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T62 Irenaeus, bishop, a treatise Against Heresies by the Saint
Knowledge of the Father consists in the self revelation of the Son
No one can know the Father apart
from God's Word, that is, unless the Son reveals him, and no one can
know the Son unless the Father so wills. Now the Son fulfills the
Father's good pleasure: the Father sends, the Son is sent, and he comes.
The Father is beyond our sight and comprehension; but he is known by his
Word, who tells us of him who surpasses all telling. In turn, the Father
alone has knowledge of his Word. And the Lord has revealed both truths.
Therefore, the Son reveals the knowledge of the Father by his revelation
of himself. Knowledge of the Father consists in the self revelation of
the Son, for all is revealed through the Word.
The Father's purpose in revealing the Son was to make himself known to
us all and so to welcome into eternal rest those who believe in him,
establishing them in justice, preserving them from death. To believe in
him means to do his will.
Through creation itself the Word reveals God the Creator. Through the
world he reveals the Lord who made the world. Through all that is
fashioned he reveals the craftsman who fashioned it all. Through the Son
the Word reveals the Father who begot him as Son. All speak of these
things in the same language, but they do not believe them in the same
way. Through the law and the prophets the Word revealed himself and his
Father in the same way, and though all the people equally heard the
message not all equally believed it. Through the Word, made visible and
palpable, the Father was revealed, though not all equally believed in
him. But all saw the Father in the Son, for the Father of the Son cannot
be seen, but the Son of the Father can be seen.
The Son performs everything as a ministry to the Father,
from beginning to end, and without the Son no one can know God. The way
to know the Father is the Son. Knowledge of the Son is in the Father,
and is revealed through the Son. For this reason the Lord said: No one
knows the Son except the Father, and no one knows the Father except the
Son, and those to whom the Son has revealed him. The word "revealed"
refers not only to the future---as though the Word began to reveal the
Father only when he was born of Mary; it refers equally to all time.
From the beginning the Son is present to creation, reveals the Father to
all, to those the Father chooses, when the Father chooses, and as the
Father chooses. So, there is in all and through all one God the Father,
one Word and Son, and one Spirit, and one salvation for all who believe
in him.

B287 Irenaeus, bishop, a treatise Against Heresies by the Saint
Life in man is the glory of God; the life of man is the vision of God
The glory of God gives life; those who see God
receive life. For this reason God, who cannot be grasped, comprehended
or seen, allows himself to be seen, comprehended and grasped by men,
that he may give life to those who see and receive him, It is impossible
to live without life, and the actualization of life comes from
participation in God, while participation in God is to see God and enjoy
his goodness.
Men will therefore see God if they are to live; through the vision of
God they become immortal and attain to God himself. As I have said, this
was shown in symbols by the prophets: God will be seen by men who bear
his Spirit and are always waiting for his coming. As Moses said in the
Book of Deuteronomy: On that day we shall see, for God will speak to
man, and man will live.
God is the source of all activity throughout creation. He cannot be seen
or described in his own nature and in all his greatness by any of his
creatures. Yet he is certainly not unknown. Through his Word the whole
creation learns that there is one God the Father, who holds all things
together and gives them their being. As it is written in the Gospel: No
man has ever seen God, except the only-begotten Son, who is in the bosom
of the Father; he has revealed him.
From the beginning the Son is the one who teaches us about the Father;
he is with the Father from the beginning. He was to reveal to the human
race visions of prophecy, the diversity of spiritual gifts, his own ways
of ministry, the glorification of the Father, all in due order and
harmony, at the appointed time and for our instruction. Where there is
order, there is also harmony; where there is harmony, there is also
correct timing; where there is correct timing, there is also advantage.
The Word became the steward of the Father's grace for the
advantage of men, for whose benefit he made such wonderful arrangements.
He revealed God to men and presented men to God. He safeguarded the
invisibility of the Father to prevent man from treating God with
contempt and to set before him a constant goal toward which to make
progress. On the other hand, he revealed God to men and made him visible
in many ways to prevent man from being totally separated from God and so
cease to be. Life in man is the glory of God; the life of man is the
vision of God. If the revelation of God through creation gives life to
all who live upon the earth, much more does the manifestation of the
Father through the Word give life to those who see God.

R194 Irenaeus, bishop, a treatise Against Heresies by the Saint
The covenant of the Lord
In the book of Deuteronomy Moses says to the
people: The Lord your God made a covenant on Horeb; he made this
covenant, not with your fathers but with you. Why did God not make this
covenant with their fathers? Because the law is not aimed at the
righteous. Their fathers were righteous: they had the power of the
Decalogue implanted in their hearts and in their souls. That is, they
loved the God who made them and did nothing unjust against their
neighbor. For this reason they did not need to be admonished by written
rebukes: they had the righteousness of the law in their hearts.
When this righteousness and love for God had passed into oblivion and
been extinguished in Egypt, God had necessarily to reveal himself
through his own voice, out of his great love for men. He led the people
out of Egypt in power, so that man might once again become God's
disciple and follower. He made them afraid as they listened, to warn
them not to hold their Creator in contempt.
He fed them with manna, that they might receive spiritual food. In the
book of Deuteronomy Moses says: He fed you with manna, which your
fathers did not know, that you might understand that man will not live
by bread alone but will live by every word of God coming from the mouth
of God.
He commanded them to love himself and trained them to practice
righteousness toward their neighbor, so that man might not be
unrighteous or unworthy of God. Through the Decalogue he prepared man
for friendship with himself and for harmony with his neighbor. This was
to man's advantage, though God needed nothing from man.
This raised man to glory, for it gave him what he did not
have, friendship with God. But it brought no advantage to God, for God
did not need man's love. Man did not possess the glory of God, nor could
he attain it by any other means than through obedience to God. This is
why Moses said to the people: Choose life, that you may live and your
descendants too; love the Lord your God, hear his voice and hold fast to
him, for this is life for you and length of days.
This was the life that the Lord was preparing man to receive when he
spoke in person and gave the words of the Decalogue for all alike to
hear. These words remain with us as well; they were extended and
amplified through his coming in the flesh, but not annulled.
God gave to the people separately through Moses the commandments that
enslave: these were precepts suited to their instruction or their
condemnation. As Moses said: The Lord commanded me at that time to teach
you precepts of righteousness and of judgment. The precepts that were
given them to enslave and to serve as a warning have been cancelled by
the new covenant of freedom. The precepts that belong to man's nature
and to freedom and to all alike have been enlarged and broadened.
Through the adoption of sons God had enabled man so generously and
bountifully to know him as Father, to love him with his whole heart, and
to follow his Word unfailingly.

