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MATT. XII. 38, 39.
"Then certain of the Scribes and Pharisees answered Him, saying,
Master, we would see a sign from Thee. But He answered and said;
An evil and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign, and there
shall no sign be given to it, but the sign of the Prophet Jonas."
COULD then anything be more foolish than these men (not more
impious only), who after so many miracles, as though none had been
wrought, say, "We would see a sign from Thee?" With what intent
then did they so speak? That they might lay hold of Him again. For
since by His words He had stopped their mouths, once and twice and
often, and had checked their shameless tongue, they come to His works
again. At which also the evangelist marvelling again, said,
"Then certain of the scribes answered Him, asking a sign."
"Then," when? When they ought to be stooping before Him, to
admire, to be amazed and give way, "then" they desist not from their
wickedness.
And see their words too, teeming with flattery and dissimulation.
For they thought to draw Him towards them in that way. And now they
insult, now they flatter Him; now calling Him a demoniac, now again
"Master," both out of an evil mind, how contrary soever the words
they speak.
Wherefore also He rebukes them severely. And when they were
questioning Him roughly and insulting Him, He reasoned with them
gently; when they were flattering; reproachfully, and with great
severity; implying that He is superior to either passion, and is
neither at the one time moved to anger, nor at the other softened by
flattery. And see His reproach, that it is not merely hard words,
but contains a demonstration of their wickedness. For what saith He?
"An evil and adulterous generation seeketh after a sign." Now what
He saith is to this effect: What marvel if ye behave so to me who
have been hitherto unknown to you when even to the Father, of whom ye
have had so much experience, ye have done the very same? forsaking
Him, ye have run unto the devils, drawing to yourselves wicked
lovers. With this Ezekiel too was continually upbraiding them.
Now by these sayings He signified Himself to be of one accord with
His Father, and them to be doing nothing new; He was also unfolding
their secrets, how with hypocrisy and as enemies they were making their
demand. Therefore He called them "an evil generation," because
they have been always ungrateful towards their benefactors; because
upon favors they become worse, which belongs to extreme wickedness.
And He called it "adulterous," declaring both their former and
their present unbelief; whereby He implies Himself again to be equal
to the Father, if at least the not believing Him makes it
"adulterous."
2. Then, after His reproach, what saith He? "There shall no
sign be given to it, but the sign of Jonas the prophet." Now is He
striking the first note of the doctrine of His resurrection, and
confirming it by the type.
What then? one may say; was no sign given it? None was given to it
on asking. For not to bring in them did He work His signs (for He
knew them to be hardened), but in order to amend others. Either then
this may be said, or that they were not to receive such a sign as that
was. For a sign did befall them, when by their own punishment they
learnt His power. Here then He speaks as threatening, and with this
very meaning obscurely conveyed: as if He said, innumerable benefits
have I showed forth, none of these hath drawn you to me, neither were
ye willing to adore my power. Ye shall know therefore my might by the
contrary tokens, when ye shall see your city cast down to the ground,
the walls also dismantled, the temple become a ruin; when ye shall be
cast out both from your former citizenship and freedom, and shall again
go about everywhere, houseless and in exile. (For all these things
came to pass after the cross.) These things therefore shall be to you
for great signs. And indeed it is an exceeding great sign, that their
ills remain unchanged; that although ten thousand have attempted it,
no one hath been able to reversethe judgment once gone forth against
them.
All this however He saith not, but leaves it to after time to make it
clear to them, but for the present He is making trial of the doctrine
of His resurrection, which they were to come to know by the things
which they should afterwards suffer.
"For as Jonas," saith He, "was three days and three nights in
the whale's belly, so shall the Son of Man be three days and three
nights in the heart of the earth."Thus, He said not indeed openly
that He should rise again, since they would have even laughed Him to
scorn, but He intimated it in such manner, that they might believe
Him to have foreknown it. For as to their being aware of it, they
say to Pilate, "That deceiver said," these are their words,
"while He was yet alive, After three days I will rise again;"and
yet we know His disciples were ignorant of this; even as they had been
beforehand more void of understanding than these: wherefore also these
became self-condemned.
But see how exactly He expresses it, even though in a dark saying.
For He said not, "In the earth," but, "In the heart of the
earth;" that He might designate His very sepulchre, and that no one
might suspect a mere semblance.And for this intent too did He allow
three days, that the fact of His death might be believed. For not by
the cross only doth He make it certain, and by the sight of all men,
but also by the time of those days. For to the resurrection indeed all
succeeding time was to bear witness; but the cross, unless it had at
the time many signs bearing witness to it, would have been
disbelieved; and with this disbelief would have gone utter disbelief of
the resurrection also. Therefore He calls it also a sign. But had
He not been crucified, the sign would not have been given. For this
cause too He brings forward the type, that the truth may be believed.
