Sermon on the Day of Lights by St. Gregory of Nyssa
Now
I recognize my own flock: to-day I behold the wonted figure of the
Church, when, turning with aversion from the occupation even of the
cares of the flesh, you come together in your undiminished numbers for
the service of God—when the people crowds the house, coming within the
sacred sanctuary, and when the multitude that can find no place within
fills the space outside in the precincts like bees. For of them some are
at their labours within, while others outside hum around the hive. So
do, my children: and never abandon this zeal. For I confess that I feel a
shepherd’s affections, and I wish, when I am set upon this watch-tower,
to see the flock gathered round about the mountain’s foot: and when it
so happens to me, I am filled with wonderful earnestness, and work with
pleasure at my sermon, as the shepherds do at their rustic strains. But
when things are otherwise, and you are straying in distant wanderings,
as you did but lately, the last Lord’s Day, I am much troubled, and glad
to be silent; and I consider the question of flight from hence, and
seek for the Carmel of the prophet Elijah, or for some rock without
inhabitant; for men in depression naturally choose loneliness and
solitude. But now, when I see you thronging here with all your families,
I am reminded of the prophetic saying, which Isaiah proclaimed from
afar off, addressing by anticipation the Church with her fair and
numerous children:—“Who are these that fly as a cloud, and as doves with
their young to me”? Yes, and he adds moreover this also, “The place is
too strait for me; give place that I may dwell.” For these predictions
the power of the Spirit made with reference to the populous Church of
God, which was afterwards to fill the whole world from end to end of the
earth.
The time, then, has come, and bears in
its course the remembrance of holy mysteries, purifying man,—mysteries
which purge out from soul and body even that sin which is hard to
cleanse away, and which bring us back to that fairness of our first
estate which God, the best of artificers, impressed upon us. Therefore
it is that you, the initiated people, are gathered together; and you
bring also that people who have not made trial of them, leading, like
good fathers, by careful guidance, the uninitiated to the perfect
reception of the faith. I for my part rejoice over both;—over you that
are initiated, because you are enriched with a great gift: over you that
are uninitiated, because you have a fair expectation of hope—remission
of what is to be accounted for, release from bondage, close relation to
God, free boldness of speech, and in place of servile subjection
equality with the angels. For these things, and all that follow from
them, the grace of Baptism secures and conveys to us. Therefore let us
leave the other matters of the Scriptures for other occasions, and abide
by the topic set before us, offering, as far as we may, the gifts that
are proper and fitting for the feast: for each festival demands its own
treatment. So we welcome a marriage with wedding songs; for mourning we
bring the due offering with funeral strains; in times of business we
speak seriously, at times of festivity we relax the concentration and
strain of our minds; but each time we keep free from disturbance by
things that are alien to its character.
Christ, then, was born as it were a few
days ago—He Whose generation was before all things, sensible and
intellectual. To-day He is baptized by John that He might cleanse him
who was defiled, that He might bring the Spirit from above, and exalt
man to heaven, that he who had fallen might be raised up and he who had
cast him down might be put to shame. And marvel not if God showed so
great earnestness in our cause: for it was with care on the part of him
who did us wrong that the plot was laid against us; it is with
forethought on the part of our Maker that we are saved. And he, that
evil charmer, framing his new device of sin against our race, drew along
his serpent train, a disguise worthy of his own intent, entering in his
impurity into what was like himself,—dwelling, earthly and mundane as
he was in will, in that creeping thing. But Christ, the repairer of his
evil-doing, assumes manhood in its fulness, and saves man, and becomes
the type and figure of us all, to sanctify the first-fruits of every
action, and leave to His servants no doubt in their zeal for the
tradition. Baptism, then, is a purification from sins, a remission of
trespasses, a cause of renovation and regeneration. By regeneration,
understand regeneration conceived in thought, not discerned by bodily
sight. For we shall not, according to the Jew Nicodemus and his somewhat
dull intelligence, change the old man into a child, nor shall we form
anew him who is wrinkled and gray-headed to tenderness and youth, if we
bring back the man again into his mother’s womb: but we do bring back,
by royal grace, him who bears the scars of sin, and has grown old in
evil habits, to the innocence of the babe. For as the child new-born is
free from accusations and from penalties, so too the child of
