Showing posts with label Cyril of Jerusalem. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cyril of Jerusalem. Show all posts

Friday, June 1, 2018

Cyril of Jerusalem, Lecture 20


Cyril of Jerusalem

Lecture 20


“Don’t you know, that as many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death?  Therefore, we were buried-together in Him by baptism into the death: that just as Christ was raised up from death by the glory of the Father, so also we could have walked in newness of life: for, if we, [the] planted-together, have been begotten[i] in the likeness of His death, moreover also we will be of the resurrection.  Knowing this, that our old man was crucified-together, that the body of sin would be made powerless, that we no longer be slaves in sin: for, the dead, has been justified from sin.  Yet, if we died with Christ, we believe that we will also live-together in Him; seeing that Christ, awakening out of death, no longer dies; death no longer has mastery of Him: for, in that He died in[ii] [our] sin, He died once; yet, in that He lives, He lives in God.  So also you, count yourselves indeed to be dead in sin; yet, alive in God in Christ Jesus our Lord.  [Do] not, therefore, let sin have domination[iii] in your dying body[iv] into submission[v] in her[vi] desires; nor commend[vii] your members as weapons of unrighteousness in sin; but, commend yourselves in God as alive from death, and your members as weapons of righteousness in God:[viii] for, sin will not have mastery of you: for, you are not under law, but under grace. — Romans 6:3-14


Summary: Having laid a foundation in the denouncing of Satan, St. Cyril proceeds to discuss the mysteries of baptism itself; especially that we share in the likeness or similitude of Christ’s death; which he shows from Paul to be far more important than the remission of our sins or our adoption, or even our reception of the Holy Spirit.  We have put off the old man and put on a whole new man.  We were cut from a wild olive tree and grafted into Christ, the true olive tree.  We have died in this similitude and been resurrected from the dead.  Not just once, either; but, fully three times entering into death, and three times being resurrected in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.[ix]


Preview:  1.  “These daily introductions into the Mysteries … are profitable to us; and … to you, who have been renewed from an old state to a new.  Therefore, I … lay before you [yesterday’s] sequel … that you may learn of what those things … in the inner chamber, were symbolic.”  2.  “… as you entered, you put off your tunic; and this was an image of putting off the old man with his deeds.[x]  Having stripped yourselves … imitating Christ, who was stripped naked on the Cross, and by His nakedness put off from Himself the principalities and powers, and openly triumphed over them on the tree.[xi]  For since … [your enemies] made their lair in your members, you may no longer wear that old garment … the old man, which waxes corrupt in the lusts of deceit.[xii]  May the soul which has once put him off, never again put him on, but say with the Spouse of Christ in the Song of Songs, I have put off my garment, how shall I put it on?[xiii]  3.  “Then … you were anointed with exorcised oil, from the very hairs of your head to your feet, and were made partakers of the good olive-tree, Jesus Christ.  For you were cut off from the wild olive-tree, and grafted into the good one, and were made to share the fatness of the true olive-tree.[xiv]  The exorcised oil therefore was a symbol of the participation of the fatness of Christ….”  4.  “[Then] you were led to the holy pool of Divine Baptism, as Christ was carried from the Cross to the Sepulcher….  Each of you was asked, whether he believed in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost, and you made that saving confession, and descended three times into the water, and ascended again … hinting … at the three days burial of Christ.”  “And at the self-same moment you were both dying and being born; and that Water of salvation was at once your grave and your mother.  … Solomon … said, in that case, There is a time to bear and a time to die;[xv] but … in the reverse order….”  5.  “O strange and inconceivable thing!  We did not … die, were not … buried, … crucified and raised again; … our imitation was … a figure, [but] our salvation … reality.  Christ was actually crucified, … buried, and … rose again … that we, sharing His sufferings by imitation, might gain salvation in reality.  O surpassing loving-kindness!  Christ received nails in His undefiled hands and feet, and suffered anguish; while on me without pain or toil by the fellowship of His suffering He freely bestows salvation.”  6.  “Let no one … suppose that Baptism is merely the grace of remission of sins, or … of adoption …  whereas we know full well, that as it purges our sins, and ministers to us the gift of the Holy Ghost, so also it is the counterpart of the sufferings of Christ.  … Paul … said, Or are you ignorant that all we who were baptized into Christ Jesus, were baptized into His death?  We were buried therefore with Him by baptism into His death.”[xvi]  7.  “Whatsoever things Christ endured, for us and for our salvation He suffered them in reality and not in appearance, and that we also are made partakers of His sufferings, Paul cried … For if we have been planted together with the likeness of His death, we shall be also with the likeness of His resurrection.[xvii] “He said not, For if we have been planted together with His death, but, with the likeness of His death.  For in Christ’s case there was death in reality … but in your case there was only a likeness of death and sufferings, whereas of salvation there was not a likeness but a reality.  8.  “… keep [these things], I beseech you, in your remembrance; that I also, unworthy though I be, may say of you, Now I love you, because you always remember me, and hold fast the traditions, which I delivered unto you.[xviii]  And God, who has presented you as it were alive from the dead,[xix] is able to grant unto you to walk in newness of life:[xx] because His is the glory and the power, now and forever.  Amen.