For tell me, was Jonah in the whale's belly a mere appearance?
Nay, thou canst not say so. Therefore neither was Christ in the
heart of the earth such. For surely the type is not in truth, and the
truth in mere appearance. For this cause we every where show forth
His death, both in the mysteries, and in baptism, and in all the
rest. Therefore Paul also cries with a clear voice, "God forbid
that I should glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ."
Whence it is clear, that they who are diseased in Marcion's way are
children of the devil, blotting out these truths, to avoid the
annulling whereof Christ did so many things, while to have them
annulled the devil took such manifold pains: I mean, His cross and
His passion.
3. Therefore He said elsewhere also, "Destroy this temple, and
in three days I will raise it up:"and, "The days will come when
the Bridegroom shall be taken away from them:and here, "There shall
no sign be given it, but the sign of Jonas the prophet:" declaring
both that He should diefor them, and that they would profit nothing;
for this He afterwards declared. Nevertheless, even with this
knowledge He died: so great was His tender care.
For to hinder thy supposing that the result would be such with the
Jews as with the Ninevites; that they would be converted, and that
as in their case He established the tottering city, and converted the
barbarians, so these too should turn unto Him after His
resurrection; hear how He declares altogether the contrary. For that
they should reap no good from hence in respect of their own benefit,
but rather suffer incurable ills, this too He went on to declare by
the parable of the evil spirit.
But for the present He is justifying their future sufferings,
signifying that they would suffer justly. For their calamities and
their desolation He represents by that similitude; but up to this time
He is indicating the justice of their having to suffer all these
things: which also in the Old Testament was His wont. Thus when
about to destroy Sodom, He first defended Himself to Abraham, by
showing the desolation and rareness of virtue, when indeed not even ten
men were found in so many cities, who had made it their rule to live
chastely. And to Lot also in like manner, He first signifies their
inhospitality and their unnatural lusts, and then He brings the fire
on them. And with regard to the deluge again He did the self-same
thing, by His acts excusing Himself to Noah. And also to Ezekiel
s in like manner, when He caused him dwelling in Babylon to see
men's evil deeds in Jerusalem. And yet again to Jeremiah, when He
said, "Pray not," excusing Himself He added, "Seest thou not
what they do?"And everywhere He doeth the selfsame thing, as here
also.
For what saith He? "The men of Nineveh shall rise up,and shall
condemn this generation, because they repented at the preaching of
Jonas, and, behold, a greater than Jonas is here."
For he was a servant, but I am the Master; and he came forth from
the whale, but I rose from death; and he proclaimed destruction, but
I am come preaching the good tidings of the kingdom. And they indeed
believed without a sign, but I have exhibited many signs. And they
indeed heard nothing more than those words, but I have given a spring
to every kind of self-denial. And he came being ministered unto, but
I the very Master and Lord of all am come not threatening, not
demanding an account, but bringing pardon. And they were barbarians,
but these have conversed with unnumbered prophets. And of him no man
had foretold, but of me all, and the facts agreed with their words.
And he indeed, when he was to go forth, ran away that he might not be
ridiculed; but I, knowing that I am both to be crucified and
mocked, am come. And while he did not endure so much as to be
reproached for them that were saved, I underwent even death, and that
the most shameful death, and after this I sent others again. And he
was a strange sort of person, and an alien, and unknown; but I a
kinsman after the flesh, and of the same forefathers. And many more
topics too might any one collect, were he to seek diligently for more.
But He stops not even at this, but adds also another example,
saying,
"And the queen of the south shall rise up in judgmentwith this
generation, and shall condemn them, because she came from the
uttermost parts of the earth to hear the wisdom of Solomon, and behold
a greater than Solomon is here."
This was more than the former. For Jonah went unto them, but the
queen of the south waited not for Solomon to come to her, but went
herself unto him, although she was both a woman, and a barbarian, and
at so great a distance, no threat laid upon her, nor being in fear of
death, but simply through the love of wise words. "But behold even a
greater than Solomon is here." For in that case the woman came, but
here I have come. And she indeed rose up from the uttermost pans of
the earth, but I go about cities and villages. And his discourse was
of trees and various kinds of wood, which could do no great good to his
visitor: but mine, of secret things, and most awful mysteries.
