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JOHN ix. 17, 18.
"They say unto the blind man again, What sayest thou of him, that
he hath opened thine eves? He said, He is a Prophet. The Jews
then did not believe."
1. We must go over the Scriptures not in a chance way or
carelessly, but with all exactness, that we be not entangled. Since
even now in this place one might with show of reason question, how,
when they had asserted, "This man is not of God, because he keepeth
not the Sabbath," they now say to the man, "What sayest thou of
him, that he hath opened thine eyes?" and not, "What sayest thou
of him, that he hath broken the Sabbath?" but put now that which was
the ground of the defense, not that of the accusation. What then have
we to reply? That these (who speak) are not the men who said,
"This man is not of God," but those who separated themselves from
them, who also said, "A man that is a sinner cannot do such
miracles." For desiring to silence their opponents the more, in
order that they may not seem to be partisans of Christ, they bring
forward the man who had received proof of His power, and question
him. Observe now the wisdom of the poor man, he speaketh more wisely
than them all. First he saith, "He is a Prophet"; and shrank not
from the judgment of the perverse Jews who spake against Him and
said, "How can this man be of God, not keeping the Sabbath?" but
replied to them, "He is a Prophet."
"And they did not believe that he had been blind, and received his
sight, until they had called his parents."
Observe in how many ways they attempt to obscure and take away the
miracle. But this is the nature of truth, by the very means by which
it seems to be assailed by men, by these it becomes stronger, it
shines by means of that by which it is obscured. For if these things
had not taken place, the miracle might have been suspected by the
many; but now, as if desiring to lay bare the truth, so do they use
all means, and would not have acted otherwise, supposing they had done
all in Christ's behalf. For they first attempted to cast Him down
by occasion of this mode (of cure), saying, "How opened he thine
eyes?" that is, "was it by some sorcery?" In another place also,
when they had no charge to bring against Him, they endeavored to
insult the mode of the cure, saying, "He doth not cast out devils
save by Beelzebub." (Matt. xii. 24.) And here again, when
they have nothing to say, they betake themselves to the time (of
cure), saying, "He breaketh the Sabbath"; and again, "He is a
sinner." Yet He asked you, who would slay Him, and who were ready
to lay hold of His actions, most plainly, saying, "Which of you
convinceth Me of sin?" (c. viii. 46); and no man spake, nor
said "Thou blasphemest because thou makest thyself without sin."
But if they had had it in their power to say so, they would not have
held their peace. For they who because they heard that He was before
Abraham would have stoned Him, and said that He was not of God,
who boasted that they, murderers as they were, were of God, but who
said that One who did such wonders, after that He had wrought a
cure, was not of God, because He kept not the Sabbath, if they had
had but a shadow of a charge against Him, would never have let it
pass. And if they call Him a sinner because He seemed to break the
Sabbath, this charge also is shown to be unsound, when those who are
ranked with them condemn their great coldness and littleness of soul.
Being therefore entangled on every side, they afterwards betake
themselves to something else more shameless and impudent. What is
that? They "did not believe," It saith, "that he had been
blind, and received his sight." How then did they charge Christ
with not keeping the Sabbath? Plainly, as having believed. But why
gave ye not heed to the great number of people? to the neighbors who
knew him? As I said, falsehood everywhere defeats itself by the very
means by which it seems to annoy the truth, and makes the truth to
appear more bright. Which was now the case. For that no one might
say that his neighbors and those who had seen him did not speak with
precision, but guessed from a likeness, they bring forward his
parents, by whom they succeeded against their will in proving that what
had taken place was real, since the parents best of all knew their own
child. When they could not terrify the man himself, but beheld him
with all boldness proclaim his Benefactor, they thought to wound the
miracle by means of his parents. Observe the malice of their
questioning. For what saith it? Having placed them in the midst so
as to throw them into distress, they apply the questioning with great
severity and anger, Ver. 19. "Is this your son?" (and they
said not, "who once was blind," but) "of whom ye say that he was
born blind?"
