own institution as shown
towards the partners of His honour, commending the well ordered love of the
whole Church, which ever finds Peter in Peter's See, and from affection for so
great a shepherd grows not lukewarm even over so inferior a successor as
myself. In order therefore, dearly beloved, that this loyalty which you
unanimously display towards my humbleness may obtain the fruit of its zeal, on
bended knee entreat the merciful goodness of our GOD that in our days He will
drive out those who assail us, strengthen faith, increase love, increase peace
and deign to render me His poor slave, whom to show the riches of His grace He
has willed to stand at the helm of the Church, sufficient for so great a work
and useful in building you up, and to this end to lengthen our time for
service that the years He may grant us may be used to His glory through Christ
our LORD. Amen.
SERMON III: ON HIS BIRTHDAY,
III
DELIVERED ON THE ANNIVERSARY OF HIS ELEVATION TO THE PONTIFICATE.
I The honour of being
raised to the episcopate must be referred solely to the Divine Head of the
Church.
As often as GOD's mercy deigns to bring round the day of His gifts to us, there is, dearly-beloved,
just and reasonable cause for rejoicing, if only our appointment to the office
be referred to the praise of Him who gave it. For though this recognition of
GOD may well be found in all His priests, yet I take it to be peculiarly
binding on me, who, regarding my own utter insignificance and the greatness of
the office undertaken, ought myself also to utter that exclamation of the
Prophet," LORD, I heard Thy speech and was afraid: I considered Thy works
and was dismayed." For what is so unwonted and so dismaying as labour
to the frail, exaltation to the humble, dignity to the undeserving? And yet we
do not despair nor lose heart, because we put our trust not in ourselves but
in Him who works in us. And hence also we have sung with harmonious voice the
psalm of David, dearly beloved, not in our own praise, but to the glory of
Christ the LORD. For it is He of whom it is prophetically written, "Thou
art a priest for ever after the order of Melchizedeck," that is, not
after the order of Aaron, whose priesthood descending along his own line of
offspring was a temporal ministry, and ceased with the law of the Old
Testament, but after the order of Melchizedeck, in whom was prefigured the
eternal High Priest. And no reference is made to his parentage because in him
it is understood that He was portrayed, whose generation cannot be declared.
And finally, now that the mystery of this Divine priesthood has descended to
human agency, it runs not by the line of birth, nor is that which flesh and
blood created, chosen, but without regard to the privilege of paternity and
succession by inheritance, those men are received by the Church as its rulers
whom the Holy Ghost prepares: so that in the people of GOD's adoption, the
whole body of which is priestly and royal, it is not the prerogative of
earthly origin which obtains the unction, but the condescension of Divine
grace which creates the bishop.
II. From Christ and through
S. Peter the priesthood is handed on in perpetuity.
Although, therefore, dearly
beloved, we be found both weak and slothful in fulfilling the duties of our
office, because, whatever devoted and vigorous action we desire to do, we are
hindered by the frailty of our very condition; yet having the unceasing
propitiation of the Almighty and perpetual Priest, who being like us and yet
equal with the Father, brought down His Godhead even to things human, and
raised His Manhood even to things Divine, we worthily and piously rejoice over
His dispensation, whereby, though He has delegated the care of His sheep to
many shepherds, yet He has not Himself abandoned the guardianship of His
beloved flock. And from His overruling and eternal protection we have received
the support of the Apostles' aid also, which assuredly does not cease from its
operation: and the strength of the foundation, on which the whole
superstructure of the Church is reared, is not weakened by the weight of
the temple that rests upon it. For the solidity of that faith which was
praised in the chief of the Apostles is perpetual: and as that remains which
Peter believed in Christ, so that remains which Christ instituted in Peter.
For when, as has been read in the Gospel lesson, the LORD had asked the
disciples whom they believed Him to be amid the various opinions that were
held, and the blessed Peter bad replied, saying, "Thou art the Christ,
the Son of the living GOD," the LORD says, "Blessed art thou, Simon
Bar-Jona, because flesh and flood hath not revealed it to thee, but My Father,
which is in heaven. And I say to thee, that thou art Peter, and upon this rock
will I build My church, and the gates of Hades shall not prevail against it.
And I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven. And whatsoever
thou shall bind on earth, shall be bound in heaven; and whatsoever thou shall
loose on earth, shall be loosed also in heaven."
III. S. Peter's work is
still carried out by his successors.
The dispensation of Truth
therefore abides, and the blessed Peter persevering in the strength of the
Rock, which he has received, has not abandoned the helm of the Church, which
he undertook. For he was ordained before the rest in such a way that from his
being called the Rock, from his being pronounced the Foundation, from his
being constituted the Doorkeeper of the kingdom of heaven, from his being set
as the Umpire to bind and to loose, whose judgments shall retain their
validity in heaven, from all these mystical titles we might know the nature of
his association with Christ. And still to-day he more fully and effectually
performs what is entrusted to him, and carries out every part of his duty and
charge in Him and with Him, through Whom he has been glorified. And so if
anything is rightly done and rightly decreed by us, if anything is won from
the mercy of GOD by our daily supplications, it is of his work and merits
whose power lives and whose authority prevails in his See. For this,
dearly-beloved, was gained by that confession, which, inspired in the
Apostle's heart by GOD the Father, transcended all the uncertainty of human
opinions, and was endued with the firmness of a rock, which no assaults could
shake. For throughout the Church Peter daily says, "Thou an the Christ,
the Son of the living GOD," and every tongue which confesses the LORD,
accepts the instruction his voice conveys. This Faith conquers the devil, and
breaks the bonds of his prisoners. It uproots us from this earth and plants us
in heaven, and the gates of Hades cannot prevail against it. For with such
solidity is it endued by GOD that the depravity of heretics cannot mar it nor
the unbelief of the heathen overcome it.
IV. This festival then is in
S. Peter's honour, and the progress of his flock redounds to his glory.
And so, dearly beloved, with
reasonable obedience we celebrate to-day's festival by such methods, that in
my humble person he may be recognized and honoured, in whom abides the care of
all the shepherds, together with the charge of the sheep commended to him, and
whose dignity is not abated even in so unworthy an heir. And hence the
presence of my venerable brothers and fellow- priests, so much desired and
valued by me, will be the more sacred and precious, if they will transfer the
chief honour of this service in which they have deigned to take part to him
whom they know to be not only the patron of this see, but also the primate of
all bishops. When therefore we utter our exhortations in your ears, holy
brethren, believe that he is speaking whose representative we are: because it
is his warning that we give, nothing else but his teaching that we preach,
beseeching you to "gird up the loins of your mind," and lead a
chaste and sober life in the fear of GOD, and not to let your mind forget his
supremacy and consent to the lusts of the flesh. Short and fleeting are the
joys of this world's pleasures which endeavour to turn aside from the path of
life those who are called to eternity. The faithful and religious spirit,
therefore, must desire the things which are heavenly, and being eager for the
Divine promises, lift itself to the love of the incorruptible Good and the
hope of the true Light. But be sure, dearly-beloved, that your labour, whereby
you resist vices and fight against carnal desires, is pleasing and precious in
GOD'S sight, and in GOD's mercy will profit not only yourselves but me also,
because the zealous pastor makes his boast of the progress of the LORD'S
flock. "For ye are my crown and joy," as the Apostle says; if
your faith, which from the beginning of the Gospel has been preached in all
the world has continued in love and holiness. For though the whole Church,
which is in all the world, ought to abound in all virtues, yet you especially,
above all people, it becomes to excel in deeds of piety, because founded as
you are on the very citadel of the Apostolic Rock, not only has our LORD Jesus
Christ redeemed you in common with all men, but the blessed Apostle Peter has
instructed you far beyond all men. Through the same Christ our LORD.
SERMON IX: UPON THE
COLLECTIONS, IV.
I. The devil's wickedness in
leading men astray is now counteracted by the work of Redemption in restoring
them to the Truth.
GOD's mercy and justice,
dearly-beloved, has in loving-kindness disclosed to us through our LORD Jesus
Christ's teaching, the manner of His retributions, as they have been ordained
from the foundation of the world, that accepting the significance of facts we
might take what we believe will happen, to have, as it were, already come to
pass. For our Redeemer and Saviour knew what great errors the devil's deceit
had dispersed throughout the world and by how many superstitions he had
subjected the chief part of mankind to himself. But that the creature formed
in GOD'S image might not any longer through ignorance of the Truth be driven
on to the precipice of perpetual death, He inserted in the Gospel-pages the
nature of His judgment that it might recover every man from the snares of the
crafty foe; for now all would know what rewards the good might hope for and
what punishments the evil must fear. For the instigator and author of sin in
order first to fall through pride and then to injure us through envy, because
"he stood not in the Truth" put all his strength in lying and
produced every kind of deceit from this poisoned source of his cunning, that
he might cut off man's devout hopes from that happiness which he had lost by
his own uplifting, and drag them into partnership with his condemnation, to
whose reconciliation he himself could not attain. Whoever therefore among men
has wronged GOD by his wickednesses, has been led astray by his guile, and
depraved by his villainy. For he easily drives into all evil doings those whom
he has deceived in the matter of religion. But knowing that GOD is denied not
only by words but also by deeds, many whom he could not rob of their faith, he
has robbed of their love, and by choking the ground of their heart with the
weeds of avarice, has spoiled them of the fruit of good works, when he could
not spoil them of the confession of their lips.
II. GOD's just judgment
against sin is denounced that we may avoid it by deeds of mercy and love.
On account therefore,
dearly-beloved, of these crafty designs of our ancient foe, the unspeakable
goodness of Christ has wished us to know, what was to be decreed about all
mankind in the day of retribution, that, while in this life healing remedies
are legitimately offered, while restoration is not denied to the contrite, and
those who have been long barren can at length be fruitful, the verdict on
which justice has determined may be fore-stalled and the picture of GOD's
coming to judge the world never depart from the mind's eye. For the LORD will
come in His glorious Majesty, as He Himself has foretold, and there will be
with Him an innumerable host of angel-legions radiant in their splendour.
Before the throne of His power will all the nations of the world be gathered;
and all the men that in all ages and on all the face of the earth have been
born, shall stand in the Judge's sight. Then shall be separated the just from
the unjust, the guiltless from the guilty; and when the sons of piety, their
works of mercy reviewed, have received the Kingdom prepared for them, the
unjust shall be upbraided for their utter barrenness, and those on the left
having naught in common with those on the right, shall by the condemnation of
the Almighty Judge be cast into the fire prepared for the torture of the devil
and his angels, with him to share the punishment, whose will they choose to
do. Who then would not tremble at this doom of eternal torment? Who would not
dread evils which are never to be ended? But since this severity is only
denounced in order that we may seek for mercy, we too in this present life
must show such open-handed mercy that after perilous neglect returning to
works of piety it may be possible for us to be set free from this doom. For
this is the purpose of the Judge's might and of the Saviour's graciousness,
that the unrighteous may forsake his ways and the sinner give up his wicket
habits. Let those who wish Christ to spare them, have mercy on the poor; let
them give freely to feed the wretched, who desire to attain to the society of
the blessed. Let no man consider his fellow vile, nor despise in any one that
nature which the Creator of the world made His own. For who that labours can
deny that Christ claims that labour as done unto Himself? Your fellow-slave is
helped thereby, but it is the LORD who will repay. The feeding of the needy is
the purchase money of the heavenly kingdom and the free dispenser of things
temporal is made the heir of things eternal. But how has such small
expenditure deserved to be valued so highly except because our works are
weighed in the balance of love, and when a man loves what GOD loves, he is
deservedly raised into His kingdom, whose attribute of love has in part become
his?
III. We minister to Christ
Himself in the person of His poor.
To this pious duty of good
works, therefore dearly beloved, the day of Apostolic institution invites
us, on which the first collection of our holy offerings has been prudently and
profitably ordained by the Fathers; in order that, because at this season
formerly the Gentiles used superstitiously to serve demons, we might celebrate
the most holy offering of our alms in protest against the unholy victims of
the wicked. And because this has been most profitable to the growth of the
Church, it has been resolved to make it perpetual. We exhort you, therefore,
holy brethren throughout the churches of your several regions on Wednesday
next to contribute of your goods, according to your means and willingness,
to purposes of charity, that ye may be able to win that blessedness in which
he shall rejoice without end, who "considereth the needy and
poor." And if we are to "consider" him, dearly beloved, we
must use loving care and watchfulness, in order that we may find him whom
modesty conceals and shamefastness keeps back. For there are those who blush
openly to ask for what they want and prefer to suffer privation without
speaking rather than to be put to shame by a public appeal. These are they
whom we ought to "consider" and relieve from their hidden straits in
order that they may the more rejoice from the very fact that their modesty as
well as poverty has been consulted. And rightly in the needy and poor do we
recognize the person of Jesus Christ our LORD Himself, "Who though He was
rich," as says the blessed Apostle, "became poor, that He might
enrich us by His poverty." And that His presence might never seem to
be wanting to us, He so effected the mystic union of His humility and His
glory that while we adore Him as King and LORD in the Majesty of the Father,
we might also feed Him in His poor, for which we shall be set free in an evil
day from perpetual damnation, and for our considerate care of the poor shall
be joined with the whole company of heaven.
IV. To complete their
acceptance by GOD, they must not neglect to lay all information against the
Manichees who are in the city.
But in order that your
devotion, dearly beloved, may in all things be pleasing to GOD, we exhort you
also to show due zeal in informing your presbyters of Manichees wherever they
be hidden. For it is naught but piety to disclose the hiding-places of the
wicked, and in them to overthrow the devil whom they serve. For against them,
dearly beloved, it becomes indeed the whole world and the whole Church
everywhere to put on the armour of Faith: but your devotion ought to be
foremost in this work, who in your progenitors learnt the Gospel of the Cross
of Christ from the very mouth of the most blessed Apostles Peter and Paul. Men
must not be allowed to lie hid who do not believe that the law given through
Moses, in which GOD is shown to be the Creator of the Universe, ought to be
received: who speak against the Prophets and the Holy Ghost, dare in their
damnable profanity to reject the Psalms of David which are sung through the
universal Church with all reverence, deny the birth of the LORD Christ,
according to the flesh, say that His Passion and Resurrection was fictitious,
not true, and deprive the baptism of regeneration of all its power as a means
of grace. Nothing with them is holy, nothing entire, nothing true. They are to
be shunned, lest they harm any one: they are to be given up, lest they should
settle in any part of our city. Yours, dearly. beloved, will be the gain
before the LORD'S judgment-seat of what we bid, of what we ask. For it is but
right that the triumph of this deed also should be joined to the oblation of
our alms, the LORD Jesus Christ in all things aiding us, Who lives and reigns
for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON X: ON THE
COLLECTIONS, v.
I. Our goods are given us
not as our own possessions but for use in GOD's service.
Observing the institutions
of the Apostles' tradition, dearly beloved, we exhort you, as watchful
shepherds, to celebrate with the devotion of religious practice that day which
they purged from wicked superstitions and consecrated to deeds of mercy,
thus showing that the authority of the Fathers still lives among us, and that
we obediently abide by their teaching. Inasmuch as the sacred usefulness of
such a practice affects not only time past but also our own age, so that what
aided them in the destruction of vanities, might contribute with us to the
increase of virtues. And what so suitable to faith, what so much in harmony
with godliness as to assist the poverty of the needy, to undertake the care of
the weak, to succour the needs of the brethren, and to remember one's own
condition in the toils of others. In which work He only who knows what He
has given to each, discerns aright how much a man can and how much he cannot
do. For not only are spiritual riches and heavenly gifts received from GOD,
but earthly and material possessions also proceed from His bounty, that He may
be justified in requiring an account of those things which He has not so much
put in our possession as committed to our stewardship. GOD's gifts, therefore,
we must use properly and wisely, lest the material for good work should become
an occasion of sin. For wealth, after its kind and regarded as a means, is
good and is of the greatest advantage to human society, when it is in the
bands of the benevolent and open-handed, and when the luxurious man does not
squander nor the miser hoard it; for whether ill-stored or unwisely spent it
is equally lost.
II. The liberal use of
riches is worse than vain, if it be for selfish ends alone.
And, however praiseworthy it
be to flee from intemperance, and to avoid the waste of base pleasures, and
though many in their magnificence disdain to conceal their wealth, and in the
abundance of their goods think scorn of mean and sordid parsimony, yet such
men's liberality is not happy, nor their thriftiness to be commended, if their
riches are of benefit to themselves alone; if no poor folks are helped by
their goods, no sick persons nourished; if out of the abundance of their great
possessions the captive gets not ransom, nor the stranger comfort, nor the
exile relief. Rich men of this kind are needier than all the needy. For they
lose those returns which they might have for ever, and while they gloat over
the brief and not always free enjoyment of what they possess, they are not fed
upon the bread of justice nor the sweets of mercy: outwardly splendid, they
have no light within: of things temporal they have abundance, but utter lack
of things eternal: for they inflict starvation on their own souls, and bring
them to shame and nakedness by spending upon heavenly treasures none of these
things which they put into their earthly storehouses.
III. The duty of mercy
outweighs all other virtues.
But, perhaps there are some
rich people, who, although they are not wont to help the Church's poor by
bounteous gifts, yet keep other commands of GOD, and among their many
meritorious acts of faith and uprightness think they will be pardoned for the
lack of this one virtue. But this is so important that, though the rest exist
without it, they can be of no avail. For although a man be full of faith, and
chaste, and sober, and adorned with other still greater decorations, yet if he
is not merciful, he cannot deserve mercy: for the LORD says, "blessed are
the merciful, for GOD shall have mercy upon them ." And when the Son
of Man comes in His Majesty and is seated on His glorious throne, and all
nations being gathered together, division is made between the good and the
bad, for what shall they be praised who stand upon the fight except for works
of benevolence and deeds of love which Jesus Christ shall reckon as done to
Himself? For He who has made man's nature His own, has separated Himself in
nothing from man's humility. And what objection shall be made to those on the
left except for their neglect of love, their inhuman harshness, their refusal
of mercy to the poor? as if those on the right had no other virtues those on
the left no other faults. But at the great and final day of judgment large-
hearted liberality and ungodly meanness will be counted of such importance as
to outweigh all other virtues and all other shortcomings, so that for the one
men shall gain entrance into the Kingdom, for the other they shall be sent
into eternal fire.
IV. And its efficacy, as
Scripture proves, is incalculable.
Let no one therefore, dearly
beloved, flatter himself on any merits of a good life, if works of charity be
wanting in him, and let him not trust in the purity of his body, if he be not
cleansed by the purification of almsgiving. For "almsgiving wipes out sin
," kills death, and extinguishes the punishment of perpetual fire. But
he who has not been fruitful therein, shall have no indulgence from the great
Re-compenser, as Solomon says, "He that closeth his ears lest he should
hear the weak, shall himself call upon the LORD, and there shall be none to
hear him ." And hence Tobias also, while instructing his son in the
precepts of godliness, says, "Give alms of thy substance, and turn not
thy face from any poor man: so shall it come to pass that the face of GOD
shall not be turned from thee ." This virtue makes all virtues
profitable; for by its presence it gives life to that very faith, by which
"the just lives ," and which is said to be "dead without
works :" because as the reason for works consists in faith, so the
strength of faith consists in works. "While we have time therefore,"
as the Apostle says, "let us do that which is good to all men, and
especially to them that are of the household of faith ." "But let
us not be weary in doing good; for in His own time we shall reap ."
And so the present life is the time for sowing, and the day of retribution is
the time of harvest, when every one shall reap the fruit of his seed according
to the amount of his sowing. And no one shall be disappointed in the produce
of that harvesting, because it is the heart's intentions rather than the sums
expended that will be reckoned up. And little sums from little means shall
produce as much as great sums from great means. And therefore, dearly beloved,
let us carry out this Apostolic institution. And as the first collection will
be next Sunday, let all prepare themselves to give willingly, that every one
according to his ability may join in this most sacred offering. Your very alms
and those who shall be aided by your gifts shall intercede for you, that you
may be always ready for every good work in Christ Jesus our LORD, Who lives
and reigns for ages without end. Amen.
SERMON XII: ON THE FAST OF
THE, TENTH MONTH, I.
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 them ." And again he says, "I was found
by them that sought Me not, and openly appeared to them that asked not for Me
. 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 Son ," and again, "let us therefore love GOD,
because He first loved us ." 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 pleasure ," 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 thyself ," 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
gladness ." 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 on 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 Father ."
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 poorness (3a). 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 you ."
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 east 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 neighhour. 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.
SERMON XVI: ON THE FAST OF
THE TENTH MONTH.
I. The prosperous must show
forth their thankfulness to GOD, by liberality to the floor and needy.
The transcendant power of
GOD's grace, dearly beloved, is indeed daily effecting in Christian hearts the
transference of our every n desire from earthly to heavenly things. But this
present life also is passed through the Creator's aid and sustained by His
providence, because He who promises things eternal is also the the Supplier of
things temporal. As therefore we ought to give GOD thanks for the hope of
future happiness towards which we run by faith, because He raises us up to a
perception of the happiness in store for us, so for those things also which we
receive in the course of every year, GOD should be honoured and praised, who
having from the beginning given fertility to the earth and laid down laws of
bearing fruit for every germ and seed, will never forsake his own decrees but
will as Creator ever continue His kind administration of the things that He
has made. Whatever therefore the cornfields, the vineyards and the olive
groves have borne for man's purposes, all this God in His bounteous goodness
has produced: for under the varying condition of the elements He has
mercifully aided the uncertain toils of the husbandmen so that wind, and rain,
cold and heat, day and night might serve our needs. For men's methods would
not have sufficed to give effect to their works, had not GOD given the
increase to their wonted plantings and waterings. And hence it is but godly
and just that we too should help others with that which the Heavenly Father
has mercifully bestowed on us. For there are full many, who have no fields, no
vineyards, no olive-groves, whose wants we must provide out of the store which
GOD has given, that they too with us may bless GOD for the richness of the
earth and rejoice at its possessors having received things which they have
shared also with the poor and the stranger. That garner is blessed and most
worthy that all fruits should increase manifold in it, from which the hunger
of the needy and the weak is satisfied from which the wants of the stranger
are relieved, from which the desire of the sick is gratified. For these men
GOD has in His justice permitted to be afflicted with divers troubles, that He
might both crown the wretched for their patience and the merciful for their
loving-kindness.
II. Almsgiving and fasting
are the most essential aids to prayer.
And while all seasons are
opportune for this duty, beloved, yet this present season is specially
suitable and appropriate, at which our holy fathers, being Divinely inspired,
sanctioned the Fast of the tenth month, that when all the ingathering of the
crops was complete, we might dedicate to GOD our reasonable service of
abstinence, and each might remember so to use his abundance as to be more
abstinent in himself and more open-handed towards the poor. For forgiveness of
sins is most efficaciously prayed for with almsgiving and fasting, and
supplications that are winged by such aids mount swiftly to GOD's ears: since
as it is written, "the merciful man doeth good to his own soul ,"
and nothing is so much a man's own as that which he spends on his neighbour.
For that part of his material possessions with which he ministers to the
needy, is transformed into eternal riches, and such wealth is begotten of this
bountifulness as can never be diminished or in any way destroyed, for
"blessed are the merciful, for GOD shall have mercy on them 6," and
He Himself shall be their chief Reward, who is the Model of His own command.
III. Christians' pious
activity has so enraged Satan that he has multiplied heresies to wreak them
harm.
But at all these acts of
godliness, dearly-beloved, which commend us more and more to GOD, there is no
doubt that our enemy, who is so eager and so skilled in harming us, is aroused
with keener stings of hatred, that under a false profession of the Christian
name he may corrupt those whom he is not allowed to attack with open and
bloody persecutions, and for this work he has heretics in his service whom he
has led astray from the catholic Faith, subjected to himself, and forced under
divers errors to serve in his camp. And as for the deception of primitive man
he used the services of a serpent, so to mislead the minds of the upright he
has armed these men's tongues with the poison of his falsehoods. But these
treacherous designs, dearly beloved, with a shepherd's care, and so far as the
LORD vouchsafes His aid, we will defeat. And taking heed lest any of the holy
flock should perish, we admonish you with fatherly warnings to keep aloof from
the "lying lips" and the "deceitful tongue" from which the
prophet asks that his soul should be delivered ; because "their
words," as says the blessed Apostle, "do creep as doth a gangrene
." They creep in humbly, they arrest softly, they bind gently, they
slay secretly. For they "come," as the Saviour foretold, "in
sheeps' clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves ;" because
they could not deceive the true and simple sheep, unless they covered their
bestial rage with the name of Christ. But in them all he is at work who,
though he is really the enemy of enlightenment, "transforms himself into
an angel of light ." His is the craft which inspires Basilides; his
the ingenuity which worked in Marcion; he is the leader under whom Sabellius
acted; he the author of Photinus' headlong fall, his the authority and his the
spirit which Arius and Eunomius served: in fine under his command and
authority the whole herd of such wild beasts has separated from the unity of
the Church and severed connexion with the Truth.
IV. Of all heresies
Manicheism is the worst and foullest.
But while he retains this
ever-varying supremacy over all the heresies, yet he has built his citadel
upon the madness of the Manichees, and found in them the most spacious court
in which to strut and boast himself: for there he possesses not one form of
misbelief only, but a general compound of all errors and ungodlinesses. For
all that is idolatrous in the heathen, all that is blind in carnal Jews, all
that is unlawful in the secrets of the magic art, all finally that is profane
and blasphemous in all the heresies is gathered together with all manner of
filth in these men as if in a cesspool . And hence it is too long a matter
to describe all their ungodlinesses: for the number of the charges against
them exceeds my supply of words. It will be sufficient to indicate a few
instances, that you may, from what you hear, conjecture what from modesty we
omit. In the matter of their rites, however, which are as indecent morally as
they are religiously, we cannot keep silence about that which the LORD has
been pleased to reveal to our inquiries, lest any one should think we have
trusted in this thing to vague rumours and uncertain opinions. And so with
bishops and presbyters sitting beside me, and Christian nobles assembled in
the same place, we ordered their elect men and women to be brought before us.
And when they had made many disclosures concerning their perverse tenets and
their mode of conducting festivals, they revealed this story of utter
depravity also, which I blush to describe but which has been so carefully
investigated that no grounds for doubt are left for the incredulous or for
cavillers. For there were present all the persons by which the unutterable
crime had been perpetrated, to wit a girl at most ten years old, and two women
who had nursed her and prepared her for this outrage. There was also present
the stripling who had outraged her, and the bishop, who had arranged their
horrible crime. All these made one and the same confession, and a tale of such
foul orgies s was disclosed as our ears could scarcely bear. And lest by
plainer speaking we offend chaste ears, the account Of the proceedings shall
suffice, in which it is most fully shown that in that sect no modesty, no
sense of honour, no chastity whatever is found: for their law is falsehood,
their religion the devil, their sacrifice immorality.
V. Every one should abjure
such men, and give all the information they possess about them to the
authorities.
And so, dearly beloved,
renounce all friendship with these men who are utterly abominable and
pestilential, and whom disturbances in other districts have brought in great
numbers to the city : and you women especially refrain from acquaintance
and intercourse with such men, lest while your ears are charmed unawares by
their fabulous stories, you fall into the devil's noose, who, knowing that he
seduced the first man by the woman's mouth, and drove all men from the bliss
of paradise through feminine credulity, still lies in watch for your sex with
more confident craft that he may rob both of their faith and of their modesty
those whom he has been able to ensnare by the servants of his falseness. This,
too, dearly beloved, I entreat and admonish you loyally to inform us , if
any of you know where they dwell, where they teach, whose houses they
frequent, and in whose company they take rest: because it is of little avail
to any one that through the Holy Ghost's protection he is not caught by them
himself, if he takes no action when he knows that others are being caught.
Against common enemies for the common safety all alike should exercise the
same vigilance lest from one member's wound other members also be injured, and
they that think such men should not be given up, in Christ's judgment be found
guilty for their silence even though they are not contaminated by their
approval.
VI. Zeal in rooting out
heresy will make other pious duties more acceptable.
Display then a holy zeal of
religious vigilance, and let all the faithful rise in one body against these
savage enemies of their souls. For the merciful GOD has delivered a certain
portion of our noxious foes into our hands in order that by revelation of the
danger the utmost caution might be aroused. Let not what has been done
suffice, but let us persevere in searching them out: and by GOD'S aid the
result will be not only the continuance in safety of those who still stand,
but also the recovery from error of many who have been deceived by the devil's
seduction. And the prayers, and alms, and fasts that you offer to the merciful
GOD shall be the holier for this very devotion, when this deed of faith also
is added to all your other godly duties. On Wednesday and Friday, therefore,
let us fast, and on Saturday let us keep vigil in the presence of the most
blessed Apostle Peter; who, as we experience and know, watches unceasingly
like a shepherd over the sheep entrusted to him by the LORD, and who will
prevail in his entreaties that the Church of GOD, which was rounded by his
preaching, may be free from all error, through Christ our LORD. Amen.
SERMON XVII: ON THE FAST OF
THE TENTH MONTH, VI.
I. The duty of fasting is
based on both the Old and New Testaments, and is closely connected with the
duties of prayer and almsgiving.
The teaching of the Law,
dearly beloved, imparts great authority to the precepts of the Gospel, seeing
that certain things are transferred from the old ordinances to the new, and by
the very devotions of the Church it is shown that the LORD Jesus Christ
"came not to destroy but to fulfil the Law ." For since the
cessation of the signs by which our Saviour's coming was announced, and the
abolition of the types in the presence of the Very Truth, those things which
our religion instituted, whether for the regulation of customs or for the
simple worship of GOD, continue with us in the same form in which they were at
the beginning, and what was in harmony with both Testaments has been modified
by no change. Among these is also the solemn fast of the tenth month, which is
now to be kept by us according to yearly custom, because it is altogether just
and godly to give thanks to the Divine bounty for the crops which the earth
has produced for the use of men under the guiding hand of supreme Providence.
And to show that we do this with ready mind, we must exercise not only the
self-restraint of fasting, but also diligence in almsgiving, that from the
ground of our heart also may spring the germ of righteousness and the fruit of
love, and that we may deserve GOD'S mercy by showing mercy to His poor. For
the supplication, which is supported by works of piety, is most efficacious in
prevailing with GOD, since he who turns not his heart away from the poor soon
turns himself to hear the LORD, as the LORD says: "be ye merciful as your
Father also is merciful release and ye shall be released ." What is
kinder than this justice? what more merciful than this retribution, where the
judge's sentence rests! in the power of him that is to be judged?
"Give," he says, "and it shall be given to you ." How
soon do the misgivings of distrust and the puttings off of avarice fall to the
ground, when humanity s may fearlessly spend what the Truth pledges Himself to
repay.
II. He that lends to the
LORD makes a better bargain than he that lends to man.
Be stedfast, Christian
giver: give what you may receive, sow what you may reap, scatter what you may
gather. Fear not to spend, sigh not over the doubtfulness of the gain. Your
substance grows when it is wisely dispensed. Set your heart on the profits due
to mercy, and traffic in eternal gains. Your Recompenser wishes you to be
munificent, and He who gives that you may have, commands you to spend, saying,
"Give, and it shall be given to you." You must thankfully embrace
the conditions of this promise. For although you have nothing that you did not
receive, yet you cannot fail to have what you give. He therefore that loves
money, and wishes to multiply his wealth by immoderate profits, should rather
practise this holy usury and grow rich by such money-lending, in order not to
catch men hampered with difficulties, and by treacherous assistance entangle
them in debts which they can never pay, but to be His creditor and His
money-lender, who says, "Give, and it shall be given to you," and
"with what measure ye measure, it shall be measured again to you
." But he is unfaithful and unfair even to himself, who does not wish
to have for ever what he esteems desirable. Let him amass what he may, let him
hoard and store what he may, he will leave this world empty and needy, as
David the prophet says, "for when he dieth he shall take nothing away,
nor shall his glory descend with him ." Whereas if he were considerate
of his own soul, he would trust his good to Him, who is both the proper Surety
for the poor and the generous Repayer of loans. But unrighteous and
shameless avarice, which promises to do some kind act but eludes it, trusts
not GOD, whose promises never fail, and trusts man, who makes such hasty
bargains; and while he reckons the present more certain than the future, often
deservedly finds that his greed for unjust gain is the cause of by no means
unjust loss.
III. Money-lending at high
interest is in all respects iniquitous.
And hence, whatever result
follow, the money-lender's trade is always bad, for it is sin either to lessen
or increase the sum, in that if he lose what he lent he is wretched, and if he
takes more than he lent he is more wretched still. The iniquity of
money-lending must absolutely be abjured, and the gain which lacks all
humanity must be shunned. A man's possessions are indeed multiplied by these
unrighteous and sorry means, but the mind's wealth decays because usury of
money is the death of the soul . For what GOD thinks of such men the most
holy Prophet David makes clear, for when he asks, "LORD, who shall dwell
in thy tabernacle, or who shall rest upon thy holy hill ?" he receives
the Divine utterance in reply, from which he learns that that man attains to
eternal rest who among other rules of holy living "hath not given his
money upon usury :" and thus he who gets deceitful gain from lending
his money on usury is shown to be both an alien from GOD's tabernacle and an
exile from His holy hill, and in seeking to enrich himself by other's losses,
he deserves to be punished with eternal neediness.
IV. Let us avoid avarice,
and share GOD's benefits with others.
And so, dearly beloved, do
ye who with the whole heart have put your trust in the LORD's promises, flee
from this unclean leprosy of avarice, and use GOD's gift piously and wisely.
And since you rejoice in His bounty, take heed that you have those who may
share in your joys. For many lack what you have in plenty, and some men's
needs afford you opportunity for imitating the Divine goodness, so that
through you the Divine benefits may be transferred to others also, and that by
being wise stewards of your temporal goods, you may acquire eternal riches. On
Wednesday and Friday next, therefore, let us fast, and on Saturday keep vigil
with the most blessed Apostle Peter, by whose prayers we may in all things
obtain the Divine protection through Christ our LORD. Amen.
SERMON XIX: ON THE FAST OF
THE TEN MONTH, VIII.
I. Self-restraint leads to
higher enjoyments.
When the Saviour would
instruct His disciples about the Advent of GOD's Kingdom and the end of the
world's times, and teach His whole Church, in the person of the Apostles, He
said, "Take heed lest haply your hearts be overcharged with surfeiting
and drunkenness, and care of this life." And assuredly, dearly
beloved, we acknowledge that this precept applies more especially to us, to
whom undoubtedly the day denounced is near, even though hidden. For the advent
of which it behoves every man to prepare himself, lest it find him given over
to gluttony, or entangled in cares of this life. For by daily experience,
beloved, it is proved that the mind's edge is blunted by over-indulgence of
the flesh, and the heart's vigour is dulled by excess of food, so that the
delights of eating are even opposed to the health of the body, unless
reasonable moderation withstand the temptation and the consideration of future
discomfort keep from the pleasure. For although the flesh desires nothing
without the soul, and receives its sensations from the same source as it
receives its motions also, yet it is the function of the same soul to deny
certain things to the body which is subject to it, and by its inner judgment
to restrain the outer parts from things unseasonable, in order that it may be
the oftener free from bodily lusts, and have leisure for Divine wisdom in the
palace of the mind, where, away from all the noise of earthly cares, it may in
silence enjoy holy meditations and eternal delights. And, although this is
difficult to maintain in this life, yet the attempt can frequently be renewed,
in order that we may the oftener and longer be occupied with spiritual rather
than fleshly cares; and by our spending ever greater portions of our time on
higher cares, even our temporal actions may end in gaining the incorruptible
riches.
II. The teaching of the four
yearly fasts is that spiritual self-restraint is as necessary as corporeal.
This profitable observance,
dearly beloved, is especially laid down for the fasts of the Church, which, in
accordance with the Holy Spirit's teaching, are so distributed over the whole
year that the law of abstinence may be kept before us at all times.
Accordingly we keep the spring fast in Lent, the summer fast at Whitsuntide,
the autumn fast in the seventh month, and the winter fast in this which is the
tenth month, knowing that there is nothing unconnected with the Divine
commands, and that all the elements serve the Word of GOD to our instruction,
so that from the very hinges on which the world turns, as if by four gospels
we learn unceasingly what to preach and what to do. For, when the prophet
says, "The heavens declare the glory of GOD, and the firmament showeth
His handiwork: day unto day uttereth speech, and night showeth
knowledge," what is there by which the Truth does not speak to us? By
day and by night His voices are heard, and the beauty of the things made by
the workmanship of the One GOD ceases not to instil the teachings of Reason
into our hearts' ears, so that "the invisible things of GOD may be
perceived and seen through the things which are made," and men may serve
the Creator of all, not His creatures. Since therefore all vices are
destroyed by self-restraint, and whatever avarice thirsts for, pride strives
for, luxury lusts after, is overcome by the solid force of this virtue, who
can fail to understand the aid which is given us by fastings? for therein we
are bidden to restrain ourselves, not only in food, but also in all carnal
desires. Otherwise it is lost labour to endure hunger and yet not put away
wrong wishes; to afflict oneself by curtailing food, and yet not to flee from
sinful thoughts. That is a carnal, not a spiritual fast, where the body only
is stinted, and those things persisted in, which are more harmful than all
delights. What profit is it to the soul to act outwardly as mistress and
inwardly to be a captive and a slave, to issue orders to the limbs and to lose
the right to her own liberty? That soul for the most part (and deservedly)
meets with rebellion in her servant, which does not pay to GOD the service
that is due. When the body therefore fasts from food, let the mind fast from
vices, and pass judgment upon all earthly cares and desires according to the
law of its King
III. Thus fasting in mind as
well as body, and giving alms freely, we shall win GOD's highest favour.
Let us remember that we owe
love first to GOD, secondly to our neighbour, and that all our affections must
be so regulated as not to draw us away from the worship of GOD, or the
benefiting our fellow slave. But how shall we worship GOD unless that which is
pleasing to Him is also pleasing to us? For, if our will is His will, our
weakness will receive strength from Him, from Whom the very will came;
"for it is GOD," as the Apostle says, "who worketh in us both
to will and to do for (His) good pleasure." And so a man will not be
puffed up with pride, nor crushed with despair, if he uses the gifts which GOD
gave to His glory, and withholds his inclinations from those things, which he
knows will harm him. For in abstaining from malicious envy, from luxurious and
dissolute living, from the perturbations of anger, from the lust after
vengeance, he will be made pure and holy by true fasting, and will be fed upon
the pleasures of incorruptible delights, and so he will know how, by the
spiritual use of his earthly riches, to transform them into heavenly
treasures, not by hoarding up for himself what he has received, but by gaining
a hundred-fold on what he gives. And hence we warn you, beloved, in fatherly
affection, to make this winter fast fruitful to yourselves by bounteous alms,
rejoicing that by you the LORD feeds and clothes His poor, to whom assuredly
He could have given the possessions which He has bestowed on you, had He not
in His unspeakable mercy wished to justify them for their patient labour, and
you for your works of love. Let us therefore fast on Wednesday and Friday, and
on Saturday keep vigil with the most blessed Apostle Peter, and he will deign
to assist with his own prayers our supplications and fastings and alms which
our LORD Jesus Christ presents, Who with the Father and the Holy Ghost lives
and reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XXI: ON THE FEAST OF
THE NATIVITY, I.
I. All share in the joy of
Christmas.
Our Saviour, dearly-beloved,
was born today: let us be glad. For there is no proper place for sadness, when
we keep the birthday of the Life, which destroys the fear of mortality and
brings to us the joy of promised eternity. No one is kept from sharing in this
happiness. There is for all one common measure of joy, because as our LORD the
destroyer of sin and death finds none free from charge, so is He come to free
us all. Let the saint exult in that he draws near to victory. Let the sinner
be glad in that he is invited to pardon. Let the gentile take courage in that
he is called to life. For the Son of GOD in the fulness of time which the
inscrutable depth of the Divine counsel has determined, has taken on him the
nature of man, thereby to reconcile it to its Author: in order that the
inventor of death, the devil, might be conquered through that (nature) which
he had conquered. And in this conflict undertaken for us, the fight was fought
on great and wondrous principles of fairness; for the Almighty LORD enters the
lists with His savage foe not in His own majesty but in our humility, opposing
him with the same form and the same nature, which shares indeed our mortality,
though it is free from all sin. Truly foreign to this nativity is that which
we read of all others, "no one is clean from stain, not even the infant
who has lived but one day upon earth." Nothing therefore of the lust
of the flesh has passed into that peerless nativity, nothing of the law of sin
has entered. A royal Virgin of the stem of David is chosen, to be impregnated
with the sacred seed and to conceive the Divinely-human offspring in mind
first and then in body. And lest in ignorance of the heavenly counsel she
should tremble at so strange a result, she learns from converse with the
angel that what is to be wrought in her is of the Holy Ghost. Nor does she
believe it loss of honour that she is soon to be the Mother of God. For why
should she be in despair over the novelty of such conception, to whom the
power of the most High has promised to effect it. Her implicit faith is
confirmed also by the attestation of a precursory miracle, and Elizabeth
receives unexpected fertility: in order that there might be no doubt that He
who had given conception to the barren, would give it even to a virgin.
