The holy
Doctor expounds the seven last verses of the thirty-fourth chapter, the
whole of the thirty-fifth, with the first twenty-one verses of the
thirty-sixth chapter; and launches out, at very great length, into both
allegorical and moral meanings.
[i]
1. Haughty men are wont to
display this peculiarity in what they say, that, when they know that they
have said any thing in a praiseworthy manner, they then enquire of their
hearers, whether they have by chance said any thing out of the way. And this
they do, not because they doubt of what they say, but because, namely, they
seek for approval, in the judgment of their hearers. For the object of their
enquiry will be easily discovered, if when any one praises their good
qualities, he also blames their faults. For it is certain, that as they are
puffed up by praises, so are they inflamed by reproofs; and when they see
that they are blamed, even justly, by any one, they seek at once in their
faults for materials of self-defence. How then do they humbly doubt of their
own good qualities, who even perversely endeavour to defend their bad ones?
For he is really humble in his good doings, who does not defend himself in
his evil ones. For he who is reproved for his faults, and fires up against
the words of his reprover, when he hesitates, as if humbly, in speaking of
his good qualities, seeks, by his words of humility, for compliments, and
not for instruction. Eliu therefore, as representing the conduct of the
haughty, after having stated many spiritual and sublime sentiments, behold,
assumes in words an appearance of humility, and under a kind of show of
being his disciple, addresses blessed Job with a fair proposal, saying,
Ver. 31, 32. Because I have
spoken to God, I will not hinder thee also. If I have sinned, teach thou me;
if I have spoken iniquity, I will add no more.
[ii]
2. As it is frequently the case,
that even wicked men say what is right, Eliu called to mind that he had made
a little before many noble statements, and therefore confidently enquired of
him if perchance he had erred. For he would not have thus asked, if he had
believed that he had erred. For, as I said, it is a craft peculiar to the
boastful to be eager to enquire about their erring, when they know that they
have not erred. And, again, they disdain to make this enquiry, and to be
convicted of error, whenever they plainly foresee that they have done wrong.
For they seek not to be, but to appear, humble, and they assume an
appearance of humility, by then making the enquiry, when they are praised
the more from the very enquiry itself. But, because it is very difficult for
the pride, which reigns in the heart, not to break out in the voice, if the
hearers of these haughty men wait for a while, and consider their sayings in
silence, the words, which follow, too soon make manifest their hearts. For
they cannot continue long in that guise of humility, which they assume in
appearance only. For to haughty minds humility is lofty; and when they
endeavour to climb up to its beauty they stumble, as if from abrupt and
rugged paths, with the weary steps of their mind. For that which they wish
to appear is foreign to them: and they cannot therefore long cling close to
its resemblance. They count it a heavy burden, when they bear it only in
appearance, and they suffer a kind of constraint in their heart, till they
cast it aside. Because in truth they are slaves to the habit of pride, which
fatally rules over them, and are compelled by its authority to shew what
they are, so that they cannot appear, for any time, that which they are not.
Whence Eliu also, after he requested to be informed of his error, after he
promised that he would no longer speak iniquity, suddenly broke out, from an
appearance of humility, into words of proud arguing. For he added, saying,
Ver. 33. Doth God require it
of thee, because it hath displeased thee?
[iii]
3. As though he were saying, I am
about to give reasons, in the sight of God, why my iniquity is now blamed by
thee, though it is plain that it is not required of thee in judgment. When
good men are unrighteously assailed by the world, they appeal to the
judgment of heaven. Whence also it is said by the same blessed Job,
Behold, my witness is in heaven, and He Who knoweth me is on high. [Job
16, 19] And because they especially desire to please Him, they seek for the
witness of Him only. Wicked men also, because they forsake the life of the
just, but sometimes imitate their words, when reproved for their misdeeds
adopt that, as a ground of defence, which the righteous urge, as an evidence
of their purity. Whence it has become already a custom with them, when any
one blames them for their doings, to seek the judgment of God rather than of
men. For, even when they know that they will be condemned by God, they are
not afraid of being judged by Him, and are ashamed of being judged by men.
They prefer, therefore, the greater, which they fear not, in order to be
able to avoid the less, of which they are ashamed. For it is written,
Every one of us shall give account of himself to God. [Rom. 14, 12]
Because then the condemnation of every one is then manifest, the ungodly now
gather from it, that, even the wicked conduct of every one is out of danger,
that the righteous should now refute and expose that conduct, with which, it
is plain, he has no concern in the judgment. But the consciences of the holy
consider on the other hand, that a great reward is conferred on them, when
they are now convicted of some of their unlawful deeds. For, they set it
before the eyes of their heart, that the strict judgment of God will then be
more surely mitigated towards them, the more severely it is now anticipated
by the reproofs of man. And they consider as a gain the temporal wrath upon
them, by which they know well that they can escape the wrath eternal. Let
Eliu, therefore, (as representing all haughty men, and choosing rather to be
smitten with eternal severity, than to be reproved in this life,) say,
Doth God require it of thee, because it hath displeased thee? But since
those who speak first in a dispute are usually more to blame than those who
reply, he subjoins,
For thou didst begin to speak,
not I.
[iv]
4. He believed himself to
be so far innocent, in as much as he burst forth only on being struck, being
doubtless ignorant that innocence is not defended on the score of time, but
on that of reason. For what support does it give to his defence, that,
though he did not revile him when silent, when he began properly, he replied
to him revilingly? But after he displays himself in words of pride, lo, he
again conceals himself under the pretext of a demand, and proceeds to say,
But if thou knowest any thing
better, say on.
Although, while he does not say,
because thou knowest better, but, If thou knowest any thing better, say
on, it was itself too proud of him, that he had doubted of the knowledge
of his superior. But he signified that he had exhibited his humility, in
having given blessed Job an opportunity of speaking. But, as was before
stated, that every thing in the doings of the proud, which is concealed by a
covering of words, is brought to light, when the boastful purpose again
breaks forth, Eliu speedily made known, with what purpose he required
blessed Job to speak. For it follows,
Ver. 34, 35. Let men of
understanding speak to me, and let a wise man hear me. But Job hath spoken
foolishly, and his words sound not of discipline.
[v]
5. Lo, how he lays open that,
which he was cherishing within, when, as if humbly, he allows blessed Job to
speak; saying, Let men of understanding speak to me. For if blessed
Job were to presume to speak, he would have disdained him, as though he
could not understand his words. And, because he considered that blessed Job
was unworthy not only to speak with, but even to hear, him, he immediately
added, Let a wise man hear me. As if he were to say, This man is
unfairly permitted to speak, who is not worthy even to hear the words of
wise men. And he presently shews plainly, how contemptibly he thinks of him,
saying, But Job hath spoken foolishly, and his words sound not of
discipline. He believed that blessed Job had spoken without discipline,
because he said, that he had been just in his doings. Eliu would perhaps be
speaking truly, if the Author of discipline had not Himself agreed with what
blessed Job had said of himself. For Job asserted that he had been scourged
undeservedly, whom God declared also to have been smitten without reason.
What haughtiness then did the voice of the sufferer utter, which did not at
all differ from the sentence of the Smiter? Those persons are
inconsiderately humble, who, whilst they avoid pride, ensnare themselves in
falsehood. Nay rather, they shew pride in their falsehood; because they set
themselves up against the truth, which they abandon. For he, who states of
himself good qualities, which are true, when necessity compels, the more
closely is united to humility, the more he adheres also to truth. Was not
Paul humble, when from zeal for the truth against false Apostles, he related
to his disciples so many bold deeds concerning himself? For he would
doubtless be an enemy of truth, if, by concealing his own good qualities, he
had allowed the preachers of errors to gain strength.
But because proud men, in that
they haughtily examine the sayings of the righteous, consider rather the
surface of the words, than the order of the matters, Eliu believed that the
sentiments of blessed Job had not sounded of discipline. But since the
asperity of haughty men extends sometimes as far as to the severity of
cursing, he immediately, as if speaking to God, subjoins against blessed
Job,
Ver. 36. My Father, let Job be
tried even to the end.
[vi]
6. Lo! how he lifts up even in
words of cursing, that which he had before conceived of the swellings of
arrogance. But he would perhaps wish for the force of a merciful probation,
if he had believed that he had stood firm in probation. In order then that
the malice of his cruelty may openly appear, he prays, that he may still be
tried by scourges, who he complains had already fallen during his scourges.
He first stated what he thought, in order that what he wished might be more
plainly understood. He requires him to be still smitten, whom he accuses of
having sinned already under the hand of the Smiter. These are wishes
peculiar to the haughty, to pray that the lives of those who are suffering
may be more severely examined, because the more just they are in their own
eyes, the more hardened are they in others’ sufferings. For they know not
how to take to them the feeling of the other’s infirmity, and to feel pity
for their neighbour’s weakness, as they do for their own. For since they
think highly of themselves, they do not at all condescend to the humble.
Eliu believed that blessed Job had been smitten for his sin, and therefore
believed that no bowels of compassion were to be shewn to him, even in the
midst of so many sorrows. But when men, who are truly holy, behold any one
smitten, even for his faults, though they reprove some of his inordinate
doings, yet they sympathize with some of his sufferings; and they are so
skilled in keeping down swellings, as yet to know how to relieve wounds, in
order that when their hardnesses are softened, their infirmities may be
strengthened. But because, on the other hand, haughty men have no bowels of
love, they not only do not sympathize with the righteous when suffering, but
moreover afflict them, under pretence of proper reproof, and they either
exaggerate trifling faults, if there are any in them, or pervert by wrong
construction those points which are really good.
7. Although even holy teachers
are frequently wont to exaggerate the vices of offenders, and from some
outward signs to dive into secret faults, in order from the smallest defects
to discover greater. Whence it is said to Ezekiel, Son of man, dig in the
wall. Where he presently subjoined, And when I had digged in the
wall, there appeared a door;
and He said unto me, Go in, and
see the most wicked abominations that they do here. And I went in and saw,
and behold every likeness of creeping things, and the abominations of
animals, and all the idols of the house of Israel, were painted on the wall.
[Ez. 8, 8-10] For by
Ezekiel is represented the person of rulers; by the wall the hardness of
subjects. And what is the digging into the wall, except laying bare hardness
of heart by sharp reproofs? For when he had dug into it, there appeared a
door; because when hardness of heart is opened by sharp reproofs, a kind of
door appears, through which all the secret thoughts of the person, who is
reproved, can be seen. Whence it also well follows in that place, And He
said to me, Go in, and see the most wicked abominations which they do here.
A person enters as it were to behold abominations, who on examining
certain signs which appear outwardly, so penetrates the hearts of those
under him, that all their unlawful thoughts are made plain to him. Whence he
added, And I went in and saw; and behold every likeness of
creeping things, and the abomination of animals. By reptiles are
especially understood worldly thoughts: but by animals, those which rise a
little above the earth, but still seek for the rewards of an earthly
recompense. For reptiles cling to the earth with the whole of their body,
but though animals are in their belly suspended from the earth, yet they are
by the appetite of gluttony ever bending to the earth. Reptiles therefore
are within the wall, when thoughts which are never elevated from worldly
desires, are revolved in the mind. Animals also are within the wall, when if
any just and becoming thoughts are conceived, they subserve the pursuit of
worldly gains and honours, and of themselves indeed they are already
suspended, as it were, from the earth, but by their ambition, they still
bring themselves down to the basest objects, as by gluttonous desire. Whence
it is also well subjoined, And all the idols of the house of Israel were
painted on the wall. For it is written, And covetousness which is
idolatry. [Col. 3, 5] After the animals, therefore, the idols are
properly described, because, though they arise themselves, as it were, from
the earth by becoming conduct, yet they bring themselves down to the earth
again by dishonourable ambition. But it is well said, Were painted;
because while the appearances of outward objects are drawn inward, whatever
is thought in imagination is painted, as it were, on the heart.
8. We must therefore observe,
that first a hole, and afterwards a door, is seen in the wall: and that then
at last the secret abomination is laid open: because, doubtless, the signs
of every sin are first observed without, next the door of detected iniquity
is laid open; and then at last all the evil is disclosed, which is lurking
within. Therefore even holy teachers are wont to examine severely into
minute points, in order to arrive at greater hidden faults, from outer
faults at the very surface. They utter words of sharp reproof, in order to
root out the thorns of deadly thought, and when they act thus, they rage
with the love of charity, and are not puffed up with the swelling of pride.
For they are ready to die for those, whom they afflict as if raging even to
the death. In their thoughts they retain this affection, while they assume
persecution in appearance. They insinuate sound truths in their preaching,
they announce and warn against evils, and do not as Eliu pray for, and
desire them. They are sometimes so prompt in reproof against those committed
to their care, as though they had nothing of calmness: but are so tranquil
in affection, as though no warmth could kindle them. For they greatly fear,
that if they should cease to reprove the wicked, they would be punished
themselves for their damnation. And when warmed into words of reproof, they
unwillingly have recourse to them, but yet prepare them, as a defence for
themselves, before their strict Judge.
9. Whence it is said again also
to the same Ezekiel, Son of man, take thee a brick, and thou shall place
it before thee, and
thou shall describe on it the city Jerusalem, and thou shalt build
munitions, and heap up a mound, and set a camp against it, and place
battering rams around it. And take thou an iron pan, and thou shalt place it
as an iron wall between thee and the city.
[Ezek. 4, 1-3] For whom does
Ezekiel represent, but rulers? And to him it is said, Take thee a brick,
and thou shall place it before thee, and thou shalt describe on it the city
Jerusalem. For holy teachers take to themselves a brick, when they lay
hold of the earthly heart of hearers, in order to instruct it. And they
place this brick before them, because they guard it with the entire
attention of their anxiety. And they are ordered also to describe the city
Jerusalem thereon, because they earnestly endeavour in their preaching to
shew to earthly hearts, how great is the vision of heavenly peace. And it is
well said to him also, And thou shalt set in array the siege against it,
and thou shall build munitions. For holy teachers set the siege in array
against the brick, on which the city Jerusalem is described, when they shew
to an earthly mind, now seeking after its heavenly country, what an
opposition of sins assails it in the season of this life. For when it is
pointed out, how each separate sin lays ambush against the mind, the siege
is set, as it were, against Jerusalem by the voice of the preacher. But
because they suggest not only how sins lay wait and assault the mind, but
also how virtues, when guarded, strengthen it, it is rightly subjoined,
And thou shall build munitions. For a holy preacher builds munitions,
when he ceases not to teach what virtues oppose what vices. And
because the contests of temptation frequently become stronger as virtues
increase, it is still rightly added, And thou shalt heap up a mound, and
set a camp against it, and place battering rams around it. For every
preacher raises up a mound, when he points out the mass of increasing
temptation. And he raises a camp against Jerusalem, when he points out to
the right disposition of his hearers the circumventions of the crafty enemy,
as snares which are beyond their understanding. And he places battering rams
around, when he makes known the stings of temptations which surround us on
every side in this life, and pierce through the wall of virtues.
10. Where it is well added,
And take thee an iron pan, and thou shalt place it as an iron wall between
thee and the city. For, by the pan is set forth parching, and by the
iron, strength. But what so parches and tortures the mind of a ruler and
teacher as zeal for the Lord? Whence also Paul was burned by the parching of
this pan, when saying, Who is weak, and I am not weak? who is offended,
and I burn not? [2 Cor. 11, 29] And because whoever is kindled with a
zeal for God against sinners, is constantly protected by a strong guard
within, in order that he may not be condemned for neglecting his charge of
preaching and ruling, it is well said, Thou shall place it as an iron
wall between thee and the city. For the iron pan is placed as an iron
wall between the Prophet and the city, because when teachers now display a
resolute zeal, they hold afterwards the same zeal, as a strong bulwark,
between themselves and their hearers; that they may not then be given up to
punishment, if they have been now negligent in reproof. The same Prophet
heard that he was to hold this pan between himself and his hearers, when the
voice of God addressed him before, saying, If thou hast announced to the
wicked, and he have turned not from his wickedness, and from his evil way,
he himself shall die in his wickedness, but thou hast delivered thy soul.