As if they were acting deceitfully, and plotting on behalf of
Christ. O ye accursed, utterly accursed! What father would choose
to invent such falsehoods against his child? For they almost say,
"Whom ye have made out blind, and not only so, but have spread
abroad the report everywhere."
"How then doth he now see?"
2. O folly! "Yours," saith one, "is the trick and the
contrivance." For by these two things do they attempt to lead the
parents to a denial; by using the words, "Whom ye say," and,
"How then doth he now see?" Now when there were three questions
asked, whether he was their son, whether he had been blind, and how
he received his sight, the parents only acknowledged two of them, but
do not add the third. And this came to pass for the sake of the
truth, in order that none other save the man that was healed, who was
also worthy of credit, should acknowledge this matter. And how would
the parents have favored (Christ), when even of what they knew some
part they spake not through fear of the Jews? What say they?
Ver. 20, 21. "We know that this is our son, and that he was
born blind; but by what means he now seeth we know not, or who hath
opened his eyes we know not; he is of age, he shall speak for
himself."
By making him to be worthy of credit, they begged off themselves;
"He is not a child, say they, nor incapable, but able to testify
for himself."
Ver. 22. "These words spake they, because they feared the
Jews."
Observe how the Evangelist again brings forward their opinion and
thoughts. This I say, because of that speech which they before
uttered, when they said, "He maketh Himself equal to God." (c.
v. 18.) For had that also been the opinion of the Jews but not
the judgment of Christ, he would have added and said, that "it was a
Jewish opinion." When therefore the parents referred them to him
that had been healed, they called him again the second time, and did
not say openly and shamelessly, "Deny that Christ healed thee,"
but would fain effect this under a pretense of piety.
Ver. 24. "Give," saith one, "the glory to God."
For to have said to the parents, "Deny that he is your son, and
that he was born blind," would have seemed very ridiculous. And
again, to have said this to himself would have been manifest
shamelessness. Wherefore they say not so, but manage the matter in
another way, saying, "Give God the glory," that is, "confess
that this man hath wrought nothing."
"We know that this man is a sinner."
"Why then did ye not convict Him when He said, 'Which of you
convinceth Me of sin?' (c. viii. 46.) Whence know ye that He
is a sinner?" After that they had said, "Give God the glory,"
and the man had made no reply, Christ meeting praised him, and did
not rebuke him, nor say, "Wherefore hast thou not given glory to
God?" But what said He? "Dost thou believe on the Son of
God?" (ver. 35), that thou mayest learn that this is "to give
glory to God." Now had He not been equal in honor to the Father,
this would not have been giving glory; but since he that honoreth the
Son honoreth the Father also, the blind is with good reason not
rebuked. Now while they expected that the parents would contradict and
deny the miracle, the Pharisees said nothing to the man himself, but
when they saw that they profited nothing by this, they again return to
him, saying, "This man is a sinner."
Ver. 25. "He answered and said, Whether he be a sinner or no,
I know not; one thing I know, that, whereas I was blind, now I
see."
Surely the blind man was not terrified? That be far from him. How
then doth he who said,
"He is a Prophet" (ver. 17), now say, "Whether he be a
sinner, I know not"? He said so, not as being in such a state of
mind, nor as having persuaded himself of this thing, but desiring to
clear Him from their charges by the testimony of the fact, not by his
own declaration, and to make the defense credible, when the testimony
of the good deed done should decide the matter against them. Since if
after many words when the blind man said, "Except this were a
righteous man he could not do such miracles" (ver. 33), they were
so enraged as to reply, "Thou wast altogether born in sin, and dost
thou teach us?" what would they not have said, if he had spoken so
from the beginning; what would they not have done? "Whether he be a
sinner or not, I know not"; as though he had said, "I say nothing
in this man's favor, I make no declaration at present, yet this I
certainly know and would affirm, that if he were a sinner he could not
have done such things." Thus he kept himself free from suspicion,
and his testimony uncorrupted, as not speaking from partiality, but as
bearing witness according to the fact. When therefore they could
neither upset nor remove what had been done, they again return to their
former plan, making trifling enquiries about the manner of the cure,
like men who search on every side about a prey which is before them,
and cannot be hurt, hastening round now in one direction, now in
another; and they recur to the man's former assertions, in order now
to make them unsound by continual questions, and say, Ver. 26.
