|
JOHN V. 39,
" Search the Scriptures; for in them ye think ye have eternal life;
and they are they which testify of Me. And ye will not come to Me
that ye might have [eternal] life."
1. Beloved, let us make great account of spiritual things, and not
think that it is sufficient for us to salvation to pursue them anyhow.
For if in things of this life a man can gain no great profit if he
conduct them in an indifferent and chance way, much more will this be
the case in spiritual things, since these require yet greater
attention. Wherefore Christ when He referred the Jews to the
Scriptures, sent them not to a mere reading, but a careful and
considerate s search; for He said not, "Read the Scriptures,"
but, "Search the Scriptures." Since the sayings relating to Him
required great attention, (for they had been concealed froth the
beginning for the advantage of the men of that time,) He biddeth them
now dig down with care that they might be able to discover what lay in
the depth below. These sayings were not on the surface, nor were they
cast forth to open view, but lay like some treasure hidden very deep.
Now he that searcheth for hidden things, except he seek them with care
and toil, will never find the object of his search. For which cause
He said, "Search the Scriptures, because in them ye think ye have
eternal life." He said not, "Ye have," but "ye think,"
showing that they gained from them nothing great or high, expecting as
they did to be saved by the mere reading, without the addi tion of
faith. What He saith therefore is of this kind: "Do ye not admire
the Scriptures, do ye not think that they are the causes of all life?
By these I confirm My claims now, for they are they which testify of
Me, yet ye will not come to Me that ye may have eternal life." It
was thus with good reason that He said, "ye think, because they
would not obey, but merely prided themselves on the bare reading.
Then lest owing to His very tender care He should incur among them
the suspicion of vainglory, and because He desired to be believed by
them, should be deemed to be seeking His own; (for He reminded them
of the words of John, and of the witness of God, and of His own
works, and said all He could to draw them to Him, and promised them
"life"; since, I say, it was likely that many would suspect that
He spake these things from a desire of glory, hear what He saith:
Ver. 41. "I receive not honor from men."
That is, "I need it not": "My nature," He saith, "is not of
such a kind as to need the honor which is from men, for if the sun can
receive no addition from the light of a candle, much farther am I from
needing the honor which is from men." "Why then," asks some one,
"sayest thou these things, if thou needest it not?" "That ye may
be saved." This He positively asserted above, and the same He
implied here also, by saying, "that ye might have life."
Moreover, He putteth another reason:
Ver. 42. "But I know you that ye have not the love of God in
you."
For when under pretense of loving God they persecuted Him because He
made Himself equal with God, and He knew that they would not believe
Him, lest any one should ask, "why speakest thou these words?"
"I speak them," He saith, "to convict you of this, that it is
not for the love of God that ye persecute Me, if it be so that He
testifieth to Me both by works and by the Scriptures. For as before
this when ye deemed Me an enemy of God ye drove Me away, so now,
since I have declared these things, ye ought to have hastened to Me,
if ye had really loved. God. But ye love Him not. And therefore
have I spoken these words, to show that you are possessed with
excessive pride, that you are vainly boasting and shading over your own
enviousness." And the same He proveth not by these things only, but
by those that should come to pass.
Ver. 43. "I am come in My Father's name, and ye receive Me
not; if another shall come in his own name, him will ye receive."
2. Seest thou that He everywhere declareth that He hath been
"sent," that judgment hath been committed to Him by the Father,
that He can do nothing of Himself, in order that He may cut off all
excuse for their unfairness? But who is it that He here saith shall
come "in his own name"? He alludeth here to Antichrist, and
putteth an incontrovertible proof of their unfairness. "For if as
loving God ye persecute Me, much more ought this to have taken place
in the case of Antichrist. For he will neither say that he is sent by
the Father, nor that he cometh according to his will, but in
everything contrariwise, seizing like a tyrant what belongeth not to
him, and asserting that he is the very God over all, as Paul saith,
'Exalting himself above all that is called God, or that is
worshiped, showing himself that he is God.' (2 Thess. ii.
