BOOK I.
CONTENTS.
- HOW BASIL EXCELLED ALL THE FRIENDS OF CHRYSOSTOM.
- THE UNANIMITY OF BASIL AND CHRYSOSTOM, AND THEIR JOINT STUDY OF
ALL SUBJECTS.
- THE BALANCE UPSET IN THE PURSUIT OF THE MONASTIC LIFE.
- THE PROPOSAL TO OCCUPY A COMMON HOME.
- THE FOND ENTREATIES OF CHRYSOSTOM'S MOTHER.
- THE DECEIT EMPLOYED BY CHRYSOSTOM IN THE MATTER OF ORDINATION.
- CHRYSOSTOM'S DEFENCE IN REPLY TO OBJECTIONS.
- THE GREAT ADVANTAGE OF DECEIT WHEN WELL TIMED; CONCLUSION AND
GENERAL REMARKS.
1. I HAD many genuine and true friends, men who understood the laws
of friendship, and faithfully observed them; but out of this large
number there was one who excelled all the rest in his attachment to me,
striving to outstrip them as much as they themselves outstripped
ordinary acquaintance. He was one of those who were constantly at my
side; for we were engaged in the same studies, and employed the same
teachers.1 We had the same eagerness and zeal about the
studies at which we worked, and a passionate desire produced by the same
circumstances was equally strong in both of us. For not only when we
were attending school, but after we had left it, when it became
necessary to consider what course of life it would be best for us to
adopt, we found ourselves to be of the same mind.
2. And in addition to these, there were other things also which
preserved and maintained this concord unbroken and secure. For as
regarded the greatness of our fatherland neither had one cause to vaunt
himself over the other, nor was I burdened with riches, and he pinched
by poverty, but our means corresponded as closely as our tastes. Our
families also were of equal rank, and thus everything concurred with our
disposition.
3. But when it became our duty to pursue the blessed life of monks,
and the true philosophy, our balance was no longer even, but his scale
mounted high, while I, still entangled in the lusts of this world,
dragged mine down and kept it low, weighting it with those fancies in
which youths are apt to indulge. For the future our friendship indeed
remained as firm as it was before, but our intercourse was interrupted;
for it was impossible for persons who were not interested about the same
things to spend much time together. But as soon as I also began to
emerge a little from the flood of worldliness, he received me with open
arms; yet not even thus could we maintain our former equality: for
having got the start of me in time, and having displayed great
earnestness, he rose again above my level, and soared to a great height.
4. Being a good man, however, and placing a high value on my
friendship, he separated himself from all the rest (of the brethren),
and spent the whole of his time with me, which he had desired to do
before, but had been prevented as I was saying by my frivolity. For it
was impossible for a man who attended the law-courts, and was in a
flutter of excitement about the pleasures of the stage, to be often in
the company of one who was nailed to his books, and never set foot in
the market place. Consequently when the hindrances were removed, and he
had brought me into the same condition of life as himself, he gave free
vent to the desire with which he had long been laboring. He could not
bear leaving me even for a moment, and he persistently urged that we
should each of us abandon our own home and share a common dwelling:—in
fact he persuaded me, and the affair was taken in hand.
5. But the continual lamentations of my mother hindered me from
granting him the favor, or rather from receiving this boon at his hands.
For when she perceived that I was meditating this step, she took me into
her own private chamber, and, sitting near me on the bed where she had
given birth to me, she shed torrents of tears, to which she added words
yet more pitiable than her weeping, in the following lamentable strain:
My child, it was not the will of Heaven that I should long enjoy the
benefit of thy father's virtue. For his death soon followed the pangs
which I endured at thy birth, leaving thee an orphan and me a widow
before my time to face all the horrors of widowhood, which only those
who have experienced them can fairly understand. For no words are
adequate to describe the tempest-tossed condition of a young woman who,
having but lately left her paternal home, and being inexperienced in
business, is suddenly racked by an overwhelming sorrow, and compelled to
support a load of care too great for her age and sex. For she has to
correct the laziness of servants, and to be on the watch for their
rogueries, to repel the designs of relations, to bear bravely the
threats of those who collect the public taxes, and harshness in the
imposition of rates. And if the departed one should have left a child,
even if it be a girl, great anxiety will be caused to the mother,
although free from much expense and fear: but a boy fills her with ten
thousand alarms and many anxieties every day, to say nothing of the
great expense which one is compelled to incur if she wishes to bring him
up in a liberal way. None of these things, however, induced me to enter
into a second marriage, or introduce a second husband into thy father's
house: but I held on as I was, in the midst of the storm and uproar, and
did not shun the iron furnace of widowhood. My foremost help indeed was
the grace from above; but it was no small consolation to me under those
I terrible trials to look continually on thy face and to preserve in
thee a living image of him who had gone, an image indeed which was a
fairly exact likeness.
On this account, even when thou wast an infant, and hadst not yet
learned to speak, a time when children are the greatest delight to their
parents, thou didst afford me much comfort. Nor indeed can you complain
that, although I bore my widowhood bravely, I diminished thy patrimony,
which I know has been the fate of many who have had the misfortune to be
orphans. For, besides keeping the whole of it intact, I spared no
expense which was needful to give you an honorable position, spending
for this purpose some of my own fortune, and of my marriage dowry. Yet
do not think that I say these things by way of reproaching you; only in
return for all these benefits I beg one favor: do not plunge me into a
second widowhood; nor revive the grief which is now laid to rest: wait
for my death: it may be in a little while I shall depart. The young
indeed look forward to a distant old age; but we who have grown old have
nothing but death to wait for. When, then, you shall have committed my
body to the ground, and mingled my bones with thy father's, embark for a
long voyage, and set sail on any sea thou wilt: then there will be no
one to hinder thee: but as long as my life lasts, be content to live
with me. Do not, I pray you, oppose God in vain, involving me without
cause, who have done you no wrong, in these great calamities. For if you
have any reason to complain that I drag you into worldly cares, and
force you to attend to business, do not be restrained by any reverence
for the laws of nature, for training or custom, but fly from me as an
enemy; but if, on the contrary, I do everything to provide leisure for
thy journey through this life, let this bond at least if nothing else
keep thee by me. For couldst thou say that ten thousand loved thee, yet
no one will afford thee the enjoyment of so much liberty, seeing there
is no one who is equally anxious for thy welfare.
6. These words, and more, my mother spake to me, and I related them
to that noble youth. But he, so far from being disheartened by these
speeches, was the more urgent in making the same request as before. Now
while we were thus situated, he continually entreating, and I refusing
my assent, we were both of us disturbed by a report suddenly reaching us
that we were about to be advanced to the dignity of the episcopate. As
soon as I heard this rumor I was seized with alarm and perplexity: with
alarm lest I should be made captive against my will, and perplexity,
inquiring as I often did whence any such idea concerning us could have
entered the minds of these men; for looking to myself I found nothing
worthy of such an honor. But that noble youth having come to me
privately, and having conferred with me about these things as if with
one who was ignorant of the rumor, begged that we might in this instance
also as formerly shape our action and our counsels the same way: for he
would readily follow me whichever course I might pursue, whether I
attempted flight or submitted to be captured. Perceiving then his
eagerness, and considering that I should inflict a loss upon the whole
body of the Church if, owing to my own weakness, I were to deprive the
flock of Christ of a young man who was so good and so well qualified for
the supervision of large numbers, I abstained from disclosing to him the
purpose which I had formed, although I had never before allowed any of
my plans to be concealed from him. I now told him that it would be best
to postpone our decision concerning this matter to another season, as it
was not immediately pressing, and by so doing persuaded him to dismiss
it from his thoughts, and at the same time encouraged him to hope that,
if such a thing should ever happen to us, I should be of the same mind
with him. But after a short time, when one who was to ordain us arrived,
I kept myself concealed, but Basil, ignorant of this, was taken away on
another pretext, and made to take the yoke, hoping from the promises
which I had made to him that I should certainly follows or rather
supposing that he was following me. For some of those who were present,
seeing that he resented being seized, deceived him by exclaiming how
strange it was that one who was generally reputed to be the more hot
tempered (meaning me), had yielded very mildly to the judgment of the
Fathers, whereas he, who was reckoned a much wiser and milder kind of
man, had shown himself hotheaded and conceited, being unruly, restive,
and contradictory. Having yielded to these remonstrances, and afterwards
having learned that I had escaped capture, he came to me in deep
dejection, sat down near me and tried to speak, but was hindered by
distress of mind and inability to express in words the violence to which
he had been subjected. No sooner had he opened his mouth than he was
prevented from utterance by grief cutting short his words before they
could pass his lips. Seeing, then, his tearful and agitated condition,
and knowing as I did the cause, I laughed for joy, and, seizing his
right hand, I forced a kiss on him, and praised God that my plan had
ended so successfully, as I had always prayed it might. But when he saw
that I was delighted and beaming with joy, and understood that he had
been deceived by me, he was yet more vexed and distressed.
7. And when he had a little recovered from this agitation of mind, he
began: If you have rejected the part allotted to you, and have no
further regard for me (I know not indeed for what cause), you ought at
least to consider your own reputation; but as it is you have opened the
mouths of all, and the world is saying that you have declined this
ministry through love of vainglory, and there is no one who will deliver
you from this accusation. As for me, I cannot bear to go into the market
place; there are so many who come up to me and reproach me every day.
For, when they see me anywhere in the city, all my intimate friends take
me aside, and cast the greater part of the blame upon me. Knowing his
intention, they say, for none of his affairs could be kept secret from
you, you should not have concealed it, but ought to have communicated it
to us, and we should have been at no loss to devise some plan for
capturing him. But I am too much ashamed and abashed to tell them that I
did not know you had long been plotting this trick, lest they should say
that our friendship was a mere pretence. For even if it is so, as indeed
it is—nor would you yourself deny it after what you have done to me—yet
it is well to hide our misfortune from the outside world, and persons
who entertain but a moderate opinion of us. I shrink from telling them
the truth, and how things really stand with us, and I am compelled in
future to keep silence, and look down on the ground, and turn away to
avoid those whom I meet. For if I escape the condemnation on the former
charge, I am forced to undergo judgment for speaking falsehood. For they
will never believe me when I say that you ranged Basil amongst those who
are not permitted to know your secret affairs. Of this, however, I will
not take much account, since it has seemed agreeable to you, but how
shall we endure the future disgrace? for some accuse you of arrogance,
others of vainglory: while those who are our more merciful accusers, lay
both these offences to our charge, and add that we have insulted those
who did us honor, although had they experienced even greater indignity
it would only have served them right for passing over so many and such
distinguished men and advancing mere youths, who were but yesterday
immersed in the interests of this world, to such a dignity as they never
have dreamed of obtaining, in order that they may for a brief season
knit the eyebrows, wear dusky garments, and put on a grave face. Those
who from the dawn of manhood to extreme old age have diligently
practised self-discipline, are now to be placed under the government of
youths who have not even heard the laws which should regulate their
administration of this office. I am perpetually assailed by persons who
say such things and worse, and am at a loss how to reply to them; but I
pray you tell me: for I do not suppose that you took to flight and
incurred such hatred from such distinguished men without cause or
consideration, but that your decision was made with reasoning and
circumspection: whence also I conjecture that you have some argument
ready for your defence. Tell me, then, whether there is any fair excuse
which I can make to those who accuse us.
