[Note: pagination of Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers edition preserved]
Gregory Nazianzus' family was one of the most amazing in Christian history. Almost all its members - himself, his brothers Basil and Ceasarius, his sisters Gorgonia and Macrina, and his mother and father - were later revered as saints. The primary "saint's life" for most of them were the orations on them delivered by Gregory. This oration on the death of his father, also addresses the sanctity of his mother, Nonna.
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THIS Oration was delivered A. D. 374. S. Gregory the elder died
early in that year, according to the Greek Menaea on the 1st of
January, though Clement and some others place his death a few
months later. His wife, S. Nonna, survived him, and was present
to hear the Oration, as was also S. Basil, who desired to honour
one who had consecrated him to the Episcopate. The aged Saint,
who died in his hundredth year, had originally belonged to a sect
called Hypsistarii. Our knowledge of the existence and tenets
of this sect is due to this Oration(
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and, soon after his baptism, consecrated Bishop of Nazianzus. He was eminent as an able administrator, a devout Christian, an orthodox teacher, a steadfast Confessor of the faith, a sympathetic Pastor, an affectionate father. In his life and work he was seconded by his wife, and followed by his three children, Gregory, Gorgonia, and Caesarius, whose names are all to be found upon the roll of the Saints.
1. O man of God,(
2. Tell me, however, whence do you come, what is your business,
and what favour do you bring us? Since I know that you are entirely
moved with and by God, and for the benefit of those who receive
you. Are you come to inspect us, or to seek for the pastor, or
to take the oversight of the flock? You find us no longer in existence,
but for the most part having passed away with him, unable to bear
with the place of our affliction, especially now that we have
lost our skilful steersman, our light of life, to whom we looked
to direct our course as the blazing beacon of salvation above
us: he has departed with all his excellence, and all the power
of pastoral organization, which he had gathered in a long time,
full of days and wisdom, and crowned, to use the words of Solomon,
with the hoary head of glory.(
3. There are, as I said, three causes to necessitate your presence, all of equal weight, ourselves, the pastor, and the flock: come then, and according to the spirit of ministry which is in you, assign to each its due, and guide your words in judgment, so that we may more than ever marvel at your wisdom. And how will you guide them? First by bestowing seemly praise upon his virtue, not only as a pure sepulchral tribute of speech to him who was pure, but also to set forth to others his conduct and example as a mark of true piety. Then bestow upon us some brief counsels concerning life and death, and the union and severance of body and soul, and the two worlds, the one present but transitory, the other spiritually perceived and abiding; and persuade us to despise that which is deceitful and disordered and uneven, carrying us and being carried, like the waves, now up, now down; but to cling to that which is firm and stable and divine and constant, free from all disturbance and confusion. For this would lessen our pain because of friends departed before us, nay we should rejoice if your words should carry us hence and set us on high, and hide distress of the present in the future, and persuade us that we also are pressing on to a good Master, and that our home is better than our pilgrimage; and that translation and removal thither is to us who are tempest-tost here like a calm haven to men at sea; or as ease and relief from toil come to men who, at the close of a long journey, escape the troubles of the wayfarer, so to those who attain to the hostel yonder comes a better and more tolerable existence than that of those who still tread the crooked and precipitous path of this life.
4. Thus might you console us; but what of the flock? Would you
first promise the oversight and leadership of yourself, a man
under whose wings we all would gladly repose, and for whose words
we thirst more eagerly than men suffering from thirst for the
purest fountain? Secondly, persuade us that the good shepherd
who laid down his life for the sheep(
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by the voice of strangers, souls under the fair guidance of the truth. Aye, I am well assured that his intercession is of more avail now than was his instruction in former days, since he is closer to God, now that he has shaken off his bodily fetters, and freed his mind from the clay which obscured it, and holds intercourse naked with the nakedness of the prime and purest Mind; being promoted, if it be not rash to say so, to the rank and confidence of an angel. This, with your power of speech and spirit, you will set forth and discuss better than I can sketch it. But in order that, through ignorance of his excellences, your language may not fall very far short of his deserts, I will, from my own knowledge of the departed, briefly draw an outline, and preliminary plan of an eulogy to be handed to you, the illustrious artist of such subjects, for the details of the beauty of his virtue to be filled in and transmitted to the ears and minds of all.