14.) This is to 'come in his own name.' I do not so, but am
come in the Name of My Father." That they received not One who
said that He was sent of God, was a sufficient proof that they loved
not God; but now from the contrary of this fact, from their being
about to receive Antichrist, He showeth their shamelessness. For
when they received not One who asserteth that He was sent by God,
and are about to worship one who knoweth Him not, and who saith that
he is God over all, it is clear that their persecution proceeded from
malice and from hating God. On this account He putteth two reasons
for His words; and first the kinder one, "That ye may be saved";
and, "That ye may have life": and when they would have mocked at
Him, He putteth the other which was more striking, showing that even
although His hearers should not believe, yet that God was wont always
to do His own works. Now Paul speaking concerning Antichrist said
prophetically, that "God shall send them strong delusion,--that
they all might be judged who believed not the truth, but had pleasure
in unrighteousness." (2 Thess. ii. 11, 12.) Christ said
not, "He shall come"; but, "if He come," from tenderness for
His hearers; and because all their obstinacy was not yet complete.
He was silent as to the reason of His coming; but Paul, for those
who can understand, has particularly alluded to it. For it is he who
taketh away all excuse from them.
Christ then putteth also the cause of their unbelief, saying, Ver.
44. "How can ye believe, which receive honor one of another, and
seek not the honor that cometh from God only?"
Hence again He showeth that they looked not to the things of God,
but that under this pretense they desired to gratify private feeling,
and were so far from doing this on account of
His glory, that they preferred honor from men to that which cometh
from Him. How then were they likely to entertain such hostility
towards Him for a kind of honor which they so despised, as to prefer
to it the honor which cometh from men?
Having told them that they had not the love of God, and having proved
it by what was doing in His case, and by what should be in the case of
Antichrist, and having demonstrated that they were deprived of all
excuse, He next bringeth Moses to be their accuser, going on to
say, Ver. 45-47. "Do not think that I will accuse you to the
Father; there is one that accuseth you, even Moses, in whom ye
trust. For had ye believed Moses, ye would have believed Me; for
he wrote of Me. But if ye believe not his writings, how shall ye
believe My words?"
What He saith is of this kind: "It is Moses a who has been
insulted more than I by your conduct towards Me, for ye have
disbelieved him rather than Me." See how in every way He hath cast
them out from all excuse. "Ye said that ye loved God when ye
persecuted Me; I have shown that ye did so from hatred of Him: ye
say that I break the Sabbath and annul the Law; I have rid Me of
this slander also: ye maintain that ye believe in Moses by what ye
dare to do against Me; I on the contrary show that this is most to
disbelieve in Moses; for so far am I from opposing the Law, that he
who shall accuse you is none other than the man who gave you the
Law." As then He said of the Scriptures, in which "ye think ye
have eternal life," so of Moses also He saith, "in whom ye
trust"; everywhere conquering them by their own weapons.
"And whence," saith some one, "is it clear that Moses will accuse
us, and that thou art not a boaster? What hast thou to do with
Moses? Thou hast broken the Sabbath which he ordained that we should
keep; how then should he accuse us? And how doth it appear that we
shall believe on another who cometh in his own name? All these
assertions thou makest without evidence." Now in truth all these
points are proved above. "For" (Christ would reply) "since it is
acknowledged that I came from God, both by the works, by the voice
of John, and by the testimony of the Father, it is evident that
Moses will accuse the Jews." For what saith he? "If a man come
doing miracles and leading you to God, and truly foretelling things
future, ye must hearken unto him with all readiness." Now Christ
had done all this. He wrought miracles in very truth, He drew all
men to God, and (so that He caused accomplishment to follow His
predictions.
"But whence doth it appear that they will believe another?" From
their hating Christ, since they who turn aside froth Him who cometh
according to the will of God will, it is quite plain, receive the
enemy of God. And marvel not if He now putteth forward Moses,
although He said, "I receive not witness from man," for He
referreth them not to Moses, but to the Scriptures of God.
However, since the Scriptures terrified them less, He bringeth
round His discourse to the very person (of Moses), setting over
against them their Lawgiver as their accuser, thus rendering the
terror more impressive; and each of their assertions He refuteth.