For I do not demand any account for the wrongs which I have sustained
at your hands, nor for the deceit or treachery you have practised, nor
for the advantage which you have derived from me in the past. For I
placed my very life, so to say, in your hands, yet you have treated me
with as much guile as if it had been your business to guard yourself
against an enemy. Yet if you knew this decision of ours to be
profitable, you ought not to have avoided the gain: if on the contrary
injurious, you should have saved me also from the loss, as you always
said that you esteemed me before every one else. But you have done
everything to make me fall into the snare: and you had no need of guile
and hypocrisy in dealing with one who was wont to display the utmost
sincerity and candor in speech and action towards thee. Nevertheless, as
I said, I do not now accuse you of any of these things, or reproach you
for the lonely position in which you have placed me by breaking off
those conferences from which we often derived no small pleasure and
profit; but all these things I pass by, and bear in silence and
meekness, not that thou hast acted meekly in transgressing against me,
but because from the day that I cherished thy friendship I laid it down
as a rule for myself, that whatever sorrow you might cause me I would
never force you to the necessity of an apology. For you know yourself
that you have inflicted no small loss on me if at least you remember
what we were always saying ourselves, and the outside world also said
concerning us, that it was a great gain for us to be of one mind and be
guarded by each other's friendship. Every one said, indeed, that our
concord would bring no small advantage to many besides ourselves; I
never perceived, however, so far as I am concerned, how it could be of
advantage to others: but I did say that we should at least derive this
benefit from it: that those who wished to contend with us would find us
difficult to master. And I never ceased reminding you of these things:
saying the age is a cruel one, and designing men are many, genuine love
is no more, and the deadly pest of envy has crept into its place: we
walk in the midst of snares, and on the edge of battlements; those who
are ready to rejoice in our misfortunes, if any should befall us, are
many and beset us from many quarters: whereas there is no one to condole
with us, or at least the number of such may be easily counted. Beware
that we do not by separation incur much ridicule, and damage worse than
ridicule. Brother aided by brother is like a strong city, and well
fortified kingdom. Do not dissolve this genuine intimacy, nor break down
the fortress. Such things and more I was continually saying, not indeed
that I ever suspected anything of this kind, but supposing you to be
entirely sound in your relation towards me, I did it as a superfluous
precaution, wishing to preserve in health one who was already sound; but
unwittingly, as it seems, I was administering medicines to a sick man:
and even so I have not been fortunate enough to do any good, and have
gained nothing by my excess of forethought. For having totally cast away
all these considerations, without giving them a thought, you have turned
me adrift like an unballasted vessel on an untried ocean, taking no heed
of those fierce billows which I must encounter. For if it should ever be
my lot to undergo calumny, or mockery, or any other kind of insult or
menace (and such things must frequently occur), to whom shall I fly for
refuge: to whom shall I impart my distress, who will be willing to
succour me and drive back my assailants and put a stop to their
assaults? who will solace me and prepare me to bear the coarse ribaldry
which may yet be in store for me. There is no one since you stand aloof
from this terrible strife, and cannot even hear my cry. Seest thou then
what mischief thou hast wrought? now that thou hast dealt the blow, dost
thou perceive what a deadly wound thou hast inflicted? But let all this
pass: for it is impossible to undo the past, or to find a path through
pathless difficulties. What shall I say to the outside world? what
defence shall I make to their accusations.
8. CHRYSOSTOM: Be of good cheer, I replied, for
I am not only ready to answer for myself in these matters, but I will
also endeavor as well as I am able to render an account of those for
which you have not held me answerable. Indeed, if you wish it, I will
make them the starting-point of my defence. For it would be a strange
piece of stupidity on my part if, thinking only of praise from the
outside public, and doing my best to silence their accusations, I were
unable to convince my dearest of all friends that I am not wronging him,
and were to treat him with indifference greater than the zeal which he
has displayed on my behalf, treating me with such forbearance as even to
refrain from accusing me of the wrongs which he says he has suffered
from me, and putting his own interests out of the question in
consideration for mine.
What is the wrong that I have done thee, since I have determined to
embark from this point upon the sea of apology? Is it that I misled you
and concealed my purpose? Yet I did it for the benefit of thyself who
wast deceived, and of those to whom I surrendered you by means of this
deceit. For if the evil of deception is absolute, and it is never right
to make use of it, I am prepared to pay any penalty you please: or
rather, as you will never endure to inflict punishment upon me, I shall
subject myself to the same condemnation which is pronounced by judges on
evil-doers when their accusers have convicted them. But if the thing is
not always harmful, but becomes good or bad according to the intention
of those who practise it, you must desist from complaining of deceit,
and prove that it has been devised against you for a bad purpose; and as
long as this proof is wanting it would only be fair for those who wish
to conduct themselves prudently, not only to abstain from reproaches and
accusation, but even to give a friendly reception to the deceiver. For a
well-timed deception, undertaken with an upright intention, has such
advantages, that many persons have often had to undergo punishment for
abstaining from fraud. And if you investigate the history of generals
who have enjoyed the highest reputation from the earliest ages, you will
find that most of their triumphs were achieved by stratagem, and that
such are more highly commended than those who conquer in open fight. For
the latter conduct their campaigns with greater expenditure of money and
men, so that they gain nothing by the victory, but suffer just as much
distress as those who have been defeated, both in the sacrifice of
troops and the exhaustion of funds. But, besides this, they are not even
permitted to enjoy all the glory which pertains to the victory; for no
small part of it is reaped by those who have fallen, because in spirit
they were victorious, their defeat was only a bodily one: so that had it
been possible for them not to fall when they were wounded, and death had
not come and put the finishing stroke to their labors, there would have
been no end of their prowess. But one who has been able to gain the
victory by stratagem involves the enemy in ridicule as well as disaster.
Again, in the other case both sides equally carry off the honors
bestowed upon valor, whereas in this case they do not equally obtain
those which are bestowed on wisdom, but the prize falls entirely to the
victors, and, another point no less important is that they preserve the
joy of the victory for the state unalloyed; for abundance of resources
and multitudes of men are not like mental powers: the former indeed if
continually used in war necessarily become exhausted, and fail those who
possess them, whereas it is the nature of wisdom to increase the more it
is exercised. And not in war only, but also in peace the need of deceit
may be found, not merely in reference to the affairs of the state, but
also in private life, in the dealings of husband with wife and wife with
husband, son with father, friend with friend, and also children with a
parent. For the daughter of Saul would not have been able to rescue her
husband out of Saul's hands' except by deceiving her father. And her
brother, wish-bag to save him whom she had rescued when he was again in
danger, made use of the same weapon as the wife?
BASIL : But none of these cases apply to me: for I am not an
enemy, nor one of those who are striving to injure thee, but quite the
contrary. For I entrusted all my interests to your judgment, and always
followed it whenever you bid me.
CHRYSOSTOM : But, my admirable and excellent Sir, this is the
very reason why I took the precaution of saying that it was a good thing
to employ this kind of deceit, not only in war, and in dealing with
enemies, but also in peace, and in dealing with our dearest friends. For
as a proof that it is beneficial not only to the deceivers, but also to
those who are deceived; if you go to any of the physicians and ask them
how they relieve their patients from disease, they will tell you that
they do not depend upon their professional skill alone, but sometimes
conduct the sick to health by availing themselves of deceit, and
blending the assistance which they derive from it with their art. For
when the waywardness of the patient and the obstinacy of the complaint
baffle the counsels of the physicians, it is then necessary to put on
the mask of deceit in order that, as on the stage, they may be able to
hide what really takes place. But, if you please, I will relate to you
one instance of stratagem out of many which I have heard of being
contrived by the sons of the healing art. A man was once suddenly
attacked by a fever of great severity; the burning heat increased, and
the patient rejected the remedies which could have reduced it and craved
for a draught of pure wine, passionately entreating all who approached
to give it him and enable him to satiate this deadly craving—I say
deadly, for if any one had gratified this request he would not only have
exasperated the fever, but also have driven the unhappy man frantic.
Thereupon, professional skill being baffled, and at the end of its
resources and utterly thrown away, stratagem stepped in and displayed
its power in the way which I will now relate. For the physician took an
earthen cup brought straight out of the furnace, and having steeped it
in wine, then drew it out empty, filled it with water, and, having
ordered the chamber where the sick man lay to be darkened with curtains
that the light might not reveal the trick, he gave it him to drink,
pretending that it was filled with undiluted wine. And the man, before
he had taken it in his hands, being deceived by the smell, did not wait
to examine what was given him, but convinced by the odor, and deceived
by the darkness, eagerly gulped down the draught, and being satiated
with it immediately shook off the feeling of suffocation and escaped the
imminent peril. Do you see the advantage of deceit? And if any one were
to reckon up all the tricks of physicians the list would run on to an
indefinite length. And not only those who heal the body but those also
who attend [to the diseases of the soul may be found continually making
use of this remedy. Thus the blessed Paul attracted those multitudes of
Jews: with this purpose he circumcised Timothy, although he warned the
Galatians in his letter that Christ would not profit those who were
circumcised. For this cause he submitted to the law, although he
reckoned the righteousness which came from the law but loss after
receiving the faith in Christ. For great is the value of deceit,
provided it be not introduced with a mischievous intention. In fact
action of this kind ought not to be called deceit, but rather a kind of
good management, cleverness and skill, capable of finding out ways where
resources fail, and making up for the defects of the mind. For I would
not call Phinees a murderer, although he slew two human beings with one
stroke: nor yet Elias after the slaughter of the 100 soldiers, and the
captain, and the torrents of blood which he caused to be shed by the
destruction of those who sacrificed to devils. For if we were to concede
this, and to examine the bare deeds in themselves apart from the
intention of the doers, one might if he pleased judge Abraham guilty of
child-murder and accuse his grandson and descendant of wickedness and
guile. For the one got possession of the birthright, and the other
transferred the wealth of the Egyptians to the host of the Israelites.
But this is not the case: away with the audacious thought! For we not
only acquit them of blame, but also admire them because of these things,
since even God commended them for the same. For that man would fairly
deserve to be called a deceiver who made an unrighteous use of the
practice, not one who did so with a salutary purpose. And often it is
necessary to deceive, and to do the greatest benefits by means of this
device, whereas he who has gone by a straight course has done great
mischief to the person whom he has not deceived.
BOOK II
CONTENTS
- THE PRIESTHOOD IS THE GREATEST PROOF OF LOVE FOR CHRIST.
- THIS MINISTRY EXCELS OTHERS.
- IT REQUIRES A GREAT AND NOBLE SOUL.
- THE OFFICE IS FULL OF DIFFICULTY AND DANGER.
- I SHRANK FROM IT FOR LOVE OF CHRIST.
- PROOF OF BASIL'S VIRTUE AND OF HIS ARDENT CHARITY.
- IT WAS NOT TO INSULT THE ELECTORS THAT I FLED FROM ORDINATION.
- BY FLIGHT I SAVED THEM FROM BLAME.