4. When therefore He had condemned them, having proved most amply
that they were sinning inexcusably, and that their disobedience arose
from their own perverseness not from their Teacher's inability, and
when He had demonstrated this as well by many other arguments, as also
by the Ninevites, and by the queen: then He speaks also of the
punishment that should overtake them, darkly indeed, yet He doth
speak of it, interweaving an intense fear in His narration.
"For when," saith He, "the unclean spirit is gone out of the
man, he walketh through dry places, seeking rest; and finding none,
he saith, I will return to my house from whence I came out; and when
he is come, he findeth it empty, and swept and garnished. Then goeth
he, and taketh with himself seven other spirits more wicked than
himself, and they enter in and dwell there, and the last state of that
man is worse than the first. Even so shall it be also unto this
generation."
By this He signifies, that not only in the world to come, but here
too they should suffer most grievously. For since He had said,
"The men of Nineveh shall rise up in judgment, and shall condemn
this generation;" lest, on account of the postponement of the time,
they should despise and grow more careless, by this He brings His
terror close upon them. Wherewith the prophet Hosea likewise
threatening them said, that they should be "even as the prophet that
is beside himself, the man that is carried away by a spirit;", that
is to say, as the madmen, and distracted by evil spirits, even the
false prophets. For here, by "a prophet that is beside himself,"
he means the false prophet, such as are the augurs. Much to the same
effect Christ also tells them, that they shall suffer the utmost
evils.
Seest thou how from everything He urges them to attend to His
sayings; from things present, from things to come; by those who had
approved themselves (the Ninevites, I mean, and that queen), and
by the offending Tyrians and Sodomites? This did the prophets
likewise, bringing forward the sons of the Rechabites,and the bride
that forgetteth not her proper ornament and her girdle,and "the ox
that knoweth his owner, and the ass that remembereth his crib." Even
so here too, when He had by a comparison set forth their
perverseness, He speaks afterwards of their punishment also.
What then can the saying mean? As the possessed, saith He, when
delivered from that infirmity, should they be at all remiss, draw upon
themselves their delusion more grievous than ever: even so is it with
you. For before also ye were possessed by a devil, when ye were
worshipping idols, and were slaying your sons to the devils,
exhibiting great madness; nevertheless I forsook you not, but cast
out that devil by the prophets; and again in my own person I am come,
willing to cleanse you more entirely. Since then you will not attend,
but have wrecked yourselves in greater wickedness (for to kill prophets
was a crime not nearly so great and grievous as to slay Him);
therefore your sufferings will be more grievous than the former, those
at Babylon, I mean, and in Egypt, and under the first Antiochus.
Because what things befell them in the time of Vespasian and Titus,
were very far more grievous than those. Wherefore also He said,
"There shall be great tribulation, such as never was, neither shall
be."But not this only doth the illustration declare, but that they
should be also utterly destitute of all virtue, and more assailable by
the power of the devils, than at that time. For then even although
they sinned, yet were there also among them such as acted uprightly,
and God's providence was present with them, and the grace of the
Spirit, tending, correcting, fulfilling all its part; but now of
this guardianship too they shall be utterly deprived; so He tells
them; so that there is now both a greater scarcity of virtue, and a
more intense affliction, and a more tyrannical operation of the
devils.
Ye know accordingly even in our generation, when he who surpassed all
in impiety, I mean Julian, was transported with his fury, how they
ranged themselves with the heathens, how they courted their party. So
that, even if they seem to be in some small degree chastened now, the
fear of the emperors makes them quiet; since, if it were not for
that, far worse than the former had been their daring. For in all
their other evil works they surpass their predecessors; sorceries,
magic arts, impurities, they exhibit in great excess. And amongst
the rest, moreover, strong as is the curb which holds them down, they
have often made seditions, and risen up against kings, which has
resulted in their being pierced through with the worst of evils.
Where now are they that seek after signs? Let them hear that a
considerate mind is needed, and if this be wanting, signs are of no
profit. See, for instance, how the Ninevites without signs
believed, while these, after so many miracles, grew worse, and made
themselves an habitation of innumerable devils, and brought on
themselves ten thousand calamities; and very naturally. For when a
man, being once delivered from his ills, fails to be corrected, he
will suffer far worse than before. Yea, therefore He said, "he
finds no rest," to indicate, that positively and of necessity such an
one will be overtaken by the ambush of the devils. Since surely by
these two things he ought to have been sobered, by his former
sufferings, and by his deliverance; or rather a third thing also is
added, the threat of having still worse to endure. But yet by none of
these were they made better.