regeneration has nothing for which to answer, being released by royal
bounty from accountability. And this gift it is not the water that
bestows (for in that case it were a thing more exalted than all
creation), but the command of God, and the visitation of the Spirit that
comes sacramentally to set us free. But water serves to express the
cleansing. For since we are wont by washing in water to render our body
clean when it is soiled by dirt or mud, we therefore apply it also in
the sacramental action, and display the spiritual brightness by that
which is subject to our senses. Let us however, if it seems well,
persevere in enquiring more fully and more minutely concerning Baptism,
starting, as from the fountain-head, from the Scriptural declaration,
“Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into
the kingdom of God.” Why are both named, and why is not the Spirit alone
accounted sufficient for the completion of Baptism? Man, as we know
full well, is compound, not simple: and therefore the cognate and
similar medicines are assigned for healing to him who is twofold and
conglomerate:—for his visible body, water, the sensible element,—for his
soul, which we cannot see, the Spirit invisible, invoked by faith,
present unspeakably. For “the Spirit breathes where He wills, and thou
hearest His voice, but canst not tell whence He cometh or whither He
goeth.” He blesses the body that is baptized, and the water that
baptizes. Despise not, therefore, the Divine laver, nor think lightly of
it, as a common thing, on account of the use of water. For the power
that operates is mighty, and wonderful are the things that are wrought
thereby. For this holy altar, too, by which I stand, is stone, ordinary
in its nature, nowise different from the other slabs of stone that build
our houses and adorn our pavements; but seeing that it was consecrated
to the service of God, and received the benediction, it is a holy table,
an altar undefiled, no longer touched by the hands of all, but of the
priests alone, and that with reverence. The bread again is at
first common bread, but when the sacramental action consecrates it, it
is called, and becomes, the Body of Christ. So with the sacramental oil;
so with the wine: though before the benediction they are of little
value, each of them, after the sanctification bestowed by the Spirit,
has its several operation. The same power of the word, again, also makes
the priest venerable and honourable, separated, by the new blessing
bestowed upon him, from his community with the mass of men. While but
yesterday he was one of the mass, one of the people, he is suddenly
rendered a guide, a president, a teacher of righteousness, an instructor
in hidden mysteries; and this he does without being at all changed in
body or in form; but, while continuing to be in all appearance the man
he was before, being, by some unseen power and grace, transformed in
respect of his unseen soul to the higher condition. And so there are
many things, which if you consider you will see that their appearance is
contemptible, but the things they accomplish are mighty: and this is
especially the case when you collect from the ancient history instances
cognate and similar to the subject of our inquiry. The rod of Moses was a
hazel wand. And what is that, but common wood that every hand cuts and
carries, and fashions to what use it chooses, and casts as it will into
the fire? But when God was pleased to accomplish by that rod those
wonders, lofty, and passing the power of language to express, the wood
was changed into a serpent. And again, at another time, he smote the
waters, and now made the water blood, now made to issue forth a
countless brood of frogs: and again he divided the sea, severed to its
depths without flowing together again. Likewise the mantle of one of the
prophets, though it was but a goat’s skin, made Elisha renowned in the
whole world. And the wood of the Cross is of saving efficacy for all
men, though it is, as I am informed, a piece of a poor tree, less
valuable than most trees are. So a bramble bush showed to Moses the
manifestation of the presence of God: so the remains of Elisha raised a
dead man to life; so clay gave sight to him that was blind from the
womb. And all these things, though they were matter without soul or
sense, were made the means for the performance of the great marvels
wrought by them, when they received the power of God. Now by a similar
train of reasoning, water also, though it is nothing else than water,
renews the man to spiritual regeneration, when the grace from above
hallows it. And if any one answers me again by raising a difficulty,
with his questions and doubts, continually asking and inquiring how
water and the sacramental act that is performed therein regenerate, I
most justly reply to him, “Show me the mode of that generation which is
after the flesh, and I will explain to you the power of regeneration in
the soul.” You will say perhaps, by way of giving an account of the
matter, “It is the cause of the seed which makes the man.” Learn then
from us in return, that hallowed water cleanses and illuminates the man.
