On the
words of the Gospel, Matthew 10:28
Be not afraid of them that kill the body. Delivered on a
Festival of Martyrs.
Be not afraid of them that kill the body. Delivered on a
Festival of Martyrs.
1. The Divine oracles which have just been read teach us in fearing not to fear, and in not fearing to fear. You observed when the Holy Gospel was being read, that our Lord God before He died for us, would have us to be firm; and this by admonishing us not to fear, and withal to fear. For he said, Fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to kill the soul. See where He advised us not to fear. See now where He advised us to fear. But, says he, fear Him who has power to destroy both body and soul in hell. Let us fear therefore, that we may not fear. Fear seems to be allied to cowardice: seems to be the character of the weak, not the strong. But see what says the Scripture, The fear of the Lord is the hope of strength. Let us then fear, that we may not fear; that is, let us fear prudently, that we may not fear vainly. The holy Martyrs on the occasion of whose solemnity this lesson was read out of the Gospel, in fearing, feared not; because in fearing God, they did not regard men.
2. For
what need a man fear from man? And what is that whereby one man should cause
another fear, since both of them are men? One threatens and says, I will kill
you; and does not fear, lest after his threat he die before he have fulfilled
it. I will kill you, he says. Who says it, and to whom? I hear two men, the one
threatening, and the other alarmed: of whom the one is powerful, and the other
weak, yet both are mortal. Why then does he so stretch out himself, he, in
honour, a somewhat more inflated power, in body, equal weakness? Let him
securely threaten death who does not fear death. But if he fear that whereby he
causes fear; let him think of himself, and compare himself with him whom he is
threatening. Let him see in him whom he threatens a likeness of condition, and
so together with him let him seek like pity from the Lord. For he is but a man,
and he threatens another man, a creature, another creature; only the one puffed
up under his Creator's eye, and the other fleeing for refuge to the same
Creator.
3. Let
the stout Martyr then, as he stands a man before another man, say; I do not
fear, because I fear. You can not do what you are threatening, unless He will;
but what He threatens, none can hinder Him from doing. And then again, what do
you threaten, and what can you do, if you are permitted? Your violence extends
but to the flesh, the soul is safe from you. You can not kill what you do not
see: visible yourself, you threaten that which is visible in me. But we have
both an invisible Creator, whom we ought both to fear; who of that which was
both visible and invisible created man. He made Him visible out of the earth,
and with His Breath He breathed into Him an invisible Spirit. Therefore the
invisible substance, that is, the soul, which has raised from the earth the
earth as it lay, does not fear, when you assault the earth. You can strike the
habitation, but can you strike him who dwells there? When the chain is broken,
he escapes who before was bound, and he will now be crowned in secret. Why then
do you threaten me, who canst do nothing to my soul? Through the desert of that
to which you can do nothing, will that to which your power extends rise again.
For through the soul's desert, will the flesh also rise again; and will be
restored to its inhabitant, now no more to fail, but to endure for ever. Behold
(I am using the words of a Martyr), behold, I say, not even on account of my
body do I fear your threats. My body indeed is subject to your power; but even
the hairs of my head are numbered by my Creator. Why should I fear lest I lose
my body, who cannot even lose a hair? How shall he not have a care of my body,
to whom my meanest things are so well known? This body which may be wounded and
slain will for a time be ashes, but it will be for ever immortal. But to whom
shall this be? To whom shall the body be restored for life eternal, even though
it have been slain, destroyed, and scattered to the winds? To whom shall it be
so restored? To him who has not been afraid to lay down his own life, since he
does not fear, lest his body should be slain.
4. For,
Brethren, the soul is said to be immortal, and immortal it is according to a
certain manner of its own: for it is a kind of life which is able to give life
to the body by its presence. For by the soul does the body live. This life
cannot die, and therefore is the soul immortal. Why then said I according to a
certain manner of its own? Hear why. Because there is a true immortality, an
immortality which is an entire unchangeableness; of which the Apostle says,
speaking of God, Who only has immortality, dwelling in that light which no man
may approach unto, whom no man has seen, nor can see, to whom be honour and
glory for ever and ever. Amen. If then God only has immortality, the soul must
needs be mortal. See then why it was that I said that the soul is immortal
after a certain manner of its own. For in fact it may also die. Understand
this, Beloved, and there will remain no difficulty. I venture to say then that
the soul can die, can be slain also. Yet it is undoubtedly immortal. See, I
venture to say, it is at once immortal, and it may be slain; and therefore I
said that there is a kind of immortality, an entire unchangeableness, that is,
which God Only has, of whom it is said, Who Only has immortality; for if the
soul cannot be slain, how did the Lord Himself say, when He would make us fear,
Fear Him who has power to slay both body and soul in hell?
5.