[i] Born, born again, created: the new birth is clearly in view.

[ii] dative, His state at death, in our sin, not in His sin.

[iii] Third person imperative or emphatic, sin is the subject.  The Greek idiom does not require a second person imperative.  Do is supplied to make sense in English.

[iv] The force seems to fall just short of, “our dead corpse”: for we are to count ourselves as dead to sin.

[v] substantive infinitive

[vi] This is feminine, because it modifies a feminine noun, desires; so, what is the antecedent, if any?  Sin is the other feminine noun in the sentence: it is sin’s desires that are under discussion.

However, sin is said to reign in the body, which seems to contradict St. Cyril’s idea that the mind and will are the root of sin, the body being the innocent victim.

It is possible that St. Cyril’s concern is pastoral, insofar as he seeks to rouse the will to fight against the fleshly desires of the body: this is certainly necessary to sanctified Christian life; yet, these bodily desires, which seem to act involuntarily and independently of the rational mind or will, are only brought into subjection by decades of discipline: even then, they break out from time to time with surprising ferocity.  It is only through the power of the Spirit that we even hope to make any headway in this battle: it is a raging spiritual battle, which requires the participation of every Christian.  Nevertheless, St. Cyril’s pastoral concerns, if any, seem fully warranted; since Jerusalem was considered to be a licentious and wicked city in his day.  If the will is not aroused to engage in this battle; then, the soul’s war is hopelessly lost before it begins.  If the will is engage in this war; battles may be won or lost: but the Spirit brings the war to its victorious conclusion.

We perceive several possible errors of extremism here: the will has every affect (misnamed Pelagianism); the will has no affect (determinism); the will has power (category error); the body always acts independently of the will (excessive focus on involuntary muscles); the body never acts independently of the will (excessive focus on voluntary muscles).  Augustine’s illustrations concerning the penis are devastating to several of these excesses.

In modern times, John Romanides weighs in against Augustine; Georges Florovsky, and many others, value Augustine by appropriation.

[vii] Take a stand-beside, associate; in the political arena, to stand-beside in a photo-op, would be an implied endorsement of the person and any evil involved.

[viii] The opposing dangers here are: One.  To turn this into and justify physical war, or jihad, which this does not approve; Two.  To treat this lightly, as if no true spiritual battle were taking place.  This is clearly a call for commitment of the will; not a call to take up arms.

[ix] It is a vital matter of interest that St. Cyril gives no instruction about making the sign of the cross; left to right, right to left, or otherwise: he simply insists that we do it.  His descriptions of Baptism, on the other hand, are meticulously scrupulous in every least detail.  The Didache has such detailed instructions for Trine-Baptism; yet, these may be set aside as a superstition coming from an uncertain single witness.  Now, with St. Cyril’s voice also supporting the necessity of Trine-Baptism, there can be little doubt that the practice of Mono-Baptism is to be deplored and rejected in all its forms.  While we accept the persons Baptized by Mono-Baptism, we really wish the practice would stop: we cringe inwardly, in fear, every time we witness it.  Matthew 28:19

[x] Colossians 3:9

[xi] Colossians 2:15; 1 Peter 2:24

[xii] Ephesians 4:22

[xiii] Song of Songs 5:3

[xiv] Romans 11:17-24

[xv] Ecclesiastes 3:2

[xvi] Romans 6:3

[xvii] Romans 6:5

[xviii] 1 Corinthians 11:2; 15:2; 2 Thessalonians 2:15

[xix] Romans 6:13

[xx] Romans 6:4

Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Cyril of Jerusalem, Lecture 19


Cyril of Jerusalem

Lecture 19


“Be sober, be vigilant; because your adversary the devil, stalks about as a roaring lion, seeking whom he may devour.  Whom resist firm in the faith, knowing that the same sufferings are endured by your brothers and sisters worldwide.  Yet, the God of all grace, Who has called you into His eternal glory in Christ Jesus, after you have suffered a little while, He Himself will complete, establish[i], strengthen, and seat[ii] you.  To Him be glory and might into the ages of ages.  Amen.


