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John xi. 30, 31.
"Now Jesus was not yet come into the town, but was in that place
where Martha met Him. The Jews then which were with her," and
what follows.
1. A great good is philosophy; the philosophy, I mean, which is
with us. For what the heathen have is words and fables only; nor have
these fables anything truly wise in them; since everything among those
men is done for the sake of reputation. A great good then is true
wisdom, and even here returns to us a recompense. For he that
despises wealth, from this at once reaps advantage, being delivered
from cares which are superfluous and unprofitable; and he that tramples
upon glory from this at once receives his reward, being the slave of
none, but free with the real freedom; and he that desires heavenly
things hence receives his recompense, regarding present things as
nothing, and being easily superior to every grief. Behold, for
example, how this woman by practicing true wisdom even here received
her reward. For when all were sitting by her as she mourned and
lamented, she did not wait that the Master should come to her, nor
did she maintain what might have seemed her due, nor was she restrained
by her sorrow, (for, in addition to the other wretchedness, mourning
women have this malady, that they wish to be made much of on account of
their case,) but she was not at all so affected; as soon as she
heard, she quickly came to Him. "Jesus was not yet come into the
town." He proceeded somewhat slowly, that He might not seem to
fling Himself upon the miracle, but rather to be entreated by them.
At least, it is either with an intention of implying this that the
Evangelist has said the, "riseth up quickly," or else he showeth
that she ran so as to anticipate Christ's arrival. She came not
alone, but drawing after her the Jews that were in the house. Very
wisely did her sister call her secretly, so as not to disturb those who
had come together, and not mention the cause either; for assuredly
many would have gone back, but now as though she were going to weep,
all followed her. By these means again it is proved that Lazarus was
dead.
Ver. 32. "And she fell at His feet."
She is more ardent than her sister. She regarded not the multitude,
nor the suspicion which they had concerning Him, for there were many
of His enemies, who said, "Could not this man, which opened the
eyes of the blind, have caused that even this man should not have
died?" (ver. 37); but cast out all mortal things in the presence
of her Master, and was given up to one thing only, the honor of that
Master. And what saith she?
"Lord, if Thou hadst been here, my brother had not died."
What doth Christ? He converseth not at all with her for the
present, nor saith to her what He said to her sister, (for a great
multitude was by, and this was no fit time for such words,) He only
acteth measurably and condescendeth; and to prove His human nature,
weepeth in silence, and deferreth the miracle for the present. For
since that miracle was a great one, and such as He seldom wrought,
and since many were to believe by means of it, lest to work it without
their presence should prove a stumbling-block to the multitude, and so
they should gain nothing by its greatness, in order that He might not
lose the quarry, He draweth to Him many witnesses by His
condescension, and showeth proof of His human nature. He weepeth,
and is troubled; for grief is wont to stir up the feelings. Then
rebuking those feelings, (for He "groaned in spirit" meaneth,
"restrained His trouble,") He asked, Ver. 34. "Where have
ye laid him?"
So that the question might not be attended with lamentation. But why
doth He ask? Because He desired not to cast Himself on (the
miracle), but to learn all from them, to do all at their invitation,
so as to free the miracle from any suspicion.
"They say unto Him, Come and see."
Ver. 35. "Jesus wept."
Seest thou that He had not as yet shown any sign of the raising, and
goeth not as if to raise Lazarus, but as if to weep? For the Jews
show that He seemed to them to be going to bewail, not to raise him;
at least they said,
Ver. 36, 37. "Behold how he loved him! And some of them
said, Could not this man, which opened the eyes of the blind, have
caused that even this man should not have died?"
Not even amid calamities did they relax their wickedness. Yet what
He was about to do was a thing far more wonderful; for to drive away
death when it hath come and conquered, is far more than to stay it when
coming on. They therefore slander Him by those very points through
which they ought to have marveled at His power. They allow for the
time that He opened the eyes of the blind, and when they ought to have
admired Him on account of that miracle, they, by means of this latter
case, cast a slur upon it, as though it had not even taken place.
And not from this only are they shown to be all corrupt, but because
when He had not yet come, nor exhibited any action, they prevent Him
with their accusations without waiting the end of the matter. Seest
thou how corrupt was their judgment?
2. He cometh then to the tomb; and again rebuketh His feelings.
Why doth the Evangelist carefully in several places mention that "He
wept," and that, "He groaned"? That thou mayest learn that He
had of a truth put on our nature. For when this Evangelist is
remarkable for uttering great things concerning Christ more than the
others, in matters relating to the body, here he also speaketh much
more humbly than they. For instance, concerning His death he hath
said nothing of the kind; the other Evangelists declare that He was
exceedingly sorrowful, that He was in an agony; but John, on the
contrary, saith, that He even cast the officers backwards. So that
he hath made up here what is omitted there, by mentioning His grief.
When speaking of His death, Christ saith "I have power to lay down
My life" (c. x. 18), and then He uttereth no lowly word;
therefore at the Passion they attribute to Him much that is human, to
show the reality of the Dispensation. And Matthew proves this by the
Agony, the trouble, the trembling, and the sweat; but John by His
sorrow. For had He not been of our nature, He would not once and
again have been mastered by grief. What did Jesus? He made no
defense with regard to their charges; for why should He silence by
words those who were soon to be silenced by deeds? a means less
annoying, and more adapted to shame them.