Hitherto I have confirmed, not solved, the difficulty. I have proved that the
soul can be slain. The Gospel cannot be gainsaid but by the ungodly soul. Lo,
something occurs to me here, and comes into my mind to speak. Life cannot be
gainsaid, but by a dead soul. The Gospel is life, impiety and infidelity are
the death of the soul. See then, it can die, and yet it is immortal. How then
is it immortal? Because there is always a sort of life which is never
extinguished in it. And how does it die? Not in ceasing to be life, but by
losing its life. For the soul is both life to something else, and it has its
own proper life. Consider the order of the creatures. The soul is the life of
the body: God is the life of the soul. As the life, that is the soul, is
present with the body, that the body die not; so ought the life of the soul,
that is God, to be with it that the soul die not. How does the body die? By the
soul's leaving it. I say, by the soul's leaving it the body dies; and it lies
along a mere carcass, what was a little before a desirable, now a contemptible,
object. There are in it still its several members, the eyes, and ears; but
these are but the windows of the house, its inhabitant is gone. They who bewail
the dead, cry in vain at the windows of the house; there is none within to
hear. How many things does the fond affection of the mourner give utterance to,
how many enumerate and call to mind; and with what a madness of sorrow, so to
say, does he speak, as with one who was sensible of what was doing, when he is
really speaking with one who is no longer there? He recounts his good
qualities, and the tokens of his goodness towards himself. It was you that gave
me this; and did this and that for me; it was you who did thus, and thus dearly
love me. But if you would only consider and understand, and restrain the
madness of your grief, he who once loved you, is gone; in vain does the house
receive your knockings, in which you can not find a dweller.
6. Let us
return to the subject I was speaking of a little while since. The body is dead.
Why? Because its life, that is the soul, is gone. Again, the body is alive, and
the man is impious, unbelieving, hard of belief, incorrigible; in this case
while the body is alive, the soul by which the body lives is dead. For the soul
is so excellent a thing, that it has power even though dead to give life to the
body. So excellent a thing, I say, is the soul, so excellent a creature, that
even though dead itself, it has power to quicken the body. For the soul of the
impious, unbelieving, unregulated man is dead, and yet by it though dead the
body lives. And therefore is it in the body; it sets on the hands to work, and
the feet to walk; it directs the eye to see, it disposes the ears to hear, it
discriminates tastes, avoids pains, seeks after pleasures. All these are tokens
of the life of the body; but they are from the presence of the soul. If I were
to ask a body whether it were alive; it would answer me, You see me walking,
you see me working, you hear me talking, you perceive that I have certain aims
and aversions, and do you not understand that the body is alive? By these works
then of the soul which is placed within, I understand that the body is alive. I
ask the soul also whether it is alive? It also has its proper works, by which
it manifests its life. The feet walk. I understand by this that the body lives,
but by the presence of the soul. I ask now, does the soul live? These feet
walk. (To speak only of this one movement.) I am questioning both body and
soul, as touching their life. The feet walk, I understand that the body lives.
But whither do they walk? To adultery, it is said. Then is the soul dead. For
so has unerring Scripture said, The widow who lives in pleasure is dead. Now
since the difference is great between pleasure and adultery, how can the soul
which is said to be dead in pleasure, live in adultery? It is surely dead. But
it is dead even though it be not in this case. I hear a man speaking; the body
then lives. For the tongue could not move itself in the mouth, and by its
several motions give utterance to articulate sounds, were there not an
inhabitant within; and a musician as it were to this instrument, to make use of
his tongue. I understand it perfectly. Thus the body speaks; the body then
lives. But I ask, is the soul alive also? Lo, the body speaks, and so is alive.
But what does it speak? As I said concerning the feet; they walk, and so the
body is alive, and I then asked, whither do they walk? That I might understand
whether the soul was alive also. So also when I hear a man speak, I understand
that the body is alive; I ask what does he speak, that I may know whether the
soul is alive also. He speaks a lie. If so, then is the soul dead. How do we
prove this? Let us ask the truth itself, which says, The mouth that lies, slays
the soul. I ask, why is the soul dead? I ask as I did just now, why is the body
dead? Because the soul, its life, had gone. Why is the soul dead? Because God,
its life, has forsaken it.
7. After
this brief examination then, know and hold for certain that the body is dead
without the soul, and that the soul is dead without God. Every man without God
has a dead soul. You bewail the dead: bewail the sinner rather, bewail rather
the ungodly man, bewail the unbeliever. It is written, The mourning for the
dead is seven days; for a fool and an ungodly man all the days of his life.
What! Are there no bowels of Christian compassion in you; that you mourn for a
body from which the soul is gone, and mournest not for the soul, from which God
is departed? Let the Martyr remembering this make answer to him that threatens
him, Why do you force me to deny Christ? Would you then force me to deny the
truth? And if I will not, what will you do? You will assault my body, that my
soul shall depart from it; but this same soul of mine has its body only for the
soul's sake. It is not so foolish or unwise. You would wound my body; but would
you, that through fear lest you should wound my body, and my soul should depart
from it, I should wound my own soul, and my God should depart from it? Fear not
then, O Martyr, the sword of your executioner; fear only your own tongue, lest
you do execution upon your own self, and slay, not your body, but your soul.
Fear for your soul, lest it die in hell-fire.
8.
Therefore said the Lord, Who has power to slay both body and soul in hell-fire.
How? When the ungodly shall be cast into hell-fire, will his body and his soul burn
there? Everlasting punishment will be the death of the body; the absence of God
will be the death of the soul. Would you know what the death of the soul is?
Understand the Prophet who says, Let the ungodly be taken away, that he may not
see the glory of the Lord. Let the soul then fear its proper death, and not
fear the death of its body. Because if it fear its own death, and so live in
its God, by not offending and thrusting Him away from him, it will be found
worthy to receive its body again at the end; not unto everlasting punishment,
as the ungodly, but unto life eternal, as the righteous. By fearing this death,
and loving that life, did the Martyrs, in hope of the promises of God, and in
contempt of the threats of persecutors, attain themselves to be crowned with
God, and have left to us the celebration of these solemnities.
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