[Ez. 3, 19] Paul had placed this pan, as a wall between himself and his
disciples, when saying, I am pure from the blood of all of you:
for I have not shunned to declare unto you the whole counsel of God. It
is, therefore, necessary that teachers should seek to be burned up now with
ardent zeal, that they may not be compelled to suffer torments in the fire
of hell for the sloth of negligence.
11. But we owe one duty to those
who are unrighteous and subject to us, and another to those who are
righteous and not subject to us. For fear should enkindle us to reprove
those, and to take good care of the accounts we have to render. But the
thought of equity should incline us to reverence these. But haughty men,
because they know not this kind of discretion, exhibit the same conduct to
those who are righteous, and not subject to them, as they see good preachers
display towards those who are unrighteous, and subject to them. And when
they unjustly launch out into warmth of invective, they venture even on
words of malediction. For, because they do not love their neighbours as
themselves, they cease not to wish for their neighbours that, which they are
afraid of befalling themselves. Whence Eliu, venting his secret hatred in
open malediction, exclaims, O my Father, let Job be tried even to the
end, cease not from the man of iniquity. He calls him a man of iniquity,
whom God, by a testimony from on high, pronounces righteous above all men.
And because many things are still subjoined, from this want of
discrimination, I think that they must be run through briefly. For sayings,
which are wanting in weight, do not require any careful exposition. It
follows,
Ver. 37. Who hath added
blasphemy upon his sins.
[vii]
12. He accuses him of having
deserved scourges for his sins, and of having sinned after the scourges. But
the Lord judges far otherwise, Who both asserts that he was scourged without
reason, and conferred on him double goods, after his scourges. Blessed Job,
then, is proved to have spoken without sin, whom rewards follow after his
speech. Because, therefore, Eliu, when speaking in the Lord’s defence,
thinks of blessed Job differently from the Lord, he is at variance with the
truth, while multiplying, as it were, his words in behalf of the truth. It
follows,
Let him be bound meanwhile
amongst us, and then let him provoke God to judgment with his words.
[viii]
13. As though he were saying, Let
him know from our assertion, that he is by no means able to bear the
examination of God. And, because haughty men strive to say not only foolish,
but also many, things, the verse which follows is frequently well introduced
respecting him.
Chap. xxxv. Ver. 1. Eliu
therefore spake these words again.
[ix]
14. Every one, who says many
things, is anxious to be always beginning, in his speech, in order, by this
very beginning, to keep his hearers in suspense, so that they may be the
more attentively silent, the more they expect, as it were, to hear some new
thing. But Eliu, finishing one subject, begins another without delay, in
order that his loquacity may be continued without limit, by beginnings being
constantly joined on. It follows,
Ver. 2. Doth thy thought seem
right to thee, that thou saidst, I am more righteous than God.
[x]
15. Every one observes, who reads
the text of the history, that blessed Job did not say that he was more
righteous than God. But he says, Let Him put forth equity against me, and
my judgment shall come to victory. [Job 23, 7. Vulg.] Examining namely
his life, and not knowing the reasons of his smiting, as has been often
observed, he believed that he was scourged for the sake of washing away his
sins, and not of increasing his merits. And he was therefore confident, that
his judgment would come to victory, because he found in himself no fault,
for which he deserved to be smitten. Which thing indeed the Lord also said
of him to the devil; Thou hast moved Me against him, to afflict him
without cause. [Job 2, 3] What had he sinned then, by speaking thus,
who, unknowingly, agreed, in these words, with the divine and secret
sentence upon himself? Or what harm is there, if, in the judgment of men,
our words differ, on the surface, from the exactness of truth, when, in that
on which they turn in the heart, they are closely joined to, and agree with,
it. [‘cordis cardine’] The ears of men consider our words to be such as they
sound outwardly, but the divine judgments hear them as they are uttered from
our inmost heart. Among men, our heart is judged of from our words, but with
God, our words are judged of from our heart. Whilst blessed Job, then said
without, that, which God said within, he justly uttered every thing which he
said, inasmuch as he, piously, did not differ from the Inner sentence.
Although in that which he said, filled by the spirit of Prophecy, Let Him
put forth Equity against me, and my judgment shall come to victory, he
might be looking for the presence of our Redeemer. For He, Who is the Virtue
and the Wisdom of the Father, may be, not improperly, considered as His
Equity. Whence it is written, Who of God is made unto us wisdom, and
righteousness, and sanctification. [1 Cor. l, 30] And because, namely,
God has placed this Equity against sinners who fly from Him, by exhibiting
It Incarnate, He recalled them at once from their iniquity; and, in that
judgment in which it found the Equity of God opposing its ways, mankind has
overcome its ancient opponent. It follows,
Ver. 3. For thou saidst, that
which is right doth not please thee, or what will it profit thee, if I shall
have sinned.
[xi]
16. If the whole course of the
book is attended to, blessed Job is proved to have said none of these
things. But haughty men, as we have also said before, are wont to have this
peculiarity, that while they go on in violent invective, they also speak
falsely in their inveighing, and that, when they cannot justly blame the
things which exist, they reprehend, in their falsehood, those which do not
exist. It follows,
Ver. 4. I will therefore
answer thy words, and thy friends with thee.
In his former saying, he
mentioned culpable words, as if those of blessed Job, and derived from them
matter for his remarks. But, in the words which follow, he examines, with
great acuteness, that, which he craftily invented as matter to speak upon.
And the sentiments which follow are powerful, but are not applicable to the
character of blessed Job; and the shafts of this reproof strike him the
less, the more unjustly they are launched against him. It follows,
Ver. 5—7. Look unto the
heaven, and see, and behold the sky, that it is higher than thou. If thou
hast sinned, what wilt thou hurt Him? If thine iniquities have been
multiplied, what wilt thou do against Him? If, moreover, thou hast acted
justly, what wilt thou give Him, or what will He receive of thy hand?
[xii]
17. Although these words ought
not to have been said to blessed Job, who knew greater truths, yet the
things, which are said, are true, namely, that neither do our sins hurt God,
nor our good deeds assist Him. Whence he followed, and added, (ver. 8.)
Thine iniquity will hurt a man that is like thee, and thy righteousness will
profit the son of man. But amongst these things we must carefully notice
that which he says, Look into the heavens, and see, and behold the sky,
that it is higher than thou. For from speaking in this way he doubtless
signifies, that Job should consider, how much less he could either benefit,
or injure, God by his conduct, since he could neither benefit, nor injure,
the loftiness of the heaven, or of the sky. For although we can understand
by the heaven, or the sky, the heavenly powers, who are ever steadily gazing
on the sight of the Godhead, (in order that, when we behold that the angelic
spirits are still far distant from us, we may acknowledge how far we are
distant below, from the Creator and Lord of spirits Himself,) yet nothing
prevents our understanding by them in this place the material substance of
heaven and sky. For if we look attentively at outward things, we are
recalled by their very means to inward things. For the wonderful works of
the visible creation, are the footsteps of our Creator. For we cannot as yet
behold Him Himself; but we are yet tending to a sight of Him, if we admire
Him in these things which He has made. We call, therefore, the creation His
footsteps, because we journey onwards towards Him by-following up those
things which proceed from Him. Whence Paul says, The invisible things of
Him are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even His
eternal power and Godhead. [Rom. 1, 20] Whence also it is written in the
Book of Wisdom, For by the greatness and beauty of the creatures the
Maker of them can be intelligently seen. [Wisd. 13, 5] For to our
mind, which is through sin scattered abroad, God is not as yet made known
within, as He really is. But while He sets before us from without the beauty
of His creation, He gives us, as it were, certain hints, and shews what to
follow within. He leads us on wonderfully by these same outward forms to
inward things, He intimates with boundless admiration what He is, by shewing
us these marvels without, which are not Himself. For hence it is written of
Wisdom, She sheweth herself cheerfully unto them in the ways, and meeteth
them in all forethought. [Wisd. 6, 16]
18. For the works of the creation
are, when considered, ways to the Creator. For when we see these things,
which are made, we admire the power of their Maker. In these ways we are met
by Wisdom, with all forethought, because the power of our Maker is set
before us, to be enquired into, in every thing, which appears to have been
wonderfully wrought. And wherever the soul turns itself, if it looks
attentively, it finds God in the very same objects, through which it forsook
Him; and again acknowledges His power, from a consideration of those
objects, for the love of which it abandoned Him. And it is recalled, when
converted, by those things, by which, when perverted, it fell. For we make
efforts to rise on the very spot where we fell, and in rising, we place, as
it were, the hand of consideration on the spot, where, falling with the foot
of slippery love, we were lying prostrate through neglect. But because we
have, by visible things, fallen from invisible, it is right that we should
again strive, by visible things, to reach invisible; in order that what was
to the soul a fall to the bottom, may be a step in turn to the summit, and
that it may rise by the same paces by which it fell: while, as was before
said, those objects, rightly considered, recal us to God, which, when
improperly chosen, separated us from Him. Eliu, therefore, in order to apply
the force of consideration, and to shew from bodily objects, how far higher
is God than man, well observed, Look unto the heaven, and see, and behold
the sky, that it is higher than thou. For we learn from these created
and corporeal objects, how far we are distant from the loftiness of our
Creator: because, by every thing which we behold, we are warned to be
humble; in order that the beauty of the creature, when considered, may be,
as it were, a kind of lesson to our mind. Let him say then, Look unto the
heaven, and see, and behold the sky, that it is higher than thou. If thou
hast sinned, in what wilt thou hurt Him? If thine iniquities have been
multiplied, what wilt thou do against Him? If, moreover, thou hast acted
justly, what wilt thou give Him, or what will He receive of thy hand? As
if he were saying, Understand from the very creatures, which thou seest by
thy bodily senses, to be higher than thyself, how far thou art removed from
the loftiness of the Divine Power, and conclude, from this thy
consideration, that thou canst neither benefit God by thy good living, nor,
again, injure Him by thy evil deeds.
19. But if, as we before said, we
understand the superior Powers by ‘heaven,’ or the ‘sky,’ Eliu, in these
words, warns us to consider, that, because the angelic spirits themselves
cannot fully contemplate the power of our Creator, (though it is certain
that they are higher than ourselves, as not having fallen into the lowest
depths,) we should hence infer, how far we are inferior to God, who are
beneath even those sublime creatures, who are yet far His inferiors. As if
he were to say, Lo ! how widely thou art separated from the loftiness of the
Godhead, from Whose might even those powers shrink in their humility, who
surpass thee with immeasurable loftiness; and how far inferior thou art to
the Most High, who discernest that thou art inferior to those, who are
inferior to Him. But, by pointing out the highest objects, he brings to an
equality, and says,
Ver. 8. Thine iniquity will
hurt a man, who is like thee, and thy righteousness will profit the son of
man.
[xiii]
20. The iniquity of man hurts
him, whom it pollutes by perversion. And, again, our righteousness profits
him, whom it converts from his wickedness. For those things cannot either
hurt, or profit, which cannot either corrupt from what is good, or change
from what is evil. The powers above, then, cannot be either hurt, or
profiled, because they have already received to be free from change. But
they who are involved in earthly desires, cannot consider these things. For
it is difficult for minds, which are scattered abroad, to return to
themselves; because evil ways detain them, more pleasurably, when once
ensnared, the more every thing, which pleases them, is therein permitted.
For no wall of discipline stands in the way to confine them, no punishment
of retribution is looked forward to, to frighten them. But, when the eyes of
the heart are closed, the soul is plunged the more surely into the lowest
abyss, as it is shut out from the highest objects, and commits temporal sins
more fearlessly, the more obstinately it despairs of eternal blessings.
21. But that wickedness of the
reprobate, separating the life of the Elect, as corn from the chaff in
threshing, oppresses, that it may purify. For the wicked, whilst they
afflict the good, release them the more from the desires of this world;
because, while they heap on them many cruelties here, they compel them to
hasten heavenwards. Which is well signified by the Jewish people, when Moses
was summoning, and king Pharaoh raging against, them. For Moses was then
sent to call them, when Pharaoh had been already urged to oppress them by
hard labours: in order that the one, while summoning, might draw away, as it
were, the minds of the Israelites disgracefully clinging to Egypt, and the
other might urge them on, as it were, while raging: and that the people,
which was disgracefully held in bondage, might be moved, either by being
invited by blessings, or driven by sufferings. [Ex.16, 3] This occurs daily,
while the reprobate are allowed to rage against the Elect, when heavenly
rewards have been announced to them; in order, that, if we neglect to go
forth, when called, to the land of promise, we may be compelled at least by
raging oppressions; and, that this Egypt, that is, our present life, which
oppressed us, when flattering, may aid, when pressing, us: and that, that
which, when cherishing, crushed us with the yoke of bondage, may shew the
way of liberty, while it tortures. This is the special reason, why the
righteous are allowed to be afflicted by the wicked, in order, namely, that
while they hear of future blessings to desire, they may also suffer present
evils to shudder at; and that, while love invites, torture may drive them to
an easier escape. Whence Eliu, going on to speak of the same sufferings of
the Elect, under the oppressions of the reprobate, says,
Ver. 9. They will cry out, by
reason of the multitude of oppressors
[‘calumniatores.’
‘wrongful clamants.’],
and will wail on account of the force of the arm of tyrants.
[xiv]
22. We can rightly term all the
ungodly ‘oppressors,’ not those only, who spoil our outward goods, but
those, also, who endeavour by their wicked habits, and by the example of
their reprobate life, to scatter our inward treasures. For those go about to
attack the things, which are without us, but these seek to prey on us
within. The one cease not to rage with love for our goods, the other with
hatred of our virtues. The one envy what we possess, the others the way we
live. The one desire to spoil our outward goods, because they like them, the
others are busy in squandering our inward goods, because they dislike them.
As the life, then, of our habits is superior to the substance of our goods,
he is the greater oppressor, who assaults our virtues, by wicked conduct,
than he who injures our goods, by violently oppressing us. For though he has
withdrawn nothing from our support, yet he has set before us examples of
perdition. He has inflicted on us, therefore, a heavier oppression, since he
has roused our heart, when quiet, by temptation. And though he has not
persuaded us to the works of his conduct, he has yet imposed on us a contest
of temptation. We suffer therefore a heavy oppression from his life,
because, doubtless, we suffer that within, which we must overcome with
difficulty. And because the life of the wicked abounds in this world, to
torture us, it is well said, They will cry out by reason of the multitude
of the oppressors.
23. But because they sometimes
endeavour to extort even by unrestrained violence, that which they cannot
persuade by words, it is rightly subjoined, And will wail on account of
the force of the arm of tyrants. For whoever compels us, by his example,
to live wickedly, uses in our case, as yet, the voice of the oppressor. But
whoever desires to frighten us also, when persuading us to sin, now rages
against us with the arm of tyranny. For, to recommend vices by one’s
conduct, is one thing, to enforce it by terrors, is another. When we look
then at patterns of evil doing, we hear, thus far, as it were, the noise of
the oppressor; but when we are by force compelled to sin, we endure at once
a tyrant in our heart. [‘vi cogimur’]
24. But the minds of the strong,
which are stedfastly fixed in God, despise all these assaults, the more they
discern that they rise up against the commands of their Creator. For waiting
for the rewards of eternity, they gain strength from their adversities,
because, as the fight grows strong, they doubt not that a more glorious
victory awaits them. Thus while the desires of the Elect are kept down, they
make progress by adversity, just as the fire is blown back by the blast, in
order to increase, and gains strength by the means, by which it appears to
be extinguished. For we shew in this way, with what great desire for God we
are inflamed, if we pass over to Him, not merely by tranquil and smooth, but
even through rugged and hard paths. For hence the Prophet says, Who hath
made my feet like harts’ feet. [Ps.18, 33] For, when a hart climbs
mountain ridges, it passes over, with a bound, whatever rugged places it
beholds, whatever spots, entangled with briars, oppose themselves, and rises
up to higher ground, without any obstacle to its course. So also the minds
of the Elect leap over, with the bound of contemplation, whatever they see
obstructing, or opposing them in this world, and, despising the thorns of
worldly anxieties, raise themselves, like hinds, to things above. Hence he
says again, And by my God, I shall pass over a wall. [Ps. 18,
29] For ‘a wall’ is every thing thrown in our way, ‘that we pass not over to
Him, Whom we love. But we pass over a wall, when we trample down, for love
of our heavenly country, whatever things have, in this world, been placed in
our way. Hence the Lord says, by the same Prophet, to a struggling soul;
I heard thee in the hidden place of the
tempest, I proved thee at the waters of contradiction.