"What did he to thee? How opened he thine eyes?"
What was his reply? Having conquered and cast them down, he no
longer speaks to them submissly. As long as the matter needed enquiry
and arguments he spake guardedly, while he supplied the proof; but
when he had conquered and gained a splendid victory, he then takes
courage, and tramples upon them. What saith he?
Ver. 27. "I have told you once, and ye did not hear; wherefore
would ye hear it again?"
Seest thou the bold-speaking of a beggar towards Scribes and
Pharisees? So strong is truth, so weak is falsehood. Truth,
though she take hold but of ordinary men, maketh them to appear
glorious; the other, even though it be with the strong, shows them
weak? What he saith is of this kind: "Ye give no heed to my words,
therefore I will no longer speak or answer you continually, who
question me to no purpose, and who do not desire to hear in order to
learn, but that you may insult over my words."
"Will ye also be His disciples?"
3. Now he hath ranked himself among the band of disciples, for the
"will ye also?" is the expression of one who is declaring himself to
be a disciple. Then he mocked and annoyed them abundantly. For since
he knew that this struck them hard, he said it, wishing to upbraid
them with exceeding severity; the act of a soul courageous, soaring on
high and despising their madness, pointing out the greatness of this
dignity, in which he was very confident, and showing that they
insulted him who was a man worthy to be admired, but that he took not
the insult to himself, but grasped as an honor what they offered as a
reproach.
Ver. 28. "Thou art his disciple, but we are Moses'
disciples."
"But this cannot be. Ye are neither Moses' nor this Man's; for
were ye Moses', ye would become this Man's also." Wherefore
Christ before said unto them, because they were continually betaking
themselves to these speeches, "Had ye believed Moses, ye would have
believed Me, for he wrote of Me." (c. v.
46.)
Ver. 29. "We know that God spake unto Moses."
By whose word, whose report? "That of our forefathers," saith
one. Is not He then more to be believed than your forefathers, who
confirmeth by miracles that He came from God, and that He speaketh
things from above? They said not, "We have heard that God spake to
Moses," but, "We know." Do ye affirm, O Jews, what ye have
by hearing, as knowing it, but deem what ye have by sight as less
certain than what ye have by hearing? Yet the one ye saw not, but
heard, the other ye did not hear, but saw. What then saith the blind
man?
Ver. 30. "Why herein is a marvelous thing, that ye know not
whence He is, and He doeth such miracles."
"That a Man, who is not one of the distinguished or noble or
illustrious among you, can do such things; so that it is in every way
clear that He is God, needing no human aid."
Ver. 31. "We know that God heareth not sinners."
Since they had been the first to say, "How can a man that is a
sinner do such miracles?" (ver. 16), he now brings forward even
their judgment, reminding them of their own words. "This opinion,"
saith he, "is common to me and you. Stand fast now to it." And
observe, I pray you, his wisdom. He turns about the miracle in
every way, because they could not do away with it, and from it he
draws his inferences. Seest thou that at first he said "Whether he
be a sinner or not, I know not"? not doubting (God forbid!) but
knowing that He was not a sinner. At least now, when he had an
opportunity, see how he defended Him. "We know that God heareth
not sinners":
"But if any man be a worshiper of God, and doeth His will."
Here he not only hath cleared Him from sin, but declareth that He is
very pleasing to God, and doeth all His will. For since they called
themselves worshipers of God, he added, "and doeth His will";
"since," saith he, "it is not sufficient to know God: men must
also do His will." Then he magnifies what had been done, saying,
Ver. 32. "Since the world began was it not heard that any man
opened the eyes of one that was born blind."