And if you again object to me your “How?” I shall more vehemently cry
in answer, “How does the fluid and formless substance become a man?” and
so the argument as it advances will be exercised on everything through
all creation. How does heaven exist? how earth? how sea? how every
single thing? For everywhere men’s reasoning, perplexed in the attempt
at discovery, falls back upon this syllable “how,” as those who cannot
walk fall back upon a seat. To speak concisely, everywhere the power of
God and His operation are incomprehensible and incapable of being
reduced to rule, easily producing whatever He wills, while concealing
from us the minute knowledge of His operation. Hence also the blessed
David, applying his mind to the magnificence of creation, and filled
with perplexed wonder in his soul, spake that verse which is sung by
all, “O Lord, how manifold are Thy works: in wisdom hast Thou made them
all.” The wisdom he perceived: but the art of the wisdom he could not
discover. Let us then leave the task of searching into what is beyond
human power, and seek rather that which shows signs of being partly
within our comprehension:—what is the reason why the cleansing is
effected by water? and to what purpose are the three immersions
received? That which the fathers taught, and which our mind has received
and assented to, is as follows:—We recognize four elements, of which
the world is composed, which every one knows even if their names are not
spoken; but if it is well, for the sake of the more simple, to tell you
their names, they are fire and air, earth and water. Now our God and
Saviour, in fulfilling the Dispensation for our sakes, went beneath the
fourth of these, the earth, that He might raise up life from thence. And
we in receiving Baptism, in imitation of our Lord and Teacher and
Guide, are not indeed buried in the earth (for this is the shelter of
the body that is entirely dead, covering the infirmity and decay of our
nature), but coming to the element akin to earth, to water, we conceal
ourselves in that as the Saviour did in the earth: and by doing this
thrice we represent for ourselves that grace of the Resurrection which
was wrought in three days: and this we do, not receiving the sacrament
in silence, but while there are spoken over us the Names of the Three
Sacred Persons on Whom we believed, in Whom we also hope, from Whom
comes to us both the fact of our present and the fact of our future
existence. It may be thou art offended, thou who contendest boldly
against the glory of the Spirit, and that thou grudgest to the Spirit
that veneration wherewith He is reverenced by the godly. Leave off
contending with me: resist, if thou canst, those words of the Lord which
gave to men the rule of the Baptismal invocation. What says the Lord’s
command? “Baptizing them in the Name of the Father and of the Son and of
the Holy Ghost.” How in the Name of the Father? Because He is the
primal cause of all things. How in the Name of the Son? Because He is
the Maker of the Creation. How in the Name of the Holy Ghost? Because He
is the power perfecting all. We bow ourselves therefore before the
Father, that we may be sanctified: before the Son also we bow, that the
same end may be fulfilled: we bow also before the Holy Ghost, that we
may be made what He is in fact and in Name. There is not a distinction
in the sanctification, in the sense that the Father sanctifies more, the
Son less, the Holy Spirit in a less degree than the other Two. Why then
dost thou divide the Three Persons into fragments of different natures,
and make Three Gods, unlike one to another, whilst from all thou dost
receive one and the same grace?
As, however, examples always render an
argument more vivid to the hearers, I propose to instruct the mind of
the blasphemers by an illustration, explaining, by means of earthly and
lowly matters, those matters which are great, and invisible to the
senses. If it befel thee to be enduring the misfortune of captivity
among enemies, to be in bondage and in misery, to be groaning for that
ancient freedom which thou once hadst—and if all at once three men, who
were notable men and citizens in the country of thy tyrannical masters,
set thee free from the constraint that lay upon thee, giving thy ransom
equally, and dividing the charges of the money in equal shares among
themselves, wouldst thou not then, meeting with this favour, look upon
the three alike as benefactors, and make repayment of the ransom to them
in equal shares, as the trouble and the cost on thy behalf was common
to them all—if, that is, thou wert a fair judge of the benefit done to
thee? This we may see, so far as illustration goes, for our aim at
present is not to render a strict account of the Faith. Let us return to
the present season, and to the subject it sets before us.
