St. John Chrysostom
Homily
21 and 22 on the Gospel of John
John 2:1-11
John 2:1-2
On the third day there was
a marriage in Cana of Galilee. And Jesus was called to the marriage. And the
mother of Jesus was there, and His brethren.
I said before that He was
best known in Galilee; therefore they invite Him to the marriage, and He comes;
for He looked not to His own honor, but to our benefit. He who disdained not to
take upon Him the form of a servant Philippians 2:7, would much less disdain to
be present at the marriage of servants; He who sat down with publicans and
sinners Matthew 9:13, would much less refuse to sit down with those present at
the marriage. Assuredly they who invited Him had not formed a proper judgment
of Him, nor did they invite Him as some great one, but merely as an ordinary
acquaintance; and this the Evangelist has hinted at, when he says, The mother
of Jesus was there, and His brethren. Just as they invited her and His
brethren, they invited Jesus.
John 2:3
And when they wanted wine,
His mother says unto Him, They have no wine.
Here it is worth while to
enquire whence it came into His mother's mind to imagine anything great of her
Son; for He had as yet done no miracle, since the Evangelist says, This
beginning of miracles did Jesus in Cana of Galilee. John 2:11
2. Now if any say that
this is not a sufficient proof that it was the beginning of His miracles,
because there is added simply in Cana of Galilee, as allowing it to have been
the first done there, but not altogether and absolutely the first, for He
probably might have done others elsewhere, we will make answer to him of that
which we have said before. And of what kind? The words of John (the Baptist);
And I knew Him not; but that He should be made manifest to Israel, therefore am
I come, baptizing with water. Now if He had wrought miracles in early age, the
Israelites would not have needed another to declare Him. For He who came among
men, and by His miracles was so made known, not to those only in Judæa, but
also to those in Syria and beyond, and who did this in three years only, or
rather who did not need even these three years to manifest Himself Matthew
4:24, for immediately and from the first His fame went abroad everywhere; He, I
say, who in a short time so shone forth by the multitude of His miracles, that
His name was well known to all, was much less likely, if while a child He had
from an early age wrought miracles, to escape notice so long. For what was done
would have seemed stranger as done by a boy, and there would have been time for
twice or thrice as many, and much more. But in fact He did nothing while He was
a child, save only that one thing to which Luke has testified Luke 2:46, that
at the age of twelve years He sat hearing the doctors, and was thought
admirable for His questioning. Besides, it was in accordance with likelihood
and reason that He did not begin His signs at once from an early age; for they
would have deemed the thing a delusion. For if when He was of full age many
suspected this, much more, if while quite young He had wrought miracles, would
they have hurried Him sooner and before the proper time to the Cross, in the
venom of their malice; and the very facts of the Dispensation would have been
discredited.
How then, asks some one,
came it into the mind of His mother to imagine anything great of Him? He was
now beginning to reveal Himself, and was plainly discovered by the witness of
John, and by what He had said to His disciples. And before all this, the
Conception itself and all its attending circumstances had inspired her with a
very great opinion of the Child; for, said Luke, she heard all the sayings
concerning the Child, and kept them in her heart. Why then, says one, did not
she speak this before? Because, as I said, it was now at last that He was
beginning to manifest Himself. Before this time He lived as one of the many,
and therefore His mother had not confidence to say any such thing to Him; but
when she heard that John had come on His account, and that he had borne such
witness to Him as he did, and that He had disciples, after that she took
confidence, and called Him, and said, when they wanted wine, They have no wine.
For she desired both to do them a favor, and through her Son to render herself
more conspicuous; perhaps too she had some human feelings, like His brethren,
when they said, Show yourself to the world John 17:4, desiring to gain credit
from His miracles. Therefore He answered somewhat vehemently, saying,
John 2:4
Woman, what have I to do
with you? My hour is not yet come.