R727 Irenaeus, bishop, a treatise Against Heresies by the Saint
The Eucharist, pledge of our resurrection
If our flesh is not saved, then the Lord has not
redeemed us with his blood, the eucharistic chalice does not make us
sharers in his blood, and the bread we break does not make us sharers in
his body. There can be no blood without veins, flesh and the rest of the
human substance, and this the word of God actually became: it was with
his own blood that he redeemed us. As the Apostle says: In him, through
his blood, we have been redeemed, our sins have been forgiven.
We are his members and we are nourished by creation, which is his gift
to us, for it is he who causes the sun to rise and the rain to fall. He
declared that the chalice, which comes from his creation, was his blood,
and he makes it the nourishment of our blood. He affirmed that the
bread, which comes from his creation, was his body, and he makes it the
nourishment of our body. When the chalice we mix and the bread we bake
receive the word of God, the eucharistic elements become the body and
blood of Christ, by which our bodies live and grow. How then can it be
said that flesh belonging to the Lord's own body and nourished by his
body and blood is incapable of receiving God's gift of eternal life?
Saint Paul says in his letter to the Ephesians that we are members of
his body, of his flesh and bones. He is not speaking of some spiritual
and incorporeal kind of man, for spirits do not have flesh and bones. He
is speaking of a real human body composed of flesh, sinews and bones,
nourished by the chalice of Christ's blood and receiving growth from the
bread which is his body.
The slip of a vine planted in the ground bears fruit at the proper time.
The grain of wheat falls into the ground and decays only to be raised up
again and multiplied by the Spirit of God who sustains all things. The
Wisdom of God places these things at the service of man and when they
receive God's word they become the eucharist, which is the body and
blood of Christ. In the same way our bodies, which have been nourished
by the Eucharist, will be buried in the earth and will decay, but they
will rise again at the appointed time, for the Word of God will raise
them up to the glory of God the Father. then the Father will clothe our
mortal nature in immortality and freely endow our corruptible nature
with incorruptibility, for God's power is shown most perfectly in
weakness.

R77 Irenaeus, bishop, a treatise Against Heresies by the Saint
The friendship of God
Our Lord, the Word of God, first drew men to God as
servants, but later he freed those made subject to him. He himself
testified to this: I do not call you servants any longer, for a servant
does not know what his master is doing. Instead I call you friends,
since I have made known to you everything that I have learned from my
Father. Friendship with God brings the gift of immortality to those who
accept it.
In the beginning God created Adam, not because he needed
man, but because he wanted to have someone on whom to bestow his
blessings. Not only before Adam but also before all creation, the Word
was glorifying the Father in whom he dwelt, and was himself being
glorified by the Father. The Word himself said: Father, glorify me with
that glory that I had with you before the world was.
Nor did the Lord need our service. He commanded us to follow him, but
his was the gift of salvation. To follow the Savior is to share in
salvation; to follow the light is to enjoy the light. Those who are in
the light do not illuminate the light but are themselves illuminated and
enlightened by the light. They add nothing to the light; rather, they
are beneficiaries, for they are enlightened by the light.
The same is true of service to God: it adds nothing to God, nor does God
need the service of man. Rather, he gives life and immortality and
eternal glory to those who follow and serve him. He confers a benefit on
his servants in return for their service and on his followers in return
for their loyalty, but he receives no benefit from them. He is rich,
perfect and in need of nothing.
The reason why God requires service from man is this: because he is good
and merciful he desires to confer benefits on those who persevere in his
service. In proportion to God's need of nothing is man's need for
communion with God.
This is the glory of man: to persevere and remain in the service of God.
For this reason the Lord told his disciples: You did not choose me but I
chose you. He meant that his disciples did not glorify him by following
him, but in following the Son of God they were glorified by him. As he
said: I wish that where I am they also may be, that they may see my
glory.