[Ps. 81, 7] For it is ‘the hidden
place of the tempest,’ when the waves of tempting thoughts swell up in the
contrite heart, when the tumults of worldly cares dash themselves against
the zeal of holy love. He is heard, then, in the hidden place of the
tempest, because this very agitation of tribulation, is the cry of
suppliants. But, because there are never entirely wanting such, as endeavour
to advise evil to those who are seeking for good, the waters of
contradiction are opposing people. And because our desire is then proved,
when it is opposed by any adversity, it is rightly said, I have proved
thee at the waters of contradiction. By these efforts of virtues, then,
the strong make progress, from adversity: but the weak, if any obstacles
have been placed against them, often languish in their desires, and, when
assaulted by mighty tribulation, fail from cowardice. Whence Eliu,
inflicting on blessed Job reproaches for his cowardice, having first
mentioned the oppressions of the wicked, proceeds immediately to speak of
the cowardice of the weak, saying,
Ver. 10. And He said not,
Where is God, Who made me?
[xv]
25. It is the practice of Holy
Scripture, to pass suddenly from the singular to the plural, and to turn
itself from the plural to the singular. Whence Eliu, when saying, They
will cry and wail, did not subjoin, They said not, Where is God?
but, He said not, Where is God? For, coming from the plural to the
singular, he suddenly passed over to the person of each of the weak. Perhaps
because that is better discerned by individuals, which is heard spoken of
them individually: so that each of them returns to his own heart, and blames
in himself that, which is stated of each man one by one. He, therefore,
retained the singular number, saying, He said not, Where is God, Who hath
made me? For, whoever is crushed by the tribulation of adversities, does
not look at Him, by Whom He was made. For He, Who made that, which was not,
leaves it not, when made, without guidance: and He Who made man mercifully,
does not permit him to be tormented unjustly. Nor does He carelessly suffer
that, which is, to perish, Who also created that which was not, that it
might be. When we ask, then, the cause of our tribulation, and perhaps too
slowly discover it; there is this consideration, we can suffer nothing
unjustly, because if, God being our Creator, we exist, who before were not,
God being our Ruler, we, who are, are not unjustly afflicted. It follows,
Who hath given songs in the
night.
[xvi]
26. A ‘song in the night’ is joy
in tribulation; because, though afflicted with worldly oppressions, we yet
now rejoice in the hope of eternity. Paul was announcing songs in the night,
saying, Rejoicing in hope, patient in tribulation. [Rom. 12, 12]
David had taken up his song in the night, who was saying, Thou art my
hope from the oppression which hath surrounded me, my Exultation, deliver me
from those who surround me. [Ps. 32, 7] Lo! he calls oppression ‘night,’
and yet amidst his straitnesses, he calls his Deliverer, his Exultation.
There was ‘night’ indeed without, in the encompassing of oppressions, but
‘songs’ were resounding within, from the consolation of joy. For, because we
cannot return to eternal joys, except through temporal losses, it is the
whole object of Scripture, that the hope of the joys, which will abide,
should strengthen us, amid these passing adversities. Whence also the
Prophet Ezekiel witnesses, that he had received a book, in which were
written, lamentations, a song, and woe. [Ezek. 2, 10] For what is
signified by this ‘book,’ except the words of God? For since they enjoin on
us tears and sorrow, lamentations are said to be written therein. They
contain also a song and woe; for they so set forth joy from hope, as yet to
announce oppression and difficulties in this present life. They contain a
song and woe, because though we seek for what is sweet there, it is yet
first necessary for us to endure bitternesses here. The Lord was preaching a
song and woe to His disciples, when He was saying, These things I have
spoken unto you, that in Me ye might have peace: in the world ye shall have
tribulation. [John 16, 33] As though He were plainly saying, May you
have an inward refreshment and consolation from Me, because cruel and heavy
oppression will befal you from the world without. Because then, every feeble
person, when oppressed, has, by reason of his great weakness of heart, but
faint hope of joy, and, when suffering adversities without, forgets that, in
which he used to rejoice within, it is well said, He said not, Where is
God Who made me, Who hath given songs in the night? For, were he to say
these words, he would moderate the violence which he suffers, and, by the
lasting good he was seeking within, would consider, that the transitory pain
he endures, is not intolerable. It follows,
Ver. 11. Who teacheth us more
than the beasts of the earth, and instructeth us more than the fowls of
heaven.
[xvii]
27. The beasts of the earth are
they, who seek the lowest things, from the habit of a carnal life. But the
fowls of the heaven are they, who search into lofty things, with the
eagerness of a proud curiosity. These degrade themselves, by their conduct,
below what they are in themselves; these exalt themselves, by their
enquiries, beyond what they are able. The pleasure of the flesh casts down
those to the very bottom, the lust of curiosity exalts these, as it were, in
things above them. To those it is said by holy Scripture, Be ye not as
the horse, and the mule, which have no understanding. [Ps. 32, 9] The
proud labour of these is blamed, when it is said, Seek not out the things
that are higher than thou, neither search the things that are above thy
strength. [Ecclus. 3, 21] To those it is said, Mortify your members
which are upon the earth, fornication, lust, evil concupiscence.
[Col. 3, 5] To these it is said, Let no man deceive you through
philosophy and vain deceit. [Col. 2, 8] God teaches us, therefore, more
than the beasts and the fowls of the air, because, while we understand what
we are, neither does the infirmity of the flesh cast us down, nor does the
spirit of pride raise us up. We do not, by sinking down, fall beneath the
lowest things, nor are we puffed up, by pride, as to those above us. For he,
who falls in the flesh, is overcome by the appetite of beasts, but he, who
is exalted in mind, is raised up, like the fowls, as if with the wing of
lightness.
28. But if we keep strict watch,
that both humility of mind and chastity of body be preserved, we soon know
that the one is preserved by the other. For pride has often been to many a
seed-plot of lust; for, whilst their spirit raised them, as it were, on
high, their flesh plunged them in the lowest depths. For they are first
secretly raised up, but afterwards they fall openly; for while they swell in
the secret motions of the heart, they fall with open lapses of the body.
Thus, thus, elated, they required to be smitten with righteous retribution;
in order that, since they set themselves above men by pride, they might be
brought down, by their lust, even to a resemblance of beasts. For, man
when he was in honour, understood not, he hath been compared to the
senseless beasts, and made like them. [Ps. 49, 20] For the wing of
knowledge had raised them, as it were, on high, of whom Paul said that which
we before mentioned; Because, when they had known God, they glorified Him
not as God, or gave Him thanks, but became vain in their thoughts. [Rom.
1, 21] But how they fell into bestial and more than bestial pleasure, he
added, saying, God gave them up to the desires of their hearts, unto
uncleanness. [ib. 24.] Lo! the flesh overwhelmed those, whom boastful
learning had raised up, and, from the flying of birds, they fell beyond the
appetite of beasts, and sank beneath themselves, by the very means by which
they appeared to rise above themselves. We must take heed then, and the mind
must be kept, with all care, from the swelling of pride. For our thoughts
fly not in vain, before the eyes of God; and no moments of time pass in
thought, without an abiding of retribution. God then beholds what elates the
mind within; and therefore permits that which is to bring it down to gain
strength without. That which is afterwards to be struck down without by the
pollution of lust, is first raised up within us. Open punishment, namely,
follows a secret fault, in order that our inward evils may be punished, by
those from without, and that the heart, which was secretly pulled up, may
fall openly. For hence it is said by Hosea, against the Israelites, The
spirit of fornication is in the midst of them, and they have not known the
Lord. [Hos. 5, 4] Who, in order to shew that the cause of lust
sprung from the sin of pride, proceeded to say, And the pride of Israel
will answer to his face. [ib. 5] As if he were saying, The sin, which
through pride of mind lurked in secret, openly replied by the lust of the
flesh. Wherefore the cleanness of chastity is to be preserved, by guarding
humility. For, if the spirit is piously humbled before God, the flesh is not
raised unlawfully above the spirit. For, the spirit holds the dominion over
the flesh, committed to it, if it acknowledges the claims of lawful
servitude to the Lord. For if, through pride, it despises its Author, it
justly takes on itself a contest with its subject flesh. Whence also that
first disobedient one, as soon as he had sinned through pride, covered his
shameful parts. [Gen. 3, 7] For, because his spirit had put an insult on
God, it soon experienced the insult of the flesh. And, because it refused to
submit to its Creator, it lost its right over the subject flesh, which it
used to rule: in order, namely, that the confusion of its own disobedience
might redound upon itself, and that it might learn, when vanquished, what it
had lost through pride.
29. Let no one, then, after he
has begun to aim at things above him, consider, if overcome by carnal
pleasure, that he is only then defeated, when he is openly overpowered. For,
if the poison of lust frequently springs from the root of pride, the flesh
then triumphed, when the spirit was secretly proud. The soul then fell, as
to the beginning of its fault, into the wantonness of beasts, when, by
raising itself, like the fowls, it soared higher than it ought. For it is
hence, that long-maintained continence is suddenly broken through, hence,
that virginity, though preserved even to old age, is frequently violated.
For, since humility of heart is neglected, the righteous Judge despises even
chastity of body, and at last proclaims, by an open sin, those to be
reprobates, whom He endured in secret, though long ago rejected. For he, who
has suddenly lost a long-treasured good, has retained, in himself within,
another evil, from which a further evil has suddenly burst forth, by which
he was, even then, estranged from God, though he shewed that he cleaved to
Him by cleanness of body. Because, therefore, pride of mind leads to the
pollution of the flesh, the heart of the reprobate is, from the flight of
birds, plunged into the wantonness of beasts. But holy men, that they may
not be carried down into the whirlpool of lust, through bestial appetite,
carefully guard the thoughts of their mind from the flight of pride; and,
that they may not sink, through folly, into the lowest depths, humbly keep
down all their high notions. It is therefore rightly said, Who teacheth
us more than the beasts of the earth, and instructeth us more than the fowls
of heaven. Thou understandest, ‘this he also said not.’
30. He says, therefore, that he
does not remember in tribulation, that he is superior to the beasts, and to
the fowls. As if he were to say, Every one who is weak, does not strengthen
himself when in perturbation, because he does not moderate himself, when in
tranquillity; and he therefore knows not how to endure adversities, because,
when prosperous, he knew not how to keep himself down in thought from the
flight of birds, nor to raise up the motions of his flesh from the gluttony
of beasts. But this was the more unfitly said to blessed Job, as his life is
wonderfully kept in the mean, between things high and low. But it can also
be understood in another way; Who teacheth us more than the beasts of the
earth, and instructeth us more than the fowls of heaven. For as the life
of men, still subject to the motions of the flesh, is signified by the word
‘beasts;’ so is the pride of haughty spirits set forth by the appellation
‘fowls;’ in order that earthly men may be designated by ‘beasts,’ but the
devils by ‘fowls.’ Whence, when the Lord said that the seeds had fallen by
the way side, He adds, The fowls of the air came and devoured them up;
[Matt. 13, 4] signifying doubtless by fowls, the powers of the air.
31. But because holy persons
neither follow the lowest examples of men, nor, again, are deceived by the
subtlety of devils, they rise, by the virtue of their instruction, both
above the beasts of the earth, and the fowls of heaven. For they are taught
more than the beasts of the earth, because they despise whatever can be
desired below: and they are instructed more than the fowls of the air,
because they understand all the stratagems of unclean spirits. They are
taught above the beasts of the earth, because they seek not any thing, which
passes away in this life. They are instructed more than the fowls of the
air, because they trample down even now, by the merits of their life, the
powers of the air, which they still tolerate through the infirmity of the
flesh. Paul had been already taught above the beasts of the earth, when
saying, For many walk; and shortly afterwards, Whose end is
destruction, whose god is their belly, who savour of earthly things. But our
conversation is in heaven. [Phil. 3, 18-20] And again he knew that he
was instructed above the fowls of the air, when he said, Know ye not that
we shall Judge angels? [1 Cor. 6, 3] He perceived that the beasts were
beneath him, because, namely, though still dwelling on earth, he was
trampling down the habits of men, who engage in grovelling pursuits. And
again he had surpassed the flying of fowls, by the dignity of his merits,
because, when now about to enter heaven, he was not ignorant that we would
judge Angels. In the one he was treading under the basenesses of the impure,
in the other the loftinesses of the proud. For the minds of holy men despise
all transitory objects, and behold every thing that is proud, and every
thing that passes away, sink beneath them. And placed on a lofty eminence,
they see all things the more subject to them, the more truly they submit
themselves to the Author of all; and they transcend all things, just as they
prostrate themselves in true humility before the Creator of all things. Let
him say then, Who teacheth us more than the beasts of the earth, and
instructeth us more than the fowls of the heaven. As if he were saying,
The weak man, overcome by his cowardice, said not thus, and therefore the
adversity of temptation smote him: because in the season of tranquillity he
did not overcome all these transitory objects, by any perfection. For he
would not dread the adversities of this life, if he had trampled even its
prosperity under foot, by the merit of his perfection. It follows,
Ver. 12. There they will cry,
and He will not hear, because of the pride of evil men.
[xviii]
32. There; namely, in
tribulation: as it is written on the other hand of joy, The children of
thy servants shall inhabit there. [Ps. 102, 28] But it seems
doubtful whether he says, Because of the pride of evil men He will not hear,
or, they will cry because of the pride of evil men. But it can be better
understood, if they are rather said not to be heard, than to cry out,
because of the pride of evil men. For, that they cry out, because of the
pride of evil men, is already stated, in the verse in which it is said,
They will cry out by reason of the multitude of the violent. [ver. 9]
Something is therefore suggested to us in this verse, to be attended to a
little more minutely. Because often, when the oppressed have cried out, they
deserve indeed to be heard, for their own sake; but yet their desires are
deferred, on account of the pride of their oppressors. For the Just God
allows His own people to be oppressed in their worldly goods, and the malice
of the violent sinfully to increase; in order that, while the life of these
is wasted away in purification, the wickedness of those may be consummated.