Ver. 39. "He saith, Take ye away the stone."
Why did not He when at a distance summon Lazarus, and place him
before their eyes? Or rather, why did He not cause him to arise
while the stone yet lay on the grave? For He who was able by His
voice to move a corpse, and to show it again endowed with life, would
much more by that same voice have been able to move a stone; He who
empowered by His voice one bound and entangled in the grave-clothes to
walk, would much more have been able to move a stone; why then did He
not so? In order to make them witnesses of the miracle; that they
might not say as they did in the case of the blind man, "It is he,"
"It is not he." For their hands and their coming to the tomb
testified that it was indeed he. If they had not come, they might
have deemed that they saw a vision, or one man in place of another.
But now the coming to the place, the raising the stone, the charge
given them to loose the dead man bound in grave-clothes from his
bands; the fact that the friends who bore him from the tomb, knew from
the grave-clothes that it was he; that his sisters were not left
behind; that one of them said, "He now stinketh, for he hath been
dead four days"; all these things, I say, were sufficient to
silence the ill-disposed, as they were made witnesses of the miracle.
On this account He biddeth them take away the stone from the tomb, to
show that He raiseth the man. On this account also He asketh,
"Where have ye laid him?" that they who said, "Come and see,"
and who conducted Him, might not be able to say that He had raised
another person; that their voice and their hands might bear witness,
(their voice by saying, "Come and see," their hands by lifting the
stone, and loosing the grave-clothes,) as well as their eyes and
ears, (the one by hearing His voice, the other by seeing Lazarus
come forth,) and their smell also by perceiving the ill-odor, for
Martha said, "He now stinketh, for he hath been dead four days."
Therefore I said with good reason, that the woman did not at all
understand Christ's words, "Though he were dead, yet shall he
live." At least observe, that she speaketh as though the thing were
impossible on account of the time which had intervened. For indeed it
was a strange thing to raise a corpse which had been dead four days,
and was corrupt. To the disciples Jesus said, "That the Son of
Man may be glorified," referring to Himself; but to the woman,
"Thou shalt see the glory of God," speaking of the Father. Seest
thou that the weakness of the hearers is the cause of the difference of
the words? He therefore remindeth her of what He had spoken unto
her, well nigh rebuking her, as being forgetful. Yet He did not
wish at present to confound the spectators, wherefore He saith,
Ver. 40. "Said I not unto thee, that if thou wouldest believe,
thou shouldest see the glory of God?"
3. A great blessing truly is faith, great, and one which makes
great those who hold it rightly with (good) living. By this men
(are enabled) to do the things of God in His name. And well did
Christ say, "If ye have faith ye shall say unto this mountain,
Remove, and it shall remove" (Matt. xvii. 20); anti again,
"He that believeth on Me, the works that I do shall he do also,
and greater works than these shall he do." (c. xiv. 12. ) What
meaneth He by "greater"? Those which the disciples are seen after
this to work. For even the shadow of Peter raised a dead man; and so
the power of Christ was the more proclaimed. Since it was not so
wonderful that He while alive should work miracles, as that when He
was dead others should be enabled to work in His name greater than He
wrought. This was an indisputable proof of the Resurrection; nor if
(that Resurrection) had been seen by all, would it have been equally
believed. For men might have said that it was an appearance, but one
who saw that by His name alone greater miracles were wrought than when
He conversed with men, could not disbelieve unless he were very
senseless. A great blessing then is faith when it arises from glowing
feelings, great love, and a fervent soul; it makes us truly wise, it
hides our human meanness, and leaving reasonings beneath, it
philosophizes about things in heaven; or rather what the wisdom of men
cannot discover, it abundantly comprehends and succeeds in. Let us
then cling to this, and not commit to reasonings what concerns
ourselves. For tell me, why have not the Greeks been able to find
out anything? Did they not know all the wisdom of the heathen? Why
then could they not prevail against fishermen and tentmakers, and
unlearned persons? Was it not because the one committed all to
argument, the others to faith? and so these last were victorious over
Plato and Pythagoras, in short, over all that had gone astray; and
they surpass those whose lives had been worn out in astrology and
geometry, mathematics and arithmetic, and who had been thoroughly
instructed in every sort of learning, and were as much superior to them
as true and real philosophers are superior to those who are by nature
foolish and out of their senses. For observe, these men asserted that
the soul was immortal, or rather, they did not merely assert this,
but persuaded others of it.
The Greeks, on the contrary, did not at first know what manner of
thing the soul was, and when they had found out, and had distinguished
it from the body, they were again in the same case, the one asserting
that it was incorporeal, the other that it was corporeal and was
dissolved with the body. Concerning heaven again, the one said that
it had life and was a god, but the fishermen both taught and persuaded
that it was the work and device of God. Now that the Greeks should
use reasonings is nothing wonderful, but that those who seem to be
believers, that "they" should be found carnal, this is what may
justly be lamented. And on this account they have gone astray, some
saying that they know God as He knoweth Himself, a thing which not
even any of those Greeks have dared to assert others that God cannot
beget without passion, not even allowing Him any superiority over
men; others again, that a righteous life and exact conversation avail
nothing. But it is not the time to refute these things now.
