The Church Fathers
SAINT AMBROSE
CONCERNING REPENTANCE
BOOK I
CHAPTER I
St. Ambrose writes in praise of gentleness,
pointing out how needful that grace is for the rulers of the Church, and
commended to them by the meekness of Christ. As the Novatians have fallen away
from this, they cannot be considered disciples of Christ. Their pride and
harshness are inveighed against.
1. If the highest end of virtue is that
which aims at the advancement of most, gentleness is the most lovely of all,
which does not hurt even those whom it condemns, and usually renders those
whom it condemns worthy of absolution. Moreover, it is the only virtue which
has led to the increase of the Church which the Lord sought at the price of
His own Blood, imitating the loving kindness of heaven, and aiming at the
redemption of all, seeks this end with a gentleness which the ears of men can
endure, in presence of which their hearts do not sink, nor their spirits
quail.
2. For he who endeavours to amend the faults
of human weakness ought to bear this very weakness on his own shoulders, let
it weigh upon himself, not cast it off. For we read that the Shepherd in the
Gospel(1) carried the weary sheep, and did not cast it off. And Solomon says:
"Be not overmuch righteous;"(2) for restraint should temper
righteousness. For how shall he offer himself to you for healing whom you
despise, who thinks that he will be an object of contempt, not of compassion,
to his physician?
3. Therefore had the Lord Jesus compassion
upon us in order to call us to Himself, not frighten us away. He came in
meekness, He came in humility, and so He said: "Come unto Me, all ye that
labour and are heavy laden, and I will refresh you.''(1) So, then, the Lord
Jesus refreshes, and does not shut out nor east off, and fitly chose such
disciples as should be interpreters of the Lord's will, as should gather
together and not drive away the people of God. Whence it is clear that they
are not to be counted amongst the disciples of Christ, who think that harsh
and proud opinions should be followed rather than such as are gentle and meek;
persons who, while they themselves seek God's mercy, deny it to others, such
as are the teachers of the Novatians, who call themselves pure.(2)
4. What can show more pride than this, since
the Scripture says: "No one is free from sin, not even an infant of a day
old;"(3) and David cries out: "Cleanse me from my sin."(4) Are
they more holy than David, of whose family Christ vouchsafed to be born in the
mystery of the Incarnation, whose descendant is that heavenly Hall which
received the world's Redeemer in her virgin womb? For what is more harsh than
to inflict a penance which they do not relax, and by refusing pardon to take
away the incentive to penance and repentance?(5) Now no one can repent to good
purpose unless he hopes for mercy.
CHAPTER II.
The assertion of the Novatians that they
refuse communion only to the lapsed agrees neither with the teaching of holy
Scripture nor with their own. And whereas they allege as a pretext their
reverence for the divine power, they really are contemning it, inasmuch as it
is a sign of low estimation not to use the whole of a power entrusted to one.
But the Church rightly claims the power of binding and loosing, which heretics
have not, inasmuch as she has received it from the Holy Spirit, against Whom
they act presumptuously.
5. But they say that those should not be
restored to communion who have fallen into denial(1) of the faith. If they
made the crime of sacrilege the only exception to receiving forgiveness, they
would be acting harshly indeed, and, as it would seem, would be in opposition
to the divine utterances only, while consistent with their own assertions. For
when the Lord forgave all sins, He made an exception of none. But since, as it
were after the fashion of the Stoics, they think that all sins are equal in
gravity, and assert that he who has stolen a common fowl, as they say, no less
than he who has smothered his father, should be for ever excluded from the
divine mysteries, how can they select those guilty of one special offence,
since even they themselves cannot deny that it is most unjust that the penalty
of one should extend to many?(3)
6. They affirm that they are showing great
reverence for God, to Whom alone they reserve the power of forgiving sins. But
in truth none do Him greater injury than they who choose to prune His
commandments and reject the office entrusted to them. For inasmuch as the Lord
Jesus Himself said in the Gospel: "Receive ye the Holy Spirit whosesoever
sins ye forgive they are forgiven unto them, and whosesoever sins ye retain,
they are retained,"(3) Who is it that honours Him most, he who obeys His
bidding or he who rejects it?
7. The Church holds fast its obedience on
either side, by both retaining and remitting sin; heresy is on the one side
cruel, and on the other disobedient; wishes to bind what it will not loosen,
and will not loosen what it has bound, whereby it condemns itself by its. own
sentence. For the Lord willed that the power of binding and of loosing should
be alike, and sanctioned each by a similar condition. So he who has not the
power to loose has not the power to bind. For as, according to the Lord's
word, he who has the power to bind has also the power to loose, their teaching
destroys itself, inasmuch as they who deny that they have the power of loosing
ought also to deny that of binding. For how can the one be allowed and the
other disallowed? It is plain and evident that either each is allowed or each
is disallowed in the case of those to whom each has been given. Each is
allowed to the Church, neither to heresy, for this power has been entrusted to
priests alone. Rightly, therefore, does the Church claim it, which has true
priests; heresy, which has not the priests of God,(1) cannot claim it. And by
not claiming this power heresy pronounces its own sentence, that not
possessing priests it cannot claim priestly power. And so in their shameless
obstinacy a shamefaced acknowledgment meets our view.
8. Consider, too, the point that he who has
received the Holy Ghost has also received the power of forgiving and of
retaining sin. For thus it is written: "Receive the Holy Spirit:
whosesoever sins ye forgive, they are forgiven unto them, and whosesoever sins
ye retain, they are retained."(20 So, then, he who has not received power
to forgive sins has not received the Holy Spirit. The office of the priest is
a gift of the Holy Spirit, and His right it is specially to forgive and to
retain sins. How, then, can they claim His gift who distrust His power and His
right?
9. And what is to be said of their excessive
arrogance? For although the Spirit of God is more inclined to mercy than to
severity, their will is opposed to that which He wills, and they do that which
He wills not; whereas it is the office of a judge to punish, but of mercy to
forgive. It would be more endurable, Novatian, that thou shouldst forgive than
that thou shouldst bind. In the one case thou wouldst assume the right as one
who rarely offended; in the other thou wouldst forgive as one who had
fellow-feeling with the misery of sin.
CHAPTER III.
To the argument of the Novatians, that they
only deny forgiveness in the case of greater sins, St. Ambrose replies, that
this is also an offence against God, Who gave the power to forgive all sins,
but that of course a more severe penance must follow in case of graver sins.
He points out likewise that this distinction as to the gravity of sins
assigns, as it were, severity to God, Whose mercy in the Incarnation is
overlooked by the Novatians.
10. But they say that, with the exception of
graver sins, they grant forgiveness to those of less weight. This is not the
teaching of your father, Novatian, who thought that no one should be admitted
to penance, considering that what he was unable to loose he would not bind,(1)
lest by binding he should inspire the hope that he would loose. So that your
father is condemned by your own sentence, you who make a distinction between
sins, some of which you consider that you can loose, and others which you
consider to be without remedy. But God does not make a distinction, Who has
promised His mercy to all, and granted to His priests the power of loosing
without any exception. But he who has heaped up sin must also increase his
penitence. For greater sins are washed away by greater weeping. So neither is
Novatian justified, who excluded all from pardon; nor are you, who imitate
and, at the same time, condemn him, for you diminish zeal for penance where it
ought to be increased, since the mercy of Christ has taught us that graver
sins must be made good by greater efforts.
11. And what perversity it is to claim for
yourselves what can be forgiven, and, as you say, to reserve to God what
cannot be forgiven. This would be to reserve to oneself the cases for mercy,
to God those for severity. And what as to that saying: "Let God be true
but every man a liar, as it is written, That Thou mightest be justified in Thy
words, and overcome when Thou art judged"?(2) In order, then, that we may
recognize that the God of mercy is rather prone to indulgence than to
severity, it is said: "I desire mercy rather than sacrifice."(3)
How, then, can your sacrifice, who refuse mercy, be acceptable to God, since
He says that He wills not the death of a sinner, but his correction?(4)
12. Interpreting which truth, the Apostle
says: "For God, sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and
for sin condemned sin in the flesh, that the righteousness of the Law might be
fulfilled in us."(5) He does not say "in the likeness of
flesh," for Christ took on Himself the reality not the likeness of flesh;
nor does He say in the likeness of sin, for He did no sin, but was made sin
for us. Yet He came "in the likeness of sinful flesh;" that is, He
took on Him the likeness of sinful flesh, the likeness, because it is written:
"He is man, and who shall know Him?"(6) He was man in the flesh,
according to His human nature, that He might be recognized, but in power was
above man, that He might not be recognized, so He has our flesh, but has not
the failings of this flesh.
13. For He was not begotten, as is every
man, by intercourse between male and female, but born of the Holy Spirit and
of the Virgin; He received a stainless body, which not only no sins polluted,
but which neither the generation nor the conception had been stained by any
admixture of defilement. For we men are all born under sin, and our very
origin is in evil, as we read in the words of David: "For lo, I was
conceived in wickedness, and in sin did my mother bring me forth." (1)
Therefore the flesh of Paul was a body of death, as he himself says: "Who
shall deliver me from the body of this death?"(2) But the flesh of Christ
condemned sin, which He felt not at His birth, and crucified by His death, so
that in our flesh there might be justification through grace, in which before
there had been pollution by guilt.
14. What, then, shall we say to this, except
that which the Apostle said: "If God is for us, who is against us? He who
spared not His own Son, but gave Him up for us all, how has He not with Him
also given us all things? Who shall lay a charge against the elect? It is God
Who justifieth, who is he that shall condemn? It is Christ Who died, yea, Who
also rose again, Who is at the right hand of God, Who also maketh intercession
for us."(3) Novatian then brings charges against those for whom Christ
intercedes. Those whom Christ has redeemed unto salvation Novatian condemns to
death. Those to whom Christ says: "Take My yoke upon you, and learn of
Me, for I am gentle,"(4) Novatian says, I am not gentle. On those to whom
Christ says: "Ye shall find rest for your souls, for My yoke is pIeasant
and My burden is light,"(5) Novatian lays a heavy burden and a hard yoke.
CHAPTER IV.
St. Ambrose proceeds with the proof of the
divine mercy, and shows by the testimony of the Gospels that it prevails over
severity, and he adduces the instance of athletes to show that of those who
have denied Christ before men, all are not to be esteemed alike.
15. Although what has been said sufficiently
shows how inclined the Lord Jesus is to mercy, let Him further instruct us
with His own words, when He would arm us against the assaults of persecution.
"Fear not," He says, "those who kill the body, but cannot kill
the soul, but rather fear Him Who can cast both body and soul into
hell."(1) And farther on: "Every one, therefore, who shall confess
Me before men, him will I also confess before My Father, Who is in heaven, but
he who shall deny Me before men, him will I also deny before My Father, Who is
in heaven."(2)
16. Where He says that He will confess, He
will confess "every one."(3) Where He speaks of denying, He does not
speak of denying "every one." For, whereas in the former clause He
says, "Every one who shall confess Me, him will I confess," we
should expect that in the following clause He would also say, "Every one
who shall deny Me." But in order that He might not appear to deny every
one, He concludes: "But he who shall deny Me before men, him will I also
deny." He promises favour to every one, but He does not threaten the
penalty to every one. He makes more of that which is merciful. He makes less
of what is penal.
17. And this is written not only in that
book of the Gospel of the Lord Jesus, which is written according to Matthew,
but it is also to be read in that which we have according to Luke,(4) that we
might know that neither had thus related the saying by chance.
18. We have said that it is thus written.
Let us now consider the meaning. "Every one," He says, "who
shall confess Me," that is to say, of whatever age, of whatever condition
he may be, who shall confess Me, he shall have Me as the Rewarder of his
confession. Whereas the expression is, "every one," no one who shall
confess is excluded from the reward. But it is not said in like manner,
"Every one who shall deny shall be denied," for it is possible that
a man overcome by torture may deny God in word, and yet worship Him in his
heart.
19. Is the case the same with him who denies
voluntarily, and with him whom torture, not his own will, has led to denial?
How unfit were it, since with men credit is given for endurance in a struggle,
that one should assert that it had no value with God! For often in this
world's athletic contests the public crown together with the victors even the
vanquished whose conduct has been ap-proved, especially if perchance they have
seen that they lost the victory by some trick or fraud. And shall Christ
suffer His athletes, whom He has seen to yield for a moment to severe
torments, to remain without forgiveness?
20. Shall not He take account of their toil,
Who will not cast off for ever even those whom He casts off? For David says:
"God will not cast off for ever,"(1) and in opposition to this shall
we listen to heresy asserting, "He does cast off for ever"? David
says: "God will not for ever cut off His mercy from generation to
generation, nor will He forget to be merciful."(2) This is the prophet's
declaration, and there are those who would maintain a forgetfulness of mercy
on God's part.
CHAPTER V.
The objection from the unchangeablehess of
God is answered from several passages of Scripture, wherein God promises
forgiveness to sinners on their repentance. St. Ambrose also shows that mercy
will e more readily accorded to such as have sinned, as it were, against their
will, which he illustrates by the case of prisoners taken in war, and by
language put into the mouth of the devil.
21. But they say that they make these
assertions in order not to seem to make God liable to change, as He would be
if He forgave those with whom He was angry. What then? Shall we reject the
utterances of God and follow their opinions? But God is not to be judged by
the statements of others, but by His own words. What mark of His mercy have we
more ready at hand than that He Himself, through the prophet Hoses, is at once
merciful as though reconciled to those whom in His anger He had threatened?
For He says: "O Ephraim, what shall I do unto thee, or what shall I do
unto thee, O Judah? Your kindness," etc.(3) And further on: "How
shall I establish thee? I will make thee as Admah, and as Zeboim."(4) In
the midst of His indignation He hesitates, as it were, with fatherly love,
doubting how He can give over the wanderer to punishment; for although the Jew
deserves it, God yet takes counsel with Himself. For immediately after having
said, "I will make thee as Admah and as Zeboim," which cities, owing
to their nearness to Sodom, suffered together in like destruction, He adds,
"My heart is turned against Me, My compassion is aroused, I will not do
according to the fierceness of Mine anger."