To prove that He greatly
respected His mother, hear Luke relate how He was subject to His parents Luke
2:51, and our own Evangelist declare how He had forethought for her at the very
season of the Crucifixion. For where parents cause no impediment or hindrance
in things belonging to God, it is our bounden duty to give way to them, and
there is great danger in not doing so; but when they require anything
unseasonably, and cause hindrance in any spiritual matter, it is unsafe to
obey. And therefore He answered thus in this place, and again elsewhere, Who is
My mother, and who are My brethren? Matthew 12:48, because they did not yet
think rightly of Him; and she, because she had borne Him, claimed, according to
the custom of other mothers, to direct Him in all things, when she ought to
have reverenced and worshipped Him. This then was the reason why He answered as
He did on that occasion. For consider what a thing it was, that when all the
people high and low were standing round Him, when the multitude was intent on
hearing Him, and His doctrine had begun to be set forth, she should come into
the midst and take Him away from the work of exhortation, and converse with Him
apart, and not even endure to come within, but draw Him outside merely to
herself. This is why He said, Who is My mother and My brethren? Not to insult
her who had borne Him, (away with the thought!) but to procure her the greatest
benefit, and not to let her think meanly of Him. For if He cared for others,
and used every means to implant in them a becoming opinion of Himself, much
more would He do so in the case of His mother. And since it was probable that
if these words had been addressed to her by her Son, she would not readily have
chosen even then to be convinced, but would in all cases have claimed the
superiority as being His mother, therefore He replied as He did to them who
spoke to Him; otherwise He could not have led up her thoughts from His present
lowliness to His future exaltation, had she expected that she should always be
honored by Him as by a son, and not that He should come as her Master.
3. It was then from this
motive that He said in this place, Woman, what have I to do with you? and also
for another reason not less pressing. What was that? It was, that His miracles
might not be suspected. The request ought to have come from those who needed,
not from His mother. And why so? Because what is done at the request of one's
friends, great though it be, often causes offense to the spectators; but when
they make the request who have the need, the miracle is free from suspicion,
the praise unmixed, the benefit great. So if some excellent physician should
enter a house where there were many sick, and be spoken to by none of the
patients or their relations, but be directed only by his own mother, he would
be suspected and disliked by the sufferers, nor would any of the patients or
their attendants deem him able to exhibit anything great or remarkable. And so
this was a reason why He rebuked her on that occasion, saying, Woman, what have
I to do with you? instructing her for the future not to do the like; because,
though He was careful to honor His mother, yet He cared much more for the
salvation of her soul, and for the doing good to the many, for which He took
upon Him the flesh.
These then were the words,
not of one speaking rudely to his mother, but belonging to a wise dispensation,
which brought her into a right frame of mind, and provided that the miracles
should be attended with that honor which was meet. And setting other things
aside, this very appearance which these words have of having been spoken
chidingly, is amply enough to show that He held her in high honor, for by His
displeasure He showed that He reverenced her greatly; in what manner, we will
say in the next discourse. Think of this then, and when you hear a certain
woman saying, Blessed is the womb that bare You, and the paps which You have
sucked, and Him answering, rather blessed are they that do the will of my
Father Luke 11:27, suppose that those other words also were said with the same
intention. For the answer was not that of one rejecting his mother, but of One
who would show that her having borne Him would have nothing availed her, had
she not been very good and faithful. Now if, setting aside the excellence of
her soul, it profited Mary nothing that the Christ was born of her, much less
will it be able to avail us to have a father or a brother, or a child of
virtuous and noble disposition, if we ourselves be far removed from his virtue.