4. Yet that a right faith availeth nothing if the life be corrupt,
both Christ and Paul declare, having taken the more care for this
latter part; Christ when He teacheth, "Not every one that saith
unto Me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven"
(Matt. vii. 21); and again, "Many will say unto Me in that
day, Lord, have we not prophesied in Thy Name? And I will
profess unto them, I never knew you; depart from Me, ye that work
iniquity" (Matt. xxii. 23); (for they who take not heed to
themselves, easily slip away into wickedness, even though they have a
right faith;) and Paul, when in his letter to the Hebrews he thus
speaks and exhorts them; "Follow peace with all men, and holiness,
without which no man shall see the Lord." (Heb. xii. 14.) By
"holiness," meaning chastity, so that it behooved each to be content
with his own wife, and not have to do with any other woman; for it is
impossible that one not so contented should be saved; he must assuredly
perish though he have ten thousand right actions, since with
fornication it is impossible to enter into the kingdom of heaven. Or
rather, this is henceforth not fornication but adultery; for as a
woman who is bound to a man, if she come together with another man,
then hath committed adultery, so he that is bound to a woman, if he
have another, hath committed adultery. Such an one shall not inherit
the kingdom of heaven, but shall fall into the pit. Hear what Christ
saith concerning these, "Their worm shall not die, and the fire
shall not be quenched." (Mark ix. 44.) For he can have no
pardon, who after (possessing) a wife, and the comfort of a wife,
then acts shamelessly towards another woman; since this is henceforth
wantonness. And if the many abstain even from their wives when it be a
season of fast or prayer, how great a fire doth he heap up for himself
who is not even content with his wife, but mingleth with another; and
if it is not permitted one who has put away and cast out his own wife to
mingle with another, (for this is adultery,) how great evil doth he
commit who, while his wife is in his house, brings in another. Let
no one then allow this malady to dwell in his soul; let him tear it up
by the root. He doth not so much wrong his wife as himself. For so
grievous and unpardonable is this offense, that if a woman separate
herself from a husband which is an idolater without his consent, God
punisheth her; but if she separate herself from a fornicator, not so.
Seest thou how great an evil this is? "If," It saith, "any
faithful woman have a husband that believeth not, and if he be pleased
to dwell with her, let her not leave him."
(1 Cor. vii. 13.) Not so concerning a harlot; but what?
"If any man put away his wife, saving for the cause of fornication,
he causeth her to commit adultery." (Matt. v. 32.) For if the
coming together maketh one body, he who cometh together with a harlot
must needs become one body with her. How then shall the modest woman,
being a member of Christ, receive such an one, or how shall she join
to herself the member of an harlot. And observe the excess of the one
(fornication) over the other (idolatry). The woman who dwelleth
with an unbeliever is not impure; ("for," It saith, "the
unbelieving husband is sanctified by the wife"--1 Cor. vi.
15;) not so with the harlot; but what? "Shall I then make the
members of Christ the members of an harlot?" In the one case
sanctification remains, and is not removed though the unbeliever
dwelleth with his wife; but in the other case it departeth. A
dreadful, a dreadful thing is fornication, and an agent for
everlasting punishment; and even in this world it brings with it ten
thousand woes. The man so guilty is forced to lead a life of anxiety
and toil; he is nothing better off than those who are under
punishment, creeping into another man's house with fear and much
trembling, suspecting all alike both slave and free. Wherefore I
exhort you to be freed from this malady, and if you obey not, step not
on the sacred threshold. Sheep that are covered with the scab, and
full of disease, may not herd with those that are in health; we must
drive them from the fold until they get rid of the malady. We have
been made members of Christ; let us not, I entreat, become members
of an harlot. This place is not a brothel but a church; if then thou
hast the members of an harlot, stand not in the church, lest thou
insult the place. If there were no hell, if there were no
punishment, yet, after those contracts, those marriage torches, the
lawful bed, the procreation of children, the intercourse, how
couldest thou bear to join thyself to another? How is it that thou art
not ashamed nor blushest? Knowest thou not that they who after the
death of their own wife, introduce another into their own house, are
blamed by many? yet this action hath no penalty attached to it: but
thou bringest in another while thy wife is yet alive. What lustfulness
is this! Learn what hath been spoken concerning such men, "Their
worm," It saith, "shall not die, and the fire shall not be
quenched." (Mark ix. 44.) Shudder at the threat, dread the
vengeance. The pleasure here is not so great as the punishment there,
but may it not came to pass that any one (here) become liable to that
punishment, but that exercising holiness they may see Christ, and
obtain the promised good things, which may we all enjoy, through the
grace and lovingkindness of our Lord Jesus Christ, to whom with the
Father and the Holy Ghost be glory, for ever and ever. Amen.
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