B337 Irenaeus, bishop, a treatise Against Heresies by the Saint
The plan of redemption through the Incarnation
God is man's glory. Man is the vessel which
receives God's action and all his wisdom and power.
Just as a doctor is judged in his care for the sick, so God is revealed
in his conduct with men. That is Paul's reason for saying: God has made
the whole world prisoner of unbelief that he may have mercy on all. He
was speaking of man, who was disobedient to God, and cast off from
immortality, and then found mercy, receiving through the Son of God the
adoption he brings.
If man, without being puffed up or boastful, has a right belief
regarding created things and their divine Creator, who, having given
them being, holds them all in his power, and if man perseveres in God's
love, and in obedience and gratitude to him, he will receive greater
glory from him. It will be a glory which will grow ever brighter until
he takes on the likeness of the one who died for him.
He it was who took on the likeness of sinful flesh, to condemn sin and
rid the flesh of sin, as now condemned. He wanted to invite man to take
on his likeness, appointing man an imitator of God, establishing man in
a way of life in obedience to the Father that would lead to the vision
of God, and endowing man with power to receive the Father. He is the
Word of God who dwelt with man and became the Son of Man to open the way
for man to receive God, for God to dwell with man, according to the will
of the Father.
For this reason the Lord himself gave as the sign of our salvation, the
one who was born of the Virgin, Emmanuel. It was the Lord himself who
saved them, for of themselves they had no power to be saved. For this
reason Paul speaks of the weakness of man, and says: I know that no good
dwells in my flesh. He means that the blessing of our salvation comes
not from us but from God. Again, he says: I am a wretched man; who will
free me from this body doomed to die? Then he speaks of a liberator,
thanks to Jesus Christ our Lord.
Isaiah says the same: Hands that are feeble, grow strong! Knees that are
weak, take courage! Hearts that are faint, grow strong! Fear not---see,
our God is judgment and he will repay. He himself will come and save us.
He means that we could not be saved of ourselves but only with God's
help.

R1025 Irenaeus, bishop, a treatise Against Heresies by the Saint
The sending of the Holy Spirit
When the Lord told his disciples to go and teach
all nations and to baptize them in the name of the Father and of the Son
and of the Holy Spirit, he conferred on them the power of giving men new
life in God.
He had promised through the prophets that in these last days he would
pour out his Spirit on his servants and handmaids, and that they would
prophesy. So when the Son of God became the Son of Man, the Spirit also
descended upon him, becoming accustomed this way to dwelling with the
human race, to living in men and to inhabiting God's creation. The
Spirit accomplished the Father's will in men who had grown old in sin,
and gave them new life in Christ.
Luke says that the Spirit came down on the disciples at Pentecost, after
the Lord's ascension, with power to open the gates of life to all
nations and to make known to them the new covenant. So it was that men
of every language joined in singing one song of praise to God, and
scattered tribes, restored to unity by the Spirit, were offered to the
Father as the firstfruits of all the nations.
This was why the Lord had promised to send the Advocate: he was to
prepare us as an offering to God. Like dry flour, which cannot become
one lump of dough, one loaf of bread, without moisture, we who are many
could not become one in Christ Jesus without the water that comes down
from heaven. And like parched ground, which yields no harvest unless it
receives moisture, we who were once like a waterless tree could never
have lived and borne fruit without this abundant rainfall from above.
Through the baptism that liberates us from change and decay we have
become one in body; through the Spirit we have become one in soul.
The Spirit of wisdom and understanding, the Spirit of counsel and
strength, the Spirit of knowledge and the fear of God came down upon the
Lord, and the Lord in turn gave this Spirit to his Church, sending the
Advocate from heaven into all the world into which, according to his own
words, the devil too had been cast down like lightning.
If we are not to be scorched and made unfruitful, we need the dew of
God. Since we have our accuser, we need an Advocate as well. And so the
Lord in his pity for man, who had fallen into the hands of brigands,
having himself bound up his wounds and left for his care two coins
bearing the royal image, entrusted him to the Holy Spirit. Now, through
the Spirit, the image and inscription of the Father and the Son have
been given to us, and it is our duty to use the coin committed to our
charge and make it yield a rich profit for the Lord.

R177 Irenaeus, bishop, the treatise Against Heresies by the Saint
Through foreshadowings of the future, Israel was learning reverence for God and perseverance in his service
From the beginning
God created man out of his own generosity. He chose the patriarchs to
give them salvation. He took his people in hand, teaching them,
unteachable as they were, to follow him. He gave them prophets,
accustoming man to bear his Spirit and to have communion with God on
earth. He who stands in need of no one gave communion with himself to
those who need him. Like an architect he outlined the plan of salvation
to those who sought to please him. By his own hand he gave food in Egypt
to those who did not see him. To those who were restless in the desert
he gave a law perfectly suited to them. To those who entered the land of
prosperity he gave a worthy inheritance. He killed the fatted calf for
those who turned to him as Father, and clothed them with the finest
garment. In so many ways he was training the human race to take part in
the harmonious song of salvation.
For this reason John in the book of Revelation says: His voice was as
the voice of many waters. The Spirit of God is indeed a multitude of
waters, for the Father is rich and great. As the word passed among all
these people he provided help in generous measure for those who were
obedient to him, by drawing up a law that was suitable and fitting for
every circumstance.
He established a law for the people governing the construction of the
tabernacle and the building of the temple, the choice of Levites, the
sacrifices, the offerings, the rites of purification and the rest of
what belonged to worship.
He himself needs none of these things. He is always filled with all that
is good. Even before Moses existed he had within himself every fragrance
of all that is pleasing. yet he sought to teach his people, always ready
though they were to return to their idols. Through many acts of
indulgence he tried to prepare them for perseverance in his service. He
kept calling them to what was primary by means of what was secondary,
that is, through foreshadowings to the reality, through things of time
to the things of eternity, through things of the flesh to the things of
the spirit, through earthly things to the heavenly things. As he said to
Moses: You will fashion all things according to the pattern that you saw
on the mountain.
For forty days Moses was engaged in remembering the words of God, the
heavenly patterns, the spiritual images, the foreshadowing of what was
to come. Saint Paul says: They drank from the rock that followed them,
and the rock was Christ. After speaking of the things that are in the
law he continues: All these things happened to them as symbols: they
were written to instruct us, on whom the end of the ages has come.
Through foreshadowings of the future they were learning reverence for
God and perseverance in his service. The law was therefore a school of
instruction for them, and a prophecy of what was to come.