But it frequently happens, that the righteous, when involved in tribulation,
enjoy, even in this life, heavenly consolation, which they do not ask for in
this life. For they wish to be saved not for their own sakes, but for the
salvation of their adversaries; in order that, while Almighty God delivers
them, by working a kind of miracle, from their boundless dangers, He may
manifest His might, even to their persecutors; and may deliver the
adversaries for eternity, by the same means, as He rescues His own people in
this world. As the Prophet also, taking up the language of martyrs, says,
Deliver me, because of mine enemies. [Ps. 69, 18] As if he were saying;
For myself indeed, I seek not to be delivered from temporal tribulation; but
yet I wish to be delivered, on account of my adversaries; in order that,
while my life is seen to be miraculously preserved, the hardness of my
enemies may be converted at the very sight of the miracles. As the Lord then
frequently rescues the life of His own people, in this world, for the
conversion of His enemies, so does He frequently not listen to the cry of
His own people, for the sake of the condemnation of their persecutors; in
order, namely, that they may add to their guilt, from the fact that they
wickedly rejoice that they have prevailed. For they, who despise invisible
things, can sometimes be moved by visible miracles. But frequently no
visible miracle is worked in behalf of the righteous, because their
adversaries do not deserve to be invisibly enlightened. Let it be said then,
There will they cry, and He will not hear, because of the pride of evil
men. As if he were saying, The guilt of the oppressors prevents His
hearing the voice of the oppressed: and the righteous are not visibly
rescued, because the unrighteous do not deserve to be invisibly saved. Hence
it is again said by the Prophet, When he shall see the wise dying, the
simple and the foolish shall perish together. [Ps. 49, 10] For those,
whom they behold dying visibly, they do not believe can live invisibly, and
they add to the guilt of their unbelief, as they despair of eternity, when
they behold the death of the faithful. The violent, then, fail the more
fatally, from the very fact, that they outwardly prevail against the life of
the innocent. And the inmost Truth drives them forth the more from Itself,
the more It suffers them to work their will, in this world, against those
who are Its own.
33. Whoever, then, persecutes the
life of the good, is then condemned with more fearful vengeance, when he is
opposed by no adversity; and he is then exposed to the risk of more fearful
wrath, when he prosecutes successfully his sinful desires. Because, namely,
the vengeance of the Divine Judgment has given up, by reserving for future
punishment, him, whom It has here not cared to oppose in his wickedness. For
hence the Lord says by the Prophet, I gave them up according to the
desires of their heart, and they will go on in their own wills. [Ps. 81,
12] Hence it is said again, The rod of God is not upon them. [Job 21,
9] Hence also it is written of their chief himself, He will do, and
prosper. [Dan. 8, 12] Hence again it is said of the same person, And
craft shall be guided aright in his hand. [ib. 25] For craft is
guided aright, in the hand of Antichrist, because he is not hindered by any
adversity, in this world, from fulfilling that, which he has purposed
against the good. Hence again it is said by Solomon, The prosperity of
fools shall destroy them. [Prov. 1, 32] It is, then, a manifest token of
perdition, when subsequent success favours much-wished for iniquities, and
when no obstacle hinders that, which a perverse mind has conceived. For
frequently, while the wishes of sinful men are delayed, they are changed,
and, while they feel the difficulty of performing an evil action, they learn
its guilt; and they, who are thwarted at first against their will, shrink
afterwards, of their own accord, from that which they had conceived. Because
then the Lord, when He forsakes the wicked, allows them to prevail, and,
because the wickedness of the proud is perfected, by the same means, as the
long-suffering of the humble is consummated, let it be rightly said,
There will they cry, and He will not hear, because of the pride of wicked
men. It follows,
Ver. 13. For God will not hear
without reason, and the Almighty will behold the causes of men one by one.
[xix]
34. We must observe that two
points are stated: both that He does not hear without reason [or, ‘in vain,’
(with different punctuation.)] him, who cries to Him, and yet regards his
sufferings; and pretends not to hear his cry, and still is not ignorant what
each one suffers. Let no one, then, who is not speedily heard, believe that
he is not cared for by God’s providence. For our desires are often heard,
because they are not speedily granted: and that, which we wish to be soon
fulfilled, is the better prospered by the very delay. Our prayer is
frequently made good, the more it is deferred; and when our request is, in
appearance, neglected, our wishes are more fully carried out in the depth of
our thoughts. As the seeds of harvest are firmly compressed by frost, and
spring up in greater number, to bear produce, the slower they come forth to
the surface. Our desires, therefore, are deferred, in order that they may
make progress; they make progress, in order to gain strength for that which
they are about to enjoy: they are exercised in the contest, in order that
greater rewards may be heaped on them, in recompense. The labour of the
contest is protracted, in order that the crown of victory may become
greater. When the Lord, then, does not speedily hear His own people, He
draws them to Himself, just as He is believed to repel them. For He is, in
truth, our spiritual Physician, and cuts out the infection of vices, whose
existence within us He utterly reprobates. He extracts the poison of
corruption with the knife of tribulation; and the more He pretends not to
hear the cries of His patient, the more is He providing for the ending of
his sickness. For hence the Prophet exclaims, O my God, I will cry
through the day, and Thou wilt not hear; and in the night, and not to my
folly. [Ps. 22, 2] As if He were saying, It tends not to my folly, that
Thou dost not hear me, when I cry to Thee, day and night, without ceasing;
because Thou trainest me the more in heavenly wisdom, by seeming, as it
were, to desert me in my temporal affliction. Hence also he says, A
helper opportunities, in tribulation. [Ps. 9, 9] Intending to
speak of tribulations, he first mentioned opportunities; because we are
frequently bruised by tribulation, and yet it is not a fit season for our
being assisted according to our desire for deliverance. Let it be said then,
For God will not hear without reason, and the Almighty will behold the
causes of men one by one. But because some persons are frequently broken
down by this very delay of assistance, he fitly subjoins,
Ver. 14. Even when thou shall
say, He doth not consider, judge thyself before Him, and wait for Him.
[xx]
35. For perhaps when our cry
seems to be disregarded, the hope, which was in our heart, is weakened, and
we believe that assistance from above will fail us, because we are too slow
in asking: and we lament that the unavenged wrongs we are enduring are
almost disregarded by God. But when this storm of despair agitates us, our
disordered mind sooner takes shelter in the harbour of hope, if it weighs
accurately its causes with the Lord; if it recals to its memory His favours,
if it does not artfully excuse in itself the evils it has returned for His
goodness; if it balances what it has justly deserved, and what it has
received of His mercy; if it actively [‘vivaciter’] searches its own
conduct; if, examining all its doings in God’s sight, it conceals not itself
from itself; if it remembers that it was brought into being, which before
was not; if it reflects that though it was lying in darkness, it was
illumined, and raised up. Bringing then all these points together in itself,
while it considers the blessings it has received, it blames not the ills it
is suffering; and, strengthened with the consolation of so many gifts, it is
not crushed with despair. Because, when it calls to mind past mercies, it
derives hope for the future. Let him say therefore, Even when thou shall
say, He doth not consider, judge thyself before Him, and wait for Him.
As though he were to say, When God is believed not to regard, because He is
slow in shewing compassion, enter into thy most secret thoughts, and there
undertake the judgment of thy cause before His eyes, and discern both what
thou hast conferred on Him, by thy conduct, or what thou hast mercifully
received. And then thou returnest to the confidence of hope, when thou art
ashamed at the mercies of such great goodness: so that thou mayest
confidently look for Him in adversities, Whom thou rememberest to have been
gracious to thee, even after thine offences. For thou hadst reason to hope
for assistance from above, even though no favours had preceded. And thou
must feel sure that God does not unjustly reject man, whom He mercifully
created.
36. We must consider, therefore,
how dangerous it is to behold past gifts, and to despair of future: how
dangerous, if in this storm of tribulations, we suffer shipwreck from
despair, bound as we are to the harbour of hope by the boundless ties of
past favours. Let it then be said rightly, Judge thyself before Him, and
wait for Him. For he who judges not himself before God, does not wait
for Him when afflicted. For he despairs that assistance can hereafter come
from Him, Whose preceding kindnesses He does not admit: and when he forgets
those that are past, he is deprived also of a bounteous supply of subsequent
blessings. But behold, while we are afflicted, while we patiently wait for
the grace of consolation, the wicked break out into greater wickedness, and
proceed the more in adding to their iniquities, as they are left unpunished.
And yet the Almighty mercifully bears with sinners, and grants them time for
repentance, which He converts, if they are not converted, into an evidence
of greater guilt; He patiently restrains the wrath, which at length He pours
out irrevocably.
Whence it is fitly subjoined,:
Ver. 15. For He doth not now
bring on His fury, nor severely punish wickedness.
[xxi]
37. For God in truth bears a long
while with him, whom He condemns for ever; and forbears now to bring on His
wrath, because He reserves it to be poured forth, hereafter, without end.
For suffering is here the portion of the Elect, in order to their being
trained for the rewards of their heavenly inheritance. It is our portion to
receive stripes here, for whom an eternity of joy is reserved. For hence it
is written, He scourgeth every son whom He receiveth. [Heb. 12, 6]
Hence it is said to John, I rebuke and chasten those whom I love.
[Rev. 3, 19] Hence Peter says, It is time, that judgment must begin at
the house of God. [1 Pet. 4, 17] Where he immediately adds with
astonishment, But if it first begin at us, what shall the end be of them
that believe not the Gospel of God? For the severity of God permits not
sins to remain unpunished; but the wrath of judgment commences with our
punishment here, in order that it may cease to rage at the damnation of the
reprobate. Let the reprobate proceed then, and accomplish the desires of
their pleasures, with unpunished iniquity: and let them feel no temporal
scourges, since eternal punishments await them. But their unpunished
wickedness, is well signified by the sin of Ham: to whom it was said by his
father, Cursed be thy son Canaan, a servant shall he be to his brethren.
[Gen. 9, 25] For Canaan was the son of Ham. And what is signified by his
son Canaan receiving the sentence of punishment, when Ham offended? What is
meant by his being smitten, not in himself, but in his posterity, except
that the sins of the reprobate go on unpunished in this world, but are
smitten hereafter? Let it be said then, For He doth not now bring on His
fury, nor severely punish wickedness.
38. But it must be noticed, that
he inserted the word “severely;” for, although He patiently endures some
wickednesses, yet some He punishes even in this life: and He sometimes
begins to smite even here, what He intends to destroy with eternal
damnation. Therefore He smites some sins, and leaves some unpunished: for,
if He were to be severe with none, who would believe that God regarded the
doings of men? And again, if He were to smite all of them here, for what
reason would the last judgment still remain? Some are, therefore, smitten,
in order that we may tremble at the attentive care of our Ruler over us. But
some are still left unpunished, in order that we may feel that judgment
still remains. It is well said then, He doth not severely punish sin:
because while some small portion of iniquity is punished, the sentence of
eternal judgment is even now foretasted by unconverted souls.
39. All this then that Eliu says
is right, if it were said rightly. For he knows what he ought to say, but
knows not to whom he is speaking. For the things which he said are true, but
are out of place, in reproving blessed Job; because he the less needed this
reproof, as he had not sinned, even from any cowardice. But, because the
pride of haughty men is often an occasion of virtues for the righteous,
blessed Job is so dealt with in the secret judgment, in order that, after
the scourges of punishments, he may gain strength also, by the words of the
arrogant. For, lo! the more he is despised by the minister of pride, the
more is he comforted by the truth teaching him within. For, after Eliu knew
that he had said so many powerful words, he disclosed what pride he bore
within, and despised blessed Job, by thinking highly of himself, saying;
Ver. 16. Therefore doth Job
open his mouth in vain, he multiplieth words without knowledge.
[xxii]
40. By introducing these words,
he doubtless asserts, that blessed Job both knew nothing, and had said much;
and, though he introduces his own opinions loquaciously, he accuses him of
the fault of loquacity. But this seems also to be a peculiar fault of the
arrogant, that they believe the much, which they have said, to be little,
and the little, which is said to them, to be much. For, because they always
wish to speak their own words, they cannot hear the words of others; they
think that they suffer violence, if they do not pour forth their own
immoderate opinions more immoderately. And, although blessed Job was silent
at his words, yet Eliu finds cause for invective, in the speech, in which he
had replied to his friends; in order to get himself larger space of his
silence, and that he himself might answer many things, he asserts that he
had multiplied words. For he immediately begins the commencement of a
tedious speech, and endeavours to commence, as though he had as yet said
nothing at all. Whence it is subjoined,
Chap. xxxvi. Ver. 1, 2. Eliu
also added, and spake thus; Suffer me a little, and I will shew thee.
[xxiii]
41. He had already said much, and
hopes that he will be borne with yet a little longer; because, namely,
haughty men consider that they suffer a heavy loss, if they confine their
skill by speaking within brief limits. For they believe, that they shew
themselves to be more learned, the more they have been able to lay open
their minds in multiplicity of much speaking. But, because they frequently
perceive that the respect of silence is not paid to them, they mention, at
times, the power of the Lord, from Whom they seem to be speaking; and, under
pretence of Him, they exact that silence for themselves, which they by no
means deserve; and, while in appearance they bring God forward, when
exacting a hearing for themselves from reverence for Him, they strive more
to display themselves, than to set forth His doings. Whence also Eliu
subjoins, saying,
Ver. 2. For I have yet
somewhat to speak on God’s behalf.
Because holy teachers sometimes
frequently repeat any things they state rather obscurely, in order to instil
these hidden sayings into the hearts of their hearers, by the language of
repetition; haughty men also wish to imitate this practice, and the things
they have said they repeat in an insolent manner, not because they seek to
insinuate the subjects into the hearts of their hearers, but because they
wish to appear eloquent in their judgment. Whence Eliu subjoining, says,
Ver. 3. I will repeat my
knowledge from the beginning.
But because, on the mention of
knowledge, his pride of heart hath displayed itself in his voice, he is
plainly discovered to be a haughty person, if he does not quickly conceal
himself by some disguise. Whence in concealing his own arrogance, he
immediately introduces the righteousness of the Lord, and says,
And I will prove my Maker
just.
In order that, while he speaks as
if in behalf of God’s righteousness, whatever escapes from him arrogantly,
may be excused in the judgment of man. It follows,
Ver. 4. For truly my words are
without falsehood.
[xxiv]
42. Even righteous men, when they
see that they cannot be understood by their feeble hearers, are frequently
wont to praise the things they say. Not because they are eager for their own
praise, but to inflame their hearers with an anxious desire of listening to
them; in order that, while they are uttered by their voice, they may be
embraced, with more ardent affection, by the hearts of their hearers. Whence
Paul, when he had spoken to the Corinthians things wonderful and many, says,
Our mouth is opened unto you, O ye Corinthians, our heart is enlarged.
[2 Cor. 6, 11] But haughty men, while they know not the heart of the
good, and imitate only their words, from time to time, are hurried forward
in praising what they say, not because the listlessness of their hearers
displeases them, but because they eagerly please themselves. They imitate
and feign the voice of the righteous, but know not the power of their voice.
They see what the righteous put forward, but know not what they seek for.
For, when holy teachers set forth the praise of their preaching, they raise,
as it were, the hearts of their hearers from grovelling thoughts, by the
hand of their voice; in order that, having been suddenly roused, they may
run, as if to meet the words which follow, and may hold them the more firmly
in the embrace of their understanding, the more they had loved them, by the
voice of their praiser, even before they beheld them. But, as I said,
haughty men know not these things. For since that, which they seek for, is
without, they cannot feel what is desirable within. For it is written of the
Church of the Elect, All the glory of her, the daughter of kings, is from
within. [Ps. 45, 13] And the wise virgins are said to carry oil in their
lamps. [Matt. 25, 4] Whence it is said by the voice of the Saints, Our
glory is this, the testimony of our conscience. [2 Cor. 1, 12]
But haughty men, because they have no testimony of their conscience before
God, seek the testimony of another’s voice before men; and, when they slowly
obtain it, they burst forth into shameless praise of themselves. For if they
find not the applause of men, which they eagerly look for, they themselves
speak in praise of their own wisdom. Whence also Eliu adds, saying,
And perfect knowledge shall be
proved to thee.