“By Silvanus[iii] to you, [your] faithful brother, as I count him, I wrote briefly, exhorting, and witnessing that this is the true grace of God in which you stand.  She[iv] greets you, who is in Babylon[v], [your] co-elect, as well as my son Mark.  Greet one another with a kiss of charity.  Peace be with you all who are in Christ Jesus.  Amen.” — 1 Peter 5:8-14


Summary: We begin now, the review of St. Cyril’s five so-called “mystagogical”[vi] lectures given immediately on the days following Pascha or Pesach.  Parts of this lecture are so pedantic that it is hard to believe that St. Cyril wrote them.[vii]  If genuine, they condemn all of twenty-first century world civilization as demonic: for what do we have anywhere that is not dominated by sport and other entertainment?  Unfortunately, we will make little additional headway in the evaluation of such problems until a critical Greek edition is published with an updated translation.  In the meantime we have the privilege of finding and reading this... a detailed description of the renunciation of Satan immediately prior to baptism.


Preview:  1.  “I have long been wishing … to discourse to you concerning these spiritual and heavenly Mysteries; but since … seeing is far more persuasive than hearing, I waited for the present season; that … I might lead you by the hand into the brighter and more fragrant meadow of the Paradise before us; especially as you have been made fit to receive the more sacred Mysteries … [by] divine and life-giving Baptism.  … let us now teach you these things exactly, that you may know the effect wrought upon you on that evening of your baptism.”  2.  “First you entered into the vestibule … and there facing … West … as [if] in the presence of Satan you renounced him.  … this figure is found in ancient history.  For when Pharaoh … was oppressing … the Hebrews, God sent Moses to bring them out of … bondage….  Then the door posts were anointed with the blood of a lamb … and the Hebrew people was marvelously delivered.  The enemy … pursued after them,[viii] … and was all at once overwhelmed and engulphed in the Red Sea.”  3.  “Now turn from the [type] … to the reality.”  “The tyrant of old was drowned in the sea; and this present one [Satan] disappears in the water of salvation.”  4.  “… you are bidden to say … I renounce you, Satan.  … you stand facing to the West … [as] the region of sensible darkness.  I fear your might no longer; for that Christ has overthrown, having partaken with me of flesh and blood, that through these He might by death destroy death,[ix] that I might not be made subject to bondage forever.”  5.  Then … you are taught to say, and all your works.  Now the works of Satan are all sin….  … all that you say … is written in God’s books; when therefore you do any thing contrary to these promises, you shall be judged as a transgressor.[x]  You renounce therefore … all deeds and thoughts which are contrary to reason.”  6.  “Then you say, And all his pomp.  … theatres … horse-races … hunting … vanity: from which that holy man … says unto God, Turn away my eyes from beholding vanity.[xi]  “… for the sake of their own god, their belly, they cast away their life headlong in single combats.”[xii]  7.  Moreover, the things … [of] idol festivals … [are] polluted by the invocation of the unclean spirits….  [xiii]  …such meats belonging to the pomp of Satan, though in their own nature simple, become profane by the invocation of the evil spirit.[xiv]  8.  “After this you say, and all your service.  … prayer in idol temples … honor of lifeless idols….”  … divination [of various sorts[xv]]….  Take heed therefore to yourself, and turn not again to what is behind, having put your hand to the plough, and then turning back to the salt savour of this life’s doings; but escape to the mountain, to Jesus Christ, that stone hewn without hands,[xvi] which has filled the world.”  9.  “When therefore you renounce Satan, utterly breaking all your covenant with him, that ancient league with hell,[xvii] there is opened to you the paradise of God … turning from West to East, the place of light.  Then you were told to say, I believe in the Father, and in the Son, and in the Holy Ghost, and in one Baptism of repentance.”  10.  “Guarded therefore by these discourses, be sober.  For our adversary the devil, as was just now read, as a roaring lion, walks about, seeking whom he may devour.[xviii]  But … at the holy Laver of regeneration God has wiped away every tear from off all faces.  … you shall keep holy-day, clothed in the garment of salvation,[xix] even Jesus Christ.”  11.  “These things were done in the outer chamber.  But … when … we have entered into the Holy of Holies, we shall there know the symbolic meaning of the things which are there performed.  Now to God the Father, with the Son and the Holy Ghost, be glory, and power, and majesty, forever and ever.  Amen.”


