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MATT. VIII. 14, 15.
"And when Jesus was come into Peter's house, He saw his wife's
mother laid and sick of a fever:and He touched her hand, and the
fever left her, and she arose and ministered unto Him."
But Mark adds also, "immediately,"meaning to declare the time as
well; but this evangelist hath set down only the miracle, without
signifying besides the time. And whereas the others say, that she
that lay ill did also entreat Him, this too he hath passed over in
silence. But this comes not of any dissonance, but the one of
brevity, the other of exact narrative. But for what intent did He go
into Peter's house? As it seems to me, to take food. This at
least is declared when it is said,
"She arose and ministered unto Him."
For He used to visit His disciples (as Matthew likewise, when He
had called him), so honoring them and making them more zealous.
But do thou mark, I pray thee, herein also Peter's reverence
towards Him. For though he had his wife's mother at home lying ill,
and very sick of a fever, he drew Him not into his house, but waited
first for the teaching to be finished, then for all the others to be
healed; and then when He had come in, besought Him. Thus from the
beginning was he instructed to prefer the things of all others to his
own.
Therefore neither doth he himself bring Him in, but He entered of
His own accord (after the centurion had said, "I am not worthy that
Thou shouldest come under my roof"s): to show how much favor He
bestowed on His disciple. And yet consider of what sort were the
houses of these fishermen; but for all that, He disdained not to
enter into their mean huts, teaching thee by all means to trample under
foot human pride.
And sometimes He heals by words only, sometimes He even stretches
forth His hand, sometimes He doeth both these things, to bring into
sight His way of healing. For it was not His will always to work
miracles in the more surpassing manner: it being needful for Him to be
concealed awhile, and especially as concerned His disciples; since
they out of their great delight would have proclaimed everything. And
this was evident from the fact, that even after coming to the mount,
it was needful to charge them that they should tell no man.
Having therefore touched her body, He not only quenched the fever,
but also gave her back perfect health. Thus, the disease being an
ordinary one, He displayed His power by the manner of healing; a
thing which no physician's art could have wrought. For ye know that
even after the departing of fevers, the patients yet need much time to
return to their former health. But then all took place at once.
And not in this case only, but also in that of the sea. For neither
there did He quiet the winds only and the storm, but He also stayed
at once the swelling of the waves; and this also was a strange thing.
For even if the tempest should cease, the waves continue to swell for
a long time.
But with Christ it was not so, but all at once was ended: and so it
befell this woman also. Wherefore also the evangelist, to declare
this, said, "She arose and ministered unto Him;"which was a sign
both of Christ's power, and of the disposition of the woman, which
she showed towards Christ.
And another thing together with these we may hence observe, that
Christ grants the healing of some to the faith even of others. Since
in this case too, others besought Him, as also in the instance of the
centurion's servant. And this grant He makes, when there is no
unbelief in him that is to be healed, but either through disease he
cannot come unto Him, or through ignorance imagines nothing great of
Him, or because of His immature age.
2. "When the even was come, they brought unto Him many that were
possessed with devils: and He cast out the spirits from them with a
word, and healed all that were sick: that it might be fulfilled which
was spoken by the Prophet Esaias, that He took our infirmities, and
bare our sicknesses."
Seest thou the multitude, by this time growing in faith? For not
even when the time pressed could they endure to depart, nor did they
account it unseasonable to bring their sick to Him at eventide.
But mark, I pray thee, how great a multitude of persons healed the
evangelists pass quickly over, not mentioning one by one, and giving
us an account of them, but in one word traversing an unspeakable sea of
miracles. Then lest the greatness of the wonder should drive us again
to unbelief, that even so great a people and their various diseases
should be delivered and healed by Him in one moment of time, He
brings in the prophet also to bear witness to what is going on:
indicating the abundance of the proof we have, in every case, out of
the Scriptures; such, that from the miracles themselves we have no
more; and He saith, that Esaias also spake of these things; "He
took our infirmities, and bare our sicknesses." a He said not,
"He did them away," but "He took and bare them;" which seems to
me to be spoken rather of sins, by the prophet, in harmony with
John, where he saith, "Behold the Lamb of God, that beareth the
sin of the world."
How then cloth the evangelist here apply it to diseases? Either as
rehearsing the passage in the historical sense,or to show that most of
our diseases arise from sins of the soul. For if the sum of all,
death itself, hath its root and foundation from sin, much more the
majority of our diseases also: since our very capability of suffering
did itself originate there.