[xxv]
43. He doubtless felt that he was
about to utter great things, but he could not conceal his lofty estimate of
himself, in his swelling heart; and therefore preceded by his praises his
sound opinions; because he would be already indeed guilty in God’s judgment,
if he had merely felt in silence great things of himself. For we are by no
means safe, before the searching examination of the Truth, even though we
have nothing in ourselves which deserves blame, in the judgment of men. For,
frequently, when careless in our thoughts, we are assaulted by the pride,
which yet we suppress in silence. But unless our secret pride is
extinguished, by awakened repentance, in the chamber of the heart, in which
it takes its rise; all the merit of our conduct is extinguished before our
strict Judge. We must, therefore, hence consider, with what great punishment
that pride will be condemned, which is cherished till it is boldly uttered,
if even that is inexcusable which springs up secretly in the heart. We must
consider also with what power that pride reigns within, which is so far
encouraged, as not to be ashamed even to break forth without. Because then
Eliu felt great things, he could not humbly control himself, he maintained
the loftiness of knowledge, he spurned the grace of humility. And while
following after the gift by which he desired to speak well, he lost the
grace by which he might have lived well. For knowledge puffeth up, but
charity edifieth. [1 Cor. 8, 1] But let him now state that right thing,
which he still knows not how to speak rightly. For, after he had breathed
forth the proud thoughts of his mind, in words of pride, he added a noble
sentiment, saying,
Ver. 5. God rejecteth not the
mighty, though He Himself is mighty.
[xxvi]
44. Some things in the course of
this mortal life are hurtful in themselves, some are such from
circumstances. Some are hurtful of themselves; as sins and wickednesses. But
some things are, now and then, hurtful from circumstances, as temporal
power, or the bond of wedlock. For marriage is good, but those things which
grow up around it, through the care of this world, are evil. Whence
Paul says, He that is with a wife, thinketh of the things that are of the
world, how he may please his wife. [l Cor. 7, 33] Whence also,
recommending to certain persons a better course, he dissuades them from
marriage, and says, But this I say, not that I may cast a snare on you,
but for that which is comely, and which may give you power to pray to the
Lord without impediment. [ib. v. 35] While that then which is not
hurtful is retained, something hurtful is commonly committed from attendant
circumstances: as frequently we journey along a straight and clear road, and
yet we are entangled by our clothes in briars which grow by its side. We do
not stumble in a clear road, but something grows by the side to wound us.
For great is that temporal power, which, from being well administered, has
its special reward from God: and yet sometimes from being preeminent over
others, it swells with pride of thought. And while all things for its use
are at its service, while its commands are speedily fulfilled, according to
its wish, while all its subjects praise its good deeds, if there are any,
but do not oppose its evil doings with any authority, while they too
commonly praise, even that which they ought to blame; the mind, being led
astray by those things that are beneath it, is raised above itself, and
while it is encircled with unbounded applause without, is bereft of truth
within. And, forgetting itself, it scatters itself after others’ speech, and
believes itself to be really such, as it is spoken of without, and not such
as it ought to see itself to be within. It despises those beneath it, and
does not acknowledge them to be its equals in order of nature, and believes
that it has exceeded those also in the merits of its life, whom it has
surpassed by the accident of rank. It considers that it is far wiser than
all those, than whom it sees itself greater in power. For it places itself
in truth on a lofty eminence, in its own opinion, and, he that is confined
within the same natural condition as others, scorns to look on them as his
equals, and is in this way led even to resemble him, of whom it is written,
He beholdeth every high thing, and is a king
over all the children of pride;
[Job 41, 34] and of
whose body it is said, A generation, whose eyes are lofty, and their
eyelids are raised up on high. [Prov. 30, 13] It is led to a
resemblance of him, who aiming at singular loftiness, and scorning a life in
company with angels, says, I will ascend above the height of the clouds,
I will be like the Most High. By a marvellous judgment, then, it finds
the depth of downfal within, whilst it raises itself without, in loftiness
of power. For a man is in truth made like an apostate angel, when he
disdains to be like his fellow men. Thus Saul grew up, from meritorious
humility, into swelling pride, by his height of power. He was in truth
raised up in consequence of his humility, and rejected through his pride: as
the Lord bears witness, Who says, When thou wast little in thine own
eyes, did not I make thee the head of the tribes of Israel? [1 Sam. 15,
17] Before he attained to power he had seen that he was little, but
supported by temporal authority he no longer saw himself to be so. For
preferring himself, in comparison with others, he counted himself great in
his own judgment. But marvellously, when little in his own sight, he was
great in the sight of the Lord, and when great in his own sight, in the
Lord’s sight he was little. The Lord forbids us, by His Prophet, to be great
in our own sight, saying, Woe unto you that are wise in your own
eyes, and prudent in your own sight. [Is. 5, 21] And Paul admonishes us
not to be great in our own opinions, saying, Be not wise in your own
conceits. [Rom. 12, 16] While the mind then is puffed up, through the
number of those that are subject to it, it falls into the lust of pride, the
very height of its power pandering to it.
45. But for this and that not to
be good is one thing, for any not to know how to use the good aright is
another. For power is good in its proper place, but it requires careful
conduct in a ruler. He therefore exercises it aright, who has learned both
how to retain, and how to overcome it. He exercises it aright, who knows how
to raise himself, by its means, above his faults, and, with it, to keep
himself down on a level with others. For the mind of man is frequently
elated, even when not supported by any power. How much more then does it
exalt itself, when power joins itself unto it? And yet it is prepared to
correct the faults of others with due punishment. Whence also it is said by
Paul, For he is the minister of God, a revenger to execute wrath upon him
that doeth evil. When then the administration of temporal power is
undertaken, a person must watch with the greatest care, in order to learn
how to select from it what is of use, and to withstand its temptations, and
to feel himself, even with it, on an equality with others, and yet, by his
zeal for revenge, to set himself above those who do wrong. We gain a fuller
knowledge of this discretion, if we look also at some instances of
ecclesiastical power. Peter then, though holding the Chief power [‘principatum’]
in the Church by Divine authority, refused to be reverenced unduly by
Cornelius, who was a righteous man, and was prostrating himself before him,
and acknowledged himself to be but his equal, saying, Arise, do it not, I
myself am also a man. [Acts 10, 26] But on discovering the sin of
Ananias and Sapphira, he soon displayed with what great power he had risen
above others. [Acts 5, 1-11] For by a word he smote their life, which he
detected by the searching of the Spirit; and called to mind that he held
within the Church the chief power against sinners, which, when the honour
had been violently thrust on him, he refused to acknowledge before his
righteous brethren. In the one case holiness of conduct deserved a communion
of equality, in the other his zeal for vengeance displayed his rightful
power. Paul did not acknowledge that he was superior to his righteous
brethren, when he said, Not for that we have dominion over your faith,
but are helpers of your joy. [2 Cor. 1, 24] And he immediately added,
For by faith ye stand. As if he were saying, We have not dominion over
your faith, for this very reason, because ye stand by faith. For we are your
equals, in a case where we know that you are standing firm. He seemed not to
know that he was superior to his brethren when he said, We have
made ourselves as little ones among you; [1 Thess. 2, 7] and again,
And ourselves your servants through Jesus Christ. [2 Cor. 4, 5] But when
he discovered a fault, which needed correction, he immediately
remembered that he was their master, and said, What will ye? shall I come
to you with a rod? [1 Cor. 4, 21]
46. A high place is therefore
rightly discharged, when a ruler exercises his authority rather over sins,
than over his brethren. For nature has made us all equal; but that some are
committed to others to rule over them, it is not nature, but their own fault
which places them beneath. Rulers, therefore, ought to raise themselves
above the vices, on account of which they are placed above others: and, when
they correct offenders, they should attend carefully to smite their faults
with discipline, by the right of their power, but, by guarding their
humility, to acknowledge, that they are equal with those very brethren, who
are corrected. Although it is frequently even right, that we should, in our
secret thought, prefer those, whom we correct, to ourselves. For their
faults are smitten, through us, with the vigour of discipline, but, in the
faults we ourselves commit, we are not wounded by any one, with an attack of
even a word. We are, therefore, the more indebted to the Lord, the more we
sin without punishment from man. But our discipline the more exempts those
under it from Divine punishment, the more it leaves not their faults
unpunished here. We must maintain then both humility in our heart, and
discipline in our work. And we must, meanwhile, keep careful watch, lest the
rights of discipline should be relaxed, while the virtue of humility is
unduly guarded, and lest, while a ruler humbles himself more than is
becoming, he should be unable to bind beneath the bond of discipline the
life of his subjects. Let us outwardly, then, keep up that office, which we
undertake for others’ benefit. Let us keep, within, the estimate we
entertain of ourselves. But yet even those committed to us may properly
learn, by some evidences which break forth, that we are such to ourselves
within, in order to see what to dread from our authority, and to learn what
to imitate from our humility. Having maintained the authority of our office,
let us return unceasingly to our heart, and assiduously consider, that we
are created on an equality with others, not that we have been temporally
placed above others. For the more eminent is our power outwardly, the more
ought it to be kept down within, lest it should overpower our thought, lest
it should hurry the mind to be delighted with it, and lest the mind should
soon be unable to control that power, to which it submits itself from desire
of authority.
47. David had well learned to
govern his kingly power, who used to overcome, by humbling himself, all
pride at this power, saying, O Lord, my heart is not exalted. [Ps.
131, 1] And who subjoined, to increase his humility, Nor mine eyes lofty.
And added, Neither have I walked in great things. And examining
himself still further, with most searching enquiry, Nor in wonderful
things above me. And drawing forth also all his thoughts from the bottom
of his heart, he subjoins, saying, If I have thought not humbly, but if I
have exalted my soul. Lo! he frequently repeats the sacrifice of
humility, offered from his inmost heart, and, by again and again confessing,
ceases not to offer it, and brings it before the eyes of his Judge, by
repeatedly speaking of it. What is this? and how had he learned, that this
sacrifice was pleasing to God, which he was offering, in His sight, with so
great a repetition of words? Except that pride is ever wont to attend on the
powerful, and that haughtiness is almost always associated with prosperity;
because also abundance of humour often causes the hardness of a tumour.
48. But it is very wonderful,
when humility of manners reigns in the hearts of the lofty. Whence we must
consider, that whenever powerful persons think humbly, they attain to an
eminence of strange, and, as it were, far distant virtue: and they rightly
appease the Lord, the more readily, with this virtue, because they humbly
offer Him that sacrifice, which the powerful can scarcely meet with. For it
is a most difficult art of living, for a man to possess a high place, and to
keep down boasting; to be indeed in power, and yet not to know that he is
powerful; to know that he is powerful, for conferring favours, not to know
all the power he possesses for requiting wrongs. It is therefore rightly
said of such, God rejecteth not the mighty, though He Himself is mighty.
For he, in truth, desires to imitate God, who administers his lofty
power with a view to the benefit of others, and is not elated with his own
praises; who, when placed above others, desires to serve, and not to rule
over, them. [prodesse, præesse] For it is swelling pride, and not position
of power, which is to blame. God confers power, but the wickedness of our
mind causes haughtiness at our power. Let us take away, then, what we have
contributed of our own, and those things, which we possess of God’s bounty,
are good. For because not lawful power, but wicked deeds are condemned, it
is fitly subjoined.
Ver. 6. But He saveth not the
wicked, and giveth judgment to the poor.
[xxvii]
49. Holy Scripture is frequently
wont to call the humble, ‘poor.’ Whence they are mentioned in the Gospel,
with the addition, ‘spirit,’ when it is said, Blessed are the poor
in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. [Matt. 5, 3] For,
because riches visibly manifest the powerful, those are poor in their own
sight, who are not puffed up in their own minds. But he calls those
‘wicked,’ who are either cut off from the piety of the faith, or who else
contradict themselves, by their wicked habits, in that which they faithfully
believe. Because then Almighty God condemns pride of wickedness, not
loftiness of power; after it was said, God rejecteth not the mighty,
though He is Himself mighty; it is rightly subjoined, But He saveth
not the wicked, and giveth judgment to the poor. That is, He destroys
the proud, but sets free the humble, by His judgment. Or certainly He gives
judgment to the poor, because those who are now wickedly oppressed, then
come themselves as judges over their oppressors.
50. There are in truth two
classes, namely, of the Elect and the reprobate. But two ranks are comprised
in each of these classes. For some are judged and perish; others are not
judged and perish. Some are judged and reign; others are not judged and
reign. They are judged and perish, to whom it is said in our Lord’s
declaration, I hungered, and ye gave Me not to eat; I thirsted,
and ye gave Me not drink; I was a stranger, and ye took Me not in; naked,
and ye covered Me not; sick and in prison, and ye visited Me not. [Matt.
25, 42. 43.] To whom it is before said, Depart from Me, ye cursed,
into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his angels. [ib. v.
41] But others are not judged in the last judgment, and yet perish. Of whom
the Prophet says, The ungodly do not rise again in the judgment.
[Ps. 1, 5] And of whom the Lord declares, But he that believeth not
is judged already. [John 3, 18] And of whom Paul says, They who have
sinned without the Law, shall perish without the Law. [Rom. 2, 12]
Therefore even all unbelievers rise again, but to torment and not to
judgment. For their case is not then examined; because they come into the
presence of their strict Judge, with the condemnation already of their own
unbelief. But those, who retain their profession of faith, but have not
works in accordance with it, are convicted of sin, in order to their
perishing. But they, who have not enjoyed even the sacraments of the faith,
do not hear the reproof of the Judge at the last ordeal; for, condemned
already by the darkness of their own unbelief, they do not deserve to be
condemned by the open reproof of Him, Whom they had despised. Those hear at
least the words of the Judge, because they have retained at least the words
of His faith. These hear not in their condemnation the sentence of the
eternal Judge: because they would not retain their reverence for Him even in
words. Those perish by the Law, because they have sinned under the Law;
whilst no mention of the Law is made to these, in their condemnation;
because they made no effort to have any thing of the Law. For a prince, who
administers an earthly commonwealth, punishes in different ways a citizen,
who offends at home, and an enemy who makes war abroad. In the first case,
he considers his rights, and condemns him in language of just reproof. But
against an enemy he wages war: he wields instruments of destruction, and
inflicts the tortures his wickedness deserves. But he does not enquire what
the law provides for his offence. For it is not necessary for him to be
destroyed by Law, who could never be held by the Law. Thus, therefore, in
the last judgment, both a lawful reproof smites him down, who has departed
in his conduct from that which he held in profession; and he is destroyed
without a judicial sentence, who is not held by the law of faith.
51. But of the class of the
Elect, some are judged and reign. As those, who wipe away with their tears
the stains of their life, who, atoning their former misdeeds by their
subsequent conduct, conceal from the eyes of their Judge, with the cloak of
alms deeds, whatever unlawfulness they may have ever committed. To whom,
when placed at His right hand, the Judge says at His coming, I hungered,
and ye gave Me to eat. I thirsted, and ye gave Me to drink. I was a
stranger, and ye took Me in, naked, and ye covered Me; sick, and ye visited
Me; I was in prison, and ye came to Me. [Matt. 25, 35. 36.] To
whom he speaks before, saying, Come, ye blessed of My Father, possess the
kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world. [ib. v. 34]
But others are not judged, and yet reign; as those, who surpass even the
precepts of the Law in the perfection of their virtues; because they are by
no means satisfied with fulfilling that which the Divine Law enjoins on all,
but with surpassing eagerness desire to perform more, than they would learn
from general precepts. To whom it is said by the voice of the Lord; Ye
which have left all and have followed Me, when the Son of Man shall sit on
the throne of His Majesty, ye also shall sit upon twelve thrones, judging
the twelve tribes of Israel. [Matt. 19, 28] And of whom the Prophet
says, The Lord will come to judgment with the. elders of His people.