[i] He will provide you with honor, a standing.

[ii] He will enthrone you, giving you a place at His festal table.

[iii] We suspect this means that Silvanus will deliver the message; less likely, that he was the scribe that penned it: the fact that Peter continues in the first person makes this latter possibility less likely.

[iv] The Church, the co-elect.  The Co-elect greets you who is in Babylon….”  Peter may be writing before the term Church comes into common use; or, he may desire to emphasize election: namely, the baptism of the Spirit.

[v] The pejorative term, Babylon, most likely indicates that Peter is writing from Jerusalem, which he now regards as the seat of all evil.  If Rome were intended, we would have to explain why Rome is the seat of evil at this early date, and how Mark journeyed there.  Still, it was not Rome that crucified Christ.

[vi] Mystagogy implies a relationship between Christianity and mystery religions; in which, as with social fraternities, the secret rites are only disclosed after initiation.  Christianity is not a secret society, and is wholly unlike any secret society (Luke 11:13).  That being said, the Baptism, which the Spirit brings, opens fresh, direct avenues of communication with God (Romans 8:16); this can be a somewhat startling event: the newly baptized may wonder what hit them: so, some explanation is in order.  St. Cyril, now goes through the previous day’s activities, reviewing them one step at a time.  These are not secrets.  They were openly published from around 313; prior to that, Christianity was an illegal religion, for which any publication was a high-risk venture: getting caught publishing Christian literature meant almost certain death, plus the destruction of all the work.  So, before 313 much Christian activity went on behind closed, locked doors; admission required careful vetting to exclude pagan spies.  This made Christianity appear to be a secret pagan mystery religion, even though it was not.  The legalization of Christianity in 313 changed all that; more and more Christians were again free to speak openly and publicly; in 385 the Nicene Creed is amended, approved, and made part of the law of the Roman Empire.  The Sacraments of the Church (including Baptism, Confirmation, Communion, and several other things) are called Mysteries, because God is Spirit, and invisible; thus, the operations of the Spirit in these Sacraments cannot be seen… they are mysterious, even though real inwardly observable, felt change takes place.  No one saw the Spirit overwhelm me; yet, I certainly know that it happened.  No one understands the meaning of “this is My body, this is My blood”; yet, roughly a billion people have experienced it.  A better and more thorough explanation may be found in St. Cyril’s biography and under Disciplina Arcani.  However, beware: for, much of the biographical material concerning St. Cyril is pejorative, prejudicial, and presumptive.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04595b.htm
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/05032a.htm

[vii] St. Cyril’s authorship of these last five “mystagogical” lectures has not gone undisputed.  Some reasons for suspecting the genuineness of St. Cyril’s authorship would be a paucity of Scripture, where other of St. Cyril’s writings are immersed in Scripture; a tone of legalism, which St. Cyril, elsewhere, opposes.  Better biographical materials (NPOV, less biased) may be found at:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyril_of_Jerusalem
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyril_of_Jerusalem#Mystagogic_Catecheses
Nevertheless, biographers often miss obvious Scripture references and attribute these to St. Cyril.

[viii] Exodus 14:9, 23

[ix] Hebrews 2:14-15

[x] Galatians 2:18

[xi] Psalms 119:37

[xii] It seems unlike St. Cyril to harp on specific sins; these are not the sorts of sin with which Jesus seems concerned; nor the sins condemned in Acts 15: perhaps a Judaizing legalism has crept back into the Church.
Little is known of horse racing prior to the seventh century; so, it seems strange to find an emphasis against horse-racing.

[xiii] St. Cyril specifies details of Communion here, “For as the Bread and Wine of the Eucharist before the invocation of the Holy and Adorable Trinity were simple bread and wine, while after the invocation the Bread becomes the Body of Christ, and the Wine the Blood of Christ.”
We are not comfortable with this illustration.  The work of a Sacrament is the work of the Spirit, not simply a powerless invocation as with pagan sacrifice.

[xiv] Only in the sense of the superstition associated with them; depending on the circumstances, Paul classifies some of these things as adiaphora.

[xv] St. Cyril speaks of birds here, which may be a veiled reference, mocking the Roman or other practice of Augury or Auspices.

[xvi] Daniel 2:35, 45

[xvii] Isaiah 28:15

[xviii] 1 Peter 5:8

[xix] Isaiah 61:10