"If now ye acknowledge that God heareth not sinners, and this
Person hath wrought a miracle, and such a miracle as no man ever
wrought, it is clear that He hath surpassed all things in virtue, and
that His power is greater than belongeth to man." What then say
they?
Ver. 34. "Thou wast altogether born in sins, and dost thou teach
us?"
As long as they expected that he would deny Christ, they deemed him
trustworthy, calling upon him once and a second time. If ye deemed
him not trustworthy, why did ye call and question him a second time?
But when he spake the truth, unabashed, then, when they ought most
to have admired, they condemned him. But what is the, "Thou wast
altogether born in sins"? They here unsparingly reproach him with his
very blindness, as though they had said, "Thou art in sins from thy
earliest age" insinuating that on this account he was born blind;
which was contrary to reason. On this point at least Christ
comforting him said, "For judgment I am come into the world, that
they which see not might see, and that they which see might be made
blind." (c. ix. 39.)
"Thou wast altogether born in sins, and dost thou teach us?" Why,
what had the man said? Did he set forth his private opinion? Did he
not set forth a common judgment, saying, "We know that God heareth
not sinners"?Did he not produce your own words?
"And they cast him out."
Hast thou beheld the herald of the truth, how poverty was no hindrance
to his true wisdom? Seest thou what reproaches, what sufferings he
bare from the beginning, and how by word and by deed he testified?
4. Now these things are recorded, that we too may imitate them.
For if the blind man, the beggar, who had not even seen Him,
straightway showed such boldness even before he was encouraged by
Christ, standing opposed to a whole people, murderous, possessed,
and raving, who desired by means of his voice to condemn Christ, if
he neither yielded nor gave back, but most boldly stopped their
mouths, and chose rather to be cast out than to betray the truth; how
much more ought we, who have lived so. long in the faith, who have
seen ten thousand marvels wrought by faith, who have received greater
benefits than he, have recovered the sight of the eyes within, have
beheld the ineffable Mysteries, and have been called to such honor,
how ought we, I say, to exhibit all boldness of speech towards those
who attempt to accuse, and who say anything against the Christians,
and to stop their mouths, and not to acquiesce without an effort. And
we shall be able to do this, if we are bold, and give heed to the
Scriptures, and hear them not carelessly. For if one should come in
here regularly, even though he read not at home, if he attends to what
is said here, one year even is sufficient to make him well versed in
them; because we do not today read one kind of Scriptures, and
tomorrow another, but always and continually the same. Still such is
the wretched disposition of the many, that after so much reading, they
do not even know the names of the Books, and are not ashamed nor
tremble at entering so carelessly into a place where they may hear
God's word. Yet if a harper, or dancer, or stage-player call the
city, they all run eagerly, and feel obliged to him for the call, and
spend the half of an entire day in attending to him alone; but when
God speaketh to us by Prophets and Apostles, we yawn, we scratch
ourselves, we are drowsy. And in summer, the heat seems too great,
and we betake ourselves to the market place; and again, in winter,
the rain and mire are a hindrance, and we sit at home; yet at horse
races, though there is no roof over them to keep off the wet, the
greater number, while heavy rains are falling, and the wind is dashing
the water into their faces, stand like madmen, caring not for cold,
and wet, and mud, and length of way, and nothing either keeps them at
home, or prevents their going thither. But here, where there are
roofs over head, and where the warmth is admirable, they hold back
instead of running together; and this too, when the gain is that of
their own souls. How is this tolerable, tell me? Thus it happens,
that while we are more skilled than any in those matters, in things
necessary we are more ignorant than children. If a man call you a
charioteer, or a dancer, you say that you have been insulted, and use
every means to wipe off the affront; but if he draw you to be a
spectator of the action, you do not start away, and the art whose name
you shun, you almost in every case pursue. But where you ought to
have both the action and the name, both to be and to be called a
Christian, you do not even know what kind of thing the action is.