22. Is it not evident that the Lord Jesus is
angry with us when we sin in order that He may convert us through fear of His
indignation? His indignation, then, is not the carrying out of vengeance, but
rather the working out of forgiveness, for these are His words: "If thou
shalt turn and lament, thou shall be saved.''(1) He waits for our lamentations
here, that is, in time, that He may spare us those which shall be eternal. He
waits for our tears, that He may pour forth His goodness. So in the Gospel,
having pity on the tears of the widow, He raised her son. He waits for our
conversion, that He may Himself restore us to grace, which would have
continued with us had no fall overtaken us. But He is angry because we have by
our sins incurred guilt, in order that we may be humbled; we are humbled, in
order that we may be found worthy rather of pity than of punishment.
23. Jeremiah, too, may certainly teach when
he says: "For the Lord will not cast off for ever; for after He has
humbled, He will have compassion according to the multitude of His mercies,
Who hath not humbled from His whole heart nor cast off the children of
men."(2) This passage we certainly find in the Lamentations of Jeremiah,
and from it, and from what follows, we note that the Lord humbles all the
prisoners of the earth under His feet,(3) in order that we may escape His
judgment. But He does not bring down the sinner even to the earth with His
whole heart Who raises the poor even from the dust and the needy from the
dunghill. For He brings not down with His whole heart Who reserves the
intention of forgiving.
24. But if He brings not down every sinner
with His whole heart, how much less does He bring down him with His whole
heart who has not sinned with his whole heart! For as He said of the Jews:
"This people honoureth Me with their lips, but their heart is far from
Me,"(4) so perhaps He may say of some of the fallen: "They denied Me
with their lips, but in heart they are with Me. It was pain which overcame
them, not unfaithfulness which turned them aside."(5) But some without
cause refuse pardon to those whose faith the persecutor himself confessed up
to the point of striving to overcome it by torture. They denied the Lord once,
but confess Him daily; they denied Him in word, but confess Him with groans,
with cries, and with tears; they confess Him with willing words, not under
compulsion. They yielded, indeed, for a moment to the temptation of the devil,
but even the devil afterwards departed from those whom he was unable to claim
as his own. He yielded to their weeping, he yielded to their repentance, and
after making them his own lost those whom he attached when they belonged to
Another.
25. Is not the case such as when any one
carries away captive the people of a conquered city? The captive is led away,
but against his will. He must of necessity go to foreign lands, does not
willingly make the journey; he takes his native land with him in his heart,
and seeks an opportunity to return. What then? When any such return, does any
one urge that they should not be received; with less honour indeed, but with
readier will, that the enemy may have nothing with which to reproach them? If
you pardon an armed man who was able to fight, do you not pardon him in whom
faith alone waged the battle?
26. If we were to enquire what is the
opinion of the devil concerning those who have fallen after this sort, would
he not probably reply: "This people honours me with their lips, but their
heart is far from me? For how can he be with me who does not depart from
Christ? Without any cause do they appear to honour me who keep the doctrine of
Jesus, and I thought that they would teach mine. They condemn me all the more
when they forsake me after trial. Indeed Jesus is more glorified in these,
when He receives them on their return to Him. All the angels rejoice, for in
heaven there is greater joy over one sinner that repents, than over ninety and
nine just persons who need not repentance. I am triumphed over in heaven and
on earth. Christ loses nothing when they who came to me with weeping return
with longing to the Church, and I am in danger even as regards my own, who
will learn that in reality there is nothing here where men are led on by
present rewards, but that there must be very much there where groans and tears
and fasts are preferred to my feasts."
CHAPTER VI.
The Novatians, by excluding such from the
banquet of Christ, imitate not indeed the good Samaritan, but the proud
lawyer, the priest, and the Levite who are blamed in the Gospel, and are
indeed worse than these.
27. Do you then, O Novatians, shut out
these? For what is it When you refuse the hope of forgiveness but to shut out?
But the Samaritan did not pass by the man who had been left half dead by the
robbers; he dressed his wounds with oil and wine, first pouring in oil in
order to comfort them; he set the wounded man on his own beast, on which he
bore all his sins; nor did the Shepherd despise His wandering sheep.
28. But you say: "Touch me not."
You who wish to justify yourselves say, "He is not our neighbour,"
being more proud than that lawyer who wished to tempt Christ, for he said
"Who is my neighbour?" He asked, you deny, going on Iike that
priest, like that Levite passing by him whom you ought to have taken and
tended, and not receiving them into the inn for whom Christ paid the two
pence, whose neighbour Christ bids you to become that you might show mercy to
him. For he is our neighbour whom not only a similar condition has joined, but
whom mercy has bound to us. You make yourself strange to him through pride, in
vain puffing up yourself in your carnal mind, and not holding the Head.(1) For
if you held the Head you would consider that you must not forsake him for whom
Christ died. If you held the Head you would consider that the whole body, by
joining together rather than by separating, grows unto the increase of God(2)
by the bond of charity and the rescue of a sinner.
29. When, then, you take away all the fruits
of repentance, what do you say but this: Let no one who is wounded enter our
inn, let no one be healed in our Church? With us the sick are not cared for,
we are whole, we have no need of a physician, for He Himself says: "They
that are whole need not a physician, but they that are sick"
CHAPTER VII.
St. Ambrose, addressing Christ, complains of
the Novatians, and shows that they have no part with Christ, Who wishes all
men to be saved.
30. So, then, Lord Jesus, come wholly to Thy
Church, since Novatian makes excuse. Novatian says, "I have bought a yoke
of oxen," and he puts not on the light yoke of Christ, but lays upon his
shoulders a heavy burden which he is not able to bear. Novatian held back Thy
servants by whom he was invited, treated them contemptuously and slew them,
polluting them with the stain of a reiterated baptism. Send forth, therefore,
into the highways, and gather together good and bad, (1) bring the weak, the
blind, and the lame into Thy Church. Command that Thy house be filled, bring
in all unto Thy supper, for Thou wilt make him whom Thou shalt call worthy, if
he follow Thee. He indeed is rejected who has not the wedding garment, that
is, the vestment of charity, the veil of grace. Send forth I pray Thee to all.
31. Thy Church does not excuse herself from
Thy supper, Novatian makes excuse. Thy family says not, "I am whole, I
need not the physician," but it says: "Heal me, O Lord, and I shall
be healed; save me, and I shall be saved."(2) The likeness of Thy Church
is that woman who went behind and touched the hem of Thy garment, saying
within herself: "If I do but touch His garment I shall be whole."(3)
So the Church confesses her wounds, but desires to be healed.
32. And Thou indeed, O Lord, desirest that
all should be healed, but all do not wish to be healed. Novatian wishes not,
who thinks that he is whole. Thou, O Lord, sayest that Thou art sick, and
feelest our infirmity in the least of us, saying: "I was sick and ye
visited Me." (4) Novatian does not visit that least one in whom Thou
desirest to be visited. Thou saidst to Peter when he excused himself from
having his feet washed by Thee: "If I wash not thy feet, thou wilt have
no part with Me."(5) What fellowship, then, can they have with Thee, who
receive not the keys of the kingdom of heaven, saying that they ought not to
remit sins?
33. And this confession is indeed rightly
made by them, for they have not the succession of Peter, who hold not the
chair of Peter, which they rend by wicked schism; and this, too, they do,
wickedly denying that sins can be forgiven even in the Church, whereas it was
said to Peter: "I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven.
and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound also in heaven, and
whatsoever thou shall loose on earth shall be loosed also in heaven."(6)
And the vessel of divine election himself said: "If ye have forgiven
anything to any one, I forgive also, for what I have forgiven I have done it
for your sakes in the person of Christ."(7) Why, then, do they read
Paul's writings, if they think that he has erred so wickedly as to claim for
himself the right of his Lord? But he claimed what he had received, he did not
usurp that which was not due to him.
CHAPTER VIII.
It was the Lord's will to confer great gifts
on His disciples. Further, the Novatians confute themselves by the practices
of laying on of hands and of baptism, since it is by the same power that sins
are remitted in penance and in baptism. Their conduct is then contrasted with
that of our Lord.
34. It is the will of the Lord that His
disciples should possess great powers; it is His will that the same things
which He did when on earth should be done in His Name by His servants. For He
said: "Ye shall do greater things than these.''(1) He gave them power to
raise the dead. And whereas He could Himself have restored to Saul the use of
his sight, He nevertheless sent him to His disciple Ananias, that by his
blessing Saul's eyes might be restored, the sight of which he had lost.(2)
Peter also He bade walk with Himself on the sea, and because he faltered He
blamed him for lessening the grace given him by the weakness of his faith.(3)
He Who Himself was the light of the world granted to His disciples to be the
light of the world through grace. (4) And because He purposed to descend from
heaven and to ascend thither again, He took up Elijah into heaven to restore
him again to earth at the time which should please Him. And being baptized
with the Holy Spirit and with fire, He foreshadowed the Sacrament of Baptism
at the hands of John.(5)
35. And in fine He gave all gifts to His
disciples, of whom He said: "In My Name they shalt cast out devils; they
shall speak with new tongues; they shall take up serpents; and if they shall
drink any deadly thing it shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands on the
sick, and they shall do well."(6) So, then, He gave them all things, but
there is no power of man exercised in these things, in which the grace of the
divine gift operates.
36. Why, then, do you lay on hands, and
believe it to be the effect of the blessing, if perchance some sick person
recovers? Why do you assume that any can be cleansed by you from the pollution
of the devil? Why do you baptize if sins cannot be remitted by man? If baptism
is certainly the remission of all sins, what difference does it make whether
priests claim that this power is given to them in penance or at the font? In
each the mystery is one.
37. But you say that the grace of the
mysteries works in the font. What works, then, in penance? Does not the Name
of God do the work? What then? Do you, when you choose, claim for yourselves
the grace of God, and when you choose reject it? But this is a mark of
insolent presumption, not of holy fear, when those who wish to do penance are
despised by you. You cannot, forsooth, endure the tears of the weepers; your
eyes cannot bear the coarse clothing, the filth of the squalid; with proud
eyes and puffed- up hearts you delicate ones say with angry tones, "Touch
me not, for I am pure.
38. The Lord said indeed to Mary Magdalene,
"Touch Me not," (1) but He Who was pure did not say, "because I
am pure." Do you, Novatian, dare to call yourself pure, whilst, even if
you were pure as regards your acts, you would be made impure by this saying
alone? Isaiah says: "O wretched that I am, and pricked to the heart; for
that being a man, and having unclean lips, I dwell also in the midst of a
people having unclean lips,''(2) and do you say, "I am clean," when,
as it is written, not even an infant of a day old is pure?(3) David says,
"And cleanse me from my sin,"(4) whom for his tender heart the grace
of God often cleansed; are you pure who are so unrighteous as to have no
tenderness, as to see the mote in your brother's eye, but not to consider the
beam which is in your own eye? For with God no one who is unjust is pure. And
what is more unjust than to desire to have your sins forgiven you, and yet
yourself to think that he who entreats you ought not to be forgiven? What is
more unjust than to justify yourself in that wherein you condemn another,
whilst you yourself are committing worse offences ?
39. Then, too, the Lord Jesus when about to
consecrate s the forgiveness of our sins replied to John, who said: "I
ought to be baptized of Thee, and comest Thou to me? Suffer it now, for thus
it becometh us to fulfil all righteousness."(6) And the Lord indeed came
to a sinner, though indeed He had no sin, and desired to be baptized, having
no need of cleansing; who, then, can tolerate you, who think there is no need
for you to be cleansed by penance, because you say you are cleansed by grace,
as though it were now impossible for you to sin?
CHAPTER IX.
By collating similar passages with I Sam.
iii. 25, St. Ambrose shows that the meaning is not that no one shall
intercede, but that the intercessor must be worthy as were Moses and Jeremiah,
at whose prayers we read that God spared lsrael.
40. But you Say, It is written: "If a
man sin against the Lord, who shall entreat for him?"(1) First of all, as
I already said before, I might allow you to make that objection if you refused
penance to those only who denied the faith. But what difficulty does that
question produce? For it is not written, "No one shall entreat for
him;" but, "Who shall entreat?" that is to say, the question
is, Who in such a case can entreat? The entreaty is not excluded.
41. Then you have in the fifteenth Psalm
"Lord, who shall dwell in Thy tabernacle, or who shall rest upon Thy holy
hill?"(2) It is not that no one, but that he who is approved shall dwell
there, nor does it say that no one shall rest, but he who is chosen shall
rest. And that you may know that this is true, it is said not much later in
the twenty-fourth Psalm: "Who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord, or
who shall stand in His holy place?"(3) The writer implies, not any
ordinary person, or one of the common sort, but only a man of excellent life
and of singular merit. And that we may understand that when the question is
asked, Who? it does not imply no one, but some special one is meant, after
having said "Who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord ?" the
Psalmist adds: "He that hath clean hands and a pure heart, who hath not
lift up his mind unto vanity."(4) And elsewhere it is said: "Who is
wise and he shall understand these things?"(5) And in the Gospel:
"Who is the faithful and wise steward, whom the Lord shall set over His
household to give them their measure of wheat in due season?" (6) And
that we may understand that He speaks of such as really exist, the Lord added:
"Blessed is that servant, whom his Lord when He cometh shall find so
doing."(7) And I am of opinion that where it is said, "Lord, who is
like unto Thee?"(8) it is not meant that none is like, for the Son is the
image of the Father.
42. We must then understand in the same
manner, "Who shall entreat for him ?" as implying: It must be some
one of excellent life who shall entreat for him who has sinned against the
Lord. The greater the sin, the more worthy must be the prayers that are
sought. For it was not any one of the common people who prayed for the Jewish
people, but Moses, (1) when forgetful of their covenant they worshipped the
head of the calf. Was Moses wrong? Certainly he was not wrong in praying, who
both merited and obtained that for which he asked. For what should such love
not obtain as that of his when he offered himself for the people and said:
"And now, if Thou wilt forgive their sin, forgive; but if not, blot me
out of the book of life."(2) We see that he does not think of himself,
like a man full of fancies and scruples, whether he may incur the risk of some
offence, as Novatian says he dreads that he might, but rather, thinking of all
and forgetful of himself, he was not afraid test he should offend, so that he
might rescue and free the people from danger of offence.