5. All this might be seasonably said, not of them only, but of us
also, when after having been enlightened,and delivered from our former
ills, we again cleave unto the same wickedness, for more grievous also
thenceforth will be the punishment of our subsequent sins. Therefore
to the sick of the palsy also Christ said, "Behold, thou art made
whole; sin no more, lest a worse thing come unto thee;"and this to a
man who was thirty-eight years in his infirmity. And what, one might
ask, was he to suffer worse than this? Something far worse, and more
intolerable. For far be it from us, that we should endure as much as
we are capable of enduring. For God is at no loss for inflictions.
For according to the greatness of His mercy, so also is His wrath.
With this He charges Jerusalem also by Ezekiel. "I saw thee,"
saith He, "polluted in blood; and I washed thee, and anointed
thee; and thou hadst renown for thy beauty; and thou pouredst out thy
fornications," saith He, "on those who dwell near thee,"
wherefore also the more grievous are His threatenings to thee when thou
sinnest.
But from hence infer not thy punishment only, but also the boundless
longsuffering of God. How often at least have we put our hands to the
same evil deeds, and yet He suffers long! But let us not be
sanguine, but fear; since Pharaoh too, had he been taught by the
first plague, would not have experienced the later ones; he would not
afterwards have been drowned, his host and all together.
And this I say, because I know many, who like Pharaoh are even now
saying, "I know not God,"and making those that are in their power
cleave to the clay and to the bricks. How many, though God bids them
assauge their "threatening,"cannot bear so much as to relax the
toil!
"But we have no Red Sea now, to pass through afterwards." But we
have a sea of fire, a sea not like that, either in kind or in size,
but far greater and fiercer, having its waves of fire, of some strange
and horrible fire. A great abyss is there, of most intolerable
flame, Since everywhere fire may be seen roving quickly round, like
some savage wild beast. And if here this sensible and material fire
leaped like a wild beast out of the furnace, and sprang upon those who
were sitting without,what will not that other fire do to such as have
fallen into it?
Concerning that day, hear the prophets, saying, "The day of the
Lord is incurable, full of anger and wrath."For there will be none
to stand by, none to rescue, nowhere the face of Christ, so mild and
calm. But as those who work in the mines are delivered over to certain
cruel men, and see none of their friends, but those only that are set
over them; so will it be then also: or rather not so, but even far
more grievous. For here it is possible to go unto the king, and
entreat, and free the condemned person: but there, no longer; for
He permits it not, but they continue in the scorching torment,and in
so great anguish, as it is not possible for words to tell. For if,
when any are in flames here, no speech can describe their sharp pangs,
much less theirs, who suffer it in that place: since here indeed all
is over in a brief point of time, but in that place there is burning
indeed, but what is burnt is not consumed.
What then shall we do there? For to my self also do I say these
things.
6. "But if thou," saith one, "who art our teacher, speakest so
of thyself, I care no more; for what wonder, should I be
punished?" Nay, I entreat, let no man seek this consolation; for
this is no refreshment at all. For tell me; was not the devil an
incorporeal power? Was he not superior to men? Yet he fell away.
Is there any one who will derive consolation from being punished along
with him? By no means. What of all who were in Egypt? did they not
see those also punished who were in high places, and every. house in
mourning? Were they then hereby refreshed, and comforted? No
surely; and it is manifest by what they did afterwards, as men
tortured by some kind of fire, rising up together against the king,
and compelling him to cast out the people of the Hebrews.
Yea, and very unmeaning is this saying, to suppose that it gives
comfort to be punished with all men, to say, "As all, so I too."
For why should I speak of hell? Think, I pray you, of those that
are seized with gout, how, when they are racked by sharp pain, though
you show them ten thousand suffering worse, they do not so much as take
it into their mind. For the intensity of their anguish allows not
their reason any leisure for thinking of others, and so finding
consolation. Let us not then feed ourselves with these cold hopes.
For to receive consolation from the ills of our neighbors, takes place
in ordinary sufferings; but when the torment is excessive, and all our
inward parts full of tempest, and the soul is now come to be unable so
much as to know itself, whence shall it derive consolation? So that
all these sayings are an absurdity, and fables of foolish children.
For this, of which thou speakest, takes place in dejection, and in
moderate dejection, when we are told, "the same thing hath befallen
such an one;" but sometimes not even in dejection: now if in that
case it hath no strength, much less in the anguish and burden
unspeakable, which "the gnashing of teeth" indicates.