Observe: they said that they persecuted Him through love for God,
He showeth that they did so through hating God; they said that they
held fast to Moses, He showeth that they acted thus because they
believed not Moses. For had they been zealous for the law, they
ought to have received Him who fulfilled it; if they loved God they
ought to have believed One who drew them to Him, if they believed
Moses they ought to have done homage to One of whom Moses
prophesied. "But" (saith Christ) "if Moses is disbelieved
before My coming, it is nothing unlikely that I, who am heralded by
him, should be driven away by you." As then He had shown from their
conduct towards Himself that they who admired John (really) despised
him, so now He showeth that they who thought that they believed
Moses, believed him not, and turneth back on their own head all that
they thought to put forward in their own behalf. "So far," He
saith, "am I from drawing you away from the Law, that I call your
Lawgiver himself to be your accuser."
That the Scriptures testified of Him He declared, but where they
testify He added not; desiring to inspire them with greater awe, and
to prompt them to search, and to reduce them to the necessity of
questioning. For had He told them readily and without their
questioning, they would have rejected the testimony; but now, if they
gave any heed to His words, they needed first of all to ask, and
learn from Him what that testimony was. On this account He dealeth
the more largely in assertions and threats, not in proofs only, that
even so He may bring them over by fear of what He saith; but they
even so were silent. Such a thing is wickedness; whatsoever a man say
or do it is not stirred to move, but remaineth keeping its peculiar
venom.
Wherefore we must cast out all wickedness from our souls, and never
more contrive any deceit; for, saith one, "To the perverse God
sendeth crooked paths" (Prov. xxi. 8, LXX.); and, "The
holy spirit of discipline will flee deceit, and remove from thoughts
that are without understanding." (Wisd. i. 5.) For nothing
maketh men so foolish as wickedness; since when a man is treacherous,
unfair, ungrateful, (these are different forms of wickedness,) when
without having been wronged he grieves another, when he weaves
deceits, how shall he not exhibit an example of excessive folly?
Again, nothing maketh men so wise as virtue; it rendereth them
thankful and fair-minded, merciful, mild, gentle, and candid; it
is wont to be the mother of all other blessings. And what is more
understanding than one so disposed? for virtue is the very spring and
root of prudence, just as all wickedness hath its beginning in folly.
For, the insolent man and the angry become the prey of their
respective passions from lack of wisdom; on which account the prophet
said, "There l is no soundness in my flesh: my wounds stink and are
corrupt because of my foolishness" (Ps. xxxviii. 3, 4):
showing that all sin hath its beginning in folly: and so the virtuous
man who hath the fear of God is more understanding than any; wherefore
a wise man hath said, "The fear of the Lord is the beginning of
wisdom." (Prov. i. 7.) If then to fear God is to have
wisdom, and the wicked man hath not that fear, he is deprived of that
which is wisdom indeed;--and deprived of that which is wisdom
indeed, he is more foolish than any. And yet many admire the wicked
as being able to do injustice and harm, not knowing that they ought to
deem them wretched above all men, who thinking to injure others thrust
the sword against themselves;--an act of extremest folly, that a man
should strike himself and not even know that he doth so, but should
think that he is injuring another while he is killing himself.
Wherefore Paul, knowing that we slay ourselves when we smite others,
saith, "Why do ye not rather take wrong? Why do ye not rather
suffer yourselves to be defrauded?" (1 Cor. vi. 7.) For the
not suffering wrong consists in doing none, as also the not being
ill-used in not using others ill; though this assertion may seem a
riddle to the many, and to those who will not learn true wisdom.
Knowing this, let us not call wretched or lament for those who suffer
injury or insult, but for such who inflict these things; these are
they who have been most injured, who have made God to be at war with
them, and have opened the mouths of ten thousand accusers, who are
getting an evil reputation in the present life, and drawing down on
themselves severe punishment in the life to come. While those who have
been wronged by them, and have nobly borne it all, have God favorable
to them, and all to condone with, and praise, and entertain them.
Such as these in the present life, shall enjoy an exceeding good
report, as affording the strongest example of true wisdom, and in the
life to come shall share the good things everlasting; to which may we
all attain through the grace and lovingkindness of our Lord Jesus
Christ, with whom to the Father and the Holy Ghost be glory, now
and ever, and world without end. Amen.
|
|