1. THAT it is possible then to make use of deceit for a good purpose,
or rather that in such a case it ought not to be called deceit, but a
kind of good management worthy of all admiration, might be proved at
greater length; but since what has already been said suffices for
demonstration, it would be irksome and tedious to lengthen out my
discourse upon the subject. And now it will remain for you to pave
whether I have not employed this art to your advantage.
BASIL : And what kind of advantage have I derived from this
piece of good management, or wise policy, or whatever you may please to
call it, so as to persuade me that I have not been deceived by you?
CHRYSOSTOM : What advantage, pray, could be greater than to be
seen doing those things which Christ with his own lips declared to be
proofs of love to Himself? For addressing the leader of the apostles He
said, "Peter, lovest thou me?" and when he confessed that he
did, the Lord added, "if thou lovest me tend my sheep." The
Master asked the disciple if He was loved by him, not in order' to get
information (how should He who penetrates the hearts of all men?), but
in order to teach us how great an interest He takes in the
superintendence of these sheep. This being plain, it will likewise be
manifest that a great and unspeakable reward will be reserved for him
whose labors are concerned with these sheep, upon which Christ places
such a high value. For when we see any one bestowing care upon members
of our household, or upon our flocks, we count his zeal for them as a
sign of love towards ourselves: yet all these things are to be bought
for money :—with how great a gift then will He requite those who tend
the flock which He purchased, not with money, nor anything of that kind,
but by His own death, giving his own blood as the price of the herd.
Wherefore when the disciple said, "Thou knowest Lord that I love
Thee," and invoked the beloved one Himself as a witness of his
love, the Saviour did not stop there, but added that which was the token
of love. For He did not at that time wish to show how much Peter loved
Him, but how much He Himself loved His own Church, and he desired to
teach Peter and all of us that we also should bestow much zeal upon the
same. For why did God not spare His only-begotten Son, but delivered Him
up, although the only one He had? It was that He might reconcile to
Himself those who were disposed towards Him as enemies, and make them
His peculiar people. For what purpose did He shed His blood? It was that
He might win these sheep which He entrusted to Peter and his successors.
Naturally then did Christ say, "Who then is the faithful and wise
servant, whom his lord shall make ruler over His household." Again,
the words are those of one who is in doubt, yet the speaker did not
utter them in doubt, but just as He asked Peter whether he loved Him,
not from any need to learn the affection of the disciple, but from a
desire to show the exceeding depth of his own love: so now also when He
says, "Who then is the faithful and wise servant ?" he speaks
not as being ignorant who is faithful and wise, but as desiring to set
forth the rarity of such a character, and the greatness of this office.
Observe at any rate how great the reward is—" He will appoint
him," he says, "ruler over all his goods."
2. Will you, then, still contend that you were not rightly deceived,
when you are about to superintend the things which belong to God, and
are doing that which when Peter did the Lord said he should be able to
surpass the rest of the apostles, for His words were, "Peter,
lovest thou me more than these?" Yet He might have said to him,
"If thou lovest me practise fasting, sleeping on the ground, and
prolonged vigils, defend the wronged, be as a father to orphans, and
supply the place of a husband to their mother." But as a matter of
fact, setting aside all these things, what does He say? "Tend my
sheep." For those things which I have already mentioned might
easily be performed by many even of those who are under authority, women
as well as men; but when one is required to preside over the Church, and
to be entrusted with the care of so many souls, the whole female sex
must retire before the magnitude of the task, and the majority of men
also; and we must bring forward those who to a large extent surpass all
others, and soar as much above them in excellence of spirit as Saul
overtopped the whole Hebrew nation in bodily stature: or rather far
more. For in this case let me not take the height of shoulders as the
standard of inquiry; but let the distinction between the pastor and his
charge be as great as that between rational man and irrational
creatures, not to say even greater, inasmuch as the risk is concerned
with things of far greater importance. He indeed who has lost sheep,
either through the ravages of wolves, or the attacks of robbers, or
through murrain, or any other disaster befalling them, might perhaps
obtain some indulgence from the owner of the flock; and even if the
latter should demand satisfaction the penalty would be only a matter of
money: but he who has human beings entrusted to him, the rational flock
of Christ, incurs a penalty in the first place for the loss of the
sheep, which goes beyond material things and touches his own life: and
in the second place he has to carry on a far greater and more difficult
contest. For he has not to contend with wolves, nor to dread robbers,
nor to consider how he may avert pestilence from the flock. With whom
then has he to fight? with whom has he to wrestle? Listen to the words
of St. Paul. "We wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against
principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of
this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places." Do you
see the terrible multitude of enemies, and their fierce squadrons, not
steel clad, but endued with a nature which is of itself an equivalent
for a complete suit of armor. Would you see yet another host, stern and
cruel, beleaguering this flock? This also you shall behold from the same
post of observation. For he who has discoursed to us concerning the
others, points out these enemies also to us, speaking in a certain place
on this wise: "The works of the flesh are manifest, which are
these, fornication, adultery, uncleanness, lasciviousness, idolatry,
witchcraft, hatred, variance, emulation, wrath, strife, backbitings,
whisperings, swellings, tumults," and many more besides; for he did
not make a complete list, but left us to understand the rest from these.
Moreover, in the case of the shepherd of irrational creatures, those who
wish to destroy the flock, when they see the guardian take to flight,
cease making war upon him, and are contented with the seizure of the
cattle: but in this case, even should they capture the whole flock, they
do not leave the shepherd unmolested, but attack him all the more, and
wax bolder, ceasing not until they have either overthrown him, or have
themselves been vanquished. Again, the afflictions of sheep are
manifest, whether it be famine, or pestilence, or wounds, or whatsoever
else it may be which distresses them, and this might help not a little
towards the relief of those who are oppressed in these ways. And there
is yet another fact greater than this which facilitates release from
this kind of infirmity. And what is that? The shepherds with great
authority compel the sheep to receive the remedy when they do not
willingly submit to it. For it is easy to bind them when cautery or
cutting is required, and to keep them inside the fold for a long time,
whenever it is expedient, and to bring them one kind of food instead of
another, and to cut them off from their supplies of water, and all other
things which the shepherds may decide to be conducive to their health
they perform with great ease.
3. But in the case of human infirmities, it is not easy in the first
place for a man to discern them, for no man "knoweth the things of
a man, save the spirit of man which is in him." How then can any
one apply the remedy for the disease of which he does not know the
character, often indeed being unable to understand it even should he
happen to sicken with it himself? And even when it becomes manifest, it
causes him yet more trouble: for it is not possible to doctor all men
with the same authority with which the shepherd treats his sheep. For in
this case also it is necessary to bind and to restrain from food, and to
use cautery or the knife: but the reception of the treatment depends on
the will of the patient, not of him who applies the remedy. For this
also was perceived by that wonderful man (St. Paul) when he said to the
Corinthians—"Not for that we have dominion over your faith, but
are helpers of your joy." For Christians above all men are not
permitted forcibly to correct the failings of those who sin. Secular
judges indeed, when they have captured malefactors under the law, show
their authority to be great, and prevent them even against their will
from following their own devices: but in our case the wrong-doer must be
made better, not by force, but by persuasion. For neither has authority
of this kind for the restraint of sinners been given us by law, nor, if
it had been given, should we have any field for the exercise of our
power, inasmuch as God rewards those who abstain from evil by their own
choice, not of necessity. Consequently much skill is required that our
patients may be induced to submit willingly to the treatment prescribed
by the physicians, and not only this, but that they may be grateful also
for the cure. For if any one when he is bound becomes restive (which it
is in his power to be), he makes the mischief worse; and if he should
pay no heed to the words which cut like steel, he inflicts another wound
by means of this contempt, and the intention to heal only becomes the
occasion of a worse disorder. For it is not possible for any one to cure
a man by compulsion against his will.
4. What then is one to do? For if you deal too gently with him who
needs a severe application of the knife, and do not strike deep into one
who requires such treatment, you remove one Dart of the sore but leave
the other: and if on the other hand you make the requisite incision
unsparingly, the patient, driven to desperation by his sufferings, will
often fling everything away at once, both the remedy and the bandage,
and throw himself down headlong, "breaking the yoke and bursting
the band." I could tell of many who have run into extreme evils
because the due penalty of their sins was exacted. For we ought not, in
applying punishment, merely to proportion it to the scale of the
offence, but rather to keep in view the disposition of the sinner, lest
whilst wishing to mend what is torn, you make the rent worse, and in
your zealous endeavors to restore what is fallen, you make the ruin
greater. For weak and careless characters, addicted for the most part to
the pleasures of the world, and having occasion to be proud on account
of birth and position, may yet, if gently and gradually brought to
repent of their errors, be delivered, partially at least, if not
perfectly, from the evils by which they are possessed: but if any one
were to inflict the discipline all at once, he would deprive them of
this slight chance of amendment. For when once the soul has been forced
to put off shame it lapses into a callous condition, and neither yields
to kindly words nor bends to threats, nor is susceptible of gratitude,
but becomes far worse than that city which the prophet reproached,
saying, "thou hadst the face of a harlot, refusing to be ashamed
before all men." Therefore the pastor has need of much discretion,
and of a myriad eyes to observe on every side the habit of the soul. For
as many are uplifted to pride, and then sink into despair of their
salvation, from inability to endure severe remedies, so are there some,
who from paying no penalty equivalent to their sins, fall into
negligence, and become far worse, and are impelled to greater sins. It
behoves the priest therefore to leave none of these things unexamined,
but, after a thorough inquiry into all of them, to apply such remedies
as he has appositely to each case, lest his zeal prove to be in vain.
And not in this matter only, but also in the work of knitting together
the severed members of the Church, one can see that he has much to do.
For the pastor of sheep has his flock following him, wherever he may
lead them: and if any should stray out of the straight path, and,
deserting the good pasture, feed in unproductive or rugged place, a loud
shout suffices to collect them and bring back to the fold those who have
been parted from it: but if a human being wanders away from the right
faith, great exertion, perseverance and patience tare required; for he
cannot be dragged back by force, nor constrained by fear, but must be
led back by persuasion to the truth from which be originally swerved.
The pastor therefore ought to be of a noble spirit, so as not to
despond, or to despair of the salvation of wanderers from the fold, but
continually to reason with himself and say, "Peradventure God will
give them repentance to the acknowledging of the truth, and that they
may recover themselves out of the snare of the devil." Therefore
the Lord, when addressing His disciples, said, "Who then is the
faithful and wise servant?" For he indeed who disciplines himself
compasses only his own advantage, but the benefit of the pastoral
function extends to the whole people. And one who dispenses money to the
needy, or otherwise succors the oppressed, benefits his neighbors to
some extent, but so much less than the priest in proportion as the body
is inferior to the soul. Rightly therefore did the Lord say that zeal
for the flock was a token of love for Himself.
BASIL : But thou thyself—dost thou not love Christ?
CHRYSOSTOM : Yea, I love Him, and shall never cease loving Him;
but I fear lest I should provoke Him whom I love.
BASIL : But what riddle can there be more obscure than this—Christ
has commanded him who loves Him to tend His sheep, and yet you say that
you decline to tend them because you love Him who gave this command?