II. The mystery of the
Incarnation is a fitting theme for joy both to angels and to men.
Therefore the Word of GOD,
Himself GOD, the Son of GOD who "in the beginning was with GOD,"
through whom "all things were made" and "without" whom
"was nothing made," with the purpose of delivering man from
eternal death, became man: so bending Himself to take on Him our humility
without decrease in His own majesty, that remaining what He was and assuming
what He was not, He might unite the true form of a slave to that form in which
He is equal to GOD the Father, and join both natures together by such a
compact that the lower should not be swallowed up in its exaltation nor the
higher impaired by its new associate. Without detriment therefore to the
properties of either substance which then came together in one person, majesty
took on humility, strength weakness, eternity mortality: and for the paying
off of the debt, belonging to our condition, inviolable nature was united with
possible nature, and true GOD and true man were combined to form one LORD, SO
that, as suited the needs of our case, one and the same Mediator between GOD
and men, the Man Christ Jesus, could both die with the one and rise again with
the other.
Rightly therefore did the
birth of our Salvation impart no corruption to the Virgin's purity, because
the bearing of the Truth was the keeping of honour. Such then beloved was the
nativity which became the Power of GOD and the Wisdom of GOD even Christ,
whereby He might be one with us in manhood and surpass us in Godhead. For
unless He were true GOD, He would not bring us a remedy, unless He were true
Man, He would not give us an example. Therefore the exulting angel's song when
the LORD was born is this, "Glory to GOD in the Highest," and their
message, "peace on earth to men of good will." For they see that
the heavenly Jerusalem is being built up out of all the nations of the world:
and over that indescribable work of the Divine love how ought the humbleness
of men to rejoice, when the joy of the lofty angels is so great?
III. Christians then must
live worthily of Christ their Head.
Let us then, dearly beloved,
give thanks to GOD the Father, through His Son, in the Holy Spirit, Who
"for His great mercy, wherewith He has loved us," has had pity on
us: and "when we were dead in sins, has quickened us together in
Christ," that we might be in Him a new creation and a new production.
Let us put off then the old man with his deeds: and having obtained a share in
the birth of Christ let us renounce the works of the flesh. Christian,
acknowledge thy dignity, and becoming a partner in the Divine nature, refuse
to return to the old baseness by degenerate conduct. Remember the Head and the
Body of which thou art a member. Recollect that thou wert rescued from the
power of darkness and brought out into GOD's light and kingdom. By the mystery
of Baptism thou weft made the temple of the Holy Ghost: do not put such a
denizen to flight from thee by base acts, and subject thyself once more to the
devil's thraldom: because thy purchase money is the blood of Christ, because
He shall judge thee in truth Who ransomed thee in mercy, who with the Father
and the Holy Spirit reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XXII: ON THE FEAST OF
THE NATIVITY, II.
I. The mystery of the
Incarnation demands our joy.
Let us be glad in the LORD,
dearly-beloved, and rejoice with spiritual joy that there has dawned for us
the day of ever-new redemption. of ancient preparation, of eternal bliss.
For as the year rolls round, there recurs for us the commemoration of our
salvation, which promised from the beginning, accomplished in the fulness of
time will endure for ever; on which we are bound with hearts up-lifted to
adore the divine mystery: so that what is the effect of GOD's great gift may
be celebrated by the Church's great rejoicings. For GOD the almighty and
merciful, Whose nature as goodness, Whose will is power, Whose work is mercy:
as soon as the devil's malignity killed us by the poison of his hatred,
foretold at the very beginning of the world the remedy His piety had prepared
for the restoration of us mortals: proclaiming to the serpent that the seed of
the woman should come to crush the lifting of his baneful head by its power,
signifying no doubt that Christ would come in the flesh, GOD and man, Who born
of a Virgin should by His uncorrupt birth condemn the despoiler of the human
stock. Thus in the whole and perfect nature of true man was true GOD born,
complete in what was His own, complete in what was ours. And "ours"
we call what the Creator formed in us from the beginning and what He undertook
to repair. For what, the deceiver brought in and the deceived admitted had no
trace in the Saviour Nor because He partook of man's weaknesses, did He
therefore share our faults. He took the form of a slave without stain of sin,
increasing the human and not diminishing the Divine: because that
"emptying of Himself" whereby the Invisible made Himself visible and
Creator and LORD Of all things as He was, wished to be mortal, was the
condescension of Pity not the failing of Power.
II. The new character of the
birth of Christ explained.
Therefore, when the time
came, dearly beloved, which had been fore- ordained for men's redemption,
there enters these lower parts of the world, the Son of GOD, descending from
His heavenly throne and yet not quitting His Father's glory, begotten in a new
order, by a new nativity. In a new order, because being invisible in His own
nature He became visible in ours, and He whom nothing could contain, was
content to be contained: abiding before all time He began to be in time: the
LORD of all things, He obscured His immeasurable majesty and took on Him the
form of a servant: being GOD, that cannot suffer, He did not disdain to be man
that can, and immortal as He is, to subject Himself to the laws of death.
And by a new nativity He was begotten, conceived by a Virgin, born of a
Virgin, without paternal desire, without injury to the mother's chastity:
because such a birth as knew no taint of human flesh, became One who was to be
the Saviour of men, while it possessed in itself the nature of human
substance. For when GOD was born in the flesh, GOD Himself was the Father, as
the archangel witnessed to the Blessed Virgin Mary: "because the Holy
Spirit shall come upon thee, and the power of the most High shall overshadow
thee: and therefore, that which shall be born of thee shall be called holy,
the Son of God." The origin is different but the nature like: not by
intercourse with man but by the power of GOD was it brought about: for a
Virgin conceived, a Virgin bare, and a Virgin she remained. Consider here not
the condition of her that bare but the will of Him that was born; for He was
born Man as He willed and was able. If you inquire into the truth of His
nature, you must acknowledge the matter to be human: if you search for the
mode of His birth, you must confess the power to be of GOD. For the LORD Jesus
Christ came to do away with not to endure our pollutions: not to succumb to
our faults but to heal them. He came that He might cure every weakness of
oar corruptness and all the sores of our defiled souls: for which reason it
behoved Him to be born by a new order, who brought to men's bodies the new
gift of unsullied purity. For the uncorrupt nature of Him that was born had to
guard the primal virginity of the Mother, and the infused power of the Divine
Spirit had to preserve in spotlessness and holiness that sanctuary which He
had chosen for Himself: that Spirit (I say) who had determined to raise the
fallen, to restore the broken, and by overcoming the allurements of the flesh
to bestow on us in abundant measure the power of chastity: in order that the
virginity which in others cannot be retained in child-bearing, might be
attained by them at their second birth.
III. Justice required that
Satan should be vanquished by GOD made man.
And, dearly beloved, this
very fact that Christ chose to be born of a Virgin does it not appear to be
part of the deepest design? I mean, that the devil should not be aware that
Salvation had been born for the human race, and through the obscurity of that
spiritual conception, when he saw Him no different to others, should believe
Him born in no different way to others. For when he observed that His nature
was like that of all others, he thought that He had the same origin as all
had: and did not understand that He was free from the bonds of transgression
because he did not find Him a stranger to the weakness of mortality. For
though the true s mercy of GOD had infinitely many schemes to hand for the
restoration of mankind, it chose that particular design which put in force for
destroying the devil's work, not the efficacy of might but the dictates of
justice. For the pride of the ancient foe not undeservedly made good its
despotic rights over all men, and with no unwarrantable supremacy tyrannized
over those who had been of their own accord lured away from GOD's commands to
be the slaves of his will. And so there would be no justice in his losing the
immemorial slavery of the human race, were he not conquered by that which he
had subjugated. And to this end, without male seed Christ was conceived of a
Virgin, who was fecundated not by human intercourse but by the Holy Spirit.
And whereas in all mothers conception does not take place without stain of
sin, this one received purification from the Source of her conception. For no
taint of sin penetrated, where no intercourse occurred. Her unsullied
virginity knew no lust when it ministered the substance. The LORD took from
His mother our nature, not our fault. The slave's form is, created without
the slave's estate, because the New Man is so commingled with the old, as both
to assume the reality of our race and to remove its ancient flaw.
IV. The Incarnation deceived
the Devil and caused him to break the bond under which he held men.
When, therefore, the
merciful and almighty Saviour so arranged the commencement of His human course
as to hide the power of His Godhead which was inseparable from His manhood
under the veil of our weakness, the crafty foe was taken off his guard and he
thought that the nativity of the Child, Who was born for the salvation of
mankind, was as much subject to himself as all others are at their birth. For
he saw Him crying and weeping, he saw Him wrapped in swaddling clothes,
subjected to circumcision, offering the sacrifice which the law required. And
then he perceived in Him the usual growth of boyhood, and could have had no
doubt of His reaching man's estate by natural steps. Meanwhile, he inflicted
insults, multiplied injuries, made use of curses, affronts, blasphemies,
abuse, in a word, poured upon Him all the force of his fury and exhausted all
the varieties of trial: and knowing how he had poisoned man's nature, had no
conception that He had no share in the first transgression Whose mortality he
had ascertained by so many proofs. The unscrupulous thief and greedy robber
persisted in assaulting Him Who had nothing of His own, and in carrying out
the general sentence on original sin, went beyond the bond on which he
rested, and required the punishment of iniquity from Him in Whom he found
no fault. And thus the malevolent terms of the deadly compact are annulled,
and through the injustice of an overcharge the whole debt is cancelled. The
strong one is bound by his own chains, and every device of the evil one
recoils on his own head. When the prince of the world is bound, all that he
held in captivity is released. Our nature cleansed from its old contagion
regains its honourable estate, death is destroyed by death, nativity is
restored by nativity: since at one and the same time redemption does away with
slavery, regeneration changes our origin, and faith justifies the sinner.
V. The Christian is exhorted
to share in the blessings of the Incarnation.
Whoever then thou art that
devoutly and faithfully boastest of the Christian name, estimate this
atonement at its right worth. For to thee who wast a castaway, banished from
the realms of paradise, dying of thy weary exile, reduced to dust and ashes,
without further hope of living, by the Incarnation of the Word was given the
power to return from afar to thy Maker, to recognize thy parentage, to become
free after slavery, to be promoted from being an outcast to sonship: so that,
thou who wast born of corruptible flesh, mayest be reborn by the Spirit of
GOD, and obtain through grace what thou hadst not by nature, and, if thou
acknowledge thyself the son of GOD by the spirit of adoption, dare to call GOD
Father. Freed from the accusings of a bad conscience, aspire to the kingdom of
heaven, do GOD's will supported by the Divine help, imitate the angels upon
earth, feed on the strength of immortal sustenance, fight fearlessly on the
side of piety against hostile temptations, and if thou keep thy allegiance(8a)
in the heavenly warfare, doubt not that thou wilt be crowned for thy victory
in the triumphant camp of the Eternal King, when the resurrection that is
prepared for the faithful has raised thee to participate in the heavenly
Kingdom.
VI. The festival has nothing
to do with Sun-worship, as some maintain.
Having therefore so
confident a hope, dearly beloved, abide firm in the Faith in which you are
built: lest that same tempter whose tyranny over you Christ has already
destroyed, win you back again with any of his wiles, and mar even the joys of
the present festival by his deceitful art, misleading simpler souls with the
pestilential notion of some to whom this our solemn feast day seems to derive
its honour, not so much from the nativity of Christ as, according to them,
from the rising of the new sun. Such men's hearts are wrapped in total
darkness, and have no growing perception of the true Light: for they are still
drawn away by the foolish errors of heathendom, and because they cannot lift
the eyes of their mind above that which their carnal sight beholds, they pay
divine honour to the luminaries that minister to the world. Let not Christian
souls entertain any such wicked superstition and portentous lie. Beyond all
measure are things temporal removed from the Eternal, things corporeal from
the Incorporeal, things governed from the Governor. For though they possess a
wondrous beauty, yet they have no Godhead to be worshipped. That power then,
that wisdom, that majesty is to be adored which created the universe out of
nothing, and framed by His almighty methods the substance of the earth and sky
into what forms and dimensions He willed. Sun, moon, and stars may be most
useful to us, most fair to look upon; but only if we render thanks to their
Maker for them and worship GOD who made them, not the creation which does Him
service. Then praise GOD, dearly beloved, in all His works and judgments.
Cherish an undoubting belief in the Virgin's pure conception. Honour the
sacred and Divine mystery of man's restoration with holy and sincere service.
Embrace Christ born in our flesh, that you may deserve to see Him also as the
GOD of glory reigning in His majesty, who with the Father and the Holy Spirit
remains in the unity of the Godhead for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XXIII: On THE FEAST
OF THE NATIVITY, III.
I. The truths of the
Incarnation never suffer from being repeated.
The things which are
connected with the mystery, of to-day's solemn feast are well known to you,
dearly-beloved, and have frequently been heard: but as yonder visible light
affords pleasure to eyes that are unimpaired, so to sound hearts does the
Saviour's nativity give eternal joy; and we must not keep silent about it,
though we cannot treat of it as we ought. For we believe that what Isaiah
says, "who shall declare his generation?" applies not only to
that mystery, whereby the Son of GOD is co-eternal with the Father, but also
to this birth whereby "the Word became flesh." And SO GOD, the Son
of GOD, equal and of the same nature from the Father and with the Father,
Creator and LORD of the Universe, Who is completely present everywhere, and
completely exceeds all things, in the due course of time, which runs by His
own disposal, chose for Himself this day on which to be born of the blessed
virgin Mary for the salvation of the world, without loss of the mother's
honour. For her virginity was violated neither at the conception nor at the
birth: "that it might be fulfilled," as the Evangelist says,
"which was spoken by the LORD through Isaiah the prophet, saying, behold
the virgin shall conceive in the womb, and shall bear a son, and they shall
call his name Emmanuel, which is interpreted, GOD with us." For this
wondrous child-bearing of the holy Virgin produced in her offspring one person
which was truly human and truly Divine, because neither substance so
retained their properties that there could be any division of persons in them;
nor was the creature taken into partnership with its Creator in such a way
that the One was the in- dweller, and the other the dwelling; but so that the
one nature was blended s with the other. And although the nature which is
taken is one, and that which takes is another, yet these two diverse natures
come together into such close union that it is one and the same Son who says
both that, as true Man, "He is less than the Father," and that, as
true GOD, "He is equal with the Father."
II.The Arians could not
comprehend the union of GOD and man.
This union, dearly beloved,
whereby the Creator is joined to the creature, Arian blindness could not see
with the eyes of intelligence, but, not believing that the Only-begotten of
GOD was of the same glory and substance with the Father, spoke of the Son's
Godhead as inferior, drawing its arguments front those words which are to be
referred to the "form of a slave," in respect of which, in order to
show that it belongs to no other or different person in Himself, the same Son
of GOD with the same form, says, "The Father is greater than I,"
just as He says with the same form, "I and my Father are one."
For in "the form of a slave," which He took at the end of the ages
for our restoration, He is inferior to the Father: but in the form of GOD, in
which He was before the ages, He is equal to the Father. In His human
humiliation He was "made of a woman, made under the Law:" in His
Divine majesty He abides the Word of GOD, "through whom all things were
made." Accordingly, He Who in the form of GOD made man, in the form
of a slave was made man. For both natures retain their own proper character
without loss: and as the form of GOD did not do away with the form of a slave,
so the form of a slave did not impair the form of GOD. And so the mystery
of power united to weakness, in respect of the same human nature, allows the
Son to be called inferior to the Father: but the Godhead, which is One in the
Trinity of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, excludes all notion of inequality.
For the eternity of the Trinity has nothing temporal, nothing dissimilar in
nature: Its will is one, Its substance identical, Its power equal, and yet
there are not three GODS, but one GOD; because it is a true and inseparable
unity, where there can be no diversity. Thus in the whole and perfect
nature of true man was true GOD born, complete in what was His own, complete
in what was ours. And by "ours" we mean what the Creator formed in
us from the beginning, and what He undertook to repair. For what the deceiver
brought in, and man deceived committed, had no trace in the Saviour; nor
because He partook of man's weaknesses, did He therefore share our faults. He
took the form of a slave without stain of sin, increasing the human and not
diminishing the divine: for that "emptying of Himself," whereby the
Invisible made Himself visible, was the bending down of pity, not the failing
of power.
III. The Incarnation was
necessary to the taking away of sin.
In order therefore that we
might be called to eternal bliss from our original bond and from earthly
errors, He came down Himself to us to Whom we could not ascend, because,
although there was in many the love of truth, yet the variety of our shifting
opinions was deceived by the craft of misleading demons, and man's ignorance
was dragged into diverse and conflicting notions by a falsely-called science.
But to remove this mockery, whereby men's minds were taken captive to serve
the arrogant devil, the teaching of the Law was not sufficient, nor could our
nature be restored merely by the Prophets' exhortations; but the reality of
redemption had to be added to moral injunctions, and our fundamentally corrupt
origin had to be re-born afresh. A Victim had to be offered for our atonement
Who should be both a partner of our race and free from our contamination, so
that this design of GOD whereby it pleased Him to take away the sin of the
world in the Nativity and Passion of Jesus Christ, might reach to all
generations: and that we should not be disturbed but rather strengthened by
these mysteries, which vary with the character of the times, since the Faith,
whereby we live, has at no time suffered variation.
IV.The blessings of the
Incarnation stretch backwards as well as reach forward.
Accordingly let those men
cease their complaints who with disloyal murmurs speak against the
dispensations of GOD, and babble about the lateness of the LORD'S Nativity as
if that, which was fulfilled in the last age of the world, had no bearing upon
the times that are past. For the Incarnation of the Word did but contribute to
the doing of that which was done: and the mystery of man's salvation was
never in the remotest age at a standstill. What the apostles foretold, that
the prophets announced: nor was that fulfilled too late which has always been
believed. But the Wisdom and Goodness of GOD made us more receptive of His
call by thus delaying the work which brought salvation: so that what through
so many ages had been foretold by many signs, many utterances, and many
mysteries, might not be doubtful in these days of the Gospel: and that the
Saviour's nativity, which was to exceed all wonders and all the measure of
human knowledge, might engender in us a Faith so much the firmer, as the
foretelling of it had been ancient and oft- repeated. And so it was no new
counsel, no tardy pity whereby GOD took thought for men: but from the
constitution of the world He ordained one and the same Cause of Salvation for
all. For the grace of GOD, by which the whole body of the saints is ever
justified, was augmented, not begun, when Christ was born: and this mystery of
GOD's great love, wherewith the whole world is now filled, was so effectively
presignified that those who believed that promise obtained no less than they,
who were the actual recipients.
V. The coming of Christ in
our flesh corresponds with our becoming members of His body.
Wherefore since the
loving-kindness is manifest, dearly beloved, wherewith all the riches of
Divine goodness are showered on us, whose call to eternal life has been
assisted not only by the profitable examples of those who went before, but
also by the visible and bodily appearing of the Truth Itself, we are bound to
keep the day of the LORD's Nativity with no slothful nor carnal joy. And we
shall each keep it worthily and thoroughly, if we remember of what Body we are
members, and to what a Head we are joined, lest any one as an ill-fitting
joint cohere not with the rest of the sacred building. Consider, dearly
beloved and by the illumination of the Holy Spirit thoughtfully bear in mind
Who it was that received us into Himself, and that we have received in us:
since, as the LORD Jesus became our flesh by being born, so we also became His
body by being re-born. Therefore are we both members of Christ, and the temple
of the Holy Ghost: and for this reason the blessed Apostle says, "Glorify
and carry GOD in your body:" for while suggesting to us the standard
of His own gentleness and humility, He fills us with that power whereby He
redeemed us, as the LORD Himself promises: "come unto Me all ye who
labour and are heavy-laden, and I will refresh you. Take My yoke upon you and
learn of Me, for I am meek and lowly of heart, and ye shall find rest to your
souls[7]" Let us then take the yoke, that is not heavy nor irksome, of
the Truth that rules us, and let us imitate His humility, to Whose glory we
wish to be conformed: He Himself helping us and leading us to His promises,
Who, according to His great mercy, is powerful to blot out our sins, and to
perfect His gifts in us, Jesus Christ our LORD, Who lives and reigns for ever
and ever. Amen.
SERMON XXIV: ON THE FEAST OF
THE NATIVITY, IV.
I. The Incarnation fulfils
all its types and promises.
The Divine goodness, dearly
beloved, has indeed always taken thought for mankind in divers manners, and in
many portions, and of His mercy has imparted many gifts of His providence to
the ages of old; but in these last times has exceeded all the abundance of His
usual kindness, when in Christ the very Mercy has descended to sinners, the
very Truth to those that are astray, the very Life to those that are dead: so
that Word, which is co- eternal and co-equal with the Father, might take our
humble nature into union with His Godhead, and, being born GOD of GOD, might
also be bern Man of man. Tiffs was indeed promised from the foundation of the
world, and had always been prophesied by many intimations of facts and
words: but how small a portion of mankind would these types and
fore-shadowed mysteries have saved, had not the coming of Christ fulfilled
those long and secret promises: and had not that which then benefited but a
few believers in the prospect, now benefited myriads of the faithful in its
accomplishment. Now no longer then are we led to believe by signs and types,
but being confirmed by the gospel story we worship that which we believe to
have been done; the prophetic lore assisting our knowledge, so that we have
no manner of doubt about that which we know to have been predicted by such
sure oracles. For hence it is that the LORD says to Abraham: "In thy seed
shall all nations be blessed :" hence David, in the spirit of
prophecy, sings, saying: "The LORD swore truth to David, and He shall not
frustrate it: of the fruit of thy loins will I set upon thy seat;"
hence the LORD again says through Isaiah: "behold a virgin shall conceive
in her womb, and shall bear a Son, and His Name shall be called Emmanuel,
which is interpreted, GOD with us," and again, "a rod shall come
forth from the root of Jesse, and a flower shall arise froth his
root." In which rod, no doubt the blessed Virgin Mary is predicted,
who sprung from the stock of Jesse and David and fecundated by the Holy Ghost,
brought forth a new flower of human flesh, becoming a virgin-mother.
II. The Incarnation was the
only effective remedy to the Fall.
Let the righteous then
rejoice in the LORD, and let the hearts of believers turn to GOD'S praise, and
the sons of men confess His wondrous acts; since in this work of GOD
especially our humble estate realizes how highly its Maker values it: in that,
after His great gift to mankind in making us after His image, He contributed
far more largely to our restoration when the Land Himself took on Him
"the form of a slave." For though all that the Creator expends upon
His creature is part of one and the same Fatherly love, yet it is less
wonderful than man should advance to divine things than that GOD should
descend to humanity. But unless the Almighty GOD did deign to do this, no kind
of righteousness, no form of wisdom could rescue any one from the devil's
bondage and from the depths of eternal death. For the condemnation that passes
with sin from one upon all would remain, and our nature, corroded by its
deadly wound, would discover no remedy, because it could not alter its state
in its own strength. For the first man received the substance of flesh from
the earth, and was quickened with a rational spirit by the in-breathing of his
Creator, so that living after the image and likeness of his Maker, he might
preserve the form of GOD's goodness and righteousness as in a bright mirror.
And, if he had perseveringly maintained this high dignity of his nature by
observing the Law that was given him, his uncorrupt mind would have raised the
character even Of his earthly body to heavenly glory. But because in unhappy
rashness he trusted the envious deceiver, and agreeing to his presumptuous
counsels, preferred to forestall rather than to win the increase of honour
that was in store for him, not only did that one man, but in him all that came
after him also hear the verdict: "earth thou art, and unto earth shalt
thou go;" "as in the earthy," therefore, "such are they
also that are earthy," and no one is immortal, because no one is
heavenly.
III. We all became partakers
in the Birth of Christ, by the re-birth of baptism.
And so to undo this chain of
sin and death, the Almighty Son of GOD, that fills all things and contains,all
things, altogether equal to the Father and co-eternal in one essence from Him
and with Him, took on Him man's nature, and the Creator and Land of all things
deigned to be a mortal: choosing for His mother one whom He had made, one who,
without loss of her maiden honour, supplied so much of bodily substance, that
without the pollution of human seed the New Man might be possessed of purity
and truth. In Christ, therefore, born of the Virgin's womb, the nature does
not differ from ours, because His nativity is wonderful. For He Who is true
GOD, is also true man: and there is no lie in either nature. "The Word
became flesh" by exaltation of the flesh, not by failure of the Godhead:
which so tempered its power and goodness as to exalt our nature by taking it,
and not to lose His own by imparting it. In this nativity of Christ, according
to the prophecy of David, "truth sprang out of the earth, and
righteousness looked down from heaven." In this nativity also,
Isaiah's saying is fulfilled, "let the earth produce and bring forth
salvation, and let righteousness spring up together." For the earth of
human flesh, which in the first transgressor, was cursed, in this Offspring of
the Blessed Virgin only produced a seed that was blessed and free from the
fault of its stock. And each one is a partaker of this spiritual origin in
regeneration; and to every one when he is re-born, the water of baptism is
like the Virgin's womb; for the same Holy Spirit fills the font, Who filled
the Virgin, that the sin, which that sacred conception overthrew, may be taken
away by this mystical washing.
IV. The Manichaeans, by
rejecting the Incarnation, have fallen into terrible iniquities.
In this mystery, dear
beloved, the mad error of the Manichaeans has no part, nor have they any
partnership in the regeneration of Christ, who say that He was corporeally
born of the Virgin Mary: so that, as they do not believe in His real nativity,
they do not accept His real passion either; and, not acknowledging Him really
buried, they reject His genuine resurrection. For, having entered on the
perilous path of their abominable dogma, where all is dark and slippery, they
rush into the abyss of death over the precipice of falsehood, and find no sure
ground on which to rest; because, besides all their other diabolical
enormities, on the very chief feast of Christ's worship, as their latest
confession has made manifest, they revel in bodily as well as mental
pollution, losing their own modesty as well as the purity of their Faith; so
that they are found to be as filthy in their rites as they are blasphemers in
their doctrines.
V. Other heresies contain
some portion of truth, but the Manichoeans contain none whatever.
Other heresies, dearly
beloved, although they are all rightly to be condemned in their variety, yet
have each in some part of them that which is true. Arius, in laying down that
the Son of GOD is less than the Father and a creature, and in thinking that
the Holy Spirit was like all else made by the same (Father), has lost himself
in great blasphemy; but he has not denied the eternal and unchangeable Godhead
in the essence of the Father, though he could not see it in the Unity of the
Trinity. Macedonius was devoid of the light of the Truth when he did not
receive the Godhead of the Holy Spirit, but he did acknowledge one power and
the same nature in the Father and the Son. Sabellius was plunged into
inextricable error by holding the unity of substance to be inseparable in the
Father, Son and Holy Spirit, but granted to a singleness of nature what he
should have attributed to an equality of nature, and because he could not
understand a true Trinity, he believed in one and the same person under a
threefold appellation. Photinus, misled by his mental blindness, acknowledged
in Christ true man of our substance, but did not believe Him born GOD of GOD
before all ages, and so losing the entirety of the Faith, believed the Son of
GOD tO have taken on Him the true nature of human flesh in such a way as to
assert that there was no soul in it, because the Godhead Itself took its
place. Thus, if all the errors which the catholic Faith has anathematized
are recanted, something is found in one after another which can be separated
from its damnable setting. But in the detestable dogma of the Manicheans there
is absolutely nothing which can be adjudged tolerable in any degree.
VI. Christians must cling to
the one Faith and not be led astray.
But you, dearly beloved,
whom I address in no less earnest terms than those of the blessed Apostle
Peter, "a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for
GOD's own possession," built upon the impregnable rock, Christ, and
joined to the LORD our Saviour by His true assumption of our flesh, remain
firm in that Faith, which you have professed before many witnesses, and in
which you were reborn through water and the Holy Ghost, and received the
anointing of salvation, and the seal of eternal life. But "if any one
preach to you any thing beside that which you have learnt, let him be
anathema:" refuse to put wicked fables before the clearest truth, and
what you may happen to read or hear contrary to the rule of the catholic and
Apostolic creed, judge it altogether deadly and diabolical. Be not carried
away by their deceitful keepings of sham and pretended fasts which tend not to
the cleansing, but to the destroying of men's souls. They put on indeed a
cloke of piety and chastity, but under this deceit they conceal the filthiness
of their acts, and from the recesses of their ungodly heart hurl shafts to
wound the simple; that, as the prophet says, "they may shoot in darkness
at the upright in heart." A mighty bulwark is a sound faith, a true
faith, to which nothing has to be added or taken away: because unless it is
one, it is no faith, as the Apostle says, "one LORD, one faith, one
baptism, one GOD and Father of all, who is above all, and through all, and in
us all." Cling to this unity, dearly beloved, with minds unshaken, and
in it "follow after" all "holiness," in it carry out
the LORD's commands, because "without faith it is impossible to please
GOD," and without it nothing is holy, nothing is pure, nothing alive:
"for the just lives by faith," and he who by the devil's
deception loses it, is dead though living, because as righteousness is gained
by faith, so too by a true faith is eternal life gained, as says our LORD and
Saviour. And this is life eternal, that they may know Thee, the only true GOD,
and Jesus Christ, whom Thou hast sent. May He make you to advance and
persevere to the end, Who lives and reigns with the Father and the Holy
Spirit, for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XXVI: ON THE FEAST OF
THE NATIVITY, VI.
I. Christmas morning is the
most appropriate time for thoughts on the Nativity.
On all days and at all
times, dearly beloved, does the birth of our Lord and Saviour from the
Virgin-mother occur to the thoughts of the faithful, who meditate on divine
things, that the mind may be aroused to the acknowledgment of its Maker, and
whether it be occupied in the groans of supplication, or in the shouting of
praise, or in the offering of sacrifice, may employ its spiritual insight on
nothing more frequently and more trustingly than on the fact that GOD the Son
of GOD, begotten of the co-eternal Father, was also born by a human birth. But
this Nativity which is to be adored in heaven and on earth is suggested to us
by no day more than this when, with the early light still shedding its rays on
nature, there is borne in upon our senses the brightness of this wondrous
mystery. For the angel Gabriel's converse with the astonished Mary and her
conception by the Holy Ghost as wondrously promised as believed, seem to recur
not only to the memory but to the very eyes. For to day the Maker of the world
was born of a Virgin's womb, and He, who made all natures, became Son of her,
whom He created. To-day the Word of GOD appeared clothed in flesh, and That
which had never been visible to human eyes began to be tangible to our hands
as well. Today the shepherds learnt from angels' voices that the Saviour was
born in the substance of our flesh and soul; and to-day the form of the Gospel
message was pre-arranged by the leaders of the LORD'S flocks, so that we
too may say with the arm), of the heavenly host: "Glory in the highest to
GOD, and on earth peace to men of good will."
II. Christians are
essentially participators in the nativity of Christ.
Although, therefore, that
infancy, which the majesty of GOD's Son did not disdain, reached mature
manhood by the growth of years and, when the triumph of His passion and
resurrection was completed, all the actions of humility which were undertaken
for us ceased, yet to-day's festival renews for us the holy childhood of Jesus
born of the Virgin Mary: and in adoring the birth of our Saviour, we find we
are celebrating the commencement of our own life. For the birth of Christ is
the source of life for Christian folk, and the birthday of the Head is the
birthday of the body. Although every individual that is called has his own
order, and all the sons of the Church are separated from one another by
intervals of time, yet as the entire body of the faithful being born in the
font of baptism is crucified with Christ in His passion, raised again in His
resurrection, and placed at the Father's right hand in His ascension, so with
Him are they born in this nativity. For any believer in whatever part of the
world that is re-born in Christ, quits the old paths of his original nature
and passes into a new man by being re-born; and no longer is he reckoned of
his earthly father's stock but among the seed of the Saviour, Who became the
Son of man in order that we might have the power to be the sons of GOD. For
unless He came down to us in this humiliation, no one would reach His presence
by any merits of his own. Let not earthly wisdom shroud in darkness the hearts
of the called on this point, and let not the frailty of earthly thoughts raise
itself against the loftiness of GOD's grace, for it will soon return to the
lowest dust. At the end of the ages is fulfilled that which was ordained from
all eternity: and in the presence of realities, when signs and types have
ceased, the Law and prophecy have become Truth: and so Abraham is found the
father of all nations, and the promised blessing is given to the world in his
seed: nor are they only Israelites whom blood and flesh begot, but the
whole body of the adopted eater into possession of the heritage prepared for
the sons of Faith. Be not disturbed by the cavils of silly questionings, and
let not the effects of the Divine word be dissipated by human calculation; we
with Abraham believe in GOD and "waver not through unbelief" but
"know most assuredly that what the LORD promised, He is able to
perform."
III. Peace with GOD is His
best gift to man.
The Saviour then, dearly
beloved, is born not of fleshly seed but of the Holy Spirit, in such wise that
the condemnation of the first transgression did not touch Him. And hence the
very greatness of the boon conferred demands of us reverence worthy of its
splendour. For, as the blessed Apostle teaches, "we have received not the
spirit of this world but the Spirit which is of GOD, that we may know the
things which are given us by GOD:" and that Spirit can in no other way
be rightly worshipped, except by offering Him that which we received from Him.
But in the treasures of the LORD'S bounty what can we find so suitable to the
honour of the present feast as the peace, which at the LORD's nativity was
first proclaimed by the angel-choir? For that it is which brings forth the
sons of GOD, the nurse of love and the mother of unity: the rest of the
blessed and our eternal home; whose proper work and special office it is to
join to GOD those whom it removes from the world. Whence the Apostle incites
us to this good end, in saying, "being justified therefore by faith let
us have peace towards GOD." In which brief sentence are summed up
nearly all the commandments; for where true peace is, there can be no lack of
virtue. But what is it, dearly beloved, to have peace towards GOD, except to
wish what He bids, and not to wish what He forbids? For if human friendships
seek out equality of soul and similarity of desires, and difference of habits
can never attain to full harmony, how will he be partaker of divine peace, who
is pleased with what displeases GOD and desires to get delight from what he
knows to be offensive to GOD? That is not the spirit of the sons of GOD; such
wisdom is not acceptable to the noble family of the adopted. That chosen and
royal race must live up to the dignity of its regeneration, must love what the
Father loves, and in nought disagree with its Maker, lest the LORD should
again say: "I have begotten and raised up sons, but they have scorned Me:
the ox knoweth his owner and the ass his master's crib: but Israel hath not
known Me and My people hath not acknowledged Me."
IV. We must be worthy of our
calling as sans and friends of GOD.
The mystery of this boon is
great, dearly beloved, and this gift exceeds all gifts that GOD should call
man son, and man should name GOD Father: for by these terms we perceive and
learn the love which reached so great a height. For if in natural progeny and
earthly families those who are born of noble parents are lowered by the faults
of evil intercourse, and unworthy offspring are put to shame by the very
brilliance of their ancestry; to what end will they come who through love of
the world do not fear to be outcast from the family of Christ? But if it gains
the praise of men that the father's glory should shine again in their
descendants, how much more glorious is it for those who are born of GOD to
regain the brightness of their Maker's likeness and display in themselves Him
Who begat them, as saith the LORD: "Let your light so shine before men
that they may see your good works and glorify your Father which is in
heaven?" We know indeed, as the Apostle John says that "the whole
world lieth in the evil one," and that by the stratagems of the Devil
and his angels numberless attempts are made either to frighten man in his
struggle upwards by adversity or to spoil him by prosperity, but "greater
is He that is in us, than he that is against us," and they who have
peace with GOD and are always saying to the Father with their whole hearts
"thy will be done" can be overcome in no battles, can be hurt by
no assaults. For accusing ourselves in our confessions and refusing the
spirit's consent to our fleshly lusts, we stir up against us the enmity of him
who is the author of sin, but secure a peace with GOD that nothing can
destroy, by accepting His gracious service, in order that we may not only
surrender ourselves in obedience to our King but also be united to Him by our
free- will. For if we are like-minded, if we wish what He wishes, and
disapprove what He disapproves, He will finish all our wars for us, He Who
gave the will, will also give the power: so that we may be fellow-workers in
His works, and with the exultation of Faith may utter that prophetic song:
"the LORD is my light and my salvation: whom shall I fear? the LORD is
the defender of my life: of whom shall I be afraid?"
V. The birth of Christ is
the birth of peace to the Church.
They then who "are born
not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of
GOD," must offer to. the Father the unanimity of peace-loving sons,
and all the members of adoption must meet in the First-begotten of the new
creation, Who came to do not His own Will but His that sent Him; inasmuch as
the Father in His gracious favour has adopted as His heirs not those that are
discordant nor those that are unlike Him, but those that are in feeling and
affection one. They that are re-modelled after one pattern must have a spirit
like the model. The birthday of the LORD is the birthday of peace: for thus
says the Apostle, "He is our peace, who made both one;" since
whether we be Jew or Gentile, "through Him we have access in one Spirit
to the Father." And it was this in particular that He taught His
disciples before the day of His passion which He had of His own free-will
fore-ordained, saying, "My peace I give unto you, My peace I leave for
you; and lest under the general term the character of His peace should
escape notice, He added. "not as the world give I unto you." The
world, He Says, has its friendships, and brings many that are apart into
loving harmony. There are also minds which are equal in vices. and similarity
of desires produces equality of affection. And if any are perchance to be
found who are not pleased with what is mean and dishonourable, and who exclude
from the terms of their connexion unlawful compacts, yet even such if they be
either Jews, heretics or heathens, belong not to GOD's friendship but to
this world's peace. But the peace of the spiritual and of catholics coming
down from above and leading upwards refuses to hold communion with the lovers
of the world resists all obstacles and flies from pernicious pleasures to true
joys, as the LORD says: "Where thy treasure is, there will thy heart be
also:" that is, if what you love is below you will descend to the
lowest depth: if what you love is above, you will reach the topmost height:
thither may the Spirit of peace lead and bring us, whose wishes and feeling
are at one, and who are of one mind in faith and hope and in charity: since
"as many as are led by the Spirit of GOD these are sons of GOD"
Who reigneth with the Son and Holy Spirit for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XXVII: ON THE FEAST
OF THE NATIVITY, VII.
I. It is equally dangerous
to deny the Godhead or the Manhood in Christ.
He is a true and devout
worshipper, dearly-beloved, of to-day's festival who thinks nothing that is
either false about the LORD'S Incarnation or unworthy about His Godhead. For
it is an equally dangerous evil to deny in Him the reality of our nature and
the equality with the Father in glory. When, therefore, we attempt to
understand the mystery of Christ's nativity, wherein He was born of the
Virgin-mother, let all the clouds of earthly reasonings be driven far away and
the smoke of worldly wisdom be purged from the eyes of illuminated faith: for
the authority on which we trust is divine, the teaching which we follow is
divine. Inasmuch as whether it be the testimony of the Law, or the oracles of
the prophets, or the trumpet of the gospel to which we apply our inward ear,
that is true which the blessed John full of the Holy Spirit uttered with his
voice of thunder:" in the beginning was the Word: and the Word was
with GOD, and the Word was GOD. The same was in the beginning with GOD. All
things were made through Him, and without Him was nothing made." And
similarly is it true what the same preacher added: "the Word became flesh
and dwelt in us: and we beheld His glory, the glory as of the only-begotten of
the Father." Therefore in both natures it is the same Son of GOD
taking what is ours and not losing what is His own; renewing man in His
manhood, but enduring unchangeable in Himself. For the Godhead which is His in
common with the Father underwent no loss of omnipotence, nor did the
"form of a slave" do despite to the "form of GOD," because
the supreme and eternal Essence, which lowered Itself for the salvation of
mankind, transferred us into Its glory, but did not cease to be what It was.
And hence when the Only-begotten of GOD confesses Himself less than the
Father, and yet calls Himself equal with Him, He demonstrates the
reality of both forms in Himself: so thai the inequality proves the human
nature, and the equality the Divine.
II. The Incarnation has
changed all the possibilities of man's existence.
The bodily Nativity
therefore of the Son of GOD took nothing from and added nothing to His Majesty
because His unchangeable substance could be neither diminished nor increased.
For that "the Word became flesh" does not signify that the nature of
GOD was changed into flesh, but that the Word took the flesh into the unity of
His Person: and therein undoubtedly the whole man was received, with which
within the Virgin's womb fecundated by the Holy Spirit, whose virginity was
destined never to be lost, the Son of GOD was so inseparably united that He
who was born without time of the Father's essence was Himself in time born of
the Virgin's womb. For we could not otherwise be released from the chains of
eternal death but by Him becoming humble in our nature, Who remained Almighty
in His own. And so our LORD Jesus Christ, being at birth true man though He
never ceased to be true GOD, made in Himself the beginning of a new creation,
and in the "form" of His birth started the spiritual life of mankind
afresh, that to abolish the taint of our birth according to the flesh there
might be a possibility of regeneration without our sinful seed for those of
whom it is said, "Who were born not of blood, nor of the will of the
flesh, nor of the will of man, but of GOD." What mind can grasp this
mystery, what tongue can express this gracious act? Sinfulness returns to
guiltlessness and the old nature becomes new; strangers receive adoption and
outsiders enter upon an inheritance. The ungodly begin to be righteous, the
miserly benevolent, the incontinent chaste, the earthly heavenly. And whence
comes this change, save by the right hand of the Most High? For the Son of GOD
came to "destroy the works of the devil,"and has so united
Himself with us and us with Him that the descent of GOD to man's estate became
the exaltation of man to GOD's.