43. Rightly, then, is it said: "Who
shall entreat for him?" It implies that it must be such an one as Moses
to offer himself for those who sin, or such as Jeremiah, who, though the Lord
said to him, "Pray not thou for this people,"(3) and yet he prayed
and obtained their forgiveness. For at the intercession of the prophet, and
the entreaty of so great a seer, the Lord was moved and said to Jerusalem,
which had meanwhile repented for its sins, and had said: "O Almighty Lord
God of Israel, the soul in anguish, and the troubled spirit crieth unto Thee,
hear, O Lord, and have mercy."(4) And the Lord bids them lay aside the
garments of mourning, and to cease the groanings of repentance, saying:
"Put off, O Jerusalem, the garment of thy mourning and affliction. and
clothe thyself in beauty, the glory which God hath given thee for
ever."(5)
CHAPTER X.
St. John did not absolutely forbid that
prayer should be made for those who "sin unto death," since he knew
that Moses, Jeremiah, and Stephen had so prayed, and he himself implies that
forgiveness is not to be denied them.
44. Such intercessors, then, must be sought
for after very grievous sins, for if any ordinary persons pray they are not
heard.
45. So that point of yours will have no
weight, which you take from the Epistle of John, where he says: "He who
knows that his brother sinneth a sin not unto death, let him ask, and God will
give him life, because he sinned not unto death. There is a sin unto death:
not concerning it do I say, let him ask."(1) He was not speaking to Moses
and Jeremiah, but to the people, who must seek another intercessor for their
sins; the people, for whom it is sufficient they entreat God for their lighter
faults, and consider that pardon for weightier sins must be reserved for the
prayers of the just. For how could John say that graver sins should not be
prayed for, when he had read that Moses prayed and obtained his request, where
there had been wilful casting off of faith, and knew that Jeremiah also had
entreated?
46. How could John say that we should not
pray for the sin unto death, who himself in the Apocalypse wrote the message
to the angel of the Church of Pergamos? "Thou hast there those that hold
the doctrine of Balaam, who taught Balac to put a stumbling-block before the
children of Israel, to eat things sacrificed unto idols, and to commit
fornication. So hast thou also them that hold the doctrines of the Nicolaitans.
Repent likewise, or else I will come to thee quickly."(2) Do you see that
the same God Who requires repentance promises forgiveness? And then He says:
"He that hath ears let him hear what the Spirit saith to the churches: To
him that overcometh will I give to eat of the hidden manna."(3)
47. Did not John himself know that Stephen
prayed for his persecutors, who had not been able even to listen to the Name
of Christ, when he said of those very men by whom he was being stoned:
"Lord, lay not this sin to their charge"?(4) And we see the result
of this prayer in the case of the Apostle, for Paul, who kept the garments of
those who were stoning Stephen, not long after became an apostle by the grace
of God, having before been a persecutor.
CHAPTER XI.
The passage quoted from St. John's Epistle
is confirmed by another in which salvation is promised to those who believe in
Christ, which refutes the Novatians who try to induce the lapsed to believe,
although denying them pardon. Furthermore, many who had lapsed have received
the grace of martyrdom, whilst the example of the good Samaritan shows that we
must not abandon those in whom even the faintest amount of faith is still
alive.
48. Since, then, we have spoken of the
general Epistle of St. John, let us enquire whether the writings of John in
the Gospel agree with your interpretation. For he writes that the Lord said:
"God so loved this world, that He gave His only-begotten Son, that every
one that believeth on Him should not perish but have everlasting
life."(1) If, then, you wish to reclaim any one of the lapsed, do you
exhort him to believe, or not to believe? Undoubtedly you exhort him to
believe. But, according to the Lord's words, he who believes shall have
everlasting life. How, then, will you forbid to pray for him, who has a claim
to everlasting life? since faith is of divine grace, as the Apostle teaches
where he speaks of the differences of gifts, for "to another is given
faith by the same Spirit."(2) And the disciples say to the Lord:
"Increase our faith."(3) He then who has faith has life, and he who
has life is certainly not shut out from pardon; "that every one," it
is said, "that believeth on Him should not perish." Since it is
said, Every one, no one is shut out, no one is excepted, for He does not
except him who has lapsed, if only afterwards he believes effectually.
49. We find that many have at length
recovered themselves after a fall, and have suffered for the Name of God. Can
we deny fellowship with the martyrs to these to whom the Lord Jesus has not
denied it? Do we dare to say that life is not restored to those to whom Christ
has given a crown? As, then, a crown is given to many after they have lapsed,
so, too, if they believe, their faith is restored, which faith is the gift of
God, as you read: "Because unto you it hath been granted by God not only
to believe in Him, but also to suffer in His behalf."(4) Is it possible
that he who has the gift of God should not have His forgiveness?
50. Now it is not a single but a twofold
grace that every one who believes should also suffer for the Lord Jesus. He,
then, who believes receives his grace, but he receives a second, if his faith
be crowned by suffering. For neither was Peter without grace before he
suffered, but when he suffered he received a second gift. And many who have
not had the grace to suffer for Christ have nevertheless had the grace of
believing on Him.
51. Therefore it is said: "That every
one that believeth in Him should not perish." Let no one, that is, of
whatever condition, after whatever fall, fear that he will perish. For it may
come to pass that the good Samaritan of the Gospel may find some one going
down from Jerusalem to Jericho, that is, falling back from the martyr's
conflict to the pleasures of this life and the comforts of the world; wounded
by robbers, that is, by persecutors, and left half dead; that good Samaritan,
Who is the Guardian of our souls (for the word Samaritan means Guardian),(1)
may, I say, not pass by him but tend and heal him.(2)
52. Perchance He therefore passes him not
by, because He sees in him some signs of life, so that there is hope that he
may recover. Does it not seem to you that he who has fallen is half alive if
faith sustains any breath of life? For he is dead who wholly casts God out of
his heart. He, then, who does not wholly cast Him out, but under pressure of
torments has denied Him for a time, is half dead. Or if he be dead, why do you
bid him repent, seeing he cannot now be healed? If he be half dead, pour in
oil and wine, not wine without oil, that may be the comfort and the smart.
Place him upon thy beast, give hint over to the host, lay out two pence for
his cure, be to him a neighbour. But you cannot be a neighbour unless you have
compassion on him; for no one can be called a neighbour unless he have healed,
not killed, another. But if you wish to be called a neighbour, Christ says to
you: "Go and do likewise."(3)
CHAPTER XII.
Another passage of St. John is considered.
The necessity of keeping the commandments of God may be complied with by those
who, having fallen, repent, as well as by those who have not fallen, as is
shown in the case of David.
53. Let us consider another similar
passage:" He that believeth on the Son hath eternal life, but he that
believeth not the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God abideth on
him."(4) That which abideth has certainly had a commencement, and that
from some offence, viz., that first he not believe. When, then, any one
believes, the wrath of God departs and life comes. To believe, then, in Christ
is to gain life, for "he that believeth in Him is not judged."(1)
54. But with reference to this passage they
allege that he who believes in Christ ought to keep His sayings, and say that
it is written in the Lord's own words: "I am come a light into this
world, that whosoever believeth in Me may not abide in darkness. And if any
man hear My word and keep it, I judge him not."(2) He judges not, and do
you judge? He says, "that whosoever believeth on Me may not abide in
darkness," that is, that if he be in darkness he may not remain therein,
but may amend his error, correct his fault, and keep My commandments, for I
have said, "I will not the death of the wicked, but the
correction."(3) I said above that he that believeth on Me is not judged,
and I keep to this: "For I am not come to judge the world, but that the
world may be saved through Me."(4) I pardon willingly, I quickly forgive,
"I will have mercy rather than sacrifice,"(5) because by sacrifice
the just is rendered more acceptable, by mercy the sinner is redeemed. "I
come not to call the righteous but sinners."(6) Sacrifice was under the
Law, in the Gospel is mercy. "The Law was given by Moses, grace by
Me."(7)
55. And again further on He says: "He
that despiseth Me, and receiveth not My words, hath one that judgeth
him."(8) Does he seem to you to have received Christ's words who has not
corrected himself? Undoubtedly not. He, then, who corrects himself receives
His word, for this is His word, that every one should turn back from sin. So,
then, of necessity you must either reject this saying of His, or if you cannot
deny it you must accept it.
56. It is also necessary that he who leaves
off sinning must keep the commandments of God and renounce his sins. We ought
not, then, to interpret this saying of him who has always kept the
commandments, for if this had been His meaning He would have added the word
always, but by not adding it He shows that He was speaking of him who has kept
what he has heard, and what he heard has led him to correct his faults; he has
then kept what he has heard.
57. But how hard it is to condemn to penance
for life one who even afterwards keeps the commandments of the Lord, let Him
teach us Himself Who has not refused forgiveness. Even to those who do not
keep His commandments, as you read in the Psalm: "If they profane My
statutes and keep not My commandments, I will visit their offences with the
rod and their sins with scourges, but My mercy will I not take from
them."(1) So, then, He promises mercy to all.
58. Yet that we may not think that this
mercy is without judgment, there is a distinction made between those who have
paid continual obedience to God's commandments, and those who at some time,
either by error or by compulsion, have fallen. And that you may not think that
it is only our arguments which press you, consider the decision of Christ, Who
said: "If the servant knew his Lord's will and did it not, he shall be
beaten with many stripes, but if he knew it not, he shall be beaten with few
stripes."(2) Each, then, if he believes, is received, for God "chasteneth
every son whom He receiveth,"(3) and him whom He chasteneth He does not
give over unto death, for it is written: "The Lord hath chastened me
sore, but He hath not given me over unto death."(4)
CHAPTER XIII.
They who have committed a "sin unto
death" are not to be abandoned, but subjected to penance, according to
St. Paul. Explanation of the phrase "Deliver unto Satan." Satan can
afflict the body, but these afflictions bring spiritual profit, showing the
power of God, Who thus turns Satan's devices against himself.
59. Lastly, Paul teaches us that we must not
abandon those who have committed a sin unto death, but that we must rather
coerce them with the bread of tears and tears to drink, yet so that their
sorrow itself be moderated. For this is the meaning of the passage: "Thou
hast given them to drink in large measure,"(5) that their sorrow itself
should have its measure, lest perchance he who is doing penance should be
consumed by overmuch sorrow, as was said to the Corinthians: "What will
ye? Shall I come to you with a rod, or in love and a spirit of
meekness?"(6) But even the rod is not severe, since he had read:
"Thou shalt beat him indeed with the rod, but shalt deliver his soul from
death."(7)
60. What the Apostle means by the rod is
shown by his invective against fornication,(8) his denunciation of incest, his
reprehension of pride, because they were puffed up who ought rather to be
mourning, and lastly, his sentence on the guilty person, that he should be
excluded from communion, and delivered to the adversary, not for the
destruction of the soul but of the flesh. For as the Lord did not give power
to Satan over the soul of holy Job, but allowed him to afflict his body,(1) so
here, too, the sinner is delivered to Satan for the destruction of the flesh,
that the serpent might lick the dust(2) of his flesh, but not hurt his soul.
61. Let, then, our flesh die to lusts, let
it be captive, let it be subdued, and not war against the law of our mind, but
die in subjection to a good service, as in Paul, who buffeted his body that he
might bring it into subjection, in order that his preaching might become more
approved, if the law of his flesh agreed and was consonant with the law of his
flesh. For the flesh dies when its wisdom passes over into the spirit, so that
it no longer has a taste for the things of the flesh, but for the things of
the spirit. Would that I might see my flesh growing weak, would that I were
not dragged captive into the law of sin, would that I lived not in the flesh,
but in the faith of Christ! And so there is greater grace in the infirmity of
the body than in its soundness.
62. Having explained Paul's meaning, let us
now consider the words themselves, in what sense he said that he had delivered
him to Satan for the destruction of the flesh, for the devil it is who tries
us. For he brings ailments on each of our limbs, and sickness on our whole
bodies. And then, too, he smote holy Job with evil sores from the feet to the
head, because he had received the power of destroying his flesh, when God
said: "Behold, I give him up unto thee, only preserve his life."(3)
This the Apostle took up in the same words, giving up this man to Satan for
the destruction of the flesh, that his spirit might be saved in the day of our
Lord Jesus Christ.(4)
63. Great is the power, great is the gift,
which commands the devil to destroy himself. For he destroys himself when he
makes the man whom he is seeking to overthrow by temptation stronger instead
of weak, because whilst he is weakening the body he is strengthening his soul.
For sickness of the body restrains sin, but luxury sets on fire the sin of the
flesh.
64. The devil is then deceived so as to
wound himself with his own bite, and to arm against himself him whom he
thought to weaken. So he armed holy Job the more after he wounded him, who,
with his whole. body covered with sores, endured indeed the bite of the devil,
but felt not his poison. And so it is well said of him, "Thou shalt draw
out the dragon with an hook, thou wilt play with him as with a bird, thou
shall bind him as a boy doth a sparrow, thou shalt lay thine hand upon
him."(1)
65. You see how he is mocked by Paul, so
that, like the child in prophecy, he lays his hand on the hole of the asp, and
the serpent injures him not; he draws him out of his hiding-places, and makes
of his venom a spiritual antidote, so that what is venom becomes a medicine,
the venom serves to the destruction of the flesh, it becomes medicine to the
healing of the spirit. For that which hurts the body benefits the spirit.
66. Let, then, the serpent bite the earthy
part of me, let him drive his tooth into my flesh, and bruise my body; and may
the Lord say of me: "I give him up unto thee, only preserve his
life." How great is the power of Christ, that the guardianship of man is
made a charge even to the devil himself, who always desires to injure him. Let
us then make the Lord Jesus favourable to ourselves. At the command of Christ
the devil himself becomes the guardian of his prey. Even unwillingly he
carries out the commands of heaven, and, though cruel, obeys the commands of
gentleness.