I find that not only do the Gospels,
written after the Crucifixion, proclaim the grace of Baptism, but, even
before the Incarnation of our Lord, the ancient Scripture everywhere
prefigured the likeness of our regeneration; not clearly manifesting its
form, but fore-showing, in dark sayings, the love of God to man. And as
the Lamb was proclaimed by anticipation, and the Cross was foretold by
anticipation, so, too, was Baptism shown forth by action and by word.
Let us recall its types to those who love good thoughts—for the festival
season of necessity demands their recollection.
Hagar, the handmaid of Abraham (whom
Paul treats allegorically in reasoning with the Galatians), being sent
forth from her master’s house by the anger of Sarah—for a servant
suspected in regard to her master is a hard thing for lawful wives to
bear—was wandering in desolation to a desolate land with her babe
Ishmael at her breast. And when she was in straits for the needs of
life, and was herself nigh unto death, and her child yet more sore for
the water in the skin was spent (since it was not possible that the
Synagogue, she who once dwelt among the figures of the perennial
Fountain, should have all that was needed to support life), an angel
unexpectedly appears, and shows her a well of living water, and drawing
thence, she saves Ishmael. Behold, then, a sacramental type: how from
the very first it is by the means of living water that salvation comes
to him that was perishing—water that was not before, but was given as a
boon by an angel’s means. Again, at a later time, Isaac—the same for
whose sake Ishmael was driven with his mother from his father’s home—was
to be wedded. Abraham’s servant is sent to make the match, so as to
secure a bride for his master, and finds Rebekah at the well: and a
marriage that was to produce the race of Christ had its beginning and
its first covenant in water. Yes, and Isaac himself also, when he was
ruling his flocks, digged wells at all parts of the desert, which the
aliens stopped and filled up, for a type of all those impious men of
later days who hindered the grace of Baptism, and talked loudly in their
struggle against the truth. Yet the martyrs and the priests overcame
them by digging the wells, and the gift of Baptism over-flowed the whole
world. According to the same force of the text, Jacob also, hastening
to seek a bride, met Rachel unexpectedly at the well. And a great stone
lay upon the well, which a multitude of shepherds were wont to roll away
when they came together, and then gave water to themselves and to their
flocks. But Jacob alone rolls away the stone, and waters the flocks of
his spouse. The thing is, I think, a dark saying, a shadow of what
should come. For what is the stone that is laid but Christ Himself? for
of Him Isaiah says, “And I will lay in the foundations of Sion a costly
stone, precious, elect:” and Daniel likewise, “A stone was cut out
without hands,” that is, Christ was born without a man. For as it is a
new and marvellous thing that a stone should be cut out of the rock
without a hewer or stone-cutting tools, so it is a thing beyond all
wonder that an offspring should appear from an unwedded Virgin. There
was lying, then, upon the well the spiritual stone, Christ, concealing
in the deep and in mystery the laver of regeneration which needed much
time—as it were a long rope—to bring it to light. And none rolled away
the stone save Israel, who is mind seeing God. But he both draws up the
water and gives drink to the sheep of Rachel; that is, he reveals the
hidden mystery, and gives living water to the flock of the Church. Add
to this also the history of the three rods of Jacob. For from the time
when the three rods were laid by the well, Laban the polytheist
thenceforth became poor, and Jacob became rich and wealthy in herds. Now
let Laban be interpreted of the devil, and Jacob of Christ. For after
the institution of Baptism Christ took away all the flock of Satan and
Himself grew rich. Again, the great Moses, when he was a goodly child,
and yet at the breast, falling under the general and cruel decree which
the hard-hearted Pharaoh made against the men-children, was exposed on
the banks of the river—not naked, but laid in an ark, for it was fitting
that the Law should typically be enclosed in a coffer. And he was laid
near the water; for the Law, and those daily sprinklings of the Hebrews
which were a little later to be made plain in the perfect and marvellous
Baptism, are near to grace. Again, according to the view of the
inspired Paul, the people itself, by passing through the Red Sea,
proclaimed the good tidings of salvation by water. The people passed
over, and the Egyptian king with his host was engulfed, and by these
actions this Sacrament was foretold. For even now, whensoever the people
is in the water of regeneration, fleeing from Egypt, from the burden of
sin, it is set free and saved; but the devil with his own servants (I
mean, of course, the spirits of evil), is choked with grief, and
perishes, deeming the salvation of men to be his own misfortune.
