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JOHN vii. 37, 38.
"In the last day, the great day of the feast, Jesus stood and
cried, saying, If any man thirst, let him come unto Me, and
drink. He that believeth on Me, as the Scripture hath said, out of
his belly shall flow rivers of living water."
1. They who come to the divine preaching and give heed to the faith,
must manifest the desire of thirsty men for water, and kindle in
themselves a similar longing; so will they be able also very carefully
to retain what is said. For as thirsty men, when they have taken a
bowl, eagerly drain it and then desist, so too they who hear the
divine oracles if they receive them thirsting, will never be weary
until they have drunk them up. For to show that men ought ever to
thirst and hunger, "Blessed," It saith, "are they which do
hunger and thirst after righteousness" (Matt. v. 6); and here
Christ saith, "If any man thirst, let him come unto Me, and
drink." What He saith is of this kind, "I draw no man to Me by
necessity and constraint; but if any hath great zeal, if any is
inflamed with desire, him I call."
But why hath the Evangelist remarked that it was "on the last day,
that great day"? For both the first day and the last were "great,"
while the intermediate days they spent rather in enjoyment. Wherefore
then saith he, "in the last day"? Because on that day they were all
collected together. For on the first day He came not, and told the
reason to His brethren, nor yet on the second and third days saith He
anything of this kind, lest His words should come to nought, the
hearers being about to run into indulgence. But on the last day when
they were returning home He giveth them supplies for their salvation,
and crieth aloud, partly by this showing to us His boldness, and
partly for the greatness of the multitude. And to show that He spake
not of material drink, He addeth, "He that believeth on Me, as
the Scripture hath said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living
water." By "belly" he here meaneth the heart, as also in another
place It saith, "And Thy Law in the midst of my belly." (Ps.
xl. 10; Theodotion.) But where hath the Scripture said, that
"rivers of living water shall flow from his belly"? Nowhere. What
then meaneth, "He that believeth on Me, as the Scripture saith"?
Here we must place a stop, so that the, "rivers shall flow from his
belly," may be an assertion of Christ. For because many said,
"This is the Christ"; and, "When the Christ cometh will He do
more miracles?" He showeth that it behooveth to have a correct
knowledge, and to be convinced not so much from the miracles as from
the Scriptures. Many, in fact, who even saw Him working marvels
received Him not as Christ, and were ready to say, "Do not the
Scriptures say that Christ cometh of the seed of David?" and on
this they continually dwelt. He then, desiring to show that He did
not shun the proof from the Scriptures, again referreth them to the
Scriptures. He had said before, "Search the Scriptures" (c.
v. 39); and again, "It is written in the Prophets, And they
shall be taught of God" (c. vi. 45); and, "Moses accuseth
you" (c. v. 45); and here," As the Scripture hath said,
rivers shall flow from his belly," alluding to the largeness and
abundance of grace. As in another place He saith, "A well of water
springing up unto eternal life" (c. iv. 14), that is to say,
"he shall possess much grace"; and elsewhere He calleth it,
"eternal life," but here, "living water." He calleth that
"living" which ever worketh; for the grace of the Spirit, when it
hath entered into the mind and hath been established, springeth up more
than any fountain, faileth not, becometh not empty, stayeth not. To
signify therefore at once its unfailing supply and unlimited operation,
He hath called it "a well" and "rivers," not one river but
numberless; and in the former case He hath represented its abundance
by the expression, "springing." And one may clearly perceive what
is meant, if he will consider the wisdom of Stephen, the tongue of
Peter, the vehemence of Paul how nothing bare, nothing withstood
them, not the anger of multitudes, not the risings up of tyrants, not
the plots of devils, not daily deaths, but as rivers borne along with
a great rushing sound, so they went on their way hurrying all things
with them.
Ver. 39. "But this spake He of the Spirit, which they that
believe on Him should receive; for the Holy Ghost was not yet
given."
2. How then did the Prophets prophesy and work those ten thousand
wonders? For the Apostles cast not out devils by the Spirit, but by
power received from Him; as He saith Himself, "If I by
Beelzebub cast out devils, by whom do your children cast them out?"
(Matt. xii. 27.) And this He said, signifying that before the
Crucifixion not all cast out devils by the Spirit, but that some did
so by the power received from Him. So when He was about to send
them, He said, "Receive ye the Holy Ghost" (c. xx. 22);
and again, "The Holy Ghost came upon them" (Acts xix. 6),
and then they wrought miracles. But when He was sending them, the
Scripture said not, that "He gave to them the Holy Ghost," but
that He gave to them "power," saying, "Cleanse the lepers, cast
out devils, raise the dead, freely ye have received, freely give."