III. The Devil knows exactly
what temptations to offer to each several person.
But in this mercifulness of
GOD, dearly beloved, the greatness of which towards us we cannot explain,
Christians must be extremely careful lest they be caught again in the devil's
wiles and once more entangled in the errors which they have renounced. For the
old enemy does not cease to "transform himself into an angel of
light," and spread everywhere the snares of his deceptions, and make
every effort to corrupt the faith of believers. He knows whom to ply with the
zest of greed, whom to assail with the allurements of the belly, before whom
to set the attractions of self- indulgence, in whom to instil the poison of
jealousy: he knows whom to overwhelm with grief, whom to cheat with joy, whom
to surprise with fear, whom to bewilder with wonderment: there is no one whose
habits he does not sift, whose cares he does not winnow, whose affections he
does not pry into: and wherever he sees a man most absorbed in occupation,
there he seeks opportunity to injure him. Moreover he has many whom he has
bound still more tightly because they are suited for his designs, that he may
use their abilities and tongues to deceive others. Through them are guaranteed
the healing of sicknesses, the prognosticating of future, events, the
appeasing of demons and the driving away of apparitions. They also are to
be added who falsely allege that the entire condition of human life depends
on the influences of the stars, and that that which is really either the
divine will or ours rests with the unchangeable fates. And yet, in order to do
still greater harm, they promise that they can be changed if supplication is
made to those constellations which are adverse. And thus their ungodly
fabrications destroy themselves; for if their predictions are not reliable,
the fates are not to be feared: if they are, the stars are not to be
venerated.
IV. The foolish practice of
some who turn to the sun and bow to it is reprehensible.
From such a system of
teaching proceeds also the ungodly practice of certain foolish folk who
worship the sun as it rises at the beginning of daylight from elevated
positions: even some Christians think it is so proper to do this that, before
entering the blessed Apostle Peter's basilica, which is dedicated to the One
Living and true GOD, when they have mounted the steps which lead to the raised
platform, they turn round and bow themselves towards the rising sun and
with bent neck do homage to its brilliant orb. We are full of grief and
vexation that this should happen, which is partly due to the fault of
ignorance and partly to the spirit of heathenism: because although some of
them do perhaps worship the Creator of that fair light rather than the Light
itself, which is His creature, yet we must abstain even flora the appearance
of this observance: for if one who has abandoned the worship of gods, finds it
in our own worship, will he not hark back again to this fragment of his old
superstition, as if it were allowable, when he sees it to be common both to
Christians and to infidels?
V. The sun and moon were
created for use, not for worship.
This objectionable practice
must be given up therefore by the faithful, and the honour due to GOD alone
must not be mixed up with those men's rites who serve their fellow-creatures.
For the divine Scripture says: "Thou shalt worship the LORD thy GOD, and
Him only shalt thou serve.'' Anti the blessed Job, "a man without
complaint," as the LORD says, "and one that eschews every
evil," said, "Have I seen the sun when it shone or the moon
walking brightly, and my heart hath rejoiced in secret, and I have kissed my
hand: what is my great iniquity and denial against the most High GOD?"
But what is the sun or what is the moon but elements of visible creation and
material light: one of which is of greater brightness and the other of lesser
light? For as it is now day time and now night time, so the Creator has
constituted divers kinds of luminaries, although even before they were made
there had been days without the sun and nights without the moon. But these
were fashioned to serve in making man, that he who is an animal endowed with
reason might be sure of the distinction of the months, the recurrence of the
year, and the variety of the seasons, since through the unequal length of the
various periods, and the clear indications given by the changes in its
risings, the sun doses the year and the moon renews the months. For on the
fourth day, as we read, GOD said: "Let there be lights in the firmament
of the heaven, and let them shine upon the earth, and let them divide between
day and night, and let them be for signs and for seasons, and for days and
years, and let them be in the firmament of heaven that they may shine upon
earth."
VI. Let us awake to the
proper use of all our parts and facilities.
Awake, O man, and recognize
the dignity of thy nature. Recollect thou wast made in the image of GOD, which
although it was corrupted in Adam, was yet re-fashioned in Christ. Use visible
creatures as they should be used, as thou usest earth, sea, sky, air, springs,
and rivers: and whatever in them is fair and wondrous, ascribe to the praise
and glory of the Maker. Be not subject to that light wherein birds and
serpents, beasts and cattle, flies and worms delight. Confine the material
light to your bodily senses, and with all your mental powers embrace that
"true light which lighteth every man that cometh into this
world," and of which the prophet says, "Come unto Him and be
enlightened, and your faces shall not blush." For if we "are a
temple of GOD, and the Spirit of GOD dwelleth in(2a)" us, what every one
of the faithful has in his own heart is more than what he wonders at in
heaven. And so, dearly beloved, we do not bid or advise you to despise GOD's
works or to think there is anything opposed to your Faith in what the good GOD
has made good, but to use every kind of creature and the whole furniture of
this world reasonably and moderately: for as the Apostle says, "the
things which are seen are temporal: but the things which are not seen are
eternal." Hence because we are born for the present and reborn for the
future, let us not give ourselves up to temporal goods, but to eternal: and in
order that we may behold our hope nearer, let us think on what the Divine
Grace has bestowed on our nature on the very occasion when we celebrate the
mystery of the LORD'S birthday. Let us hear the Apostle, saying: "for ye
are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in GOD. But when CHRIST, who is
your life, shall appear, then shall ye also appear with Him in glory:"
who lives and reigns with the Father and the Holy Ghost for ever and ever.
Amen.
SERMON XXVIII: ON THE
FESTIVAL OF THE NATIVITY, VIII.
I. The Incarnation an
unceasing source a joy.
Though all the divine
utterances exhort us, dearly beloved, to "rejoice in the LORD
always," yet to-day we are no doubt incited to a full spiritual joy,
when the mystery of the LORD's nativity is shining brightly upon us, so
that we may have recourse to that unutterable condescension of the Divine
Mercy, whereby the Creator of men deigned to become man, and be found
ourselves in His nature whom we worship in ours. For GOD the Son of GOD, the
only-begotten of the eternal and not-begotten Father, remaining eternal
"in the form of GOD," and unchangeably and without time
possessing the property of being no way different to the Father He received
"the form of a slave" without loss of His own majesty, that He might
advance us to His state and not lower Himself to ours. Hence both natures
abiding in possession of their own properties such unity is the result of the
union that whatever of Godhead is there is inseparable from the manhood: and
whatever of manhood, is indivisible from the Godhead.
II. The Virgin's conception
explained.
In celebrating therefore the
birthday of our LORD and Saviour, dearly beloved, let us entertain pure
thoughts of the blessed Virgin's child- bearing, so as to believe that at no
moment of time was the power of the Word wanting to the flesh and soul which
she conceived, and that the temple of Christ's body did not previously receive
its form and soul that its Inhabitant might come and take possession but
through Himself and in Himself was the beginning given to the New Man, so that
in the one Son of GOD and Man there might be Godhead without a mother, and
Manhood without a Father. For her virginity fecundated by the Holy Spirit at
one and the same time brought forth without trace of corruption both the
offspring and the Maker of her race. Hence also the same LORD, as the
Evangelist relates, asked of the Jews whose son they had learnt Christ to be
on the authority of the Scriptures, and when they replied that the tradition
was He would come of David's seed, "How," saith He, "doth David
in the Spirit call Him LORD, saying, the LORD said to my LORD: sit thou on My
right hand till I place thy enemies as the footstool of thy feet?" And
the Jews could not solve the question put, because they did not understand
that in the one Christ both the stock of David and the Divine nature were
there prophesied.
III. In redeeming man,
justice as well as mercy had to be considered.
But the majesty of the Son
of GOD in which He is equal with the Father in its garb of a slave's humility
feared no diminution, required no augmentation: and the very effect of His
mercy which He expended on the restitution of man, He was able to bring about
solely by the power of His Godhead; so as to rescue the creature that was made
in the image of GOD from the yoke of his cruel oppressor. But because the
devil had not shown himself so violent in his attack on the first man as to
bring him over to his side without the consent of His free will, man's
voluntary sin and hostile desires had to be destroyed in such wise that the
standard of justice should not stand in the way of the gift of Grace. And
therefore in the general ruin of the entire human race there was but one
remedy in the secret of the Divine plan which could succour the fallen, and
that was that one of the sons of Adam should be born free and innocent of
original transgression, to prevail for the rest both by His example and His
merits. Still further, because this was not permitted by natural generation,
and because there could be no offspring from our faulty stock without seed, of
which the Scripture saith, "Who can make a clean thing conceived of an
unclean seed? is it not Thou who art alone?" David's LORD was made
David's Son, and from the fruit of the promised branch sprang. One without
fault, the twofold nature coining together into one Person, that by one and
the same conception and birth might spring our LORD Jesus Christ, in Whom was
present both true Godhead for the performance of mighty works and true Manhood
for the endurance of sufferings.
IV. All heresies proceed
from failure to believe the twofold nature of Christ.
The catholic Faith then,
dearly beloved, may scorn the errors of the heretics that bark against it,
who, deceived by the vanity of worldly wisdom, have forsaken the Gospel of
Truth, and being unable to understand the Incarnation of the Word, have
constructed for themselves out of the source of enlighten-merit occasion of
blindness. For after investigating almost all false believers' opinions, even
those which presume to deny the Holy Spirit, we come to the conclusion that
hardly any one has gone astray, unless he has refused to believe the reality
of the two natures in Christ under the confession of one Person. For some have
ascribed to the LORD only manhood, others only Deity. Some have said
that, though there was in the true Godhead, His flesh was unreal. Others
have acknowledged that He took true flesh but say that He had not the nature
of GOD the Father; and by assigning to His Godhead what belonged to His human
substance, have made for themselves a greater and a lesser GOD, although there
can be in true Godhead no grades: seeing that whatever is less than GOD, is
not GOD. Others recognizing that there is no difference between Father and
Son, because they could not understand unity of Godhead except in unity of
Person, have maintained that the Father is the same as the Son: so that to
be born and nursed, to suffer and die, to be buried and rise again, belonged
to the same Father who sustained throughout the Person of both Man and the
Word. Certain have thought that our LORD Jesus Christ had a body not of our
substance but assumed from higher and subtler elements: whereas certain
others have considered that in the flesh of Christ there was no human soul,
but that the Godhead of the Word Itself fulfilled the part of soul. But
their unwise assertion passes into this form that, though they acknowledge the
existence of a soul in the LORD, yet they say it was devoid of mind, because
the Godhead of Itself was sufficient for all purposes of reason to the Man as
well as to the GOD in Christ. Lastly the same people have dared to assert that
a certain portion of the Word was turned into Flesh, so that in the manifold
varieties of this one dogma, not only the nature of the flesh and of the soul
but also the essence of the Word Itself is dissolved.
V.Nestorianism and
Eutychianism are particularly to be avoided at the present time.
There are many other
astounding falsehoods also which we must not weary your ears, beloved, with
enumerating. But after all these various impieties, which are closely
connected by the relationship that exists between one form of blasphemy and
another, we call your devout attention to the avoiding of these two errors in
particular: one of which, with Nestorius for its author, some time ago
attempted to gain ground, but ineffectually; the other, which is equally
damnable, has more recently sprung up with Eutyches as its propounder. The
former dared to maintain that the blessed Virgin Mary was the mother of
Christ's manhood only, so that in her conception and childbearing no union
might be believed to have taken place of the Word and the Flesh: because the
Son of GOD did not Himself become Son of Man, but of His mere condescension
linked Himself with created man. This can in no wise be tolerated by catholic
ears, which are so imbued with the gospel of Truth that they know of a surety
there is no hope of salvation for mankind unless He were Himself the Son of
the Virgin who was His mother's Creator. On the other hand this blasphemous
propounder of more recent profanity has confessed the union of the two Natures
in Christ, but has maintained that the effect of this very union is that of
the two one remained while the substance of the other no longer existed, which
of course could not have been brought to an end except by either destruction
or separation. But this is so opposed to sound faith that it cannot be
entertained without loss of one's Christian name. For if the Incarnation of
the Word is the uniting of the Divine and human natures, but by the very fact
of their coming together that which was twofold became single, it was only the
Godhead that was born of the Virgin's womb, and went through the deceptive
appearance of receiving nourishment and bodily growth: and to pass over all
the changes of the human state, it was only the Godhead that was crucified,
dead, and buried: so that according to those who thus think, there is no
reason to hope for the resurrection, and Christ is not "the
first-begotten from the dead;" because He was not One who ought to
have been raised again, if He had not been One who could be slain.
VI. The Deity and the
Manhood were present in Christ from the very first.
Keep far from your hearts,
dearly beloved, the poisonous lies of the devil's inspirations, and knowing
that the eternal Godhead of the Son underwent no growth while with the Father,
be wise and consider that to the same nature to which it was said in Adam,
"Thou art earth, and unto earth shall thou go," it is said in
Christ, "sit Thou on My right hand." According to that Nature,
whereby Christ is equal to the Father, the Only- begotten was never inferior
to the sublimity of the Father; nor was the glory which He had with the Father
a temporal possession; for He is on the very right hand of the Father, of
which it is said in Exodus, "Thy right hand, O LORD, is glorified in
power;" and in Isaiah, "LORD, who hath believed our report? and
the arm of the LORD, to whom is it revealed?" The man, therefore,
assumed into the Son of GOD, was in such wise received into the unity of
Christ's Person from His very commencement in the body, that without the
Godhead He was not conceived, without the Godhead He was not brought forth,
without the Godhead He was not nursed. It was the same Person in the wondrous
acts, and in the endurance of insults; through His human weakness crucified,
dead and buried: through His Divine power, being raised the third day, He
ascended to the heavens, sat down at the right hand of the Father, and in His
nature as man received from the Father that which in His nature as GOD He
Himself also gave.
VII. The fulness of the
Godhead is imparted to the Body (the Church) through the Head, (Christ).
Meditate, dearly beloved on
these things with devout hearts, and be always mindful of the apostle's
injunction, who admonishes all men, saying, "See lest any one deceive you
through philosophy and vain deceit according to the tradition of men, and not
according to Christ; for in Him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead
bodily, and ye have been filled in Him." He said not
"spiritually" but "bodily," that we may understand the
substance of flesh to be real, where there is the dwelling in the body of the
fulness of the Godhead: wherewith, of course, the whole Church is also filled,
which, clinging to the Head, is the body of Christ; who liveth and reigneth
with the Father and the Holy Ghost, GOD for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XXXI: ON THE FEAST OF
THE EPIPHANY, I.
I. The Epiphany a necessary
sequel to the Nativity.
After celebrating but lately
the day on which immaculate virginity brought forth the Saviour of mankind,
the venerable feast of the Epiphany, dearly beloved, gives us continuance of
joy, that the force of our exultation and the fervour of our faith may not
grow cool, in the midst of neighbouring and kindred mysteries. For it
concerns all men's salvation, that the infancy of the Mediator between GOD and
men was already manifested to the whole world, while He was still detained in
the tiny town. For although He had chosen the Israelitish nation, and one
family out of that nation, from whom to assume the nature of all mankind, yet
He was unwilling that the early days of His birth should be concealed within
the narrow limits of His mother's home: but desired to be soon recognized by
all, seeing that He deigned to be born for all. To three wise men,
therefore, appeared a star of new splendour in the region of the East, which,
being brighter and fairer than the other stars, might easily attract the eyes
and minds of those that looked on it, so that at once that might be observed
not to be meaningless, which had so unusual an appearance. He therefore who
gave the sign, gave to the beholders understanding of it, and caused inquiry
to be made about that, of which He had thus caused understanding, and after
inquiry made, offered Himself to be found.
II. Herod's evil designs
were fruitless. The Wise men's gifts were consciously symbolical.
These three men follow the
leading of the light above, and with stedfast gaze obeying the indications of
the guiding splendour, are led to the recognition of the Truth by the
brilliance of Grace, for they supposed that a king's birth was notified in a
human sense, and that it must be sought in a royal city. Yet He who had
taken a slave's form, and had come not to judge, but to be judged, chose
Bethlehem for His nativity, Jerusalem for His passion. But Herod, hearing that
a prince of the Jews was born, suspected a successor, and was in great terror:
and to compass the death of the Author of Salvation, pledged himself to a
false homage. How happy had he been, if he had imitated the wise men's faith,
and turned to a pious use what he designed for deceit. What blind wickedness
of foolish jealousy, to think thou canst overthrow the Divine plan by thy
frenzy. The LORD of the works, who offers an eternal Kingdom, seeks not a
temporal. Why dost thou attempt to change the unchangeable order of things
ordained, and to forestall others in their crime? The death of Christ belongs
not to thy time. The Gospel must be first set on foot, the Kingdom of GOD
first preached, healings first given to the sick, wondrous acts first
performed. Why dost thou wish thyself to have the blame of what will belong to
another's work, and why without being able to effect thy wicked design, dost
thou bring on thyself alone the charge of wishing the evil? Thou gainest
nothing and cattiest out nothing by this intriguing. He that was born
voluntarily shall die of His own free will. The Wise men, therefore, fulfil
their desire, and come to the child, the LORD Jesus Christ, the same star
going before them. They adore the Word in flesh, the Wisdom in infancy, the
Power in weakness, the LORD of majesty in the reality of man: and by their
gifts make open acknowledgment of what they believe in their hearts, that they
may show forth the mystery of their faith and understanding[2]. The incense
they offer to God, the myrrh to Man, the gold to the King, consciously paying
honour to the Divine and human Nature in union: because while each substance
had its own properties, there was no difference in the power[3] of either.
III. The massacre of the
Innocents is in harmony with the Virgin's conception, which again teaches us
purity of life.
And when the wise men had
returned to their own land, and Jesus had been carried into Egypt at the
Divine suggestion, Herod's madness blazes out into fruitless schemes. He
orders all the little ones in Bethlehem to be slain, and since he knows not
which infant to fear, extends a general sentence against the age he suspects.
But that which the wicked king removes from the world, Christ admits to
heaven: and on those for whom He had not yet spent His redeeming blood, He
already bestows the dignity of martyrdom. Lift your faithful hearts then,
dearly-beloved, to the gracious blaze of eternal light, and in adoration of
the mysteries dispensed for man's salvation[4] give your diligent heed to the
things which have been wrought on your behalf. Love the purity of a chaste
life, because Christ is the Son of a virgin. "Abstain from fleshly lusts
which war against the soul[5]," as the blessed Apostle, present in his
words as we read, exhorts us, "In malice be ye children[6]," because
the Lord of glory conformed Himself to the infancy of mortals. Follow after
humility which the Son of God deigned to teach His disciples. Put on the power
of patience, in which ye may be able to gain[7] your souls; seeing that He who
is the Redemption of all, is also the Strength of all. "Set your minds on
the things which are above, not on the things which are on the earth[8]."
Walk firmly along the path of truth and life: let not earthly things hinder
you for whom are prepared heavenly things through our LORD Jesus Christ, who
with the Father and the Holy Ghost liveth and reigneth for ever and ever.
Amen.
SERMON XXXIII: ON THE FEAST
OF THE EPIPHANY, III.
I. When we were yet sinners,
Christ came to save.
Although I know,
dearly-beloved, that you are fully aware of the purpose of to-day's festival,
and that the words of the Gospel[9] have according to use unfolded it to you,
yet that nothing may be omitted on our part, I shall venture to say on the
subject what the LORD has put in my mouth: so that in our common joy the
devotion of our hearts may be so much the more sincere as the reason of our
keeping the feast is better understood. The providential Mercy of God, having
determined to succour the perishing world in these latter times, fore-ordained
the salvation of all nations in the Person of Christ; in order that, because
all nations had long been turned aside from the worship of the true God by
wicked error, and even God's peculiar people Israel had well-nigh entirely
fallen away from the enactments of the Law, now that all were shut up under
sin[1], He might have mercy upon all. For as justice was everywhere failing
and the whole world was given over to vanity and wickedness, if the Divine
Power had not deferred its judgment, the whole of mankind would have received
the sentence of damnation. But wrath was changed to forgiveness, and, that the
greatness of the Grace to be displayed might be the more conspicuous, it
pleased God, to apply the mystery of remission to the abolishing of men's sins
at a time when. no one could boast of his own merits.
II. The wise men from the
East are typical fulfilments of God's promise to Abraham.
Now the manifestation of
this unspeakable mercy, dearly-beloved, came to pass when Herod held the royal
power in Judea, where the legitimate succession of Kings having failed and the
power of the High-priests having been overthrown, an alien-born had gained the
sovereignty: that the rising of the true King might be attested by the voice
of prophecy, which had said: "a prince shall not fail from Juda, nor a
leader from his loins, until He come for whom it is reserved[2], and He shall
be the expectation of the nations." Concerning which an innumerable
succession was once promised to the most blessed patriarch Abraham to be
begotten not by fleshly seed but by fertile faith; and therefore it was
compared to the stars in multitude that as father of all the nations he might
hope not for an earthly but for a heavenly progeny. And therefore, for the
creating of the promised posterity, the heirs designated under the figure of
the stars are awakened by the rising of a new star, that the ministrations of
the heaven might do service in that wherein the witness of the heaven had been
adduced. A star more brilliant than the other stars arouses wise men that
dwell in the far East, and from the brightness of the wondrous light these
men, not unskilled in observing such things, appreciate the importance of the
sign: this doubtless being brought about in their hearts by Divine
inspiration, in order that the mystery of so great a sight might not be hid
from them, and, what was an unusual appearance to their eyes, might not be
obscure to their minds. In a word they scrupulously set about their duty and
provide themselves with such gifts that in worshipping the One they may at the
same time show their belief in His threefold function: with gold they honour
the Person of a King, with myrrh that of Man, with incense that of God[3].
III. The chosen race is no
longer the Jews, but believers of every nation.
And so they enter the chief
city of the Kingdom of Judaea, and in the royal city ask that He should be
shown them Whom they had learnt was begotten to be King. Herod is perturbed:
he fears for his safety, he trembles for his power, he asks of the priests and
teachers of the Law what the Scripture has predicted about the birth of
Christ, he ascertains what had been prophesied: truth enlightens the wise men,
unbelief blinds the experts: carnal Israel understands not what it reads, sees
not what it points out; refers to the pages, whose utterances it does not
believe. Where is thy boasting, O Jew? where thy noble birth drawn from the
stem of Abraham? is not thy circumcision become uncircumcision[4]? Behold
thou, the greater servest the less[5], and by the reading of that covenant[6]
which thou keepest in the letter only, thou becomest the slave of strangers
born, who enter into the lot of thy heritage. Let the fulness of the nations
enter into the family of the patriarchs, yea let it enter, and let the sons of
promise receive in Abraham's seed the blessing which his sons, according to
the flesh, renounce their claim to. In the three Magi[7] let all people
worship the Author of the universe: and let God be known not in Judaea alone,
but in all the world, so that everywhere "His name" may be
"great in Israel[8]." For while the dignity of the chosen race is
proved to be degenerate by unbelief in its descend ants, it is made common to
all alike by our belief.
IV. The massacre of the
Innocents through the consequent flight of Christ, brings the truth into
Egypt.
Now when the wise men had
worshipped the Lord and finished all their devotions, according to the warning
of a dream, they return not by the same route by which they had come. For it
behoved them now that they believed in Christ not to walk in the paths of
their old line of life, but having entered on a new way to keep away from the
errors they had left: and it was also to baffle Herod's design, who, under the
cloke of homage, was planning a wicked plot against the Infant Jesus. Hence
when his crafty hopes were overthrown, the king's wrath rose to a greater
fury. For reckoning up the time which the wise men had indicated, he poured
out his cruel rage on all the men-children of Bethlehem, and in a general
massacre of the whole of that city[9] slew the infants, who thus passed to
their eternal glory, thinking that, if every single babe was slain there,
Christ too would be slain. But He Who was postponing the shedding of His blood
for the world's redemption till another time, was carried and brought into
Egypt by his parents' aid, and thus sought the ancient cradle of the Hebrew
race, and in the power of a greater providence dispensing the princely office
of the true Joseph, in that He, the Bread of Life and the Food of reason that
came down from heaven, removed that worse than all famines under which the
Egyptians' minds were labouring, the lack of truth[1], nor without that
sojourn would the symbolism of that One Victim have been complete; for there
first by the slaying of the lamb was fore-shadowed the health- bringing sign
of the Cross and the Lord's Passover.
V. We must keep this
festival as thankful sons of light.
Taught then, dearly-beloved,
by these mysteries of Divine grace, let us with reasonable joy celebrate the
day of our first-fruits and the commencement of the nations' calling:
"giving thanks to" the merciful God "who made us worthy,"
as the Apostle says, "to be partakers of the lot of the saints in light:
who delivered us from the power of darkness and translated us into the kingdom
of the Son of His love[2] :" since as Isaiah prophesied, "the people
of the nations that sat in darkness, have seen a great light, and they that
dwelt in the land of the shadow of death, upon them hath the light
shined[3]." Of whom he also said to the Lord, "nations which knew
not thee, shall call on thee: and peoples which were ignorant of thee, shall
run together unto thee[4]." This day "Abraham saw and was
glad[5]," when he understood that the sons of his faith would be blessed
in his seed that is in Christ, and foresaw that by believing he should be the
father of all nations, "giving glory to God and being fully assured that
What He had promised, He was able also to perform[6]." This day David
sang of in the psalms saying: "all nations that thou hast made shall come
and worship before Thee, O Lord: and they shall glorify Thy name[7];" and
again: "The Lord hath made known His salvation: His righteousness hath He
openly showed in the sight of the nations[8]." This in good truth we know
to have taken place ever since the three wise men aroused in their far-off
land were led by a star to recognize and worship the King of heaven and
earth,[which to those who gaze aright ceases not daily to appear. And if it
could make Christ known when concealed in infancy, how much more able was it
to reveal Him when reigning in majesty][9]. And surely their worship of Him
exhorts us to imitation; that, as far as we can, we should serve our gracious
God who invites us all to Christ. For whosoever lives religiously and chastely
in the Church and "sets his mind on the, things which are above, not on
the things that are upon the earth[1]," is in some measure like the
heavenly light: and whilst he himself keeps the brightness of a holy life, he
points out to many the way to the Lord like a star. In which regard,
dearly-beloved, ye ought all to help one another in turn, that in the kingdom
of God, which is reached by right faith and good works, ye may shine as the
sons of light: through our Lord Jesus Christ, Who with God the Father and the
Holy Spirit lives and reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XXXIV: ON THE FEAST
OF THE EPIPHANY, IV.
I. The yearly observance of
the Epiphany is profitable to Christians.
It is the right and
reasonable duty of true piety, dearly-beloved, on the days which bear witness
to the works of Divine mercy, to rejoice with the whole heart and to celebrate
with all honour the things which have been wrought for our salvation: for the
very law of recurring seasons calls us to such devout observance, and has now
brought before us the feast of the Epiphany, consecrated by the Lord's
appearance soon after the clay on which the Son of God co-eternal with the
Father was born of a Virgin. And herein the providence. of God has established
a great safeguard to our faith, so that, whilst the worship of the Saviour's
earliest infancy is repeated year by year, the production of true man's nature
in Him might be proved by the original verifications themselves. For this it
is that justifies the ungodly, this it is that makes sinners saints, to wit
the belief in the true Godhead and the true Manhood of the one Jesus Christ,
our Lord: the Godhead, whereby being before all ages "in the form of
God" He is equal with the Father: the Manhood whereby in the last days He
is united to Man in the "form of a slave." For the confirmation
therefore of this Faith which was to be fore-armed against all errors, it was
a wondrous loving provision of the Divine plan that a nation which dwelt in
the far-off country of the East and was cunning in the art of reading the
stars, should receive the sign of the infant's birth who was to reign over all
Israel. For the unwonted splendour of a bright new star appeared to the wise
men and filled their mind with such wonder, as they gazed upon its brilliance,
that they could not think they ought to neglect what was announced to them
with such distinctness. And, as the event showed, the grace of God was the
disposing cause of this wondrous thing: who when the whole of Bethlehem itself
was still unaware of Christ's birth, brought it to the knowledge of the
nations who would believe, and declared that which human words could not yet
explain, through the preaching of the heavens.
II. Both Herod and the wise
men originally had an earthly conception of the kingdom signified; but the
latter learnt the truth, the former did not.
But although it was the
office of the Divine condescension to make the Saviour's Nativity recognizable
to the nations, yet for the under standing of the wondrous sign the wise men
could have had intimation even from the ancient prophecies of Balaam, knowing
that it was predicted of old and by constant repetition spread abroad: "A
star shall rise out of Jacob, and a man shall rise out of Israel, and shall
rule the nations[2]." And so the three men aroused by God through the
shining of a strange star, follow the guidance of its twinkling light,
thinking they will find the babe designated at Jerusalem in the royal city.
But finding themselves mistaken in this opinion, through the scribes and
teachers of the Jews they learnt what the Holy Scripture had foretold of the
birth of Christ; so that confirmed by a twofold witness, they sought with
still more eager faith Him whom both the brightness of the star and the sure
word of prophecy revealed. And when the Divine oracle was proclaimed through
the chief priests' answers and the Spirit's voice declared, which says:
"And thou, Bethlehem, the land of Judah, art not least among the princes
of Judah; for out of thee shall come a leader to rule My people
Israel[3]," how easy and how natural it was that the leading men among
the Hebrews should believe what they taught! But it appears that they held
material notions with Herod, and reckoned Christ's kingdom as on the same
level as the powers of this world: so that they hoped for a temporal leader
while he dreaded an earthly rival. The fear that racks thee, Herod, is wasted;
in vain dost thou try to vent thy rage on the infant thou suspectest. Thy
realm cannot hold Christ; the Lord of the world is not satisfied with the
narrow limits of thy sway. He, whom thou dost not wish to reign in Judaea,
reigns everywhere: and thou wouldst rule more happily thyself, if thou wert to
submit to His command. Why dost thou not do with sincerity what in treacherous
falseness thou dost promise? Come with the wise men, and in suppliant
adoration worship the true King. But thou, from too great fondness for Jewish
blindness, wilt not imitate the nations' faith, and directest thy stubborn
heart to cruel wiles, though thou art doomed neither to stay Him whom thou
fearest nor to harm them whom thou slayest.
III. The perseverance of the
Magi has led to the most important results.
Led then, dearly beloved,
into Bethlehem by obeying the guidance of the star, the wise men
"rejoiced with very great joy," as the evangelist has told us:
"and entering the house, found the child with Mary, His mother; and
falling down they worshipped Him; and opening their treasures they presented
to Him gifts, gold, frankincense and myrrh[4]." What wondrous faith of
perfect knowledge, which was taught them not by earthly wisdom, but by the
instruction of the Holy Spirit! Whence came it that these men, who had quitted
their country without having seen Jesus, and had not noticed anything in His
looks to enforce such systematic adoration, observed this method in offering
their gifts? unless it were that besides the appearance of the star, which
attracted their bodily eyes, the more refulgent rays of truth taught their
hearts that before they started on their toilsome road, they must understand
that He was signified to Whom was owed in gold royal honour, in incense Divine
adoration, in myrrh the acknowledgment of mortality. Such a belief and
understanding no doubt, as far as the enlightenment of their faith went, might
have been sufficient in themselves and have prevented their using their bodily
eyes in inquiring into that which they had beheld with their mind's fullest
gaze. But their sagacious diligence, persevering till they found the child,
did good service for future peoples and for the men of our own time: so that,
as it profited us all that the apostle Thomas, after the Lord's resurrection,
handled the traces of the wounds in His flesh, so it was of advantage to us
that His infancy should be attested by the visit of the wise men. And so the
wise men saw and adored the Child of the tribe of Judah, "of the seed of
David according to the flesh[5]," " made from a woman, made under
the law[6]," which He had come "not to destroy but to
fulfil[7]." They saw and adored the Child, small in size, powerless to
help others[8], incapable of speech, and in nought different to the generality
of human children. Because, as the testimonies were trustworthy which asserted
in Him the majesty of invisible Godhead, so it ought to be impossible to doubt
that "the Word became flesh," and the eternal essence of the Son of
God took man's true nature: lest either the inexpressible marvels of his acts
which were to follow or the infliction of sufferings which He had to bear
should overthrow the mystery of our Faith by their inconsistency: seeing that
no one at all can be justified save those who believe the Lord Jesus to be
both true God and true Man.
IV. The Manichoean heresy
corrupts the Scriptures in order to disprove the truth.
This peerless Faith,
dearly-beloved, this Truth proclaimed throughout all ages, is opposed by the
devilish blasphemies of the Manichaeans: who to murder the souls of the
deceived have woven a deadly tissue of wicked doctrine out of impious and
forged lies, and over the ruins of their mad opinions men have fallen headlong
to such depths as to imagine a Christ with a fictitious body, who presented
nothing solid, nothing real to the eyes and touch of men[9], but displayed an
empty shape of fancy-flesh. For they wish it to be thought unworthy of belief
that God the Son of God placed Himself within a woman's body and subjected His
majesty to such a degradation as to be joined to our fleshly nature and be
born in the true body of human substance although this is entirely the outcome
of His power, not of His ill-treatment, and it is His glorious condescension,
not His being polluted that should be believed in. For if yonder visible light
is not marred by any of the uncleannesses with which it is encompassed, and
the brightness of the sun's rays, which is doubtless a material creature, is
not contaminated by any of the dirty or muddy places to which it penetrates,
is there anything whatever its quality which could pollute the essence of that
eternal and immaterial Light? seeing that by allying Himself to that creature
which He had made after His own image He furnished it with purification and
received no stain, and healed the wounds of its weakness without suffering
loss of power. And because this great and unspeakable mystery of divine
Godliness was announced by all the testimonies of the Holy Scriptures, those
opponents of the Truth of which we speak have rejected the law that was given
through Moses and the divinely inspired utterances[1] of the prophets, and
have tampered with the very pages of the gospels and apostles, by removing or
inserting certain things: forging for themselves under the Apostles' names and
under the words of the Saviour Himself many volumes of falsehood, whereby to
fortify their lying errors and instil deadly poison into the minds of those to
be deceived. For they saw that everything contradicted and made against them
and that not only by the New but also by the Old Testament their blasphemous
and treacherous folly was confuted. And yet persisting in their mad lies they
cease not to disturb the Church of God with their deceits, persuading those
miserable creatures whom they can ensnare to deny that man's nature was truly
taken by the Lord Jesus Christ; to deny that He was truly crucified for the
world's salvation: to deny that from His side wounded by the spear flowed the
blood of Redemption and the water of baptism[2]: to deny that He was buried
and raised again the third day: to deny that in sight of the disciples He was
lifted above all the heights of the skies to take His seat on the right hand
of the Father; and in order that when all the truth of the Apostles[1] Creed
was destroyed, there may be nothing to frighten the wicked or inspire the
saints with hope, to deny that the living and the dead must be judged by
Christ; so that those whom they have robbed of the power of these great
mysteries may learn to worship Christ in the sun and moon, and under the name
of the Holy Spirit to adore Manichaeus himself, the inventor of all these
blasphemies.
V. Avoid all dealings with
the heretics, but intercede with God for them.
To confirm your hearts
therefore, dearly-beloved, in the Faith and Truth, let to-day's festival help
you all, and let the catholic confession be fortified by the testimony of the
manifestation of the Saviour's infancy, while we anathematize the blasphemy of
those who deny the flesh of our nature in Christ: about which the blessed
Apostle John has forewarned us in no doubtful utterance, saying, "every
spirit which confesses Christ Jesus to have come in the flesh is of God: and
every spirit which destroys Jesus is not of God, and this is
Antichrist[3]." Consequently let no Christian have aught in common with
men of this kind, let him have no alliance or intercourse with such. Let it
advantage the whole Church that many of them in the mercy of God have been
discovered, and that their own confession has disclosed how sacrilegious their
lives were. Let no one be deceived by their discriminations between food and
food, by their soiled raiment, by their pale faces. Fasts are not holy which
proceed not on the principle of abstinence but with deceitful de sign. Let
this be the end of their harming the unwary, and deluding the ignorant;
henceforth no one's fall shall be excusable: no longer must he be held simple
but extremely worthless and perverse who hereafter shall be found entangled in
detestable error. A practice countenanced by the Church and Divinely
instituted, not only do we not forbid, we even incite you to, that you should
supplicate the Lord even for such: since we also with tears and mourning feel
pity for the ruins of cheated souls, carrying out the Apostles' example of
loving- kindness[4], so as to be weak with those that are weak and to
"weep with those that weep[5]." For we hope that God's mercy can be
won by the many tears and due amendment of the fallen: because so long as life
remains in the body no man's restoration must be despaired of, but the reform
of all desired with the Lord's help, "who raiseth up them that are
crushed, looseth them that are chained, giveth light to the blind[6]: "
to whom is honour and glory for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XXXVI: ON THE FEAST
OF THE EPIPHANY, VI.
I. The story of the magi not
only a byegone fact in history, but of everyday application to ourselves.
The day, dearly-beloved, on
which Christ the Saviour of the world first appeared to the nations must be
venerated by us with holy worship: and to- day those joys must be entertained
in our hearts which existed in the breasts of the three magi, when, aroused by
the sign and leading of a new star, which they believed to have been promised,
they fell down in presence of the King of heaven and earth. For that day has
not so passed away that the mighty work, which was then revealed, has passed
away with it, and that nothing but the report of the thing has come down to us
for faith to receive and memory to celebrate; seeing that, by the oft-repeated
gift of God, our times daily enjoy the fruit of what the first age possessed.
And therefore, although the narrative which is read to us from the Gospel[7]
properly records those days on which the three men, who had neither been
taught by the prophets' predictions nor instructed by the testimony of the
law, came to acknowledge God from the furthest parts of the East, yet we
behold this same thing more clearly and abundantly carried on now in the
enlightenment of all those who are called, since the prophecy of Isaiah is
fulfilled when he says, "the Lord has laid bare His holy arm in the sight
of all the nations, and all the nations upon earth have seen the salvation
which is from the Lord our God ;" and again, "and those to whom it
has not been announced about Him shall see, and they who have not heard, shall
understand[8]." Hence when we see men devoted to worldly wisdom and far
from belief in Jesus Christ brought out of the depth of their error and called
to an acknowledgment of the true Light, it is undoubtedly the brightness of
the Divine grace that is at work: and whatever of new light illumines the
darkness of their hearts, comes from the rays of the same star: so that it
should both move with wonder, and going before lead to the adoration of God
the minds which it visited with its splendour. But if with careful thought we
wish to see how their threefold kind of gift is also offered by all who come
to Christ with the foot of faith, is not the same offering repeated in the
hearts of true believers? For he that acknowledges Christ the King of the
universe brings gold from the treasure of his heart: he that believes the
Only-begotten of God to have united man's true nature to Himself, offers
myrrh; and he that confesses Him in no wise inferior to the Father's majesty,
worships Him in a manner with incense.
II. Satan still carries on
the wiles of Herod, and, as it were, personates him in his opposition to
Christ.
These comparisons,
dearly-beloved, being thoughtfully considered, we find Herod's character also
not to be wanting, of which the devil himself is now an unwearied imitator,
just as he was then a secret instigator. For he is tortured at the calling of
all the nations, and racked at the daily destruction of his power, grieving at
his being everywhere deserted, and the true King adored in all places. He
prepares devices, he hatches plots, he bursts out into murders, and that he
may make use of the remnants of those whom he still deceives, is consumed with
envy in the persons of the Jews, lies treacherously in wait in the persons of
heretics, blazes out into cruelty in the persons of the heathen. For he sees
that the power of the eternal King is invincible Whose death has extinguished
the power of death itself; and therefore he has armed himself with all his
skill of injury against those who serve the true King; hardening some by the
pride that knowledge of the law engenders, debasing others by the lies of
false belief, and inciting others to the madness of persecution. Yet the
madness of this "Herod" is vanquished, and brought to nought by Him
who has crowned even infants with the glory of martyrdom, and has endued His
faithful ones with so unconquerable a love that in the Apostle's words they
dare to say, "who shall separate us from the love of Christ? shall
tribulation, or want, or persecution, Or hunger, or nakedness, or peril, or
the sword? as it is written, For thy sake are we killed all the day long, we
are counted as sheep for the slaughter. But in all these things we overcome on
account of Him who loved us."
III. The cessation of active
persecution does not do away with the need of continued vigilance: Satan has
only changed his tactics.