CHRYSOSTOM : My saying is no riddle, but very intelligible and
simple, for if I were well qualified to administer this office, as
Christ desired it, and then shunned it, my remark might be open to
doubt, but since the infirmity of my spirit renders me useless for this
ministry, why does my saying deserve to be called in question? For I
fear lest if I took the flock in hand when it was in good condition and
well nourished, and then wasted it through my unskilfulness, I should
provoke against myself the God who so loved the flock as to give Himself
up for their salvation and ransom.
BASIL : You speak in jest: for if you were in earnest I know
not how you would have proved me to be justly grieved otherwise than by
means of these very words whereby you have endeavored to dispel my
dejection. I knew indeed before that you had deceived and betrayed me,
but much more now, when you have undertaken to clear yourself of my
accusations, do I plainly perceive and understand the extent of the
evils into which you have led me. For if you withdrew yourself from this
ministry because you were conscious that your spirit was not equal to
the burden of the task, I ought to have been rescued from it before you,
even if I had chanced to have a great desire for it, to say nothing of
having confided to you the entire decision of these matters: but as it
is, you have looked solely to your own interest and neglected mine.
Would indeed you had entirely neglected them; then I should have been
well content: but you plotted to facilitate my capture by those who
wished to seize me. For you cannot take shelter in the argument that
public opinion deceived you and induced you to imagine great and
wonderful things concerning me. For I was none of your wonderful and
distinguished men, nor, had this been the case, ought you to have
preferred public opinion to truth. For if I had never permitted you to
enjoy my society, you might have seemed to have a reasonable pretext for
being guided in your vote by public report; but if there is no one who
has such thorough knowledge of my affairs, if you are acquainted with my
character better than my parents and those who brought me up, what
argument can you employ which will be convincing enough to persuade your
hearers that you did not purposely thrust me into this danger: say, what
answer shall I make to your accusers?
CHRYSOSTOM : Nay! I will not proceed to those questions until I
have resolved such as concern yourself alone, if you were to ask me ten
thousand times to dispose of these charges. You said indeed that
ignorance would bring me forgiveness, and that I should have been free
from all accusation if I had brought you into your present position not
knowing anything about you, but that as I did not betray you in
ignorance, but was intimately acquainted with your affairs, I was
deprived of all reasonable pretext and excuse. But I say precisely the
reverse: for in such matters there is need of careful scrutiny, and he
who is going to present any one as qualified for the priesthood ought
not to be content with public report only, but should also himself,
above all and before all, investigate the man's character. For when the
blessed Paul says, "He must also have a good report of them which
are without," he does not dispense with an exact and rigorous
inquiry, nor does he assign to such testimony precedence over the
scrutiny required in such cases. For after much previous discourse, he
mentioned this additional testimony, proving that one must not be
contented with it alone for elections of this kind, but take it into
consideration along with the rest. For public report often speaks false;
but when careful investigation precedes, no further danger need be
apprehended from it. On this account, after the other kinds of evidence
he places that which comes from those who are without. For he did not
simply say, "he must have a good report," but added the words,
"from them which are without," wishing to show that before the
report of those without he must be carefully examined. Inasmuch, then,
as I myself knew your affairs better than your parents, as you also
yourself acknowledged, I might deserve to be released from all blame.
BASIL : Nay this is the very reason why you could not escape,
if any one chose to indite you. Do you not remember hearing from me, and
often learning from my actual conduct, the feebleness of my character?
Were you not perpetually taunting me for my pusillanimity, because I was
so easily dejected by ordinary cares?
5. CHRYSOSTOM: I do indeed remember often
hearing such things said by you; I would not deny it. But if I ever
taunted you, I did it in sport and not in serious truth. However, I do
not now dispute about these matters, and I claim the same degree of
forbearance from you while I wish to make mention of some of the good
qualities which you possess. For if you attempt to convict me of saying
what is untrue, I shall not spare you, but shall drove that you say
these things rather by way of self—depreciation than with a view to
truth, and I will employ no evidence but your own words and deeds to
demonstrate the truth of my assertion. And now the first question I wish
to ask of you is this: do you know how great the power of love is? For
omitting all the miracles which were to be wrought by the apostles,
Christ said, "Hereby shall men know that ye are my disciples if ye
love one another," and Paul said that it was the fulfilling of the
law, and that in default of it no spiritual gift had any profit. Well,
this choice good, the distinguishing mark of Christ's disciples, the
gift which is higher than all other gifts, I perceived to be deeply
implanted in your soul, and teeming with much fruit.
BASIL : I acknowledge indeed that the matter is one of deep
concern to me, and that I endeavor most earnestly to keep this
commandment, but that I have not even half succeeded in so doing, even
you yourself would bear me witness if you would leave off talking out of
partiality, and simply respect the truth.
6. CHRYSOSTOM: Well, then, I shall betake
myself to my evidences, and shall now do what I threatened, proving that
you wish to disparage yourself rather than to speak the truth. But I
will mention a fact which has only just occurred, that no one may
suspect me of attempting to obscure the truth by the great lapse of time
in relating events long past, as oblivion would then prevent any
objection being made to the things which I might say with a view to
gratification. For when one of our intimate friends, having been falsely
accused of insult and folly, was in extreme peril, you then flung
yourself into the midst of the danger, although you were not summoned by
any one, or appealed to by the person who was about to be involved in
danger. Such was the fact: but that I may convict you out of your own
mouth, I will remind you of the words you uttered: for when some did not
approve of this zeal, while others commended and admired it, "How
can I help myself?" you said to those who accused you, "for I
do not know how otherwise to love than by giving up my life when it is
necessary to save any of my friends who is in danger:" thus
repeating, in different words, indeed, but with the same meaning, what
Christ said to his disciples when he laid down the definition of perfect
love. "Greater love," He said, "hath no man than this
that a man lay down his life for his friends." If then it is
impossible to find greater love than this, you have attained its limit,
and both by your deeds and words have crowned the summit. This is why I
betrayed you, this is why I contrived that plot. Do I now convince you
that it was not from any malicious intent, nor from any desire to thrust
you into danger, but from a persuasion of your future usefulness that I
dragged you into this course?
BASIL : Do you then suppose that love is sufficient for the
correction of one's fellowmen?
CHRYSOSTOM : Certainly it would contribute in a great measure
to this end. But if you wish me to produce evidence of your practical
wisdom also, I will proceed to, do so, and will prove that your
understanding exceeds your loving-kindness.
At these remarks he blushed scarlet and said, "Let my character
be now dismissed: for it was not about this that I originally demanded
an explanation; but if you have any just answer to make to those who are
without, I would gladly hear what you have to say. Wherefore, abandoning
this vain contest, tell me what defence I shall make, both to those who
have honored you and to those who are distressed on their account,
considering them to be insulted.
7. CHRYSOSTOM: This is just the point to which
I am finally hastening, for as my explanation to you has been completed
I shall easily turn to this part of my defence. What then is the
accusation made by these persons, and what are their charges? They say
that they have been insulted and grievously wronged by me because I have
not accepted the honor which they wished to confer upon me. Now in the
first place I say that no account should be taken of the insult shown to
men, seeing that by paying honor to them I should be compelled to offend
God. And I should say to those who are displeased that it is not safe to
take offence at these things, but does them much harm. For I think that
those who stay themselves on God and look to Him alone, ought to be so
religiously disposed as not to account such a thing an insult, even if
they happened to be a thousand times dishonored. But that I have not
gone so far as even to think of daring anything of this kind is manifest
from what I am about to say. For if indeed I had been induced by
arrogance and vainglory, as you have often said some slanderously
affirm, to assent to my accusers, I should have been one of the most
iniquitous: of mankind, having treated great and excellent men, my
benefactors moreover, with contempt. For if men ought to be punished for
wronging those who have never wronged them, how ought we to honor those
who have spontaneously preferred to honor us? For no one could possibly
say that they were requiting me for any benefits small or great which
they had received at my hands. How great a punishment then would one
deserve if one requited them in the contrary manner. But if such a thing
never entered my mind, and I declined the heavy burden with quite a
different intention, why do they refuse to pardon me (even if they do
not consent to approve), but accuse me of having selfishly spared my own
soul? For so far from having insulted the men in question I should say
that I had even honored them by my refusal.
And do not be surprised at the paradoxical nature of my remark, for I
shall supply a speedy solution of it.
8. For had I accepted the office, I do not say all men, but those who
take pleasure in speaking evil, might have suspected and said many
things concerning myself who had been elected and concerning them, the
electors: for instance, that they regarded wealth, and admired splendor
of rank; or had been induced by flattery to promote me to this honor:
indeed I cannot say whether some one might not have suspected that they
were bribed by money. Moreover, they would have said, "Christ
called fishermen, tentmakers, and publicans to this dignity, whereas
these men reject those who support themselves by daily labor: but if
there be any one who devotes himself to secular learning, and is brought
up in idleness, him they receive and admire. For why, pray, have they
passed by men who have undergone innumerable toils in the service of the
Church, and suddenly dragged into this dignity one who has never
experienced any labors of this kind, but has spent all his youth in the
vain study of secular learning." These things and more they might
have said had I accepted the office: but not so now. For every pretext
for maligning is now cut away from them, and they can neither accuse me
of flattery, nor the others of receiving bribes, unless some choose to
act like mere madmen. For how could one who used flattery and expended
money in order to obtain the dignity, have abandoned it to others when
he might have obtained it? For this would be just as if a man who had
bestowed much labor upon the ground in order that the corn field might
be laden with abundant produce, and the presses overflow with wine,
after innumerable toils and great expenditure of money were to surrender
the fruits to others just when it was time to reap his corn and gather
in his vintage. Do you see that although what was said might be far from
the truth, nevertheless those who wished to calumniate the electors
would then have had a pretext for alleging that the choice was made
without fair judgment and consideration. But as it is I have prevented
them from being open mouthed, or even uttering a single word on the
subject. Such then and more would have been their remarks at the outset.
But after undertaking the ministry I should not have been able day by
day to defend myself against accusers, even if I had done everything
faultlessly, to say nothing of the many mistakes which I must have made
owing to my youth and inexperience. But now I have saved the electors
from this kind of accusation also, whereas in the other case I should
have involved them in innumerable reproaches. For what would not the
world have said? "They have committed affairs of such vast interest
and importance to thoughtless youths, they have defiled the flock of
God, and Christian affairs have become a jest and a laughingstock."
But now "all iniquity shall stop her mouth." For although they
may say these things on your account, you will speedily teach them by
your acts that understanding is not to be estimated by age, and the grey
head is not to be the test of an elder—that the young man ought not to
be absolutely excluded from the ministry, but only the novice: and the
difference between the two is great.
BOOK III
CONTENTS
- THOSE WHO SUSPECT THAT I DECLINED THROUGH PRIDE HAVE INJURED THEIR
OWN REPUTATION.
- I DID NOT FLY THROUGH VANITY.
- HAD I DESIRED VAINGLORY I SHOULD RATHER HAVE ACCEPTED THE OFFICE.
- THE PRIESTHOOD IS AUGUST, AND THE PRIESTHOOD OF THE NEW LAW MORE
AUGUST THAN THAT OF THE OLD.