A brother, says David, does not redeem, shall man redeem? Psalm 49:7,
Septuagint We must place our hopes of salvation in nothing else, but only in
our own righteous deeds (done) after the grace of God. For if this by itself
could have availed, it would have availed the Jews, (for Christ was their
kinsman according to the flesh,) it would have availed the town in which He was
born, it would have availed His brethren. But as long as His brethren cared not
for themselves, the honor of their kindred availed them nothing, but they were
condemned with the rest of the world, and then only were approved, when they
shone by their own virtue; and the city fell, and was burnt, having gained
nothing from this; and His kinsmen according to the flesh were slaughtered and
perished very miserably, having gained nothing towards being saved from their
relationship to Him, because they had not the defense of virtue. The Apostles,
on the contrary, appeared greater than any, because they followed the true and
excellent way of gaining relationship with Him, that by obedience. And from
this we learn that we have always need of faith, and a life shining and bright,
since this alone will have power to save us. For though His relations were for
a long time everywhere held in honor, being called the Lord's kinsmen, yet now
we do not even know their names, while the lives and names of the Apostles are
everywhere celebrated.
Let us then not be proud
of nobleness of birth according to the flesh, but though we have ten thousand
famous ancestors, let us use diligence ourselves to go beyond their
excellences, knowing that we shall gain nothing from the diligence of others to
help us in the judgment that is to come; nay, this will be the more grievous
condemnation, that though born of righteous parents and having an example at
home, we do not, even thus, imitate our teachers. And this I say now, because I
see many heathens, when we lead them to the faith and exhort them to become
Christians, flying to their kinsmen and ancestors and house, and saying, All my
relations and friends and companions are faithful Christians. What is that to
you, thou wretched and miserable? This very thing will be especially your ruin,
that you did not respect the number of those around you, and run to the truth.
Others again who are believers but live a careless life, when exhorted to
virtue make the very same defense, and say, my father and my grandfather and my
great-grandfather were very pious and good men. But this will assuredly most
condemn you, that being descended from such men, you have acted unworthily of
the root from whence you are sprung. For hear what the Prophet says to the
Jews, Israel served for a wife, and for a wife he kept (sheep) Hosea 12:12; and
again Christ, Your father Abraham rejoiced to see My day, and he saw it, and
was glad. John 8:56 And everywhere they bring forward to them the righteous
acts of their fathers, not only to praise them, but also to make the charge
against their descendants more heavy. Knowing then this, let us use every means
that we may be saved by our own works, lest having deceived ourselves by vain
trusting on others, we learn that we have been deceived when the knowledge of
it will profit us nothing. In the grave, says David, who shall give you thanks?
Psalm 6:5 Let us then repent here, that we may obtain the everlasting goods,
which may God grant we all do, through the grace and lovingkindness of our Lord
Jesus Christ, with whom to the Father and the Holy Ghost be glory, for ever and
ever. Amen.
Homily
22 on the Gospel of John
John 2:4
Woman, what have I to do
with you? My hour is not yet come.
1. In preaching the word
there is some toil, and this Paul declares when he says, Let the elders that
rule well be counted worthy of double honor, especially they who labor in the
word and doctrine. 1 Timothy 5:17 Yet it is in your power to make this labor
light or heavy; for if you reject our words, or if without actually rejecting
them you do not show them forth in your works, our toil will be heavy, because
we labor uselessly and in vain: while if you heed them and give proof of it by
your works, we shall not even feel the toil, because the fruit produced by our
labor will not suffer the greatness of that labor to appear. So that if you
would rouse our zeal, and not quench or weaken it, show us, I beseech you, your
fruit, that we may behold the fields waving with grain, and being supported by
hopes of an abundant crop, and reckoning up your riches, may not be slothful in
carrying on this good traffic.
It is no slight question
which is proposed to us also today. For first, when the mother of Jesus says,
They have no wine, Christ replies, Woman, what have I to do with you? Mine,
hour is not yet come. And then, having thus spoken, He did as His mother had
said; an action which needs enquiry no less than the words. Let us then, after
calling upon Him who wrought the miracle, proceed to the explanation.