Such courage as this,
dearly-beloved, we do not believe to have been needful only at those times in
which the kings of the world and all the powers of the age were raging against
God's people in an outburst of wickedness, thinking it to redound to their
greatest glory if they removed the Christian name from the earth, but not
knowing that God's Church grows through the frenzy of their cruelty, since in
the tortures and deaths of the martyrs, those whose number was reckoned to be
diminished were augmented through the force of example. In fine, so much
strength has our Faith gained by the attacks of persecutors that royal
princedoms have no greater ornament than that the lords of the world are
members of Christ; and their boast is not so much that they were born in the
purple as that they have been re-born in baptism. But because the stress of
former blasts has lulled, and with a cessation of fightings a measure of
tranquillity has long seemed to smile upon us, those divergences are carefully
to be guarded against which arise from the very reign of peace. For the
adversary having been proved ineffective in open persecutions now exercises a
hidden skill in doing cruel hurt, in order to overthrow by the stumbling-block
of pleasure those whom he could not strike with the blow of affliction. And so
seeing the faith of princes opposed to him and the indivisible Trinity of the
one Godhead as devoutly worshipped in palaces as in churches, he grieves at
the shedding of Christian blood being forbidden, and attacks the mode of life
of those whose death he cannot compass. The terror of confiscations he changes
into the fire of avarice, and corrupts with covetousness those whose spirit he
could not break by losses. For the malicious haughtiness which long use has
ingrained into his very nature has not laid aside its hatred, but changed its
character in order to subjugate the minds of the faithful by blandishments. He
inflames those with covetous desires whom he cannot distress with tortures: he
sows strifes, kindles passions, sets tongues a-wagging, and, lest more
cautious hearts should draw back from his lawless wiles, facilitates
opportunities for accomplishing crimes: because this is the only fruit of all
his devices that he who is not worshipped with the sacrifice of cattle and
goats, and the burning of incense, should be paid the homage of divers wicked
deeds .
IV. Timely repentance gains
God's merciful consideration.
Our state of peace,
therefore, dearly-beloved, has its dangers, and it is vain for those who do
not withstand vicious desires to feel secure of the liberty which is the
privilege of their Faith. Men's hearts are shown by the character of their
works, and the fashion of their minds is betrayed by the nature of their
actions. For there are some, as the Apostle says, "who profess that they
know God, but deny Him by their deeds." For the charge of denial is
truly incurred when the good which is heard in the sound of the voice is not
present in the conscience. Indeed, the frailty of man's nature easily glides
into faults: and because no sin is without its attractiveness, deceptive
pleasure is quickly acquiesced in. But we should run for spiritual succour
from the desires of the flesh: and the mind that has knowledge of its God
should turn away from the evil suggestion of the enemy. Avail thyself of the
long-suffering of God, and persist not in cherishing thy sin, because its
punishment is put off. The sinner must not feel secure of his impunity,
because if he loses the time for repentance he will find no place for mercy,
as the prophet says, "in death no one remembers thee; and in the realms
below who will confess to thee?" But let him who experiences the
difficulty of self-amendment and restoration betake himself to the mercy of a
befriending God, and ask that the chains of evil habit may be broken off by
Him "who lifts up those that fall and raises all the crushed ."
The prayer of one that confesses will not be in vain since the merciful God
"will grant the desire of those that fear Him ," and will give
what is asked, as He gave the Source from Which to ask. Through our Lend Jesus
Christ, Who liveth and reigneth with the Father and the Holy Ghost for ever
and ever. Amen.
SERMON XXXIX: On Lent, I.
I. The benefits of
abstinence shown by the example of the Hebrews.
In former days, when the
people of the Hebrews and all the tribes of Israel were oppressed for their
scandalous sins by the grievous tyranny of the Philistines, in order that they
might be able to overcome their enemies, as the sacred story declares, they
restored their powers of mind and body by the injunction of a fast. For they
understood that they had deserved that hard and wretched subjection for their
neglect of God's commands, and evil ways, and that it was in vain for them to
strive with arms unless they had first withstood their sin. Therefore
abstaining from food and drink, they applied the discipline of strict
correction to themselves, and in order to conquer their foes, first conquered
the allurements of the palate in themselves. And thus it came about that their
fierce enemies and cruel taskmasters yielded to them when fasting, whom they
had held in subjection when full. And so we too, dearly beloved, who are set
in the midst of many oppositions and conflicts, may be cured by a little
carefulness, if only we will use the same means. For our case is almost the
same as theirs, seeing that, as they were attacked by foes in the flesh so are
we chiefly by spiritual enemies. And if we can conquer them by God's grace
enabling us to correct our ways, the strength of our bodily enemies also will
give way before us, and by our self-amendment we shall weaken those who were
rendered formidable to us, not by their own merits but by our shortcomings.
II. Use Lent to vanquish the
enemy, and be thus preparing for Eastertide.
Accordingly, dearly-beloved,
that we may be able to overcome all our enemies, let us seek Divine aid by the
observance of the heavenly bidding, knowing that we cannot otherwise prevail
against our adversaries, unless we prevail against our own selves. For we have
many encounters with our own selves: the flesh desires one thing against the
spirit, and the spirit another thing against the flesh (6a). And in this
disagreement, if the desires of the body be stronger, the mind will
disgracefully lose its proper dignity, and it will be most disastrous for that
to serve which ought to have ruled. But if the mind, being subject to its
Ruler, and delighting in gifts from above, shall have trampled under foot the
allurements of earthly pleasure, and shall not have allowed sin to reign in
its mortal body(6a), reason will maintain a well-ordered supremacy, and its
strongholds no strategy of spiritual wickednesses will cast down: because man
has then only true peace and true freedom when the flesh is ruled by the
judgment of the mind, and the mind is directed by the will of God. And
although this state of preparedness, dearly-beloved, should always be
maintained that our ever-watchful foes may be overcome by unceasing diligence,
yet now it must be the more anxiously sought for and the more zealously
cultivated when the designs of our subtle foes themselves are conducted with
keener craft than ever. For knowing that the most hollowed days of Lent are
now at hand, in the keeping of which all past slothfulnesses are chastised,
all negligences alerted for, they direct all the force of their spite on this
one thing, that they who intend to celebrate the Lord's holy Passover may be
found unclean in some matter, and that cause of offence may arise where
propitiation ought to have been obtained.
III. Fights are necessary to
prove our faith.
As we approach then,
dearly-beloved, the beginning of Lent, which is a time for the more careful
serving of the Lord, because we are, as it were, entering on a kind of contest
in good works, let us prepare our souls for fighting with temptations, and
understand that the more zealous we are for our salvation, the more determined
must be the assaults of our opponents. But "stronger is He that is in us
than He that is against us ," and through Him are we powerful in whose
strength we rely: because it was for this that the LORD allowed Himself to be
tempted by the tempter, that we might be taught by His example as well as
fortified by His aid. For He conquered the adversary, as ye have heard, by
quotations from the law, not by actual strength, that by this very thing He
might do greater honour to man, and inflict a greater punishment on the
adversary by conquering the enemy of the human race not now as God but as Man.
He fought then, therefore, that we too might fight thereafter: He conquered
that we too might likewise conquer. For there are no works of power,
dearly-beloved, without the trials of temptations, there is no faith without
proof, no contest without a foe, no victory without conflict. This life of
ours is in the midst of snares, in the midst of battles; if we do not wish to
be deceived, we must watch: if we want to overcome, we must fight. And
therefore the most wise Solomon says, "My son in approaching the service
of GOD prepare thy soul for temptation (8a)." For He being a man full of
the wisdom of God, and knowing that the pursuit of religion involves laborious
struggles, foreseeing too the danger of the fight, forewarned the intending
combatant; lest haply, if the tempter came upon him in his ignorance, he might
find him unready and wound him unawares.
IV. The Christian's armour
is both for defence and for attack.
So, dearly-beloved, let us
who instructed in Divine learning come wittingly to the present contest and
strife, hear the Apostle when he says, "for our struggle is not against
flesh and blood, but against principalities and powers, against the rulers of
this dark world, against spiritual wickedness in heavenly things," and
let us not forget that these our enemies feel it is against them all is done
that we strive to do for our salvation, and that by the very fact of our
seeking after some good thing we are challenging our foes. For this is an
old-standing quarrel between us and them fostered by the devil's ill-will, so
that they are tortured by our being justified, because they have fallen from
those good things to which we, God helping us, are advancing. If, therefore,
we are raised, they are prostrated: if we are strengthened, they are weakened.
Our cures are their blows, because they are wounded by our wounds' cure.
"Stand, therefore," dearly-beloved, as the Apostle says,
"having the loins of your mind girt in truth, and your feet shod in the
preparation of the gospel of peace, in all things taking the shield of faith
in which ye may be able to extinguish all the fiery darts of the evil one, and
put on the helmet of salvation and the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word
of God ." See, dearly-beloved, with what mighty weapons, with what
impregnable defences we are armed by our Leader, who is famous for His many
triumphs, the unconquered Master of the Christian warfare. He has girt our
loins with the belt of chastity, He has shod our feet with the bonds of peace:
because the unbelted soldier is quickly vanquished by the suggester of
immodesty, and he that is unshod is easily bitten by the serpent. He has given
the shield of faith for the protection of our whole body; on our head has He
set the helmet of salvation; our right hand has He furnished with a sword,
that is with the word of Truth: that the spiritual warrior may not only be
safe from wounds, but also may have strength to wound his assailant.
V. Abstinence not only from
food but from other evil desires, especially from wrath, is required in Lent.
Relying, therefore,
dearly-beloved, on these arms, let us enter actively and fearlessly on the
contest set before us: so that in this fasting struggle we may not rest
satisfied with only this end, that we should think abstinence from food alone
desirable. For it is not enough that the substance of our flesh should be
reduced, if the strength of the soul be not also developed. When the outer man
is somewhat subdued, let the inner man be somewhat refreshed; and when bodily
excess is denied to our flesh, let our mind be invigorated by spiritual
delights. Let every Christian scrutinise himself, and earth severely into his
inmost heart: let him see that no discord cling there, no wrong desire be
harboured. Let chasteness drive incontinence far away; let the light of truth
dispel the shades of deception; let the swellings of pride subside; let wrath
yield to reason; let the darts of ill-treatment be shattered, and the chidings
of the tongue be bridled; let thoughts of revenge fall through, and injuries
be given over to oblivion. In fine, let "every plant which the heavenly
Father hath not planted be removed by the roots ." For then only are
the seeds of virtue well nourished in us, when every foreign germ is uprooted
from the field of wheat. If any one, therefore, has been fired by the desire
for vengeance against another, so that he has given him up to prison or bound
him with chains, let him make haste to forgive not only the innocent, but also
one who seems worthy of punishment, that he may with confidence make use of
the clause in the Lord's prayer and say, "Forgive us our debts, as we
also forgive our debtors ." Which petition the LORD marks with
peculiar emphasis, as if the efficacy of the whole rested on this condition,
by saying, "For if ye forgive men their sins, your Father which is in
heaven also will forgive you: but if ye forgive not men, neither will your
Father forgive you your Sins ."
VI. The right use of Lent
will lead to a happy participation in Easter.
Accordingly, dearly-beloved,
being mindful of our weakness, because we easily fall into all kinds of
faults, let us by no means neglect this special remedy and most effectual
healing of our wounds. Let us remit, that we may have remission: let us grant
the pardon which we crave: let us not be eager to be revenged when we pray to
be forgiven. Let us not pass over the groans of the poor with deaf ear, but
with prompt kindness bestow our mercy on the needy, that we may deserve to
find mercy in the judgment. And he that, aided by God's grace, shall strain
every nerve after this perfection, will keep this holy fast faithfully; free
from the leaven of the old wickedness, in the unleavened bread of sincerity
and truth , he will reach the blessed Passover, and by newness of life will
worthily rejoice in the mystery of man's reformation through Christ our LORD
Who with the Father and the Holy Spirit lives and reigns for ever and ever.
Amen.
SERMON XL. On Lent, II.
I. Progress and improvement
always possible.
Although, dearly-beloved, as
the Easter festival approaches, the very recurrence of the season points out
to us the Lenten fast, yet our words also must add their exhortations which,
the Lord helping us, may be not useless to the active nor irksome to the
devout. For since the idea of these days demands the increase of all our
religious performances, there is no one, I am sure, that does not feel glad at
being incited to good works. For though our nature which, so long as we are
mortal, will be changeable, is advancing to the highest pursuits of virtue,
yet always has the possibility of filling back, so has it always the
possibility of advancing. And this is the true justness of the perfect that
they should never assume themselves to be perfect, lest flagging in the
purpose of their yet unfinished journey, they should fall into the danger of
failure, through giving up the desire for progress.
And, therefore, because none
of us, dearly beloved, is so perfect and holy as not to be s able to be more
perfect and more holy, let us all together, without difference of rank,
without distinction of desert, with pious eagerness pursue our race from what
we have attained to what we yet aspire to, and make some needful additions to
our regular devotions. For he that is not more attentive than usual to
religion in these days, is shown at other times to be not attentive enough.
II. Satan seeks to supply
his numerous losses by fresh gains.
Hence the reading of the
Apostle's proclamation has sounded opportunely in our ears, saying,
"Behold now is the accepted time, behold now is the day of salvation
." For what is more accepted than this time, what more suitable to
salvation than these days, in which war is proclaimed against vices and
progress is made in all virtues? Thou hadst indeed always to keep watch, O
Christian soul, against the enemy of thy salvation, lest any spot should be
exposed to the tempter's snares: but now greater wariness and keener prudence
must be employed by thee when that same foe of thine rages with fiercer
hatred. For now in all the world the power of his ancient sway is taken from
him, and the countless vessels of captivity are rescued from his grasp. The
people of all nations and of all tongues are breaking away from their cruel
plunderer, and now no race of men is found that does not struggle against the
tyrant's laws, while through all the borders of the earth many thousands of
thousands are being prepared to be reborn in Christ : and as the birth of a
new creature draws near, spiritual wickedness is being driven out by those who
were possessed by it. The blasphemous fury of the despoiled foe frets,
therefore, and seeks new gains because it has lost its ancient right.
Unwearied and ever wakeful, he snatches at any sheep he finds straying
carelessIy from the sacred folds, intent on leading them over the steeps of
treasure anti down the slopes of luxury into the abodes of death. And so he
inflames their wrath, feeds their hatreds, whets their desires, mocks at their
continence, arouses their gluttony.
III. The twofold nature of
Christ shown at the Temptation.
For whom would he not dare
to try, who did not keep from his treacherous attempts even on our LORD Jesus
Christ? For, as the story of the Gospel has disclosed , when our Saviour,
Who was true God, that He might show Himself true Man also, and banish all
wicked and erroneous opinions, after the fast of 40 days and nights, had
experienced the hunger of human weakness, the devil, rejoicing at having found
in Him a sign of possible and mortal nature, in order to test the power which
he feared, said, "If Thou art the Son of God, command that these stones
become bread ." Doubtless the Almighty could do this, and it was easy
that at the Creator's command a creature of any kind should change into the
form that it was commanded: just as when He willed it, in the marriage feast,
He changed the water into wine: but here it better agreed with His purposes of
salvation that His haughty foe's cunning should be vanquished by the Lord, not
in the power of His Godhead, but by the mystery of His humiliation. At length,
when the devil had been put to flight and the tempter baffled in all his arts,
angels came to the Lord and ministered to Him, that He being true Man and true
God, His Manhood might be unsullied by those crafty questions, and His Godhead
displayed by those holy ministrations. And so let the sons and disciples of
the devil be confounded, who, being filled with the poison of vipers, deceive
the simple, denying in Christ the presence of both true natures, whilst they
rob either His Godhead of Manhood, or His Manhood of Godhead, although both
falsehoods are destroyed by a twofold and simultaneous proof: for by His
bodily hunger His perfect Manhood was shown, and by the attendant angels His
perfect Godhead.
IV. The fast should not end
with abstinence front food, but lead to good deeds.
Therefore, dearly-beloved,
seeing that, as we are taught by our Redeemer's precept, "man lives not
in bread alone, but in every word of God," and it is right that
Christian people, whatever the amount of their abstinence, should rather
desire to satisfy themselves with the "Word of God" than with bodily
food, let us with ready devotion and eager faith enter upon the celebration of
the solemn fast, not with barren abstinence flora food, which is often imposed
on us by weakliness of body, or the disease of avarice, but in bountiful
benevolence: that in truth we may be of those of whom the very Truth speaks,
"blessed are they which hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they
shall be filled ." Let works of piety, therefore, be our delight, and
let us be filled with those kinds of food which feed us for eternity. Let us
rejoice in the replenishment of the poor, whom our bounty has satisfied. Let
us delight in the clothing of those whose nakedness we have covered with
needful raiment. Let our humaneness be felt by the sick in their illnesses, by
the weakly in their infirmities, by the exiles in their hardships, by the
orphans in their destitution, and by solitary widows in their sadness: in the
helping of whom there is no one that cannot carry out some amount of
benevolence. For no one's income is small, whose heart is big: and the measure
of one's mercy and goodness does not depend on the size of one's means. Wealth
of goodwill is never rightly lacking, even in a slender purse. Doubtless the
expenditure of the rich is greater, and that of the poor smaller, but there is
no difference in the fruit of their works, where the purpose of the workers is
the same.
V. And still further it
should lead to personal amendment and domestic harmony.
But, beloved, in this
opportunity for the virtues' exercise there are also other notable crowns, to
be won by no dispersing abroad of granaries, by no disbursement of money, if
wantonness is repelled, if drunkenness is abandoned, and the lusts of the
flesh tamed by the laws of chastity: if hatreds pass into affection, if
enmities be turned into peace, if meekness extinguishes wrath, if gentleness
forgives wrongs, if in fine the conduct of master and of slaves is so well
ordered that the rule of the one is milder, and the discipline of the other is
more complete. It is by such observances then, dearly-beloved, that God's
mercy will be gained, the charge of sin wiped out, and the adorable Easter
festival devoutly kept. And this the pious Emperors of the Roman world have
long guarded with holy observance; for in honour of the Lord's Passion and
Resurrection they bend their lofty power, and relaxing the severity of their
decrees set free many of their prisoners: so that on the clays when the world
is saved by the Divine mercy, their clemency, which is modelled on the
Heavenly goodness, may be zealously followed by us. Let Christian peoples then
imitate their princes, and be incited to forbearance in their homes by these
royal examples. For it is not right that private laws should be severer than
public. Let faults be forgiven, let bonds be loosed offences wiped out,
designs of vengeance fall through, that the holy festival through the Divine
and human grace may find all happy, all innocent: through our Lord Jesus
Christ Who with the Father and the Holy Spirit liveth and reigneth God for
endless ages of ages. Amen.
SERMON XLII: On Lent, IV.
I. The Lenten fast an
opportunity for restoring our purely.
In proposing to preach this
most holy and important fast to you, dearly beloved, how shall I begin more
fitly than by quoting the words of the Apostle, in whom Christ Himself was
speaking, and by reminding you of what we have read : "behold, now is
the acceptable time, behold now is the day of salvation." For though
there are no seasons which are not full of Divine blessings, and though access
is ever open to us to God's mercy through His grace, yet now all men's minds
should be moved with greater zeal to spiritual progress, and animated by
larger confidence, when the return of the day, on which we were redeemed,
invites us to all the duties of godliness: that we may keep the
super-excellent mystery of the Lord's passion with bodies and hearts purified.
These great mysteries do indeed require from us such unflagging devotion and
unwearied reverence that we should remain in God's sight always the same, as
we ought to be found on the Easter feast itself. But because few have this
constancy, and, because so long as the stricter observance is relaxed in
consideration of the frailty of the flesh, and so long as one's interests
extend over all the various actions of this life, even pious hearts must get
some soils from the dust of the world, the Divine Providence has with great
beneficence taken care that the discipline of the forty days should heal us
and restore the purity of our minds, during which the faults of other times
might be redeemed by pious acts and removed by chaste fasting.
II. Lent must be used far
removing all our defilements, and of good works there must be no stint.
As we are therefore,
dearly-beloved, about to enter on those mystic days which are dedicated to the
benefits of fasting, let us take care to obey the Apostle's precepts,
cleansing "ourselves from every defilement of flesh and spirit :"
that by controlling the struggles that go on between our two natures, the
spirit which, if it is under the guidance of God, should be the governor of
the body, may uphold the dignity of its rule: so that we may give no offence
to any, nor be subject to the chidings of reprovers. For we shall be rightly
attacked with rebukes, and through our fault ungodly tongues will arm
themselves to do harm to religion, if the conduct of those that fast is at
variance with the standard of perfect purity. For our fast does not consist
chiefly of mere abstinence from food, nor are dainties withdrawn from our
bodily appetites with profit, unless the mind is recalled from wrong-doing and
the tongue restrained from slandering. This is a time of gentleness and
long-suffering, of peace and tranquillity: when all the pollutions of vice are
to be eradicated and continuance of virtue is to be attained by us. Now let
godly minds boldly accustom themselves to forgive faults, to pass over
insults, and to forget wrongs. Now let the faithful spirit train himself with
the armour of righteousness on the fight hand and on the left, that through
honour and dishonour, through ill repute and good repute, the conscience may
be undisturbed in unwavering uprightness, not puffed up by praise and not
wearied out by revilings. The self-restraint of the religious should not be
gloomy, but sincere; no murmurs of complaint should be heard from those who
are never without the consolation of holy joys. The decrease of worldly means
should not be feared in the practice of works of mercy. Christian poverty is
always rich, because what it has is more than what it has not. Nor does the
poor man fear to labour in this world, to whom it is given to possess all
things in the Lord of all things. Therefore those who do the things which are
good must have no manner of fear lest the power of doing should fail them;
since in the gospel the widow's devotion is extolled in the case of her two
mites, and voluntary bounty gets its reward for a cup of cold water . For
the measure of our charitableness is fixed by the sincerity of our feelings,
and he that shows mercy on others will never want for mercy himself. The holy
widow of Sarepta discovered this, who offered the blessed Elias in the time of
famine one day's food, which was all she had, and putting the prophet's hunger
before her own needs, ungrudgingly gave up a handful of corn and a little oil
. But she did not lose what she gave in all faith, and in the vessels
emptied by her godly bounty a source of new plenty arose, that the fulness of
her substance might not be diminished by the holy purpose to which she had put
it, because she had never dreaded being brought to want.
III. As with the Saviour, so
with us, the devil tries to make our very piety its own snare.
But, dearly-beloved, doubt
not that the devil, who is the opponent of all virtues, is jealous of these
good desires, to which we are confident you are prompted of your own selves,
and that to this end he is arming the force of his malice in order to make
your very piety its own snare, and endeavouring to overcome by boastfulness
those whom he could not defeat by distrustfulness. For the vice of pride is a
near neighbour to good deeds, and arrogance ever lies in wait hard by virtue:
because it is hard for him that lives praise- worthily not to be caught by
man's praise unless, as it is written, "he that glorieth, glorieth in the
Lord[6].'' Whose intentions would that most naughty enemy not dare to attack?
whose fasting would he not seek to break down? seeing that, as has been shown
in the reading of the Gospel[6a], he did not restrain his wiles even against
the Saviour of the world Himself. For being exceedingly afraid of His fast,
which lasted 40 days and nights, he wished most cunningly to discover whether
this power of abstinence was given Him or His very own: for he need not fear
the defeat of all his treacherous designs, if Christ were throughout subject
to the same conditions as He is in body[7]. And so he first craftily examined
whether He were Himself the Creator of all things, such that He could change
the natures of material things as He pleased: secondly, whether under the form
of human flesh the Godhead lay concealed, to Whom it was easy to make the air
His chariot, and convey His earthly limbs through space. But when the Lord
preferred to resist him by the uprightness of His true Manhood, than to
display the power of His Godhead, to this he turns the craftiness of his third
design, that he might tempt by the lust of empire Him in Whom the signs of
Divine power had failed, and entice Him to the worship of himself by promising
the kingdoms of the world. But the devil's cleverness was rendered foolish by
God'S wisdom, so that the proud foe was bound by that which he had formerly
bound, and did not fear to assail Him Whom it behoved to be slain for the
world.
IV. The perverse turn even
their fasting into sin.
This adversary's wiles then
let us beware of, not only in the enticements of the palate, but also in our
purpose of abstinence. For he who knew how to bring death upon mankind by
means of food, knows also how to harm us through our very fasting, and using
the Manichaeans as his tools, as he once drove men to take what was forbidden,
so in the opposite direction he prompts them to avoid what is allowed. It is
indeed a helpful observance, which accustoms one to scanty diet, and checks
the appetite for dainties: but woe to the dogmatizing of those whose very
fasting is turned to sin. For they condemn the creature's nature to the
Creator's injury, and maintain that they are defiled by eating those things of
which they contend the devil, not God, is the author: although absolutely
nothing that exists is evil, nor is anything in nature included in the
actually bad. For the good Creator made all things good and the Maker of the
universe is one, "Who made the heaven and the earth, the sea and all that
is in them[8]." Of which whatever is granted to man for food and drink,'
is holy and clean after its kind. But if it is taken with immoderate greed, it
is the excess that disgraces the eaters and drinkers, not the nature of the
food or drink that defiles them. "For all things," as the Apostle
says, "are clean to the clean. But to the defiled and unbelieving nothing
is clean, but their mind and conscience is defiled[9]."
V. Be reasonable and
seasonable in your fasting.
But ye, dearly-beloved, the
holy offspring of the catholic Mother, who have been taught in the school of
Truth by God's Spirit, moderate your liberty with due reasonableness, knowing
that it is good to abstain even from things lawful, and at seasons of greater
strictness to distinguish one food from another with a view to giving up the
use of some kinds, not to condemning their nature. And so be not infected with
the error of those who are corrupted merely by their own ordinances,
"serving the creature rather than the Creator[1],'' and offering a
foolish abstinence to the service of the lights of heaven: seeing that they
have chosen to fast on the first and second days of the week in honour of the
sun and moon, proving themselves in this one instance of their perverseness
twice disloyal to God, twice blasphemous, by setting up their fast not only in
worship of the stars but also in contempt of the Lord's Resurrection. For they
reject the mystery of man's salvation and refuse to believe that Christ our
Lord in the true flesh of our nature was truly born, truly suffered, was truly
buried and was truly raised. And in consequence, condemn the day of our
rejoicing by the gloom of their fasting. And since to conceal their infidelity
they dare to be present at our meetings, at the Communion of the Mysteries[2]
they bring themselves sometimes, in order to ensure their concealment, to
receive Christ's Body with unworthy lips, though they altogether refuse to
drink the Blood of our Redemption. And this we make known to you, holy
brethren, that men of this sort may be detected by you by these signs, and
that they whose impious pretences have been discovered may be driven from the
society of the saints by priestly authority. For of such the blessed Apostle
Paul in his foresight warns God's Church, saying: "but we beseech you,
brethren, that ye observe those who make discussions and offences contrary to
the doctrine which ye learnt and turn away from them. For such persons serve
not Christ the Lord but their own belly, and by sweet words and fair speeches
beguile the hearts of the innocent[3]."
VI. Make your fasting a
reality by amendment in your lives.
Being therefore,
dearly-beloved, fully instructed by these admonitions of ours, which we have
often repeated in your ears in protest against abominable error, enter upon
the holy days of Lent with Godly devoutness, and prepare yourselves to win
God's mercy by your own works of mercy. Quench your anger, wipe out enmities,
cherish unity, and vie with one another in the offices of true humility. Rule
your slaves and those who are put under you with fairness, let none of them be
tortured by imprisonment or chains. Forego vengeance, forgive offences:
exchange severity for gentleness, indignation for meekness, discord for peace.
Let all men find us self-restrained, peaceable, kind: that our fastings may be
acceptable to God. For in a word to Him we offer the sacrifice of true
abstinence and true Godliness, when we keep ourselves from all evil: the
Almighty God helping us through all, to Whom with the Son and Holy Spirit
belongs one Godhead and one Majesty, for ever and ever. Amen:
SERMON XLVI: ON LENT, VIII.
I. Lent must be kept not
only by avoiding bodily impurity but also by avoiding errors of thought and
faith.
We know indeed,
dearly-beloved, your devotion to be so warm that in the fasting, which is the
forerunner of the Lord's Easter, many of you will have forestalled our
exhortations. But because the right practice of abstinence is needful not only
to the mortification of the flesh but also to the purification of the mind, we
desire your observance to be so complete that, as you cut down the pleasures
that be long to the lusts of the flesh, so you should banish the errors that
proceed from the imaginations of the heart. For he whose heart is polluted
with no misbelief prepares himself with true and reasonable purification for
the Paschal Feast, in which all the mysteries of our religion meet together.
For, as the Apostle says, that "all that is not of faith is sin[4],"
the fasting of those will be unprofitable and vain, whom the father of lying
deceives with his delusions, and who are not fed by Christ's true flesh. As
then we must with the whole heart obey the Divine commands and sound doctrine,
so we must use all foresight in abstaining from wicked imaginations. For the
mind then only keeps holy and spiritual fast when it rejects the food of error
and the poison of falsehood, which our crafty and wily foe plies us with more
treacherously now, when by the very return of the venerable Festival, the
whole church generally is admonished to understand the mysteries of its
salvation. For he is the true confessor and worshipper of Christ's
resurrection, who is not confused about His passion, nor deceived about His
bodily nativity. For some are so ashamed of the Gospel of the Cross of Christ,
as to impudently nullify the punishment which He underwent for the world's
redemption, and have denied the very nature of true flesh in the Lord, not
understanding how the impossible and unchangeable Deity of God's Word could
have so far condescended for man's salvation, as by His power not to lose His
own properties, and in His mercy to take on Him ours. And so in Christ, there
is a twofold form but one person, and the Son of God, who is at the same time
Son of Man, is one Lord, accepting the condition of a slave by the design of
loving-kindness, not by the law of necessity, because by His power He became
humble, by His power passible, by His power mortal; that for the destruction
of the tyranny of sin and death, the weak nature in Him might be capable of
punishment, and the strong nature not lose aught of its glory.
II. All the actions of
Christ reveal the presence of the twofold nature.
And so, dearly-beloved, when
in reading or hearing the Gospel you find certain things in our Lord Jesus
Christ subjected to injuries and certain things illumined by miracles, in such
a way that in the same Person now the Humanity appears, and now the Divinity
shines out, do not put down any of these things to a delusion, as if in Christ
there is either Manhood alone or Godhead alone, but believe both faithfully,
worship both right humbly; so that in the union of the Word and the Flesh
there may be no separation, and the bodily proofs may not seem delusive,
because the divine signs were evident in Jesus. The attestations to both
natures in Him are true and abundant, and by the depth of the Divine purpose
all concur to this end, that the inviolable Word not being separated from the
passible flesh, the Godhead may be understood as in all things partaker with
the flesh and flesh with the Godhead. And, therefore, must the Christian mind
that would eschew lies and be the disciple of truth, use the Gospel-story
confidently, and, as if still in company with the Apostles themselves,
distinguish what is visibly done by the Lord, now by the spiritual
understanding and now by the bodily organs of sight. Assign to the man that He
is born a boy of a woman: assign to God that His mother's virginity is not
harmed, either by conception or by bearing. Recognize "the form of a
slave" enwrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger, but acknowledge
that it was the Lord's form that was announced by angels, "proclaimed by
the elements[5]," adored by the wise men. Understand it of His humanity
that he did not avoid the marriage feast confess it Divine that he turned
water into wine. Let your own feelings explain to you why He shed tears over a
dead friend: let His Divine power be realized, when that same friend, after
mouldering in the grave four days, is brought to life and raised only by the
command of His voice. To make clay with spittle and earth was a work of the
body: but to anoint therewith and enlighten the eyes of the blind is an
undoubted mark of that power which had reserved for the revelation of its
glory that which it had not allowed to the early part of His natural life. It
is truly human to relieve bodily fatigue with rest in sleep: but it is truly
Divine to quell the violence of raging storms by a rebuking command. To set
food before the hungry denotes human kindness and a philanthropic spirit: but
with five loaves and two fishes to satisfy 5,000 men, besides women and
children, who would dare deny that to be the work of Deity? a Deity which, by
the co-operation of the functions of true flesh, showed not only itself in
Manhood, but also Manhood in itself; for the old, original wounds in man's
nature could not be healed, except by the Word of God taking to Himself flesh
from the Virgin's womb, whereby in one and the same Person flesh and the Word
co-existed.
III. Hold fast to the
statements of the Creed.
This belief in the Lord's
Incarnation, dearly-beloved, through which the whole Church is Christ's
body[6], hold firm with heart unshaken and abstain from all the lies of
heretics, and remember that your works of mercy will only then profit you, and
your strict continence only then bear fruit, when your minds are unsoiled by
any defilement from wrong opinions. Cast away the arguments of this world's
wisdom, for God hates them, and none can arrive by them at the knowledge of
the Truth, and keep fixed in your mind that which you say in the Creed.
Believe[7] the Son of God to be co-eternal with the Father by Whom all things
were made and without Whom nothing was made, born also according to the flesh
at the end of the times. Believe Him to have been in the body crucified, dead,
raised up, and lifted above the heights of heavenly powers, set on the
Father's right hand, about to come in the same flesh in which He ascended, to
judge the living and the dead. For this is what the Apostle proclaims to all
the faithful, saying: "if ye be risen with Christ seek the things which
are above, where Christ is sitting on the right hand of God. Set your mind on
the things that are above, not on the things that are upon the earth. For ye
are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God. For when Christ, our life,
shall appear, then shall ye also appear with Him in glory[8]."
IV. Use Lent for general
improvement in the whole round of Christian duties.
Relying, therefore,
dearly-beloved, on so great a promise, be heavenly not only in hope, but also
in conduct And though our minds must at all times be set on holiness of mind
and body, yet now during these 40 days of fasting bestir yourselves[9] to yet
more active works of piety, not only in the distribution of alms, which are
very effectual in attesting reform, but also in forgiving offences, and in
being merciful to those accused of wrongdoing, that the condition which God
has laid down between Himself and us may not be against us when we pray. For
when we say, in accordance with the Lord's teaching, "Forgive us our
debts, as we also forgive our debtors[1]," we ought with the whole heart
to carry out what we say. For then only will what we ask in the next clause
come to pass, that we be not led into temptation and freed from all evils[2]:
through our Lord Jesus Christ, Who with the Father and the Holy Spirit lives
and reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XLIX: ON LENT, XI.
I. The Lenten fast is
incumbent on all alike.
On all days and seasons,
indeed, dearly-beloved, some marks of the Divine goodness are set, and no part
of the year is destitute of sacred mysteries, in order that, so long as proofs
of our salvation meet us on all sides, we may the more eagerly accept the
never- ceasing calls of God's mercy. But all that is bestowed on the
restoration of human souls in the divers works and gifts of grace is put
before us more clearly and abundantly now, when no isolated portions of the
Faith are to be celebrated, but the whole together. For as the Easter festival
approaches, the greatest and most binding of fasts is kept, and its observance
is imposed on all the faithful without exception; because no one is so holy
that he ought not to be holier, nor so devout that he might not be devouter.
For who, that is set in the uncertainty of this life, can be found either
exempt from temptation, or free from fault? Who is there who would not wish
for additions to his virtue, or removal of his vice? seeing that adversity
does us harm, and prosperity spoils us, and it is equally dangerous not to
have what we want at all, and to have it in the fullest measure. There is a
trap in the fulness of riches, a trap in the straits of poverty. The one lifts
us up in pride, the other incites us to complaint. Health tries us, sickness
tries us, so long as the one fosters carelessness and the other sadness. There
is a snare in security, a snare in fear; and it matters not whether the mind
which is given over to earthly thoughts, is taken up with pleasures or with
cares; for it is equally unhealthy to languish under empty delights, or to
labour under racking anxiety.
II. The broad road is
crowded the narrow way of salvation nearly empty.
And thus is perfectly
fulfilled that assurance of the Truth, by which we learn that "narrow and
steep is the way that leads to life[3];" and whilst the breadth of the
way that leads to death is crowded with a large company, the steps are few of
those that tread the path of safety. And wherefore is the left road more
thronged than the right, save that the multitude is prone to wordly joys and
carnal goods? And although that which it desires is short-lived and uncertain,
yet men endure toil more willingly for the lust of pleasure than for love of
virtue. Thus while those who crave things visible are unnumbered, those who
prefer the eternal to the temporal are hardly to be found. And, therefore,
seeing that the blessed Apostle Paul says, "the things which are seen are
temporal, but the things which are not seen are eternal[4]," the path of
virtue lies hid and m concealment, to a certain extent, since "by hope we
were saved s," and true faith loves that above all things, which it
attains to without any intervention of the flesh. A great work and toil it is
then to keep our wayward heart from all sin, and, with the numberless
allurements of pleasure to ensnare it on all sides, not to let the vigour of
the mind give way to any attack. Who "toucheth pitch, and is not defiled
thereby[6] ?" who is not weakened by the flesh? who is not begrimed by
the dust? who, lastly, is of such purity as not to be polluted by those things
without which one cannot live? For the Divine teaching commands by the
Apostle's mouth that "they who have wives" should "be as though
they had none: and those that weep as though they wept not; and those that
rejoice as though they rejoiced not; and those that buy as though they
possessed not; and those that use this world as though they used it not; for
the fashion of this world passeth away[7]." Blessed, therefore, is the
mind that passes the time of its pilgrimage in chaste sobriety, and loiters
not in the things through which it has to walk, so that, as a stranger rather
than the possessor of its earthly abode, it may not be wanting in human
affections, and yet rest on the Divine promises.
III. Satan is incited to
fresh efforts at this season of the year.
And, dearly-beloved, no
season requires and bestows this fortitude more than the present, when by the
observance of a special strictness a habit is acquired which must be
persevered in. For it is well known to you that this is the time when
throughout the world the devil waxes furious, and the Christian army has to
combat him, and any that have grown lukewarm and slothful, or that are
absorbed in worldly cares, must now be furnished with spiritual armour and
their ardour kindled for the fray by the heavenly trumpet, inasmuch as he,
through whose envy death came into the world[8], is now consumed with the
strongest jealousy and now tortured with the greatest vexation. For he sees[9]
whole tribes of the human race brought in afresh to the adoption of God's sons
and the offspring of the New Birth multiplied through the virgin fertility of
the Church. He sees himself robbed of all his tyrannic power, and driven from
the hearts of those he once possessed, while from either sex thousands of the
old, the young, the middle-aged are snatched away from him, and no one is
debarred by sin either of his own or original, where justification is not paid
for deserts, but simply given as a free gift. He sees, too, those that have
lapsed, and have been deceived by his treacherous snares, washed in the tears
of penitence and, by the Apostle's key unlocking the gates of mercy, admitted
to the benefit of reconciliation'[1]. He feels, moreover, that the day of the
Lord's Passion is at hand, and that he is crushed by the power of that cross
which in Christ, Who was free from all debt of sin, was the world's ransom and
not the penalty of sin.
IV. Self-examination by the
standard of God's commands the right occupation in Lent.
And so, that the malice of
the fretting foe may effect nothing by its rage, a keener devotion must be
awaked to the performance of the Divine commands, in order that we may enter
on the season, when all the mysteries of the Divine mercy meet together, with
preparedness both of mind and body, invoking the guidance and help of God,
that we may be strong to fulfil all things through Him, without Whom we can do
nothing. For the injunction is laid on us, in order that we may seek the aid
of Him Who lays it Nor must any one excuse himself by reason of his weakness,
since He Who has granted the will, also gives the power, as the blessed
Apostle James says, "If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, Who
giveth to all liberally and upbraideth not, and it shall be given
him[2]." Which of the faithful does not know what virtues he ought to
cultivate, and what vices to fight against? Who is so partial or so unskilled
a judge of his own conscience as not to know what ought to be removed, and
what ought to be developed? Surely no one is so devoid of reason as not to
understand the character of his mode of life, or not to know the secrets of
his heart. Let him not then please himself in everything, nor judge himself
according to the delights of the flesh, but place his every habit in the scale
of the Divine commands, where, some things being ordered to be done and others
forbidden, he can examine himself in a true balance by weighing the actions of
his life according to this standard. For the designing mercy of God[3] has set
up the brightest mirror in His commandments, wherein a man may see his mind's
face and realize its conformity or dissimilarity to God's image: with the
specific purpose that, at least, during the days of our Redemption and
Restoration, we may throw off awhile our carnal cares and restless
occupations, and betake ourselves from earthly matters to heavenly.
V. Forgiveness of our own
sins requires that we should forgive others.
But because, as it is
written, "in many things we all stumble[4]," let the feeling of
mercy be first aroused and the faults of others against us be forgotten; that
we may not violate by any love of revenge that most holy compact, to which we
bind ourselves in the Lord's prayer, and when we say "forgive us our
debts as we also forgive our debtors," let us not be hard in forgiving,
because we must be possessed either with the desire for revenge, or with the
leniency of gentleness, and for man, who is ever exposed to the dangers of
temptations, it is more to be desired that his own faults should not need
punishments than that he should get the faults of others punished. And what is
more suitable to the Christian faith than that not only in the Church, but
also in all men's homes, there should be forgiveness of sins? Let threats be
laid aside; let bonds be loosed, for he who will not loose them will bind
himself with them much more disastrously. For whatsoever one man resolves upon
against another, he decrees against himself by his own terms. Whereas
"blessed are the merciful, for God shall have mercy on them[6] :"
and He is just and kind in His judgments, allowing some to be in the power of
others to this end, that under fair government may be preserved both the
profitableness of discipline and the kindliness of clemency, and that no one
should dare to refuse that pardon to another's shortcomings, which he wishes
to receive for his own.