67. But why do I commend his obedience? Let
him be ever evil that God may be ever good, Who converts his ill-will into
grace for us. He wishes to injure us, but cannot if Christ resist him. He
wounds the flesh but preserves the life. And then it is written: "Then
shall the wolves and the lambs feed together, the lion and the ox shall eat
straw, and they shall not hurt nor destroy in My holy mountain, saith the
Lord."(2) For this is the sentence of condemnation on the serpent:
"Dust shall be thy food."(3) What dust? Surely that of which it is
said: "Dust thou art, and into dust shall thou return.
CHAPTER XIV.
St. Ambrose explains that the flesh given to
Satan for destruction is eaten by the serpent when the soul is set free from
carnal desires. He gives, therefore, various rules for guarding the senses,
points out the snares laid for us by means of pleasures, and exhorts his
hearers not to fear the destruction of the flesh by the serpent.
68. The serpent eats this dust, if the Lord
Jesus is favourable to us, that our spirit may not sympathize with the
weakness of the flesh, nor be set on fire by the vapours of the flesh and the
heat of our members. "It is better to marry than to burn,"(1) for
there is a flame which burns within. Let us not then suffer this fire to
approach the bosom of our minds and the depths of our hearts, lest we burn up
the covering of our inmost hearts, and lest the devouring fire of lust consume
this outward garment of the soul and its fleshy veil, but let us pass through
the fire.(2) And should any one fall into the fire of love let him leap over
it and pass forth; let him not bind to himself adulterous lust with the bands
of thoughts, let him not tie knots around himself by the fastenings of
continual reflection, let him not too often turn his attention to the form of
a harlot, and let not a maiden lift her eyes to the countenance of a youth.
And if by chance she has looked and is caught, how much more will she be
entangled if she gazes with curiosity.
69. Let custom itself teach us. A woman
covers her face with a veil for this reason, that in public her modesty may be
safe, That her face may not easily meet the gaze of a youth, let her be
covered with the nuptial veil, so that not even in chance meetings she might
be exposed to the wounding of another or of herself, though the wound of
either were indeed hers. But if she cover her head with a veil that she may
not accidentally see or be seen(for when the head is veiled the face is
hidden), how much more ought she to cover herself with the veil of modesty, so
as even in public to have her own secret place.
70. But granted that the eye has fallen upon
another, at least let not the inward affection follow. For to have seen is no
sin, but one must be careful that it be not the source of sin. The bodily eye
sees, but let the eye of the heart be closed; let modesty of mind remain. We
have a Lord Who is both strict and indulgent. The prophet indeed said:
"Look not upon the beauty of a woman that is all harlot."(3) But the
Lord said: "Whoever shall look on a woman to lust after her, hath
committed adultery with her already in his heart."(4) He does not say,
"Whosoever shall look hath committed adultery," but "Whosoever
shall look on her to last after her." He condemned not the look but
sought out the inward affection. But that modesty is praiseworthy which has so
accustomed itself to close the bodily eyes as often not to see what we really
behold. For we seem to behold with the bodily sight whatever meets us; but if
there be not joined to this any attention of the mind, the sight also,
according to what is usual in the body, fades away, so that in reality we see
rather with the mind than with the body.
71. And if the flesh has seen the flame, let
us not cherish that flame in our bosoms, that is, in the depths of the heart
and the inward part of the mind. Let us not instil this fire into our bones,
let us not bind bonds upon ourselves, let us not join in conversation with
such as may be the cause to us of unholy fires. The speech of a maiden is a
snare to a youth, the words of a youth are the bonds of love.
72. Joseph saw the fire when the woman eager
for adultery spoke to him.(1) She wished to catch him with her words. She set
the snares of her lips, but was not able to capture the chaste man. For the
voice of modesty, the voice of gravity, the rein of caution, the care for
integrity, the discipline of chastity, loosed the woman's chains. So that
unchaste person could not entangle him in her meshes. She laid her hand upon
him; she caught his garment, that she might tighten the noose around him. The
words of a lascivious woman are the snares of lust, and her hands the bonds of
love; but the chaste mind could not be taken either by snares or by bonds. The
garment was cast off, the bonds were loosed, and because he did not admit the
fire into the bosom of his mind, his body was not burnt.
73. You see, then, that our mind is the
cause of our guilt. And so the flesh is innocent, but is often the minister of
sin. Let not, then, desire of beauty overcome you. Many nets and many snares
are spread by the devil. The look of a harlot is the snare of him who loves
her. Our own eyes are nets to us, wherefore it is written: "Be not taken
with thine eyes."(2) So, then, we spread nets for ourselves in which we
are entangled and hampered. We bind chains on ourselves, as we read: "For
every one is bound with the chains of his own sins."(3)
74. Let us then pass through the fires of
youth and the glow of early years; let us pass through the waters, let us not
remain therein, lest the deep floods shut us in. Let us rather pass over, that
we too may say: "Our soul has passed over the stream,"(4) for he who
has passed over is safe. And lastly, the Lord speaks thus: "If thou pass
through the water, I am with thee, the rivers shall not overflow
thee."(1) And the prophet says: "I have seen the wicked exalted
above the cedars of Libanus, and I passed by, and lo, he was not." Pass
by things of this world, and you will see that the high places of the wicked
have fallen. Moses, too, passing by things of this world, saw a great sight
and said: "I will turn aside and see this great sight,"(2) for had
he been held by the fleeting pleasures of this world he would not have seen so
great a mystery.
75. Let us also pass over this fire of lust,
fearing which Paul--but fearing for us, inasmuch as by buffeting his body he
had come no longer to fear for himself--says to us: "Flee
fornication."(3) Let us then flee it as though following us, though
indeed it follows not behind us, but within our very selves. Let us then
diligently take heed lest while we are fleeing from it we carry it with
ourselves. For we wish for the most part to flee, but if we do not wholly cast
it out of our mind, we rather take it up than forsake it. Let us then spring
over it, lest it be said to us: "Walk ye in the flame of your fire, which
ye have kindled for yourselves."(4) For as he who "takes fire into
his bosom burns his clothes,"(5) so he who walks upon fiery coals must of
necessity burn his feet, as it is written: "Can one walk upon coals of
fire and not burn his feet?"(6)
76. This fire is dangerous, let us then not
feed it with the fuel of luxury. Lust is fed by feastings, nourished by
delicacies, kindled by wine, and inflamed by drunkenness. Still more dangerous
than these are the incentives of words, which intoxicate the mind as it were
with a kind of wine of the vine of Sodore. Let us be on our guard against
abundance of this wine, for when the flesh is intoxicated the mind totters,
the heart wavers, the heart is carried to and fro. And so with regard to each
that precept is useful wherein Timothy is warned: "Drink a little wine
because of thy frequent infirmities."(7) When the body is heated, it
excites the glow of the mind; when the flesh is chilled with the cold of
disease the spirit is chilled; when the body is in pain, the mind is sad, but
the sadness shall become joy.
77. Do not then fear if your flesh be eaten
away, the soul is not consumed. And so David says that he does not fear,
because the enemy were eating up his flesh but not his soul, as we read:
"When evil-doers come near upon me to eat up my flesh, my foes who
trouble me, they were weakened and fell."(1) So the serpent works
overthrow for himself alone, therefore is he who has been injured by the
serpent given over to the serpent that he may raise up again him whom he cast
down, and the overthrow of the serpent may be the raising again of the man.
And Scripture testifies that Satan is the author of this bodily suffering and
weakness of the flesh, where Paul says: "There was given unto me a thorn
in the flesh, a messenger of Satan to buffet me, that I should not be
exalted."(2) So Paul learned to heal even as he himself had been made
whole.
CHAPTER XV.
Returning from this digression, St. Ambrose
explains what is the meaning of St. Paul where he speaks of coming "with
a rod or in the spirit of meekness." One who has grievously fallen is to
be separated, but to be again restored to religious privileges when he has
sufficiently repented. The old leaven is purged out when the hardness of the
letter is tempered by the meal of a milder interpretation. All should be
sprinkled with the Church's meal and fed with the food of charity, lest they
become like that envious elder brother, whose example is followed by the
Novatians.
78. That faithful teacher, having promised
one of two things, gave each. He came with a rod, for he separated the guilty
man from the holy fellowship. And well is he said to be delivered to Satan who
is separated from the body of Christ. But he came in love and with the spirit
of meekness, whether because he so delivered him up as to save his soul, or
because he afterwards restored to the sacraments him whom he had before
separated.
79. For it is needful to separate one who
has grievously fallen, lest a little leaven corrupt the whole lump. And the
old leaven must be purged out, or the old man in each person; that is, the
outward man and his deeds, he who among the people has grown old in sin and
hardened in vices. And well did he say purged, not cast forth, for what is
purged is not considered wholly valueless, for to this end is it purged, that
what is of value be separated from the worthless, but that which is cast forth
is considered to have in itself nothing of value.
80. The Apostle then judged that the sinner
should then at once be restored to the heavenly sacraments if he himself
wished to be cleansed. And well is it said "Purge," for he is purged
as by certain things done by the whole people, and is washed in the tears of
the multitude, and redeemed from sin by the weeping of the multitude, and is
purged in the inner man. For Christ granted to His Church that one should be
redeemed by means of all, as she herself was found worthy of the coming of the
Lord Jesus, in order that through One all might be redeemed.
81. This is Paul's meaning which the words
make more obscure. Let us consider the exact words of the Apostle: "Purge
out," says he, "the old leaven, that ye may be a new lump, even as
ye are unleavened."(1) Either that the whole Church takes up the burden
of the sinner, with whom she has to suffer in weeping and prayer and pain,
and, as it were, covers herself with his leaven, in order that by means of all
that which is to be done away in the individual doing penance may be purged by
a kind of contribution and commixture of compassion and mercy offered with
manly vigor.(2) Or one may understand it as that woman in the Gospel teaches
us, who is a type of the Church, when she hid the leaven in her meal, till all
was leavened, and the whole could be used as pure.
82. The Lord taught me in the Gospel what
leaven is when He said: "Do ye not understand that I said not concerning
bread, Beware of the leaven of the Pharisees and Sadducees?"(3) Then, it
is said, they understood that He spake not of bread, but that they should
beware of the doctrine of the Pharisees and Sadducees. This leaven, then--that
is, the doctrine of the Pharisees and the contentiousness of the
Sadducees--the Church hides in her meal, when she softened the hard letter of
the Law by a spiritual interpretation, and ground it as it were in the mill of
her explanations, bringing out as it were from the husks of the letter the
inner secrets of the mysteries, and setting forth the belief in the
Resurrection, wherein the mercy of God is proclaimed, and wherein it is
believed that the life of those who are dead is restored.
83. Now this comparison seems to be not
unfitly brought forward in this place, since the kingdom of heaven is
redemption from sin, and therefore we all, both bad and good, are mingled with
the meal of the Church that we all may be a new lump. But that no one may be
afraid that an admixture of evil leaven might injure the lump, the Apostle
said: "That ye may be a new lump, even as ye are unleavened;"(1)
that is to say, This mixture will render you again such, as in the pure
integrity of your innocence. If we thus have compassion, we are not stained
with the sins of others, but we gain the restoration of another to the
increase of our own grace, so that our integrity remains as it was. And
therefore he adds: "For Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us;
"(2) that is, the Passion of the Lord profited all, and gave redemption
to sinners who repented of the sins they had committed.
84. Let us then keep the feast on good food,
doing penance yet joyful in our redemption, for no food is sweeter than
kindness and gentleness. Let no envy towards the sinner who is saved be
mingled with our feasts and joy, lest that envious brother, as is set forth in
the Gospel, exclude himself from the house of his Father, because he grieved
at the reception of his brother, at whose lasting exile he was wont to
rejoice.
85. And you Novatians cannot deny that you
are like him, who, as you say, do not come together to the Church because by
penance a hope of return had been given to those who had lapsed. But this is
only a pretence, for Novatian contrived his schism through grief at his loss
of the episcopal office.
86. But do you not understand that the
Apostle also prophesied of you and says to you: "And ye are puffed up and
did not rather mourn, that he who did this deed might be taken away from among
you"?(3) He is, then, wholly taken away when his sin is done away, but
the Apostle does not say that the sinner is to be shut out of the Church who
counsels his cleansing.
CHAPTER XVI.
Comparison between the apostles and
Novatians. The fitness of the words, "Ye know not what spirit ye are
of," when applied to them. The desire of penance is extinguished by them
when they take away its fruit. And thus are sinners deprived of the promises
of Christ, though, indeed, they ought not to be too soon admitted to the
mysteries. Some examples of repentance.
87. Inasmuch, then, as the Apostle forgave
sins, by what authority do you say that they are not to be forgiven? Who has
the most reverence for Christ, Paul or Novatian? But Paul knew that the Lord
was merciful. He knew that the Lord Jesus was offended more by the harshness
of the disciples than by their pitifulness.
88. Furthermore, Jesus rebuked James and
John when they spoke of bringing down fire from heaven to consume those who
refused to receive the Lord, and said to them: "Ye know not whose spirit
ye are of; for the Son of Man is not come to destroy men's lives but to save
them."(1) To them, indeed, He said, "Ye know not whose spirit ye are
of," who were of His spirit; but to you He says, "Ye are not of My
spirit, who hold not fast My clemency, who reject My mercy, who refuse
repentance which I willed to be preached by the apostles in My Name."
89. For it is in vain that you say that you
preach repentance who remove the fruits of repentance. For men are led to the
pursuit of anything either by rewards or results, and every pursuit grows
slack by delay. And for this reason the Lord, in order that the devotion of
His disciples might be increased, said that every one who had left all that
was his, and followed God, should receive sevenfold more both here and
hereafter.(2) First of all He promised the reward here, to do away with the
tedium of delay, and again hereafter, that we might learn to believe that
rewards will also be given to us hereafter. Present rewards are then an
earnest of those hereafter.
90. If, then, any one, having committed
hidden sins, shall nevertheless diligently do penance, how shall he receive
those rewards if not restored to the communion of the Church? I am willing,
indeed, that the guilty man should hope for pardon, should seek it with tears
and groans, should seek it with the aid of the tears of all the people, should
implore forgiveness; and if communion be postponed two or three times, that he
should believe that his entreaties have not been urgent enough, that he must
increase his tears, must come again even in greater trouble, clasp the feet of
the faithful with his arms, kiss them, wash them with tears, and not let them
go, so that the Lord Jesus may say of him too: "His sins which are many
are forgiven, for he loved much."(8)
91. I have known penitents whose countenance
was furrowed with tears, their cheeks worn with constant weeping, who offered
their body to be trodden under foot by all, who with faces ever pale and worn
with fasting bore about in a yet living body the likeness of death.