[Is. 3, 14] And of whom Solomon, when speaking of the Bridegroom of holy
Church, observed, saying, Her husband is noble in the gates, when he
sitteth with the elders of the land. [Prov. 31, 23] These, therefore,
are not judged in the last judgment, and yet reign, because they come as
judges together with their Creator. For, leaving all things, they performed,
from ready devotion, more than they heard ordered in general terms. For
that, which the rich young man heard, was said by a special command to the
more perfect, and not generally to all, Go and sell all that thou hast,
and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven, and come and
follow Me. [Matt. 19, 21] For if a general command bound all persons
under this precept, it would be at once a fault for us to possess any thing
of this world. But a general direction to all persons in Holy Scripture is
one thing, a command specially to the more perfect is another. These then
are rightly not bound by the general judgment, who in their conduct have far
surpassed even general precepts. For as they are not judged, and yet perish,
who, from the persuasion of unbelief, scorn to be bound by the Law; so, they
are judged not, and yet reign, who, from the persuasion of godliness,
advance even beyond the general precepts of the Divine Law. Hence is it,
that Paul, far surpassing even special precepts given him, performed more in
deed, than he received by the appointment of permission. For when he had
received, that preaching the Gospel he should live of the Gospel, he both
communicated the Gospel to his hearers, and yet refused to be maintained at
the expense of the Gospel. [l Cor. 9, 14. 15.] Why then should he be judged
in order to reign, who received a less obligation, but found out a higher
mode of life? Let it be said then rightly, He giveth judgment to the
poor: because, the more they are despised, by this world, for their
great humility, the more do they then rise up, with greater height of power,
to the seats which have been assigned them. Whence it also follows;
Ver. 7. He will not withdraw
His eyes from the righteous, but establisheth kings on the throne for ever,
and there are they exalted.
52. For God is perhaps believed
to have withdrawn His eyes from the righteous, because they are here wounded
by the injustice of the unrighteous, and are unavenged. But He then more
regards His servants, when the iniquity of their persecutor unjustly
afflicts them. For, beholding what they here humbly endure, He doubtless
even now looks forward to the recompense He is there mercifully to bestow on
them. He does not therefore withdraw His eyes from the righteous. Behold how
the one groans in his humility; the other is proud, and flourishes in his
wickedness. The one bruises his heart, the other is exalted with pride at
his iniquity. Which then of these is far withdrawn from the sight of God,
the one who has suffered injustice, or the one who has inflicted it on the
sufferers? The one, who has kept hold of Divine grace, amid the gloom of
sorrow, or he who, amidst external pleasure, has lost the light of
righteousness within?
[xxviii]
53. But holy men are properly
termed ‘kings,’ in the language of Scripture; because having been raised
above all the motions of the flesh, at one time they control the appetite of
lust; at another, they moderate the heat of avarice; at one time, they bow
down the boastfulness of pride; at another, they crush the suggestion of
envy; at another, they extinguish the fire of passion. They are ‘kings’
then, because they have learned not to give way to the motions of their
temptations, by consenting to them; but to gain the mastery, by ruling over
them. Since, therefore, they pass, from this power of authority, to the
power of retribution, let it be rightly said, He establisheth kings on
the throne for ever. For they are wearied for a time, by ruling
themselves, but they are placed for ever on the throne of the kingdom of
eternal elevation; and they there receive the power of justly judging
others, just as they are here unskilled in unjustly sparing themselves. For
it is hence said in another place; Until righteousness be turned into
judgment. [Ps. 94, 15] Paul says of himself and his fellows; That we
might be made the righteousness of God in Him. [2 Cor. 5, 21]
Righteousness, then, is turned into judgment, because they, who now live
righteously and blamelessly, then obtain the power of judging others. Hence
the Lord says to the Church of Laodicea, To him that hath overcome I will
give to sit with Me on My throne, as I have overcome, and have sat with My
Father on His throne. [Rev. 3, 21] The Lord asserts, that He had sat as
a conqueror with His Father on His throne, because after the struggles of
His passion, after the reward of His resurrection, He pointed out more
clearly to all, that He was equal to the Power of the Father, and He made it
known that He was not inferior to Him by having trampled under foot the
sting of death. Hence He says to Mary, who did not as yet believe that He
was like His Father, Touch Me not, for I have not yet ascended to My
Father. [John 20, 17] For, for us to sit on the throne of the
Son, is for us to judge with the authority of the Son Himself. For, because
we derive, from His virtue, the power of judgment, we sit, as it were, on
His throne. Nor is it inconsistent, that He declares, in another place, that
His disciples will come on twelve thrones, and that here He says, that they
will sit on His throne. [Matt. 19, 28] For, by twelve thrones is set forth
the universal judgment, but by the throne of the Son, the special
preeminence of judicial power. One and the same thing then is designated by
twelve thrones, and by the single throne of the Son, because, namely, the
universal judgment is undertaken, by the intervention of our Mediator. Let
it be said then, He establisheth kings on the throne for ever.
54. But by suitably subjoining
“for ever,” he suggests, what he plainly means. For if he were speaking
of the throne of an earthly kingdom, he would not have added “for ever:”
since they who seize hold of that throne, are placed in it, not for
ever, but only for a time. But he properly subjoined, And there they are
exalted. As if he were suggesting to the mind of his hearer, saying,
Because they are here brought low, they are there raised up. For to holy men
this is a place of humiliation, as that is to be one of exaltation. Whence
it is written in another place, Thou hast humbled them in the place of
affliction. [Ps. 44, 19] For this present life is a place of affliction.
They then, who are journeying to their eternal home, now despise themselves
in the place of affliction for a time, that they may then be truly exalted
in the place of joy. It follows:
Ver. 8, 9. And if they shall
be in chains, and bound with the cords of poverty, He will shew them
their works, and their wickednesses, because they have been violent.
[xxix]
55. The chains of bondage, are
the very detention of their present pilgrimage. Paul had seen, that he was
bound by these chains, when he was saying, I have a desire to be
dissolved, and to be with Christ. [Phil. 1, 23] He perceived that he was
bound with the cords of poverty, when, beholding the true riches, he
entreated them also for his disciples. That ye may know what is
the hope of His calling, what the riches of the glory of His
inheritance in the Saints. [Eph. 1, 18]
But after this it is rightly
added, He will shew them their works, and their wickednesses, because
they have been violent. For when, by loving, we learn more of heavenly
glory, we then feel the sins we have committed to have been more burdensome.
Whence also Paul, after having felt the grace of heavenly things, found that
what he had believed to be in him a zeal for virtue, was but wickedness;
saying, Who before was a blasphemer, and a persecutor, and injurious: but
I obtained mercy, because I did it ignorantly in unbelief. [l Tim. l,
13] Or certainly, when saying, But what things were gain to me, those I
counted loss for Christ. [Phil. 3, 7] Whence it is also fitly subjoined,
Ver. 10. He will open also
their ear, to correct them, and will speak to them that they return from
iniquity.
[xxx]
56. To ‘open the ear from
iniquity,’ is to lay open the understanding of knowledge. But a man is
reproved, and his ear opened, when he feels within him a desire after
eternal goods, and acknowledges the sins which he has outwardly committed.
But temporal punishment can also be understood by the chains and cords of
poverty. For they who hear not the words of their Ruler, are frequently
warned by the blows of the Smiter; in order that punishments, at least, may
lead them onwards to good desires, whom rewards do not invite. Whence it is
said by the prophet, Bind with bit and bridle the jaws of those who do
not draw near to Thee. But if they despise even scourges, it is
plain that they there feel the sufferings of heavier punishments, the more
they here trample down the grace of greater consideration. Whence also it
follows,
Ver. 11, 12. If they shall
hear and observe Him, they shall fulfil their days in good, and their years
in glory; but if they shall not hear, they shall pass away by the sword, and
shall be consumed with folly.
[xxxi]
57. By ‘good,’ is designated
right conduct, but by ‘glory,’ heavenly recompense. They, then, who study to
obey the Divine commands, fulfil their days in good, and their years in
glory. Because they pass the course of this life in right deeds, and perfect
their consummation by a blessed retribution. But if they shall not hear,
they shall pass away by the sword, and shall be consumed in their folly.
For vengeance smites them in tribulation, and the end shuts them up in
folly. For there are some, whom not even torments keep back from their
abandoned habits. Of whom it is said by the Prophet, Thou hast stricken
them, but they have not grieved; Thou hast scourged them, and they have
refused to receive correction. [Jer. 5, 3] And of whom it is said
under the figure of Babylon, We have cured Babylon, and she is not
healed. [Jer. 51, 9] Of whom it is said again, I have slain and
destroyed My people, and yet they have not returned from their ways?
[Jer. 15, 7] These sometimes become worse by the scourge, because, when
attacked by pain, they are either more hardened in their contumacious
obstinacy, or, what is worse, launch out into even the exasperation of
blasphemy. It is well said, then, that they pass away by the sword, and are
consumed with folly; for through their scourges, they increase those sins,
which they ought, in consequence of them, to correct. And they both feel
even here the punishments of the blow, and do not escape there the
sufferings of righteous retribution. For it is the infatuation of folly that
iniquity so fetters them, that not even punishment keeps them from
offending. It follows,
Ver. 13. Hypocrites and crafty
men provoke the wrath of God.
[xxxii]
58. When mentioning hypocrites,
he appropriately subjoins, ‘and crafty.’ For unless they are crafty in wit,
they cannot consistently make pretence of that which they wish to appear.
For there are certain faults, which are easily perpetrated even by those of
duller sense. For any one even of dull understanding is able to swell, for
instance, with pride, to be eager with the desires of avarice, and to yield
to the assaults of lust. But a person is unable to carry on the falsity of
simulation, unless he is one of more subtle wit. For whoever is such, is
distracted in truth by constant observation, in watching two points; so as
to skilfully learn, both to conceal what he really is, and to make a show of
what he is not; to suppress his real faults, and to display unreal goods;
not to boast himself openly of that, which he seems to be; and to pretend
often to decline glory, in order to obtain the greater glory. For, because
he cannot attain it by pursuing it before the eyes of men, he generally
studies to secure it by shrinking from it. These things then do not at all
suit the simple; for if they do, they are no longer simple.
59. But when mentioning
hypocrites and crafty men, he very properly added, not that they deserve,
but that they provoke the wrath of God. For to sin even through
ignorance, is to deserve the wrath of God. But wilfully to contradict His
commands, to know what is good, but to make light of it, to be able and yet
unwilling to do good, is to provoke it. For these are darkened within by the
commission of iniquity, and are whitened outwardly by their display of
righteousness. To whom it is declared by the voice of the Lord, Woe to
you, Scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites, for ye are like unto whited
sepulchres, which appear to men beautiful without, but are within full of
dead men's bones, and all uncleanness. Even so ye also outwardly appear
righteous unto men, but within ye are full of hypocrisy and iniquity.
[Matt. 23, 27-18] They preserve, then, in outward display, that which they
assail in their inward conduct. But, by thinking evil within, they increase
those sins, which they conceal outwardly, by assuming another character.
They cannot therefore now have any excuse, before the strict Judge, from
ignorance; because, while they display every kind of sanctity before the
eyes of men, they are a witness against themselves, that they are not
ignorant how to live aright. Let it be rightly said then, Hypocrites and
crafty men provoke the wrath of God. But he adds what befals them at
last, saying,
Ver. 13. Neither shall they
cry, when they are bound.
[xxxiii]
60. Every wicked person, who,
though he is wicked, does not seek to appear holy, when smarting under the
infliction of the scourge, is not ashamed to confess that he is wicked. But
a wicked person, who intercepts the judgments of men by a shew of sanctity,
even when he is smitten with the rod, shrinks from exposing his iniquity,
because he has been accustomed to appear holy. But if he is ever hard
pressed, he scarcely confesses, even superficially, that he is wicked;
because he is confounded at disclosing his inward character by sincere
confession. But we are, as it were, free, when we are not chastened by any
reproofs; but we are ‘bound,’ when we are constrained by the blows of the
rod. We cry, then, the more loudly when bound, the more sincerely we confess
our sins, when placed beneath the blow. For devout confession is a loud cry
in the ears of God. Because then the blows of the rod, even when they
chastise hypocrites, do not bring them to honest confession; (for they
shrink from being discovered to be sinners, because they were counted holy
in the opinion of all men;) though the scourges now smite them to the
utmost, though they are aware that they are being led on to eternal
punishments, they yet wish to remain the same in the opinion of men, as they
had always studied to display themselves. Though smarting, then, even under
the blow of the extremest suffering, because they neglect to put forth an
honest confession, even when afflicted, they scorn, as it were, to cry out,
even when bound. It is well said then, Neither shall they cry, when they
are bound.
61. Although it can be understood
in another way also. For every one, who, although he is wicked, fears not to
be called holy by men, though he blames himself as wicked, in his secret
thought, yet when he begins to hear of himself frequently as righteous,
loses that which he used to hold of himself within. For he pours
forth his heart without; and because he willingly receives a false testimony
of himself without, he does not enquire what he should think of himself
within. Whence it comes to pass, that he seeks even for the solaces of empty
praise, if they are wanting, and that, forgetting what he is, he seeks to
appear what he is not. While they who are such, then, pretend to be
righteous in the judgment of men, and display their praiseworthy actions to
the eyes of beholders, they are dealt with justly in secret, so that, the
more they endeavour to deceive others, the more are they even themselves
deceived as to themselves within. For they lose all eye for anxiously
searching into their own state. For they excuse themselves from searching
into, and examining their own conduct, but believe themselves to be the
persons they are said to be; and they consider themselves to be holy, not
because they so live, but because they are so called. But they neglect God’s
searching judgment, and to look into themselves; for they rest their belief
in their merit on the testimony of another’s mouth. But when they are
smitten by a sudden blow, they are unable either to confess that they are
wicked, or to discover themselves as they really are: because, namely, they
believed themselves to be holy from the profession of men. It is well said,
then, Neither shall they cry, when they are bound. For they trust,
with vain hope, that they are coming before their heavenly Judge, such as
they know they appeared in the sight of men. And the wretched men do not
find themselves out, even in the midst of torments; and, while they look for
the testimony of untrue praise, they lose the remedy of true confession.
They are said even to be bound, and yet to cry not; for, overcome by the
importunity of human applause, the wretched men consider themselves holy,
even when they are dying in sins. To whom it is well said by the Prophet,
Return ye transgressors to your heart. [Is. 46, 8] For were they to
return to their heart, they would pour out themselves in words of outward
profession. For what is nearer to us than our heart? What is nearer to us,
than that thing which is within us? And yet, when it is distracted with
wicked thoughts, our heart wanders far away from us. The prophet then sends
the transgressor a long way, when he compels him to return to his heart: for
the more he has distracted himself with outward things, the more does he
hardly find out the means of returning to himself. But since, because the
mind of hypocrites is diverted from the single consideration of eternity, it
is ravaged by the inundation of manifold thoughts, it is rightly subjoined,
Ver. 14. Their soul shall die
in a tempest.
[xxxiv]
62. For they were seeming to live
as if in calm, when they were taking care to rejoice in the credit of
holiness. But their soul, which used to rejoice in the fatal tranquillity of
human praise, dies by a sudden tempest. For most commonly an unexpected
tempest suddenly produces a change in all the calm blandishment of the air,
and danger cannot be avoided, inasmuch as it could not be foreseen. Whence
hypocrites, who neglect to watch over their conduct, are said to die in a
tempest. For the sudden whirlwind of an inward shock casts them forth hence,
whom the pride of outward applause exalts on high; and, while they embrace
in their praise that which they are not, they suddenly find in vengeance
what they are. But it is well said by Solomon, As silver is proved in the
fining-pot, and gold in the furnace, so is a man proved by the mouth of him
that praiseth him. [Prov. 17, 3] For praise of one’s self tortures the
just, but elates the wicked. But while it tortures, it purifies the just;
and while it pleases the wicked, it proves them to be reprobate. For these
revel in their own praise, because they seek not the glory of their Maker.