VI. Reconciliation between
enemies and alms-giving are also Lenten duties.
Furthermore, as the Lord
says, that "the peacemakers are blessed, because they shall be called
sons of God[7]," let all discords and enmities be laid aside, and let no
one think to have a share in the Paschal feast that has neglected to restore
brotherly peace. For with the Father on high, he that is not in charity with
the brethren, will not be reckoned in the number of His sons. Furthermore, in
the distribution of alms and care of the poor, let our Christian fast-times be
fat and abound; and let each bestow on the weak and destitute those dainties
which he denies himself. Let pains be taken that all may bless God with one
mouth, and let him that gives some portion of substance understand that he is
a minister of the Divine mercy; for God has placed the cause of the poor in
the hand of the liberal man; that the sins which are washed away either by the
waters of baptism, or the tears of repentance, may be also blotted out by
alms- giving; for the Scripture says, "As water extinguisheth fire, so
alms extinguisheth sin[8]." Through our Lord Jesus Christ, &c.
SERMON LI: A HOMILY
DELIVERED ON THE SATURDAY BEFORE THE SECOND SUNDAY IN LENT--ON THE
TRANSFIGURATION, S. Mat.[1] . xvii. 1--13.
I. Peter's confession shown
to lead up to the Transfiguration.
The Gospel lesson,
dearly-beloved, which has reached the inner hearing of our minds through our
bodily ears, calls us to the understanding of a great mystery, to which we
shall by the help of God's grace the better attain, if we turn our attention
to what is narrated just before.
The Saviour of mankind,
Jesus Christ, in founding that faith, which recalls the wicked to
righteousness and the dead to life, used to instruct His disciples by
admonitory teaching and by miraculous acts to the end that He, the Christ,
might be believed to be at once the Only-begotten of God and the Son of Man.
For the one without the other was of no avail to salvation, and it was equally
dangerous to have believed the Lord Jesus Christ to be either only God without
manhood, or only man without Godhead[9], since both had equally to be
confessed, because just as true manhood existed in His Godhead, so true
Godhead existed in His Manhood. To strengthen, therefore, their most wholesome
knowledge of this belief, the Lord had asked His disciples, among the various
opinions of others, what they themselves believed, or thought about Him:
whereat the Apostle Peter, by the revelation of the most High Father passing
beyond things corporeal and surmounting things human by the eyes of his mind,
saw Him to be Son of the living God, and acknowledged the glory of the
Godhead, because he looked not at the substance of His flesh and blood alone;
and with this lofty faith Christ was so well pleased that he received the
fulness of blessing, and was endued with the holy firmness of the inviolable
Rock on which the Church should be built and conquer the gates of hell and the
laws of death, so that, in loosing or binding the petitions of any whatsoever,
only that should be ratified in heaven which had been settled by the judgment
of Peter.
II. The same continued.
But this exalted and
highly-praised understanding, dearly-beloved, had also to be instructed on the
mystery of Christ's lower substance, lest the Apostle's faith, being raised to
the glory of confessing the Deity in Christ, should deem the reception of our
weakness unworthy of the impassible God, and incongruous, and should believe
the human nature to be so glorified in Him as to be incapable of suffering
punishment, or being dissolved in death. And, therefore, when the Lord said
that He must go to Jerusalem, and suffer many things from the elders and
scribes and chief of the priests, and the third day rise again, the blessed
Peter who, being illumined with light from above, was burning with the heat of
his confession, rejected their mocking insults and the disgrace of the most
cruel death, with, as he thought, a loyal and outspoken contempt, but was
checked by a kindly rebuke from Jesus and animated with the desire to share
His suffering. For the Saviour's exhortation that followed, instilled and
taught this, that they who wished to follow Him should deny themselves. and
count the loss of temporal flyings as light in the hope of things eternal;
because he alone could save his soul that did not fear to lose it for Christ.
In order, therefore, that the Apostles might entertain this happy, constant
courage with their whole heart, and have no tremblings about the harshness of
taking up the cross, and that they might not be ashamed of the punishment of
Christ, nor think what He endured disgraceful for themselves (for the
bitterness of suffering was to be displayed without despite to His; glorious
power), Jesus took Peter and James and his brother John, and ascending a very
high' mountain with them apart, showed them the brightness of His glory;
because, although they had recognised the majesty of God in Him, yet the power
of His body, wherein His Deity was contained, they did not know. And,
therefore, rightly and significantly, had He promised that certain of the
disciples standing by should not taste death till they saw "the Son of
Man coming in His Kingdom[2]," that is, in the kingly brilliance which,
as specially belonging to the nature of His assumed Manhood, He wished to be
conspicuous to these three men. For the unspeakable and unapproachable vision
of the Godhead Itself which is reserved tilt eternal life for the pure in
heart, they could in no wise look upon and see while still surrounded with
mortal flesh. The Lord displays His glory, therefore, before chosen witnesses,
and invests that bodily shape which He shared with others with such splendour,
that His face was like the sun's brightness and His garments equalled the
whiteness of snow.
III. The object and the
meaning of the Transfiguration.
And in this Transfiguration
the foremost object was to remove the offence of the cross from the disciple's
heart, and to prevent their faith being disturbed by the humiliation of His
voluntary Passion by revealing to them the excellence of His hidden dignity.
But with no less foresight, the foundation was laid of the Holy Church's hope,
that the whole body of Christ might realize the character of the change which
it would have to receive, and that the members might promise themselves a
share in that honour which had already shone forth in their Head. About which
the Lord bad Himself said, when He spoke of the majesty of His coming,
"Then shall the righteous shine as the sun in their Father's
Kingdom[3]," whilst the blessed Apostle Paul bears witness to the
self-same thing, and says: "for I reckon that the sufferings of this thee
are not worthy to be compared with the future glory which shall be revealed in
us[4]:" and again, "for ye are dead, and your life is hid with
Christ in GOD. For when Christ our life shall appear, then shall ye also
appear with Him in glory[5]." But to confirm the Apostles and assist them
to all knowledge, still further instruction was conveyed by that miracle.
IV. The significance of the
appearance of Moses and Elias.
For Moses and Elias, that is
the Law and the Prophets, appeared talking with the LORD; that in the presence
of those five men might most truly be fulfilled what was said: "In two or
three witnesses stands every word[6]." What more stable, what more
steadfast than this word, in the proclamation of which the trumpet of the Old
and of the New Testament joins, and the documentary evidence of the ancient
witnesses[7] combine with the teaching of the Gospel? For the pages of both
covenants[8] corroborate each other, and He Whom under the veil of mysteries
the types that went before had promised, is displayed clearly and conspicously
by the splendour of the present glory. Because, as says the blessed John,
"the law was given through Moses: but grace and truth came through Jesus
Christ[9]," in Whom is fulfilled both the promise of prophetic figures
and the purpose of the legal ordinances: for He both teaches the truth of
prophecy by His presence, and renders the commands possible through grace.
V. S. Peter's suggestion
contrary to the Divine order.
The Apostle Peter,
therefore, being excited by the revelation of these mysteries, despising
things mundane and scorning things earthly, was seized with a sort of frenzied
craving for the things eternal, and being filled with rapture at the whole
vision, desired to make his abode with Jesus in the place where he had been
blessed with the manifestation of His glory. Whence also he says, "Lord,
it is good for us to be here: if thou wilt let us make three tabernacles[1],
one for Thee, one for Moses, and one for Elias." But to this proposal the
LORD made no answer, signifying that what he wanted was not indeed; wicked,
but contrary to the Divine order: since the world could not be saved, except;
by Christ's death, and by the LORD'S example the faithful were called upon to
believe that, although there ought not to be any doubt about the promises of
happiness, yet we should understand that amidst the trials of this life we
must ask for the power of endurance rather than the glory, because the
joyousness of reigning cannot precede the times of suffering.
VI. The import of the
Father's voice from the cloud.
And so "while He was
yet speaking, behold a bright cloud overshadowed them, and behold a voice out
of the cloud, saying, "This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased;
hear ye Him." The Father was indeed present in the Son, and in the LORD'S
brightness, which He had tempered to the disciples' sight, the Father's
Essence was not separated from the Only- begotten: but, in order to emphasize
the two-fold personality, as the effulgence of the Son's body displayed the
Son to their sight, so the Father's voice from out the cloud announced the
Father to their hearing. And when this voice was heard, "the disciples
fell upon their faces, and were sore afraid," trembling at the majesty,
not only of the Father, but also of the Son: for they now had a deeper insight
into the undivided Deity of Both: and in their fear they did not separate the
One from the Other, because they doubted not in their faith[2]. That was a
wide and manifold testimony, therefore, and contained a fuller meaning than
struck the ear. For when the Father said, "This is My beloved Son, in
Whom, &c.," was it not clearly meant, "This is My Son,"
Whose it is to be eternally from Me and with Me? because the Begetter is not
anterior to the Begotten, nor the Begotten posterior to the Begetter.
"This is My Son," Who is separated from Me, neither by Godhead, nor
by power, nor by eternity. "This is My Son," not adopted, but
true-born, not created from another source, but begotten of Me: nor yet made
like Me from another nature, but born equal to Me of My nature. "This is
My Son," "through Whom all things were made, and without Whom was
nothing made[2a]" because all things that I do He doth in like manner:
and whatever I perform, He performs with Me inseparably and without
difference: for the Son is in the Father and the Father in the Son[2a], and
Our Unity is never divided: and though I am One Who begot, and He the Other
Whom I begot, yet is it wrong for you to think anything of Him which is not
possible of Me. "This is My Son," Who sought not by grasping, and
seized not in greediness[2a], that equality with Me which He has, but
remaining in the form of My glory, that He might carry out Our common plan for
the restoration of mankind, He lowered the unchangeable Godhead even to the
form of a slave.
VII. Who it is we have to
hear.
"Here ye Him,"
therefore, unhesitatingly, in Whom I am throughout well pleased, and by Whose
preaching I am manifested, by Whose humiliation I am glorified; because He is
"the Truth and the Life[2b]," He is My "Power and Wisdom[2b].''
"Hear ye Him," Whom the mysteries of the Law have foretold, Whom the
mouths of prophets have sung. "Hear ye Him," Who redeems the world
by His blood, Who binds the devil, and carries off his chattels, Who destroys
the bond of sin, and the compact of the transgression. Hear ye Him, Who opens
the way to heaven, and by the punishment of the cross prepares for you the
steps of ascent to the Kingdom? Why tremble ye at being redeemed? why fear ye
to be healed of your wounds? Let that happen which Christ wills and I will.
Cast away all fleshly fear, and arm yourselves with faithful constancy; for it
is unworthy that ye should fear in the Saviour's Passion what by His good gift
ye shall not have to fear even at your own end.
VIII. The Father's words
have a universal application to the whole Church.
These things,
dearly-beloved, were said not for their profit only, who heard them with their
own ears, but in these three Apostles the whole Church has learnt all that
their eyes saw and their ears heard. Let all men's faith then be established,
according to the preaching of the most holy Gospel, and let no one be ashamed
of Christ's cross, through which the world was redeemed. And let not any one
fear to suffer for righteousness' sake, or doubt of the fulfilment of the
promises, for this reason, that through toil we pass to rest and through death
to life; since all the weakness of our humility was assumed by Him, in Whom,
if we abide in the acknowledgment and love of Him, we conquer as He conquered,
and receive what he promised, because, whether to the performance of His
commands or to the endurance of adversities, I the Father's fore-announcing
voice should always be sounding in our ears, saying, "This is My beloved
Son, in Whom I am well pleased; hear ye Him:" Who liveth and reigneth,
with the Father and the Holy Ghost, for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON LIV: ON THE PASSION,
III.; DELIVERED ON THE SUNDAY BEFORE EASTER.
I. The two-fold Nature of
Christ set forth.
Among all the works of GOD's
mercy, dearly-beloved, which from the beginning have been bestowed upon men's
salvation, none is more wondrous, and none more sublime, than that Christ was
crucified for the world. For to this mystery all the mysteries of the ages
preceding led up, and every variation which the will of GOD ordained in
sacrifices, in prophetic signs, and in the observances of the Law, foretold
that this was fixed, and promised its fulfilment: so that now types and
figures are at an end, and we find our profit in believing that accomplished
which before we found our profit in looking forward to. In all things,
therefore, dearly-beloved, which pertain to the Passion of our LORD Jesus
Christ, the Catholic Faith maintains and demands that we acknowledge the two
Natures to have met in our Redeemer, and while their properties remained, such
a union of both Natures to have been effected that, from the thee when, as the
cause of mankind required, in the blessed Virgin's womb, "the Word became
flesh," we may not think of Him as GOD without that which is man, nor as
man without that which is GOD. Each Nature does indeed express its real
existence by actions that distinguish it, but neither separates itself from
connexion with the other. Nothing is wanting there on either side; in the
majesty the humility is complete, in the humility the majesty is complete: and
the unity does not introduce confusion, nor does the distinctiveness destroy
the unity. The one is passible, the other inviolable; and yet the degradation
belongs to the same Person, as does the glory. He is present at once in
weakness and in power; at once capable of death and the vanquisher of it.
Therefore, GOD took on Him whole Manhood, and so blended the two Natures
together by means of His mercy and power, that each Nature was present in the
other, and neither passed out of its own properties into the other.
II. The two Natures acted
conjointly, and the human sufferings were not compulsory, but in accordance
with the Divine will.
But because the design of
that mystery which was ordained for our restoration before the eternal ages,
was not to be carried out without human weakness and without Divine power[3],
both "form" does that which is proper to it in common with the
other, the Word, that is, performing that which is the Word's and the flesh
that which is of the flesh. One of them gleams bright with miracles, the other
i succumbs to injuries. The one departs not from equality with the Father's
glory, the other leaves not the nature of our race. But nevertheless even His
very endurance of sufferings does not so far expose Him to a participation in
our humility as to separate Him from the power of the Godhead. All the mockery
and insults, all the persecution and pain which the madness of the wicked
inflicted on the LORD, was not endured of necessity, but undertaken of
free-will: "for the Son of Man came to seek and to save that which had
perished[4]:" and He used the wickedness of His persecutors for the
redemption of all men in such a way that in the mystery of His Death and
Resurrection even His murderers could have been saved, if they had believed.
III Judas' infamy has never
been exceeded.
And hence, Judas, thou art
proved more criminal and unhappier than all; for when repentance should have
called thee back to the LORD, despair dragged thee to the halter. Thou
shouldest have awaited the completion of thy crime, and have put off thy
ghastly death by hanging, until Christ's Blood was shed for all sinners. And
among the many miracles and gifts of the LORDS which might have aroused thy
conscience, those holy mysteries, at least, might have rescued thee from thy
headlong fall, which at the Paschal supper thou hadst received, being even
then detected in thy treachery by the sign of Divine knowledge. Why dost thou
distrust the goodness of Him, Who did not repel thee from the communion of His
body and blood, Who did not deny thee the kiss of peace when thou camest with
crowds and a band of armed men to seize Him. But O man that nothing could
convert, O "spirit going and not returning[5]," thou didst follow
thy heart's rage, and, the devil standing at thy right hand, didst turn the
wickedness, which thou hadst prepared against the life of all the saints, to
thine own destruction, so that, because thy crime had exceeded all measure of
punishment, thy wickedness might make thee thine own judge, thy punishment
allow thee to be thine own hangman.
IV. Christ voluntarily
bartered His glory for our weakness.
When, therefore, "GOD
was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself[6]," and the Creator
Himself was wearing the creature which was to be restored to the image of its
Creator; and after the Divinely-miraculous works had been performed, the
performance of which the spirit of prophecy had once predicted, "then
shall the eyes of the blind be opened and the ears of the deaf shall hear;
then shall the lame man leap as a hart, and the tongue of the dumb shall be
plain[7];" Jesus knowing that the thee was now come for the fulfilment of
His glorious Passion, said, "My soul is sorrowful even unto
death[8];" and again, "Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass
from Me[8]." And these words, expressing a certain fear, show His desire
to heal the affection of our weakness by sharing them, and to check our fear
of enduring pain by undergoing it. In our Nature, therefore, the LORD trembled
with our fear, that He might fully clothe our weakness and our frailty with
the completeness of His own strength. For He had come into this world a rich
and merciful Merchant from the skies, and by a wondrous exchange had entered
into a bargain of salvation with us, receiving ours and giving His, honour for
insults, salvation for pain, life for death: and He Whom more than 12,000 of
the angel-hosts might have served[9] for the annihilation of His persecutors,
preferred to entertain our fears, rather than employ His own power.
V. S. Peter was the first
to' benefit by his Master's humiliation.
And how much this
humiliation conferred upon all the faithful, the most blessed Apostle Peter
was the first to prove, who, after the fierce blast of threatening cruelty had
dismayed him, quickly changed, and was restored to vigour, finding remedy from
the great Pattern, so that the suddenly- shaken member returned to the
firmness of the Head. For the bond-servant could not be "greater than the
lord, nor the disciple greater than the master and he could not have
vanquished the trembling of human frailty had not the Vanquisher of Death
first feared. The LORD, therefore, "looked back upon Peter[9a]," and
amid the calumnies of priests, the falsehoods of witnesses, the injuries of
those that scourged and spat upon Him, met His dismayed disciple with those
eyes wherewith He had foreseen his dismay: and the gaze of the Truth entered
into him, on whose heart correction must be wrought, as if the LORD'S voice
were making itself heard there, and saying, Whither goest thou, Peter? why
retirest thou upon thyself? turn thou to Me, put thy trust in Me, follow Me:
this is the thee of My Passion, the hour of thy suffering is not yet come. Why
dost thou fear what thou, too, shalt overcome? Let not the weakness, in which
I share, confound thee. I was fearful for thee; do thou be confident of Me.
VI. The mad counsel of the
Jews was turned to their own destruction.
"And when morning was
come all the chief priests and elders of the people took counsel against Jesus
to put him to death[1]." This morning, O ye Jews, was for you not the
rising, but the setting of the sun, nor did the wonted daylight visit your
eyes, but a night of blackest darkness brooded on your naughty hearts. This
morning overthrew for you the temple and its altars, did away with the Law and
the Prophets, destroyed the Kingdom and the priesthood, turned all your feasts
into eternal mourning. For ye resolved on a mad and bloody counsel, ye
"fat bulls," ye "many oxen," ye "roaring" wild
beasts, ye rabid "dogs[1a]," to give up to death the Author of life
and the LORD of glory; and, as if the enormity of your fury could be palliated
by employing the verdict of him, who ruled your province, you lead Jesus bound
to Pilate's judgment, that the terror- stricken judge being overcome by your
persistent shouts, you might choose a man that was a murderer for pardon, and
demand the crucifixion of the Saviour of the world. After this condemnation of
Christ, brought about more by the cowardice than the power of Pilate, who with
washed hands but polluted mouth sent Jesus to the cross with the very lips
that had pronounced Him innocent, the licence of the people, obedient to the
looks of the priests, heaped many insults on the LORD, and the frenzied mob
wreaked its rage on Him, Who meekly and voluntarily endured it all. But
because, dearly- beloved, the whole story is too long to go through to-day,
let us put off the rest till Wednesday, when the reading of the LORD'S Passion
will be repeated[2]. For the LORD will grant to your prayers, that of His own
free gift we may fulfil our promise: through our LORD Jesus Christ, Who liveth
and reigneth for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON LV: ON THE LORD'S
PASSION IV., DELIVERED ON WEDNESDAY IN HOLY WEEK.
I. The difference between
the penitence and blasphemy of the two robbers is a type of the human race.
That which we owe to your
expectations, dearly-beloved, must be paid through the LORD'S bountiful answer
to your prayers that He Who has made you eager in the demanding would make us
fit for the performing.
In speaking but lately of
the LORD'S Passion we reached the point in the Gospel story, where Pilate is
said to have yielded to the Jews' wicked shouts that Jesus should be
crucified. And so when all things had been accomplished, which the Godhead
veiled in frail flesh[3] permitted, Jesus Christ the Son of GOD was fixed to
the cross which He had also been carrying, two robbers being similarly
crucified, one on His right hand, and the other on the left: so that even in
the incidents of the cross might be displayed that difference which in His
judgment must be made in the case of all men; for the believing robber's faith
was a type of those who are to be saved, and the blasphemer's wickedness
prefigured those who are to be damned. Christ's Passion, therefore, contains
the mystery of our salvation, and of the instrument which the iniquity of the
Jews prepared for His punishment, the Redeemer's power has made for us the
stepping-stone to glory[4]: and that Passion the LORD Jesus so underwent for
the salvation of all men that, while hanging there nailed to the wood, He
entreated the Father's mercy for His murderers, and said, "Father,
forgive them, for they know' not what they do[5]."
II. The chief priests showed
utter ignorance of Scripture in their taunts.
But the chief priests, for
whom the Saviour sought forgiveness, rendered the torture of the cross yet
worse by the barbs of railery; and at Him, on Whom they could vent no more
fury with their hands, they hurled the weapons of their tongues, saying,
"He saved others; Himself he cannot save. If He is the King of Israel,
let Him now come down from the cross, and we believe Him[6]." From what
spring of error, from what pool of hatred, O ye Jews, do ye drink such
poisonous blasphemies? What master informed you, what teaching convinced you
that you ought to believe Him to be King of Israel and Son Of GOD, who should
either not allow Himself to be crucified, or should shake Himself free from
the binding nails. The mysteries of the Law, the sacred observances of the
Passover, the mouths of the Prophets never told you this: whereas you did find
truly and oft-times written that which applies to your abominable wicked-doing
and to the LORD'S voluntary suffering. For He Himself says by Isaiah, "I
gave My back to the scourges, My cheeks to the palms of the hand, I turned not
My face from the shame of spitting[7]." He Himself says by David,
"They gave Me gall for My food, and in My thirst they supplied Me with
vinegar[8]." and again, "Many dogs came about Me, the council of
evil-doers beset Me. They pierced My hands and My feet, they counted all My
bones. But they themselves watched and gazed on Me, they parted My raiment
among them, and for My robe they cast lots[8]." And lest the course of
your own evil doings should seem to have been foretold, and no power in the
Crucified predicted, ye read not, indeed, that the LORD descended from the
cross, but ye did read, "The LORD reigned on the tree[9]."
II. The triumph of the Cross
is immediate and effective.
The Cross of Christ,
therefore, symbolizes[1] the true altar of prophecy, on which the oblation of
man's nature should be celebrated by means of a salvation-bringing Victim.
There the blood of the spotless Lamb blotted out the consequences of the
ancient trespass: there the whole tyranny of the devil's hatred was crushed,
and humiliation triumphed gloriously over the lifting up of pride: for so
swift was the effect of Faith that of the robbers crucified with Christ, the
one who believed in Christ as the Son of GOD entered paradise justified. Who
can unfold the mystery of so great a boon? who can state the power of so
wondrous a change? In a moment of thee the guilt of long evil-doing is done
away; clinging to the cross, amid the cruel tortures of his struggling soul,
he passes over to Christ; and to him, on whom his own wickedness had brought
punishment, Christ's grace now gives a crown.
IV. When the last act in the
tragedy was over how must the Jews have felt?
And then, having now tasted
the vinegar, the produce of that vineyard which had degenerated in spite of
its Divine Planter, and had turned to the sourness of a foreign vine[1a], the
LORD says, "it is finished;" that is, the Scriptures are fulfilled:
there is no more for Me to abide from the fury of the raging people: I have
endured all that I foretold I should suffer. The mysteries of weakness are
completed, let the proofs of power be produced. And so He bowed the head and
yielded up His Spirit and gave that Body, Which should be raised again on the
third day, the rest of peaceful slumber. And when the Author of Life was
undergoing this mysterious phase, and at so great a condescension of GOD'S
Majesty, the foundations of the whole world were shaken, when all creation
condemned their wicked crime by its upheaval, and the very elements of the
world delivered a plain verdict against the criminals, what thoughts, what
heart-searchings had ye, O Jews, when the judgment of the universe went
against you, and your wickedness could not be recalled, the crime having been
done? what confusion covered you? what torment seized your hearts?
V. Chastity, and charity are
the two things most needful in preparing for Easter Communion.
Seeing therefore,
dearly-beloved, that GOD'S Mercy is so great, that He has deigned to justify.
by faith many even from among such a nation, and had adopted into the company
of the patriarchs and into the number of the chosen people us who were once
perishing in the deep darkness of our old ignorance, let us mount to the
summit of our hopes not sluggishly nor in sloth; but prudently and faithfully
reflecting from what captivity and from how miserable a bondage, with what
ransom we were purchased, by how strong an arm led out, let us glorify GOD in
our body: that we may show Him dwelling in us, even by the uprightness of our
manner of life: And because no virtues are worthier or more excellent than
merciful loving-kindness and unblemished chastity, let us more especially
equip ourselves with these weapons, so that, raised from the earth, as it were
on the two wings of active charity and shining purity, we may win a place in
heaven. And whosoever, aided by GOD'S grace, is filled with this desire and
glories not in himself, but in the LORD, over his progress, pays due honour to
the Easter mystery. His threshold the angel of destruction does not cross, for
it is marked with the Lamb's blood and the sign of the cross[1b]. He fears not
the plagues of Egypt, and leaves his foes overwhelmed by the same waters by
which he himself was saved. And so, dearly-beloved, with minds and bodies
purified let us embrace the wondrous mystery of our salvation, and, cleansed
from all "the leaven of our old wickedness, let us keep[1b]" the
LORD'S Passover with due observance: so that, the Holy Spirit guiding us, we
may be "separated" by no temptations "from the love of
Christ[1b]," Who bringing peace by His blood to all things, has returned
to the loftiness of the Father's glory, and yet not forsaken the lowliness of
those who serve Him to Whom is the honour and the glory for ever and ever.
Amen.
SERMON LVIII. (ON THE
PASSION, VII.)
I. The reason of Christ
suffering at the Paschal Feast.
I know indeed,
dearly-beloved, that the Easter festival partakes of so sublime a mystery as
to surpass not only the slender perceptions of my humility, but even the
powers of great intellects. But I must not consider the greatness of the
Divine work in such a way as to distrust or to feel ashamed of the service
which I owe; for we may not hold our peace upon the mystery of man's
salvation, even if it cannot be explained. But, your prayers aiding us, we
believe GOD'S Grace will be granted, to sprinkle the barrenness of our heart
with the dew of His inspiration: that by the pastor's mouth things may be
proclaimed which are useful to the ears of his holy flock. For when the Lord,
the Giver of all good things, says: "open thy mouth, and I will fill
it[2]," we dare likewise to reply in the prophet's words: "Lord,
Thou shale open my lips, and my mouth shall shew forth Thy praise[3]."
Therefore beginning, dearly- beloved, to handle once more the Gospel-story of
the Lord's Passion, we understand it was part of the Divine plan that the
profane chiefs of the Jews and the unholy priests, who had often sought
occasion of venting their rage on Christ, should receive the power of
exercising their fury at no other time than the Paschal festival. For the
things which had long been promised under mysterious figures had to be
fulfilled in all clearness; for instance, the True Sheep had to supersede the
sheep which was its antitype, and the One Sacrifice to bring to an end the
multitude of different sacrifices. For all those things which had been
divinely ordained through Moses about the sacrifice of the lamb had prophesied
of Christ and truly announced the slaying of Christ. In order, therefore, that
the shadows should yield to the substance and types cease in the presence of
the Reality, the ancient observance is removed by a new Sacrament, victim
passes into Victim, blood is wiped away by Blood, and the law-ordained Feast
is fulfilled by being changed.
II. The leading Jews broke
their own Law, as well as failed to apprehend the new dispensation in
destroying Christ.
And hence, when the chief
priests gathered the scribes and elders of the people together to their
council, and the minds of all the priests were occupied with the purpose of
doing wrong to Jesus, the teachers of the law put themselves without the law,
and by their own voluntary failure in duty abolished their ancestral
ceremonies. For when the Paschal feast began, those who ought to have adorned
the temple, cleansed the vessels, provided the victims, and employed a holier
zeal in the purifications that the law enjoined, seized with the fury of
traitorous hate, give themselves up to one work, and with uniform cruelty
conspire for one crime, though they were doomed to gain nothing by the
punishment of innocence and the condemnation of righteousness, except the
failure to apprehend the new mysteries and the violation of the old. The
chiefs, therefore, in providing against a tumult arising on a holy day[4],
showed zeal not for the festival, but for a heinous crime; and their anxiety
served not the cause of religion, but their own incrimination. For these
careful pontiffs and anxious priests feared the occurrence of seditious riots
on the principal feast-day, not lest the people should do wrong, but lest
Christ should escape.
III. Jesus instituting the
Blessed Sacrament showed mercy to the Traitor Judas to the last.
But Jesus, sure of His
purpose and undaunted in carrying out His Father's will, fulfilled the New
Testament and founded a new Passover. For while the disciples were lying down
with Him at the mystic Supper, and when discussion was proceeding in the hall
of Caiaphas how Christ might be put to death, He, ordaining the Sacrament of
His Body and Blood, was teaching them what kind of Victim must be offered up
to God, and not even from this mystery was the betrayer kept away, in order to
show that he was exasperated by no personal wrong, but had determined
beforehand of his own free-will upon his treachery. For he was his own source
of ruin and cause of perfidy, following the guidance of the devil and refusing
to have Christ as director. And so when the Lord said, "Verily I say to
you that one of you is about to betray Me," He showed that His betrayer's
conscience was well known to Him, not confounding the traitor by harsh or open
rebukes, but meeting him with mild and silent warnings that he who had never
been sent astray by rejection, might the easier be set right by repentance.
Why, unhappy Judas, dose thou not make use of so great long- suffering?
Behold, the Lord spares thy wicked attempts; Christ betrays thee to none save
thyself. Neither thy name nor thy person is discovered, but only the secrets
of thy heart are touched by the word of truth and mercy. The honour of the
apostolic rank is not denied thee, nor yet a share in the Sacraments. Return
to thy right mind; lay aside thy madness and be wise. Mercy invites thee,
Salvation knocks at the door, Life recalls thee to life. Lo, thy stainless and
guiltless fellow-disciples shudder at the hint of thy crime, and all tremble
for themselves till the author of the treachery is declared. For they are
saddened not by the accusations of conscience, but by the uncertainty of man's
changeableness; fearing lest what each knew against himself be less true than
what the Truth Himself foresaw. But thou abusest the Lord's patience in this
panic of the saints, and believest that thy bold front hides thee. Thou addest
impudence to guilt, and art not frightened by so clear a test And when the
others refrain from the food in which the Lord had set His judgment, thou dost
not withdraw thy band from the dish, because thy mind is not turned aside from
the crime.
IV. Various incidents of the
Passion .further explained and the reality of Christ's sufferings asserted.
And thus it followed,
dearly-beloved, that as John the Evangelist has narrated, when the Lord
offered the bread which He had dipped to His betrayer, more clearly to point
him out, the devil entirely seized Judas, and now, by his veritable act of
wickedness, took possession of one whom he had already bound down by his evil
designs. For only in body was he lying there with those at meat: in mind he
was arming the hatred of the priests, the falseness of the witnesses, and the
fury of the ignorant mob, At last the Lord, seeing on what a gross crime bent
says, "What thou doest do Judas was quickly[5]." This is the voice
not of command but of permission, and not of fear but of readiness: He, that
has power over all times, shows that He puts no hindrance in the way of the
traitor, and carries out the Father's will for the redemption of the world in
such a way as neither to promote nor to fear the crime which His persecutors
were preparing. When Judas, therefore, at the devil's persuasion, departed
from Christ, and cut himself off from the unity of the Apostolic body, the
Lord, without bring disturbed by any fear, but anxious only for the salvation
of those He came to redeem, spent all the time that was free from His
persecutors' attack on mystic conversation and holy teaching, as is declared
in St. John's gospel: raising His eyes to heaven and beseeching the Father for
the whole Church that all whom the Father had and would give the Son might
become one and remain undivided to the Redeemer's glory, and adding lastly
that prayer in which He says, "Father, if it be possible, let this cup
pass from Me[6]." Wherein it is not to be thought that the Lord Jesus
wished to escape the Passion and the Death, the sacraments of which He had
already committed to His disciples' keeping, seeing that He Himself forbids
Peter, when he was burning with devoted faith and love, to use the sword,
saying, "The cup which the Father hath given Me, shall I not drink
it[7]?" and seeing that that is certain which the Lord also says,
according to John's Gospel, "For God so loved the world that He gave His
only begotten Son, that everyone who believes in Him may not perish, but have
eternal life[8]";" as also what the Apostle Paul says, "Christ
loved us and gave Himself for us, a victim to God for a sweet-smelling
savour[9]." For the saving of all through the Cross of Christ was the
common will and the common plan of the Father and the Son; nor could that by
any means be disturbed which before eternal ages had been mercifully
determined and unchangeably fore-ordained. Therefore in assuming true and
entire manhood He took the true sensations of the body and the true feelings
of the mind. And it does not follow because everything in Him was full of
sacraments, full of miracles, that therefore He either shed false tears or
took food from pretended hunger or reigned slumber. It was in our humility
that He was despised, with our grief that He was saddened, with our pain that
He was racked on the cross. For His compassion underwent the sufferings of our
mortality with the purpose of healing them, and His power encountered them
with the purpose of conquering them. And this Isaiah has most plainly
prophesied, saying, "He carries our sins and is pained for us, and we
thought Him to be in pain and in stripes and in vexation. But He was wounded
for our sins, and was stricken for our offences, and with His braises we are
healed[1]."
V. The resignation of Christ
is an undying lesson to the Church
And so, dearly beloved, when
the Son of God says, "Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from
Me[2]," He uses the outcry of our nature, and pleads the cause of human
frailty and trembling: that our patience may be strengthened and our fears
driven away in the things which we have to bear. At length, ceasing even to
ask this now that He had in a measure palliated our weak fears, though it is
not expedient for us to retain them, He passes into another mood, and says,
"Nevertheless, not as I will but as Thou;" and again, "If this
cup can not pass from Me, except I drink it, Thy will be done[2]." These
words of the Head are the salvation of the whole Body: these words have
instructed all the faithful, kindled the zeal of all the confessors, crowned
all the martyrs. For who could overcome the world's hatred, the blasts of
temptations, the terr onsf persecutors, had not Christ, in the name of all and
for all, said, to the Father, "Thy will be done?" Then let the words
be learnt by all the Church's sons who have been purchased at so great a
price, so freely justified: and when the shock of some violent temptation has
fallen on them, let them use the aid of this potent prayer, that they may
conquer their fear and trembling, and learn to suffer patiently. From this
point, dearly-beloved, our sermon must pass to the consideration of the
details of the Lord's Passion, and lest we should burden you with prolixity,
we will divide our common task, and put off the rest[3] till the fourth day of
the week. God's grace will be vouchsafed to you if you pray Him to give me the
power of carrying out my duty: through our Lord Jesus Christ, &c.
SERMON LIX: (ON THE PASSION,
VIII.: ON WEDNESDAY IN Holy Week.)
I. Christ's arrest fulfils
His own eternal purpose.
Having discoursed, dearly
beloved, in our last sermon, on the events which preceded the Lord's arrest,
it now remains, by the help of God's grace, to discuss, as we promised, the
details of the Passion itself. When the Lord had made it clear by the words of
His sacred prayer that the Divine and the Human Nature was most truly and
fully present in Him, showing that the unwillingness to suffer proceeded from
the one, and from the other the determination to suffer by the expulsion of
all frail fears and the strengthening of His lofty power, then did He return
to His eternal purpose, and "in the form of a" sinless
"slave" encounter the devil who was savagely attacking Him by the
hands of the Jews: that He in Whom alone was all men's nature without fault,
might undertake the cause of all. The sins of darkness, therefore, assailed
the true Light, and, for all their torches and lanterns[4], could not escape
the night of their own unbelief, because they did not recognize the Fount of
Light. They arrest Him, and He is ready to be seized; they lead Him away, and
He is willing to be led; for though, if He had willed to resist, their wicked
hands could have done Him no harm, yet thereby the world's redemption would
have been impeded, and He, who was to die for all men's salvation, would have
saved none at all.
II. How great was Pilate's
crime in allowing himself to be led astray& the Jews.
Accordingly, permitting the
infliction on Himself of all that the people's fury inflamed by the priests
dared do, He is brought to Annas, father-in-law to Caiaphas, and thence Annas
passes Him on to Caiaphas: and after the calumniators' mad accusations, after
the lying falsehoods of suborned witnesses, He is transferred to Pilate's
hearing by the delegation of the two high-priests, who in neglecting the
Divine law, and exclaiming that they had "no king but Caesar," as if
they were devoted to the Roman laws, and had left the whole judgment in the
hands of the governor, really sought for an accomplisher of their cruelty
rather than an umpire of the case. For they gave up Jesus, bound in hard
bonds, bruised by many buffets and blows, spat upon, already condemned by
their shouts: so that amidst so many signs of their own verdict Pilate might
not dare to acquit One Whom all desired to perish. In fact, the very inquiry
shows both that he found in the Accused no fault and that in his judgment he
did not adhere to his purpose: for as judge he condemns One Whom he pronounces
guiltless, invoking on the unrighteous people the blood of the Righteous Man
with Whom he felt by his own conviction, and knew from his wife's dream[4a],
he must have nothing to do. That stained soul is not cleansed by the washing
of hands, there is no expiation in water-besprinkled fingers for the crime
abetted by that wicked mind. Pilate's fault is indeed, less than the Jews'
crime; for it was they that terrified him with Caesar's name, chode him with
hateful words, and drove him to perpetrate his wickedness. But he also did not
escape incrimination for playing into the hands of those that made the uproar,
for abandoning his own judgment, and for acquiescing in the charges of others.
III. Yet the Jews' guilt was
infinitely greater.
In bowing, therefore,
dearly-beloved, to the madness of the impacable people, in permitting Jesus to
be dishonoured by much mocking, and harassed with excessive insults, and in
displaying Him to the eyes of His persecutors lacerated with scourges, crowned
with thorns, and clothed in a robe of scorn, Pilate doubtless thought to
appease the enemies' minds, so that when they had glutted their cruel hate,
they might cease further to persecute One Whom they beheld subjected to such a
variety of afflictions. But their wrath was still in full blaze, and they
cried out to him to release Barabbas and thus, Jesus bear the penalty of the
cross, and thus, when with consenting murmur the crowd said "His blood be
on us and on our sons[4a]," those wicked folk gained, to their own
damnation what they had persistently demanded, "whose teeth," as the
prophet bore witness, "were arms and arrows, and their tongue a sharp
sword[5]." For in vain did they keep their own hands from crucifying the
Lord of glory when they had hurled at Him the tongue's deadly darts and the
poisoned weapons of words. On you, on you, false Jews and unholy leaders of
the people, falls the full weight of that crime: and although the enormity of
the guilt involves the governor and the soldiers also, yet you are the primary
and chief offenders. And in Christ's condemnation, whatsoever wrong was done
either by Pilate's judgment or by the cohorts carrying out of his commands,
makes you only the more deserving of the hatred of mankind, because the
impulse of your fury would not let even those be free from guilt who were
displeased at your unrighteous acts.
IV. Christ bearing His own
cross is an eternal lesson to the Church.
And so the Lord was handed
over to their savage wishes, and in mockery of His kingly state, ordered to be
the bearer of His own instrument of death, that what Isaiah the prophet
foresaw might be fulfilled, saying, "Behold a Child is born, and a Son is
given to us whose government is upon His shoulders[6]." When, therefore,
the Lord carried the wood of the cross which should turn for Him into the
sceptre of power, it was indeed in the eyes of the wicked a mighty mockery,
but to the faithful a mighty mystery was set forth, seeing that He, the
glorious vanquisher of the Devil, and the strong defeater of the powers that
were against Him, was carrying in noble sort the trophy of His triumph, and on
the shoulders of His unconquered patience bore into all realms the adorable
sign of salvation: as if even then to confirm all His followers by this mere
symbol of His work, and say, "He that taketh not his cross and followeth
Me, is not worthy of Me[6a]."
V. The transference of the
cross from the Lord to Simon of Cyrene signifies the participation of the
Gentiles in His sufferings.
But as the multitudes went
with Jesus to the place of punishment, a certain Simon of Cyrene was found on
whom to lay the wood of the cross instead of the Lord; that even by this act
might be pre-signified the Gentiles' faith, to whom the cross of Christ was to
be not shame but glory. It was not accidental, therefore, but symbolical and
mystical, that while the Jews were raging against Christ, a foreigner was
found to share His sufferings, as the Apostle says, "if we suffer with
Him, we shall also reign with Him[7]"; so that no Hebrew nor Israelite,
but a stranger, was substituted for the Saviour in His most holy degradation.