CHAPTER XVII.
That gentleness must be added to severity,
as is shown in the case of St. Paul at Corinth. The man had been baptized,
though the Novatians argue against it. And by the word "destruction"
is not meant annihilation but severe chastening.
92. Why do we postpone the time of pardon
for those who have mortified themselves, who during life have done themselves
to death? "Sufficient," says St. Paul, "to such a one is this
punishment which is inflicted by the many; so that contrariwise, ye should
rather forgive him and comfort him, lest by any means he should be swallowed
up with overmuch sorrow."(1) If the punishment which is inflicted by the
many is sufficient for condemnation, the intercession which is made by many is
also sufficient for the remission of sin. The Master of morals, Who both knows
our weakness and is the interpreter of the will of God, wills that comfort
should be given, lest sorrow through the weariness of long delay should
swallow up the penitent.
93. The Apostle then forgave him, and not
only forgave him, but desired that love to him should again grow strong. He
who is loved receives not harshness but mercy. And not only did he himself
forgive him only, but willed that all should forgive him, and says that he
forgave for the sake of others, lest many should be longer saddened on account
of one. "To whom," says he, "ye have forgiven anything, I
forgive also, for I also have forgiven for your sakes in the person of Christ,
for we are not ignorant of his devices.''(2) Rightly can he be on his guard
against the serpent who is not ignorant of his devices, of which there are so
many to our detriment. He is always desirous to do harm, always desirous to
circumvent us, that he may cause death; but we ought to take heed lest our
remedy become an occasion of triumph for him; for we are circumvented by him,
if any one perish through overmuch sorrow, who might be set free by
pitifulness.
94. And that we may know that this person
was baptized, he added: "I wrote to you in my epistle to have no company
with fornicators, not altogether with fornicators of this world."(1) And
farther on he adds: "But now I write unto you not to keep company if any
man that is named a brother be a fornicator, or covetous, or an idolator."(2)
Those whom he has joined together under one penalty, he willed to attain
together to forgiveness. "If any be such," he says, "with him
not to eat."(3) How severe he is with the obstinate, how indulgent to
those who seek. Against those rises up in arms the injury done to Christ,
whilst the calling upon Christ aids these.
95. But lest any one be perplexed because it
is written: "I have delivered such an one unto Satan for the destruction
of the flesh, and should say: How can he attain forgiveness whose whole flesh
has perished, seeing that it is evident that man was redeemed both in body and
soul, and is saved in both and that neither the soul without the body, nor yet
the body without the soul, since both are united by their fellowship in the
deeds that have been done, can be without fellowship either in punishment or
in reward? Let this suffice for an answer to him: That "destruction"
does not mean the complete annihilation of the flesh, but its chastening. For
as he who is dead to sin lives to God, so the allurements of the flesh perish,
and the flesh dies to its lusts, in order that it may live again to purity and
to other good works.
96. And what more suitable example can we
take than one from our common mother? For the earth itself, from which we are
all taken, when it is not worked and cultivated, seems to be desert; and the
field dies to the vines or olive-trees with which it was planted, and yet it
does not lose its own nutritive power, which is, as it were, its life. And
then later, when cultivation begins once more, and the seed is sown for which
the land seems suitable, it breaks forth again more fruitful than before with
its products. It is not, then, anything so strange if our flesh is said to
die, and yet is understood to be subdued rather than annihilated.
BOOK II.
CHAPTER I.
St. Ambrose gives additional rules
concerning repentance, and shows that it must not be delayed.
1. Although in the former book we have
written many things which may tend to the more perfect practice of repentance,
yet inasmuch as a great deal more may be added, we will continue the repast so
as not to seem to have relinquished the provisions of our teaching only half
consumed.
2. For repentance must be taken in hand not
only anxiously, but also quickly, lest perchance that father of the house in
the Gospel who planted a fig-tree in his vineyard should come and seek fruit
on it, and finding none, say to the vine-dresser: "Cut it down, why doth
it cumber the ground?"(1) And unless the vine-dresser should intercede
and say: "Lord, let it alone this year also, until I dig about it and
dung it, and if it bear fruit--well; but if not let it be cut down."(2)
3. Let us then dung this field which we
possess, and imitate those hard-working farmers, who are not ashamed to
satiate the land with rich dung and to scatter the grimy ashes over the field,
that they may gather more abundant crops.
4. And the Apostle teaches us how to dung
it, saying: "I count all things but dung, that I may gain
Christ,"(3) and he, through evil report and good report, attained to
pleasing Christ. For he had read that Abraham, when confessing himself to be
but dust and ashes,(4) in his deep humility found favour with God. He had read
how Job, sitting among the ashes,(5) regained all that he had lost.(6) He had
heard in the utterance of David, how God "raiseth the poor out of the
dust, and lifteth the needy out of the dunghill."(7)
5. Let us then not be ashamed to confess our
sins unto the Lord. Shame indeed there is when each makes known his sins, but
that shame, as it were, ploughs his land, removes the ever-recurring brambles,
prunes the thorns, and gives life to the fruits which he believed were dead.
Follow him who, by diligently ploughing his field, sought for eternal fruit:
"Being reviled we bless, being persecuted we endure, being defamed we
entreat, we are made as the offscouring of the world."(1) If you plough
after this fashion you will sow spiritual seed. Plough that you may get rid of
sin and gain fruit. He ploughed so as to destroy in himself the last tendency
to persecution. What more could Christ give to lead us on to the pursuit of
perfection, than to convert and then give us for a teacher one who was a
persecutor?
CHAPTER II.
A passage quoted by the heretics against
repentance is explained in two ways, the first being that Heb. vi. 4 refers to
the impossibility of being baptized again; the second, that what is impossible
with man is possible with God.
6. Being then refuted by the clear example
of the Apostle and by his writings, the heretics yet endeavour to resist
further, and say that their opinion is supported by apostolic authority,
bringing forward the passage in the Epistle to the Hebrews: "For it is
impossible that those who were once enlightened, and have tasted the heavenly
gift, and have been made partakers of the Holy Spirit, and have tasted the
good word of God, and the powers of the world to come, should if they fall
away be again renewed unto repentance, crucifying again the Son of God, and
put Him to open shame."(2)
7. Could Paul teach in opposition to his own
act? He had at Corinth forgiven sin through penance, how could he himself
speak against his own decision? Since, then, he could not destroy what he had
built, we must assume that what he says was different from, but not contrary
to, what had gone before. For what is contrary is opposed to itself, what is
different has ordinarily another meaning. Things which are contrary are not
such that one can support the other. Inasmuch, then, as the Apostle spoke of
remitting penance, he could not be silent as to those who thought that baptism
was to be repeated. And it was right first of all to remove our anxiety, and
to let us know that even after baptism, if any sinned their sins could be
forgiven them, lest a false belief in a reiterated baptism should lead astray
those who were destitute of all hope of forgiveness. And secondly, it was
right to set forth in a well-reasoned argument that baptism is not to be
repeated.
8. And that the writer was speaking of
baptism is evident from the very words in which it is stated that it is
impossible to renew unto repentance those who were fallen, inasmuch as we are
renewed by means of the layer of baptism, whereby we are born again, as Paul
says himself: "For we are buried with Him through baptism into death,
that, like as Christ rose from the dead through the glory of the Father, so
we, too, should walk in newness of life."(1) And in another place:
"Be ye renewed in the spirit of your mind, and put on the new man which
is created after God."(2) And elsewhere again: "Thy youth shall be
renewed like the eagle,"(3) because the eagle after death is born again
from its ashes, as we being dead in sin are through the Sacrament of Baptism
born again to God, and created anew. So, then, here as elsewhere, he teaches
one baptism. "One faith," he says, "one baptism."(4)
9. This, too, is plain, that in him who is
baptized the Son of God is crucified, for our flesh could not do away sin
unless it were crucified in Jesus Christ. And then it is written that:
"All we who were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into His
death."(5) And farther on: "If we have been planted in the likeness
of His death, we shall be also in the likeness of His resurrection, knowing
that our old man was fastened with Him to His cross."(6) And to the
Colossians he says: "Buried with Him by baptism, wherein ye also rose
again with Him."(7) Which was written to the intent that we should
believe that He is crucified in us, that our sins may be purged through Him,
that He, Who alone can forgive sins, may nail to His cross the handwriting
which was against us.(8) In us He triumphs over principalities and powers, as
it is written of Him: "He made a show of principalities and powers,
triumphing over them in Himself."(9)
10. So, then, that which he says in this
Epistle to the Hebrews, that it is impossible for those who have fallen to be
"renewed unto repentance, crucifying again the Son of God, and putting
Him to open shame," must be considered as having reference to baptism,
wherein we crucify the Son of God in ourselves, that the world may be by Him
crucified for us, who triumph, as it were, when we take to ourselves the
likeness of His death, who put to open shame upon His cross principalities and
powers, and triumphed over them, that in the likeness of His death we, too,
might triumph over the principalities whose yoke we throw off. But Christ was
crucified once, and died to sin once, and so there is but one, not several
baptisms.
11. But what of the passage wherein the
doctrine of baptisms is spoken of? Because under the Law there were many
baptisms or washings, he rightly rebukes those who forsake what is perfect and
seek again the first principles of the word. He teaches us that the whole of
the washings under the Law are done away with, and that there is one baptism
in the sacraments of the Church. But he exhorts us that leaving the first
principles of the word we should go on to perfection. "And this," he
says, "we will do, if God permits,"(1) for no one can be perfect
without the grace of God.
12. And indeed I might also say to any one
who thought that this passage spoke of repentance, that things which are
impossible with men are possible with God; and God is able whensoever He wills
to forgive us our sins, even those which we think cannot be forgiven. And so
it is possible for God to give us that which it seems to us impossible to
obtain. For it seemed impossible that water should wash away sin, and Naaman
the Syrian(2) thought that his leprosy could not be cleansed by water. But
that which was impossible God made to be possible, Who gave us so great grace.
In like manner it seemed impossible that sins should be forgiven through
repentance, but Christ gave this power to His apostles, which has been
transmitted to the priestly office. That, then, has become possible which was
impossible. But, by a true reasoning, he convinces us that the reiteration by
any one of the Sacrament of Baptism is not permitted.
CHAPTER III.
Explanation of the parable of the Prodigal
Son, in which St. Ambrose applies it to refute the teaching of the Novatians,
proving that reconciliation ought not to be refused to the greatest offender
upon suitable proof of repentance.
13. And the Apostle does not contradict the
plain teaching of Christ, Who set forth, as a comparison of a repentant
sinner, one going to a foreign country after receiving all his substance from
his father, wasted it in riotous living, and later, when feeding upon husks,
longed for his father's bread and then gained the robe, the ring, the shoes,
and the slaying of the calf,(1) which is a likeness of the Passion of the
Lord, whereby we receive forgiveness.
14. Well is it said that he went into a
foreign country who is cut off from the sacred altar, for this is to be
separated from that Jerusalem which is in heaven, from the citizenship and
home of the saints. For which reason the Apostle says: "Therefore now ye
are no more strangers and foreigners, but fellow-citizens with the saints and
of the household of God."(2)
15. "And," it is said,
"wasted his substance." Rightly, for he whose faith halts in
bringing forth good works does consume it. For, "faith is the substance
of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen."(3) And faith is a
good substance, the inheritance of our hope.
16. And no wonder if he was perishing for
hunger, who lacked the divine nourishment, impelled by the want of which he
says: "I will arise and go to my father, and will say unto him: Father, I
have sinned against heaven, and before thee." Do you not see it plainly
declared to us, that we are urged to prayer for the sake of gaining the
sacrament? and do you wish to take away that for the sake of which penance is
undertaken? Deprive the pilot of the hope of reaching port, and he will wander
uncertainly here and there on the waves. Take away the crown from the athlete,
and he will fail and lie on the course. Take from the fisher the power of
catching his booty, and he will cease to cast the nets. How, then, can he, who
suffers hunger in his soul, pray more earnestly to God, if he has no hope of
the heavenly food?
17. "I have sinned," he says,
"against heaven, and before thee." He confesses what is clearly a
sin unto death, that you may not think that any one doing penance(4) is
rightly shut out from pardon. For he who has sinned against heaven has sinned
either against the kingdom of heaven, or against his own soul, which is a sin
unto death, and against God, to Whom alone is said: "Against Thee only
have I sinned, and done evil before Thee."(1)
18. So quickly does he gain forgiveness,
that, as he is coming, and is still a great way off, his father meets him,
gives him a kiss, which is the sign of sacred peace; orders the robe to be
brought forth, which is the marriage garment, which if any one have not, he is
shut out from the marriage feast; places the ring on his hand, which is the
pledge of faith and the seal of the Holy Spirit; orders the shoes to be
brought out, (2) for he who is about to celebrate the Lord's Passover, about
to feast on the Lamb, ought to have his feet protected against all attacks of
spiritual wild beasts and the bite of the serpent; bids the calf to be slain,
for "Christ our Passover hath been sacrificed."(3) For as often as
we receive the Blood of the Lord, we proclaim the death of the Lord.(4) As,
then, He was once slain for all, so whensoever forgiveness of sins is granted,
we receive the Sacrament of His Body, that through His Blood there may be
remission of sins.
19. Therefore most evidently are we bidden
by the teaching of the Lord to confer again the grace of the heavenly
sacrament on those guilty even of the greatest sins, if they with open
confession bear the penance due to their sin.
CHAPTER IV.
St. Ambrose turns against the Novatians
themselves another objection concerning blasphemy against the Holy Spirit,
showing that it consists in an erroneous belief, proving this by St. Peter's
words against Simon Magus, and other passages, exhorting the Novatians to
return to the Church, affirming that such is our Lord's mercy that even Judas
would have found forgiveness had he repented.