But they who seek the glory of their Maker, are tortured with their own
praise, lest that which is spoken of without, should not exist within them;
lest, if that, which is said, really exist, it should be made void in the
sight of God by these very honours; lest the praise of men should soften the
firmness of their heart, and should lay it low in self-satisfaction; and
lest that, which ought to aid them to increase their exertions, should be,
even now, the recompense of their labour. But when they see that their own
praises tend to the glory of God, they even long for and welcome them. For
it is written, They may see your good works, and glorify your Father
which is in heaven. [Matt. 5, 16] They make themselves, therefore, a
path for men to follow, as often as they manifest any thing in themselves,
by which God can be recognised; because they seek not to attract the praises
of men to themselves, but wish they should pass on, through their means, to
the glory of their Maker. But haughty men prostitute their effeminate hearts
to human praise, because they are corrupted by self-love. Of whom it is said
in another place, Men shall be lovers of their own selves. [2 Tim. 3,
2] But of this very corruption of theirs it is here fitly subjoined,
And their life among the
effeminate.
[xxxv]
63. For, if they were living as
men, transitory praise would not infect them with any corruption. Whence the
Prophet persuades the Elect, saying, Do manfully; and let your heart be
strengthened. For when saying, Do manfully, he immediately
subjoined, and let your heart be strengthened. As if he desired to
secure the sex of the heart. For the mind of a luxurious man is corrupted,
if it is delighted with transitory objects. The life of hypocrites then
perishes among the effeminate, because it is found to be corrupted with the
luxury of praise. But in another translation, [LXX.] it is not rendered,
Their life among the effeminate, but, Let their life be wounded by
angels. But though these expressions differ in words, they agree in
sense; for angels wound the life of the effeminate, when the messengers of
truth assail it with the shafts of holy preaching. Because we have heard
then what occurs in the damnation of the reprobates, let us hear what
follows, respecting the deliverance of the humble.
Ver. 15. He will deliver the
poor from his straitness.
64. The poor is delivered from
his straitness, when any humble person is set free from this affliction of
his pilgrimage. For he is here oppressed with even continual tribulations,
in order that he may be excited to seek for the joy of real consolation.
Whence it follows also,
And will open his ear in
tribulation.
To open the ear in tribulation,
is to open the hearing of the heart, by the affliction of blows. For when we
despise commands, we are treated with a merciful severity, in order that we
may fear the rod. Tribulation then opens the ear of the heart, which this
world’s prosperity often closes. For it is said by Solomon, The turning
away of the little ones shall slay them, and the prosperity of fools shall
destroy them. [Prov. 1, 32] It follows,
Ver. 16. He will therefore
bring thee safely from a narrow opening into a broad place.
[xxxvi]
65. Every one who forsakes the
way of life, and casts himself down into the darkness of sins, plunges
himself, as it were, into a well or pitfall. But if, through long commission
he is also so weighed down by a habit of sin, as to be unable to rise
upward, he is pent in, as it were, in the narrow opening of a well. Whence
David the Prophet entreats in the person of sinners, saying, Let not the
tempest of water drown me, neither let the deep swallow me up, and let not
the well press its
mouth upon me. [Ps.
69, 15] For a tempest of water has, as it were, hurried away him, whom the
iniquity of evil doing has moved from stability in goodness. But if it has
not yet prevailed by long custom, it has not overwhelmed. He has already
fallen into a well, who has done that, which the law of God forbids. But if
long custom does not yet weigh him down, the well has not contracted its
mouth. He escapes therefore with greater ease, the less closely he is pent
in by habit. Whence the prophet Jeremiah, when beholding that Judaea had
been overwhelmed, through long habit, by iniquities, bewails himself in his
lamentations, under her person, and says, My life is fallen into a well,
and they have placed a stone over me. [Lam. 3, 53] For one’s life falls
into a pit, when it is denied with the pollution of iniquity. But a stone is
placed over, when the mind is also consumed by sin, through long habit, so
that, though willing to rise, it is quite unable to do so, because the
weight of evil habit presses on it from above. But because it submits to the
power of God, and is brought back to the large room of good deeds, after the
confinement of evil habit, it is said, He will bring thee safely from a
narrow opening into a broad place. For he is safely brought from a
narrow opening into a broad place, who, after having borne the yoke of
iniquity, is brought back by penitence to the liberty of good works.
66. For it is, as it were,
the narrowness of a confined opening, to wish, and yet to be unable to rise
from an overpowering evil habit; to tend, in desire, to things above, but
yet still to remain in deed in things below, to advance in heart, but not to
follow in act, and to endure one’s self as a kind of self-contradiction
within one’s self. But when a soul, proceeding thus, is assisted by the hand
of grace to raise it up, it arrives from a narrow opening to a broad place:
because, having overcome its difficulties, it performs the good works which
it desires. The prophet David had beheld the enclosure of a narrow opening,
when he said, Thou hast delivered my soul from necessities, and hast not
shut me up into the hands of the enemy. [Ps. 3l, 7. 8.] But he found
that he had been brought safely into a broad place, when he added, Thou
hast set my feet in a large room. [ibid.] For our feet are firmly placed
in a large room, when we journey to those good things which are fitted for
us, and are not impeded by any difficulty. For we are proceeding, as it
were, through a wide place whither we please, because we are not hard
pressed by any difficulties placed in our way.
67. But Eliu would say this
rightly, if his opinion were but suitable to blessed Job. For he believed,
that he had been scourged for his faults, and therefore decided that he had
fallen into a narrow opening. For with the heavier blows he beheld him
afflicted, with the more abominable iniquities he believed him to be weighed
down; being surely ignorant that his scourges were an increase of his
merits, not a punishment for his sin. But when he declares that he had
fallen into a narrow opening, he proceeds, as it were, to speak more fully
of the profound depth in which Job is plunged: and says,
And which hath no foundation
beneath it.
[xxxvii]
68. Every sin has no foundation;
because it has no subsistence in its own proper nature. For evil has no
substance. But that which any how exists, unites with the nature of good.
The narrow opening is said, then, to have no foundation beneath it, because
the pollution of sin has no power of subsisting by itself. But since
foundation is derived from fundum, (bottom,) we may without
impropriety understand that ‘foundation’ is put for bottom, as hearing is
derived from ear, and yet the ear itself is frequently designated by the
word hearing. When speaking then of a narrow opening, he added, as wishing
fully to describe the profound abyss, And which hath no foundation
(or bottom) beneath it. For the infernal pit swallows up him, whom
iniquity hurries away. But the infernal pit is rightly believed not to have
a bottom; because every one who is swept away by it, is devoured by the
boundless profound. For the Prophet, wishing to describe fully its boundless
immensity, says, The infernal pit hath enlarged its soul, and hath opened
its mouth without measure. [Is. 5, 14] As therefore that is said to be
enlarged without measure which attracts very many to itself, so it is not
improperly believed to be deep, and without a bottom, because it absorbs, as
it were, into the boundless abyss of its immensity those, whom it receives
into itself. And therefore when saying, He will bring thee safely from a
narrow opening into a broad place, he fitly subjoined, And which hath
no foundation beneath it. As if he were saying, He will bring thee
safely from a narrow opening, which has no bottom under it. For since it is
through sin that we tend to the pit, He brings safely from a narrow opening
him whom He delivers from sin. But him whom He rescues from the narrow
opening, He withdraws from the depths of hell.
69. Though it can also be
understood in another sense. For as he who is plunged into a well, is
confined in the bottom of it; so would the mind fall in, and remain, as it
were, at the bottom, if, after having once fallen, it were to confine itself
within any measure of sin. But when it cannot be contented with the sin into
which it has fallen, while it is daily plunging into worse offences, it
finds, as it were, no bottom to the well into which it has fallen, on which
to rest. For there would be a bottom to the well, if there were any bounds
to his sin. Whence it is well said in another place, When a sinner hath
come into the lowest depth of sins, he contemneth. [Prov. 18, 3] For he
puts by returning, because he has no hope that he can be forgiven. But when
he sins still more through despair, he withdraws, as it were, the bottom
from the well, so as to find therein no resting place. It follows,
But the rest of thy table
shall be full of fatness.
[xxxviii]
70. The rest of the table, is the
refreshment of inward satiety: which is said to be full of fatness, because
it is set forth with the delight of eternal pleasure. The Prophet was
hungering after the feasts of this table, when saying, I shall be
satisfied, when Thy glory shall be manifested. [Ps. 17, 15] He was
thirsting for the cups of this table, when saying, My soul thirsted for
the living God; when shall I come and appear before the face of God?
[Ps. 42, 2] Eliu, therefore, wishing to console the temporal
sufferings of blessed Job, by an eternal compensation, promises him, as if
freely, from himself, that which was justly due to him as his desert,
saying, But the rest of thy table shall be full of fatness. It
follows,
Ver. 17. But thy cause hath
been judged as the cause of the ungodly, thou shall receive thy cause and
judgment.
[xxxix]
71. The cause of the good, is
righteousness. And their cause is judged, as the cause of the ungodly,
because their righteousness is here smitten with fatherly correction, that
they may be taught to exercise greater vigilance, not only by the injunction
of commands, but by the infliction of blows. But they receive their cause
and justice, because from that righteousness, with which they now live, they
hereafter [‘tune’] shine forth in the height of judicial power; so that they
are then able to judge all things the more powerfully, the more strictly all
their conduct is now judged. But these points, which blessed Job ever
maintained with stedfast faith, Eliu mentioned, as if he were making some
new promise. For haughty men have these peculiarities: they falsely
exaggerate what is wrong, and if ever they state that which is good, they
bring it forward as something unknown. Whence it comes to pass that they
venture to teach those who are wiser than themselves, because, namely, they
believe that they alone are acquainted with such subjects. But when they
condescend to any words of consolation, they consider that they have been at
once degraded, and by the harshness of proud reproof, they reestablish, as
it were, their ability; in order that they who seemed to have condescended
in soothing speech [‘blandientes testes’ Ben. ‘testes’ seems a
misprint.], may be dreaded when reproof has suddenly sprung up. Whence also
Eliu immediately added, saying,
Ver. 18-21. Let not then anger
overcome thee, to oppress any one, neither let the multitude of
places bow thee down. Lay down thy greatness without tribulation, and all
the mighty in strength. Prolong not the night, that people may go up for
them. Take heed that thou decline not to iniquity, for thou hast begun to
follow this after misery.
[xl]
72. In most manuscripts we find
‘gifts;’ [‘donorum’] in a few, however, but more ancient, we find ‘places.’
[‘locorum’] But since the expression, Let not the multitude of gifts turn
thee aside, needs no explanation, we have thought good that that
expression should be rather expounded, which seems to be explained with some
slight difficulty. But the pride, which uttered these words, proves of how
great haughtiness they are. But, because we have said that Eliu is a type of
the arrogant, and blessed Job of the Elect, if we examine them more
accurately, we demonstrate how appropriate they are even now to haughty men
within the Church. Holy men wonder at the doings of others, even when
trifling, but make light of their own doings, even when great. But haughty
men, on the other hand, make light of other persons’ doings, even when
great, and wonder at their own even when trifling, and generally think well
of their own misdeeds, but cease not to think ill of the good qualities of
others. For while they seek their own glory, they are mischievously
desirous, that whatever virtue is performed by others, should be scarred
with the brand of iniquity, and a weighty deed of goodness they pervert into
a taint of guilt. For frequently, when they behold the wicked severely
punished by the Church, they unjustly make a kind of complaint that the
innocent are afflicted, and they miscall the splendour of its discipline by
the appellation of iniquity. Whence Eliu, representing the arrogant, as if
admonishing Job, says, Let not anger overcome thee, to oppress any one.
For whatever is done by Holy Church with the censure of discipline,
haughty men consider as an emotion of anger. And because, from their desire
of human praise, they are ever anxious to appear kind, they consider that
none should be corrected with strictness and severity. Whence also, as was
before observed, they consider that those are oppressed, whom they see
restrained from sin, against their will, even by righteous rulers.
73. But the Lord having been the
cause that Holy Church has grown up with a height of religious power in all
parts of the world; they assail, and ascribe to sinful pride this very
temporal power, which it exercises rightly. Whence Eliu subjoins, saying,
And let not the multitude of places bow thee down. As if it were said by
the tongue of haughty men to Holy Church herself, preserving her humility
more in prosperity. Because thou art every where regarded with the reverence
of faith, beware that thou art not elated with the power [‘fascibus,’ al. ‘fastibus’]
this reverence bestows. For they behold certain persons, who under the guise
of religion, are puffed up with the sin of pride: and the fault which they
justly blame in these, they unjustly bring forward as a charge against all.
Not at all considering, namely, that there are those within her, who know
how to exercise temporal power aright, though yet despising it, and to love
and look forward to eternal objects with full desire; who can discharge the
high office which has been committed to them, and carefully fulfil their
duty of inward humility; so that neither do they neglect all care for the
office they have undertaken, on account of their humility; nor, again, does
their humility swell into pride by reason of their office. And if there are
perhaps some within her, who serve not God, but their own glory, under
pretext of religion, yet she endeavours either severely to correct them, if
possible; or, if otherwise, to endure them with patience. And she either, in
correcting them, embraces them as her children, or, through tolerating, is
harassed by them as her enemies. For she knows that the life of the just is
wounded by their pride; she knows that whatever sin is committed through the
wickedness of such persons is brought forward as a charge against her. But
she is the less afraid of bearing the blame of others’ sins, since she is
aware that even her Head endured such wrongs as this. For it is written of
Him, And He was numbered with the wicked. [Is. 53, 12] Of Him it is
said again, He Himself hath borne our weaknesses, and He Himself hath
carried our sorrows. [Mark 15, 28; Is. 53, 4] Let haughty men then
pursue their course, and by their estimate of the wicked, vex the life of
the innocent. The Church of the Elect knows how to tolerate the deeds of the
one, and the words of the others: and to convert the minds of the wicked by
bearing with them. And even though they are not able to be converted, yet
she patiently endures their disgrace. For she considers that it tends to
secure her a twofold reward, that she is scorned without for the merits of
those, by whose life she is wounded even within.
74. But it must be observed that
he does not say, Let not the multitude of places elate thee, but,
Let not the multitude of places bow thee down. For every one who is
raised up in this world, is turned aside by his very exaltation; because
when he exalts himself outwardly, he falls within. Eliu, therefore,
beholding the fall of a heart in its pride, says, And let not the
multitude of places bow thee down. As if it were said to Holy Church, by
the voice of haughty men, Take heed, thou art not diverted from thy inward
intention, if thou art exalted by the veneration of the whole world. It
follows,
Ver. 19. Lay down thy
greatness without sorrow, and all the mighty in strength.
[xli]
75. Whom else do we understand by
the mighty of Holy Church, except those, who both by their lofty attempts,
and by successful designs have strength to overcome the desires of this
world? Its greatness therefore consists in the life of its mighty ones;
because it is then rendered more glorious, when its Elect contend, even to
the death, with constant resolution, in defence of the Faith. Haughty men,
therefore, when Apostles have been withdrawn from this world, and Martyrs
withdrawn also to heavenly places, because they perhaps perceive that more
learned and powerful rulers are greatly wanting, suspect that they have
remained the only ones within the Church. And hence, while they prefer
themselves, they insult, under pretence of advising, her, and say, Lay
down thy greatness without sorrow, and all the mighty in strength. As if
they said in open reproaches, “Be not confident, that thou possessest
greatness, for, since the old fathers have been taken away, thou hast no
longer any in whose life thou canst boast.” They say these things in truth,
as not knowing that Almighty God does not leave His Church without proper
government. For when He summons the strong to their reward, He strengthens,
in their place, the weak for the contest: when He rewards the one by bearing
them away, He supplies to the others strength for their labours, for Him to
recompense. Of whom it is said to the same Holy Church, Instead of thy
fathers, children are born to thee; thou shall make them princes over all
the earth. [Ps. 45, 16] For those who are afterwards preferred, are
appointed to supply the virtue of the old fathers, because also when aged
trees are felled, tender shoots grow up in the place of their strength. But
haughty men believe not that they are strong, whom they knew at one time to
be weak: and they disdain to reverence those when changed, whom they
remember to have been contemptible.