R856 Isaac of Stella, abbot, a sermon by the Saint
The Blessed Firstborn of many brothers
Just as the head and body of a man form one single
man, so the Son of the Virgin and those he has chosen to be his members
form a single man and the one Son of Man. Christ is whole and entire,
head and body, say the Scriptures, since all the members form one body,
which with its head is one Son of Man, and he with the Son of God is one
Son of God, who himself with God is one God. Therefore the whole body
with its head is Son of Man, Son of God, and God. This is the
explanation of the Lord's words: Father, I desire that as you and I are
one, so they may be one with us.
And so, according to this well-known reading of Scripture, neither the
body without the head, nor the head without the body, nor the head and
body without God make the whole Christ. When all are united with God
they become one God. The Son of God is one with God by nature; the Son
of Man is one with him in his person; we, his body, are one with him
sacramentally. Consequently those who by faith are spiritual members of
Christ can truly say that they are what he is: the Son of God and God
himself. But what Christ is by his nature we are as his partners; what
he is of himself in all fullness, we are as participants. Finally, what
the Son of God is by generation, his members are by adoption, according
to the text: As sons you have received the Spirit of adoption, enabling
you to cry, Abba, Father.
Through his Spirit, he gave men the power to become sons of God, so that
all those he has chosen might be taught by the firstborn among many
brothers to say: Our Father, who are in heaven. Again he says elsewhere:
I ascend to my Father and to your Father.
By the Spirit, from the womb of the Virgin, was born our head, the Son
of Man; and by the same Spirit, in the waters of baptism, we are reborn
as his body and as sons of God. And just as he was born without any sin,
so we are reborn in the forgiveness of all our sins. As on the cross he
bore the sum total of the whole body's sins in his own physical body, so
he gave his members the grace of rebirth in order that no sin might be
imputed to his mystical body. It is written: Blessed is the man to whom
the Lord imputes no sin. The blessed man of this text is undoubtedly
Christ, who forgives sins insofar as God is his head. Insofar as this
man is the head of the body, no sin is forgiven him. But insofar as the
body that belongs to this head consists of many members, sin is not
imputed to it.
Just in himself, it is he who justifies himself. He alone is both Savior
and saved. In his own body on the cross he bore what he had washed from
his body by the waters of baptism. Bringing salvation through wood and
through water, he is the Lamb of God who takes away the sins of the
world which he took upon himself. Himself a priest, he offers himself as
sacrifice to God, and he himself is God. Thus, through his own self, the
Son is reconciled to himself as God, as well as to the Father and to the
Holy Spirit.

R596 Jerusalem Catecheses
Baptism is a symbol of Christ's passion
You were led down to the font of holy baptism just
as Christ was taken down from the cross and placed in the tomb which is
before your eyes. Each of you was asked, "Do you believe in the name of
the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit?" You made the
profession of faith that brings salvation, you were plunged into the
water, and three times you rose again. This symbolized the three days
Christ spent in the tomb.
As our Savior spent three days and three nights in the
depths of the earth, so your first rising from the water represented the
first day and your first immersion represented the first night. At night
a man cannot see, but in the day he walks in the light. So when you were
immersed in the water it was like night for you and you could not see,
but when you rose again it was like coming into broad daylight In the
same instant you died and were born again; the saving water was both
your tomb and your mother.
Solomon's phrase in another context is very opposite here. He spoke of a
time to give birth, and a time to die. For you, however, it was the
reverse: a time to die, and a time to be born, although in fact both
events took place at the same time and your birth was simultaneous with
your death.
This is something amazing and unheard of! It was not we who actually
died, were buried and rose again. We only did these things symbolically,
but we have been saved in actual fact. It is Christ who was crucified,
who was buried and who rose again, and all this has been attributed to
us. we share in his sufferings symbolically and gain salvation in
reality. What boundless love for men! Christ's undefiled hands were
pierced by the nails; he suffered the pain. I experience no pain, no
anguish, yet by the share that I have in his sufferings he freely grants
me salvation.
Let no one imagine that baptism consists only in the forgiveness of sins
and in the grace of adoption. Our baptism is not like the baptism of
John, which conferred only the forgiveness of sins. We know perfectly
well that baptism, besides washing away our sins and bringing us the
gift of the Holy Spirit, is a symbol of the sufferings of Christ. This
is why Paul exclaims: Do you not know, that when we were baptized into
Christ Jesus we were, by that very action, sharing in his death? By
baptism we went with him into the tomb.