- THE GREATNESS OF THE POWER AND DIGNITY OF PRIESTS.
- THEY ARE THE MINISTERS OF GOD'S GREATEST GIFTS.
- PAUL WAS AWE-STRUCK WHEN HE CONSIDERED THE PRIESTHOOD.
- ONE WHO UNDERTAKES A PUBLIC OFFICE IS EXPOSED TO MANY FAULTS
UNLESS HE BE VERY GENEROUS.
- HE IS OVERCOME BY VAINGLORY AND ITS EVIL CONSEQUENCES.
- IT IS NOT THE PRIESTHOOD THAT IS TO BLAME FOR THIS, BUT OUR OWN
NEGLIGENCE.
- AMBITION SHOULD BE BANISHED FROM THE MIND OF A PRIEST.
- A PRIEST SHOULD BE MOST WISE.
- OTHER QUALITIES BESIDES MORTIFICATION ARE REQUISITE IN A PRIEST.
- NOTHING DARKENS THE MIND SO MUCH AS ANGER.
- ANOTHER DANGEROUS ENEMY.
- WHAT MANNER OF MAN A PRIEST EXPOSED TO SUCH DANGERS OUGHT TO BE.
- WHAT A SOURCE OF ANXIETY IS THE GOVERNMENT OF VIRGINS.
1. CHRYSOSTOM: As regards the insult to those
who have done me honor, what I have already said might be sufficient to
prove that in avoiding this office I had no desire to put them to shame;
but I will now endeavor to make it evident, to the best of my ability,
that I was not puffed up by arrogance of any kind. For if the choice of
a generalship or a kingdom had been submitted to me, and I had then
formed this resolution, any one might naturally have suspected me of
this fault, or rather I should have been found guilty by all men, not of
arrogance, but of senseless folly. But when the priesthood is offered to
me, which exceeds a kingdom as much as the spirit differs from the
flesh, will any one dare to accuse me of disdain? And is it not
preposterous to charge with folly those who reject small things, but
when any do this in matters of preeminent importance, to exempt such
persons from accusations of mental derangement, and yet subject them to
the charge of pride? It is just as if one were to accuse, not of pride,
but of insanity, a man who looked with contempt on a herd of oxen and
refused to be a herdsman, and yet were to say that a man who declined
the empire of the world, and the command of all the armies of the earth,
was not mad, but inflated with pride. But this assuredly is not the
case; and they who say such things do not injure me more than they
injure themselves. For merely to imagine it possible for human nature to
despise this dignity is an evidence against those who bring this charge
of the estimate which they have formed of the office. For if they did
not consider it to be an ordinary thing of no great account, such a
suspicion as this would never have entered their heads. For why is it
that no one has ever dared to entertain such a suspicion with reference
to the dignity of the angels, and to say that arrogance is the reason
why human nature would not aspire to the rank of the angelic nature? It
is because we imagine great things concerning those powers, and this
does not suffer us to believe that a man can conceive anything greater
than that honor. Wherefore one might with more justice indite those
persons of arrogance who accuse me of it. For they would never have
suspected this of others if they had not previously depreciated the
matter as being of no account. But if they say that I have done this
with a view to glory, they will be convicted of fighting openly against
themselves and falling into their own snare; for I do not know what kind
of arguments they could have sought in preference to these if they had
wished to release me from the charge of vainglory.
2. For if this desire had ever entered my mind, I ought to have
accepted the office rather than avoided it. Why? because it would have
brought me much glory. For the fact that one of my age, who had so
recently abandoned secular pursuits, should suddenly be deemed by all
worthy of such admiration as to be advanced to honor before those who
have spent all their life in labors of this kind, and to obtain more
votes than all of them, might have persuaded all men to anticipate great
and marvellous things of me. But, as it is, the greater part of the
Church does not know me even by name: so that even my refusal of the
office will not be manifest to all, but only to a few, and I am not sure
that all even of these know it for certain; but probably many of them
either imagine that I was not elected at all, or that I was rejected
after the election, being considered unsuitable, not that I avoided the
office of my own accord.
3. BASIL: But those who do know the truth will
be surprised.
CHRYSOSTOM : And lo! these are they who, according to you,
falsely accuse me of vainglory: and pride. Whence then am I to hope for
praise? From the many? They do not know the actual fact. From the few?
Here again the matter is perverted to my disadvantage. For the only
reason why you have come here now is to learn what answer ought to be
given to them And what shall I now certainly say on account of these
things? For wait a little, and you will clearly perceive that even if
all know the truth they ought not to condemn me for pride and love of
glory. And in addition to this there is another consideration: that not
only those who make this venture, if there be any such (which for my
part I do not believe), but also those who suspect it of others, will be
involved in no small danger.
4. For the priestly office is indeed discharged on earth, but it
ranks amongst heavenly ordinances; and very naturally so: for neither
man, nor angel, nor archangel, nor any other created power, but the
Paraclete Himself, instituted this vocation, and persuaded men while
still abiding in the flesh to represent the ministry of angels.
Wherefore the consecrated priest ought to be as pure as if he were
standing in the heavens themselves in the midst of those powers.
Fearful, indeed, and of most awful import, were the things which were
used before the dispensation of grace, as the bells, the pomegranates,
the stones on the breastplate and on the ephod, the girdle, the mitre,
the long robe, the plate of gold, the holy of holies, the deep silence
within. But if any one should examine the things which belong to the
dispensation of grace, he will find that, small as they are, yet are
they fearful and full of awe, and that what was spoken concerning the
law is true in this case also, that "what has been made glorious
hath no glory in this respect by reason of the glory which excelleth."
For when thou seest the Lord sacrificed, and laid upon the altar, and
the priest standing and praying over the victim, and all the worshippers
empurpled with that precious blood, canst thou then think that thou art
still amongst men, and standing upon the earth? Art thou not, on the
contrary, straightway translated to Heaven, and casting out every carnal
thought from the soul, dost thou not with disembodied spirit and pure
reason contemplate the things which are in Heaven? Oh! what a marvel!
what love of God to man! He who sitteth on high with the Father is at
that hour held in the hands of all, and gives Himself to those who are
willing to embrace and grasp Him. And this all do through the eyes of
faith! Do these things seem to you fit to be despised, or such as to
make it possible for any one to be uplifted against them?
Would you also learn from another miracle the exceeding sanctity of
this office? Picture Elijah and the vast multitude standing around him,
and the sacrifice laid upon the altar of stones, and all the rest of the
people hushed into a deep silence while the prophet alone offers up
prayer: then the sudden rush of fire from Heaven upon the sacrifice:—these
are marvellous things, charged with terror. Now then pass from this
scene to the rites which are celebrated in the present day; they are not
only marvellous to behold, but transcendent in terror. There stands the
priest, not bringing down fire from Heaven, but the Holy Spirit: and he
makes prolonged supplication, not that some flame sent down from on high
may consume the offerings, but that grace descending on the sacrifice
may thereby enlighten the souls of all, and render them more refulgent
than silver purified by fire. Who can despise this most awful mystery,
unless he is stark mad and senseless? Or do you not know that no human
soul could have endured that fire in the sacrifice, but all would have
been utterly consumed, had not the assistance of God's grace been great.
5. For if any one will consider how great a thing it is for one,
being a man, and compassed with flesh and blood, to be enabled to draw
nigh to that blessed and pure nature, he will then clearly see what
great honor the grace of the Spirit has vouchsafed to priests; since by
their agency these rites are celebrated, and others nowise inferior to
these both in respect of our dignity and our salvation. For they who
inhabit the earth and make their abode there are entrusted with the
administration of things which are in Heaven, and have received an
authority which God has not given to angels or archangels. For it has
not been said to them, "Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall be
bound in Heaven, and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed
in Heaven." They who rule on earth have indeed authority to bind,
but only the body: whereas this binding lays hold of the soul and
penetrates the heavens; and what priests do here below God ratifies
above, and the Master confirms the sentence of his servants. For indeed
what is it but all manner of heavenly authority which He has given them
when He says, "Whose sins ye remit they are remitted, and whose
sins ye retain they are retained?" What authority could be greater
than this? "The Father hath committed all judgment to the
Son?" But I see it all put into the hands of these men by the Son.
For they have been conducted to this dignity as if they were already
translated to Heaven, and had transcended human nature, and were
released from the passions to which we are liable. Moreover, if a king
should bestow this honor upon any of his subjects, authorizing him to
cast into prison whom he pleased and to release them again, he becomes
an object of envy and respect to all men; but he who has received from
God an authority as much greater as heaven is more precious than earth,
and souls more precious than bodies, seems to some to have received so
small an honor that they are actually able to imagine that one of those
who have been entrusted with these things will despise the gift. Away
with such madness! For transparent madness it is to despise so great a
dignity, without which it is not possible to obtain either our own
salvation, or the good things which have been promised to us. For if no
one can enter into the kingdom of Heaven except he be regenerate through
water and the Spirit, and he who does not eat the flesh of the Lord and
drink His blood is excluded from eternal life, and if all these things
are accomplished only by means of those holy hands, I mean the hands of
the priest, how will any one, without these, be able to escape the fire
of hell, or to win those crowns which are reserved for the victorious?
6. These verily are they who are entrusted with the pangs of
spiritual travail and the birth which comes through baptism: by their
means we put on Christ, and are buried with the Son of God, and become
members of that blessed Head. Wherefore they might not only be more
justly feared by us than rulers and kings, but also be more honored than
parents; since these begat us of blood and the will of the flesh, but
the others are the authors of our birth from God, even that blessed
regeneration which is the true freedom and the sonship according to
grace. The Jewish priests had authority to release the body from
leprosy, or, rather, not to release it but only to examine those who
were already released, and you know how much the office of priest was
contended for at that time. But our priests have received authority to
deal, not with bodily leprosy, but spiritual uncleanness—not to
pronounce it removed after examination, but actually and absolutely to
take it away. Wherefore they who despise these priests would be far more
accursed than Dathan and his company, and deserve more severe
punishment. For the latter, although they laid claim to the dignity
which did not belong to them, nevertheless had an excellent opinion
concerning it, and this they evinced by the great eagerness with which
they pursued it; but these men, when the office has been better
regulated, and has received so great a development, have displayed an
audacity which exceeds that of the others, although manifested in a
contrary way. For there is not an equal amount of contempt involved in
aiming at an honor which does not pertain to one, and in despising such
great advantages, but the latter exceeds the former as much as scorn
differs from admiration. What soul then is so sordid as to despise such
great advantages? None whatever, I should say, unless it were one
subject to some demoniacal impulse. For I return once more to the point
from which I started: not in the way of chastising only, but also in the
way of benefiting, God has bestowed a power on priests greater than that
of our natural parents. The two indeed differ as much as the present and
the future life. For our natural parents generate us unto this life
only, but the others unto that which is to come. And the former would
not be able to avert death from their offspring, or to repel the
assaults of disease; but these others have often saved a sick soul, or
one which was on the point of perishing, procuring for some a milder
chastisement, and preventing others from falling altogether, not only by
instruction and admonition, but also by the assistance wrought through
prayers. For not only at the time of regeneration, but afterwards also,
they have authority to forgive sins. "Is any sick among you?"
it is said, "let him call for the elders of the Church and let them
pray over him, anointing him with oil in the name of the Lord. And the
prayer of faith shall save the sick, and the Lord will raise him up: and
if he have committed sins they shall be forgiven him." Again: our
natural parents, should their children come into conflict with any men
of high rank and great power in the world, are unable to profit them:
but priests have reconciled, not rulers and kings, but God Himself when
His wrath has often been provoked against them. Well! after this will
any one venture to condemn me for arrogance? For my part, after what has
been said, I imagine such religious fear will possess the souls of the
hearers that they will no longer condemn those who avoid the office for
arrogance and temerity, but rather those who voluntarily come forward
and are eager to obtain this dignity for themselves. For if they who
have been entrusted with the command of cities, should they chance to be
wanting in discretion and vigilance, have sometimes destroyed the cities
and ruined themselves in addition, how much power think you both in
himself and from above must he need, to avoid sinning, whose business it
is to beautify the Bride of Christ?