And I know that I am galling you, and giving you pain by these
words; but what can I do? For I would fain not speak thus, but be
conscious of virtue both in myself, and in all of you; but since we
are in sins, the more part of us, who will grant me ability to pain
you indeed, and to penetrate the understanding of them that hear me?
Then might I so be i at rest. But now I fear lest any despise my
sayings, and their punishments become the greater for their indifferent
way of hearing. Since, when a master utters a threat, should one of
the fellow-servants hear and make light of his menace, not without
punishment would he hasten by him, provoked as he is, but rather it
would be a ground for increasing his chastisement. Wherefore I
entreat you, let us pierce our own hearts, when we hear His sayings
regarding hell. For nothing is more delightful than this discourse,
by how much nothing is more bitter than the reality. But how
delightful to be told of hell? one may ask. Because it were so far
from delight to fall into hell, which result, our words that appear so
galling, keep off. And before this they furnish another pleasure: in
that they brace up our souls, and make us more reverent, and elevate
the mind, and give wings to the thoughts, and cast out the desires
that so mischievously beset us; and the thing becomes a cure.
7. Wherefore, to proceed, together with the punishment let me speak
also of the shame. For as the Jews shall then be condemned by the
Ninevites, so we too by many that seem beneath us now.
Let us imagine then how great the mockery, how great the
condemnation; let us imagine, and cast some foundation at length,
some door of repentance.
To myself I say these things, to myself first I give this advice,
and let no one be angry, as though he were condemned. Let us enter
upon the narrow way. How long shall it be luxury? how long sloth?
Have we not had enough of indolence, mirth, procrastination? Will
it not be the same over again, feasting, and surfeiting, and
expense, and wealth, and acquisitions, and buildings? And what is
the end? Death. What is the end? Ashes, and dust, and coffins,
and worms.
Let us show forth then a new kind of life. Let us make earth,
heaven; let us hereby show the Greeks, of how great blessings they
are deprived. For when they behold in us good conversation, they will
look upon the very face of the kingdom of Heaven. Yea, when they see
us gentle, pure from wrath, from evil desire, from envy, from
covetousness, rightly fulfilling all our other duties, they will say,
"If the Christians are become angels here, what will they be after
their departure hence? if where they are strangers they shine so
bright, how great will they become when they shall have won their
native land!" Thus they too will be reformed, and the word of
godliness "will have free course,not less than in the apostles'
times. For if they, being twelve, converted entire cities and
countries; were we all to become teachers by our careful conduct,
imagine how high our cause will be exalted. For not even a dead man
raised so powerfully attracts the Greek, as a person practising
self-denial. At that indeed he will be amazed, but by this he will
be profited. That is done, and is past away; but this abides, and
is constant culture to his soul.
Let us take heed therefore to ourselves, that we may gain them also.
I say nothing burdensome. I say not, do not marry. I say not,
forsake cities, and withdraw thyself from public affairs; but being
engaged in them, show virtue. Yea, and such as are busy in the midst
of cities, I would fain have more approved than such as have occupied
the mountains. Wherefore? Because great is the profit thence
arising. "For no man lighteth a candle, and setteth it under the
bushel."Therefore I would that all the candles were set upon the
candlestick, that the light might wax great.
Let us kindle then His fire; let us cause them that are sitting in
darkness to be delivered from their error. And tell me not, "I have
a wife, and children belonging to me, and am master of a household,
and cannot duly practise all this." For though thou hadst none of
these, yet if thou be careless, all is lost; though thou art
encompassed with all these, yet if thou be earnest, thou shall attain
unto virtue. For there is but one thing that is wanted, the
preparation of a generous mind; and neither age, nor poverty, nor
wealth, nor reverse of fortune, nor anything else, will be able to
impede thee. Since in fact both old and young, and men having wives,
and bringing up children, and working at crafts, and serving as
soldiers, have duly performed all that is enjoined. For so Daniel
was young, and Joseph a slave, and Aquila wrought at a craft, and
the woman who sold purple was over a workshop, and another was the
keeper of a prison, and another a centurion, as Cornelius; and
another in ill health, as Timothy; and another a runaway, as
Onesimus; but nothing proved an hindrance to any of these, but all
were approved, both men and women, both young and old, both slaves
and free, both soldiers and people.
Let us not then make vain pretexts, but let us provide a thoroughly
good mind, and whatsoever we may be, we shall surely attain to
virtue, and arrive at the good things to come; by the grace and love
towards man of our Lord Jesus Christ, with whom be unto the
Father, together with the Holy Ghost. glory, might, honor, now
and ever, and world without end. Amen.
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