R608 Jerusalem Catecheses
The anointing with the Holy Spirit
When we were baptized into Christ and clothed
ourselves in him, we were transformed into the likeness of the Son of
God. Having destined us to be his adopted sons, God gave us a likeness
to Christ in his glory, and living as we do in communion with Christ,
God's anointed, we ourselves are rightly called "the anointed ones."
when he said: Do not touch my anointed ones, God was speaking of us.
We became "the anointed ones" when we received the sign
of the Holy Spirit. Indeed, everything took place in us by means of
images, because we ourselves are images of Christ. Christ bathed in the
river Jordan, imparting to its waters the fragrance of his divinity, and
when he came up from them the Holy Spirit descended upon him, like
resting upon like. So we also, after coming up from the sacred waters of
baptism, were anointed with chrism, which signifies the Holy Spirit, by
whom Christ was anointed and of whom blessed Isaiah prophesied in the
name of the Lord: The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has
anointed me. He has sent me to preach good news to the poor.
Christ's anointing was not by human hands, nor was it with ordinary oil.
On the contrary, having destined him to be the Savior of the whole
world, the Father himself anointed him with the Holy Spirit. The words
of Peter bear witness to this: Jesus of Nazareth, whom God anointed with
the Holy Spirit. And David the prophet proclaimed: Your throne, O God,
shall endure for ever; your royal scepter is a scepter of justice. You
have loved righteousness and hated iniquity; therefore God, your God,
has anointed you with the oil of gladness above all your fellows.
The oil of gladness with which Christ was anointed was a spiritual oil;
it was in fact the Holy Spirit himself, who is called the oil of
gladness because he is the source of spiritual joy. But we too have been
anointed with oil, and by this anointing we have entered into fellowship
with Christ and have received a share in his life. Beware of thinking
that this holy oil is simply ordinary oil and nothing else. After the
invocation of the Spirit it is no longer ordinary oil but the gift of
Christ, and by the presence of his divinity it becomes the instrument
through which we receive the Holy Spirit. while symbolically, on our
foreheads and senses, our bodies are anointed with this oil that we see,
our souls are sanctified by the holy and life-giving Spirit.

R621 Jerusalem Catecheses
The bread of heaven and the cup of salvation
On the night he was betrayed our Lord Jesus Christ
took bread, and when he had given thanks, he broke it and gave it to his
disciples and said: "Take, eat: this is my body." He took the cup, gave
thanks and said: "Take, drink: this is my blood." Since Christ himself
has declared the bread to be his body, who can have any further doubt?
Since he himself has said quite categorically, This is my blood, who
would dare to question it and say that it is not his blood?
Therefore, it is with complete assurance that we receive
the bread and wine as the body and blood of Christ. His body is given to
us under the symbol of bread, and his blood is given to us under the
symbol of wine, in order to make us by receiving them one body and blood
with him. Having his body and blood in our members, we become bearers of
Christ and sharers, as Saint Peter says, in the divine nature.
Once, when speaking to the Jews, Christ said: Unless you eat my flesh
and drink my blood you shall have no life in you. This horrified them
and they left him. Not understanding his words in a spiritual way, they
thought the Savior wished them to practice cannibalism.
Under the old covenant there was showbread, but it came to an end with
the old dispensation to which it belonged. Under the new covenant there
is bread from heaven and the cup of salvation. These sanctify both soul
and body, the bread being adapted to the sanctification of the body, the
Word, to the sanctification of the soul.
Do not, then, regard the eucharistic elements as ordinary bread and
wine: they are in fact the body and blood of the Lord, as he himself has
declared. Whatever your senses may tell you, be strong in faith.
You have been taught and you are firmly convinced that what looks and
tastes like bread and wine is not bread and wine but the body and the
blood of Christ. You know also how David referred to this long ago when
he sang: Bread gives strength to man's heart and makes his face shine
with the oil of gladness. Strengthen your heart, then, by receiving this
bread as spiritual bread, and bring joy to the face of your soul.
May purity of conscience remove the veil from the face of your soul so
that by contemplating the glory of the Lord, as in a mirror, you may be
transformed from glory to glory in Christ Jesus our Lord. To him be
glory for ever and ever. Amen.

G1344 John Chrysostom, bishop, a homily on the first letter to the Corinthians by the Saint
The weakness of God is stronger than men
It was clear through unlearned men that the
cross was persuasive, in fact, it persuaded the whole world. Their
discourse was not of unimportant matters but of God and true religion,
of the Gospel way of life and future-judgment, yet it turned plain,
uneducated men into philosophers. How the foolishness of God is wiser
than men, and his weakness stronger than men!
In what way is it stronger? It made its way
throughout the world and overcame all men; countless men sought to
eradicate the very name of the Crucified, but that name flourished and
grew ever mightier. Its enemies lost out and perished; the living who
waged war on a dead man proved helpless. Therefore, when a Greek tells
me I am dead, he shows only that he is foolish indeed, for I, whom he
thinks a fool, turn out to be wiser than those reputed wise. So too, in
calling me weak, he but shows that he is weaker still. For the good
deeds which tax-collectors and fishermen were able to accomplish by
God's grace, the philosophers, the rulers, the countless multitudes
cannot even imagine.
Paul had this in mind when he said: The
weakness of God is stronger than men. That the preaching of these men
was indeed divine is brought home to us in the same way. For how
otherwise could twelve uneducated men, who lived on lakes and rivers
and: wastelands, get the idea for such an immense enterprise? How could
men who perhaps had never been in a city or a public square think of
setting out to do battle with the whole world? That they were fearful,
timid men, the evangelist makes clear; he did not reject the fact or try
to hide their weaknesses. Indeed he turned these into a proof of the
truth. What did he say of them? That when Christ was arrested, the
others fled, despite all the miracles they had seen, while he who was
leader of the others denied him!
How then account for the fact that these men, who in Christ's lifetime
did not stand up to the attacks by the Jews, set forth to do battle with
the whole world once Christ was dead---if, as you claim, Christ
did not rise and speak to them and rouse their courage? Did they perhaps
say to themselves: "What is this? He could not save himself but he will
protect us? He did not help himself when he was alive, but now that he
is dead he will extend a helping hand to us? In his lifetime he brought
no nation under his banner, but by uttering his name we will win over
the whole world?" Would it not be wholly irrational even to think such
thoughts, much less to act upon them?
It is evident, then, that if they had not
seen him risen and had proof of his power, they would not have risked so
much.