7. No man loved Christ more than Paul: no man exhibited greater zeal,
no man was counted worthy of more grace: nevertheless, after all these
great advantages, he still has fears and tremblings concerning this
government and those who were governed by him. "I fear," he
says, "lest by any means, as the serpent beguiled Eve through his
subtlety, so your minds should be corrupted from the simplicity which is
in Christ." And again, "I was with you in fear and in much
trembling;" and this was a man who had been caught up to the third
Heaven, and made partaker of the unspeakable mysteries of God, and had
endured as many deaths as he had lived days after he became a believer—a
man, moreover, who would not use the authority given him from Christ
lest any of his converts should be offended. If, then, he who went
beyond the ordinances of God, and nowhere sought his own advantage, but
that of those whom he governed, was always so full of fear when he
considered the greatness of his government, what shall our condition be
who in many ways seek our own, who not only fail to go beyond the
commandments of Christ, but for the most part transgress them? "Who
is weak," he says, "and I am not weak? who is offended and I
burn not?" Such an one ought the priest to be, or, rather, not such
only: for these are small things, and as nothing compared with what I am
about to say. And what is this? "I could wish," he says,
"that myself were accursed from Christ for my brethren, my kinsmen
according to the flesh." If any one can utter such a speech, if any
one has the soul which attains to such a prayer, he might justly be
blamed if he took to flight: but if any one should lack such excellence
as much as I do, he would deserve to be hated, not if he avoided the
office, but if he accepted it. For if an election to a military dignity
was the business in hand, and they who had the right of conferring the
honor were to drag forward a brazier, or a shoemaker, or some such
artisan, and entrust the army to his hands, I should not praise the
wretched man if he did not take to flight, and do all in his power to
avoid plunging into such manifest trouble. If, indeed, it be sufficient
to bear the name of pastor, and to take the work in hand hap-hazard, and
there be no danger in this, then let whoso pleases accuse me of
vainglory; but if it behoves one who undertakes this care to have much
understanding, and, before understanding, great grace from God, and
uprightness of conduct, and purity of life and superhuman virtue, do not
deprive me of forgiveness if I am unwilling to perish in vain without a
cause.
Moreover, if any one in charge of a full-sized merchant ship, full of
rowers, and laden with a costly freight, were to station me at the helm
and bid me cross the Aegean or the Tyrrhene sea, I should recoil from
the proposal at once: and if any one asked me why? I should say,
"Lest I should sink the ship." Well, where the loss concerns
material wealth, and the danger extends only to bodily death, no one
will blame those who exercise great prudence; but where the shipwrecked
are destined to fall, not into the ocean, but into the abyss of fire,
and the death which awaits them is not that which severs the soul from
the body, but one which together with this dismisses it to eternal
punishment, shall I incur your wrath and hate because I did not plunge
headlong into so great an evil?
8. Do not thus, I pray and beseech you. I know my own soul, how
feeble and puny it is: I know the magnitude of this ministry, and the
great difficulty of the work; for more stormy billows vex the soul of
the priest than the gales which disturb the sea.
9. And first of all is that most terrible rock of vainglory, more
dangerous than that of the Sirens, of which the fable-mongers tell such
marvellous tales: for many were able to sail past that and escape
unscathed; but this is to me so dangerous that even now, when no
necessity of any kind impels me into that abyss, I am unable to keep
clear of the snare: but if any one were to commit this charge to me, it
would be all the same as if he tied my hands behind my back, and
delivered me to the wild beasts dwelling on that rock to rend me in
pieces day by day. Do you ask what those wild beasts are? They are
wrath, despondency, envy, strife, slanders, accusations, falsehood,
hypocrisy, intrigues, anger against those who have done no harm,
pleasure at the indecorous acts of fellow, ministers, sorrow at their
prosperity, love of praise, desire of honor (which indeed most of all
drives the human soul headlong to perdition), doctrines devised to
please, servile flatteries, ignoble fawning, contempt of the poor,
paying court to the rich, senseless and mischievous honors, favors
attended with danger both to those who offer and those who accept them,
sordid fear suited only to the basest of slaves, the abolition of plain
speaking, a great affectation of humility, but banishment of truth, the
suppression of convictions and reproofs, or rather the excessive use of
them against the poor, while against those who are invested with power
no one dare open his lips.
For all these wild beasts, and more than these, are bred upon that
rock of which I have spoken, and those whom they have once captured are
inevitably dragged down into such a depth of servitude that even to
please women they often do many things which it is well not to mention.
The divine law indeed has excluded women from the ministry, but they
endeavor to thrust themselves into it; and since they can effect nothing
of themselves, they do all through the agency of others; and they have
become invested with so much power that they can appoint or eject
priests at their will: things in fact are turned upside down, and the
proverbial saying may be seen realized— "The ruled lead the
rulers:" and would that it were men who do this instead of women,
who have not received a commission to teach. Why do I say teach? for the
blessed Paul did not suffer them even to speak in the Church. But I have
heard some one say that they have obtained such a large privilege of
free speech, as even to rebuke the prelates of the Churches, and censure
them more severely than masters do their own domestics.
10. And let not any one suppose that I subject all to the aforesaid
charges: for there are some, yea many, who are superior to these
entanglements, and exceed in number those who have been caught by them.
Nor would I indeed make the priesthood responsible for these evils: far
be such madness from me. For men of understanding do not say that the
sword is to blame for murder, nor wine for drunkenness, nor strength for
outrage, nor courage for foolhardiness, but they lay the blame on those
who make an improper use of the gifts which have been bestowed upon them
by God, and punish them accordingly. Certainly, at least, the priesthood
may justly accuse us if we do not rightly handle it. For it is not
itself a cause of the evils already mentioned, but we, who as far as
lies in our power have defiled it with so many pollutions, by entrusting
it to commonplace men who readily accept what is offered them, without
having first acquired a knowledge of their own souls, or considered the
gravity of the office, and when they have entered on the work, being
blinded by inexperience, overwhelm with innumerable evils the people who
have been committed to their care. This is the very thing which was very
nearly happening in my case, had not God speedily delivered me from
those dangers, mercifully sparing his Church and my own soul. For, tell
me, whence do you think such great troubles are generated in the
Churches? I, for my part, believe the only source of them to be the
inconsiderate and random way in which prelates are chosen and appointed.
For the head ought to be the strongest part, that it may be able to
regulate and control the evil exhalations which arise from the rest of
the body below; but when it happens to be weak in itself, and unable to
repel those pestiferous attacks, it becomes feebler itself than it
really is, and ruins the rest of the body as well. And to prevent this
now coming to pass, God kept me in the position of the feet, which was
the rank originally assigned to me. For there are very many other
qualities, Basil, besides those already mentioned, which the priest
ought to have, but which I do not possess; and, above all, this one:—his
soul ought to be thoroughly purged from any lust after the office: for
if he happens to have a natural inclination for this dignity, as soon as
he attains it a stronger flame is kindled, and the man being taken
completely captive will endure innumerable evils in order to keep a
secure hold upon it, even to the extent of using flattery, or submitting
to something base and ignoble, or expending large sums of money. For I
will not now speak of the murders with which some have filled the
Churches, or the desolation which they have brought upon cities in
contending for the dignity, lest some persons should think what I say
incredible. But I am of opinion one ought to exercise so much caution in
the matter, as to shun the burden of the office, and when one has
entered upon it, not to wait for the judgment of others should any fault
be committed which warrants deposition, but to anticipate it by ejecting
oneself from the dignity; for thus one might probably win mercy for
himself from God: but to cling to it in defiance of propriety is to
deprive oneself of all forgiveness, or rather to kindle the wrath of
God, by adding a second error more offensive than the first.
11. But no one will always endure the strain; for fearful, truly
fearful is the eager desire after this honor. And in saying this I am
not in opposition to the blessed Paul, but in complete harmony with his
words. For what says he? "If any than desireth the office of a
bishop, he desireth a good work." Now I have not said that it is a
terrible thing to desire the work, but only the authority and power. And
this desire I think one ought to expel from the soul with all possible
earnestness, not permitting it at the outset to be possessed by such a
feeling, so that one may be able to do everything with freedom. For he
who does not desire to be exhibited in possession of this authority,
does not fear to be deposed from it, and not fearing this will be able
to do everything with the freedom which becomes Christian men: whereas
they who fear and tremble lest they should be deposed undergo a bitter
servitude, filled with all kinds of evils, and are often compelled to
offend against both God and man. Now the soul ought not to be affected
in this way; but as in warfare we see those soldiers who are noble-
spirited fight willingly and fall bravely, so they who have attained to
this stewardship should be contented to be consecrated to the dignity or
removed from it, as becomes Christian men, knowing that deposition of
this kind brings its reward no less than the discharge of the office.
For when any one suffers anything of this kind, in order to avoid
submitting to something which is unbecoming or unworthy of this dignity,
he procures punishment for those who wrongfully depose him, and a
greater reward for himself. "Blessed," says our Lord,
"are ye when men shall revile you and persecute you, and shall say
all manner of evil against you falsely for my sake; rejoice and be
exceeding glad, for great is your reward in Heaven." And this,
indeed, is the case when any one is expelled by those of his own rank
either on account of envy, with a view to the favor of others, or
through hatred, or from any other wrong motive: but when it is the lot
of any one to experience this treatment at the hand of opponents, I do
not think a word is needed to prove what great gain they confer upon him
by their wickedness.
It behoves us, then, to be on the watch on all sides, and to make a
careful search lest any spark of this desire should be secretly
smouldering somewhere. For it is much to be wished that those who are
originally free from this passion, should also be able to avoid it when
they have lighted upon this office. But if any one, before he obtains
the honor, cherishes in himself this terrible and savage monster, it is
impossible to say into what a furnace he will fling himself after he has
attained it. Now I possessed this desire in a high degree (and do not
suppose that I would ever tell you what was untrue in
self-disparagement): and this, combined with other reasons, alarmed me
not a little, and induced me to take flight. For just as lovers of the
human person, as long as they are permitted to be near the objects of
their affection, suffer more severe torment from their passion, but when
they remove as far as possible from these objects of desire, they drive
away the frenzy: even so when those who desire this dignity are near it,
the evil becomes intolerable: but when they cease to hope for it, the
desire is extinguished together with the expectation.