Even these instances might be enough to
confirm our present position; but the lover of good thoughts must yet
not neglect what follows. The people of the Hebrews, as we learn, after
many sufferings, and after accomplishing their weary course in the
desert, did not enter the land of promise until it had first been
brought, with Joshua for its guide and the pilot of its life, to the
passage of the Jordan. But it is clear that Joshua also, who set up the
twelve stones in the stream, was anticipating the coming of the twelve
disciples, the ministers of Baptism. Again, that marvellous sacrifice of
the old Tishbite, that passes all human understanding, what else does
it do but prefigure in action the Faith in the Father, the Son, and the
Holy Ghost, and redemption? For when all the people of the Hebrews had
trodden underfoot the religion of their fathers, and fallen into the
error of polytheism, and their king Ahab was deluded by idolatry, with
Jezebel, of ill-omened name, as the wicked partner of his life, and the
vile prompter of his impiety, the prophet, filled with the grace of the
Spirit, coming to a meeting with Ahab, withstood the priests of Baal in a
marvellous and wondrous contest in the sight of the king and all the
people; and by proposing to them the task of sacrificing the bullock
without fire, he displayed them in a ridiculous and wretched plight,
vainly praying and crying aloud to gods that were not. At last, himself
invoking his own and the true God, he accomplished the test proposed
with further exaggerations and additions. For he did not simply by
prayer bring down the fire from heaven upon the wood when it was dry,
but exhorted and enjoined the attendants to bring abundance of water.
And when he had thrice poured out the barrels upon the cleft wood, he
kindled at his prayer the fire from out of the water, that by the
contrariety of the elements, so concurring in friendly cooperation, he
might show with superabundant force the power of his own God. Now
herein, by that wondrous sacrifice, Elijah clearly proclaimed to us the
sacramental rite of Baptism that should afterwards be instituted. For
the fire was kindled by water thrice poured upon it, so that it is
clearly shown that where the mystic water is, there is the kindling,
warm, and fiery Spirit, that burns up the ungodly, and illuminates the
faithful. Yes, and yet again his disciple Elisha, when Naaman the
Syrian, who was diseased with leprosy, had come to him as a suppliant,
cleanses the sick man by washing him in Jordan, clearly indicating what
should come, both by the use of water generally, and by the dipping in
the river in particular. For Jordan alone of rivers, receiving in itself
the first-fruits of sanctification and benediction, conveyed in its
channel to the whole world, as it were from some fount in the type
afforded by itself, the grace of Baptism. These then are indications in
deed and act of regeneration by Baptism. Let us for the rest consider
the prophecies of it in words and language. Isaiah cried saying, “Wash
you, make you clean, put away evil from your souls;” and David, “Draw
nigh to Him and be enlightened, and your faces shall not be ashamed.”