B1203 From a homily on the
Gospel of John by Saint John Chrysostom, bishop
We have found the
Messiah
After Andrew had stayed with
Jesus and had learned much from him, he did not keep this treasure to
himself, but hastened to share it with his brother. Notice what Andrew
said to him: We have found the Messiah, that is to say, the
Christ. Notice how his words reveal what he has learned in so short a
time. They show the power of the master who has convinced them of this
truth. They reveal the zeal and
concern of men preoccupied with this question from the very beginning.
Andrew's words reveal a soul waiting with the utmost longing for the
coming of the Messiah, looking forward to his appearing from heaven,
rejoicing when he does appear, and hastening to announce so great an
event to others. To support one another in the things of the spirit is
the true sign of good will between brothers, of loving kinship and
sincere affection.
Notice, too, how, even from the
beginning, Peter is docile and receptive in spirit. He hastens to Jesus,
without delay. He brought him to Jesus, says the evangelist. But
Peter must not be condemned for his readiness to accept Andrew's word
without much weighing of it. It is probable that his brother had given
him, and many others, a careful account of the event; the evangelists,
in the interest of brevity, regularly summarize a lengthy narrative.
Saint John does not say that Peter believed immediately, but that he
brought him to Jesus. Andrew was to hand him over to Jesus, to learn
everything for himself. There was also another disciple present, and he
hastened with them for the same purpose.
When John the Baptist said, This is the
Lamb, and he baptizes in the Spirit, he left the deeper understanding of
these things to be received from Christ. All the more so would Andrew
act in the same way, since he did not think himself able to give a
complete explanation. He brought his brother to the very source of
light, and Peter was so joyful and eager that he would not delay even
for a moment.

R159 John Chrysostom, bishop, the Catecheses by the Saint
Christ and Moses
The Israelites witnessed marvels;
you also will witness marvels, greater and more splendid than those
which accompanied them on their departure from Egypt. You did not see
Pharaoh drowned with his armies, but you have seen the
devil with his weapons overcome by the waters of baptism. The Israelites
passed through the sea; you have passed from death to life. They were
delivered from the Egyptians; you have been delivered from the powers of
darkness. The Israelites were freed from slavery to a pagan people; you
have been freed from the much greater slavery to sin.
Do you need another argument to show that the gifts you have received
are greater than theirs? The Israelites could not look on the face of
Moses in glory, though he was their fellow servant and kinsman. But you
have seen the face of Christ in his glory. Paul cried out: We see the
glory of the Lord with faces unveiled.
In those days Christ was present to the Israelites as he followed them,
but he is present to us in a much deeper sense. The Lord was with them
because of the favor he showed to Moses; now he is with us not simply
because of Moses but also because of your obedience. After Egypt they
dwelt in desert places; after your departure you will dwell in heaven.
Their great leader and commander was Moses; we have a new Moses, God
himself, as our leader and commander.
What distinguished the first Moses? Moses, Scripture tells us, was more
gentle than all who dwelt upon the earth. We can rightly say the same of
the new Moses, for there was with him the very Spirit of gentleness,
united to him in his inmost being. In those days Moses raised his hands
to heaven and brought down manna, the bread of angels; the new Moses
raises his hands to heaven and gives us the food of eternal life. Moses
struck the rock and brought forth streams of water; Christ touches his
table, strikes the spiritual rock of the new covenant and draws forth
the living water of the Spirit. This rock is like a fountain in the
midst of Christ's table, so that on all sides the flocks may draw near
to this living spring and refresh themselves in the waters of salvation.
Since this fountain, this source of life, this table surrounds us with
untold blessings and fills us with the gifts of the Spirit, let us
approach it with sincerity of heart and purity of conscience to receive
grace and mercy in our time of need. Grace and mercy be yours from the
only-begotten Son, our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ; through him and
with him be glory, honor and power to the Father and the life-giving
Spirit, now and always and for ever. Amen.

R473 John Chrysostom, bishop, the Catecheses by the Saint
The power of Christ's blood
If we wish to understand the power of Christ's
blood, we should go back to the ancient account of its prefiguration in
Egypt. Sacrifice a lamb without blemish, commanded Moses, and sprinkle
its blood on your doors If we were to ask him what he meant, and how the
blood of an irrational beast could possibly save men endowed with
reason, his answer would be that the saving power lies not in the blood
itself, but in the fact that it is a sign of the Lord's blood. In those
days, when the destroying angel saw the blood on the doors he did not
dare to enter, so how much less will the devil approach now when he
sees, not that figurative blood on the doors, but the true blood on the
lips of believers, the doors of the temple of Christ.
If you desire further proof of the power of this blood,
remember where it came from, how it ran down from the cross, flowing
from the Master's side. The gospel records that when Christ was dead,
but still hung on the cross, a soldier came and pierced his side with a
lance and immediately there poured out water and blood. Now the water
was a symbol of baptism and the blood, of the holy eucharist. The
soldier pierced the Lord's side, he breached the wall of the sacred
temple, and I have found the treasure and made it my own. So also with
the lamb: the Jews sacrificed the victim and I have been saved by it.
There flowed from his side water and blood. Beloved, do not pass over
this mystery without thought; it has yet another hidden meaning, which I
will explain to you. I said that water and blood symbolized baptism and
the holy eucharist. From these two sacraments the Church is born: from
baptism, the cleansing water that gives rebirth and renewal through the
Holy Spirit, and from the holy eucharist. Since the symbols of baptism
and the eucharist flowed from his side, it was from his side that Christ
fashioned the Church, as he had fashioned Eve from the side of Adam.
Moses gives a hint of this when he tells the story of the first man and
makes him exclaim: Bone from my bones and flesh from my flesh! As God
then took a rib from Adam's side to fashion a woman, so Christ has given
us blood and water from his side to fashion the Church. God took the rib
when Adam was in a deep sleep, and in the same way Christ gave us the
blood and the water after his own death.
Do you understand, then, how Christ has united his bride to himself and
what food he gives us all to eat? By one and the same food we are both
brought into being and nourished. As a woman nourishes her child with
her own blood and milk, so does Christ unceasingly nourish with his own
blood those to whom he himself has given life.