5. Leaving to the laws of panegyric the description of his country,
his family, his nobility of figure, his external magnificence,
and the other subjects of human pride, I begin with what is of
most consequence and comes closest to ourselves. He sprang from
a stock unrenowned, and not well suited for piety, for I am not
ashamed of his origin, in my confidence in the close of his life,
one that was not planted in the house of God,(
6. Even before he was of our fold, he was ours. His character
made him one of us. For, as many of our own are not with us, whose
life alienates them from the common body, so, many of those without
are on our side, whose character anticipates their faith, and
need only the name of that which indeed they possess. My father
was one of these, an alien shoot, but inclined by his life towards
us. He was so far advanced in self control, that he became at
once most beloved and most modest, two qualities difficult to
combine. What greater and more splendid testimony can there be
to his justice than his exercise of a position second to none
in the state, without enriching himself by a single farthing,
although he saw everyone else casting the hands of Briareus upon
the public funds, and swollen with ill-gotten gain? For thus do
I term unrighteous wealth. Of his prudence this also is no slight
proof, but in the course of my speech further details will be
given. It was as a reward(
7. I have heard the Scripture say: Who can find a valiant woman?(
8. She indeed who was given to Adam as a help meet for him,
because it was not good for man to be alone,(
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became an enemy, and instead of a yoke-fellow, an opponent, and beguiling the man by means of pleasure, estranged him through the tree of knowledge from the tree of life. But she who was given by God to my father became not only, as is less wonderful, his assistant, but even his leader, drawing him on by her influence in deed and word to the highest excellence; judging it best in all other respects to be overruled by her husband according to the law of marriage, but not being ashamed, in regard of piety, even to offer herself as his teacher. Admirable indeed as was this conduct of hers, it was still more admirable that he should readily acquiesce in it. She is a woman who while others have been honoured and extolled for natural and artificial beauty, has acknowledged but one kind of beauty, that of the soul, and the preservation, or the restoration as far as possible, of the Divine image. Pigments and devices for adornment she has rejected as worthy of women on the stage. The only genuine form of noble birth she recognized is piety, and the knowledge of whence we are sprung and whither we are tending. The only safe and inviolable form of wealth is, she considered, to strip oneself of wealth for God and the poor, and especially for those of our own kin who are unfortunate; and such help only as is necessary, she held to be rather a reminder, than a relief of their distress, while a more liberal beneficence brings stable honour and most perfect consolation. Some women have excelled in thrifty management, others in piety, while she, difficult as it is to unite the two virtues, has surpassed all in both of them, both by her eminence in each, and by the fact that she alone has combined them together. To as great a degree has she, by her care and skill, secured the prosperity of her household, according to the injunctions and laws of Solomon as to the valiant woman, as if she had had no knowledge of piety; and she applied herself to God and Divine things as closely as if absolutely released from household cares, allowing neither branch of her duty to interfere with the other, but rather making each of them support the other.
9. What time or place for prayer ever escaped her? To this she
was drawn before all other things in the day; or rather, who had
such hope of receiving an immediate answer to her requests? Who
paid such reverence to the hand and countenance of the priests?
Or honoured all kinds of philosophy? Who reduced the flesh by
more constant fast and vigil? Or stood like a pillar at the night
long and daily psalmody? Who had a greater love for virginity,
though patient of the marriage bond herself? Who was a better
patron of the orphan and the widow? Who aided as much in the alleviation
of the misfortunes of the mourner? These things, small as they
are, and perhaps contemptible in the eyes of some, because not
easily attainable by most people (for that which is unattainable
comes, through envy, to be thought not even credible), are in
my eyes most honourable, since they were the discoveries of her
faith and the undertakings of her spiritual fervour. So also in
the holy assemblies, or places, her voice was never to be heard
except(
10. And if it was a great thing for the altar never to have
had an iron tool lifted upon it,(
11. I pass by in silence what is still more ineffable, of which God is witness, and those of the faithful handmaidens to whom she has confided such things. That which concerns myself is perhaps undeserving of mention, since I have proved unworthy of the hope
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cherished in regard to me: yet it was on her part a great undertaking
to promise me to God before my birth, with no fear of the future,
and to dedicate me immediately after I was born. Through God's
goodness has it been that she has not utterly failed in her prayer,
and that the auspicious sacrifice was not rejected. Some of these
things were already in existence, others were in the future, growing
up by means of gradual additions. And as the sun which most pleasantly
casts its morning rays, becomes at midday hotter and more brilliant,
so also did she, who from the first gave no slight evidence of
piety, shine forth at last with fuller light. Then indeed he,
who had established her in his house, had at home no slight spur
to piety, possessed, by her origin and descent, of the love of
God and Christ, and having received virtue as her patrimony; not,
as he had been, cut out of the wild olive and grafted into the
good olive, yet unable to bear, in the excess of her faith, to
be unequally yoked; for, though surpassing all others in endurance
and fortitude, she could not brook this, the being but half united
to God, because of the estrangement of him who was a part of herself,
and the failure to add to the bodily union, a close connexion
in the spirit: on this account, she fell before God night and
day, entreating for the salvation of her head with many fastings
and tears, and assiduously devoting herself to her husband, and
influencing him in many ways, by means of reproaches, admonitions,
attentions, estrangements, and above all by her own character
with its fervour for piety, by which the soul is specially prevailed
upon and softened, and willingly submits to virtuous pressure.