And Ezekiel, writing more clearly and plainly than them both, says, “And
I will sprinkle clean water upon you, and ye shall be cleansed: from
all your filthiness, and from all your idols, will I cleanse you. A new
heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I give you: and I will
take away the stony heart out of your flesh, and I will give you an
heart of flesh, and my Spirit will I put within you.” Most manifestly
also does Zechariah prophesy of Joshua, who was clothed with the filthy
garment (to wit, the flesh of a servant, even ours), and stripping him
of his ill-favoured raiment adorns him with the clean and fair apparel;
teaching us by the figurative illustration that verily in the Baptism of
Jesus all we,
putting off our sins like some poor and patched garment, are clothed in
the holy and most fair garment of regeneration. And where shall we place
that oracle of Isaiah, which cries to the wilderness, “Be glad, O
thirsty wilderness: let the desert rejoice and blossom as a lily: and
the desolate places of Jordan shall blossom and shall rejoice”? For it
is clear that it is not to places without soul or sense that he
proclaims the good tidings of joy: but he speaks, by the figure of the
desert, of the soul that is parched and unadorned, even as David also,
when he says, “My soul is unto Thee as a thirsty land,” and, “My soul is
athirst for the mighty, for the living God.” So again the Lord says in
the Gospels, “If any man thirst, let him come unto Me and drink;” and to
the woman of Samaria, “Whosoever drinketh of this water shall thirst
again: but whosoever drinketh of the water that I shall give him shall
never thirst.” And “the excellency of Carmel” is given to the soul that
bears the likeness to the desert, that is, the grace bestowed through
the Spirit. For since Elijah dwelt in Carmel, and the mountain became
famous and renowned by the virtue of him who dwelt there, and since
moreover John the Baptist, illustrious in the spirit of Elijah,
sanctified the Jordan, therefore the prophet foretold that “the
excellency of Carmel” should be given to the river. And “the glory of
Lebanon,” from the similitude of its lofty trees, he transfers to the
river. For as great Lebanon presents a sufficient cause of wonder in the
very trees which it brings forth and nourishes, so is the Jordan
glorified by regenerating men and planting them in the Paradise of God:
and of them, as the words of the Psalmist say, ever blooming and bearing
the foliage of virtues, “the leaf shall not wither,” and God shall be
glad, receiving their fruit in due season, rejoicing, like a good
planter, in his own works. And the inspired David, foretelling also the
voice which the Father uttered from heaven upon the Son at His Baptism,
that He might lead the hearers, who till then had looked upon that low
estate of His Humanity which was perceptible by their senses, to the
dignity of nature that belongs to the Godhead, wrote in his book that
passage, “The voice of the Lord is upon the waters, the voice of the
Lord in majesty.” But here we must make an end of the testimonies from
the Divine Scriptures: for the discourse would extend to an infinite
length if one should seek to select every passage in detail, and set
them forth in a single book.
But do ye all, as many as are made glad,
by the gift of regeneration, and make your boast of that saving
renewal, show me, after the sacramental grace, the change in your ways
that should follow it, and make known by the purity of your conversation
the difference effected by your transformation for the better. For of
those things which are before our eyes nothing is altered: the
characteristics of the body remain unchanged, and the mould of the
visible nature is nowise different. But there is certainly need of some
manifest proof, by which we may recognize the new-born man, discerning
by clear tokens the new from the old. And these I think are to be found
in the intentional motions of the soul, whereby it separates itself from
its old customary life, and enters on a newer way of conversation, and
will clearly teach those acquainted with it that it has become something
different from its former self, bearing in it no token by which the old
self was recognized. This, if you be persuaded by me, and keep my words
as a law, is the mode of the transformation. The man that was before
Baptism was wanton, covetous, grasping at the goods of others, a
reviler, a liar, a slanderer, and all that is kindred with these things,
and consequent from them. Let him now become orderly, sober, content
with his own possessions, and imparting from them to those in poverty,
truthful, courteous, affable—in a word, following every laudable course
of conduct. For as darkness is dispelled by light, and black disappears
as whiteness is spread over it, so the old man also disappears when
adorned with the works of righteousness. Thou seest how Zacchæus also by
the change of his life slew the publican, making fourfold restitution
to those whom he had unjustly damaged, and the rest he divided with the
poor—the treasure which he had before got by ill means from the poor
whom he oppressed. The Evangelist Matthew, another publican, of the same
business with Zacchæus, at once after his call changed his life as if
it had been a mask. Paul was a persecutor, but after the grace bestowed
on him an Apostle, bearing the weight of his fetters for Christ’s sake,
as an act of amends and repentance for those unjust bonds which he once
received from the Law, and bore for use against the Gospel. Such ought
you to be in your regeneration: so ought you to blot out your habits
that tend to sin; so ought the sons of God to have their conversation:
for after the grace bestowed we are called His children. And therefore
we ought narrowly to scrutinize our
Father’s characteristics, that by fashioning and framing ourselves to
the likeness of our Father, we may appear true children of Him Who calls
us to the adoption according to grace. For the bastard and the
supposititious son, who belies his father’s nobility in his deeds, is a
sad reproach. Therefore also, methinks, it is that the Lord Himself,
laying down for us in the Gospels the rules of our life, uses these
words to His disciples, “Do good to them that hate you, pray for them
that despitefully use you and persecute you; that ye may be the children
of your Father which is in heaven: for He maketh His sun to rise on the
evil and on the good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust.”