12. This single motive then is no slight one: and even taken by
itself it would have sufficed to deter me from this dignity: but, as it
is, another must be added not less than the former. And what is this? A
priest ought to be sober minded, and penetrating in discernment, and
possessed of innumerable eyes in every direction, as one who lives not
for himself alone but for so great a multitude. But that I am sluggish
and slack, and scarcely able to bring about my own salvation, even you
yourself would admit, who out of love to me art especially eager to
conceal my faults. Talk not to me in this connexion of fasting, and
watching, or sleeping on the ground, and other hard discipline of the
body: for you know how defective I am in these matters: and even if they
had been carefully practised by me they could not with my present
sluggishness have been of any service to me with a view to this post of
authority. Such things might be of great service to a man who was shut
up in a cell, and caring only for his own concerns: but when a man is
divided among so great a multitude, and enters separately into the
private cares of those who are under his direction, what appreciable
help can be given to their improvement unless he possesses a robust and
exceedingly vigorous character?
13. And do not be surprised if, in connexion with such endurance, I
seek another test of fortitude in the soul. For to be indifferent to
food and drink and a soft bed, we see is to many no hard task,
especially at least to such as are of a rough habit of life and have
been brought up in this way from early youth, and to many others also;
bodily discipline and custom softening the severity of these laborious
practices: but insult, and abuse, and coarse language, and gibes from
inferiors, whether wantonly or justly uttered, and rebukes vainly and
idly spoken both by rulers and the ruled—this is what few can bear, in
fact only one or two here and there; and one may see men, who are strong
in the former exercises, so completely upset by these things, as to
become more furious than the most savage beasts. Now such men especially
we should exclude from the precincts of the priesthood. For if a prelate
did not loathe food, or go barefoot, no harm would be done to the common
interests of the Church; but a furious temper causes great disasters
both to him who possesses it, and to his neighbours. And there is no
divine threat against those who fail to do the things referred to, but
hell and hell-fire are threatened against those who are angry without a
cause. As then the lover of vainglory, when he takes upon him the
government of numbers, sup plies additional fuel to the fire, so he who
by himself, or in the company of a few, is unable to control his anger,
but readily carried away by it, should he be entrusted with the
direction of a whole multitude, like some wild beast goaded on all sides
by countless tormentors, would never be able to live in tranquillity
himself, and would cause incalculable mischief to those who have been
committed to his charge.
14. For nothing clouds the purity of the reason, and the perspicuity
of the mental vision so much as undisciplined wrath, rushing along with
violent impetuosity. "For wrath," says one, "destroys
even the prudent." For the eye of the soul being darkened as in
some nocturnal battle is not able to distinguish friends from foes, nor
the honorable from the unworthy, but handles them all in turn in the
same way; even if some harm must be suffered, readily enduring
everything, in order to satisfy the pleasure of the soul. For the fire
of wrath is a kind of pleasure, and tyrannizes over the soul more
harshly than pleasure, completely upsetting its healthy organization.
For it easily impels men to arrogance, and unseasonable enmities, and
unreasonable hatred, and it continually makes them ready to commit
wanton and vain offences; and forces them to say and do many other
things of that kind, the soul being swept along by the rush of passion,
and having nothing on which to fasten its strength and resist so great
an impulse.
BASIL : I will not endure this irony of yours any longer: for
who knows not how far removed you are from this infirmity?
CHRYSOSTOM : Why then, my good friend, do you wish to bring me
near the pyre, and to provoke the wild beast when he is tranquil? Are
you not aware that I have achieved this condition, not by any innate
virtue, but by my love of retirement? and that when one who is so
constituted remains contented by himself, or only associates with one or
two friends, he is able to escape the fire which arises from this
passion, but not if he has plunged into the abyss of all these cares?
for then he drags not only himself but many others with him to the brink
of destruction, and renders them more indifferent to all consideration
for mildness. For the mass of people under government are generally
inclined to regard the manners of those who govern as a kind of model
type, and to assimilate themselves to them. How then could any one put a
stop to their fury when he is swelling himself with rage? And who
amongst the multitude would straightway desire to become moderate when
he sees the ruler irritable? For it is quite impossible for the defects
of priests to be concealed, but even trifling ones speedily become
manifest. So an athlete, as long as he remains at home, and contends
with no one, can dissemble his weakness even if it be very great, but
when he strips for the contest he is easily detected. And thus for some
who live this private and inactive life, their isolation serves as a
veil to hide their defects; but when they have been brought into public
they are compelled to divest themselves of this mantle of seclusion, and
to lay bare their souls to all through their visible movements. As
therefore their right deeds profit many, by provoking them to equal
zeal, so their shortcomings make men more indifferent to the practice of
virtue, and encourage them to indolence in their endeavours after what
is excellent. Wherefore his soul ought to gleam with beauty on every
side, that it may be able to gladden and to enlighten the souls of those
who behold it. For the faults of ordinary men, being committed as it
were in the dark, ruin only those who practise them: but the errors of a
man in a conspicuous position, and known to many, inflicts a common
injury upon all, rendering those who have fallen more supine in their
efforts for good, and driving to desperation those who wish to take heed
to themselves. And apart from these things, the faults of insignificant
men, even if they are exposed, inflict no injury worth speaking of upon
any one: but they who occupy the highest seat of honor are in the first
place plainly visible to all, and if they err in the smallest matters
these trifles seem great to others: for all men measure the sin, not by
the magnitude of the offence, but by the rank of the offender. Thus the
priest ought to be protected on all sides by a kind of adamantine armour,
by intense earnestness, and perpetual watchfulness concerning his manner
of life, lest some one discovering an exposed and neglected spot should
inflict a deadly wound: for all who surround him are ready to smite and
overthrow him: not enemies only and adversaries, but many even of those
who profess friendship.
The souls therefore of men elected to the priesthood ought to be
endued with such power as the grace of God bestowed on the bodies of
those saints who were cast into the Babylonian furnace. Faggot and pitch
and tow are not the fuel of this fire, but things far more dreadful: for
it is no material fire to which they are subjected, but the
all-devouring flame of envy encompasses them, rising up on every side,
and assailing them, and putting their life to a more searching test than
the fire then was to the bodies of those young men. When then it finds a
little trace of stubble, it speedily fastens upon it; and this unsound
part it entirely consumes, but all the rest of the fabric, even if it be
brighter than the sunbeams, is scorched and blackened by the smoke. For
as long as the life of the priest is well regulated in every direction,
it is invulnerable to plots; but if he happens to overlook some trifle,
as is natural in a human being, traversing the treacherous ocean of this
life, none of his other good deeds are of any avail in enabling him to
escape the mouths of his accusers; but that little blunder overshadows
all the rest. And all men are ready to pass judgment on the priest as if
he was not a being clothed with flesh, or one who inherited a human
nature, but like an angel, and emancipated from every species of
infirmity. And just as all men fear and flatter a tyrant as long as he
is strong, because they cannot put him down, but when they see his
affairs going adversely, those who were his friends a short time before
abandon their hypocritical respect, and suddenly become his enemies and
antagonists, and having discovered all his weak points, make an attack
upon him, and depose him from the government; so is it also in the case
of priests. Those who honored him and paid court to him a short time
before, while he was strong, as soon as they have found some little
handle eagerly prepare to depose him, not as a tyrant only, but
something far more dreadful than that. And as the tyrant fears his body
guards, so also does the priest dread most of all his neighbours and
fellow-ministers. For no others covet his dignity so much, or know his
affairs so well as these; and if anything occurs, being near at hand,
they perceive it before others, and even if they slander him, can easily
command belief, and, by magnifying trifles, take their victim captive.
For the apostolic saying is reversed, "whether one member suffer,
all the members suffer with it; or one member be honored, all the
members rejoice with it;" unless indeed a man should be able by his
great discretion to stand his ground against everything.
Are you then for sending me forth into so great a warfare? and did
you think that my soul would be equal to a contest so various in
character and shape? Whence did you learn this, and from whom? If God
certified this to you, show me the oracle, and I obey; but if you
cannot, and form your judgment from human opinion only, please to set
yourself free from this delusion. For in what concerns my own affairs it
is fairer to trust me than others; inasmuch as "no man knoweth the
things of a man, save the spirit of man which is in him." That I
should have made myself and my electors ridiculous, had I accepted this
office, and should with great loss have returned to this condition of
life in which I now am, I trust I have now convinced you by these
remarks, if not before. For not malice only, but something much stronger—the
lust after this dignity—is wont to arm many against one who possesses
it. And just as avaricious children are oppressed by the old age of
their parents, so some of these, when they see the priestly office held
by any one for a protracted time—since it would be wickedness to
destroy him—hasten to depose him from it, being all desirous to take
his place, and each expecting that the dignity will be transferred to
himself.
15. Would you like me to show you yet another phase of this strife,
charged with innumerable dangers? Come, then, and take a peep at the
public festivals when it is generally the custom for elections to be
made to ecclesiastical dignities, and you will then see the priest
assailed with accusations as numerous as the people whom he rules. For
all who have the privilege of conferring the honor are then split into
many parties; and one can never find the council of elders of one mind
with each other, or about the man who has won the prelacy; but each
stands apart from the others, one preferring this man, another that. Now
the reason is that they do not all look to one thing, which ought to be
the only object kept in view, the excellence of the character; but other
qualifications are alleged as recommending to this honor; for instance,
of one it is said, "let him be elected because he belongs to an
illustrious family," of another "because he is possessed of
great wealth, and would not need to be supported out of the revenues of
the Church," of a third "because he has come over from the
camp of the adversary;" one is eager to give the preference to a
man who is on terms of intimacy with himself, another to the man who is
related to him by birth, a third to the flatterer, but no one will look
to the man who is really qualified, or make some test of his character.
Now I am so far from thinking these things trustworthy criteria of a
man's fitness for the priesthood, that even if any one manifested great
piety, which is no small help in the discharge of that office, I should
not venture to approve him on that account alone, unless he happened to
combine good abilities with his piety. For I know many men who have
exercised perpetual restraint upon themselves, and consumed themselves
with fastings, who, as long as they were suffered to be alone, and
attend to their own concerns, have been acceptable to God, and day by
day have made no small addition to this kind of learning; but as soon as
they entered public life, and were compelled to correct the ignorance of
the multitude, have, some of them, proved from the outset incompetent
for so great a task, and others when forced to persevere in it, have
abandoned their former strict way of living, and thus inflicted great
injury on themselves without profiting others at all. And if any one
spent his whole time in the lowest rank of the ministry, and reached
extreme old age, I would not, merely out of reverence for his years,
promote him to the higher dignity; for what if, after arriving at that
time of life, he should still remain unfit for the office? And I say
this now, not as wishing to dishonor the grey head, nor as laying down a
law absolutely to exclude from this authority those who come from the
monastic circle (for there are instances of many who issued from that
body, having shone conspicuously in this dignity); but the point which I
am anxious to prove is, that if neither piety of itself, nor advanced
age, would suffice to show that a man who had obtained the priesthood
really deserved it, the reasons formerly alleged would scarcely effect
this. There are also men who bring forward other pretexts yet more
absurd; for some are enrolled in the ranks of the clergy, that they may
not range themselves among opponents, and others on account of their
evil disposition, lest they should do great mischief if they are
overlooked. Could anything be more contrary to right rule than this?
that bad men, laden with iniquity, should be courted on account of those
things for which they ought to be punished, and ascend to the priestly
dignity on account of things for which they ought to be debarred from
the very threshold of the Church. Tell me, then, shall we seek any
further the cause of God's wrath when we expose things so holy and awful
to be defiled by men who are either wicked or worthless? for when some
men are entrusted with the administration of things which are not at all
suitable to them, and others of things which exceed their natural power,
they make the condition of the Church like that of Euripus.