The words are not used in
this place only, but in others also; for the same Evangelist says, They could
not lay hands on Him, because His hour was not yet come John 8:20; and again,
No man laid hands on Him, because His hour was not yet come John 7:30; and
again, The hour has come, glorify Your Son. John 17:1 What then do the words
mean? I have brought together more instances, that I may give one explanation
of all. And what is that explanation? Christ did not say, Mine hour is not yet
come, as being subject to the necessity of seasons, or the observance of an
hour; how can He be so, who is Maker of seasons, and Creator of the times and
the ages? To what else then did He allude? He desires to show this; that He works
all things at their convenient season, not doing all at once; because a kind of
confusion and disorder would have ensued, if, instead of working all at their
proper seasons, He had mixed all together, His Birth, His Resurrection, and His
coming to Judgment. Observe this; creation was to be, yet not all at once; man
and woman were to be created, yet not even these together; mankind were to be
condemned to death, and there was to be a resurrection, yet the interval
between the two was to be great; the law was to be given, but not grace with
it, each was to be dispensed at its proper time. Now Christ was not subject to
the necessity of seasons, but rather settled their order, since He is their
Creator; and therefore He says in this place, Mine hour is not yet come. And
His meaning is, that as yet He was not manifest to the many, nor had He even
His whole company of disciples; Andrew followed Him, and next to him Philip,
but no one else. And moreover, none of these, not even His mother nor His
brethren, knew Him as they ought; for after His many miracles, the Evangelist
says of His brethren, For neither did His brethren believe in Him. John 7:5 And
those at the wedding did not know Him either, for in their need they would
certainly have come to and entreated Him. Therefore He says, Mine hour is not
yet come; that is, I am not yet known to the company, nor are they even aware
that the wine has failed; let them first be sensible of this. I ought not to
have been told it from you; you are My mother, and renderest the miracle
suspicious. They who wanted the wine should have come and besought Me, not that
I need this, but that they might with an entire assent accept the miracle. For
one who knows that he is in need, is very grateful when he obtains assistance;
but one who has not a sense of his need, will never have a plain and clear
sense of the benefit.
Why then after He had
said, Mine hour is not yet come, and given her a denial, did He what His mother
desired? Chiefly it was, that they who opposed Him, and thought that He was
subject to the hour, might have sufficient proof that He was subject to no
hour; for had He been so, how could He, before the proper hour had come, have
done what He did? And in the next place, He did it to honor His mother, that He
might not seem entirely to contradict and shame her that bare Him in the
presence of so many; and also, that He might not be thought to want power, for
she brought the servants to Him.
Besides, even while saying
to the Canaanitish woman, It is not meet to take the children's bread, and to
give it unto dogs Matthew 15:26, He still gave the bread, as considering her
perseverance; and though after his first reply, He said, I am not sent save
unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel, yet even after saying this, He healed
the woman's daughter. Hence we learn, that although we be unworthy, we often by
perseverance make ourselves worthy to receive. And for this reason His mother
remained by, and openly brought to Him the servants, that the request might be
made by a greater number; and therefore she added,
John 2:5
Whatsoever He says unto
you, do it.
For she knew that His
refusal proceeded not from want of power, but from humility, and that He might
not seem without cause to hurry to the miracle; and therefore she brought the
servants.
John 2:6-7
And there were set there
six waterpots of stone, after the manner of the purifying of the Jews,
containing two or three firkins apiece. Jesus said unto them, Fill the
waterpots with water; and they filled them up to the brim.
It is not without a reason
that the Evangelist says, After the manner of the purifying of the Jews, but in
order that none of the unbelievers might suspect that lees having been left in
the vessels, and water having been poured upon and mixed with them, a very weak
wine had been made. Therefore he says, after the manner of the purifying of the
Jews, to show that those vessels were never receptacles for wine. For because
Palestine is a country with but little water, and brooks and fountains were not
everywhere to be found, they always used to fill waterpots with water, so that
they might not have to hasten to the rivers if at any time they were defiled,
but might have the means of purification at hand.
And why was it, that He
did not the miracle before they filled them, which would have been more
marvelous by far? For it is one thing to change given matter to a different
quality, and another to create matter out of nothing. The latter would indeed
have been more wonderful, but would not have seemed so credible to the many.