The drop(
12. These were the objects of her prayers and hopes, in the
fervour of faith rather than of youth. Indeed, none was as confident
of things present as she of things hoped for, from her experience
of the generosity of God. For the salvation of my father there
was a concurrence of the gradual conviction(
13. After a short interval, wonder succeeded wonder. I will
commend the account of it to the ears of the faithful, for to
profane minds nothing that is good is trustworthy. He was approaching
that regeneration by water and the Spirit, by which we confess
to God the formation and completion of the Christlike man, and
the transformation and reformation from the earthy to the Spirit.
He was approaching the layer with warm desire and bright hope,
after all the purgation possible, and a far greater purification
of sold and body than that of the men who were to receive the
tables from Moses. Their purification extended only to their dress,
and a slight restriction of the belly, and a temporary continence.(
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a preliminary purification making sure the gift, in order that
perfection might be entrusted to purity, and that the blessing
might incur no risk in a soul which was confident in its possession
of the grace. And as he was ascending out of the water, there
flashed around him a light and a glory worthy of the disposition
with which he approached the girt of faith;(
14. Nor indeed would anyone disbelieve this who has heard and
knows that Moses, when little in the eyes of men, and not yet
of any account, was called from the bush which burned but was
not consumed, or rather by Him who appeared in the bush,(
15. Why need I count up all those who have been called to Himself
by God and associated with such wonders as confirmed him in his
piety? Nor was it the case that after such and so incredible and
startling beginnings, any of the former things was put to shame
by his subsequent conduct, as happens with those who very soon
acquire a distaste for what is good, and so neglect all further
progress, if they do not utterly relapse into vice. This cannot
be said of him, for he was most consistent with himself and his
early days, and kept in harmony his life before the priesthood
with its excellence, and his life after it with what had gone
before, since it would have been unbecoming to begin in one way
and end in another, or to advance to a different end from that
which he had in view at first. He was next entrusted with the
priesthood, not with the facility and disorder of the present
day, but after a brief interval, in order to add to his own cleansing
the skill and power to cleanse others; for this is the law of
spiritual sequence. And when he had been entrusted with it, the
grace was the more glorified, being really the grace of God, and
not of men, and not, as the preacher(
16. He received a woodland and rustic church, the pastoral care
and oversight of which had not been bestowed from a distance,
but it had been cared for by one of his predecessors of admirable
and angelic disposition, and a more simple man than our present
rulers of the people; but, after he had been speedily taken to
God, it had, in consequence of the loss of its leader, for the
most part grown careless and run wild; accordingly, he at first
strove without harshness to soften the habits of the people, both
by words of pastoral knowledge, and by setting himself before
them as an example, like a spiritual statue, polished into the
beauty of all excellent conduct. He next, by constant meditation
on the divine words, though a late student of such matters, gathered
together so much wisdom within a short time that he was in no
wise excelled by those who had spent the greatest toil upon them,
and received this special grace from God, that he became the father
and teacher of orthodoxy--not, like our modern wise men, yielding
to the spirit of the age, nor defending our faith by indefinite
and sophistical language, as if they bad no fixity of faith, or
were adulterating the truth; but, he was more pious than those
who possessed rhetorical power, more skilled in rhetoric than
those who were upright in mind; or rather, while he took the second
place as an orator, he surpassed all in piety. He acknowledged
One God worshipped in Trinity, and Three, Who are united in One
Godhead; neither Sabellianising(
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One, nor Arianising as to the Three; either by contracting and
so atheistically annihilating the Godhead, or by tearing It asunder
by distinctions of unequal greatness or nature. For, seeing that
Its every quality is incomprehensible and beyond the power of
our intellect, how can we either perceive or express by definition
on such a subject, that which is beyond our ken? How can the immeasurable
be measured, and the Godhead be reduced to the condition of finite
things, and measured by degrees(
17. What else must we say of this great man of God, the true Divine, under the influence, in regard to these subjects, of the Holy Ghost, but that through his perception of these points, he, like the great Noah, the father of this second world, made this church to be called the new Jerusalem, and a second ark borne up upon the waters; since it both surmounted the deluge of souls, and the insults of the heretics, and excelled all others in reputation rio less than it fell behind them in numbers; and has had the same fortune as the sacred Bethlehem, which can without contradiction be at once said to be a little city and the metropolis of the world, since it is the nurse and mother of Christ, Who both made and overcame the world.