20. But we have heard that you are
accustomed to bring forward as an objection that which is written: "Every
sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men, but blasphemies against the
Spirit shall not be forgiven unto men. And whosoever shall speak a word
against the Son of Man, it shall be forgiven him, but whosoever shall speak
against the Holy Spirit, it shall not be forgiven him, neither in this world,
nor in that which is to come."(5) By which quotation the whole of your
assertion is destroyed and done away, for it is written: "Every sin and
blasphemy shall be forgiven unto men." Why, then, do you not remit them?
Why do you bind chains which you do not loose? Why do you tie knots which you
do not unfasten? Forgive the others, and deal with those who you think are
bound for ever by the authority of the Gospel for sinning against the Holy
Spirit.
21. But let us consider the case of those
whom the Lord so binds, going back to the words before the passage quoted,
that we may understand it more clearly: The Jews were saying: "This man
doth not cast out devils, but by Beelzebub, prince of the devils." Jesus
replied: "Every kingdom divided against itself shall be destroyed, and
every city or house divided against itself shall not stand; for if Satan
casteth out Satan, he is divided against himself, how then shall his kingdom
stand? But if I cast out devils by Beelzebub, by whom do your sons cast them
out?"(1)
22. Now we see plainly here that the words
are expressly used of those who were saying that the Lord Jesus cast out
devils through Beelzebub, to whom the Lord gave that answer, because they were
of the heritage of Satan, who compared the Saviour of all to Satan, and
attributed the grace of Christ to the kingdom of the devil. And that we might
know that He was speaking of this blasphemy, He added: "O generation of
vipers, how can ye speak good, being yourselves evil?" He says, then,
that those who thus speak attain not to forgiveness.
23. Then, when Simon, depraved by long
practice of magic, had thought he could gain by money the power of conferring
the grace of Christ and the infusion of the Holy Spirit, Peter said:
"Thou hast neither part nor lot in this faith, for thy heart is not right
with God. Repent therefore of this thy wickedness, and pray the Lord, if
per-chance this thought of thy heart may be forgiven thee, for I see that thou
art in the bond of iniquity and in the bitterness of gall."(2) We see
that Peter by his apostolic authority condemns him who blasphemes against the
Holy Spirit through magic vanity, and all the more because he had not the
clear consciousness of faith. And yet he did not exclude him from the hope of
forgiveness, for he called him to repentance.
24. The Lord then replies to the blasphemy
of the Pharisees, and refuses to them the grace of His power, which consists
in the remission of sins, because they asserted that His heavenly power rested
on the help of the devil. And He affirms that they act with satanic spirit who
divide the Church of God, so that He includes the heretics and schismatics of
all times, to whom He denies forgiveness, for every other sin is concerned
with single persons, this is a sin against all. For they alone wish to destroy
the grace of Christ who rend asunder the members of the Church for which the
Lord Jesus suffered, and the Holy Spirit was given us.
25. Lastly, that we may know that He is
speaking of those who destroy the unity of the Church, we find it written:
"He that is not with Me is against Me, and he that gathered not with Me,
scattereth."(1) And that we might know that He is speaking of these, He
at once added: "Therefore I say unto you, every sin and blasphemy shall
be forgiven unto men, but blasphemies against the Spirit shall not be forgiven
unto men." When He says, "Therefore say I unto you," is it not
evident that He intended the words following to be laid to heart by us beyond
the others? And He rightly added: "A good tree bringeth forth good
fruits, but a bad tree bringeth forth bad fruits,''(2) for an evil association
cannot produce good fruits. The tree, then, is the association; the fruits of
the good tree are the children of the Church.
26. Return, then, to the Church, those of
you who have wickedly separated yourselves. For He promises forgiveness to all
who are converted, since it is written: "Whosoever shall call on the Name
of the Lord shall be saved."(3) And lastly, the Jewish people who said of
the Lord Jesus, "He hath a devil,"(4) and "He casteth out
devils through Beelzebub," and who crucified the Lord Jesus, are, by the
preaching of Peter, called to baptism, that they may put away the guilt of so
great a wickedness.
27. But what wonder is it if you should deny
salvation to others, who reject your own, though they lose nothing who seek
for penance from you? For I suppose that even Judas might through the
exceeding mercy of God not have been shut out from forgiveness, if he had
expressed his sorrow not before the Jews but before Christ. "I have
sinned," he said, "in that I have betrayed righteous blood."(5)
Their answer was: "What is that to us, see thou to that." What other
reply do you give, when one guilty of a smaller sin confesses his deed to you?
What do you answer but this: "What is that to us, see thou to that"?
The halter followed on those words, but the punishment is all the more severe,
the smaller the sin is.
28. But if they be not converted, do you at
least repent, who by many a slip have fallen from the lofty pinnacle of
innocence and faith. We have a good Lord, Whose will it is to forgive all, Who
called you by the prophet, and said: "I, even I, am He that blotteth out
transgressions, and I will not remember, but do thou remember, and let us
plead together. ''(1)
CHAPTER V.
As to the words of St. Peter to Simon Magus,
from which the Novatians infer that there was no forgiveness for the latter,
it is pointed out that St. Peter, knowing his evil heart, might well use words
of doubt, and then by some Old Testament instances it is pointed out that
"perchance" does not exclude forgiveness. The apostles transmitted
to us that penitence, the fruits of which are shown in the case of David. St.
Ambrose then adduces the example of the Ephraimites, whose penitence must be
followed in order to gain the divine mercy and the sacraments.
29. The Novatians bring up a question from
the words of the Apostle Peter. Because he said, "if perchance,"
they think that he did not imply that forgiveness would be granted on
repentance. But let them consider concerning whom the words were spoken: of
Simon, who did not believe through faith, but was meditating trickery. So too
the Lord to him who said, "Lord, I will follow Thee withersoever Thou
goest," replied, "Foxes have holes."(2) For e knew that the
man's sincerity was not wholly perfect. If, then, the Lord refused to him who
was not baptized permission to follow Him, because He saw that he was not
sincere, do you wonder that the Apostle did not absolve him who after baptism
was guilty of deceit, and whom he declared to be still in the bond of
iniquity?
30. But let this be my answer to them. As to
myself, I say that Peter did not doubt, and I do not think that so great a
question can be burked by the questionable interpretation of a single word.
For if they think that Peter doubted, did God doubt, Who said to the prophet
Jeremiah: "Stand in the court of the Lord's house, and thou shall give an
answer to all Judah, to those who come to worship in the Lord's house, even
all the words which I have appointed for thee to answer them. Keep not back a
word, perchance they will hearken and be converted."(1) Let them say,
then, that God also knew not what would happen.
31. But ignorance is not implied in that
word, but the common custom of holy Scripture is observed, in order to
simplicity of utterance. Inasmuch as the Lord says also to Ezekiel: "Son
of man, I will send thee unto the house of Israel, to those who have angered
Me, both themselves and their fathers, unto this day, and thou shall say unto
them, Thus saith the Lord, if perchance they will hear and be afraid."(2)
Did He not know that they could or could not be converted? So, then, that
expression is not always a proof of doubt.
32 Lastly, the wise men of this world, who
stake all their reputation on expressions and words, do not everywhere use the
Latin word forte, "perchance," or its Greek equivalent ta'cha, as an
expression of doubt. And so they say that their earliest poet used the words,
. . . h^ ta'cha chh'rh . . . ,e'somai
which is, "I shall soon be a
widow;" and the passage goes on:
, . . ta'cha ga'r se katakne'ousin Achaioi`
pa'ntes ephormhthe'ntes.(3)
But he had no doubt that when all were
Joining in the attack one might well be laid low by all.
33. But let us use our own instances rather
than foreign ones. You find in the Gospel that the Son Himself says of the
Father (when He had sent His servants to His vineyard, and they had been
slain), that the Father said, "I will send My well-beloved Son, perchance
they will reverence Him."(4) And in another place the Son says of
Himself: "Ye know neither Me nor My Father; for if ye knew Me, ye would
perchance know My Father also."(5)
34. If, then, Peter used those words which
were used by God without any prejudice to His knowledge, why should we not
assume that Peter also used them without prejudice to his belief? For he could
not doubt concerning the gift of Christ, Who had given him the power of
forgiving sins; especially since he was bound not to leave any place for the
craftiness of heretics who desire to deprive men of hope, in order the more
easily to insinuate into the despairing their opinion as to the reiteration of
baptism.
35. But the apostles, having this baptism
according to the direction of Christ, taught repentance, promised forgiveness,
and remitted guilt, as David taught when he said: "Blessed are they whose
transgressions are forgiven, and whose sins are covered. Blessed is the man to
whom the Lord hath not imputed sin."(1) He calls each blessed both him
whose sins are remitted by the font, and him whose sin is covered by good
works. For he who repents ought not only to wash away his sin by his tears,
but also to cover and hide his former transgressions by amended deeds, that
sin may not be imputed to him.
36. Let us, then, cover our falls by our
subsequent acts; let us purify ourselves by tears, that the Lord our God may
hear us when we lament, as He heard Ephraim when weeping, as it is written:
"I have surely heard Ephraim weeping."(2) And He expressly repeats
the very words of Ephraim: "Thou hast chastised me and I was chastised,
like a calf I was not trained."(3) For a calf disports itself, and leaves
its stall, and so Ephraim was untrained like a calf far away from the stall;
because he had forsaken the stall of the Lord, followed Jeroboam,(4) and
worshipped the calves, which future event was prophetically indicated through
Aaron,(5) namely, that the people of the Jews would fall after this manner.
And so repenting, Ephraim says: "Turn Thou me, and I shall be turned, for
Thou art the Lord my God. Surely in the end of my captivity I repented, and
after I learned I mourned over the days of confusion, and subjected myself to
Thee because I received reproach and made Thee known.''(6)
37. We see how to repent, with what words
and with what acts, that the days of sin are called "days of
confusion;" for there is confusion when Christ is denied.
38. Let us, then, submit ourselves to God,
and not be subject to sin, and when we ponder the remembrance of our offences,
let us blush as though at some disgrace, and not speak of them as a glory to
us, as some boast of overcoming modesty, or putting down the feeling of
justice. Let our conversion be such, that we who did not know God may now
ourselves declare Him to others, that the Lord, moved by such a conversion on
our part, may answer to us: "Ephraim is from youth a dear son, a pleasant
child, for since My words are concerning him, I will verily remember him,
therefore have I hastened to be over him; I will surely have mercy on him,
saith the Lord."(1)
39. And what mercy He promises us, the Lord
also shows, when He says further on: "I have satiated every thirsty soul,
and have satisfied every hungry soul. Therefore, I awaked and beheld, and My
sleep was sweet unto Me."(2) We observe that the Lord promises His
sacraments to those who sin. Let us, then, all be converted to the Lord.
CHAPTER VI.
St. Ambrose teaches out of the prophet
Isaiah what they must do who have fallen. Then referring to our Lord's
proverbial expression respecting piping and dancing, he condemns dances. Next
by the example of Jeremiah he sets forth the necessary accompaniments of
repentance. And lastly, in order to show the efficacy of this medicine of
penance, he enumerates the names of many who have used it for themselves or
for others.
40. But if they be not converted, do you at
least repent, who by many a slip have fallen from the lofty pinnacle of
innocence and faith. We have a good Lord, Whose will it is to forgive all, Who
called you by the prophet and said: "I, even I, am He that blotteth out
thy transgressions, and I will not remember, but do thou remember that we may
plead together." "I," He says, "will not remember, but do
thou remember," that is to say, "I do not recall those
transgressions which I have forgiven thee, which are covered, as it were, with
oblivion, but do thou remember them. I will not remember them because of My
grace, do thou remember them in order to correction; remember, thou mayest
know that the sin is forgiven, boast not as though innocent, that thou
aggravate not the sin, but thou wilt be justified, confess thy sin." For
a shamefaced confession of sins looses the bands of transgression.
41. You see what God requires of you, that
you remember that grace which you have received, and boast not as though you
had not received it. You see by how complete a promise of remission He draws
you to confession. Take heed, lest by resisting the commandments of God you
fall into the offence of the Jews, to whom the Lord Jesus said: "We piped
to you and ye danced not; we wailed and ye wept not."(1)
42. The words are ordinary words, but the
mystery is not ordinary. And so one must be on one's guard, lest, deceived by
any common interpretation of this saying, one should suppose that the
movements of wanton dances and the madness of the stage were commended; for
these are full of evil in youthful age. But the dancing is commended which
David practised before the ark of God. For everything is seemly which is done
for religion, so that we need be ashamed of no service which tends to the
worship and honouring of Christ.
43. Dancing, then, which is an accompaniment
of pleasures and luxury, is not spoken of, but spiritually such as that
wherewith one raises the eager body, and suffers not the limbs to lie
slothfully on the ground, nor to grow stiff in their accustomed tracks. Paul
danced spiritually, when for us he stretched forward, and forgetting the
things which were behind, and aiming at those which were before, he pressed on
to the prize of Christ.(2) And you, too, when you come to baptism, are warned
to raise the hands, and to cause your feet wherewith you ascend to things
eternal to be swifter. This dancing accompanies faith, and is the companion of
grace.
44. This, then, is the mystery. "We
piped to you," singing in truth the song of the New Testament, "and
ye danced not." That is, did not raise your souls to the spiritual grace.
"We wailed, and ye wept not." That is, ye did not repent. And
therefore was the Jewish people forsaken, because it did not repent, and
rejected grace. Repentance came by John, grace by Christ. He, as the Lord,
gives the one; the other is proclaimed, as it were, by the servant. The
Church, then, keeps both that it may both attain to grace and not cast away
repentance, for grace is the gift of One Who confers it; repentance is the
remedy of the sinner.
45. Jeremiah knew that penitence was a great
remedy, which he in his Lamentations took up for Jerusalem, and brings forward
Jerusalem itself as repenting, when he says: "She wept sore in the night,
and her tears are on her cheeks, nor is there one to comfort her of all who
love her. The ways of Sion do mourn."(3) And he says further: "For
these things I weep, my eyes have grown dim with weeping, because he who used
to comfort me is gone far from me.''(1) We notice that he thought this the
bitterest addition to his woes, that he who used to comfort the mourner was
gone far from him. How, then, can you take away the very comfort by refusing
to repentance the hope of forgiveness?
