Grant
your blessing, Lord.
It was my
desire to be silent, and not to make a public display of the rustic rudeness of
my tongue. For silence is a matter of great consequence when one's speech is
mean. And to refrain from utterance is indeed an admirable thing, where there
is lack of training; and verily he is the highest philosopher who knows how to
cover his ignorance by abstinence from public address. Knowing, therefore, the
feebleness of tongue proper to me, I should have preferred such a course.
Nevertheless the spectacle of the onlookers impels me to speak. Since, then,
this solemnity is a glorious one among our festivals, and the spectators form a
crowded gathering, and our assembly is one of elevated fervour in the faith, I
shall face the task of commencing an address with confidence. And this I may
attempt all the more boldly, since the Father requests me, and the Church is
with me, and the sainted martyrs with this object strengthen what is weak in
me. For these have inspired aged men to accomplish with much love a long
course, and constrained them to support their failing steps by the staff of the
word; and they have stimulated women to finish their course like the young men,
and have brought to this, too, those of tender years, yea, even creeping
children. In this wise have the martyrs shown their power, leaping with joy in
the presence of death, laughing at the sword, making sport of the wrath of
princes, grasping at death as the producer of deathlessness, making victory
their own by their fall, through the body taking their leap to heaven,
suffering their members to be scattered abroad in order that they might hold
their souls, and, bursting the bars of life, that they might open the. gates of
heaven. And if any one believes not that death is abolished, that Hades is
trodden under foot, that the chains thereof are broken, that the tyrant is
bound, let him look on the martyrs disporting themselves in the presence of
death, and taking up the jubilant strain of the victory of Christ. O the
marvel! Since the hour when Christ despoiled Hades, men have danced in triumph
over death. O death, where is your sting! O grave, where is your victory?
1 Corinthians 15:55 Hades and the devil have been despoiled, and stripped of
their ancient armour, and cast out of their peculiar power. And even as Goliath
had his head cut off with his own sword, so also is the devil, who has been the
father of death, put to rout through death; and he finds that the selfsame
thing which he was wont to use as the ready weapon of his deceit, has become
the mighty instrument of his own destruction. Yea, if we may so speak, casting
his hook at the Godhead, and seizing the wonted enjoyment of the baited
pleasure, he is himself manifestly caught while he deems himself the captor,
and discovers that in place of the man he has touched the God. By reason
thereof do the martyrs leap upon the head of the dragon, and despise every species
of torment. For since the second Adam has brought up the first Adam out of the
deeps of Hades, as Jonah was delivered out of the whale, and has set forth him
who was deceived as a citizen of heaven to the shame of the deceiver, the gates
of Hades have been shut, and the gates of heaven have been opened, so as to
offer an unimpeded entrance to those who rise there in faith. In olden time
Jacob beheld a ladder erected reaching to heaven, and the angels of God
ascending and descending upon it. But now, having been made man for man's sake,
He who is the Friend of man has crushed with the foot of His divinity him who
is the enemy of man, and has borne up the man with the hand of His Christhood,
and has made the trackless ether to be trodden by the feet of man. Then the
angels were ascending and descending; but now the Angel of the great counsel
neither ascends nor descends: for whence or where shall He change His position,
who is present everywhere, and fills all things, and holds in His hand the ends
of the world? Once, indeed, He descended, and once He ascended,— not, however,
through any change of nature, but only in the condescension of His
philanthropic Christhood; and He is seated as the Word with the Father, and as
the Word He dwells in the womb, and as the Word He is found everywhere, and is
never separated from the God of the universe. Aforetime did the devil deride
the nature of man with great laughter, and he has had his joy over the times of
our calamity as his festal-days. But the laughter is only a three days'
pleasure, while the wailing is eternal; and his great laughter has prepared for
him a greater wailing and ceaseless tears, and inconsolable weeping, and a
sword in his heart. This sword did our Leader forge against the enemy with fire
in the virgin furnace, in such wise and after such fashion as He willed, and
gave it its point by the energy of His invincible divinity, and dipped it in
the water of an undefiled baptism, and sharpened it by sufferings without
passion in them, and made it bright by the mystical resurrection; and herewith
by Himself He put to death the vengeful adversary, together with his whole
host. What manner of word, therefore, will express our joy or his misery? For
he who was once an archangel is now a devil; he who once lived in heaven is now
seen crawling like a serpent upon earth; he who once was jubilant with the
cherubim, is now shut up in pain in the guard-house of swine; and him, too, in
fine, shall we put to rout if we mind those things which are contrary to his choice,
by the grace and kindness of our Lord Jesus Christ, to whom be the glory and
the power unto the ages of the ages. Amen.
By Saint Gregory Thaumaturgus
Photo taken from Wikimedia Commons
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