18. To give a proof of what I say. When a tumult of the over-zealous
part of the Church was raised against us, and we had been decoyed
by a document(
19. Who could enumerate the full tale of his excellences, or, if he wished to pass by most of them, discover without difficulty what can be omitted? For each trait, as it occurs to the mind, seems superior to what has gone before; it takes possession of me, and I feel more at a loss to know what I ought to pass by, than other panegyrists are as to what they ought to say. So that the abundance of material is to some extent a hindrance to me, and my mind is itself put to the test in its efforts to test his qualities, and its inability, where all are equal, to find one which surpasses the rest. So that, just as when we see a pebble failing into still water, it becomes the centre and starting-point of circle after circle, each by its continuous agitation breaking up that which lies outside of it; this is exactly the case with myself. For as soon as one thing enters my mind, another follows and displaces it; and I am wearied out in making a choice, as what I have already grasped is ever retiring in favour of that which follows in its train.
20. Who was more anxious than he for the common weal? Who more
wise in domestic affairs, since God, who orders all things in
due variation, assigned to him a house and suitable fortune? Who
was more sympathetic in mind, more bounteous in hand, towards
the poor, that most dishonoured portion of the nature to which
equal honour is due? For he actually treated his own property
as if it were another's, of which he was but the steward, relieving
poverty as far as he could, and expending not only his superfluities
but his necessities--a manifest proof of love for the poor, giving
a portion, not only to seven, according to the injunction of Solomon,(
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to deprive those who were deserving. And this seems to be the
duty of casting our bread upon the waters,(
21. But what is best and greatest of all, his magnanimity was
accompanied by freedom from ambition. Its extent and character
I will proceed to show. In considering their wealth to be common
to all, and in liberality in bestowing it, he and his consort
rivalled each other in their struggles after excellence; but he
intrusted the greater part of this bounty to her hand, as being
a most excellent and trusty steward of such matters. What a woman
she is? Not even the Atlantic Ocean, or if there be a greater
one, could meet her drafts upon it. So great and so boundless
is her love of liberality. In the contrary sense she has rivalled
the horse-leech(
22. So bounteous was his hand--further details I leave to those
who knew him, so that if anything of the kind is borne witness
to in regard to myself, it proceeds from that fountain, and is
a portion of that stream. Who was more trader the Divine guidance
in admitting men to the sanctuary,(
23. Who did more to rebuke pride and foster lowliness? And that in no assumed or external way, as most of those who now make profession of virtue, and are in appearance as elegant as the most mindless women, who, for lack of beauty of their own, take refuge in pigments, and are, if I may say so, splendidly made up, uncomely in their comeliness, and more ugly than they originally were. For his lowliness was no matter of dress, but of spiritual disposition: nor was it expressed by a bent neck, or lowered voice, or downcast look, or length of beard, or close-shaven head, or measured gait, which can be adopted for a while, but are very quickly exposed, for nothing which is affected can be permanent. No! he was ever most lofty in life, most lowly in mind; inaccessible in virtue, most accessible in intercourse. His dress had in it nothing remarkable, avoiding equally magnificence and sordidness, while his internal brilliancy was supereminent. The disease and insatiability of the belly, he, if anyone, held in check, but without ostentation; so that he might be kept down without being puffed up, from having encouraged a new vice by his pursuit of reputation. For he held that doing and saying everything by which fame among externs might be won, is the characteristic of the politician, whose chief happiness is found in the present life: but that the spiritual and Christian man should look to one object alone, his salvation, and think much of what may contribute to this, but detest as of no value what does not; and accordingly despise what is visible, but be occupied with interior perfection alone, and estimate most highly whatever promotes his own improvement, and attracts others through himself to that which is supremely good.