And therefore He often purposely lessens the greatness of His miracles, that it
may be the more readily received.
But why, says one, did not
He Himself produce the water which He afterwards showed to be wine, instead of
bidding the servants bring it? For the very same reason; and also, that He
might have those who drew it out to witness that what had been effected was no
delusion since if any had been inclined to be shameless, those who ministered
might have said to them, We drew the water, we filled the vessels. And besides
what we have mentioned, He thus overthrows those doctrines which spring up
against the Church. For since there are some who say that the Creator of the
world is another, and that the things which are seen are not His works, but
those of a certain other opposing god, to curb these men's madness He does most
of His miracles on matter found at hand. Because, had the creator of these been
opposed to Him, He would not have used what was another's to set forth His own
power. But now to show that it is He who transmutes water in the vine plants,
and who converts the rain by its passage through the root into wine, He
effected that in a moment at the wedding which in the plant is long in doing.
When they had filled the waterpots, He said,
John 2:8-10
Draw out now, and bear
unto the governor of the feast; and they bare it. When the ruler of the feast
had tasted the water that was made wine, and knew not whence it was, (but the
servants which drew the water knew,) the governor of the feast called the
bridegroom, and says unto him, Every man at the beginning does set forth good
wine, and when men have well drunk, then that which is worst; but you have kept
the good wine until now.
Here again some mock,
saying, this was an assembly of drunken men, the sense of the judges was
spoilt, and not able to taste what was made, or to decide on what was done, so
that they did not know whether what was made was water or wine: for that they
were drunk, it is alleged, the ruler himself has shown by what he said. Now
this is most ridiculous, yet even this suspicion the Evangelist has removed.
For he does not say that the guests gave their opinion on the matter, but the
ruler of the feast, who was sober, and had not as yet tasted anything. For of
course you are aware, that those who are entrusted with the management of such
banquets are the most sober, as having this one business, to dispose all things
in order and regularity; and therefore the Lord called such a man's sober
senses to testify to what was done. For He did not say, Pour forth to them that
sit at meat, but, Bear unto the governor of the feast.
And when the ruler of the
feast had tasted the water that was made wine, and knew not whence it was, (but
the servants knew,) the governor of the feast called the bridegroom. And why
did he not call the servants? For so the miracle would have been revealed.
Because Jesus had not Himself revealed what had been done, but desired that the
power of His miracles should be known gently, little by little. And suppose
that it had then been mentioned, the servants who related it would never have
been believed, but would have been thought mad to bear such testimony to one
who at that time seemed to the many a mere man; and although they knew the
certainty of the thing by experience, (for they were not likely to disbelieve
their own hands,) yet they were not sufficient to convince others. And so He
did not reveal it to all, but to him who was best able to understand what was
done, reserving the clearer knowledge of it for a future time; since after the
manifestation of other miracles this also would be credible. Thus when he was
about to heal the nobleman's son, the Evangelist has shown that it had already
become more clearly known; for it was chiefly because the nobleman had become
acquainted with the miracle that he called upon Him, as John incidentally shows
when he says, Jesus came into Cana of Galilee, where He made the water wine.
John 4:46 And not wine simply, but the best.
3. For such are the
miraculous works of Christ, they are far more perfect and better than the
operations of nature. This is seen also in other instances; when He restored
any infirm member of the body, He made it better than the sound.
That it was wine then, and
the best of wine, that had been made, not the servants only, but the bridegroom
and the ruler of the feast would testify; and that it was made by Christ, those
who drew the water; so that although the miracle were not then revealed, yet it
could not in the end be passed in silence, so many and constraining testimonies
had He provided for the future. That He had made the water wine, He had the
servants for witnesses; that the wine was good that had been made, the ruler of
the feast and the bridegroom.
