On that
which is written in the Gospel Matthew 5:16 , Even so let your light shine
before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father Who is
in Heaven: and contrariwise, Chap VI, Take heed that you do not your
righteousness before men, to be seen of them.
1. It is wont to perplex many persons, Dearly beloved, that our Lord Jesus Christ in His Evangelical Sermon, after He had first said, Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven; said afterwards, Take heed that you do not your righteousness before men to be seen of them. For so the mind of him who is weak in understanding is disturbed, is desirous to obey both precepts, and distracted by diverse, and contradictory commandments. For a man can as little obey but one master, if he give contradictory orders, as he can serve two masters, which the Saviour Himself has testified in the same Sermon to be impossible. What then must the mind that is in this hesitation do, when it thinks that it cannot, and yet is afraid not to obey? For if he set his good works in the light to be seen of men, that he may fulfil the command, Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven; he will think himself involved in guilt because he has done contrary to the other precept which says, Take heed that you do not your righteousness before men to be seen of them. And again, if fearing and avoiding this, he conceal his good works, he will think that he is not obeying Him who commands, saying, Let your light shine before men, that they may see your good works.
2. But he
who is of a right understanding, fulfils both, and will obey in both the
Universal Lord of all, who would not condemn the slothful servant, if he
commanded those things which could by no means be done. For give ear to Paul,
the servant of Jesus Christ, called to be an Apostle, separated unto the Gospel
of God, both doing and teaching both duties. See how his light shines before
men, that they may see his good works. We commend ourselves, says he, to every
man's conscience in the sight of God. And again, For we provide things honest,
not only in the sight of God, but also in the sight of men. And again, Please
all men in all things, even as I please all men in all things. See, on the
other hand, how he takes heed, that he do not his righteousness before men to
be seen of them. Let every man, says he, prove his own work, and then shall he
have glorying in himself, and not in another. And again, For our glorying is
this, the testimony of our conscience. And that, than which nothing is plainer,
If, says he, I yet pleased men, I should not be the servant of Christ. But lest
any of those who are perplexed about the precepts of our Lord Himself as
contradictory, should much more raise a question against His Apostle and say,
How do you say, Please all men in all things, even as I also please all men in
all things: and yet also sayest, If I yet pleased men; I should not be the
servant of Christ? May the Lord Himself be with us, who spoke also in His
servant and Apostle, and open to us His will, and give us the means of obeying
it.
3. The
very words of the Gospel carry with them their own explanation; nor do they
shut the mouths of those who hunger, seeing they feed the hearts of them that
knock. The intention of a man's heart, its direction and its aim, is what is to
be regarded. For if he who wishes his good works to be seen of men, sets before
men his own glory and advantage, and seeks for this in the sight of men, he
does not fulfil either of those precepts which the Lord has given as touching
this matter; because He has at once looked to doing his righteousness before
men to be seen of them; and his light has not so shined before men that they
should see his good works, and glorify His Father which is in heaven. It was
himself he wished to be glorified, not God; he sought his own advantage, and
loved not the Lord's will. Of such the Apostle says, For all seek their own,
not the things which are Jesus Christ's. Accordingly, the sentence was not
finished at the words, Let your light so shine before men, that they may see
your good works; but there was immediately subjoined why this was to be done;
that they may glorify your Father which is in heaven; that when a man who does
good works is seen of men, he may have only the intention of the good work in
his own conscience, but may have no intention of being known, save for the
praise of God, for their advantage-sake to whom he is thus made known; for to
them this advantage comes, that God who has given this power to man begins to
be well-pleasing to them; and so they do not despair, but that the same power
might be vouchsafed to themselves also if they would. And so He did not
conclude the other precept, Take heed that you do not your righteousness before
men, otherwise than in the words, to be seen of them; nor did He add in this
case, that they may glorify your Father which is in heaven, but rather,
otherwise you have no reward of your Father which is in heaven. For by this He
shows us, that they who are such, as He will not have His faithful ones to be,
seek a reward in this very thing, that they are seen of men— that it is in this
they place their good— in this that they delight the vanity of their heart— in
this is their emptiness, and inflation, their swelling, and wasting away. For
why was it not sufficient to say, Take heed that you do not your righteousness
before men, but that he added, that you may be seen of them, except because
there are some who do their righteousness before men; not that they may be seen
of them, but that the works themselves may be seen; and the Father which is in
heaven, who has vouchsafed to endow with these gifts the ungodly whom He had
justified, may be glorified?
4. They who are such, neither do they account their righteousness as their own,
but His, by the faith of whom they live (whence also the Apostle says, That I
may win Christ, and be found in Him, not having my own righteousness which is
of the law, but that which is of the faith of Christ, the righteousness which
is of God by faith; and in another place, That we may be the righteousness of
God in Him. Whence also he finds fault with the Jews in these words, Being
ignorant of God's righteousness, and wishing to establish their own
righteousness, they have not submitted themselves to the righteousness of God
). Whosoever then wish their good works to be so seen of men, that He may be
glorified from whom they have received those things which are seen in them, and
that thereby those very persons who see them, may through the dutifulness of
faith be provoked to imitate the good, their light shines truly before men,
because there beams forth from them the light of charity; theirs is no mere
empty fume of pride; and in the very act they take precautions, that they do
not their righteousness before men to be seen of them, in that they do not
reckon that righteousness as their own, nor do they therefore do it that they
may be seen; but that He may be made known, who is praised in them that are
justified, that so He may bring to pass in him that praises that which is
praised in others, that is, that He may make him that praises to be himself the
object of praise. Observe the Apostle too, how that when he had said, Please
all men in all things, as I also please all men in all things; he did not stop
there, as if he had placed in that, namely, the pleasing men, the end of his
intention; for else he would have said falsely, If I yet pleased men, I should
not be the servant of Christ; but he subjoined immediately why it was that he
pleased men; Not seeking, says he, my own profit, but the profit of many, that
they may be saved. So he at once did not please men for his own profit, lest he
should not be the servant of Christ; and he did please men for their
salvation's sake, that he might be a faithful Minister of Christ; because for
him his own conscience in the sight of God was enough, and from him there
shined forth in the sight of men something which they might imitate.
by Saint Augustine
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