24. But what was most excellent and most characteristic, though least generally recognized, was his simplicity, and freedom from guile and resentment. For among men of ancient and modern days, each is supposed to have had some special success, as
to have received from God some particular virtue: Job unconquered
patience in misfortune,(
25. We both believe in and hear of the dregs(
26. The dew would more easily resist the morning rays of the
sun, than any remains of anger continue in him; but as soon as
he had spoken, his indignation departed with his words, leaving
behind only his love for what is good, and never outlasting the
sun; nor did he cherish anger which destroys even the prudent,
or show any bodily trace of vice within, nay, even when roused,
he preserved calmness. The result of this was most unusual, not
that he was the only one to give rebuke, but the only one to be
both loved and admired by those whom he reproved, from the victory
which his goodness gained over warmth of feeling; and it was felt
to be more serviceable to be punished by a just man than besmeared
by a bad one, for in one case the severity becomes pleasant for
its utility, in the other the kindliness is suspected because
of the evil of the man's character. But though his soul and character
were so simple and divine, his piety nevertheless inspired the
insolent with awe: or rather, the cause of their respect was the
simplicity which they despised. For it was impossible to him to
utter either prayer or curse without the immediate bestowal of
permanent blessing or transient pain. The one proceeded from his
inmost soul, the other merely rested upon his lips as a paternal
reproof. Many indeed of those who had injured him incurred neither
lingering requital nor, as the poet(
27. Such and so remarkable being his gentleness, did he yield the palm to others in
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industry and practical virtue? By no means. Gentle as he was, he possessed, if any one did, an energy corresponding to his gentleness. For although, for the most part, the two virtues of benevolence and severity are at variance and opposed to each other, the one being gentle but without practical qualities, the other practical but unsympathetic, in his case there was a wonderful combination of the two, his action being as energetic as that of a severe man, but combined with gentleness; while his readiness to yield seemed unpractical but was accompanied with energy, in his patronage, his freedom of speech, and every kind of official duty. He united the wisdom of the serpent, in regard to evil, with the harmlessness of the dove, in regard to good, neither allowing the wisdom to degenerate into knavery, nor the simplicity into silliness, but as far as in him lay, he combined the two in one perfect form of virtue. Such being his birth, such his exercise of the priestly office, such the reputation which he won at the hands of all, what wonder if he was thought worthy of the miracles by which God establishes true religion?
28. One of the wonders which concern him was that he suffered
from sickness and bodily pain. But what wonder is it for even
holy men to be distressed, either for the cleansing of their clay,
slight though it may be, or a touchstone of virtue and test of
philosophy, or for the education of the weaker, who learn from
their example to be patient instead of giving way under their
misfortunes? Well, he was sick, the time was the holy and illustrious
Easter, the queen of days, the brilliant night which dissipates
the darkness of sin, upon which with abundant light we keep the
feast of our salvation, putting ourselves to death along with
the Light once put to death for us, and rising again with Him
who rose. This was the time of his sufferings. Of what kind they
were, I will briefly explain. His whole frame was on fire with
an excessive, burning fever, his strength had failed, he was unable
to take food, his sleep had departed from him, he was in the greatest
distress, and agitated by palpitations. Within his mouth, the
palate and the whole of the upper surface was so completely and
painfully ulcerated, that it was difficult and dangerous to swallow
even water. The skill of physicians, the prayers, most earnest
though they were, of his friends, and every possible attention
were alike of no avail. He himself in this desperate condition,
while his breath came short and fast, had no perception of present
things, but was entirely absent, immersed in the objects he had
long desired, now made ready for him. We were in the temple, mingling
supplications with the sacred rites, for, in despair, of all others,
we had betaken ourselves to the Great Physician, to the power
of that night, and to the last succour, with the intention, shall
I say, of keeping a feast, or of mourning; of holding festival,
or paying funeral honours to one no longer here? O those tears!