For by this transference the propitiation of the spotless Lamb and the
fulfilment of all mysteries passed from the circumcision to the
uncircumcision, from the sons according to the flesh to the sons according to
the spirit: since as the Apostle says, "Christ our Passover is sacrificed
for us[8]," Who offering Himself to the Father a new and true sacrifice
of reconciliation, was crucified not in the temple, whose worship was now at
an end, and not within the confines of the city which for its sin was doomed
to be destroyed, but outside, "without the camp[9]," that, on the
cessation of the old symbolic victims, a new Victim might be placed on a new
altar, and the cross of Christ might be the altar not of the temple but of the
world.
VI. We are to see not only
the crass but the meaning of it.
Accordingly, dearly-beloved,
Christ being lifted up upon the cross, let the eyes of your mind not dwell
only on that sight which those wicked sinners saw, to whom it was said by the
mouth of Moses, "And thy life shall be hanging before thine eyes, and
thou shalt fear day and night, and shalt not be assured of thy life[1]."
For in the crucified Lord they could think of nothing but their wicked deed,
having not the fear, by which true faith is justified, but that by which an
evil conscience is racked. But let our understandings, illumined by the Spirit
of Truth, foster with pure and free heart the glory of the cross which
irradiates heaven and earth, and see with the inner sight what the Lord meant
when He spoke of His coming Passion: "The hour is come that the Son of
man may be glorified[2] :" and below He says, "Now is My spirit
troubled. And what shall I say? Father, save Me from this hour, but for this
cause came I unto this hour. Father, glorify Thy Son." And when the
Father's voice came from heaven, saying, "I have both glorified it and
will glorify it again," Jesus in reply said to those that stood by,
"This voice came not for Me but for you. Now is the world's judgment, now
shall the prince of this world be cast out. And I, if I be lifted up from the
earth, will draw all things unto Me[2].''
VII. The power of the crass
is universally attractive.
O wondrous power of the
Cross! O ineffable glory of the Passion, in which is contained the Lord's
tribunal, the world's judgment, and the power of the Crucified! For thou didst
draw all things unto Thee, Lord and when Thou hadst stretched out Thy hands
all the day, long to an unbelieving people that gainsaid Thee[2a], the whole
world at last was brought to confess Thy majesty. Thou didst draw all things
unto Thee, Lord, when all the elements combined to pronounce judgment in
execration of the Jews' crime, when the lights of heaven were darkened, and
the day turned into night, and the earth also was shaken with unwonted shocks,
and all creation refused to serve those wicked men. Thou didst draw all things
unto Thee, Lord. for the veil of the temple was rent, and the Holy of Holies
existed no more for those unworthy high-priests: so that type was turned into
Truth, prophecy into Revelation law into Gospel. Thou didst draw all things
unto Thee, Lord, so that what before was done in the one temple of the Jews in
dark signs, was now to be celebrated everywhere by the piety of all the
nations in full and open rite. For now there is a nobler rank of Levites,
there are elders of greater dignity and priests of holier anointing: because
Thy cross is the fount of all blessings, the source of all graces, and through
it the believers receive strength for weakness, glory for shame, life for
death. Now, too, the variety of fleshly sacrifices has ceased, and the one
offering of Thy Body and Blood fulfils all those different victims: for Thou
art the true "Lamb of God, that takest away the sins of the
world[3]," and in Thyself so accomplishest all mysteries, that as there
is but one sacrifice instead of many victims, so there is but one kingdom
instead of many nations.
VIII. We must live not for
ourselves but for Christ, who died for us.
Let us, then,
dearly-beloved, confess what the blessed teacher of the nations, the Apostle
Paul, confessed, saying, "Faithful is the saying, and worthy of all
acceptation, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners[4]."
For God's mercy towards us is the more wonderful that Christ died not for the
righteous nor for the holy, but for the unrighteous and wicked; and though the
nature of the Godhead could not sustain the sting of death, yet at His birth
He took from us that which He might offer for us. For of old He threatened our
death with the power of His death, saying. by the mouth of Hosea the prophet,
"O death, I will be thy death, and I will be thy destruction, O
hell[5]." For by dying He underwent the laws of hell, but by rising again
He broke them, and so destroyed the continuity of death as to make it temporal
instead of eternal. "For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all
be made alive[6]." And so, dearly-beloved, let that come to pass of which
S. Paul speaks, "that they that live, should henceforth not live to
themselves but to Him who died for all and rose again[7]." And because
the old things have passed away and all things are become new, let none remain
in his old carnal life, but let us all be renewed by daily progress and growth
in piety. For however much a man be justified, yet so long as he remains in
this life, he can always be more approved and better. And he that is not
advancing is going back, and he that is gaining nothing is losing something.
Let us run, then, with the steps of faith, by the works of mercy, in the love
of righteousness, that keeping the day of our redemption spiritually,
"not in the old leaven of malice and wickedness, but in the unleavened
bread of sincerity and truth[8]," we may deserve to be partakers of
Christ's resurrection, Who with the Father and the Holy Ghost liveth and
reigneth for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON LXII: (ON THE
PASSION, XI.)
I. The mystery of the
Passion passes man's comprehension.
The Feast of the Lord's
Passion[9] that we have longed for and that the whole world may well desire,
has come, and suffers us not to keep silence in the tumult of our spiritual
joys: because though it is difficult to speak often on the same thing worthily
and appropriately, yet the priest is not free to withhold from the people's
ears instruction by sermon on this great mystery of God'S mercy, inasmuch as
the subject itself, being unspeakable, gives him ease of utterance, and what
is said cannot altogether fail where what is said can never be enough. Let
human frailty, then, succumb to God's glory, and ever acknowledge itself
unequal to the unfolding of His works of mercy. Let us toil in thought, fail
in insight, falter in utterance: it is good that even our right thoughts about
the Lord's Majesty should be insufficient. For, remembering what the prophet
says, "Seek ye the Lord and be strengthened: seek His face
always[1]," no one must assume that he has found all he seeks, lest he
fail of coming near, if he cease his endeavours. And amidst all the works of
God which weary out man's wondering contemplation, what so delights and so
baffles our mind's gaze as the Saviour's Passion? Ponder as we may upon His
omnipotence, which is of one and equal substance with the Father, the humility
in God is more stupendous than the power, and it is harder to grasp the
complete emptying of the Divine Majesty than the infinite uplifting of
the" slave's form" in Him. But we are much aided in our
understanding of it by the remembrance that though the Creator and the
creature, the Inviolable God and the possible flesh, are absolutely different,
yet the properties of both substances meet together in Christ's one Person in
such a way that alike in His acts of weakness and of power the degradation
belongs to the same Person as the glory.
II. The Creed takes up S.
Peter's confession as the fundamental doctrine of the Church.
In that rule of Faith,
dearly-beloved, which we have received in the very beginning of the Creed, on
the authority of apostolic teaching, we acknowledge our Lord Jesus Christ,
whom we call the only Son of God the Father Almighty, to be also born of the
Virgin Mary by the Holy Ghost. Nor do we reject His Majesty when we express
our belief in His crucifixion, death, and resurrection on the third day. For
all that is God's and all that is Man's are simultaneously fulfilled by His
Manhood and His Godhead, so that in virtue of the union of the Possible with
the Impossible, His power cannot be affected by His weakness, nor His weakness
overcome by His power. And rightly was the blessed Apostle Peter praised for
confessing this union, who when the Lord was inquiring what the disciples knew
of Him, quickly anticipated the rest and said, "Thou art Christ, the Son
of the living God[2]." And this assuredly he saw, not by the revelation
of flesh or blood, which might have hindered his inner sight, but by the very
Spirit of the Father working in his believing heart, that in preparation for
ruling the whole Church he might first learn what he would have to teach, and
for the solidification of the Faith, which he was destined to preach, might
receive the assurance, "Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build
My Church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it[3]." The
strength, therefore, of the Christian Faith, which, built upon an impregnable
rock, fears not the gates of death, acknowledges the one Lord Jesus Christ to
be both true God and true Man, believing Him likewise to be the Virgin's Son,
Who is His Mother's Creator: born also at the end of the ages, though He is
the Creator of time: Lord of all power, and yet one of mortal stock: ignorant
of sin, and yet sacrificed for sinners after the likeness of sinful flesh.
III. The devil's devices
were turned against himself.
And in order that He might
set the human race free from the bonds of deadly transgression, He hid the
power of His majesty from the raging devil, and opposed him with our frail and
humble nature. For if the cruel and proud foe could have known the counsel of
God's mercy, he would have aimed at soothing the Jews' minds into gentleness
rather than at firing them with unrighteous hatred, lest be should lose the
thraldom of all his captives in assailing the liberty of One Who owed him
nought. Thus he was foiled by his malice: he inflicted a punishment on the Son
of God, which was turned to the healing of all the sons of men. He shed
righteous Blood, which became the ransom and the drink for the world's
atonement. The Lord undertook that which He chose according to the purpose of
His own will. He permitted madmen to lay their wicked hands upon Him: hands
which, in ministering to their own doom, were of service to the Redeemer's
work. And yet so great was His loving compassion for even His murderers, that
He prayed to the Father on the cross, and begged not for His own vengeance but
for their forgiveness, saying, "Father, forgive them, for they know not
what they do[3]." And such was the power of that prayer, that the hearts
of many of those who had said, "His blood be on us and on our
sons[3a]," were turned to penitence by the Apostle Peter's preaching, and
on one day there were baptized about 3,000 Jews: and they all were "of
one heart and of one soul[4]," being ready now to die for Him, Whose
crucifixion they had demanded.
IV. Why Judas could not
obtain forgiveness through Christ.
To this forgiveness the
traitor Judas could not attain: for he, the son of perdition, at whose right
the devil stood[5], gave himself up to despair before Christ accomplished the
mystery of universal redemption. For in that the Lord died for sinners,
perchance even he might have found salvation if he had not hastened to hang
himself. But that evil heart, which was now given up to thievish frauds, and
now busied with treacherous designs, had never entertained aught of the proofs
of the Saviour's mercy. Those wicked ears had heard the Lord's words, when He
said, "I same not to call the righteous but sinners," and
"The Son of man came to seek and to save that which was lost,"
but they conveyed not to his understanding the clemency of Christ, which not
only healed bodily infirmities, but also cured the wounds of sick souls,
saying to the paralytic man, "Son, be of good cheer, thy sins are
forgiven thee saying also to the adulteress that was brought to Him,
"neither will I condemn thee; go and sin no more," to show in all
His works that He had come as the Saviour, not the Judge of the world. But the
wicked traitor refused to understand this, and took measures against himself,
not in the self-condemnation of repentance, but in the madness of perdition,
and thus he who had sold the Author of life to His murderers, even in dying
increased the amount of sin which condemned him.
V. The cruelty oaf Christ's
crucifixion is lost in its wondrous power.
Accordingly that which false
witnesses, cruel leaders of the people, wicked priests did against the Lord
Jesus Christ, through the agency of a coward governor and an ignorant band of
soldiers, has been at once the abhorrence and the rejoicing of all ages. For
though the Lord's cross was part of the cruel purpose of the 'Jews, yet is it
of wondrous power through Him they crucified. The people's fury was directed
against One, and the mercy of Christ is for all mankind. That which their
cruelty inflicts He voluntarily undergoes. in order that the work of His
eternal will may be carried out through their unhindered crime. And hence the
whole order of events which is most fully narrated in the Gospels must be
received by the faithful in such a way that by implicit belief in the
occurrences which happened at the time of the Lord's Passion, we should
understand that not only was the remission of sins accomplished by Christ, but
also the standard of justice satisfied. But that this may be more thoroughly
discussed by the Lord's help, let us reserve this portion of the subject till
the fourth day of the week(9a) God's grace, we hope, will be vouchsafed at
your entreaties to help us to fulfil our promise: through Jesus Christ our
Lord, &c. Amen.
SERMON LXIII: (On the
Passion, XII.: PREACHED ON Wednesday.)
I. God those to save man by
strength made perfect in weakness.
The glory, dearly-beloved,
of the Lord's Passion, on which we promised to speak again to-day, is chiefly
wonderful for its mystery of humility, which has both ransomed and instructed
us all, that He, Who paid the price, might also impart His righteousness to
us. For the Omnipotence of the Son of God, whereby He is by the same Essence
equal to the Father, might have rescued mankind from the dominion of the devil
by the mere exercise of Its will, had it not better suited the Divine working
to conquer the opposition of the foe's wickedness by that which had been
conquered, and to restore our nature's liberty by that very nature by which
bondage had come upon the whole race. But, when the evangelist says, "The
Word became flesh and dwelt in us '," and the Apostle," God was in
Christ reconciling the world to Himself,'' it was shown that the
Only-begotten of the Most High Father entered on such a union with human
humility, that, when He took the substance of oar flesh and soul, He remained
one and the same Son of God by exalting our properties, not His own: because
it was the weakness, not the power that had to be reinforced, so that upon the
union of the creature with the Creator there should be nothing wanting of the
Divine to the assumed, nor of the human to the Assuming.
II. God's plan was always
partially understood, and is now of universal application.
This plan of God's mercy and
justice, though in the ages past it was in a measure enshrouded in darkness,
was yet not so completely hidden that the saints, who have most merited praise
from the beginning till the coming of the Lord, were precluded from
understanding it: seeing that the salvation, which was to come through Christ,
was promised both by the words of prophecy and by the significance of events,
and this salvation not only they attained who foretold it, but all they also
who believed their predictions. For the one Faith justifies the saints of all
ages, and to the self-same hope of the faithful pertains all that by Jesus
Christ, the Mediator between God and man, we acknowledge done, or our fathers
reverently accepted as to be done. And between Jew and Gentile there is no
distinction, since, as the Apostle says, "Circumcision is nothing, and
uncircumcision is nothing, but the keeping of God's commands," and if
they be kept in entirety of faith, they make Christians the true sons of
Abraham, that is perfect, for the same Apostle says, "For whosoever of
you were baptized in Christ Jesus, have put on Christ. There is neither Jew
nor Greek: there is neither slave nor free: there is neither male nor female.
For ye are all one in Christ. But if ye are Christ's, then are ye Abraham's
seed, heirs according to promise(4.)."
III. The union of the Divine
Head with its members inseparable.
There is no doubt therefore,
dearly-beloved, that man's nature has been received by the Son of God into
such a union that not only in that Man Who is the first-begotten of all
creatures, but also in all His saints there is one and the self-same Christ,
and as the Head cannot be separated from the members, so the members cannot be
separated from the Head. For although it is not in this life, but in eternity
that God is to be "all in all (4a)," yet even now He is the
inseparable Inhabitant of His temple, which is the Church, according as He
Himself promised, saying, "Lo! I am with you all the days till the en of
the age." And agreeably therewith the Apostle says, "He is the
head of the body, the Church, which is the beginning, the first-begotten from
the dead, that in all things He may have the pre- eminence, because in Him it
was pleasing that all fulness (of the Godhead) should dwell, and that through
Him all things should be reconciled in Himself."
IV. Christ's passion
provided a saving mystery and an example for us to follow.
And what is suggested to our
hearts by these and many other references, save that we should in all things
be renewed in His image Who, remaining "in the form of God(6a),"
deigned to "take the form" of sinful flesh? For all our weaknesses,
which come from sin, He took on Him without sharing in sin, so that He felt
the sensation of hunger and thirst and sleep and fatigue, and grief and
weeping, and suffered the fiercest pangs up to the extremity of death, because
no one could be loosed from the snares of death, unless He in Whom alone all
men s nature was guileless allowed Himself to be slain by the hands of wicked
men. And hence our Saviour the Son of God provided for all that believe in Him
both a mystery and an example, that they might apprehend the one by being
born again, and follow the other by imitation. For the blessed Apostle Peter
teaches this, saying, "Christ suffered for us, leaving you an example
that ye should follow His steps. Who did no sin, neither was guile found in
His mouth. Who when He was reviled, reviled not: when He suffered, threatened
not, but gave Himself up to His unjust judge. Who Himself bare our sins in His
body on the tree, that being dead to sins, we may live to
righteousness."
V. Christ not destroyed, but
fulfilled and elevated the Law.
As therefore there is no
believer, dearly-beloved, to whom the gifts of grace are denied, so there is
no one who is not a debtor in the matter of Christian discipline; because,
although the severity of the mystic Law is done away, yet the benefits of its
voluntary observance have increased, as the evangelist John says,
"Because the Law was given through Moses, but grace and truth came
through Jesus Christy." For all things that, according to the Law, went
before, whether in the circumcision of the flesh, or in the multitude of
victims, or in the keeping of the Sabbath, testified of Christ, and foretold
the grace of Christ. And He is "the end of the Law," not by
annulling, but by fulfilling its meanings. For although He is at once the
Author of the old and of the new, yet He changed the symbolic rites connected
with the promises, because He accomplished the promises and put an end to the
announcement by the coming of the Announced. But in the matter of moral
precepts, no decrees of the earlier Testament are rejected, but many of them
are amplified by the Gospel teaching: so that the things which give salvation
are more perfect and clearer than those which promise a Saviour.
VI. The present effect of
Christ's Passion is daily realized by Christians, especially in Hall, Baptism.
All therefore that the Son
of God did and taught for the world's reconciliation, we not only know as a
matter of past history, but appreciate in the power of its present effect. It
is He Who, born of the Virgin Mother by the Holy Ghost, fertilizes His
unpolluted Church with the same blessed Spirit, that the birth of Baptism an
innumerable multitude of sons may be born to God, of Whom it is said,
"who were born not of blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the
will of man, but of God." It is He, in Whom the seed of Abraham is
blessed by the adoption of the whole world ", and the patriarch becomes
the father of nations by the birth. through faith not flesh, of the sons of
promise. It is He Who, without excluding any nation, makes one flock of holy
sheep froth every nation under heaven, and daily fulfils what He promised,
saying, "Other sheep also I have which are not of this fold; them also I
must bring, and they shall hear My: voice, and there shall be one flock and
one shepherd." For though to the blessed Peter first and foremost He
says, "Feed My sheep ;" yet the one LORD directs the charge of
all the shepherds, and feeds those that come to the rock with such glad and
well-watered pastures, that countless sheep are nourished by the richness of
His love, and hesitate not to perish for the Shepherd's sake, even as the good
Shepherd Himself was content to lay down His life for His sheep. It is He
whose sufferings are shared not only by the martyrs' glorious courage, but
also in the very act of regeneration by the faith of all the new-born. For the
renunciation of the devil and belief in God, the passing from the old state
into newness of life, the casting off of the earthly image, and the putting on
of the heavenly form--all this is a sort of dying and rising again, whereby he
that is received by Christ and receives Christ is not the same after as he was
before he came to the font, for the body of the regenerate becomes the flesh
of the Crucified.
VII. The good works of
Christians are only part of Christ's good works.
This change, dearly-beloved,
is the handiwork of the Most High, Who "worketh all things in
all," so that by the good manner of life observed in each one of the
faithful, we know Him to be the Author of all just works, and give thanks to
God's mercy, Who so adorns the whole body of the Church with countless
gracious gifts, that through the many rays of the one Light the same
brightness is everywhere diffused, and that which is well done by any
Christian whatsoever cannot but be part the glory of Christ. This is that true
which justifies and enlightens every man. This it is that rescues from the
power of darkness and transfers us into the Kingdom of the Son of God. This it
is that by newness of life exalts the desires of the mind and quenches the
lusts of the flesh. This it is whereby the Lord's Passover is duly kept
"With the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth" by the casting
away of" the old leaven of wickedness " and the inebriating and
feeding of the new creature with the very Lord. For naught else is brought
about by the partaking of the and Blood of Christ than that we pass into that
which we then take, and both in spirit and in body carry everywhere Him, in
and with Whom we were dead, buried, and rose again, as the Apostle says,
"For ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God. For when
Christ, your life, shall appear, then shall ye also appear with Him in
glory." Who with the Father, &c.
SERMON LXVII: (ON THE
PASSION, XVI.: DELIVERED ON THE Sunday.)
I. The contemplation of the
prophecies of Christ's suffering are a great source of pious delight.
The minds of the faithful,
beloved, ought indeed always to be occupied with wonder at God's works and
their reasoning faculties devoted particularly to those reflexions by which
they may gain increase of faith. For so long as the pious heart's attention is
directed either to the benefits which all enjoy, or to special gifts of His
grace, it keeps aloof from many vanities and retires from bodily cares into a
spiritual seclusion. But this must be the more eagerly and thoroughly done at
the season of the Lord's Passion, that what is then read in the sacred
lections may surely be received with the ears of understanding, and that the
themes which are great in word may be seen to be yet greater from the
mysterious realities which underlie them. For the first reason for our lifting
up our hearts ' is that the voices of the prophets have sung of the things
which the truth of the Gospel has also narrated, not as destined to happen,
but as having happened, and that what man's ears had not yet learnt was to be
accomplished, was already being proclaimed as fulfilled by the (Holy 2)
Spirit. For King David, whose seed according to the flesh is Christ, completed
his lifetime more than 1,100(2a) years before the day of the Lord's
Crucifixion, and endured none of those punishments which he relates as
inflicted upon himself. But because by his mouth One spoke Who was to take
suffering flesh of his stock, the story of the cross is tightly anticipated in
the person of him who was the bodily ancestor of the Saviour. For David truly
suffered in Christ, because Jesus was truly crucified in the flesh which He
had from David.
II. The Divine foreknowledge
does not account for the Jews' wickedness so as to excuse them.
Since then all things which
Jewish ungodliness committed against the Lord of Majesty were foretold so long
before, and the language of the prophets is concerned not so much with
things to come as with things last, what else is thereby revealed to us but
the unchangeable order of God's eternal decrees, with Whom the things which
are to be decided are already determined, and what will be is already
accomplished? For since both the character of our actions and the fulfilment
of all our wishes are fore- known to God,. how much better known to Him are
His own works? And He was rightly pleased that things should be recorded as if
done which nothing could hinder from being done. And hence when the Apostles
also, being full of the Holy Ghost, suffered the threats and cruelty of
Christ's enemies, they said to God with one consent, "For truly in this
city against Thy holy Servant Jesus, Whom Thou hast anointed, Herod and
Pontius Pilate, with the Gentiles and the peoples of Israel were gathered
together to do what Thy hand and Thy counsel ordained to come to
pass." Did then the wickedness of Christ's persecutors spring from
God's plan, and was that unsurpassable crime prefaced and set in motion by the
hand of God? Clearly we must not think this of the highest Justice: that which
was fore- known in respect of the Jews' malice is far different, indeed quite
contrary to what was ordained in respect of Christ's Passion. Their desire to
slay Him did not proceed from the same source as His to die: nor were their
atrocious crime and the Redeemer's endurance the offspring of One Spirit. The
Lord did not incite but permit those madmen's naughty hands: nor in His
foreknowledge of what must be accomplished did He compel its accomplishment,
even though it was in order to its accomplishment that He had taken flesh.
III. Christ was in no sense
the Author of His murderer's guilt.
In fact, the case of the
Crucified is so different from that of His crucifiers that what Christ
undertook could not be reversed, while what they did could be wiped out. For
He Who came to save sinners did not refuse mercy even to His murderers, but
changed the evil of the wicked into the goodness of the believing, that God's
grace might be the more wonderful, being mercifully put in force, not
according to men's merits, but according to the multitude of the riches of
God's wisdom anti knowledge, seeing that they also who had shed the Saviour's
blood were received into the baptismal flood. For, as says the Scripture,
which contains the Apostles' acts when the preaching of the blessed Apostle
Peter pierced the hearts of the Jews, and they acknowledged the iniquity of
their crime, saying, "what shall we do, brethren ?" the same Apostle
said, "Repent and be baptized, each one of you, in the name of Jesus
Christ for the remission of your sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the
Holy Ghost. For to you is the promise, and to your sons, and to all that are
afar off, whomsoever our Lord God has called," and soon after the
Scripture goes on to say: "they therefore that received his word were
baptized, and there were added on that day about 3,000 souls." And so,
in being willing to suffer their furious rage, the Lord Jesus Christ was in no
way the Author of their crimes; nor did He force them to desire this, but
permitted them to be able, and used the madness of the blinded people just as
He did also the treachery of His betrayer, whom by kindly acts and words He
vouchsafed to recall from the awful crime he had conceived, by taking him for
a disciple, by promoting him to be an apostle, by warning him with signs, by
admitting him to the revelation of holy mysteries, that one who had lacked
no degree of kindness to correct him, might have no pretext for his crime at
all.
IV. The enormity of Judas'
crime is set forth.
But O ungodliest of men,
"thou seed of Chanaan and not of Juda," and no longer "a
vessel of election," but "a son of perdition" and death, thou
didst think the devil's instigations would profit thee better, so that,
inflamed with the torch of greed, thou wert ablaze to gain 30 pieces of silver
and sawest not what riches thou wouldst lose. For even if thou didst not think
the Lord's promises were to be believed, what reason was there for preferring
so small a sum of money to what thou hadst already received? Thou wast wont to
command the evil spirits, to heal the sick, to receive honour with the rest of
the apostles, and that thou mightest satisfy thy thirst for gain, it was open
to thee to steal from the box that was in thy charge. But thy mind, which
lusted after forbidden things, was more strongly stimulated by that which was
less allowed: and the amount of the price pleased thee not so much as the
enormity of the sin. Wherefore thy wicked bargain is not so detestable merely
because thou countedst the LORD so cheap, but because thou didst sell Him Who
was the Redeemer, yea, even thieve, and badst no pity on thyself. And
justly was thy punishment put into thine own hands because none could be found
more cruelly bent on thy destruction than thyself.
V. Christ's Passion was for
our Redemption by mystery and example.
The fact, therefore, that at
the time appointed, according to the purpose of His will, jesus Christ was
crucified, dead, and buried was not the doom necessary to His own condition,
but the method of redeeming us from captivity. For "the Word became
flesh" in order that from the Virgin's womb He might take our suffering
nature, and that what could not be inflicted on the Son of God might be
inflicted on the Son of Man. For although at His very birth the signs of
Godhead shone forth in Him, and the whole course of His bodily growth was full
of wonders, yet had He truly assumed our weaknesses, and without share in sin
had spared Himself no human frailty, that He might impart what was His to us
and heal what was ours in Himself. For He, the Almighty Physician, had
prepared a two-fold remedy for us in our misery, of which the one part
consists of mystery and the other of example, that by the one Divine powers
may be bestowed, by the other human weaknesses driven out. Because as GOD
is the Author of our justification, so man is a debtor to pay Him devotion.
VI. We can only attain to
Christ's perfection by following in His steps.
Therefore, dearly-beloved,
by this unspeakable restoration of our health no place is left us for pride or
for idleness: because we have nothing which we did not receive(28), and we are
expressly warned not to treat the gifts of God's grace with negligence(2a).
For He that comes so timely to our aid justly urges us with precept, and He
that leads us to glory mercifully incites us to obedience. Wherefore the Lord
Himself is rightly made our way, because save through Christ there is no
coming to Christ. But through Him and to Him does he take his way who treads
the path of His endurance and humiliation, and on that road you may be sure
there are not wanting the heats of toil, the clouds of sadness, the storms of
fear. The snares of the wicked, the persecutions of the unbelieving, the
threats of the powerful, the insults of the proud are I there; and all these
things the LORD of hosts and King of glory passed through in the form of our
weakness and in the likeness of sinful flesh, to the end that amid the danger
of this present life we might desire not so much to avoid and escape them as
to endure and overcome them.
VII. Christ cry of
"Forsaken" on the crass was to teach us the insufficiency of the
human nature without the Divine.
Hence it is that the Lord
Jesus Christ, our Head, representing all the members of His body in Himself,
and speaking for those whom He was redeeming in the punishment of the cross,
uttered that cry which He had once uttered in the psalm, "O God, My God,
look upon Me: why hast Thou forsaken Me?" That cry, dearly-beloved, is
a lesson, not a complaint. For since in Christ there is one person of God and
man, and He could not have been forsaken by Him, from Whom He could not be
separated, it is on behalf of us, trembling and weak ones, that He asks why
the flesh that is afraid to suffer has not been heard. For when the Passion
was beginning, to cure anti correct our weak fear He had said, "Father,
if it be possible, let this cup pass from Me: nevertheless not as I will but
as Thou;" and again, "Father, if this cup cannot pass except I drink
it, Thy will be done." As therefore He had conquered the tremblings of
the flesh, and had now accepted the Father's will, and trampling all dread of
death under foot, was then carrying out the work of His design, wily at the
very time of His triumph over such a victory does He seek the cause and reason
of His being forsaken, that is, not heard, save to show that the feeling which
He entertained in excuse of His human fears is quite different from the
deliberate choice which, in accordance with the Father's eternal decree, He
had made for the reconciliation of the world? And thus the very cry of
"Unheard" is the exposition of a mighty Mystery, because the
Redeemer's power would have conferred nothing on mankind if our weakness in
Him had obtained what it sought. Let these words dearly-beloved, suffice
to-day, lest we burden you by the length of our discourse: let us put off the
rest till Wednesday. The Lord shall hear you if you pray that we may keep our
promise through the bounty of Him Who lives and reigns for ever and ever.
Amen.
SERMON LXVIII: (On The
Passion, XVII.: delivered on the Wednesday.)
I. Christ's Godhead never
forsook Him in His Passion.
The last discourse,
dearly-beloved, of which we desire now to give the promised portion, had
reached that point in the argument where we were speaking of that cry which
the crucified Lord uttered to the Father: we bade the simple and unthinking
hearer not take the words "My Con, &c.," in a sense as if, when
Jesus was fixed upon the wood of the cross, the Omnipotence of the Father's
Deity had gone away from Him; seeing that God's and Man's Nature were so
completely joined in Him that the union could not be destroyed by punishment
nor by death. For while each substance retained its own properties, God
neither held aloof from the suffering of His body nor was made passible by the
flesh, because the Godhead which was in the Sufferer did not actually suffer.
And hence, in accordance with the Nature of the Word made Man, He Who was made
in the midst of all is the same as He through Whom all things were made. He
Who is arrested by the hands of wicked men is the same as He Who is bound by
no limits. He Who is pierced with nails is the same as He Whom no wound can
affect. Finally, He Who underwent death is the same as He Who never ceased to
be eternal, so that both facts are established by indubitable signs, namely,
the truth of the humiliation in Christ and the truth of the majesty; because
Divine power joined itself to human frailty to this end, that God, while
making what was ours His, might at the same time make what was His ours. The
Son, therefore, was not separated from the Father, nor the Father from the
Son; and the unchangeable Godhead and the inseparable Trinity did not admit of
any division. For although the task of undergoing Incarnation belonged
peculiarly to the Only-begotten Son of God, yet the Father was not separated
from the Son any more than the flesh was separated from the Word.
II. Christ's death was
voluntary an His part, and yet in saving others He could not save Himself.
Jesus, therefore, cried with
a loud voice, saying, "Why hast Thou forsaken Me ?" in order to
notify to all how it behoved Him not to be rescued, not to be defended, but to
be given up into the hands of cruel men, that is to become the Saviour of the
world and the Redeemer of all men, not by misery but by mercy; and not by the
failure of succour but by the determination to die. But what must we feel to
be the intercessory power of His life Who died and rose again by His own
inherent power For the blessed Apostle says the Father "spared not His
own Son, but gave Him up for us all;" and again, he says, "For
Christ loved the Church, and gave Himself up for her, that He might sanctify
it." And hence the giving up of the Lord to His Passion was as much of
the 'Father's as of His own will, so that not only did the Father
"forsake" Him, but He also abandoned Himself in a certain sense, not
in hasty flight, but in voluntary withdrawal. For the might of the Crucified
restrained itself from those wicked men, and in order to avail Himself of a
secret design, He refused to avail Himself of His open power. For how would He
who had come to destroy death and the author of death by His Passion have
saved sinners, if he had resisted His persecutors? This, then, had been the
Jews' belief, that Jesus had been forsaken by God, against Whom they had been
able to commit such unholy cruelty; for not understanding the mystery of His
wondrous endurance, they said in blasphemous mockery: "He saved others,
Himself He cannot save. If He be the King of Israel, let Him now come down
from the cross, and we believe Him." Not at your blind will, O foolish
scribes and wicked priests, was the Saviour's power to be displayed, nor in
obedience to blasphemers' evil tongues was the Redemption of mankind to be
delayed; for if you had wished to recognize the Godhead of the Son of God, you
would have observed His numberless works, and they must have confirmed you in
that faith, which you so deceitfully promise. But if, as you yourselves
acknowledge, it is true that He saved others, why have those many, great
miracles, which have been done under the public gaze, done nothing to soften
the hardness of your hearts, unless it be because you have always so resisted
the Holy Ghost as to turn all God's benefits towards you into your
destruction? For even though Christ should descend from the cross, you would
yet remain in your crime.
III. A transition was then
being effect from the Old to the New Dispensation.
Therefore the insults of
empty exultation were scorned, and the Lord's mercy in restoring the lost and
the fallen was not turned from the path of its purpose by contumely or
reviling. For a peerless victim was being offered to God for the world's
salvation, and the slaying of Christ the true Lamb, predicted through so many,
ages, was transferring the sons of promise into the liberty of the Faith. The
New Testament also was being ratified, and in the blood of Christ the heirs of
the eternal Kingdom were being enrolled; the High Pontiff was entering the
Holy of Holies, and to intercede with GOD the spotless Priest was passing in
through the veil of His flesh(9a). In fine, so evident a transition was being
effected from the Law to the Gospel, from the from the synagogue to the
Church, from many sacrifices to the One Victim, that, when the LORD gave up
the ghost, that mystic veil which hung before and shut out the inner part of
the Temple and its holy recess was by sudden force torn from top (to
bottom(9a), for the reason that Truth was displacing figures, and forerunners
were needless in the presence of Him they announced. To this was added a
terrible confusion of all the elements, and nature herself withdrew her
support from Christ's crucifiers. And although the centurion in charge of the
crucifixion, in fright at what he had seen, said "truly this man was the
Son of God(9a)," yet the wicked hearts of the Jews, which were harder
than all tombs and rocks, is not reported to have been pierced by any
compunction: so that it seems the Roman soldiers were then readier to
recognize the Son of God than the priests of Israel.
IV. Let us profit by fasting
and good works at this sacred season of the year.
Because, then, the Jews,
deprived of all the sanctification imparted by these mysteries, turned their
light into darkness and their "feasts into mourning(1a),'' let us,
dearly-beloved, prostrate our bodies and our souls and worship God's Grace,
which has been poured out upon all nations, beseeching the merciful Father and
the rich Redeemer from day to day to give us His aid and enable us to escape
all the dangers of this life. For the crafty tempter is present everywhere,
and leaves nothing free from his snares. Whom, God's mercy helping us, which
is stretched out to us amid all dangers, we must ever with stedfast faith
resist(1a) so that, though he never ceases to asail, he may never succeed in
carrying the assault. Let all, dearly-beloved, religiously keep and profit by
the fast, and let no excesses mar the benefits of such self-restraint as we
have proved convenient both for soul and body. For the things which pertain to
sobriety and temperance must be the more diligently observed at this season,
that a lasting habit may be contracted from a brief zeal; and whether in works
of mercy or in strict self-denial, no hours may be left idle by the faithful,
seeing that, as years increase and time glides by, we are bound to increase
our store of works, and not squander our opportunities. And to devout wills
and religious souls God's Mercy will be granted, that He may enable us to
obtain that which He enabled us to desire, Who liveth and reigneth with our
Lord Jesus Christ His Son, and with the Holy Ghost, for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON LXXI: On The Lord's
Resurrection, I.; Delivered on Holy Saturday in the vigil the of Easter.
I. We must all be partakers
in Christ's Resurrection life.
In my last sermon,
dearly-beloved, not inappropriately, as I think, we explained to you our
participation in the cross of Christ, whereby the life of believers contains
in itself the mystery of Easter, and thus what is honoured at the feast is
celebrated by our practice. And how useful this is you yourselves have proved,
and by your devotion have learnt, how greatly benefited souls and bodies are
by longer fasts, more frequent prayers, and more liberal alms. For there can
be hardly any one who has not profited by this exercise, and who has not
stored up in the recesses of his conscience something over which he may
rightly rejoice. But these advantages must be retained with persistent care,
lest our efforts fall away into idleness, and the devil's malice steal what
God's grace gave. Since, therefore, by our forty days' observance we have
wished to bring about this effect, that we should feel something of the Cross
at the time of the Lord's Passion, we must strive to be found partakers also
of Christ's Resurrection, and "pass from death unto life(4a)," while
we are in this body. For when a man is changed by some process from one thing
into another, not to be what he was is to him an ending, and to be what he was
not is a beginning. But the question is, to what a man either dies or lives:
because there is a death, which is the cause of living, and there is a life,
which is the cause of dying. And nowhere else but in this transitory world are
both sought after, so that upon the character of our temporal actions depend
the differences of the eternal retributions. We must die, therefore, to the
devil and live to God: we must perish to iniquity that we may rise to
righteousness. Let the old sink, that the new may rise; and since, as says the
Truth, "no one can serve two masters," let not him be lord who
has caused the overthrow of those that stood, but Him Who has raised the
fallen to victory.
II. God did not leave His
soul in hell, nor suffer His flesh to see corruption.
Accordingly, since the
Apostle says, "the first man is of the earth earthy, the second man is
from heaven heavenly. As is the earthy, such also are they that are earthy;
and as is the heavenly, such also are they that are heavenly. As we have borne
the image of the earthy, so let us also bear the image of Him Who is from
heaven 6," we must greatly rejoice over this change, whereby we are
translated from earthly degradation to heavenly dignity through His
unspeakable mercy, Who descended into our estate that He might promote us to
His, by assuming not only the substance but also the conditions of sinful
nature, and by allowing the impossibility of Godhead to be affected by all the
miseries which are the lot of mortal manhood. And hence that the disturbed
minds of the disciples might not be racked by prolonged grief, He with such
wondrous speed shortened the three days' delay which He had announced, that by
joining the last part of the first and the first part of the third day to the
whole of the second, He cut off a considerable portion of the period, and yet
did not lessen the number of days. The Saviour's Resurrection therefore did
not long keep His soul in Hades, nor His flesh in the tomb; and so speedy was
the quickening of His uncorrupted flesh that it bore a closer resemblance to
slumber than to death, seeing that the Godhead, Which quitted not either part
of the Human Nature which He had assumed, reunited by Its power that which Its
power had separated.
III. Christ's manifestation
after the Resurrection showed that His Person was essentially the same as
before.
And then there followed many
proofs, whereon the authority of the Faith to be preached through the whole
world might be based. And although the rolling away of the stone, the empty
tomb, the arrangement of the linen cloths, and the angels who narrated the
whole deed by themselves fully built up the truth of the Lord's Resurrection,
yet did He often appear plainly to the eyes both of the women and of the
Apostles not only talking with them, but also remaining and eating with
them, and allowing Himself to be handled by the eager and curious hands of
those whom doubt assailed. For to this end He entered when the doors were
closed upon the disciples, and gave them the Holy Spirit by breathing on them,
and after giving them the light of understanding opened the secrets of the
Holy Scriptures, and again Himself showed them the wound in the side, the
prints of the nails, and all the marks of His most recent Passion, whereby it
might be acknowledged that in Him the properties of the Divine and Human
Nature remained undivided, and we might in such sort know that the Word was
not what the flesh is, as to confess God's only Son to be both Word and Flesh.
IV. But though it is the
same, it is also glorified.
The Apostle of the Gentiles,
Paul, dearly. beloved, does not disagree with this belief, when he says,
"even though we have known Christ after the flesh, yet now we know Him so
no more." For the Lord's Resurrection was not the ending, but the
changing of the flesh, and His substance was not destroyed by His increase of
power. The quality altered, but the nature did not cease to exist: the body
was made impassible, which it had been possible to crucify: it was made
incorruptible, though it had been possible to wound it. And properly is
Christ's flesh said not to be known in that state in which it had been known,
because nothing remained passible in it, nothing weak, so that it was both the
same in essence and not the same in glory. But what wonder if S. Paul
maintains this about Christ's body, when he says of all spiritual Christians
"wherefore henceforth we know no one after the flesh." Henceforth,
he says, we begin to experience the resurrection in Christ, since the time
when in Him, Who died for all, all our hopes were guaranteed to us. We do not
hesitate in diffidence, we are not under the suspense of uncertainty, but
having received an earnest of the promise, we now with the eye of faith see
the things which will be, and rejoicing in the uplifting of our nature, we
already possess what we believe.
V. Being saved by hope, we
must not fulfil the lasts of the flesh.