(Matt. x. 1, 8.) But in the case of the Prophets, all allow
that the Gift was that of the Holy Spirit. But this Grace was
stinted and departed and failed from off the earth, from the day in
which it was said, "Your house is left unto you desolate" (Matt.
xxiii. 38); and even before that day its dearth had begun, for
there was no longer any prophet among them, nor did Grace visit their
holy things. Since then the Holy Ghost had been withheld, but was
for the future to be shed forth abundantly, and since the beginning of
this imparting was after the Crucifixion, not only as to its
abundance, but also as to the increased greatness of the gifts, (for
the Gift was more marvelous, as when It saith, "Ye know not what
Spirit ye are of" (Luke ix. 55); and again, "For ye have not
received the Spirit of bondage, but the Spirit of adoption" (Rom.
viii. 15); and the men of old possessed the Spirit themselves,
but imparted It not to others, while the Apostles filled tens of
thousands with It,) since then, I say, they were to receive this
Gift, but It was not yet given, for this cause he addeth, "The
Holy Ghost was not yet." Since then the Lord spoke of this grace,
the Evangelist hath said, "For the Holy Ghost was not yet," that
is, "was not yet given,"
"Because Jesus was not yet glorified."
Calling the Cross, "glory." For since we were enemies, and had
sinned, and fallen short of the gift of God, and were haters of
God, and since grace was a proof of our reconciliation, and since a
gift is not given to those who are hated, but to friends and those who
have been well-pleasing; it was therefore necessary that the
Sacrifice should first be offered for us, that the enmity (against
God) which was in our flesh should be done away, that we should
become friends of God, and so receive the Gift. For if this was
done with respect to the promise made to Abraham, much more with
respect to grace. And this Paul hath declared, saying, "If they
which are of the Law be heirs, faith is made void--because the Law
worketh wrath." (Rom. iv. 14, 15.) What he saith, is of
this kind: God "promised that He would give the earth to Abraham
and to his seed: but his descendants were unworthy of the promise, and
of their own deeds could not be well-pleasing unto God. On this
account came in faith, an easy action, that it might draw grace unto
it, and that the promise might not fail. And It saith, "Therefore
it is of faith, that it might be by grace, to the end the promise
might be sure." (Rom. iv. 16.) Wherefore it is by grace,
since by their own labors they prevailed not.
But wherefore after saying, "according to the Scriptures," did He
not add the testimony? Because their mind was corrupt; for, Ver.
40-42. "Some said, This is the Prophet. Others said, He
deceiveth the people; others said, Christ cometh not from Galilee,
but from the village of Bethlehem."
Others said, "When Christ cometh, no man knoweth whence He is"
(ver. 27); and there was a difference of opinion, as might be
expected in a confused multitude; for not attentively did they listen
to His words, nor for the sake of learning. Wherefore He maketh
them no answer; yet they said, "Doth Christ come out of
Galilee?" And He had praised, as being "an Israelite indeed,"
Nathanael, who had said in a more forcible and striking manner,
"Can there any good thing come out of Nazareth?" (c. i. 46.)
But then these men, and they who said to Nicodemus, "Search and
look, for out of Galilee ariseth no prophet" (ver. 52), said it
not seeking to learn, but merely to overturn the opinion concerning
Christ. Nathanael said this, being a lover of the truth, and
knowing exactly all the ancient histories; but they looked only to one
thing, and that was to remove the opinion that He was the Christ, on
which account He revealed nothing to them. For they who even
contradicted themselves, and said at one time, "No man knoweth
whence He cometh," at another, "From Bethlehem," would
manifestly even if they had been informed have opposed Him. For be it
that they knew not the place of His birth, that He was from
Bethlehem, because of His dwelling in Nazareth, (yet this cannot
be allowed, for He was not born there,) were they ignorant of His
race also, that He was "of the house and lineage of David"? How
then said they, "Doth not Christ come of the seed of David?"
(Ver. 42.) Because they wished to conceal even this fact by that
question, saying all that they said with malicious intent. Why did
they not come to Him and say, "Since we admire thee in other
respects, and thou biddest us believe thee according to the
Scriptures, tell us how it is that the Scriptures say that Christ
must come from Bethlehem, when thou art come from Galilee?" But
they said nothing of the kind, but all in malice. And to show that
they spoke not enquiringly, nor as desiring to learn, the Evangelist
straightway hath added, that, Ver. 44. "Some of them would have
taken Him, but no man laid his hand upon Him."