G1331 John Eudes, priest, a treatise on the admirable Heart of Jesus by the Saint
The source of salvation and true life
I ask you to consider that our Lord Jesus Christ is
your true head and that you are a member of his body. He belongs to you
as the head belongs to the body. All that is his is yours: breath,
heart, body, soul and all his faculties. All of these you must use as if
they belonged to you, so that in serving him you may give him praise,
love and glory. You belong to him as a member belongs to the head. This
is why he earnestly desires you to serve and glorify the Father by using
all your faculties as if they were his.
He belongs to you, but more than that, he longs to be in you, living and
ruling in you, as the head lives and rules in the body. He desires that
whatever is in him may live and rule in you: his breath in your breath,
his heart in your heart, all the faculties of his soul in the faculties
of your soul, so that these words may be fulfilled in you: Glorify God
and bear him in your body, that the life of Jesus may be made manifest
in you.
You belong to the Son of God, but more than that, you ought to be in him
as the members are in the head. All that is in you must be incorporated
into him. You must receive life from him and be ruled by him. There will
be no true life for you except in him, for he is the one source of true
life. Apart from him you will find only death and destruction. Let him
be the only source of your movements, of the actions and the strength of
your life. He must be both the source and the purpose of your life, so
that you may fulfill these words: None of us lives as his own master and
none of us dies as his own master. While we live, we are responsible to
the Lord, and when we die, we die as his servants. Both in life and
death we are the Lord's. That is why Christ died and came to life again,
that he might be Lord of both the dead and the living.
Finally, you are one with Jesus as the body is one with the head. You
must, then, have one breath with him, one soul, one life, one will, one
mind, one heart. And he must be your breath, heart, love, life, your
all. These great gifts in the follower of Christ originate from baptism.
They are increased and strengthened through confirmation and by making
good use of other graces that are given by God. Through the holy
eucharist they are brought to perfection.

G559 John Eudes, priest, a treatise On the Kingdom of Jesus by the Saint
The mystery of Christ in us and in the Church
We must strive to follow and fulfill in
ourselves the various stages of Christ's plan as well as his mysteries,
and frequently beg him to bring them to completion in us and in the
whole Church. For the mysteries of Jesus are not yet completely
perfected and fulfilled. They are complete; indeed, in the person of
Jesus, but not in us, who are his members, nor in the Church; which is
his mystical body. The Son of God wills to give us a share in his
mysteries and somehow to extend them to us. He wills to continue them in
us and in his universal Church. This is brought about first through the
graces he has resolved to impart to us and then through the works he
wishes to accomplish in us through these mysteries. This is his plan for
fulfilling his mysteries in us.
For this reason Saint Paul says that Christ is being brought to
fulfillment in his Church and that all of us contribute to this
fulfillment, and thus he achieves the fullness of life, that is, the
mystical stature that he has in his mystical body, which will reach
completion only on judgment day. In another place Paul says: I complete
in my own flesh what is lacking in the sufferings of Christ.
This is the plan by which the Son of God completes and fulfills in us
all the various stages and mysteries. He desires us to perfect the
mystery of his incarnation and birth by forming himself in us and being
reborn in our souls through the blessed sacraments of baptism and the
eucharist. He fulfills his hidden life in us, hidden with him in God.
He intends to perfect the mysteries of his passion, death and
resurrection, by causing us to suffer, die and rise again with him and
in him. Finally, he wishes to fulfill in us the state of his glorious
and immortal life, when he will cause us to live a glorious, eternal
life with him and in him in heaven.
In the same way he would complete and fulfill in us and in his Church
his other stages and mysteries. He wants to give us a share in them and
to accomplish and continue them in us. So it is that the mysteries of
Christ will not be completed until the end of time, because he has
arranged that the completion of his mysteries in us and in the Church
will only be achieved at the end of time.