Let us not then be taken up
with the appearances of temporal matters, neither let our contemplations be
diverted from heavenly to earthly things. Things which as yet have for the
most part not come to pass must be reckoned as accomplished: and the mind
intent on what is permanent must fix its desires there, where what is offered
is eternal. For although "by hope we were saved," and still bear
about with us a flesh that is corruptible and mortal, yet we are rightly said
not to be in the flesh, if the fleshly affections do not dominate us, and are
justified in ceasing to be named after that, the will of which we do not
follow. And so, when the Apostle says, "make not provision for the flesh
in the lusts thereof," we understand that those things are not
forbidden us, which conduce to health and which human weakness demands, but
because we may not satisfy all our desires nor indulge in all that the flesh
lusts after, we recognize that we are warned to exercise such self-restraint
as not to permit what is excessive nor refuse what is necessary to the flesh,
which is placed under the mind's control. And hence the same Apostle says
in another place, "For no one ever hated his own flesh, but nourisheth
and cherisheth it;" in so far, of course, as it must be nourished and
cherished not in vices and luxury, but with a view to its proper functions, so
that nature may recover herself and maintain due order, the lower parts not
prevailing wrongfully and debasingly over the higher, nor the higher yielding
to the lower, lest if vices overpower the mind, slavery ensues where there
should be supremacy.
VI. Our godly resolutions
must continue all the year round, not be confined to Easier only.
Let God's people then
recognize that they are a new creation in Christ, and with all vigilance
understand by Whom they have been adopted and Whom they have adopted. let
not the things, which have been made new, return to their ancient instability;
and let not him who has "put his hand to the plough" forsake his
work, but rather attend to that which he sows than look back to that which he
has left behind. Let no one fall back into that from which he has risen, but,
even though from bodily weakness he still languishes under certain maladies,
let him urgently desire to be healed and raised up. For this is the path of
health through imitation of the Resurrection begun in Christ, whereby,
notwithstanding the many accidents and falls to which in this slippery life
the traveller is liable, his feet may be guided from the quagmire on to solid
ground, for, as it is written, "the steps of a man are directed by the
Lord, and He will delight in his way. When the just man falls he shall not be
overthrown, because the Lord will stretch out His hand." These
thoughts, dearly-beloved, must be kept in mind not only for the Easter
festival, but also for the sanctification of the whole life, and to this our
present exercise ought to be directed, that what has delighted the souls of
the faithful by the experience of a short observance may pass into a habit and
remain unalterably, and if any fault creep in, it may be destroyed by speedy
repentance. And because the cure of old-standing diseases is slow and
difficult, remedies should be applied early, when the wounds are fresh, so
that rising ever anew from all downfalls, we may deserve to attain to the
incorruptible Resurrection of our glorified flesh in Christ Jesus our Lord,
Who lives and reigns with the Father and the Holy Ghost for ever and ever.
Amen.
SERMON LXXII: (On The Lord's
Resurrection, II.)
I. The Cross is not only the
mystery of salvation, but an example to follow.
The whole of the Easter
mystery, dearly-beloved, has been brought before us in the Gospel narrative,
and the ears of the mind have been so reached through the ear of flesh that
none of you can fail to have a picture of the events: for the text of the
Divinely-inspired story has clearly shown the treachery of the Lord Jesus
Christ's betrayal, the judgment by which He was condemned, the barbarity of
His crucifixion, and glory of His resurrection. But a sermon is still required
of us, that the priests' exhortation may be added to the solemn reading of
Holy Writ, as I am sure you are with pious expectation demanding of us as your
accustomed due. Because therefore there is no place for ignorance in faithful
ears, the seed of the Word which consists of the preaching of the Gospel,
ought to grow in the soil of your heart, so that, when choking thorns and
thistles have been removed, the plants of holy thoughts and the buds of right
desires may spring up freely into fruit. For the cross of Christ, which was
set up for the salvation of mortals, is both a mystery and an example: a
sacrament where by the Divine power takes effect, an example whereby man's
devotion is excited: for to those who are rescued from the prisoner's yoke
Redemption further procures the power of following the way of the cross by
imitation. For if the world's wisdom so prides itself in its error that every
one follows the opinions and habits and whole manner of life of him whom he
has chosen as his leader, how shall we share in the name of Christ save by
being inseparably united to Him, Who is, as He Himself asserted, "the
Way, the Truth, and the Life ?" the Way that is of holy living, the Truth
of Divine doctrine, and the Life of eternal happiness.
II. Christ look our nature
upon Him for our salvation.
For when the whole body of
mankind had fallen in our first parents, the merciful GOD purposed so to
succour, through His only- begotten Jesus Christ, His creatures made after His
image, that the restoration of our nature should not be effected apart from
it, and that our new estate should be an advance upon our original position.
Happy, if we had not fallen from that which God made us; but happier, if we
remain that which He has re-made us. It was much to have received form from
Christ; it is more to have a substance in Christ. For we were taken up into
its own proper self by that Nature (which condescended to those limitations
which loving- kindness dictated and which yet incurred no sort of change. We
were taken up by that Nature, which destroyed not what was His in what was
ours, nor what was ours in what was His; which made the person of the Godhead
and of the Manhood so one in Itself that by co-ordination of weakness and
power, the flesh could not be rendered inviolable through the Godhead, nor the
Godhead passible through the flesh. We were taken up by that Nature, which did
not break off the Branch from the common stock of our race, and yet excluded
all taint of the sin which has passed upon all men. That is to say, weakness
and mortality, which were not sin, but the penalty of sin, were undergone by
the Redeemer of the World in the way of punishment, that they might be
reckoned as the price of redemption. What therefore in all of us is the
heritage of condemnation, is in Christ "the mystery of
godliness." For being free from debt, He gave Himself up to that most
cruel creditor, and suffered the hands of Jews to be the devil's agents in
torturing His spotless flesh. Which flesh He willed to be subject to death,
even up to His(speedy) resurrection, to this end, that believers in Him
might find neither persecution intolerable, nor death terrible, by the
remembrance that there was no more doubt about their sharing His glory than
there was about His sharing their nature.
III. The presence of the
risen and ascended Lord is still with us.
And so, dearly-beloved, if
we unhesitatingly believe with the heart what we profess with the mouth, in
Christ we are crucified, we are dead, we are buried; on the very third day,
too, we are raised. Hence the Apostle says, "If ye have risen with
Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ is, sitting on God's
right hand: set your affections on things above, not on things on the earth
For ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God. For when Christ,
your life, shall have appeared, then shall ye also appear with Him in
glory." But that the hearts of the faithful may know that they have
that whereby to spurn the lusts of the world and be lifted to the wisdom that
is above, the Lord promises us His presence, saying, "Lo! I am with you
all the days, even till the end of the age." For not in vain had the
Holy Ghost said by Isaiah: "Behold! a virgin shall conceive and shall
bear a Son, and they shall call His name Emmanuel, which is, being
interpreted, God wire us." Jesus, therefore, fulfils the proper
meaning of His name, and in ascending into the heavens does not forsake His
adopted brethren, though "He sitteth at the right hand of the
Father," yet dwells in the whole body, and Himself from above strengthens
them for patient waiting while He summons them upwards to His glory.
IV. We must have the same
mind as was in Christ Jesus.
We must not, therefore,
indulge in folly amid vain pursuits, nor give way to fear in the midst of
adversities. On the one side, no doubt, we are flattered by deceits, and on
the other weighed down by troubles; but because "the earth is full of the
mercy of the Lord," Christ's victory is assuredly ours, that what He
says may be fulfilled, "Fear not, for I have overcome the world."
Whether, then, we fight against the ambition of the world, or against the
lusts of the flesh, or against the darts of heresy, let us arm ourselves
always with the Lord's Cross. For our Paschal feast will never end, if we
abstain from the leaven of the old wickedness (in the sincerity of truth.
For amid all the changes of this life which is full of various afflictions, we
ought to remember the Apostle's exhortation; whereby he instructs us, saying,
"Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus: Who being in the
form of God counted it not robbery to be equal with God, but emptied Himself,
taking the form of a bond-servant, being made in the likeness of men and found
in fashion as a man. Wherefore God also exalted Him, and gave Him a name which
is above every name, that in the name of Jesus every knee should bow of things
in heaven, of things on earth, and of things below, and that every tongue
should confess that the LORD Jesus Christ is in the glory of God the
Father." If, he says, you understand "the mystery of great
godliness," and remember what the Only-begotten Son of God did for the
salvation of mankind, "have that mind in you which was also in Christ
Jesus," Whose humility is not to be scorned by any of the rich, not to be
thought shame of by any of the high-born. For no human happiness whatever can
reach so great a height as to reckon it a source of shame to himself that God,
abiding in the form of Coy, thought it not unworthy of Himself to take the
form of a slave.
V. Only he who holds t/re
truth on the Incarnation can keep Easter properly.
Imitate what He wrought:
love what He loved, and finding in you the Grace of God, love in Him your
nature in return, since as He was not dispossessed of riches in poverty,
lessened not glory in humility, lost not eternity in death, so do ye, too,
treading in His footsteps, despise earthly things that ye may gain heavenly:
for the taking up of the cross means the slaying of lusts, the killing of
vices, the turning away from vanity, and the renunciation of all error. For,
though the Lord's Passover can be kept by no immodest, self-indulgent, proud,
or miserly person, yet none are held so far aloof from this festival as
heretics, and especially those who have wrong views on the Incarnation of the
Word, either disparaging what belongs to the Godhead or treating what is of
the flesh as unreal. For the Son of God is true God, having from the Father
all that the Father is, with no beginning in time, subject to no sort of
change, undivided from the One God, not different from the Almighty, the
eternal Only-begotten of the eternal Father; so that the faithful intellect
believing in the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost in the same essence of
the one Godhead, neither divides the Unity by suggesting degrees of dignity,
nor confounds the Trinity by merging the Persons in one. But it is not enough
to know the Son of God in the Father's nature only, unless we acknowledge Him
in what is ours without withdrawal of what is His own. For that self-
emptying, which He underwent for man's restoration, was the dispensation of
compassion, not the loss of powers. For, though by the eternal purpose of God
there was "no other name under heaven given to men whereby they must be
saved," the Invisible made His substance visible. the Intemporal
temporal, the Impassible passible: not that power might sink into weakness,
but that weakness might pass into indestructible power.
VI. A mystical application
of the term "Passover" is given.
For which reason the very
feast which by us is named Pascha, among the Hebrews is called Phase, that is
Pass-overs, as the evangelist attests, saying, "Before the feast of
Pascha, Jesus knowing that His hour was come that He should pass out of this
world unto the Father." But what was the nature in which He thus
passed out unless it was ours, since the Father was in the Son and the Son in
the Father inseparably? But because the Word and the Flesh is one Person, the
Assumed is not separated from the Assuming nature, and the honour of being
promoted is spoken of as accruing to Him that promotes, as the Apostle says in
a passage we have already quoted, "Wherefore also God exalted Him and
gave Him a name which is above every name." Where the exaltation of His
assumed Manhood is no doubt spoken of, so that He in Whose sufferings the
Godheard remains indivisible is likewise coeternal in the glory of the
Godhead. And to share in this unspeakable gift the LORD Himself was preparing
a blessed "passing over" for His faithful ones, when on the very
threshhold of His Passion he interceded not only for His Apostles and
disciples but also for the whole Church, saying, "But not for these only
I pray, but for those also who shall believe on Me through their word, that
they all may be one, as Thou also, Father, art in Me, and I in Thee, that they
also may be one in us."
VII. Only true believers can
keep the Easter Festival.
In this union they can have
no share who deny that in the Son of God, Himself true GOD, man's nature
abides, assailing the health- giving mystery and shutting themselves out from
the Easter festival. For, as they dissent from the Gospel and gainsay the
creed, they cannot keep it with us, because although they dare to take to
themselves the Christian name, yet they are repelled by every creature who has
Christ for his Head: for you rightly exult and devoutly rejoice in this sacred
season as those who, admitting no falsehood into the Truth, have no doubt
about Christ's Birth according to the flesh, His Passion and Death, and the
Resurrection of His body: inasmuch as without any separation of the Godhead
you acknowledge a Christ, Who was truly born of a Virgin's womb, truly hung on
the wood of the cross, truly laid in an earthly tomb, truly raised in glory,
truly set on the right hand of the Father's majesty; "whence also,"
as the Apostle says, "we look for a Saviour our LORD Jesus Christ. Who
shall refashion the body of our humility to become conformed to the body of
His glory." Who liveth and reigneth, &c.
SERMON LXXIII: (On the
Lord's Ascension, I.)
I. The events recorded as
happening after the Resurrection were intended to convince its truth.
Since the blessed and
glorious Resurrection of our LORD Jesus Christ, whereby the Divine power in
three days raised the true Temple of GOD, which the wickedness of the Jews had
overthrown, the sacred forty days, dearly- beloved are to-day ended, which by
most holy appointment were devoted to our most profitable instruction, so
that, during the period that the LORD thus protracted the lingering of His
bodily presence, our faith in the Resurrection might be fortified by needful
proofs. For Christ's Death had much disturbed the disciples' hearts, and a
kind of torpor of distrust had crept over their grief-laden minds at His
torture on the cross, at His giving up the ghost, at His lifeless body's
burial. For, when the holy women, as the Gospel-story has revealed, brought
word of tile stone rolled away from the tomb, the sepulchre emptied of the
body, and the angels bearing witness to the living LORD, their words seemed
like ravings to the Apostles and other disciples. Which doubtfulness, the
result of human weakness, the Spirit of Truth would most assuredly not have
permitted to exist in His own preacher's breasts, had not their trembling
anxiety and careful hesitation laid the foundations of our faith. It was our
perplexities and our dangers that were provided for in the Apostles: it was
ourselves who in these men were taught how to meet the cavillings of the
ungodly and the arguments of earthly wisdom. We are instructed by their
lookings, we are taught by their hearings, we are convinced by their
handlings. Let us give thanks to the Divine management and the holy Fathers'
necessary slowness of belief. Others doubted, that we might not doubt.
II. And therefore they are
in the highest degree instructive.
Those days, therefore,
dearly-beloved, which intervened between the Lord's Resurrection and Ascension
did not pass by in uneventful leisure, but great mysteries[9] were ratified in
them, deep truths[9] revealed. In them the fear of awful death was removed,
and the immortality not only of the soul but also of the flesh established. In
them, through the Lord's breathing upon them, the Holy Ghost is poured upon
all the Apostles, and to the blessed Apostle Peter beyond the rest the care of
the Lord's flock is entrusted, in addition to the keys of the kingdom. Then it
was that the Lord joined the two disciples as a companion on the way, and, to
the sweeping away of all the clouds of our uncertainty, upbraided them with
the slowness of their timorous hearts. Their enlightened hearts catch the
flame of faith, and lukewarm as they have been, are made to burn while the
Lord unfolds the Scriptures. In the breaking of bread also their eyes are
opened as they eat with Him: how far more blessed is the opening of their
eyes, to whom the glorification of their nature is revealed than that of our
first parents, on whom fell the disastrous consequences of their
transgression.
III. The prove the
Resurrection of the flesh.
And in the course of these
and other miracles, when the disciples were harassed by bewildering thoughts,
and the Lord had appeared in their midst and said, "Peace be unto
you[1]," that what was passing through their hearts might not be their
fixed opinion (for they thought they saw a spirit not flesh), He refutes their
thoughts so discordant with the Truth, offers to the doubters' eyes the marks
of the cross that remained in His hands and feet, and invites them to handle
Him with careful scrutiny, because the traces of the nails and spear had been
retained to heal the wounds of unbelieving hearts, so that not with wavering
faith, but with most stedfast knowledge they might comprehend that the Nature
which had been lain in the sepulchre was to sit on God the Father's throne.
IV. Christ's Ascension has
given us greater privileges and joys than the devil had taken from us.
Accordingly, dearly-beloved,
throughout this time which elapsed between the Lord's Resurrection and
Ascension, God's Providence had this in view, to teach and impress upon both
the eyes and hearts of His own people that the Lord Jesus Christ might be
acknowledged to have as truly risen, as He was truly born, suffered, and died.
And hence the most blessed Apostles and all the disciples, who had been both
bewildered at His death on the cross and backward in believing His
Resurrection, were so strengthened by the clearness of the truth that when the
Lord entered the heights of heaven, not only were they affected with no
sadness, but were even filled with great joy. And truly great and unspeakable
was their cause for joy, when in the sight of the holy multitude, above the
dignity of all heavenly creatures, the Nature of mankind went up, to pass
above the angels' ranks and to rise beyond the archangels' heights, and to
have Its uplifting limited by no elevation until, received to sit with the
Eternal Father, It should be associated on the throne with His glory, to Whose
Nature It was united in the Son. Since then Christ's Ascension is our
uplifting, and the hope of the Body is raised, whither the glory of the Head
has gone before, let us exult, dearly-beloved, with worthy joy and delight in
the loyal paying of thanks. For to-day not only are we confirmed as possessors
of paradise, but have also in Christ penetrated the heights of heaven, and
have gained still greater things through Christ's unspeakable grace than we
had lost through the devil's malice. For us, whom our virulent enemy had
driven out from the bliss of our first abode, the Son of God has made members
of Himself and placed at the right hand of the Father, with Whom He lives and
reigns in the unity of the Holy Spirit, God for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON LXXIV: (On the Lord's
Ascension, II.)
I. The Ascension completes
our faith in Him, Who was God as well as man.
The mystery of our
salvation, dearly-beloved, which the Creator of the universe valued at the
price of His blood, has now been carried out under conditions of humiliation
from the day of His bodily birth to the end of His Passion. And although even
in "the form of a slave" many signs of Divinity have beamed out, yet
the events of all that period served particularly to show the reality of His
assumed Manhood. But after the Passion, when the chains of death were broken,
which had exposed its own strength by attacking Him, Who was ignorant of sin,
weakness was turned into power, mortality into eternity, contumely into glory,
which the Lord Jesus Christ showed by many clear proofs in the sight of many,
until He carried even into heaven the triumphant victory which He had won over
the dead. As therefore at the Easter commemoration, the Lord's Resurrection
was the cause of our rejoicing; so the subject of our present gladness is His
Ascension, as we commemorate and duly venerate that day on which the Nature of
our humility in Christ was raised above all the host of heaven, over all the
ranks of angels, beyond the height of all powers, to sit with God the Father.
On which Providential order of events we are founded and built up, that God's
Grace might become more wondrous, when, notwithstanding the removal from men's
sight of what was rightly felt to command their awe, faith did not fail, hope
did not waver, love did not grow cold. For it is the strength of great minds
and the light of firmly-faithful souls, unhesitatingly to believe what is not
seen with the bodily sight, and there to fix one's affections whither you
cannot direct your gaze. And whence should this Godliness spring up in our
hearts, or how should a man be justified by faith, if our salvation rested on
those things only which lie beneath our eyes? Hence our Lord said to him who
seemed to doubt of Christ's Resurrection, until he had tested by sight and
touch the traces of His Passion in His very Flesh, "because thou hast
seen Me, thou hast believed: blessed are, they who have not seen and yet have
believed[2]."
II. The Ascension renders
our faith more excellent and stronger.
In order, therefore,
dearly-beloved, that we may be capable of this blessedness, when all things
were fulfilled which concerned the Gospel preaching and the mysteries of the
New Testament, our Lord Jesus Christ, on the fortieth day after the
Resurrection in the presence of the disciples, was raised into heaven, and
terminated His presence with us in the body, to abide on the Father's right
hand until the times Divinely fore-ordained for multiplying the sons of the
Church are accomplished, and He comes to judge the living and the dead in the
same flesh in which He ascended. And so that which till then was visible of
our Redeemer was changed into a sacramental presence[3], and that faith might
be more excellent and stronger, sight gave way to doctrine, the authority of
which was to be accepted by believing hearts enlightened with rays from above.
III. The marvellous effects
of this Faith on all.
This Faith, increased by the
Lord's Ascension and established by the gift of the Holy Ghost, was not
terrified by bonds, imprisonments, banishments, hunger, fire, attacks by wild
beasts, refined torments of cruel persecutors. For this Faith throughout the
world not only men, but even women, not only beardless boys, but even tender
maids, fought to the shedding of their blood. This Faith cast out spirits,
drove off sicknesses, raised the dead: and through it the blessed Apostles
themselves also, who after being confirmed by so many miracles and instructed
by so many discourses, had yet been panic-stricken by the horrors of the
Lord's Passion and had not accepted the truth of His resurrection without
hesitation, made such progress after the Lord's Ascension that everything
which had previously filled them with fear was turned into joy. For they had
lifted the whole contemplation of their mind to the Godhead of Him that sat at
the Father's right hand, and were no longer hindered by the barrier of
corporeal sight from directing their minds' gaze to That Which had never
quitted the Father's side in descending to earth, and had not forsaken the
disciples in ascending to heaven.
IV. His Ascension refines
our Faith: the ministering of angels to Hint shows the extent of His
authority.
The Son of Man and Son of
God, therefore, dearly-beloved, then attained a more excellent and holier
fame, when He betook Himself back to the glory of the Father's Majesty, and m
an ineffable manner began to be nearer to the Father in respect of His
Godhead, after having become farther away in respect of His manhood. A better
instructed faith then began to draw closer to a conception of the Son's
equality with the Father without the necessity of handling the corporeal
substance in Christ, whereby He is less than the Father, since, while the
Nature of the glorified Body still remained the faith of believers was called
upon to touch not with the hand of flesh, but with the spiritual understanding
the Only-begotten, Who was equal with the Father. Hence comes that which the
Lord said after His Resurrection, when Mary Magdalene, representing the
Church, hastened to approach and touch Him: "Touch Me not, for I have not
yet ascended to My Father[4]:" that is, I would not have you come to Me
as to a human body, nor yet recognize Me by fleshly perceptions: I put thee
off for higher things, I prepare greater things for thee: when I have ascended
to My Father, then thou shall handle Me more perfectly and truly, for thou
shall grasp what thou canst not touch and believe what thou canst not see. But
when the disciples[1] eyes followed the ascending Lord tO heaven with upward
gaze of earnest wonder, two angels stood by them in raiment shining with
wondrous brightness, who also said, "Ye men of Galilee, why stand ye
gazing into heaven? This Jesus Who was taken up from you into heaven shall so
come as ye saw Him going into heaven[5]." By which words all the sons of
the Church were taught to believe that Jesus Christ will come visibly in the
same Flesh wherewith He ascended, and not to doubt that all things are
subjected to Him on Whom the ministry of angels had waited from the first
beginning of His Birth. For, as an angel announced to the blessed Virgin that
Christ should be conceived by the Holy Ghost, so the voice of heavenly beings
sang of His being born of the Virgin also to the shepherds. As messengers from
above were the first to attest His having risen from the dead, so the service
of angels was employed to foretell His coming in very Flesh to judge the
world, that we might understand what great powers will come with Him as Judge,
when such great ones ministered to Him even in being judged.
V. We must despise earthly
things and rise to things above, especially by active works of mercy and love.
And so, dearly-beloved, let us rejoice with spiritual joy, and let us with
gladness pay God worthy thanks and raise our hearts' eyes unimpeded to those
heights where Christ is. Minds that have heard the call to be uplifted must
not be pressed down by earthly affections[6], they that are fore-ordained to
things eternal must not be taken up with the things that perish; they that
have entered on the way of Truth must not be entangled in treacherous snares,
and the faithful must so take their course through these temporal things as to
remember that they are sojourning in the vale of this world, in which, even
though they meet with some attractions, they must not sinfully embrace them,
but bravely pass through them. For to this devotion the blessed Apostle Peter
arouses us, and entreating us with that loving eagerness which he conceived
for feeding Christ's sheep by the threefold profession of love for the Lord,
says, "dearly-beloved, I beseech you, as strangers and pilgrims, abstain
from fleshly lusts which war against the soul[7]." But for whom do
fleshly pleasures wage war, if not for the devil, whose delight it is to
fetter souls that strive after things above, with the enticements of
corruptible good things, and to draw them away from those abodes from which he
himself has been banished? Against his plots every believer must keep careful
watch that he may crush his foe on the side whence the attack is made. And
there is no more powerful weapon, dearly-beloved, against the devil's wiles
than kindly mercy and bounteous charity, by which every sin is either escaped
or vanquished. But this lofty power is not attained until that which is
opposed to it be overthrown. And what so hostile to mercy and works of charity
as avarice from the root of which spring all evils[7a]? And unless it be
destroyed by lack of nourishment, there must needs grow in the ground of that
heart in which this evil weed has taken root, the thorns and briars of vices
rather than any seed of true goodness. Let us then, dearly- beloved, resist
this pestilential evil and "follow after charity[7a]," without which
no virtue can flourish, that by this path of love whereby Christ came down to
us, we too may mount up to Him, to Whom with God the Father and the Holy
Spirit is honour and glory for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON LXXV: (ON
WHITSUNTIDE, I.)
I. The giving of the Law by
Moses prepared the way for the outpouring of the Holy Ghost.
The hearts of all catholics,
beloved, realize that to-day's solemnity is to be honoured as one of the chief
feasts, nor is there any doubt that great respect is due to this day, which
the Holy Spirit has hallowed by the miracle of His most excellent gift. For
from the day on which the Lord ascended up above all heavenly heights to sit
down at God the Father's right hand, this is the tenth which has shone, and
the fiftieth from His Resurrection, being the very day on which it began[8],
and containing in itself great revelations of mysteries both new and old, by
which it is most manifestly revealed that Grace was fore-announced through the
Law and the Law fulfilled through Grace. For as of old, when the Hebrew nation
were released from the Egyptians, on the fiftieth day after the sacrificing of
the lamb the Law was given on Mount Sinai, so after the suffering of Christ,
wherein the true Lamb of God was slain on the fiftieth day from His
Resurrection, the Holy Ghost came down upon the Apostles and the multitude of
believers, so that the earnest Christian may easily perceive that the
beginnings of the Old Testament were preparatory to the beginnings of the
Gospel, and that the second covenant was rounded by the same Spirit that had
instituted the first.
II. How marvellous was the
gift of "divers tongues."
For as the Apostles' story
testifies: "while the days of Pentecost were fulfilled and all the
disciples were together in the same place, there occurred suddenly from heaven
a sound as of a violent wind coming, and filled the whole house where they
were sitting. And there appeared to them divided tongues as of fire and it sat
upon each of them. And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit, and began to
speak with other tongues, as the Holy Spirit gave them utterance[9]." Oh!
how swift are the words of wisdom. and where God is the Master, how quickly is
what is taught, learnt. No interpretation is required for understanding, no
practice for using, no time for studying, but the Spirit of Truth blowing
where He wills[9a], the languages peculiar to each nation become common
property in the mouth of the Church. And therefore from that day the trumpet
of the Gospel-preaching has sounded loud: from that day the showers of
gracious gifts, the rivers of blessings, have watered every desert and all the
dry land, since to renew the face of the earth the Spirit of God "moved
over the waters[9a]," and to drive away the old darkness flashes of new
light shone forth, when by the blaze of those busy tongues was kindled the
Lord's bright Word and fervent eloquence, in which to arouse the
understanding, and to consume sin there lay both a capacity of enlightenment
and a power of burning.
III. The three Persons in
the Trinity are perfectly equal in all things.
But although,
dearly-beloved, the actual form of the thing done was exceeding wonderful, and
undoubtedly in that exultant chorus of all human languages the Majesty of the
Holy Spirit was present, yet no one must think that His Divine substance
appeared in what was seen with bodily eyes. For His Nature, which is invisible
and shared in common with the Father and the Son, showed the character of His
gift and work by the outward sign that pleased Him, but kept His essential
property within His own Godhead: because human sight can no more perceive the
Holy Ghost than it can the Father or the Son. For in the Divine Trinity
nothing is unlike or unequal, and all that can be thought concerning Its
substance admits of no diversity either in power or glory or eternity. And
while in the property of each Person the Father is one, the Son is another,
and the Holy Ghost is another, yet the Godhead is not distinct and different;
for whilst the Son is the Only begotten of the Father, the Holy Spirit is the
Spirit of the Father and the Son, not in the way that every creature is the
creature of the Father and the Son, but as living and having power with Both,
and eternally subsisting of That Which is the Father and the Son[1]. And hence
when the Lord before the day of His Passion promised the coming of the Holy
Spirit to His disciples, He said, "I have yet many things to say to you,
but ye cannot bear them now. But when He, the Spirit of Truth shall have come,
He shall guide you into all the Truth. For He shall not speak from Himself,
but whatsoever He shall have heard, He shall speak and shall announce things
to come unto you. All things that the Father hath are Mine: therefore said I
that He shall take of Mine, and shall announce it to you[2]."
Accordingly, there are not some things that are the Father's, and other the
Son's, and other the Holy Spirit's: but all things whatsoever the Father has,
the Son also has, and the Holy Spirit also has: nor was there ever a time when
this communion did not exist, because with Them to have all things is to
always exist. In them let no times, no grades, no differences be imagined[3],
and, if no one can explain that which is true concerning God, let no one dare
to assert what is not true. For it is more excusable not to make a full
statement concerning His ineffable Nature than to frame an actually wrong
definition. And so whatever loyal hearts can conceive of the Father's eternal
and unchangeable Glory, let them at the same time understand it of the Son and
of the Holy Ghost without any separation or difference. For we confess this
blessed Trinity to be One God for this reason, because in these three Persons
there is no diversity either of substance, or of power, or of will, or of
operation.
IV. The Macedonian heresy is
as blasphemous as the Arian.
As therefore we abhor the
Arians, who maintain a difference between the Father and the Son, so also we
abhor the Macedonians[4], who, although they ascribe equality to the Father
and the Son, yet think the Holy Ghost to be of a lower nature, not considering
that they thus fall into that blasphemy, which is not to be forgiven either in
the present age or in the judgment to come, as the Lord says: "whosoever
shall have spoken a word against the Son of Man, it shall be forgiven him, but
he that shall have spoken against the Holy Ghost, it shall not be forgiven him
either in this age or in the age to come[5]." And so to persist in this
impiety is unpardonable, because it cuts him off from Him, by Whom he could
confess: nor will he ever attain to healing pardon, who has no Advocate to
plead for him. For from Him comes the invocation of the Father, from Him come
the tears of penitents, from Him come the groans of suppliants, and "no
one can call Jesus the Lord save in the Holy Ghost[6],'' Whose Omnipotence as
equal and Whose Godhead as one, with the Father and the Son, the Apostle most
clearly proclaims, saying, "there are divisions of graces but the same
Spirit; and the divisions of ministrations but the same Lord; and there are
divisions of operations but the same God, Who worketh all things in
all[6]."
V. The Spirit's work is
still continued in the Church.
By these and other
numberless proofs, dearly-beloved, with which the authority of the Divine
utterances is ablaze, let us with one mind be incited to pay reverence to
Whitsuntide, exulting in honour of the Holy Ghost, through Whom the whole
catholic Church is sanctified, and every rational soul quickened; Who is the
Inspirer of the Faith, the Teacher of Knowledge, the Fount of Love, the Seal
of Chastity, and the Cause of all Power. Let the minds of the faithful
rejoice, that throughout the world One God, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, is
praised by the confession of all tongues, and that that sign of His Presence,
which appeared in the likeness of fire, is still perpetuated in His work and
gift. For the Spirit of Truth Himself makes the house of His glory shine with
the brightness of His light, and will have nothing dark nor lukewarm in His
temple. And it is through His aid and teaching also that the purification of
fasts and alms has been established among us. For this venerable day is
followed by a most wholesome practice, which all the saints have ever found
most profitable to them, and to the diligent observance of which we exhort you
with a shepherd's care, to the end that if any blemish has been contracted in
the days just passed through heedless negligence, it may be atoned for by the
discipline of fasting and corrected by pious devotion. On Wednesday and
Friday, therefore, let us fast, and on Saturday for this very purpose keep
vigil with accustomed devotion, through Jesus Christ our Lord, Who with the
Father and the Holy Ghost lives and reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON LXXVII: (On
Whitsuntide, III.)
I. The Holy Ghost's work did
not begin at Pentecost, but was continued because the Holy Trinity is One in
action and in will.
To-day's festival,
dearly-beloved, which is held in reverence by the whole world, has been
hallowed by that advent of the Holy Ghost, which on the fiftieth day after the
Lord's Resurrection, descended on the Apostles and the multitude of
believers[7], even as it was hoped. And there was this hope, because the Lord
Jesus had promised that He should come, not then first to be the Indweller of
the saints, but to kindle to a greater heat, and to fill with larger abundance
the hearts that were dedicated to Him, increasing, not commencing His gifts,
not fresh in operation because richer in bounty. For the Majesty of the Holy
Ghost is never separate from the Omnipotence of the Father and the Son, and
whatever the Divine government accomplishes in the ordering of all things,
proceeds from the Providence of the whole Trinity. Therein exists unity of
mercy and loving-kindness, unity of judgment and justice: nor is there any
division in action where there is no divergence of will. What, therefore, the
Father enlightens, the Son enlightens, and the Holy Ghost enlightens: and
while there is one Person of the Sent, another of the Sender, and another of
the Promiser both the Unity and the Trinity are at the same time revealed to
us, so that the Essence which possesses equality and does not admit of
solitariness is understood to belong to the same Substance but not the same
Person.
II. Each Person in the
Trinity look part in our Redemption.
The fact, therefore, that,
with the co-operation of the inseparable Godhead still perfect, certain things
are performed by the Father, certain by the Son, and certain by the Holy
Spirit, in particular belongs to the ordering of our Redemption and the method
of our salvation. For if man, made after the image and likeness of God, had
retained the dignity of his own nature, and had not been deceived by the
devil's wiles into transgressing through lust the law laid down for him, the
Creator of the world would not have become a Creature, the Eternal would not
have entered the sphere of time, nor God the Son, Who is equal with God the
Father, have assumed the form of a slave and the likeness of sinful flesh. But
because "by the devil's malice death entered into the world[8]," and
captive humanity could not otherwise be set free without His undertaking our
cause, Who without loss of His majesty should both become true Man, and alone
have no taint of sin, the mercy of the Trinity divided for Itself the work of
our restoration in such a way that the Father should be propitiated, the Son
should propitiate[9], and the Holy Ghost enkindle. For it was necessary that
those who are to be saved should also do something on their part, and by the
turning of their hearts to the Redeemer should quit the dominion of the enemy,
even as the Apostle says, "God sent the Spirit of His Son into our
hearts, crying Abba, Father[1],"And where the Spirit of the Lord is,
there is liberty[2]," and "no one can call Jesus Lord except in the
Holy Spirit[3]."
III. But this apportionment
of functions does not mar the Unity of the Trinity.
If, therefore, under guiding
grace, dearly-beloved, we faithfully and wisely understand what is the
particular work of the Father, of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, and what is
common to the Three in our restoration, we shall without doubt so accept what
has been wrought for us by humiliation and in the body as to think nothing
unworthy about the One and Selfsame Glory of the Trinity. For although no mind
is competent to think, no tongue to speak about God, yet whatever that is
which the human intellect apprehends about the essence of the Father's
Godhead, unless one and the selfsame truth is held concerning His
Only-begotten or the Holy Spirit, our meditations are disloyal, and beclouded
by the intrusions of the flesh, and even that is lost, which seemed a right
conclusion concerning the Father, because the whole Trinity is forsaken, if
the Unity therein is not maintained; and That Which is different by any
inequality can in no true sense be One.
IV. In thinking upon God, we
must put aside all material notions.
When, therefore, we fix our
minds on confessing the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost, let us keep far
from our thoughts the forms of things visible, the ages of beings born in
time, and all material bodies and places. Let that which is extended in space,
that which is enclosed by limit, and whatever is not always everywhere and
entire be banished from the heart. The conception of the Triune Godhead must
put aside the idea of interval or of grade[4], and if a man has attained any
worthy thought of God, let him not dare to withhold it from any Person
therein, as if to ascribe with more honour to the Father that which he does
not ascribe to the Son and Spirit. It is not true Godliness to put the Father
before the Only-begotten: insult to the Son is insult to the Father: what is
detracted from the One is detracted from Both. For since Their Eternity and
Godhead are alike common, the Father is not accounted either Almighty and
Unchangeable, if He begot One less than Himself or gained by having One Whom
before He had not[5].
V. Christ as Man is less
than the Father, as God co-equal.
The Lord Jesus does, indeed,
say to His disciples, as was read in the Gospel lection, "if ye loved Me,
ye would assuredly rejoice, because I go to the Father, because the Father is
greater than I[6];" but those ears, which have often heard the words,
"I and the Father are One[6]," and "He that sees Me, sees the
Father also[6]," accept the saying without supposing a difference of
Godhead or understanding it of that Essence which they know to be co-eternal
and of the same nature with the Father. Man's uplifting, therefore, in the
Incarnation of the Word, is commended to the holy Apostles also, and they, who
were distressed at the announcement of the Lord's departure from them, are
incited to eternal joy over the increase in their dignity; "If ye loved
Me," He says, "ye would assuredly rejoice, because I go to the
Father:" that is, if, with complete knowledge ye saw what glory is
bestowed on you by the fact that, being begotten of GOD the Father, I have
been born of a human mother also, that being invisible I have made Myself
visible, that being eternal "in the form of God" I accepted the
"form of a slave," "ye would rejoice because I go to the
Father." For to you is offered this ascension, and your humility is in Me
raised to a place above all heavens at the Father's right hand. But I, Who am
with the Father that which the Father is, abide undivided with My Father, and
in coming from Him to you I do not leave Him, even as in returning to Him from
you I do not forsake you. Rejoice, therefore, "because I go to the
Father, because the Father is greater than I." For I have united you with
Myself, and am become Son of Man that you might have power to be sons of God.
And hence, though I am One in both forms, yet in that whereby I am conformed
to you I am less than the Father, whereas in that whereby I am not divided
from the Father I am greater even than Myself. And so let the Nature, which is
less than the Father, go[7] to the Father, that the Flesh may be where the
Word always is, and that the one Faith of the catholic Church may believe that
He Whom as Man it does not deny to be less, is equal as God with the Father.
VI. And this equality which
the Son has with the Father, the Holy Ghost also has.
Accordingly, dearly-beloved,
let us despise the vain and blind cunning of ungodly heretics, which flatters
itself over its crooked interpretation of this sentence, and when the LORD
says, "All things that the Father hath are Mines,'' does not understand
that it takes away from the Father whatever it dares to deny to the Son, and
is so foolish in matters even which are human as to think, that what is His
Father's has ceased to belong to His Only-begotten, because He has taken on
Him what is ours. Mercy in the case of GOD does not lessen power, nor is the
reconciliation of the creature whom He loves a falling off of Eternal glory.
What the Father has the Son also has, and what the Father and the Son have,
the Holy Ghost also has, because the whole Trinity together is One God. But
this Faith is not the discovery of earthly wisdom nor the conviction of man's
opinion: the Only-begotten Son has taught it Himself, and the Holy Ghost has
established it Himself, concerning Whom no other conception must be formed
than is formed concerning the Father and the Son. Because albeit He is not the
Father nor the Son, yet He is not separable from the Father and the Son: and
as He has His own personality in the Trinity, so has He One substance in
Godhead with the Father and the Son, filling all things, containing all
things, and with the Father and the Son controlling all things, to Whom is the
honour and glory for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON LXXVIII: (On The
Whitsuntide Fast, I.)
I. Since the Apostles' day
till now self-restraint is the best defence against the devil's assaults.
To-day's festival,
dearly-beloved, hallowed by the descent of the Holy Ghost, is followed, as you
know by a solemn fast, which being a salutary institution for the healing of
soul and body, we must keep with devout observance. For when the Apostles had
been filled with the promised power, and the Spirit of Truth had entered their
hearts, we doubt not that among the other mysteries of heavenly doctrine this
discipline of spiritual self- restraint was first thought of at the prompting
of the Paraclete in order that minds sanctified by fasting might be fitter for
the chrism to be bestowed on them[9]. The disciples of Christ had the
protection of the Almighty aid, and the chiefs of the infant Church were
guarded by the whole Godhead of the Father and the Son through the presence of
the Holy Ghost. But against the threatened attacks of persecutors, against the
terrifying shouts of the ungodly, they could not fight with bodily strength or
pampered flesh, since that which delights the outer does most harm to the
inner man, and the more one's fleshly substance is kept in subjection, the
more purified is the reasoning soul.
II. The templer is foiled in
attacks upon those who have learnt these tactics.
And so those teachers, who
have instructed all the Church's sons by their examples and their traditions,
began the rudiments of the Christian warfare with holy fasts, that, having to
fight against spiritual wickednesses, they might take the armour of
abstinence, wherewith to slay the incentives to vice. For invisible foes and
incorporeal enemies will have no strength against us, if we be not entangled
in any lusts of the flesh. The desire to hurt us is indeed ever active in the
tempter, but he will be disarmed and powerless, if he find no vantage around
within us from which to attack us. But who, encompassed with this frail flesh,
and placed in this body of death, even one who has made much decided progress,
can be so sure of his safety now, as to believe himself free from the peril of
all allurements? Although Divine Grace gives daily victory to His saints[1],
yet He does not remove the occasion for fighting, because this very fact is
part of our Protector's Mercy, Who has always designed that something should
remain for our ever-changing nature to win, lest it should boast itself on the
ending of the battle.
III. And so this fast comes
very opportunely after the feast of Whitsuntide.