which were shed at that time by all the people. O voices, and
cries, and hymns blended with the psalmody! From the temple they
sought the priest, from the sacred rite the celebrant, from God
their worthy ruler, with my Miriam(
29. What then was the response of Him who was the God of that
night and of the sick man? A shudder comes over me as I proceed
with my story. And though you, my hearers, may shudder, do not
disbelieve: for that would be impious, when I am the speaker,
and in reference to him. The time of the mystery was come, and
the reverend station and order, when silence is kept for the solemn
rites; and then he was raised up by Him who quickeneth the dead,
and by the holy night. At first he moved slightly, then more decidedly;
then in a feeble and indistinct voice he called by name one of
the servants who was in attendance upon him, and bade him come,
and bring his clothes, and support him with his hand. He came
in alarm, and gladly waited upon him, while he, leaning upon his
hand as upon a staff, imitates Moses upon the mount, arranges
his feeble hands in prayer, and in union with, or on behalf of,(
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words of thanksgiving, and after blessing the people, he retired
again to his bed, and after taking a little food, and enjoying
a sleep, he recalled his spirit, and, his health being gradually
recovered, on the new day(
30. The same miracle occurred in the case of my mother not long
afterwards. I do not think it would be proper to pass by this
either: for we shall both pay the meed of honour which is due
to her, if to anyone at all, and gratify him, by her being associated
with him in our recital. She, who had always been strong and vigorous
and free from disease all her life, was herself attacked by sickness.
In consequence of much distress, not to prolong my story, caused
above all by inability to eat, her life was for many days in danger,
and no remedy for the disease could be found. How did God sustain
her? Not by raining down manna, as for Israel of old(
31. I was on a voyage from Alexandria to Greece over the Parthenian Sea. The voyage was quite unseasonable, undertaken in an Aeginetan vessel, under the impulse of eager desire; for what specially induced me was that I had fallen in with a crew who were well known to me. After making some way on the voyage, a terrible storm came upon us, and such an one as my shipmates said they had but seldom seen before. While we were all in fear of a common death, spiritual death was what I was most afraid of; for I was in danger of departing in misery, being unbaptised, and I longed for the spiritual water among the waters of death. On this account I cried and begged and besought a slight respite. My shipmates, even in their common danger, joined in my cries, as not even my own relatives would have done, kindly souls as they were, having learned sympathy from their dangers. In this my condition, my parents felt for me, my danger having been communicated to them by a nightly vision, and they aided me from the land, soothing the waves by prayer, as I afterwards learned by calculating the time, after I had landed. This was also shown me in a wholesome sleep, of which I had experience during a slight lull of the tempest. I seemed to be holding a Fury, of fearful aspect, boding danger; for the night presented her clearly to my eyes. Another of my shipmates, a boy most kindly disposed and dear to me, and exceedingly anxious on my behalf, in my then present condition, thought he saw my mother walk upon the sea, and seize and drag the ship to land with no great exertion. We had confidence in the vision, for the sea began to grow calm, and we soon reached Rhodes after the intervention of no great discomfort. We ourselves became an offering in consequence of that peril; for we promised ourselves if we were saved, to God, and, when we had been saved, gave ourselves to Him.
32. Such were their common experiences. But I imagine that some of those who have had an accurate knowledge of his life must have been for a long while wondering why we have dwelt upon these points, as if we thought
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them his only title to renown, and postponed the mention of the difficulties of his times, against which he conspicuously arrayed himself, as though we were either ignorant of them, or thought them to be of no great consequence. Come, then, we will proceed to speak upon this topic. The first, and I think the last, evil of our day, was the Emperor who apostatised from God and from reason, and thought it a small matter to conquer the Persians, but a great one to subject to himself the Christians; and so, together with the demons who led and prevailed upon him, he failed in no form of impiety, but by means of persuasions, threats, and sophistries, strove to draw men to him, and even added to his various artifices the use of force. His design, however, was exposed, whether he strove to conceal persecution under sophistical devices, or manifestly made use of his authority--namely by one means or the other--either by cozening or by violence, to get us into his power. Who can be found who more utterly despised or defeated him? One sign, among many others, of his contempt, is the mission to our sacred buildings of the police and their commissary, with the intention of taking either voluntary or forcible possession of them: he had attacked many others, and came hither with like intent, demanding the surrender of the temple according to the Imperial decree, but was so far from succeeding in any of his wishes that, had he not speedily given way before my father, either from his own good sense or according to some advice given to him, he would have had to retire with his feet mangled, with such wrath and zeal did the priest boil against him in defence of his shrine. And who had a manifestly greater share in bringing about his end, both in public, by the prayers and united supplications which he directed against the accursed one, without regard to the [dangers of] the time; and in private, arraying against him his nightly armoury, of sleeping on the ground, by which he wore away his aged and tender frame, and of tears, with whose fountains he watered the ground for almost a whole year, directing these practices to the Searcher of hearts alone, while he tried to escape our notice, in his retiring piety of which I have spoken. And he would have been utterly unobserved, had I not once suddenly rushed into his room, and noticing the tokens of his lying upon the ground, inquired of his attendants what they meant, and so learned the mystery of the night.