This, if nothing else, might have been sufficient to cause
compunction in them, but they felt it not, as the Prophet saith,
"They were cleft asunder, and were not pricked in heart." (Ps.
xxxv. 15, LXX.)
3. Such a thing is malice! it will give way to nothing, it looks to
one thing only, and that is, to destroy the person against whom it
plotteth. But what saith the Scripture? "Whoso diggeth a pit for
his neighbor, shall fill into it himself." (Prov. xxvi. 27.)
Which was the case then. For they desired to kill Him, to stop, as
they thought, His preaching; the result was the opposite. For the
preaching flourishes by the grace of Christ, while all that was theirs
is quenched and perished; they have lost their country, their
freedom, their security, their worship, they have been deprived of
all their prosperity, and are become slaves and captives.
Knowing then this, let us never plot against others, aware that by so
doing we whet the sword against ourselves, and inflict upon ourselves
the deeper wound. Hath any one grieved thee, and desireth thou to
avenge thyself on him? Avenge not thyself; so shalt thou be able to
be avenged; but if thou avenge thyself, thou art not avenged. Think
not that this is a riddle, but a true saying. "How, and in what
way?" Because if thou avenge not thyself on him, thou makest God
his enemy; but if thou avenge thyself, no longer so. "Vengeance is
Mine, I will repay, saith the Lord." (Rom. xii. 19.) For
if we have servants, and they having quarreled with each other, do not
give place to us for judgment and for punishment, but take it upon
themselves; though they come to us ten thousand times, we not only
shall not avenge them, but shall even be wroth with them, saying,
"Thou runaway, thou flogging-post, thou oughtest to have submitted
all to us, but since thou hast prevented us and avenged thyself,
trouble us no farther"; much more shall God, who hath bidden us
commit all unto Him, say this. For how can it be otherwise than
absurd, when we demand from our servants so much minding of wisdom and
obedience, but will not yield to our Master in those matters in which
we desire our domestics to yield to us? This I say because of your
readiness to inflict punishment one upon another. The truly wise man
ought not to do this even, but to pardon and forgive offenses, though
there were not that great reward proposed, the receiving in return
forgiveness. For, tell me, if thou condemnest one who hath sinned,
wherefore dost thou sin thyself, and fall into the same fault? Hath
he insulted? Insult not thou again, or thou hast insulted thyself.
Hath he struck? Strike not thou again, for then there is no
difference between you. Hath he vexed thee? Vex him not again, for
the profit is nothing, and thou wilt in thy turn be placed on an
equality with those who have wronged thee. Thus, if thou bear with
meekness and gentleness, thou shall be able to reprove thine enemy, to
shame him, to weary him of being wroth. No man cures evil with evil,
but evil with good. These rules of wisdom give some of the heathen;
now if there be such wisdom among the foolish heathen, let us be
ashamed to show ourselves inferior to them. Many of them have been in
jured, and have borne it; many have been maliciously accused, and not
defended themselves; have been plotted against, anti have repaid by
benefits. And there is no small fear lest some of them be found in
their lives to be greater than we, and so render our punishment
severer. For when we who have partaken of the Spirit, we who look
for the Kingdom, who follow wisdom for the sake of heavenly things,
who fear (not) hell, and are bidden to become angels, who enjoy the
Mysteries; when we reach not to the virtue unto which they have
attained, what pardon shall we have? If we must go beyond the Jews,
(for, "Except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of
the Scribes and Pharisees, ye shall in no case enter into the
Kingdom of Heaven"--Matt. v. 20,) much more the heathen; if
the Pharisees, much more the unbelievers. Since if when we go not
beyond the righteousness of the Jews, the Kingdom is shut against
us, how shall we be able to attain unto it when we prove ourselves
worse than the heathen? Let us then cast out all bitterness, and
wrath, and anger. To speak "the same things, to me indeed is not
grievous, but for you it is safe," (Phil. iii. 1.) For
physicians also often use the same remedy, and we will not cease from
sounding the same things in your ears, reminding, teaching,
exhorting, for great is the tumult of worldly things, and it causes in
us forgetfulness, and we have need of continual teaching. Let us
then, in order that we meet not together in this place uselessly and in
vain, exhibit the proof which is by works, that so we may obtain the
good things to come, through the grace and lovingkindness of our Lord
Jesus Christ, by whom and with whom, to the Father and the Holy
Ghost be glory. now and ever and world without end. Amen.
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