46. But let those who repent learn how they
ought to carry it out, with what zeal, with what affection, with what
intention of mind, with what shaking of the inmost bowels, with what
conversion of heart: "Behold," he says, "O Lord, that I am in
distress, my bowels are troubled by my weeping, my heart is turned within
me."(2)
47. Here you recognize the intention of the
soul, the faithfulness of the mind, the disposition of the body: "The
elders of the daughters of Sion sat," he says, "upon the ground,
they put dust upon their heads, they girded themselves with haircloth, the
princes hung their heads to the ground, the virgins of Jerusalem fainted with
weeping, my eyes grew dim, my bowels were troubled, my glory was poured on the
earth."(3)
48. So, too, did the people of Nineveh
mourn, and escaped the destruction of their city.(4) Such is the remedial
power of repentance, that God seems because of it to change His intention. To
escape is, then, in your own power; the Lord wills to be entreated, He wills
that men should hope in Him, He wills that supplication should be made to Him.
Thou art a man, and wiliest to be asked to forgive, and dost thou think that
God will pardon thee without asking Him?
49. The Lord Himself wept over Jerusalem,
that, inasmuch as it would not weep itself, it might obtain forgiveness
through the tears of the Lord. He wills that we should weep in order that we
may escape, as you find it in the Gospel: "Daughters of Jerusalem, weep
not for Me, but weep for yourselves."(5)
50. David wept, and obtained of the divine
mercy the removal of the death of the people who were perishing, when of the
three things proposed for his choice he selected that in which he might have
the most experience of the divine mercy. Why do you blush to weep for your
sins, when God commanded even the prophets to weep for the people?
51. And, lastly, Ezekiel was bidden to weep
for Jerusalem, and he took the book, at the beginning of which was written
"Lamentation, and melody, and woe,"(1) two things sad and one
pleasant, for he shall be saved in the future who has wept most in this age.
"For the heart of the wise is in the house of mourning, and the heart of
fools in the house of feasting."(2) And the Lord Himself said:
"Blessed are ye that weep now, for ye shall laugh."(3)
CHAPTER VII.
An exhortation to mourning and confession of
sins for Christ is moved by these and the tears of the Church. Illustration
from the story of Lazarus. After showing that the Novatians are the successors
of those who planned to kill Lazarus, St. Ambrose argues that the full
forgiveness of every sin is signified by the odour of the ointment poured by
Mary on the feet of Christ; and further, that the Novatian heretics find their
likeness in Judas, who grudged and envied when others rejoiced.
52. Let us, then, mourn for a time, that we
may rejoice for eternity. Let us fear the Lord, let us anticipate Him with the
confession of our sins, let us correct our backslidings and amend our faults,
lest of us too it be said: "Woe is me, my soul, for the godly man is
perished from the earth, and there is none amongst men to correct
them."(4)
53. Why do you fear to confess your sins to
our good Lord? "Set them forth," He says, "that thou mayest be
justified." The rewards of justification are set before him who is still
guilty of sin, for he is justified who voluntarily confesses his own sin; and
lastly, "the just man is his own accuser in the beginning of his
speaking."(5) The Lord knows all things, but He waits for your words, not
that He may punish, but that He may pardon. It is not His will that the devil
should triumph over you and accuse you when you conceal your sins. Be
beforehand with your accuser: if you accuse yourself, you will fear no
accuser; if you report yourself, though you were dead you shall live.
54. Christ will come to your grave, and if
He finds there weeping for you Martha the woman of good service, and Mary who
carefully heard the Word of God, like holy Church which has chosen the best
part, He will be moved with compassion, when at your death He shall see the
tears of many and will say: "Where have ye laid him?"(6) that is to
say, in what condition of guilt is he? in which rank of penitents? I would see
him for whom ye weep, that he himself may move Me with his tears. I will see
if he is already dead to that sin for which forgiveness is entreated.
55. The people will say to Him, "Come
and see."(1) What is the meaning of "Come"? It means, Let
forgiveness of sins come, let the life of the departed come, the resurrection
of the dead, let Thy kingdom come to this sinner also.
56. He will come and will command that the
stone be taken away which his fall has laid on the shoulders of the sinner. He
could have removed the stone by a word of command, for even inanimate nature
is wont to obey the bidding of Christ. He could by the silent power of His
working have removed the stone of the sepulchre, at Whose Passion the stones
being suddenly removed many sepulchres of the dead were opened, but He bade
men remove the stone, in very truth indeed, that the unbelieving might believe
what they saw, and see the dead rising again, but in a type that He might give
us the power of lightening the burden of sins, the heavy pressure as it were
upon the guilty. Ours it is to remove the burdens, His to raise again, His to
bring forth from the tombs those set free from their bands.
57. So the Lord Jesus, seeing the heavy
burden of the sinner, weeps, for the Church alone He suffers not to weep. He
has compassion with His beloved, and says to him that is dead, "Come
forth,"(2) that is, "Thou who liest in darkness of conscience, and
in the squalor of thy sins, as in the prison-house of the guilty, come forth,
declare thy sins that thou mayest be justified. "For with the mouth
confession is made unto salvation."(3)
58. If you have confessed at the call of
Christ the bars will be broken, and every chain loosed, even the stench of the
bodily corruption be grievous. For he had been dead four days and his flesh
stank in the tomb; but He Whose flesh saw no corruption was three days in the
sepulchre, for He knew no evils of the flesh, which consists of the substances
of the four elements. However great, then, the stench of the dead body may be,
it is all done away so soon as the sacred ointment has shed its odour; and the
dead rises again, and the command is given to loose his hands who till now was
in sin; the covering is taken from his face which veiled the truth of the
grace which he had received. But since he has received forgiveness, the
command is given to uncover his face, to lay bare his features. For he whose
sin is forgiven has nothing whereof to be ashamed.
59. But in the presence of such grace given
by the Lord, of such a miracle of divine bounty, when all ought to have
rejoiced, the wicked were stirred up and gathered a council against Christ,(1)
and wished moreover to kill Lazarus also.(2) Do you not recognize that you are
the successors of those whose hardness you inherit? For you too are angry and
gather a council against the Church, because you see the dead come to life
again in the Church, and to be raised again by receiving forgiveness of their
sins. And thus, so far as m you, you desire to slay again through envy those
who are raised to life.
60. But Jesus does not revoke His benefits,
nay, rather He amplifies them by additions of His liberality, He anxiously
revisits him who was raised again, and rejotting in the gift of the restored
life, He comes to the feast which His Church has prepared for Him, at which he
who had been dead is found as one amongst those sitting down with Christ.
61. Then all wonder who look upon him with
the pure gaze of the mind, who are free from envy, for such children the
Church has. They wonder, as I said, how he who yesterday and the day before
lay in the tomb is one of those sitting with the Lord Jesus.
62. Mary herself pours ointment on the feet
of the Lord Jesus.(3) Perchance for this reason on His feet, because one of
the lowliest has been snatched from death, for we are all the body of
Christ,(4) but others perchance are the more honourable members. The Apostle
was the mouth of Christ, for he said," Ye seek a proof of Christ that
speaketh in me."(5) The prophets through whom He spake of things to come
were His month, would that I might be found worthy to be His foot, and may
Mary pour on me her precious ointment, and anoint me and wipe away my sin.
63. What, then, we read concerning Lazarus
we ought to believe of every sinner who is converted, who, though he may have
been stinking, nevertheless is cleansed by the precious ointment of faith. For
faith has such grace that there where the dead stank the day before, now the
whole house is filled with good odour.
64. The house of Corinth stank, when it was
written concerning it: "It is reported that there is fornication among
you, and such fornication as is not even among the Gentiles. ''(1) There was a
stench, for a little leaven had corrupted the whole lump. A good odour began
when it was said: "If ye forgive anything to any one I forgive also. For
what I also have forgiven, for your sakes have I done it in the person of
Christ."(2) And so, the sinner being set free, there was great joy in
that place, and the whole house was filled with the odour of the sweetness of
grace. Wherefore the Apostle, knowing well that he had shed upon all the
ointment of apostolic forgiveness, says: "We are a sweet savour of Christ
unto God in them that are saved."(3)
65. At the pouring forth, then, of this
ointment all rejoice; Judas alone speaks against it.(4) So, too, now he who is
a sinner speaks against it, he who is a traitor blames it, but he is himself
blamed by Christ, as he knows not the remedy of the Lord's death, and
understands not the mystery of that so great burial. For the Lord both
suffered and died that He might redeem us from death. This is manifest from
the most excellent value from His death, which is sufficient for the
absolution of the sinner, and his restoration to fresh grace; so that all may
come and wonder at his sitting at table with Christ, and may praise God,
saying: "Let us eat and feast, for he was dead and is alive again, had
perished and is found."(5) But any one devoid of faith objects: "Why
does He eat with publicans and sinners?" This is his answer: "They
that are whole have no need of the physician, but they that are sick."(6)
CHAPTER VIII.
In urging repentance St. Ambrose turns to
his own case, expressing the wish that he could wash our Lord's feet like the
woman in the Gospel, which is a great pattern of penitence, though such as
cannot attain to it find acceptance. He prays for himself, especially that he
may sorrow with sinners, who are better than himself. Those for whom Christ
died are not to be contemned.
66. Snow, then, your wound to the Physician
that He may heal it. Though you show it not, He knows it, but waits to hear
your voice. Do away your scars by tears. Thus did that woman in the Gospel,
and wiped out the stench of her sin; thus did she wash away her fault, when
washing the feet of Jesus with her tears.
67. Would that Thou, Lord Jesus, mightest
reserve for me the washing off from Thy feet of the stains contracted since
Thou walkest in me! O that Thou mightest offer to me to cleanse the pollution
which I by my deeds have caused on Thy steps! But whence can I obtain living
water, wherewith I may wash Thy feet? If I have no water I have tears, and
whilst with them I wash Thy feet I trust to cleanse myself. Whence is it that
Thou shouldst say to me: "His sins which are many are forgiven, because
he loved much"? I confess that I owe more, and that more has been
forgiven me who have been called to the priesthood from the tumult and strife
of the law courts and the dread of public administration; and therefore I fear
that I may be found ungrateful, if I, to whom more has been forgiven, love
less.
68. But all are not able to equal that
woman, who was deservedly preferred even to Simon, who was giving the feast to
the Lord; who gave a lesson to all who desire to gain forgiveness, by kissing
the feet of Christ, washing them with her tears, wiping them with her hair,
and anointing them with ointment.
69. In a kiss is the sign of love, and
therefore the Lord Jesus says: "Let her kiss Me with the kisses of her
mouth.''(1) What is the meaning of the hair, but that you may learn that,
having laid aside all the pomp of worldly trappings, you must implore pardon,
throw yourself on the earth with tears, and prostrate on the ground move pity.
In the ointment, too, is set forth the savour of a good conversation. David
was a king, yet he said: "Every night will I wash my bed, I will water my
couch with tears.'' (2) And therefore he obtained such a favour, as that of
his house the Virgin should be chosen, who by her child-bearing should bring
forth Christ for us. Therefore is this woman also praised in the Gospel.
70. Nevertheless if we are unable to equal
her, the Lord Jesus knows also how to aid the weak, when there is no one who
can prepare the feast, or bring the ointment, or carry with her a spring of
living water. He comes Himself to the sepulchre.
71. Would that Thou wouldst vouchsafe to
come to this sepulchre of mine, O Lord Jesus, that Thou wouldst wash me with
Thy tears, since in my hardened eyes I possess not such tears as to be able to
wash away my offence. If Thou shalt weep for me l shall be saved; if I am
worthy of Thy tears I shall cleanse the stench of all my offences; if I am
worthy that Thou weep but a little, Thou wilt call me out of the tomb of this
body and will say: "Come forth," that my meditations may not be kept
pent up in the narrow limits of this body, but may go forth to Christ, and
move in the light, that I may think no more on works of darkness but on works
of light. For he who thinks on sins endeavours to shut himself up within his
own consciousness.
72. Call forth, then, Thy servant. Although
bound with the chain of my sins I have my feet fastened and my hands tied;
being now buried in dead thoughts and works, yet at Thy call I shall go forth
free, and shall be found one of those sitting at Thy feast, and Thy house
shall be filled with precious ointment. If Thou hast vouchsafed to redeem any
one, Thou wilt preserve him. For it shall be said, "See, he was not
brought up in the bosom of the Church, nor trained from childhood, but hurried
from the judgment-seat, brought away from the vanities of this world, growing
accustomed to the singing of the choir instead of the shout of the crier, but
he continues in the priesthood not by his own strength, but by the grace of
Christ, and sits among the guests at the heavenly table.
73. Preserve, O Lord, Thy work, guard the
gift which Thou hast given even to him who shrank from it. For I knew that I
was not worthy to be called a bishop, because I had devoted myself to this
world, but by Thy grace I am what I am. And I am indeed the least of all
bishops, and the lowest in merit; yet since I too have undertaken some labour
for Thy holy Church, watch over this fruit, and let not him whom when lost
Thou didst call to the priesthood, to be lost when a priest. And first grant
that I may know how with inmost affection to mourn with those who sin; for
this is a very great virtue, since it is written: "And thou shall not
rejoice over the children of Judah in the day of their destruction, and speak
not proudly in the day of their trouble."(1) Grant that so often as the
sin of any one who has fallen is made known to me I may suffer with him, and
not chide him proudly, but mourn and weep, so that weeping over another I may
mourn for myself, saying, "Tamar hath been more righteous than
I."(2)
74. Perchance a maiden may have fallen,
deceived and hurried away by those occasions which are the sources of sins.
Well, we who are older sin too. In us, too, the law of this flesh wars against
the law of our mind, and makes us captives of sin, so that we do what we would
not.(1) Her youth is an excuse for her, I now have none, for she ought to
learn, we ought to teach. So that "Tamar hath been more righteous than
I."
75. We inveigh against some one's
covetousness, let us call to mind whether we ourselves have never done
anything covetously; and if we have, since covetousness is the root of all
evils, and is working in our bodies like a serpent secretly under the earth,
let each of us say: "Tamar hath been more righteous than I."