33. A further story of the same period and the same courage.
The city of Caesarea was in an uproar about the election of a
bishop; for one(
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of resistance to the last extremity, than afterwards to enter into designs against him, especially at such a juncture, when it was better to put an end to existing enmities than to devise new ones. For the state of affairs was as follows.
34. The Emperor(
35. Who is so distant from this world of ours, as to be ignorant
of what is last in order, but the first and greatest proof of
his power? The same city was again in an uproar for the same reason,
in consequence of the sudden removal of the Bishop chosen with
such honourable violence, who had now departed to God, on Whose
behalf he had nobly and bravely contended in the persecutions.
The heat of the disturbance was in proportion to its unreasonableness.
The man of eminence was not unknown, but was more conspicuous
than the sun amidst the stars, in the eyes not only of all others,
but especially of that select and most pure portion of the people,
whose business is in the sanctuary, and the Nazarites(
36. The things of the Spirit were exactly known to the man of the Spirit, and he felt that he must take up no submissive position, nor side with factions and prejudices which depend upon favour rather than upon God, but must make the advantage of the Church and the common salvation his sole ob-
267
ject. Accordingly he wrote, gave advice, strove to unite the people
and the clergy, whether ministering in the sanctuary or not, gave
his testimony, his decision and his vote, even in his absence,
and assumed, in virtue of his gray hairs, the exercise of authority
among strangers no less than among his own flock. At last, since
it was necessary that the consecration should be canomical, and
there was(
37. From the same zeal proceeded his opposition to the heretics, when, with the aid of the Emperor's impiety, they made their expedition, in the hope of overpowering us also, and adding us to the number of the others whom they had, in almost all cases, succeeded in enslaving. For in this he afforded us no slight assistance, both in himself, and by hounding us on like well-bred dogs against these most savage beasts, through his training in piety. On one point I blame you both, and pray do not take amiss my plainspeaking. if I should annoy you by expressing the cause of my pain. When I was disgusted at the evils of life, and longing, if anyone of our day has longed, for solitude, and eager, as speedily as possible, to escape to some haven of safety, from the surge and dust of public life, it was you who, somehow or other seized and gave me up by the noble title of the priesthood to this base and treacherous mart of souls. In consequence, evils have already befallen me, and others are yet to be anticipated. For past experience renders a man somewhat distrustful of the future, in spite of the better suggestions of reason to the contrary.
38. Another of his excellences I must not leave unnoticed. In
general, he was a man of great endurance, and superior to his
robe of flesh: but during the pain of his last sickness, a serious
addition to the risks and burdens of old age, his weakness was
common to him and all other men; but this fitting sequel to the
other marvels, so far from being common, was peculiarly his own.
He was at no time free from the anguish of pain, but often in
the day, sometimes in the hour, his only relief was the liturgy,
to which the pain yielded, as if to an edict of banishment. At
last, after a life of almost a hundred years, exceeding David's
limit of our age,(
39. And since some living memorial of his munificence ought to be left behind, what other is required than this temple, which he reared for God and for us, with very little contribution from the people in addition to the expenditure of his private fortune? An exploit which should not be buried in silence, since in size it is superior to most others, in beauty absolutely to all. It surrounds itself with eight regular equilaterals, and is raised aloft by the beauty of two stories of pillars and porticos, while the statues placed upon them are true to the life; its vault flashes down upon us from above, and it dazzles our eyes with abundant sources of light on every side, being indeed the dwelling-place of light. It
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is surrounded by excrescent equiangular ambulatories of most splendid material, with a wide area in the midst, while its doors and vestibules shed around it the lustre of their gracefulness, and offer from a distance their welcome to those who are drawing nigh. I have not yet mentioned the external ornament, the beauty and size of the squared and dove-tailed stonework, whether it be of marble in the bases and capitals, which divide the angles, or from our own quarries, which are in no wise inferior to those abroad; nor of the belts of many shapes and colours, projecting or inlaid from the foundation to the roof-tree, which robs the spectator by limiting his view. How could anyone with due brevity describe a work which cost so much time and toil and skill: or will it suffice to say that amid all the works, private and public, which adorn other cities, this has of itself been able to secure us celebrity among the majority of mankind? When for such a temple a priest was needed, he also at his own expense provided one, whether worthy of the temple or no, it is not for me to say. And when sacrifices were required, he supplied them also, in the misfortunes of his son, and his patience under trials, that God might receive at his hands a reasonable whole burnt offering and spiritual priesthood, to be honourably consumed, instead of the sacrifice of the Law.