76. But since they see that the
more righteous are few, and the ungodly the largest body therein, just as in
threshing the fruits, the quantity of the chaff is greater; they despise
even the life of the righteous from their estimate of the wicked. They see
in truth that some of its rulers, supported by temporal power, revel in the
pride of that power. They see that that reverence for religion, which their
fathers preserved [so old Mss. al. ‘sowed’] to this world by dying, these
sweep away, by exulting in worldly joys; and consider that they are mighty,
but not with strength. For while they are supported by temporal power, they
are strengthened, as it were, by a kind of weakness. For the stronger they
are without, the more are they bereft of all the might of strength within.
And therefore it is said to her by haughty men, Lay down the mighty in
strength. As if it were plainly said, They once clung to thee, truly
strong, who maintained, in their lives, that which they taught in words. But
now they who are thy rulers, are mighty in appearance, not in strength. For
they cease not to set themselves forth as worthy of honour, but are the more
weak and contemptible, the more they are afraid that respect for their
honour is set aside, in comparison with the truth. Haughty men rightly think
thus of most persons, but plunge headlong into the sin of pride, the more
they suppose all persons whom they behold above them, to be such. For the
evil conduct of the many ought not to lead them to form an opinion of all.
For although those whom they know, and decide upon, are wicked; yet some,
whom they know not, are holy. For now is the season of threshing, and the
grains are, as yet, concealed beneath the chaff. No fruit then will be
expected from the threshing floor, if that alone, which is seen on the
surface, is supposed to be therein. Because, therefore, they despise those
whom they behold, and sneer at those, whom they know, being put in the place
of the old fathers, it is fitly subjoined,
Ver. 20. Prolong not the
night, that people may go up for them.
[xlii]
77. As if the arrogant openly
said; Act not so in the darkness of thy ignorance, as to substitute a host
of infirm persons in the place of the strong. For by the name ‘people’ [Lat.
‘peoples’] are designated those, who, given up to the common practice, live
without restraint in all that they desire. But to ‘prolong the night, that
people should go up in the place of the strong,’ is, if it is caused by
negligence, that the unlearned and weak occupy the place of the learned and
strong. People go up in the place of the strong, when they who have learned
to live wickedly, obtain the place of pastors. And this would be rightly
said, if it were spoken humbly. For haughty men, even when they give good
advice, exercise their wicked over-bearingness [‘superstitionis.’ vide
Ducange]. For, as was before stated, they more desire to smite with reproof,
than to cherish with consolation. Whence it is presently subjoined,
Ver. 21. Decline not to
iniquity; for thou hast begun to follow this after misery.
Haughty men in truth call this
the misery of the Church, because they suspect that its main body is
despised by God: and they scorn it with loftier pride, the more they suspect
that it is utterly despised by God.
Having given rapidly a figurative
exposition of these words, we must now gather their moral meaning; that,
having learned the figure of the Church, which we believe to be generally
described, we may learn what we may specially gather from these words in
each single case. He says therefore,
Ver. 18. Let not, therefore,
anger overcome thee, to oppress any one.
[xliii]
[MORAL INTERPRETATION]
78. Every one, who is required to
correct the vices of others, ought first of all to look carefully into
himself; lest, while punishing others’ faults, he himself should be overcome
by his zeal for punishment. For furious anger, under the guise of justice,
frequently ravages the mind; and while it seems to rage with zeal for
righteousness, it gratifies the fury of its wrath, and considers that it
justly performs, whatever its anger wickedly dictates. Whence also it
frequently transgresses the due limits of punishment, because it is not
restrained by the measure of justice. For it is right, that when we correct
others’ faults, we should first measure our own; that the mind should first
cease to glow with its own warmth, should first control within itself the
impulse of its zeal with calm moderation [‘æquitate’]; lest we should sin
ourselves, in the correction of sin, if we are hurried on with headlong fury
to punish offences, and lest we, who are deciding on, and punishing, a
fault, should commit one by punishing it immoderately. For there follows not
the correction, but rather the oppression of the delinquent, if, in
punishment, our anger extends further than the offence deserves. For, in the
correction of faults, anger ought to be under the control of the mind and
not its master, so as not to take the lead in the execution of justice, as
though imposing a command, but to follow after, as though obeying
directions, and to carry out, as if employed, the sentence which has been
made known to it, and not go first as if an employer. It is well said
therefore, Let not anger overcome thee, to oppress any one. Because,
namely, if he, who is endeavouring to correct, is overcome by anger, he
oppresses before he corrects. For, whilst he is more inflamed than he ought
to be, he rushes unchecked into enormous cruelty, under the pretence of just
punishment. And this is frequently the case, for this reason, because the
hearts of rulers are too little intent on the love of their Creator alone.
For whilst they desire many things in this life, they are distracted with
countless thoughts. And when they suddenly discover the faults of their
subjects, they are unable to judge them aright, in agreement with God;
because they cannot suddenly bring back to the height of severity, their
hearts which have been scattered abroad in transitory cares. They therefore
discover less readily, when excited, the balance of moderation for the
punishment of sins, the less they seek for it in their season of
tranquillity. Whence, when Eliu was saying, Let not anger overcome thee
to oppress any, in order to express that the causes of injustice and of
overpowering anger were the same, he immediately added,
And let not the multitude of
places bow thee down.
[xliv]
79. We are turned aside into as
many places, as are the cares with which we are distracted. For as the space
of the body is the place of the body, so is each intention of thought the
place of the mind. And if, while it is impelled hither and thither, it is
pleasingly occupied with any delightful thought of its own, it is, as it
were, put to rest in a certain place. For as often as, overcome by
weariness, we are led from thought to thought, we migrate, as it were, with
weary mind from place to place. As many thoughts then as spring up and
dissipate the unity of good intention, so do as many places bend down the
loftiness of the mind. For the mind would stand upright, if it always clung
close to that one thought to which it ought. The mind would stand upright,
if it did not, by its countless motions, prostrate itself in fluctuating
change. But when it now takes up these things, and now passes off to others,
it is turned aside, as it were, from its state of uprightness through a
multitude of places; and while it extends itself through many things, it
detaches itself from that one intention, to which it ought to adhere. But
yet this habit of change has become a nature to us ever since the guilt of
the first sin. For when the mind endeavours to stand in itself, it is
somehow or other drawn away from itself, without knowing it. For the soul of
man is diverted by an impulse of disgust, from every object to which it
directs its thoughts. But whilst it eagerly seeks for subjects to think
upon, and suddenly loathes those it has thought upon, it teaches us, that
that which does not continue at rest, wherever placed, depends on something
elsewhere. For it does, in truth, depend on Him, by Whom it was created. And
because it was made to seek after God alone, and since every thing which it
seeks beneath Him, is less than He; that which is not God, justly does not
satisfy it. Hence it is that it is scattered hither and thither, and turns
away, as we said, under the impulse of loathing, from every object. For
being eagerly desirous of satisfaction, it seeks a place wherein to rest;
but it has lost that One, Whom it might have had to its satisfaction. Whence
it is now led through many objects, that it may be satisfied with their
variety at least, since it cannot be satisfied with their quality.
80. But holy men watch themselves
with careful observation, so as not to be separated, through changeableness,
from the object of their thoughts; and, because they desire to be ever the
same, they carefully confine themselves to the thought with which they love
God. For, in the contemplation of their Creator, they are about to obtain
this, that they enjoy always the same stability of mind. No changeableness
then dissipates them; because, namely, their thought ever continues without
any difference in itself. They endeavour, therefore, now to imitate that,
with labour, which, afterwards, they receive with joy as a gift. To this
unchangeable state had the Prophet attached himself by the virtue of love,
when saying, One thing I have asked of the Lord, this I will seek after,
that I may dwell in the house of the Lord. [Ps. 27, 4] To this unity
Paul had adhered in his intention, when saying, But one thing I do;
forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those
things which are before, I follow after for the prize of the high calling of
God in Christ. [Phil. 3, 13, 14] For, if there is any human weakness in
their hearts, a severe examination speedily checks it, and when their
thought wanders as if childishly, they are soon kept in restraint by manly
correction. Whence it is, that they collect at once their distracted mind;
and fix it, as far as they are able, in one single thought. Because then the
position of the mind is bent down by the changeableness of thoughts, it is
rightly said by Eliu, Let not the multitude of places turn thee aside.
81. But frequently, while the
mind of a righteous man stands firm in the stronghold of its resolution,
while it recovers itself from every dispersion of change, and keeps down
whatever superfluously arises within; it is smitten by the very glory of its
own rectitude, and is raised up with the pride of presuming on itself. For
he who performs great deeds, though he may think humbly of himself, yet
knows that his doings are great. For, if he knows not that they are great,
he doubtless keeps but little watch over them. And while he neglects to
watch them, he either makes less progress in them, or loses them altogether.
Whilst then it is necessary to know our good deeds, in order to guard them;
from the very knowledge of them, a way is opened to our pride, and the hand
of sin, by whose ravages they are to be snatched away, is admitted to the
heart of him who does them. But it is brought about by a marvellous
dispensation, that our Creator suffers a mind which is elated by prosperity,
to be smitten with sudden temptation; in order that it may, in infirmity,
behold itself more truly, and may descend, already improved, from that
haughtiness of pride, which it had assumed from its virtues. Whence it is
now rightly subjoined;
Ver. 19. Lay down thy
greatness without tribulation, and all the mighty in strength.
[xlv]
82. For the motions of the heart
are mighty, when they feel only those things which are virtuous. But we lay
down our greatness and our mighty motions, when we are compelled, by the
assaults of sin, to consider what we are. We lay aside our mighty motions,
when we are no longer raised up by our virtue, but when, by consenting to
sin, we are fearful of being overwhelmed by that infirmity, with which we
are assaulted. For the mind has great confidence in itself, when it sees
that its strength is adequate to its wishes. It arrogates at once to itself
the assurance of sanctity, and thinks that it is now equal even to all the
heights of virtues, which it has conceived in thought only. But when a
temptation suddenly arises and pierces it through, it utterly confounds
those lofty thoughts, which had sprung up from its virtues. For an
unexpected enemy enters, as it were, an unsuspecting city; and the necks of
haughty citizens are smitten with a sudden stroke. There is nothing then at
that time but continual lamentation, whilst the captured city of the mind
is, by means of slaughter, bereft of the glory of its great ones. Whence it
is now said, Lay down thy greatness without tribulation, and all who are
mighty in strength. As if it were plainly said, Repress all the pride
thou hadst conceived within, at thy good deeds, and lay down those mighty
motions of the heart, which thou hadst from thy just doings; because thou
now considerest, in the assault of adversity, how vainly thou before
entertainedst high thoughts of thyself in thy pride. Which greatness, it is
said, must be laid aside without tribulation, doubtless, because when
humility makes progress through temptation, that very adversity, which
secures the mind from pride, is itself prosperous. But yet this is not
effected without great tribulation, when the tranquil mind is assailed by
the inroads of temptations, as if by a sudden enemy. For, when the adversity
of temptation forces itself into the mind, it produces therein a kind of
darkness, and confounds, with the gloom of its bitterness, that soul which
had long been enlightened, within itself, by the radiant sweetness of its
virtues. Whence it is also fitly subjoined;
Ver. 20. Prolong not the
night, that people should go up for them.
[xlvi]
83. For the night is indeed
prolonged, when the sorrow, that springs from temptation, is not ended by
the rising up of consolation. The night is protracted, because the sorrow of
the mind is prolonged by confused thoughts. For whilst the mind, placed in
temptation, considers that it is driven away from the former solidity of its
virtue, it is blinded by superinduced sorrows, as by a kind of gloom. And
its eye is closed to every ray of joy, whilst it anxiously trembles, lest it
should entirely lose that which it had before begun to be. Whence it is also
well said, that, in this night, people go up in the place of the strong;
because, namely, in this sorrow of temptation, instead of bold emotions,
unworthy and manifold thoughts spring up in the heart. For whilst it sees,
in this perturbation, that it has already almost lost that which it had
been, it heaps up in itself countless waves and tumults. At one time it
sorrows that it has lost its tranquillity; at another, it is afraid lest it
should fall into evil deeds. At one time it calls to mind on what a height
it had stood, at another, it observes in what a depth of vices it is lying,
by means of its pleasure. At one time it prepares itself to recover its
strength, at another, as though already defeated and crushed, it despairs
that it can recover it.
84. When such manifold thoughts
then come forth over the convicted mind, people, as it were, rise and press
it down in the night. Which people the Prophet had doubtless presumed he
could overcome, not by himself, but by the aid of the Divine protection,
when he was saying. My Protector, and in Him will I hope, subduing people
under me. [Ps. 144, 2] For people are subjected to holy minds, when
foolish thoughts start away from them, at the presence of strict severity;
so as not to hurry them through headlong fancies, but, subjected to reason,
humbly to cease from the heart. Hence, therefore, the mind which used, in
prosperity, to presume greater things of itself, endures, when placed in
temptation, the tumults of hope and despair, it is now well said, Prolong
not the night, that people should go up for them. As if it were openly
said, Disperse at once the darkness of sorrow, when involved in temptation,
lest thou, who hadst thought highly of thyself in tranquillity, shouldest
overwhelm thyself more fatally in trouble also, with the gloom of thy
thoughts. Which Eliu would properly say, if, however, he knew to whom he was
saying it. For these sayings are the less suited to blessed Job, the more
deeply all things are known by him. But because, as we have often said,
haughty men fall even into insulting words of reproaches, while they presume
to teach those, whom they ought not, it is added;
Ver. 21. Take heed that thou
decline not to iniquity, for thou hast begun to follow this after misery.
[xlvii]
85. He follows iniquity after
misery, who, after the evils which he endures for his correction, inflames
himself, in his glowing heart, with the torches of impatience. Which Eliu
believed that blessed Job had done, having heard him speak in bold words,
when in the midst of scourges: being ignorant, namely, that every thing
which he said, he uttered not from the sin of impatience, but from the
virtue of truth, who did not, even when justifying himself, differ from the
sentence of the inward Judge. But we must greatly consider how, when saying,
Decline not to iniquity, he immediately subjoined of this very
iniquity; For thou hast begun to follow this after misery.
86. What is this, that, while he
forbids him to decline to it, he condemns him for it, at once, as if he had
already declined to it; except that arrogant men wish rather to appear
judges, than consolers? Whence also, they sometimes smite, with severe
sentences, those faults, which they suspect have arisen in the heart. And,
before the fault of the offenders is certain, severe invective of words is
brought forward; and a person is struck by their sentence, before any thing
appears, to be smitten.
87. Although even just men
commonly oppose, by reproof, wicked and secret thoughts; but, when any
preceding doings make plain these thoughts, they frequently root out from
the hearts of their hearers, by the hand of reproof, those sins which have
not shewn themselves. But then they perceive that they are already following
from others, which precede. For as physicians of the body discern that some
diseases have already appeared, but heal others, that they may not appear;
so do holy teachers sometimes restore to health the wounds they have
discovered, and sometimes so deal with men’s minds that they are not
wounded. In whom we must carefully observe, that as they generally reprove
known faults with severity, so do they speak against doubtful thoughts, even
with calmness. The undoubted they chastise with blows: the doubtful they
ward off by taking precautions. But because arrogant men know not their rule
of discrimination, they wound, with the shafts of their sentences, known and
unknown, certain and uncertain faults alike. Whence it is now said by Eliu,
Take heed that thou decline not to iniquity, for thou hast begun to
follow this after misery. But because the remarks which follow are drawn
out with longer allegation, we conclude this book with this close, that it
may not be too immoderately extended.
BOOK XXVII