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NPNF2-08. Basil: Letters and Select Works - Holy Bible Institute

NPNF2-08. Basil: Letters and Select Works - Holy Bible Institute

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Homiletical.makes it out of its wits like wine. Drunkenness, too, is sorrow, <strong>and</strong> drowns our intelligence.Another drunkenness is needless fear. In a word, whatever passion makes the soul besideherself may be called drunkenness.…Dost thou know Whom thou art ordained to receiveas thy guest? He Who has promised that He <strong>and</strong> His Father will come <strong>and</strong> make their abodewith thee. 629 Why do you allow drunkenness to enter in, <strong>and</strong> shut the door on the Lord?Why allow the foe to come in <strong>and</strong> occupy your strongholds? Drunkenness dare not receivethe Lord; it drives away the Spirit. Smoke drives away bees, <strong>and</strong> debauch drives away thegifts of the Spirit.Wilt thou see the nobility of fasting? Compare this evening with to-morrow evening:thou wilt see the town turned from riot <strong>and</strong> disturbance to profound calm. Would that todaymight be like to-morrow in solemnity, <strong>and</strong> the morrow no less cheerful than to-day.May the Lord Who has brought us to this period of time grant to us, as to gladiators <strong>and</strong>wrestlers, that we may shew firmness <strong>and</strong> constancy in the beginning of contests, <strong>and</strong> mayreach that day which is the Queen of Crowns; that we may remember now the passion ofsalvation, <strong>and</strong> in the age to come enjoy the requital of our deeds in this life, in the justjudgment of Christ.” 630Homily IV. on the giving of thanks (περὶ εὐχαριστίας), is on text 1 Thess. v. 16. OurLord, it is remarked, wept over Lazarus, <strong>and</strong> He called them that mourn blessed. How 631is this to be reconciled with the charge “Rejoice alway”? “Tears <strong>and</strong> joy have not a commonorigin. On the one h<strong>and</strong>, while the breath is held in round the heart, tears spontaneouslygush forth, as at some blow, when an unforeseen calamity smites upon the soul. Joy on theother h<strong>and</strong> is like a leaping up of the soul rejoicing when things go well. Hence come differentappearances of the body. The sorrowful are pale, livid, chilly. The habit of the joyous <strong>and</strong>cheerful is blooming <strong>and</strong> ruddy; their soul all but leaps out of their body for gladness. Onall this I shall say that the lamentations <strong>and</strong> tears of the saints were caused by their love toGod. So, with their eyes ever fixed on the object of their love, <strong>and</strong> from hence gatheringgreater joy for themselves, they devoted themselves to the interests of their fellow-servants.Weeping over sinners, they brought them to better ways by their tears. But just as menst<strong>and</strong>ing safe on the seashore, while they feel for those who are drowning in the deep, donot lose their own safety in their anxiety for those in peril, so those who groan over the sinsof their neighbours do not destroy their own proper cheerfulness. Nay, they rather increaseit, in that, through their tears over their brother, they are made worthy of the joy of theLord. Wherefore, blessed are they that weep; blessed are they that mourn; for they shalllxii629 cf. John xiv. 23.630 The sermon seems to have been preached at the beginning of Lent, when Cæsarea was still suffering fromCarnival indulgences. Homily II. may be placed at a similar season in another year.631 § 4.108

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