R350 John, Fisher, bishop and martyr, the commentary on the psalms by the Saint
If anyone has sinned, we have an advocate with the Father
Our high priest is Christ Jesus, our sacrifice is
his precious body which he immolated on the altar of the cross for the
salvation of all men.
The blood that was poured out for our redemption was not that of goats
or calves (as in the old law) but that of the most innocent lamb, Christ
Jesus our Savior.
The temple in which our high priest offered sacrifice was
not one made by hands but built by the power of God alone. For he shed
his blood in the sight of the world, a temple fashioned by the hand of
God alone. This temple, however, has two parts. The first is the earth,
which we now inhabit. The second is as yet unknown to us mortals.
Christ first offered sacrifice here on earth, when he underwent his most
bitter death. Then, clothed in the new garment of immortality, with his
own blood he entered into the holy of holies, that is, into heaven.
There he also displayed before the throne of the heavenly Father that
blood of immeasurable price which he had poured out seven times on
behalf of all men subject to sin.
This sacrifice is so pleasing and acceptable to God that as soon as he
has seen it he must immediately have pity on us and extend clemency to
all who are truly repentant.
Moreover, it is eternal. It is offered not only each year (as with the
Jews) but also each day for our consolation, and indeed at every hour
and moment as well, so that we may have the strongest reason for
comfort. That is why the Apostle adds: He has secured an eternal
redemption.
All who have embarked on true contrition and penance for the sins they
have committed, and are firmly resolved not to commit sins again for the
future but to persevere constantly in that pursuit of virtues which they
have now begun, all these become sharers in this holy and eternal
sacrifice.
Saint John sets this before us in these words: My little children, I am
writing this to you so that you may not sin. But if anyone does sin we
have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous one. And he
is the propitiation for our sins, and not only for our sins but also for
those of the whole world.

T1418 John of Avila, priest, a letter by the Saint
The life of Jesus revealed in us
Praise to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus
Christ, the Father of mercy and God of all consolation who consoles us
in all our trials and enables us to console others who are being tried,
for we urge them on as God urges us on. As we share generously in the
sufferings of Christ, so do we share generously in his consolation.
The words are those of Saint Paul the apostle. He was beaten with rods
three times, flogged five times, stoned once and left for dead; he
suffered every persecution men can inflict, his body was twisted by pain
and toil. And all this was his lot not just on one or two occasions, for
he writes: We are constantly being handed over to death for Jesus' sake,
so that his life may be revealed in us.
In all these tribulations he does not murmur or complain about God, as
weaker men do. He is not saddened as those who love status and pleasure
are. He does not beg God to be relieved of them,
as men do who are unaware of their true value and therefore will have no
part of them. He does not make light of them, as men do who set little
value upon them. On the contrary, fully aware of the value of these
tribulations and rising above his own weakness, Paul blesses God amid
his sufferings and thanks him as though he had bestowed a fine reward.
He thinks it an honor to be able to suffer for him who subjected himself
to so very much shame in order to free us from the dreadful effects of
sin; who exalted us by giving us his Spirit and making us adopted sons
of God; and who gave us, in his own person and through his own efforts,
a proof and pledge of heavenly joy.
Dear brothers and sisters, I pray God may open your eyes and let you see
what hidden treasures he bestows on us in the trials from which the
world thinks only to flee. Shame turns into honor when we seek God's
glory. Present affliction becomes the source of heavenly glory. To those
who suffer wounds in fighting his battles God opens his arms in loving,
tender friendship, which is more delightful by far than anything our
earthly efforts might produce. If we have any sense, we shall yearn for
these open arms of God. Can anyone but a man in whom all desire is dead
fail to desire him who is wholly lovable, wholly desirable?
If you long for these festivals of heavenly joy, if you want to behold
them and take part in them, be assured that there is no better way to
reach them than the way of suffering. This is the way Christ and his
disciples have always traveled. He calls it a narrow way, but it leads
straight to life. That is why he tells us that if we want to join him,
we shall travel the way he took. It is surely not right that the Son of
God should go his way on the path of shame while the sons of men walk
the way of worldly honor: The disciple is not above his teacher, nor the
servant greater than his master.
God grant that our hearts may find no rest and seek no other food in
this world, save in hardship and suffering beside the Lord's cross.

B211 John of the Cross, priest, a treatise on The Ascent of Mount Carmel by the Saint
In Christ God has spoken to us
Under the ancient law
prophets and priests sought from God revelations and visions which
indeed they needed, for faith had as yet no firm foundation and the
gospel law had not yet been established. Their seeking and God's
responses were necessary. He spoke to them at one time through words and
visions and revelations, at another in signs and symbols. But however he
responded and what he said and revealed were mysteries of our holy
faith, either partial glimpses of the whole or sure movements toward it.
But now that faith is rooted in Christ, and the law of the gospel has
been proclaimed in this time of grace, there is no need to seek him in
the former manner, nor for him so to respond. By giving us, as he did,
his Son, his only word, he has in that one Word said everything. There
is no need for any further revelation.
This is the true meaning of Paul's words to the Hebrews when he urged
them to abandon their earlier ways of conversing with God, as laid down
in the law of Moses, and to set their eyes on Christ alone: In the past
God spoke to our fathers through the prophets in various ways and
manners; but now in our times, the last days, he has spoken to us in his
Son. In effect, Paul is saying that God has spoken so completely through
his own word that he chooses to add nothing. Although he had spoken but
partially through the prophets he has now said everything in Christ. He
has given us everything, his own Son.
Therefore, anyone who wished to question God or to seek some new vision
or revelation from him would commit an offense, for instead of focusing
his eyes entirely on Christ he would be desiring something other than
Christ, or beyond him.
God could then answer: This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased;
hear him. In my Word I have already said everything. Fix your eyes on
him alone for in him I have revealed all and in him you will find more
than you could ever ask for or desire.
I, with my Holy Spirit, came down upon him on Mount Tabor and declared:
This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased; hear him. You do not
need new teachings or ways of learning from me, for when I spoke before
it was of Christ who was to come, and when they sought anything of me
they were but seeking and hoping for the Christ in whom is every good,
as the whole teaching of the evangelists and apostles clearly testifies.
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