3. "Now when Jesus saw great multitudes about Him, He gave
commandment to depart unto the other side."
Seest thou again His freedom from ostentation? in that as the others
say, "He charged the devils not to say it was He," so this writer
saith, He repels the multitudes from Him. Now in so doing, He was
at once both training us to be moderate,and at the same time allaying
the envy of the Jews, and teaching us to do nothing for display. For
He was not, we know, a healer to bodies only, but a curer also of
the soul, and a teacher of self-restraint; by both disclosing
Himself, both by putting away their diseases, and by doing nought for
display. Because they indeed were cleaving unto Him, loving Him,
and marvelling at Him, and desiring to took upon Him. For who would
depart from one who was doing such miracles? Who would not long, were
it only to see the face, and the mouth that was uttering such words?
For not by any means in working wonders only was He wonderful, but
even when merely showing Himself, He was full of great grace; and to
declare this the prophet said, "Fairin beauty beyond the children of
men."And if Esaias saith, "He hath no form nor comeliness"a he
affirms it either in comparison of the glory of His Godhead, which
surpasses all utterance and description; or as declaring what took
place at His passion, and the dishonor which He underwent at the
season of the cross, and the mean estate which throughout His life He
exemplified in all respects.
Further: He did not first give "commandment to depart unto the other
side," nor until He had healed them. For surely they could not have
borne it. As therefore on the mountain they not only continued with
Him while exhorting them, but also when it was silence followed Him;
so here too, not in His miracles only did they wait on Him, but also
when He had ceased again, from His very countenance receiving no
small benefit. For if Moses had his face made glorious, and Stephen
like that of an angel; consider thou our common Lord, what manner of
person it was likely He would appear at such a time.
Many now perchance have fallen into a passionate desire of seeing that
form; but if we are willing we shall behold one far better than that.
For if we can pass through our present life with Christian
boldness,we shall receive Him in the clouds, meeting Him in an
immortal and incorruptible body.
But observe how He doth not simply drive them away, lest He should
hurt them. For He did not say, "withdraw," but "gave commandment
to depart to the other side," giving them to expect that He would
surely come thither.
4. And the multitudes for their part evinced this great love, and
were following with much affection; but some one person, a slave of
wealth, and possessed with much arrogance, approaches Him, and
saith,
"Master, I will follow Thee whithersoever Thou goest."
Seest thou how great his arrogance? For as not deigning to be
numbered with the multitude, and indicating that he is above the common
sort, so he comes near. Because such is the Jewish character; full
of unseasonable confidence. So too another afterwards, when all men
were keeping silence, of his own accord springs up, and saith,
"Which is the first commandment?"
Yet nevertheless the Lord rebuked not his unseasonable confidence,
teaching us to bear even with such as these. Therefore He doth not
openly convict them who are devising mischief, but replies to their
secret thought, leaving it to themselves only to know that they are
convicted, and doubly doing them good, first by showing that He knows
what is in their conscience, next by granting unto them concealment
after this manifestation, and allowing them to recover themselves
again, if they will: which thing He doth in the case of this man
also.
For he, seeing the many signs, and many drawn after Him, thought to
make a gain out of such miracles; wherefore also he was forward to
follow Him. And whence is this manifest? From the answer which
Christ makes, meeting not the question, as it stands verbally, but
the temper shown in its meaning. For, "What?" saith He. "dost
thou look to gather wealth by following me? Seest thou not then that
I have not even a lodging, not even so much as the birds have?"
For "the foxes," saith He, "have holes, and the birds of the air
have nests, but the Son of Man hath not where to lay His head."
Now these were not the words of one turning Himself away, but of one
who while putting to the proof his evil disposition, yet permitted him
(if he were willing with such a prospect) to follow Him. And to
convince thee of his wickedness, when he had heard these things, and
had been proved, he did not say, "I am ready to follow Thee."
5. And in many other places also Christ is clearly doing this; He
doth not openly convict, but by His answer He manifests the purpose
of them that are coming unto Him. Thus to him again that said,
"Good Master," and had thought by such flattery to gain His
favor, according to his purpose He made answer, saying, "Why
callest thou me good? There is none good but one, that is, God."
And when they said unto Him, "Behold, Thy mother and Thy
brethren seek Thee;"forasmuch as these were under the influence of
some human infirmity, not desiring to hear something profitable, but
to make a display of their relationship to Him, and therein to be
vainglorious; hear what He saith: "Who is my mother, and who are
my brethren?"