Therefore, after the days of
holy gladness, which we have devoted to the honour of the LORD rising from the
dead and then ascending into heaven, and after receiving the gift of the Holy
Ghost, a fast is ordained as a wholesome and needful practice, so that, if
perchance through neglect or disorder even amid the joys of the festival any
undue licence has broken out, it may be corrected by the remedy of strict
abstinence, which must be the more scrupulously carried out in order that what
was on this day Divinely bestowed on the Church may abide in us. For being
made the Temple of the Holy Ghost, and watered with a greater supply than ever
of the Divine Stream, we ought not to be conquered by any lusts nor held in
possession by any vices in order that the habitation of Divine power may be
stained with no pollution.
IV. And by proper use of it
we shall win God's favour.
And this assuredly it is
possible for all to obtain, God helping and guiding us, if by the purification
of fasting and by merciful liberality, we take pains to be set free from the
filth of sins, and to be rich in the fruits of love. For whatever is spent in
feeling the poor, in healing the sick, in ransoming prisoners, or in any other
deeds of piety, is not lessened but increased, nor will that ever be lost in
the sight of God which the loving-kindness of the faithful has expended,
seeing that whatever a man gives in relief, he lays up for his own reward. For
"blessed are the merciful, since God shall have mercy on them[2];"
nor wilt shortcomings be remembered, where the presence of true religion has
been attested. On Wednesday and Friday, therefore, let us fast, and on
Saturday let us keep vigil in the presence of the most blessed Apostle, Peter,
by whose prayers we surely trust to be set free both from spiritual foes and
bodily enemies; through our Lord Jesus Christ, who with the Father and the
Holy Ghost, lives and reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON LXXXII: ON THE
FEAST[3] OF THE APOSTLES PETER AND PAUL (JUNE 29).
I. Rome owes its high
position to these Apostles.
The whole world,
dearly-beloved, does indeed take part in all holy anniversaries, and loyalty
to the one Faith demands that whatever is recorded as done for all men's
salvation should be everywhere celebrated with common rejoicings. But, besides
that reverence which to-day's festival has gained from all the world, it is to
be honoured with special and peculiar exultation in our city, that there may
be a predominance of gladness on the day of their martyrdom in the place where
the chief of the Apostles met their glorious end[4]. For these are the men,
through whom the light of Christ's gospel shone on thee, O Rome, and through
whom thou, who wast the teacher of error, wast made the disciple of Truth.
These are thy holy Fathers and true shepherds, who gave thee claims to be
numbered among the heavenly kingdoms, and built thee under much better and
happier auspices than they, by whose zeal the first foundations of thy walls
were laid: and of whom the one that gave thee thy name defiled thee with his
brother's blood[5]. These are they who promoted thee to such glory, that being
made a holy nation, a chosen people, a priestly and royal state[5a], and the
head of the world through the blessed Peter's holy See thou didst attain a
wider sway. by the worship of God than by earthly government. For although
thou weft increased by many victories, and didst extend thy rule on land and
sea, yet what thy toils in war subdued is less than what the peace of Christ
has conquered.
II. The extension of the
Roman empire was part of the Divine scheme.
For the good, just, and
Almighty God, Who has never withheld His mercy from mankind, and has ever
instructed all men alike in the knowledge of Himself by the most abundant
benefits, has by a more secret counsel and a deeper love shown pity upon the
wanderers' voluntary blindness and proclivities to evil, by sending His
co-equal and co-eternal Word. Which becoming flesh so united the Divine Nature
with the human that He by lowering His Nature to the uttermost has raised our
nature to the highest. But that the result of this unspeakable Grace might be
spread abroad throughout the world, God's Providence made ready the Roman
empire, whose growth has reached such limits that the whole multitude of
nations are brought into close connexion. For the Divinely-planned work
particularly required that many kingdoms should be leagued together under one
empire, so that the preaching of the world might quickly reach to all people,
when they were held beneath the rule of one state. And yet that state, in
ignorance of the Author of its aggrandisement though it rule almost all
nations, was enthralled by the errors of them all, and seemed to itself to
have fostered religion greatly, because it rejected no falsehood. And hence
its emancipation through Christ was the more wondrous that it had been so fast
bound by Satan.
III. On the dispersing of
the Twelve, St. Peter was sent to Rome.
For when the twelve
Apostles, after receiving through the Holy Ghost the power of speaking with
all tongues, had distributed the world into parts among themselves, and
undertaken to instruct it in the Gospel, the most blessed Peter, chief of the
Apostolic band, was appointed to the citadel of the Roman empire, that the
light of Truth which was being displayed for the salvation of all the nations,
might spread itself more effectively throughout the body of the world from the
head itself. What nation had not representatives then living in this city; or
what peoples did not know what Rome had learnt? Here it was that the tenets of
philosophy must be crushed, here that the follies of earthly wisdom must be
dispelled, here that the cult of demons must be refuted, here that the
blasphemy of all idolatries must be rooted out, here where the most persistent
superstition had gathered together all the various errors which had anywhere
been devised.
IV. St. Peter's love
conquered his fears in coming to Rome.
To this city then, most
blessed Apostle Peter, thou dost not fear to come, and when the Apostle Paul;
the partner of thy glory, was still busied with regulating other churches,
didst enter this forest of roaring beasts, this deep, stormy ocean with
greater boldness than when thou didst walk upon the sea. And thou who hadst
been frightened by the high priest's maid in the house of Caiaphas, hadst no
fear of Rome the mistress of the world. Was there any less power in Claudius,
any less cruelty in Nero than in the judgment of Pilate or the Jews' savage
rage? So then it was the force of love that conquered the reasons for fear:
and thou didst not think those to be feared whom thou hadst undertaken to
love. But this feeling of fearless affection thou hadst even then surely
conceived when the profession of thy love for the Lord was confirmed by the
mystery of the thrice-repeated question. And nothing else was demanded of this
thy earnest purpose than that thou shouldst bestow the food wherewith thou
hadst thyself been enriched, on feeding His sheep whom thou didst love.
V. S. Peter was
providentially prepared for his great mission.
Thy confidence also was
increased by many miraculous signs, by many gifts of grace, by many proofs of
power. Thou hadst already taught the people, who from the number of the
circumcised had believed: thou hadst already founded the Church at Antioch,
where first the dignity of the Christian name arose: thou hadst already
instructed Pontus, Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia, in the laws of the
Gospel-message: and, without doubt as to the success of the work, with full
knowledge of the short span of thy life didst carry the trophy of Christ's
cross into the citadel of Rome, whither by the Divine fore-ordaining there
accompanied thee the honour of great power and the glory of much suffering.
VI. Many noble martyrs have
sprung from the blood of SS. Peter and Paul.
Thither came also thy
blessed brother-Apostle Paul, "the vessel of election[5b]," and the
special teacher of the Gentiles, and was associated with thee at a time when
all innocence, all modesty, all freedom was into jeopardy under Nero's rule.
Whose fury, inflamed by excess of all vices, hurled him headlong into such a
fiery furnace of madness that he was the first to assail the Christian name
with a general persecution, as if God's Grace could be quenched by the death
of saints, whose greatest gain it was to win eternal happiness by contempt of
this fleeting life. "Precious," therefore, "in the eyes of the
LORD is the death of His saints[6]:" nor can any degree of cruelty
destroy the religion which is founded on the mystery of Christ's cross.
Persecution does not diminish but increase the church, and the LORD'S field is
clothed with an ever richer crop, while the grains, which fall singly, spring
up and are multiplied a hundred- fold[7]. Hence how large a progeny have
sprung from these two Heaven-sown seeds is shown by the thousands of blessed
martyrs, who, rivalling the Apostles' triumphs, have traversed the city far
and wide in purple-clad and ruddy-gleaming throngs, and crowned it, as it were
with a single diadem of countless gems.
VII. No distinction must be
drawn between the merits of the two.
And over this band,
dearly-beloved, whom GOD has set forth for our example in patience and for our
confirmation in the Faith, there must be rejoicing everywhere in the
commemoration of all the saints, but of these two Fathers' excellence we must
rightly make our boast in louder joy, for God's Grace has raised them to so
high a place among the members of the Church, that He has set them like the
twin light of the eyes in the body, whose Head is Christ. About their merits
and virtues, which pass all power of speech, we must not make distinctions,
because they were equal in their election[8], alike in their toils, undivided
in their death. But as we have proved for Ourselves, and our forefathers
maintained, we believe, and are sure that, amid all the toils of this life, we
must always be assisted in obtaining God's Mercy by the prayers of special
interceders, that we may be raised by the Apostles' merits in proportion as we
are weighed down by our own sins. Through our Lord Jesus Christ, &c.
SERMON LXXXIV[9]: CONCERNING
THE NEGLECT OF THE COMMEMORATION.
I. The Churchmen of Rome are
in danger of forgetting past judgments and mercies, and becoming ungrateful to
God.
The fewness of those who
were present has of itself shown, dearly- beloved, that the religious devotion
wherewith, in commemoration of the day of our chastisement and release, the
whole body of the faithful used to flock together in order to give God thanks,
has on this last occasion been almost entirely neglected: and this has caused
me much sadness of heart and great fear. For there is much danger of men
becoming ungrateful to GOD, and through forgetfulness of His benefits not
feeling sorrow for the chastisement, nor joy for the liberation. Accordingly I
fear, dearly- beloved, lest that utterance of the Prophet be addressed in
rebuke to such men, which says, "thou hast scourged them and they have
not grieved: thou hast chastised them, and they have refused to receive
correction[1]" For what amendment is shown by them in whom such aversion
to GOD'S service is found? One is ashamed to say it, but one must not keep
silence: more is spent upon demons than upon the Apostles, and mad spectacles
draw greater crowds than blessed martyrdoms[2]. Who was it that restored this
city to safety? that rescued it from captivity? the games of the circus-goers
or the care of the saints? surely it was by the saints' prayers that the
sentence of Divine displeasure was diverted, so that we who deserved wrath,
were reserved for pardon.
II. Let them avail
themselves betimes of God's long-suffering and return to Him.
I entreat you, beloved, let
those words of the Saviour touch your hearts, Who, when by the power of His
mercy He had cleansed ten lepers, said that only one of them all had returned
to give thanks[2a]: meaning without doubt that, though the ungrateful ones had
gained soundness of body, yet their failure in this godly duty arose from
ungodliness of heart. And therefore, dearly-beloved, that this brand of
ingratitude may not be applied to you, return to the Lord, remembering the
marvels which He has deigned to perform among us; and ascribing. our release
not, as the ungodly suppose, to the influences of the stars, but to the
unspeakable mercy of Almighty God, Who has deigned to soften the hearts of
raging barbarians, betake yourselves to the commemoration of so great a
benefit with all the vigour of faith. Grave neglect must be atoned for by yet
greater tokens of repentance. Let us use the Mercy of Him, Who has spared us,
to our own amendment, that the blessed Peter and all the saints, who have
always been near us in many afflictions, may deign to aid our entreaties for
you to the merciful GOD, through Jesus Christ our LORD. Amen.
SERMON LXXXV: ON THE FEAST
OF S. LAURENCE THE MARTYR[3] (Aug. 10).
I. The example of the
martyrs is most valuable.
Whilst the height of all
virtues, dearly-beloved, and the fulness of all righteousness is born of that
love, wherewith GOD and one's neighbour is loved, surely in none is this love
found more conspicuous and brighter than in the blessed martyrs; who are as
near to our LORD Jesus, Who died for all men, in the imitation of His love, as
in the likeness of their suffering. For, although that Love, wherewith the
LORD has redeemed us, cannot be equalled by any man's kindness, because it is
one thing that a man who is doomed to die one day should die for a righteous
man, and another that One Who is free from the debt of sin should lay down His
life for the wicked[3a]: yet the martyrs also have done great service to all
men, in that the Lord Who gave them boldness, has used it to show that the
penalty of death and the pain of the cross need not be terrible to any of His
followers, but might be imitated by many of them. If therefore no good man is
good for himself alone, and no wise man's wisdom befriends himself only, and
the nature of true virtue is such that it leads many away from the dark error
on which its light is shed, no model is more useful in teaching God's people
than that of the martyrs. Eloquence may make intercession easy, reasoning may
effectually persuade; but yet examples are stronger than words, and there is
more teaching in practice than in precept.
II. The Saint's martyrdom
described.
And how gloriously strong in
this most excellent manner of doctrine the blessed martyr Laurentius is, by
whose sufferings to-day is marked, even his persecutors were able to feel,
when they found that his wondrous courage, born principally of love for
Christ, not only did not yield itself, but also strengthened others by the
example of his endurance. For when the fury of the gentile potentates was
raging against Christ's most chosen members, and attacked those especially who
were of priestly rank, the wicked persecutor's wrath was vented on Laurentius
the deacon, who was pre-eminent not only in the performance of the sacred
rites, but also in the management of the church's property[4], promising
himself double spoil from one man's capture: for if he forced him to surrender
the sacred treasures, he would also drive him out of the pale of true
religion. And so this man, so greedy of money and such a foe to the truth,
arms himself with double weapon: with avarice to plunder the gold; with
impiety to carry off Christ. He demands of the guileless guardian of the
sanctuary that the church wealth on which his greedy mind was set should be
brought to him. But the holy deacon showed him where he had them stored, by
pointing to the many troops of poor saints, in the feeding and clothing of
whom he had a store of riches which he could hot lose, and which were the more
entirely safe that the money had been spent on so holy a cause.
III. The description of his
sufferings continued.
The baffled plunderer,
therefore, frets, and blazing out into hatred of a religion, which had put
riches to such a use, determines to pillage a still greater treasure by
carrying off that sacred deposit[5], wherewith he was enriched, as he could
find no solid hoard of money in his possession. He orders Laurentius to
renounce Christ, and prepares to ply the deacon's stout courage with frightful
tortures: and, when the first elicit nothing, fiercer follow. His limbs, torn
and mangled by many cutting blows, are commanded to be broiled upon the fire
in an iron framework[6], which was of itself already hot enough to burn him,
and on which his limbs were turned from time to time, to make the torment
fiercer, and the death more lingering.
IV. Laurentius has conquered
his persecutor.
Thou gainest nothing, thou
prevailest nothing, O savage cruelty. His mortal frame is released from thy
devices, and, when Laurentius departs to heaven, thou art vanquished. The
flame of Christ's love could not be overcome by thy flames, and the fire which
burnt outside was less keen than that which blazed within. Thou didst but
serve the martyr in thy rage, O persecutor: thou didst but swell the reward in
adding to the pain. For what did thy cunning devise, which did not redound to
the conqueror's glory, when even the instruments of torture were counted as
part of the triumph? Let us rejoice, then, dearly-beloved, with spiritual joy,
and make our boast over the happy end of this illustrious man in the Lord, Who
is "wonderful in His saints[6a]," in whom He has given us a support
and an example, and has so spread abroad his glory throughout the world, that,
from the rising of the sun to its going down, the brightness of his deacon's
light doth shine, and Rome is become as famous in Laurentius as Jerusalem was
ennobled by Stephen. By his prayer and intercession[7] we trust at all times
to be assisted; that, because all, as the Apostle says, "who wish to live
holily in Christ, suffer persecutions[8]," we may be strengthened with
the spirit of love, and be fortified to overcome all temptations by the
perseverance of steadfast faith. Through our LORD Jesus Christ, &c.
SERMON LXXXVIII: ON THE FAST
OF THE SEVENTH MONTH, III[9].
I. The Fasts, which the
ancient prophets proclaimed, are still necessary.
Of what avail,
dearly-beloved, are religious fasts in winning the mercy of God, and in
renewing the fortunes of human frailty, we know from the statements of the
holy Prophets, who proclaim that justice of God, Whose vengeance the people of
Israel had again and again incurred through their iniquities, cannot be
appeased save by fasting. Thus it is that the Prophet Joel warns them, saying,
"thus saith the LORD your GOD, turn ye to Me with all your heart, with
fasting and weeping and mourning, and rend your hearts and not your garments,
and turn ye to the Lord your GOD, for He is merciful and patient, and of great
kindness, and very merciful[1]," and again, "sanctify a fast,
proclaim a healing, assemble the people, sanctify the church[1]." And
this exhortation must in our days also be obeyed, because these healing
remedies must of necessity be proclaimed by us too, in order that in the
observance of the ancient sanctification Christian devotion may gain what
Jewish transgression lost.
II. Public services are of a
higher character than private.
But the respect that is paid
to the Divine decrees always brings a special blessing, whatever may be the
extent of our voluntary services, so that publicly proclaimed celebrations are
of a higher character than those which rest on private institution[2]. For the
exercise of self-restraint, which each individual imposes on himself at his
own discretion, concerns the benefit of a certain portion only of the Church,
but the fast which the whole Church undergoes leaves out no one from the
general purification, and God's people' then become strongest, when the hearts
of all the faithful meet together in one common act of holy obedience, when in
the camp of the Christian army there is on all sides the same making ready for
the fight and for defence. Though the cruel enemy rage in restless fury, and
spread all round his hidden snares, yet he will be able to catch no one and
wound no one, if he find no one off his guard, no one given up to sloth, no
one inactive in works of piety.
III. The September fast
calls us in this public way to self-amendment.
To this unconquerable
strength of unity, therefore, dearly-beloved, we are even now invited by the
solemn Fast of the Seventh Month, that we may lift our souls to the Lord free
from worldly cares and earthly concerns. And because, always needful as this
endeavour is, we cannot all adhere to it perpetually, and often through human
frailty we fall back from higher things to the things of earth, let us at
least on these days, which are most healthfully ordained for our correction,
withdraw ourselves from worldly occupations, and steal a little time for
promoting our eternal welfare. "For in many things," as it is
written, "we all stumble." And though by the daily gift of GOD
we be cleansed from divers pollutions, yet there cling to unwary souls for the
most part darker stains, which need a greater care to wash them out, a
stronger effort to destroy them. And the fullest abolition of sins is obtained
when the whole Church offers up one prayer and one confession. For if the LORD
has promised fulfilment of all they shall ask, to the holy and devout
agreement of two or three, what shall be denied to many thousands of the
people who unite in one act of worship, and with one breath make their common
supplications?
IV. Community of goods and
of actions is most precious in GOD's sight.
It is a great and very
precious thing, beloved, in the LORD'S sight, when Christ's whole people
engage together in the same duties, and all ranks and degrees of either sex
co-operate with the same intent: when one purpose animates all alike of
declining from evil and doing good; when GOD is glorified in the works of His
slaves, and the Author of all godliness is blessed in unstinted giving of
thanks. The hungry are nourished, the naked are clothed, the sick are visited,
and men seek not their own but "that which is another's," so long
as in relieving the misery of others each one makes the most of his own means;
and it is easy to find "a cheerful giver, "where a man's
performances are only limited by the extent of his power. By this grace of
GOD, "which worketh all in all," the benefit: and the deserts of
the faithful are both enjoyed in common. For they, whose income is not like,
can yet think alike, and when one rejoices over another's bounty his feelings
put him on the same level with him whose powers of spending are on a different
level. In such a community there is no disorder nor diversity, for all the
members of the whole body agree in one strong purpose of godliness, and he who
glories in the wealth of others is not put to shame at his own poverty. For
the excellence of each portion is the glory of the whole body, and when we are
all led by GOD's Spirit, not only are the things we do ourselves our own but
those of others also over the doing of which we rejoice.
V. Let us then make the best
use possible of the opportunity.
Let us then, dearly-beloved,
lay hold upon this most sacred unity in all its blessed integrity and engage
in the solemn fast with the concordant purpose of a good will. Nothing hard,
nothing harsh is asked of anyone, nor is anything imposed beyond our strength,
whether in the discipline of abstinence or in the amount of alms. Each knows
what he can and what he cannot do: let every one pay his quota, assessing
himself at a just and reasonable rate, that the sacrifice of mercy be not
offered sadly nor reckoned among losses. Let so much be expended on pious
work, as will justify the heart, wash the conscience, and in a word profit
both giver and receiver. Happy indeed is that soul and truly to be admired
which in its love of doing good fears not the failing of the means, and has no
distrust that He will give him money still to spend, from Whom he had what he
spent in the past. But because few possess this greatness of heart, and yet it
is truly a pious thing for each one not to forsake the care of his own, we,
without prejudice to the more perfect sort, lay down for you this general rule
and exhort you to perform GOD's bidding according to the measure of your
ability. For cheerfulness becomes the benevolent man, who should so manage his
liberality that while the poor rejoice over the help supplied, home needs may
not suffer. "And He that ministers seed to the sower, shall both provide
bread to be eaten and multiply your seed and increase the fruits of your
righteousness." On Wednesday and Friday therefore let us fast; and on
Saturday keep vigil all together in the presence of the most blessed
Apostle Peter, by whose merits and prayers we are sure GOD's mercy will be
vouchsafed to us in all things through our LORD Jesus Christ, Who lives and
reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XC: (ON THE FAST OF
SEVENTH MONTH, V.)
I. We must always be seeking
pardon, because we are always liable to sin.
We proclaim the holy Fast of
the Seventh Month, dearly-beloved, for the exercise of common devotions,
confidently inciting you with fatherly exhortations to make Christian by your
observance that which was formerly Jewish. For it is at all times suitable
and in agreement with both the New and Old Testament, that the Divine Mercy
should be sought with chastisement both of mind and body, because nothing is
more effectual in prevailing with GOD than that a man should judge himself and
never cease from asking pardon, knowing that he is never without fault For
human nature has this flaw in itself, not planted there by the Creator but
contracted by the transgressor, and transmitted to his posterity by the law
of generations, so that from the corruptible body springs that which may
corrupt the soul also. Hence although the inner man be now reborn in Christ
and rescued from the bonds of captivity, it has unceasing conflicts with the
flesh, and has to endure resistance in seeking to restrain vain desires. And
in this strife such perfect victory is not easily obtained that even those
habits which must be broken off do not still encumber us, and those vices
which must be slain do not wound. However wisely and prudently the mind
presides as judge over the outer senses, yet even amid the pains it takes to
rule and the limits it imposes on the appetites of the flesh, the temptation
is always too close at hand. For who so abstracts himself from pleasure or
pain of body that his mind is not affected by that which delights or racks it
from without? Joy and sorrow are inseparable from a man: no part of him is
free from the kindlings of wrath, the over- powerings of delight, the castings
down of affliction. And what turning away from sin can there be, where ruler
and ruled alike are liable to the same passions? Rightly does the LORD exclaim
that "the spirit indeed is willing but the flesh is weak."
II. Christ is Himself the
Way, which He bids us tread.
And lest we should be led by
despair into sheer inaction, He promises that the Divine power shall make
those things possible which are to man impossible from his own lack of power:
"for narrow and strait is the way which leadeth unto life," and
no one could set foot on it, no one could advance one step, unless Christ by
making Himself the Way unbarred the difficulties of approach: and thus the
Ordainer of the journey becomes the Means whereby we are able to accomplish
it, because not only does He impose the labour, but also brings us to the
haven of rest. In Him therefore we find our Model of patience, in Whom we have
our Hope of life eternal; for "if we suffer with Him, we shall also reign
with Him," since, as the Apostle says, "he that saith he abideth
in Christ ought himself also to walk as He walked." Otherwise we make
a vain presence and show, if we follow not His steps, Whose name we glory in,
and assuredly they would not be irksome to us, but would free us from all
dangers, if we loved nothing but what He commanded us to love.
III. The love of GOD
contrasted with the love of the world.
For there are two loves from
which proceed all wishes, as different in quality as they are different in
their sources. For the reasonable soul, which cannot exist without love, is
the lover either of GOD or the world. In the love of GOD there is no excess,
but in the love of the world all is hurtful. And therefore we must cling
inseparably to eternal treasures, but things temporal we must use like
passers-by, that as we are sojourners hastening to return to our own land, all
the good things of this world which meet us may be as aids on the way, not
snares to detain us. Therefore the blessed Apostle makes this proclamation,
"the time is short: it remains that those who have wives be as though
they had none; and those who weep, as though they wept not; and those who
rejoice, as though they rejoiced not; and those who buy, as though they
possessed not; and those that use this world, as though they used it not. For
the fashion of this world passes away." But as the world attracts us
with its appearance, and abundance and variety, it is not easy to turn away
from it unless in the beauty of things visible the Creator rather than the
creature is loved; for, when He says, "thou shale love the LORD Shy GOD
from all thy heart, and from all thy mind, and from all shy strength,"
He wishes us in noticing to loosen ourselves from the bonds of His love. And
when He links the love of our neighbour also to this command, He enjoins on us
the imitation of His own goodness, that we should love what He loves and do
what He does. For although we be "GOD's husbandry and GOD's
building," and "neither is he that planteth anything, nor he that
watereth, but GOD that giveth the increase," yet in all things He
requires our ministry and service, and wishes us to be the stewards of His
gifts, that he who bears GOD's image may do GOD's will. For this reason, in
the LORD'S prayer we say most devoutly, "Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be
done as in heaven, so also on earth." For what else do we ask for in
these words but that GOD may subdue those whom He has not yet subdued, and as
in heaven He makes the angels ministers of His will, so also on earth He may
make men? And in seeking this we love GOD, we love also our neighbour: and the
love within us has but one Object, since we desire the bond-servant to serve
and the LORD to have rule.
IV. The love of GOD is
fostered by good works.
This state of mind,
therefore, beloved, from which earthly love is excluded, is strengthened by
the habit of well-doing, because the conscience must needs be delighted at
good deeds, and do willingly what it rejoices to have done. Thus it is that
fasts are kept, alms freely given, justice maintained, frequent prayer
resorted to, and the desires of individuals become the common wish of all.
Labour fosters patience, gentleness extinguishes anger, loving-kindness treads
down hatred, unclean desires are slain by holy, aspirations, avarice is east
out by liberality, and burdensome wealth becomes the means of virtuous
acts. But because the snares of the devil are not at rest even in such a
state of things, most rightly at certain seasons of the year the renewal of
our vigour is provided for: and now in particular, when one who is greedy of
present good might boast himself over the clemency of the weather and the
fertility of the land, and having stored his crops in great barns, might say
to his soul, "thou hast much goods, eat and drink," let him take
heed to the rebuke of the Divine voice, and hear it saying, "Thou fool,
this night they require thy soul of thee, and the things which thou hast
prepared, whose shall they be?" This should be the wise man's most
anxious consideration, in order that, as the days of this life are short and
its span uncertain, death may never come upon him unawares, and that knowing
himself mortal he may meet his end fully prepared. And so, that this may avail
both for the sanctification of out bodies and the renewal of our souls, on
Wednesday and Friday let us fast, and on Saturday let us keep vigil with the
most blessed Apostle Peter, whose prayers will help us to obtain fulfilment of
our holy desires through Christ our LORD, Who with the Father and the Holy
Ghost lives and reigns for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XCI: ON THE FAST OF
THE SEVENTH MONTH, .VI.
I. Abstinence must include
discipline of the soul as well as of the body.
There is nothing,
dearly-beloved, in which the Divine Providence does not assist the devotions
of the faithful. For the very elements of the world also minister to the
exercise of mind and body in holiness, seeing that the distinctly varied
revolution of days and months opens for us the different pages of the
commands, and thus the seasons also in some sense speak to us of that which
the sacred institutions enjoin. And hence, since the year's course has brought
back the seventh month to us, I feel certain that your minds are spiritually
aroused to keep the solemn fast; since you have learnt by experience how well
this preparation purifies both the outer and the inner parts of men, so that
by abstaining from the lawful, resistance becomes easier to the unlawful. But
do not limit your plan of abstinence, dearly-beloved, to the mortifying of the
body, or to the lessening of food alone. For the greater advantages of this
virtue belong to that chastity of the soul, which not only crushes the lusts
of the flesh, but also despises the vanities of worldly wisdom, as the Apostle
says, "take heed that no one deceive you through philosophy and empty
deceit, according to the tradition of men."
II. And in particular we
must abstain from heresy, and that of Eutyches as well as that of Nestorius.
We must restrain ourselves,
therefore, from food, but much more must we fast from errors that the mind,
given up to no carnal pleasure, may be taken captive by no falsehood: because
as in past days, so also in our own, there are not wanting enemies of the
Truth, who dare to stir up civil wars within the catholic Church, in order
that by leading the ignorant into agreement with their ungodly doctrines they
may boast of increase in numbers through those whom they have been able to
sever from the Body of Christ. For what is so opposed to the Prophets, so
repugnant to the Gospels, so at variance with the Apostles' teaching as to
preach one single Nature in the Lord Jesus Christ born of Mary, and without
respect to time co-eternal with the Eternal Father? If it is only man's nature
which is to be acknowledged, where is the Godhead Which saves? if only GOD's,
where is the humanity which is saved? But the catholic Faith, which withstands
all errors, refutes these blasphemies also at the same time, condemning
Nestorius, who divides the Divine from the human, and denouncing Eutyches, who
nullifies the human in the Divine; seeing that the Son of True GOD, Himself
True GOD, possessing unity and equality with the Father and with the Holy
Ghost, has vouchsafed likewise to be true Man, and after the Virgin Mother's
conception was not separated from her flesh and child- bearing, so uniting
humanity to Himself as to remain immutably GOD; so imparting Godhead to man as
not to destroy but enhance him by glorification. For He, Who became "the
form of a slave," ceased not to be "the form of GOD," and He is
not one joined with the other, but One in Both, so that ever since "the
Word became Flesh" our faith is disturbed by no vicissitudes of
circumstance, but whether in the miracles of power, or in the degradation of
suffering, we believe Him to be both GOD, Who is Man, and Man, Who is GOD.
III. The Truth of the
Incarnation is proved both by the Eucharistic Feast and by the Divine
institution of almsgiving.
Dearly-beloved, utter this
confession with all your heart and reject the wicked lies of heretics, that
your fasting and almsgiving may not be polluted by any contagion with error:
for then is our offering of the sacrifice clean and oar gifts of mercy holy,
when those who perform them understand that which they do. For when the LORD
says, "unless ye have eaten the flesh of the Son of Man, and drunk His
blood, ye will not have life in you," you ought so to be partakers at
the Holy Table, as to have no doubt whatever concerning the reality of
Christ's Body and Blood. For that is taken in the mouth which is believed in
Faith, and it is vain for them to respond Amend who dispute that which is
taken. But when the Prophet says, "Blessed is he, who considereth the
poor and needy," he is the praiseworthy distributor of clothes and
food among the poor, who knows he is clothing and feeding Christ in the poor:
for He Himself says, "as long as ye have done it to one of My brethren,
ye have done it to Me." And so Christ is One, True GOD and True Man,
rich in what is His own, poor in what is ours, receiving gifts and
distributing gifts, Partner with mortals, and the Quickener of the dead, so
that in the "name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven, of
things on earth, and of things under the earth, and that every tongue should
confess that the LORD Jesus Christ is in the glory of GOD the Father,"
living and reigning with the Holy Spirit for ever and ever. Amen.
SERMON XCV: A HOMILY ON THE
BEATITUDES, ST. MATT. V. 1--9.
I. Introduction of the
subject.
When our LORD Jesus Christ,
beloved, was preaching the gospel of the Kingdom, and was healing divers
sicknesses through the whole of Galilee, the fame of His mighty works had
spread into all Syria: large crowds too from all parts of Judaea were flocking
to the heavenly Physician. For as human ignorance is slow in believing what
it does not see, and in hoping for what it does not know, those who were to be
instructed in the divine lore, needed to be aroused by bodily benefits and
visible miracles: so that they might have no doubt as to the wholesomeness of
His teaching when they actually experienced His benignant power. And therefore
that the LORD might use outward healings as an introduction to inward
remedies, and after healing bodies might work cures in the soul, He separated
Himself from the surrounding crowd, ascended into the retirement of a
neighbouring mountain, and called His apostles to Him there, that from the
height of that mystic seat He might instruct them in the lottier doctrines,
signifying from the very nature of the place and act that He it was who had
once honoured Moses by speaking to him: then indeed with a more terrifying
justice, but now with a holier mercifulness, that what had been promised might
be fulfilled when the Prophet Jeremiah says: "behold the days come when I
will complete a new covenant for the house of Israel and for the house of
Judah. After those days, saith the LORD, I will put My laws in their minds,
and in their heart will I write them.'' He therefore who had spoken to
Moses, spoke also to the apostles, and the swift hand of the Word wrote and
deposited the secrets of the new covenant in the disciples' hearts: there
were no thick clouds surrounding Him as of old, nor were the people frightened
off from approaching the mountain by frightful sounds and lightning, but
quietly and freely His discourse reached the ears of those who stood by: that
the harshness of the law might give way before the gentleness of grace, and
"the spirit of adoption" might dispel the terrors of bondage.
II. The blessedness of
humility discussed.
The nature then of Christ's
teaching is attested by His own holy statements: that they who wish to arrive
at eternal blessedness may understand the steps of ascent to that high
happiness. "Blessed," He saith, "are the poor in spirit, for
theirs is the kingdom of heaven." It would perhaps be doubtful what
poor He was speaking of, if in saying "blessed are the poor" He had
added nothing which would explain the sort of poor: and then that poverty by
itself would appear sufficient to win the kingdom of heaven which many suffer
from hard and heavy necessity. But when He says "blessed are the poor in
spirit," He shows that the kingdom of heaven must be assigned to those
who are recommended by the humility of their spirits rather than by the
smallness of their means. Yet it cannot be doubted that this possession of
humility is more easily acquired by the poor than the rich: for submissiveness
is the companion of those that want, while loftiness of mind dwells with
riches. Notwithstanding, even in many of the rich is found that spirit
which uses its abundance not for the increasing of its pride but on works of
kindness, and counts that for the greatest gain which it expends in the relief
of others' hardships. It is given to every kind and rank of men to share in
this virtue, because men may be equal in will, though unequal in fortune: and
it does not matter how different they are in earthly means, who are found
equal in spiritual possessions. Blessed. therefore, is poverty which is not
possessed with a love of temporal things, and does not seek to be increased
with the riches of the world, but is eager to amass heavenly possessions.
III. Scriptural examples of
humility.
Of this high-souled humility
the Apostles first, after the LORD, have given us example, who, leaving all
that they had without difference at the voice of the heavenly Master, were
turned by a ready change from the catching of fish to be fishers of men, and
made many like themselves through the imitation of their faith, when with
those first-begotten sons of the Church, "the heart of all was one, and
the spirit one, of those that believed:" for they, putting away the
whole of their things and possessions, enriched themselves with eternal goods,
through the most devoted poverty, and m accordance with the Apostles'
preaching rejoiced to have nothing of the world and possess all things with
Christ. Hence the blessed Apostle Peter, when he was going up into the temple,
and was asked for alms by the lame man, said, "Silver and gold is not
mine, but what I have that I give thee: in the Name of Jesus Christ of
Nazareth, arise and walk." What more sublime than this humility? what
richer than this poverty? He hath not stores of money, but he hath gifts of
nature. He whom his mother had brought forth lame from the womb, is made whole
by Peter with a word; and he who gave not Caesar's image in a coin, restored
Christ's image on the man. And by the riches of this treasure not he only was
aided whose lower of walking was restored, but 5,000 men also, who then
believed at the Apostle's exhortation on account of the wonder of this cure.
And that poor man who had not what to give to the asker, bestowed so great a
bounty of Divine Grace, that, as he had set one man straight on his feet, so
he healed these many thousands of believers in their hearts, and made them
"leap as an hart" in Christ whom he had found limping in Jewish
unbelief.
IV. The blessedness of
mourning discussed.
After the assertion of this
most happy humility, the LORD hath added, saying, "Blessed are they which
mourn, for they shall be comforted." This mourning, beloved, to which
eternal comforting is promised, is not the same as the affliction of this
world: nor do those laments which are poured out in the sorrowings of the
whole human race make any one blessed. The reason for holy groanings, the
cause of blessed tears, is very different. Religious grief mourns sin either
that of others' or one's own: nor does it mourn for that which is wrought by
GOD's justice, but it laments over that which is committed by man's iniquity,
where he that does wrong is more to be deplored than he who suffers it,
because the unjust man's wrongdoing plunges him into punishment, but the just
man's endurance leads him on to glory.
V. The blessedness of the
meek.
Next the LORD says:
"blessed are the meek, for they shall possess the earth by
inheritance." To the meek and gentle, to the humble and modest, and to
those who are prepared to endure all injuries, the earth is promised for their
possession. And this is not to be reckoned a small or cheap inheritance, as if
it were distinct from our heavenly dwelling, since it is no other than these
who are understood to enter the kingdom of heaven. The earth, then, which is
promised to the meek, and is to be given to the gentle in possession, is the
flesh of the saints, which in reward for their humility will be changed in a
happy resurrection, and clothed with the glory of immortality, in nothing now
to act contrary to the spirit, and to be in complete unity and agreement with
the will of the soul. For then the outer man will be the peaceful and
unblemished possession of the inner man: then the mind, engrossed in beholding
GOD, will be hampered by no obstacles of human weakness nor will it any more
have to be said "The body which is corrupted, weigheth upon the soul, and
its earthly house presseth down the sense which thinketh many things:"
for the earth will not struggle against its tenant, and will not venture on
any insubordination against the rule of its governor. For the meek shall
possess it in perpetual peace, and nothing shall be taken from their rights,
"when this corruptible shall have put on incorruption, and this mortal
shall have put on immortality:" that their danger may turn into
reward, and what was a burden become an honour.
VI. The blessedness of
desiring righteousness.
After this the LORD goes on
to say: "blessed are they who hunger and thirst after righteousness, for
they shall be satisfied." It is nothing bodily, nothing earthly, that
this hunger, this thirst seeks for: but it desires to be satiated with the
good food of righteousness, and wants to be admitted to all the deepest
mysteries, and be filled with the LORD Himself. Happy the mind that craves
this food and is eager for such drink: which it certainly would not seek for
if it had never tasted of its sweetness. But hearing the Prophet's spirit
saying to him: "taste and see that the LORD is sweet;" it has
received some portion of sweetness from on high, and blazed out into love of
the purest pleasure, so that spurning all things temporal, it is seized with
the utmost eagerness for eating and drinking righteousness, and grasps the
truth of that first commandment which says: "Thou shalt love the LORD thy
GOD out of all thy heart, and out of all thy mind, and out of all thy
strength:" since to love GOD is nothing else but to love
righteousness. In fine, as in that passage the care for one's neighbour is
joined to the love of GOD, so, too, here the virtue of mercy is linked to the
desire for righteousness, and it is said:
VII. The blessedness of the
merciful:
"Blessed are the
merciful, for GOD shall have mercy on them." Recognize, Christian, the
worth of thy wisdom, and understand to what rewards thou art called, and by
what methods of discipline thou must attain thereto. Mercy wishes thee to be
merciful, righteousness to be righteous, that the Creator may be seen in His
creature, and the image of GOD may be reflected in the mirror of the human
heart expressed by the lines of imitation. The faith of those who do good' is
free from anxiety: thou shalt have all thy desires, and shalt obtain without
end what thou lovest. And since through thine alms-giving all things are pure
to thee, to that blessedness also thou shalt attain which is promised in
consequence where the LORD says:
VIII. The blessedness of a
pure heart.
"Blessed are the pure
in heart, for they shall see GOD." Great is the happiness, beloved, of
him for whom so great a reward is prepared. What, then, is it to have the
heart pure, but to strive after those virtues which are mentioned above? And
how great the blessedness of seeing GOD, what mind can conceive, what tongue
declare? And yet this shall ensue when man's nature is transformed, so that no
longer "in a mirror," nor "in a riddle," but "face to
face" it sees the very Godhead "as He is," which no man
could see; and through the unspeakable joy of eternal contemplation obtains
that "which eye has not seen, nor ear heard, neither has entered into the
heart of man." Rightly is this blessedness promised to purity of
heart. For the brightness of the true light will not be able to be seen by the
unclean sight: and that which will be happiness to minds that are bright and
clean, will be a punishment to those that are stained. Therefore, let the
mists of earth's vanities be shunned. and your inward eyes purged from all the
filth of wickedness, that the sight may be free to feed on this great
manifestation of GOD. For to the attainment of this we understand what follows
to lead.
IX. The blessedness of
peace-making.
"Blessed are the
peace-makers, for they shall be called the sons of GOD." This
blessedness, beloved, belongs not to any and every kind of agreement and
harmony, but to that of which the Apostle speaks: "have peace towards
GOD;" and of which the Prophet David speaks: "Much peace have
they that love Thy law, and they have no cause of offences." This
peace even the closest ties of friendship and the exactest likeness of mind do
not really gain, if they do not agree with GOD's will. Similarity of bad
desires, leagues in crimes, associations of vice, cannot merit this peace. The
love of the world does not consort with the love of GOD, nor doth he enter the
alliance of the sons of GOD who will not separate himself from the children of
this generation Whereas they who are in mind always with GOD, "giving
diligence to keep the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace," never
dissent from the eternal law, uttering that prayer of faith, "Thy will be
done as in heaven so on earth." These are "the peacemakers,"
these are thoroughly of one mind, and fully harmonious, and are to be called
sons "of GOD and joint-heirs with Christ," because this shall be
the record of the love of GOD and the love of our neighbour, that we shall
suffer no calamities, be in fear of no offence, but all the strife of trial
ended, rest in GOD's most perfect peace, through our LORD, Who, with the
Father and the Holy Spirit, liveth and reigneth for ever and ever. Amen.
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