It might be expected that
the bridegroom would reply to this, (the ruler's speech,) and say something,
but the Evangelist, hastening to more pressing matters, has only touched upon
this miracle, and passed on. For what we needed to learn was, that Christ made
the water wine, and that good wine; but what the bridegroom said to the
governor he did not think it necessary to add. And many miracles, at first
somewhat obscure, have in process of time become more plain, when reported more
exactly by those who knew them from the beginning.
At that time, then, Jesus
made of water wine, and both then and now He ceases not to change our weak and
unstable wills. For there are, yes, there are men who in nothing differ from
water, so cold, and weak, and unsettled. But let us bring those of such
disposition to the Lord, that He may change their will to the quality of wine,
so that they be no longer washy, but have body, and be the cause of gladness in
themselves and others. But who can these cold ones be? They are those who give
their minds to the fleeting things of this present life, who despise not this
world's luxury, who are lovers of glory and dominion: for all these things are
flowing waters, never stable, but ever rushing violently down the steep. The
rich today is poor tomorrow, he who one day appears with herald, and girdle,
and chariot, and numerous attendants, is often on the next the inhabitant of a
dungeon, having unwillingly quitted all that show to make room for another.
Again, the gluttonous and dissipated man, when he has filled himself to
bursting, cannot retain even for a single day the supply conveyed by his
delicacies, but when that is dispersed, in order to renew it he is obliged to
put in more, differing in nothing from a torrent. For as in the torrent when
the first body of water is gone, others in turn succeed; so in gluttony, when
one repast is removed, we again require another. And such is the nature and the
lot of earthly things, never to be stable, but to be always pouring and
hurrying by; but in the case of luxury, it is not merely the flowing and
hastening by; but many other things that trouble us. By the violence of its
course it wears away the strength of the body, and strips the soul of its
manliness, and the strongest currents of rivers do not so easily eat away their
banks and make them sink down, as do luxury and wantonness sweep away all the
bulwarks of our health; and if you enter a physician's house and ask him, you
will find that almost all the causes of diseases arise from this. For frugality
and a plain table is the mother of health, and therefore physicians have thus
named it; for they have called the not being satisfied health, (because not to
be satisfied with food is health,) and they have spoken of sparing diet as the
mother of health. Now if the condition of want is the mother of health, it is
clear that fullness is the mother of sickness and debility, and produces attacks
which are beyond the skill even of physicians. For gout in the feet, apoplexy,
dimness of sight, pains in the hands, tremors, paralytic attacks, jaundice,
lingering and inflammatory fevers, and other diseases many more than these,
(for we have not time to go over them all,) are the natural offspring, not of
abstinence and moderate diet, but of gluttony and repletion. And if you will
look to the diseases of the soul that arise from them, you will see that
feelings of coveting, sloth, melancholy, dullness, impurity, and folly of all
kinds, have their origin here. For after such banquets the souls of the
luxurious become no better than asses, being torn to pieces by such wild beasts
as these (passions). Shall I say also how many pains and displeasures they have
who wait upon luxury? I could not enumerate them all, but by a single principal
point I will make the whole clear. At a table such as I speak of, that is, a
sumptuous one, men never eat with pleasure; for abstinence is the mother of
pleasure as well as health, while repletion is the source and root not only of
diseases, but of displeasure. For where there is satiety there desire cannot
be, and where there is no desire, how can there be pleasure? And therefore we
should find that the poor are not only of better understanding and healthier
than the rich, but also that they enjoy a greater degree of pleasure. Let us,
when we reflect on this, flee drunkenness and luxury, not that of the table
alone, but all other which is found in the things of this life, and let us take
in exchange for it the pleasure arising from spiritual things, and, as the
Prophet says, delight ourselves in the Lord; Delight yourself in the Lord, and
He shall give you the desires of your heart Psalm 37:4; that so that we may
enjoy the good things both here and hereafter, through the grace and
lovingkindness of our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom and with whom, to the Father
and the Holy Ghost, be glory, world without end. Amen.