And again to His brethren themselves, saying unto Him, "Show
thyself to the world,"and wishing thence to feed their vainglory, He
said, "Your time" (so He speaks) "is always ready, but my time
is not yet come."
And in the opposite cases too He doth so; as in that of Nathanael,
saying, "Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile."And
again, "Go and show John again those things which ye do hear and
see."For neither in this did He reply to the words, but to the
intention of him that sent them. And with the people again in like
manner, He addresses His discourse unto their conscience, saying,
"What went ye out into the wilderness to see? That is because they
were probably feeling about John, as though he had been a sort of easy
and wavering person; to correct this their suspicion, He saith,
"What went ye out into the wilderness to see? A reed shaken with the
wind?" or, "a man clothed with soft raiment?" by both these
figures declaring, that he was neither of himself a waverer, nor would
be softened by any luxury. Thus then in the present case also He
makes His answer to their meaning.
And see how in this also He shows forth great moderation: in that He
said not, "I have it indeed, but despise it," but "I have it
not." Seest thou what exact care goes along with His condescension?
Even as when He eats and drinks, when He seems to be acting in an
opposite way to John, this too He doeth for the sake of the Jews'
salvation, or rather for that of the whole world, at once both
stopping the mouths of the heretics,and desiring to win also more
abundantly those of that day to Himself.
6. But a certain other one, we read, said unto Him,
"Lord, suffer me first to go and bury my father."
Didst thou mark the difference? how one impudently saith, "I will
follow Thee whithersoever Thou goest;" but this other, although
asking a thing of sacred duty,saith, "Suffer me." Yet He
suffered him not, but saith, "Let the dead bury their dead, but do
thou follow me." For in every case He had regard to the intention.
And wherefore did He not suffer him? one may ask. Because, on the
one hand, there were those that would fulfill that duty, and the dead
was not going to remain unburied; on the other, it was not fit for
this man to be taken away from the weightier matters. But by saying,
"their own dead," He implies that this is not one of His dead.
And that because he that was dead, was, at least as I suppose, of
the unbelievers.
Now if thou admire the young man, that for a matter so necessary he
besought Jesus, and did not go away of his own accord; much rather do
thou admire him for staying also when forbidden.
Was it not then, one may say, extreme ingratitude, not to be present
at the burial of his father? If indeed he did so out of negligence,
it was ingratitude, but if in order not to interrupt a more needful
work, his departing would most surely have been of extreme
inconsideration. For Jesus forbad him, not as commanding to think
lightly of the honor due to our parents, but signifying that nothing
ought to be to us more urgent than the things of Heaven, and that we
ought with all diligence to cleave to these, and not to put them off
for ever so little, though our engagements be exceeding indispensable
and pressing. For what can be more needful than to bury a father?
what more easy? since it would not even consume any long time.
But if one ought not to spend even as much time as is required for a
father's burial, nor is it safe to be parted even so long from our
spiritual concerns; consider what we deserve, who all our time stand
off from the things that pertain to Christ, and prefer things very
ordinary to such as are needful, and are remiss, when there is nothing
to press on us?
And herein too we should admire the instructivenessof His teaching,
that He nailed him fast to His word, and with this freed him from
those endless evils, such as lamentations, and mournings, and the
things that follow thereafter. For after the burial he must of
necessity proceed to inquire about the will, then about the
distribution of the inheritance, and all the other things that follow
thereupon; and thus waves after waves coming in succession upon him,
would bear him away very far from the harbor of truth. For this cause
He draws him, and fastens him to Himself. But if thou still
marvellest, and art perplexed, that he was not permitted to be present
at his father's burial; consider that many suffer not the sick, if it
be a father that is dead, or a mother, or a child, or any other of
their kinsmen, to know it, nor to follow him to the tomb; and we do
not for this charge them with cruelty nor inhumanity: and very
reasonably. For, on the contrary, it were cruelty to bring out to
the funeral solemnity men in such a state.
But if to mourn and be afflicted in mind for them that are of our
kindred is evil, much more our being withdrawn from spiritual
discourses. For this same cause He said elsewhere also, "No man
having put his hand to the plough, and looking back, is fit for the
kingdom of Heaven."And surely it is far better to proclaim the
kingdom, and draw back others from death, than to bury the dead body,
that is nothing advantaged thereby; and especially, when there are
some to fulfill all these duties.