76. If we have been seriously moved against
any one, a layman may act hastily for a smaller matter than a bishop. Let us
ponder that with ourselves and say, He who is reproved for quick temper is
more righteous than I. For if we thus speak, we guard ourselves against this,
that the Lord Jesus or one of His disciples should say to us: "Thou
beholdest the mote in thy brother's eye, but beholdest not the beam which is
in thine own eye. Thou hypocrite, cast out first the beam out of thine own
eye, and then shalt thou see to cast out the mote out of thy brother's
eye."(2)
77. Let us, then, not be ashamed to say that
our fault is more serious than that of him whom we think we must reprove, for
this is what Judah did who reprimanded Tamar, and remembering his own fault
said: "Tamar is more righteous than I." In which saying there is a
deep mystery and a moral precept; and therefore is his offence not reckoned to
him, because he accused himself before he was accused by others.
78. Let us, then, not rejoice over the sin
of any one, but rather let us mourn, for it is written: "Rejoice not
against me, O my enemy, because I have fallen, for I shall arise; for if I sit
in darkness the Lord shall be a light unto me, I will bear the indignation of
the Lord, because I have sinned against Him, until He maintain my cause, and
execute judgment for me, and bring me forth to the light. and I shall behold
His righteousness. Mine enemy, too, shall see it and shall be covered with
confusion, which said unto me, Where is the Lord thy God? Mine eyes shall
behold her, and she shall be for treading down as the mire in the
streets,"(3) And this not unreservedly, for he who rejoices at the fall
of another rejoices at the victory of the devil. Let us, then, rather mourn
when we hear that one has perished for whom Christ died, Who despises not even
the straw in time of harvest.
79. O that He may not cast away this straw
at His harvest, the empty stalks of my produce; but may He gather it in, as is
said by some one: "Woe is me, for I am become as one that gathereth straw
in harvest, and grape gleanings in the vintage,"(1) that He may eat of
the firstfruits at least of His grace in me, though He approve not the later
fruit.
CHAPTER IX.
In what way faith is necessary for
repentance. Means for paying our debts, in which work, prayer, tears, and
fasting are of more value than money. Some instances are adduced, and St.
Ambrose declares that generosity is profitable, but only when joined with
faith; it is, moreover, liable to certain defects. He goes on to speak of some
defects in repentance, such as too great haste in seeking reconciliation,
considering abstinence from sacraments all that is needed, of committing sin
in hope of repenting later.
80. So, then, it is fitting for us to
believe both that sinners must repent and that forgiveness is to be given on
repentance, yet still as hoping for forgiveness as granted upon faith, not as
a debt, for it is one thing to earn, and an other presumptuously to claim a
right. Faith asks for forgiveness, as it were, by covenant, but presumption is
more akin to demand than to request. Pay first that which you owe, that you
may be in a position to ask for what you have hoped. Come with the disposition
of an honest debtor, that you may not contract a fresh liability, but may pay
that which is due of the existing debt with the possessions of your faith.
81. He who owes a debt to God has more help
towards payment than he whets indebted to man. Man requires money for money,
and this is not always at the debtor's command. God demands the affection of
the heart, which is in our own power. No one who owes a debt to God is poor,
except one who has made himself poor. And even if he have nothing to sell, yet
has he wherewith to pay. Prayer, fasting, and tears are the resources of an
honest debtor, and much more abundant than if one from the price of his estate
offered money without faith.
82. Ananias was poor, when after selling his
land he brought the money to the apostles, and was not able with it to pay his
debt, but involved himself the more.(1) That widow was rich who cast her two
small pieces into the treasury, of whom Christ said: "This poor widow
hath cast in more than they all."(2)For God requires not money but faith.
83. And I do not deny that sins may be l
diminished by liberal gifts to the poor, but only if faith commend what is
spent. For what would the giving of one's whole property benefit without
charity?
84. There are some who aim at the credit of
generosity for pride alone, because they wish thereby to gain the good opinion
of the multitude for leaving nothing to themselves; but whilst they are
seeking rewards in this life, they are laying up none for the life to come,
and having received their reward here they cannot hope for it there.
85. Some again, having, through impulsive
excitement and not after long consideration, given their possessions to the
Church, think that they can claim them back. These gain neither the first nor
the second reward, for the gift was made thoughtlessly, its recall
sacrilegiously.
86. Some repent of having distributed their
property to the poor. But they who are doing penance must not repent of this,
lest they repent of their own repentance. For many seek for penance through
fear of future punishment, being conscious of their sins, and having received
their penance are held back by fear of the public entreaties. These persons
seem to have sought for repentance for their evil deeds, but to exercise it
for their good ones.
87. Some seek penance because they wish to
be at once restored to communion. These wish not so much to loose themselves
as to bind the priest, for they do not put off the guilt from their own
conscience, but lay it on that of the priest, to whom the command is given:
"Give not that which is holy to the dogs, neither cast your pearls before
the swine;"(3) that is to say, that partaking of the holy Communion is
not to be allowed to those polluted with impurity.
88. And so one may see those walking in
other attire, who ought to be weeping and groaning because they had defiled
the robe of sanctification and grace; and women loading their ears with
pearls, and weighing down their necks, who had better have bent to Christ than
to gold, and who ought to be weeping for themselves, because they have lost
the pearl from heaven.
89. There are, again, some who think that it
is penitence to abstain from the heavenly sacraments. These are too cruel
judges of themselves, who prescribe a penalty for themselves but refuse the
remedy, who ought to be mourning over their self-imposed penalty, because it
deprives them of heavenly grace.
90. Others think that licence is granted
them to sin, because the hope of penitence is before them, whereas penitence
is the remedy, not an incentive to sin. For the salve is necessary for the
wound, not the wound for the salve, since a salve is sought because of the
wound, the wound is not wished for on account of the salve. The hope which is
put off to a future season is but feeble, for every season is uncertain, and
hope does not outlive all time.
CHAPTER X.
In order to do away with the feeling of
shame which holds back theguilty from public penance, St. Ambrose points out
the advantage ofprayers offered by the whole Church, and sets forth the
example of saints who have sorrowed. Then, after reproving those who imagine
that penance may be often repeated, he points on the difficulty ofrepentance,
and how it is to be carried out.
91. Can any one endure that you should blush
to entreat God, when you do not blush to entreat a man? That you should be
ashamed to entreat Him Who knows you fully, when you are not ashamed to
confess your sins to a man who knows you not?(1) Do you shrink from witnesses
and sympathizers in your prayers, when, if you have to satisfy a man, you must
visit many and entreat them to be kind enough to intervene; when you throw
yourself at a man's knees, kiss his feet, bring your children, still
unconscious of guilt, to entreat also for their father's pardon? And you
disdain to do this in the Church in order to entreat God, in order to gain for
yourself the support of the holy congregation; where there is no cause for
shame, except indeed not to confess, since we are all sinners, amongst whom he
is the most praiseworthy who is the most humble; he is the most just who feels
himself the lowest.
92. Let the Church, our Mother, weep for
you, and wash away your guilt with her tears; let Christ see you mourning and
say, "Blessed are ye that are sad, for ye shall rejoice." It pleases
Him that many should entreat for one. In the Gospel, too, moved by the widow's
tears, because many were weeping for her, He raised her son. He heard Peter
more quickly when He raised Dorcas, because the poor were mourning over the
death of the woman. He also forthwith forgave Peter, for he wept most
bitterly. And if you weep bitterly Christ will look upon you and your guilt
shall leave you. For the application of pain does away with the enjoyment of
the wickedness and the delight of the sin. And so while mourning over our past
sins we shut the door against fresh ones, and from the condemnation of our
guilt there arises as it were a training in innocence.
93. Let, then, nothing call you away from
penitence, for this you have in common with the saints, and would that such
sorrowing for sin as that of the saints were copied by you. David, as it were,
"ate ashes for bread, and mingled his drink with weeping,"(1) and
therefore now rejoices the more because he wept the more: "Mine eyes ran
down," he said, "with rivers of water."(2)
94. John wept sore,(3) and, as he tells us,
the mysteries of Christ were revealed to him. But that woman who, when she was
in sin and ought to have wept, nevertheless rejoiced, and covered herself with
a robe of purple and scarlet,(4) and adorned herself with much gold and
precious stones, now mourns the misery of eternal weeping.
95. Deservedly are they blamed who think
that they often do penance, for they are wanton against Christ. For if they
went through their penance in truth, they would not think that it could be
repeated again; for as there is but one baptism, so there is but one course of
penance, so far as the outward practice goes, for we must repent of our daily
faults, but this latter has to do with lighter faults, the former with such as
are graver.
96. But I have more easily found such as had
preserved their innocence than such as had fittingly repented. Does any one
think that that is penitence where there still exists the striving after
earthly honours, where wine flows, and even conjugal connection takes place?
The world must be renounced; less sleep must be indulged in than nature
demands; it must be broken by groans, interrupted by sighs, put aside by
prayers; the mode of life must be such that we die to the usual habits of
life. Let the man deny himself and be wholly changed, as in the fable they
relate of a certain youth, who left his home because of his love for a harlot,
and, having subdued his love, returned; then one day meeting his old favourite
and not speaking to her, she, being surprised and supposing that he had not
recognized her, said, when they met again, "It is I."
"But," was his answer, "I am not the former I."
97. Well then did the Lord say: "If any
man will come after Me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross and follow
Me."(1) For they who are dead and buried in Christ ought not again to
make their conclusions as though. living in the world. "Touch not,"
it is said, nor attend to those things which tend to corruption by their very
use,(2) for the very customs of this life corrupt integrity."
CHAPTER XI.
The possibility of repentance is a reason
why baptism should not be deferred to old age, a practice which is against the
will of God in holy Scripture. But it is of no use to practise penance whilst
still serving lusts. These must be first subdued.
98. Good, then, is penitence, and if there
were no place for it, every one would defer the grace of cleansing by baptism
to old age. And a sufficient reason is that it is better, to have a robe to
mend, than none to put on; but as that which has been repaired once is
restored, so that which is frequently mended is destroyed.
99. And the Lord has given a sufficient
warning to those who put off repentance, when He says: "Repent ye, for
the kingdom of heaven is at hand."(3) We know not at what hour the thief
will come, we know not whether our soul may be required of us this next night.
God cast Adam out of Paradise immediately after his fault; there was no delay.
At once the fallen were severed from all their enjoyments that they might do
penance; at once God clothed them with garments of skins, not of silk.(4)
100. And what reason is there for putting
off? is it that you may sin yet more? Then because God is good you are evil,
and "despise the riches of His goodness and long-suffering."(1) But
the goodness of the Lord ought rather to draw you to repentance. Wherefore
holy David says to all: "Come, let us worship and fall down beford Him,
and mourn before our Lord Who made us."(2) But for a sinner who has died
without repentance, because nothing remains but to mourn grievously and to
weep, you find him groaning and saying: "O my son Absalom I my son
Absalom!"(3) For him who is wholly dead mourning is without alleviation.
101. But of those who as exiles and banished
from their ancestral homes, which the holy law of Moses had assigned them,
will be entangled in the errors of the world, you hear him saying: "By
the waters of Babylon we sat down and wept, when we remembered Zion."(4)
He sets forth the wailings of those who have fallen, and shows that they who
are living in this condition of passing time and changing circumstances ought
to repent, after the example of those who, as a reward for sin, had been led
into miserable captivity.
102. But nothing causes such exceeding grief
as when any one, lying under the captivity of sin, calls to mind whence he has
fallen, because he turned aside to carnal and earthly things, instead of
directing his mind in the beautiful ways of the knowledge of God.
103. So you find Adam concealing himself,
when he knew that God was present, and wishing to be hidden when called by God
with that voice which wounded the soul of him who was hiding: "Adam,
where art thou?"(5) That is to say, Wherefore hidest thou thyself? Why
art thou concealed? Why dost thou avoid Him, Whom thou once didst long to see?
A guilty conscience is so burdensome that it punishes itself without a judge,
and wishes for covering, and yet is bare before God.
104. And so no one in a state of sin ought
to claim a right to or the use of the sacraments, for it is written:
"Thou hast sinned, be still."(6) As David says in the Psalm lately
quoted: "We hanged our harps upon the willows in the midst thereof;"
and again: "How shall we sing the Lord's song in a strange land?"(1)
For if the flesh wars against the mind, and is not subject to the guidance of
the Spirit, that is a strange land which is not subdued by the toil of the
cultivator, and so cannot produce the fruits of charity, patience, and peace.
It is better, then, to be still when you cannot practise the works of
repentance, lest in the very acts of repentance there be that which afterward
will need further repentance. For if it be once entered upon and not rightly
carried out, it obtains not the result of a first repentance and takes away
the use of a later one.(2)
105. When, then, the flesh resists, the soul
must be intent upon God, and if results do not follow, let not faith fail. And
if the enticements of the flesh come upon us, or the powers of the enemy
attack us, let the soul keep in submission to God. For we are then specially
oppressed when the flesh yields. And some there are who trouble heavily the
wretched soul, seeking to deprive it of all protection. To which case the
words apply: "Ruse it, ruse it, even to the foundations."(3)
106. And David, pitying her,, says: "O
wretched daughter of Babylon."(4) Wretched indeed, as being the daughter
of Babylon, when she ceased to be the daughter of Jerusalem.(5) And yet he
calls for a healer for her, and says: "Blessed is he who shall take thy
little ones and dash them against the rock."(6) That is to say, shall
dash all corrupt and filthy thoughts against Christ, Who by His fear and His
rebuke will break down all motions against reason, so as, if any one is seized
by an adulterous love, to extinguish the fire, that he may by his zeal put
away the love of a harlot, and deny himself that he may gain Christ.
107. We have then learned that we must do
penance, and this at a time when the heat of luxury and sin is giving way; and
that we, when under the dominion of sin, must show ourselves God fearing by
refraining, rather than allowing ourselves in evil practices. For if it is
said to Moses when he was desiring to draw nearer: "Put off thy shoes
from off thy feet,"(7) how much more must we free the feet of our soul
from the bonds of the body, and clear our steps from all connection with this
world.
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