Now formerly I used to deride secular rulers, because in the
distribution of their honors they are not guided by considerations of
moral excellence, but of wealth, and seniority, and human distinction;
but when I heard that this kind of folly had forced its way into our
affairs also, I no longer regarded their conduct as so atrocious. For
what wonder is it that worldly men, who love the praise of the
multitude, and do everything for the sake of gain, should commit these
sins, when those who affect at least to be free from all these
influences are in no wise better disposed than they, but although
engaged in a contest for heavenly things, act as if the question
submitted for decision was one which concerned acres of land, or
something else of that kind? for they take commonplace men off-hand, and
set them to preside over those things, for the sake of which the only
begotten Son of God did not refuse to empty Himself of His glory and
become man, and take the form of a servant, and be spat upon, and
buffeted, and die a death of reproach in the flesh. Nor do they stop
even here, but add to these offences others still more monstrous; for
not only do they elect unworthy men, but actually expel those who are
well qualified. As if it were necessary to ruin the safety of the Church
on both sides, or as if the former provocation were not sufficient to
kindle the wrath of God, they have contrived yet another not less
pernicious. For I consider it as atrocious to expel the useful men as to
force in the useless. And this in fact takes place, so that the flock of
Christ is unable to find consolation in any direction, or draw its
breath freely. Now do not such deeds deserve to be punished by ten
thousand thunder- bolts, and a hell-fire hotter than that with which we
are threatened [in Holy Scripture]? Yet these monstrous evils are borne
with by Him who willeth not the death of a sinner, that he may be
converted and live. And how can one sufficiently marvel at His
lovingkindness, and be amazed at His mercy? They who belong to Christ
destroy the property of Christ more than enemies and adversaries, yet
the good Lord still deals gently with them, and calls them to
repentance. Glory be to Thee, O Lord! Glory to Thee! How vast is the
depth of Thy lovingkindness! how great the riches of Thy forbearance!
Men who on account of Thy name have risen from insignificance and
obscurity to positions of honor and distinction, use the honor they
enjoy against Him who has bestowed it, do deeds of outrageous audacity,
and insult holy things, rejecting and expelling men of zeal in order
that the wicked may ruin everything at their pleasure in much security,
and with the utmost fearlessness. And if you would know the causes of
this dreadful evil, you will find that they are similar to those which
were mentioned before; for they have one root and mother, so to say—namely,
envy; but this is manifested in several different forms: For one we are
told is to be struck out of the list of candidates, because he is young;
another because he does not know how to flatter; a third because he has
offended such and such a person; a fourth lest such and such a man
should be pained at seeing one whom he has presented rejected, and this
man elected; a fifth because he is kind and gentle; a sixth because he
is formidable to the sinful; a seventh for some other like reason; for
they are at no loss to find as many pretexts as they want, and can even
make the abundance of a man's wealth an objection when they have no
other. Indeed they would be capable of discovering other reasons, as
many as they wish, why a man ought not to be brought suddenly to this
honor, but gently and gradually. And here I should like to ask the
question, "What, then, is the prelate to do, who has to contend
with such blasts? How shall he hold his ground against such billows? How
shall he repel all these assaults?"
For if he manages the business upon upright principles, all those who
are enemies and adversaries both to him and to the candidates do
everything with a view to contention, provoking daily strife, and
heaping infinite scorn upon the candidates, until they have got them
struck off the list, or have introduced their own favorites. In fact it
is just as if some pilot had pirates sailing with him in his ship,
perpetually plotting every hour against him, and the sailors, and
marines. And if he should prefer favor with such men to his own
salvation, accepting unworthy candidates, he will have God for his enemy
in their stead; and what could be more dreadful than that? And yet his
relations with them will be more embarrassing than formerly, as they
will all combine with each other, and thereby become more powerful than
before. For as when fierce winds coming from opposite directions clash
with one another, the ocean, hitherto calm, becomes suddenly furious and
raises its crested waves, destroying those who are sailing over it, so
also when the Church has admitted corrupt men, its once tranquil surface
is covered with rough surf and strewn with shipwrecks.
16. Consider, then, what kind of man he ought to be who is to hold
out against such a tempest, and to manage skillfully such great
hindrances to the common welfare; for he ought to be dignified yet free
from arrogance, formidable yet kind, apt to command yet sociable,
impartial yet courteous, humble yet not servile, strong yet gentle, in
order that he may contend successfully against all these difficulties.
And he ought to bring forward with great authority the man who is
properly qualified for the office, even if all should oppose him, and
with the same authority to reject the man who is not so qualified, even
if all should conspire in his favor, and to keep one aim only in view,
the building up of the Church, in nothing actuated either by enmity or
favor. Well, do you now think that I acted reasonably in declining the
ministry of this office? But I have not even yet gone through all my
reasons with you; for I have some others still to mention. And do not
grow impatient of listening to a friendly and sincere man, who wishes to
clear himself from your accusations; for these statements are not only
serviceable for the defence which you have to make on my behalf, but
they will also prove of no small help for the due administration of the
office. For it is necessary for one who is going to enter upon this path
of life to investigate all matters thoroughly well, before he sets his
hand to the ministry. Do you ask why? Because one who knows all things
clearly will have this advantage, if no other, that he will not feel
strange when these things befall him. Would you like me then to approach
the question of superintending widows, first of all, or of the care of
virgins, or the difficulty of the judicial function. For in each of
these cases there is a different kind of anxiety, and the fear is
greater than the anxiety.
Now in the first place, to start from that subject which seems to be
simpler than the others, the charge of widows appears to cause anxiety
to those who take care of them only so far as the expenditure of money
is concerned; but the case is otherwise, and here also a careful
scrutiny is needed, when they have to be enrolled, for infinite mischief
has been caused by putting them on the list without due discrimination.
For they have ruined households, and severed marriages, and have often
been detected in thieving and pilfering and unseemly deeds of that kind.
Now that such women should be supported out of the Church's revenues
provokes punishment from God, and extreme condemnation among men, and
abates the zeal of those who wish to do good. For who would ever choose
to expend the wealth which he was commanded to give to Christ upon those
who defame the name of Christ? For these reasons a strict and curate
scrutiny ought to be made so as to prevent the supply of the indigent
being wasted, not only by the women already mentioned, but also by those
who are able to provide for themselves. And this scrutiny is succeeded
by no small anxiety of another kind, to ensure an abundant and unfailing
stream of supply as from a fountain; for compulsory poverty is an
insatiable kind of evil, querulous and ungrateful. And great discretion
and great zeal is required so as to stop the mouths of complainers,
depriving them of every excuse. Now most men, when they see any one
superior to the love of money, forthwith represent him as well qualified
for this stewardship. But I do not think that this greatness of soul is
ever sufficient of itself, although it ought to be possessed prior to
all other qualities; for without this a man would be a destroyer rather
than a protector, a wolf instead of a shepherd; nevertheless, combined
with this, the possession of another quality also should be demanded.
And this quality is forbearance, the cause of all good things in men,
impelling as it were and conducting the soul into a serene haven. For
widows are a class who, both on account of their poverty, their age and
natural disposition, indulge in unlimited freedom of speech (so I had
best call it); and they make an unseasonable clamor and idle complaints
and lamentations about matters for which they ought to be grateful, and
bring accusations concerning things which they ought contentedly to
accept. Now the superintendent should endure all these things in a
generous spirit, and not be provoked either by their unreasonable
annoyance or their unreasonable complaints. For this class of persons
deserve to be pitied for their misfortunes, not to be insulted; and to
trample upon their calamities, and add the pain of insult to that which
poverty brings, would be an act of extreme brutality. On this account
one of the wisest of men, having regard to the avarice and pride of
human nature, and considering the nature of poverty and its terrible
power to depress even the noblest character, and induce it often to act
in these same respects without shame, in order that a man should not be
irritated when accused, nor be provoked by continual importunity to
become an enemy where he ought to bring aid, he instructs him to be
affable and accessible to the suppliant, saying, "Incline thine ear
to a poor man and give him a friendly answer with meekness." And
passing by the case of one who succeeds in exasperating (for what can
one say to him who is overcome?), he addresses the man who is able to
bear the other's infirmity, exhorting him before he bestows his gift to
correct the suppliant by the gentleness of his countenance and the
mildness of his words. But if any one, although he does not take the
property (of these widows), nevertheless loads them with innumerable
reproaches, and insults them, and is exasperated against them, he not
only fails through his gift to alleviate the despondency produced by
poverty, but aggravates the distress by his abuse. For although they may
be compelled to act very shamelessly through the necessity of hunger,
they are nevertheless distressed at this compulsion. When, then, owing
to the dread of famine, they are constrained to beg, and owing to their
begging are constrained to put off shame, and then again on account of
their shamelessness are insulted, the power of despondency becoming of a
complex kind, and accompanied by much gloom, settles down upon the soul.
And one who has the charge of these persons ought to be so
long-suffering, as not only not to increase their despondency by his
fits of anger, but also to remove the greater part of it by his
exhortation. For as the man who has been insulted, although he is in the
enjoyment of great abundance, does not feel the advantage of his wealth,
on account of the blow which he has received from the insult; so on the
other hand, the man who has been addressed with kindly words, and for
whom the gift has been accompanied with encouragement, exults and
rejoices all the more, and the thing given becomes doubled in value
through the manner in which it is offered. And this I say not of myself,
but borrow from him whose precept I quoted just now: "My son,
blemish not thy good deeds, neither use uncomfortable words when thou
givest anything. Shall not the dew assuage the heat? So is a word better
than a gift. Lo! is not a word better than a gift? but both are with a
gracious man."
But the superintendent of these persons ought not only to be gentle
and forbearing, but also skillful in the management of property; for if
this qualification is wanting, the affairs of the poor are again
involved in the same distress. One who was entrusted not long ago with
this ministry, and got together a large hoard of money, neither consumed
it himself, nor expended it with a few exceptions upon those who needed
it, but kept the greater part of it buried in the earth until a season
of distress occurred, when it was all surrendered into the bands of the
enemy. Much forethought, therefore, is needed, that the resources of the
Church should be neither over abundant, nor deficient, but that all the
supplies which are provided should be quickly distributed among those
who require them, and the treasures of the Church stored up in the
hearts of those who are under her rule.
Moreover, in the reception of strangers, and the care of the sick,
consider how great an expenditure of money is needed, and how much
exactness and discernment on the part of those who preside over these
matters. For it is often necessary that this expenditure should be even
larger than that of which I spoke just now, and that he who presides
over it should combine prudence and wisdom with skill in the art of
supply, so as to |