40. What sayest thou, my father? Is this sufficient, and dost
thou find an ample recompense for all thy toils, which thou didst
undergo for my learning, in this eulogy of farewell or of entombment?
And dost thou, as of old, impose silence on my tongue, and bid
me stop in due time, and so avoid excess? Or dost thou require
some addition? I know thou bidst me cease, for I have said enough.
Yet stiffer me to add this. Make known to us where thou art in
glory, and the light which encircles thee, and receive into the
same abode thy partner soon to follow thee, and the children whom
thou hadst laid to rest before thee, and me also, after no further,
or but a slight addition to the ills of this life: and before
reaching that abode receive me in this sweet stone,(
41. And what do you think of us, O judge of my words and motions?
If we have spoken adequately, and to the satisfaction of your
desire, confirm it by your decision, and we accept it: for your
decision is entirely the decision of God. But if it falls far
short of his glory and of your hope, my ally is not far to seek.
Let fall thy voice, which is awaited by his merits like a seasonable
shower. And indeed he has upon you the highest claims, those of
a pastor upon a pastor and of a father upon his son in grace.
What wonder if he, who has(
42. The nature of God, my mother, is not the same as that of men; indeed, to speak generally, the nature of divine things is not the same as that of earthly things. They possess unchangeableness and immortality, and absolute being with its consequences, for sure are the properties of things sure. But how is it with what is ours? It is in a state of flux and corruption, constantly undergoing some fresh change. Life and death, as they are called, apparently so different, are in a sense resolved into, and successive to, each other. For the one takes its rise from the corruption which is our mother, runs its course through the corruption which is the displacement of all that is present, and comes to an end in the corruption which is the dissolution of this life; while the other, which is able to set us free from the ills of this life, and oftentimes translates us to the life above, is not in my opinion accurately called death, and is more dreadful in name than in reality; so that we are in danger of irrationally being afraid of what is not fearful, and courting as preferable what we really ought to fear. There is one life, to look to life. There is one death, sin, for it is the destruction of the soul. But all else, of which some are proud, is a dream-vision, making sport of realities, and a series of phantasms which lead the soul astray. If this be our condition, mother, we Shall neither be proud of life, nor greatly hurt, by death. What grievance can we find in being transferred hence to the true
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life? In being freed from the vicissitudes, the agitation, the
disgust, and all the vile tribute we must pay to this life, to
find ourselves, amid stable things, which know no flux, while
as lesser lights, we circle round the great light?(
43. Does the sense of separation cause you pain? Let hope cheer you. Is widowhood grievous to you? Yet it is not so to him. And what is the good of love, if it gives itself easy things, and assigns the more difficult to its neighbour? And why should it be grievous at all, to one who is soon to pass away? The appointed day is at hand, the pain will not last long. Let us not, by ignoble reasonings, make a burden of things which are really light. We have endured a great loss--because the privilege we enjoyed was great. Loss is common to all, such a privilege to few. Let us rise superior to the one thought by the consolation of the other. For it is more reasonable, that that which is better should win the day. You have borne, in a most brave, Christian spirit, the loss of children, who were still in their prime and qualified for life; bear also the laying aside of his aged body by one who was weary of life, although his vigor of mind preserved for him his senses unimpaired. Do you want some one to care for you? Where is your Isaac, whom he left behind for you, to take his place in all respects? Ask of him small things, the support of his hand and service, and requite him with greater things, a mother's blessing and prayers, and the consequent freedom. Are you vexed at being admonished? I praise you for it. For you have admonished many whom your long life has brought under your notice. What I have said can have no application to you, who are so truly wise; but let it be a general medicine of consolation for mourners, so that they may know that they are mortals following mortals to the grave.
from Gregory Nazianzus, Select Orations, Sermons, Letters; Dogmatic Treatises , trans in Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, 2nd Series, ed. P. Schaff and H. Wace, (repr. Grand Rapids MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 1955), VII, pp. 254-269
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(c)Paul Halsall Feb 1996
halsall@murray.fordham.edu