7 Nothing else then do we learn hereby, but that we must not wantonly
lose any, no not the smallest time, though there be ten thousand
things to press on us; but to set what is spiritual before all, even
the most indispensable matters, and to know both what is life, and
what is death. Since many even of them that seem to live are nothing
better than dead men, living as they do in wickedness; or rather
these. are worse than the dead; "For he that is dead," it is
said, "is freed from sin,"but this man is a slave to sin. For tell
me not of this, that he is not eaten of worms, nor lies in a coffin,
nor hath closed his eyes, nor is bound in graveclothes. Nay, for
these things he undergoes more grievously than the dead, no worms
devouring him, but the passions of his soul tearing him to pieces more
fiercely than wild beasts.
And if his eyes be open, this too again is far worse than having
closed them. For those of the dead see no evil thing, but this man is
gathering unto himself diseases without number, while his eyes are
open. And whereas the other lies in a coffin, unmoved by anything,
this one is buried in the tomb of his innumerable distempers.
But thou seest not his body in a state of decay. And what of that?
Since before his body, his soul is corrupted and destroyed, and
undergoes greater rottenness. For the other stinketh a few days, but
this for the whole of his life exhales evil odors, having a mouth more
foul than sewers.
And so the one differs from the other, by just so much as this, that
the dead indeed undergoes that decay only which comes of nature, but
this man together with that, brings in also that rottenness which is
from intemperance, devising each day unnumbered causes of corruption.
But is he borne on horseback? And what of that? Why, so is the
other on a couch. And what is very hard, while the other is seen by
no one in his dissolution and decay, but hath his coffin for a veil,
this man is going about everywhere with his evil savor, bearing about a
dead soul in his body as in a tomb.
And if one could but once see a man's soul who is living in luxury and
vice, thou wouldest perceive that it is far better to lie bound in a
grave than to be rivetted by the chains of our sins; and to have a
stone laid over thee, than that heavy coverof insensibility.
Wherefore above all things it behooves the friends of these dead men,
seeing that they are past feeling, to come near to Jesus in their
behalf, as Mary then did in the case of Lazarus. Though he
"stinketh," though he be "dead four days," do not despair, but
approach, and remove the stone first. Yea, for then thou shalt see
him lying as in a tomb, and bound in his grave clothes.
And if ye will, let it be some one of them that are great and
distinguished, whom we bring before you. Nay, fear not, for I will
state the example without a name: or rather, though I should mention
the name, not even so need there be any fear: for who ever fears a
dead man? seeing that whatever one may do, he continues dead, and the
dead cannot injure the living either little or much.
Let us then behold their head bound up. For indeed, when they are
for ever drunken, even as the dead by their many wrappers and
grave-clothes, so are all their organs of sense closed and bound up.
And if thou wilt look at their hands too, thou shall see these again
bound to their belly, like those of the dead, and fastened about not
with grave-clothes, but what is far more grievous, with the bands of
covetousness: obtaining as they do no leave from her to be stretched
out for alms-giving, or for any other of such like good deeds; rather
she renders them more useless than those of the dead. Wouldest thou
also see their feet bound together? See them again fastened about with
cares, and for this cause never able to run unto the house of God.
Hast thou seen the dead? behold also the embalmer. Who then is the
embalmer of these? The devil, who carefully fastens them about, and
suffers not the man any longer to appear a man, but a dry stock. For
where there is no eye, nor hands, nor feet, nor any other such
thing, how can such an one appear a man? Even so may we see their
soul also swaddled up, and rather an imagethan a soul.
Forasmuch then as they are in a sort of senseless state, being turned
to dead men, let us in their behalf draw nigh unto Jesus, let us
entreat Him to raise them up, let us take away the stone, let us
loosen the grave clothes. For if thou take away the stone, that is,
their insensibility to their own miseries, thou wilt quickly be able to
bring them also out of the tomb; and having brought them out, thou
wilt more easily rid them of their bonds. Then shall Christ know
thee, when thou art risen, when unbound; then will He call thee even
unto His own supper.As many therefore of you as are friends of
Christ, as many as are disciples, as many as love him that is gone,
draw near unto Jesus, and pray. For even though his ill savor abound
and be ever so intense, nevertheless not even so should we, his
friends, forsake him, but so much the rather draw near; even as the
sisters of Lazarus then did; neither should we leave interceding,
beseeching, entreating, until we have received Him alive.
For if we thus order our own affairs, and those of our neighbors, we
shall also attain speedily unto the life to come; unto which may we all
attain, by the grace and love to man of our Lord Jesus Christ, to
whom be glory forever and ever. Amen.
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