What can be worse than this folly? These things I have desired
continually to say to you, but I fear lest I gain hatred in vain and
unprofitably. For I perceive that not only the young are mad, but
the old also; about whom I am especially ashamed, when I see a man
venerable from his white hairs, disgracing those white hairs, and
drawing a child after him. What is worse than this mockery? What
more shameful than this conduct? The child is taught by the father to
act unseemly.
5. Do the words sting? This is what I desire, that you should
suffer the pain caused by the words, in order to be delivered from the
disgrace caused by the actions. For there are some too far colder than
these, who are not even ashamed at the things spoken of, nay, who
even put together a long argument in defense of the action. If you ask
them who was Amos or Obadiah, or what is the number of the Prophets
or Apostles, they cannot even open their mouth but for horses and
charioteers, they compose excuses more cleverly than sophists or
rhetoricians, and after all this, they say, "What is the harm?
what is the loss?" This is what I groan for, that ye do not so much
as know that the action is a loss, nor have a sense of its evils. God
hath given to thee an appointed space of life for serving Him, and
dost thou while thou spendest it vainly, and at random, and on nothing
useful, still ask, "What loss is there?" If thou hast spent a
little money to no purpose, thou callest it a loss: when thou spendest
whole days of thine upon the devil's pageants, thinkest thou that thou
art doing nothing wrong? Thou oughtest to spend all thy life in
supplications and prayers, whereas thou wastest thy life and substance
heedlessly, and to thine own hurt, on shouts, and uproar, and
shameful words, and fighting, and unseasonable pleasure, and actions
performed by trickery, and after all this thou askest, "What is the
loss?" not knowing thou shouldest be lavish of anything rather than
time. Gold, if thou shalt have spent, thou mayest get again; but if
thou lose time, thou shall hardly recover that. Little is dealt out
to us in this present life; if therefore we employ it not as we ought,
what shall we say when we depart "there"? For tell me, if thou
hadst commanded one of thy sons to learn some art, and then he had
continually stayed at home, or even passed his time somewhere else,
would not the teacher reject him? Would he not say to thee, "Thou
hast made an agreement with me, and appointed a time; if now thy son
will not spend this time with me but in other places, how shall I
produce him to thee as a scholar?" Thus also we must speak. For
God will say also to us, "I gave you time to learn this art of
piety, wherefore have ye foolishly and uselessly wasted that time?
Why did ye neither go constantly to the teacher, nor give heed to his
words?" For to show that piety is an art, hear what the Prophet
saith, "Come, ye children, hearken unto me; I will teach you the
fear of the Lord." (Ps. xxxiv. 11.) And again, "Blessed
is the man whom Thou instructest, Lord, and teachest him out of Thy
Law." (Ps. xciv. 12.) When therefore thou hast spent this
time in vain, what excuse wilt thou have? "And why," saith some
one, "did He deal out to us but little time?" O senselessness and
ingratitude! That for which thou wert most bounden to give thanks to
Him, for that He hath cut short thy labors and abridged thy toils,
and made the rest long and everlasting, for this dost thou find fault,
and art discontented?
But I know not how we have brought our discourse to this point, and
have made it so long; we must therefore shorten it now. For this too
is a part of our wretchedness, that here if the discourse be long, we
all become careless, while there they begin at noon, and retire by
torch and lamp light. However, that we be not always chiding, we now
entreat and beseech you, grant this favor to us and to yourselves; and
getting free from all other matters, to these let us rivet ourselves.
So shall we gain from you joy and gladness, and honor on your
account, and a recompense for these labors; while ye will reap all the
reward, because having been aforetime so madly riveted to the stage,
ye tore yourselves away, through fear of God, and by our
exhortations, from that malady, and brake your bonds, and hastened
unto God. Nor is it "there" alone that ye shall receive your
reward, but "here" also ye shall enjoy pure pleasure. Such a thing
is virtue; besides giving us crowns in heaven, even here it maketh
life pleasant to us. Let us then be persuaded by what has been said,
that we may obtain the blessings both here and hereafter, 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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