For then He says they are sons when in their own modes of thought they
are fashioned in loving kindness towards their kindred, after the
likeness of the Father’s goodness.
Therefore, also, it is that after the
dignity of adoption the devil plots more vehemently against us, pining
away with envious glance, when he beholds the beauty of the new-born
man, earnestly tending towards that heavenly city, from which he fell:
and he raises up against us fiery temptations, seeking earnestly to
despoil us of that second adornment, as he did of our former array. But
when we are aware of his attacks, we ought to repeat to ourselves the
apostolic words, “As many of us as were baptized into Christ were
baptized into His death.” Now if we have been conformed to His death,
sin henceforth in us is surely a corpse, pierced through by the javelin
of Baptism, as that fornicator was thrust through by the zealous
Phinehas. Flee therefore from us, ill-omened one! for it is a corpse
thou seekest to despoil, one long ago joined to thee, one who long since
lost his senses for pleasures. A corpse is not enamoured of bodies, a
corpse is not captivated by wealth, a corpse slanders not, a corpse lies
not, snatches not at what is not its own, reviles not those who
encounter it. My way of living is regulated for another life: I have
learnt to despise the things that are in the world, to pass by the
things of earth, to hasten to the things of heaven, even as Paul
expressly testifies, that the world is crucified to him, and he to the
world. These are the words of a soul truly regenerated: these are the
utterances of the newly-baptized man, who remembers his own profession,
which he made to God when the sacrament was administered to him,
promising that he would despise for the sake of love towards Him all
torment and all pleasure alike.
And now we have spoken sufficiently for
the holy subject of the day, which the circling year brings to us at
appointed periods. We shall do well in what remains to end our discourse
by turning it to the loving Giver of so great a boon, offering to Him a
few words as the requital of great things. For Thou verily, O Lord, art
the pure and eternal fount of goodness, Who didst justly turn away from
us, and in loving kindness didst have mercy upon us. Thou didst hate,
and wert reconciled; Thou didst curse, and didst bless; Thou didst
banish us from Paradise, and didst recall us; Thou didst strip off the
fig-tree leaves, an unseemly covering, and put upon us a costly garment;
Thou didst open the prison, and didst release the condemned; Thou didst
sprinkle us with clean water, and cleanse us from our filthiness. No
longer shall Adam be confounded when called by Thee, nor hide himself,
convicted by his conscience, cowering in the thicket of Paradise. Nor
shall the flaming sword encircle Paradise around, and make the entrance
inaccessible to those that draw near; but all is turned to joy for us
that were the heirs of sin: Paradise, yea, heaven itself may be trodden
by man: and the creation, in the world and above the world, that once
was at variance with itself, is knit together in friendship: and we men
are made to join in the angels’ song, offering the worship of their
praise to God. For all these things then let us sing to God that hymn of
joy, which lips touched by the Spirit long ago sang loudly: “Let my
soul be joyful in the Lord: for He hath clothed me with a garment of
salvation, and hath put upon me a robe of gladness: as on a bridegroom
He hath set a mitre upon me, and as a bride hath He adorned me with fair
array.” And verily the Adorner of the bride is Christ, Who is, and was,
and shall be, blessed now and for evermore. Amen.