Chrysostom
Beloved
The sickness is not unto death, but for the glory of God, that the Son of God may be glorified through it. When you hear this word over those you love and then see circumstances move in a contrary direction, do not be offended. The sisters of Lazarus received that very message, and yet their brother died. But they did not think the Lord had spoken falsely, and they came to Him still. Let this mind be in you as you lift up your patriarchal and matriarchal figures. The delay is not denial; the trial is meant to produce a weight of glory beyond all comparison.
You ask for renewed minds, for deliverance from evil, for them to grow in grace. This is a right and holy desire. But I urge you: do not imagine that a single prayer or a sudden healing completes the work. A tree may receive ten strokes of the axe and remain standing, and then a single blow brings it down. Yet that final stroke owes its power to the ten that went before. So it is with the soul. The words of Scripture you speak over them, the honor you show, the silent prayers you offer, they are all strokes from the divine Husbandman. Do not grow weary because you do not see immediate fruit. The root is being loosened, though the trunk seems unmoved. A man may hear ten sermons and appear insensible, and then at one hearing be converted. Continue to share the Word as they are enabled to hear, never despising the day of small things.
But be attentive yourself to the manner of your hearing. It is not enough to be free from love of riches or to be unmanly in softness; one must be careful in the hearing of the Word and continual in recalling it. You ask for fresh truths day and night, and rightly so, but take care that you do not merely seek the novelty of knowledge. The craving for the sincere milk of the Word is good, yet it must lead to solid food, to the doing of the word, not only the hearing. Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly, and it will become flesh in your own life first, then spread rapidly through your household. For how shall you offer healing medicine to others if you remain sick yourself? The physician attends to his own health in order to serve the sick.
Above all, pursue love. Though one have faith and knowledge and prophecy and tongues and gifts and healing and a perfect life and even martyrdom, if love is absent, they profit nothing. It is love that makes your prayers for deliverance from evil acceptable. It is love that covers a multitude of sins in the ones you honor. If any among them seem incurably diseased, still you are bidden to do your part. Judas himself was incurably ill, yet God did not cease attending upon him, even washing his feet. How much more should you, a fellow servant, not abandon those bound to you by nature? The devil wages war against his own kindred, seeking to divide families and set father against son, but you have been called to be a peacemaker, to honor parents not merely with outward gestures but with the sweet fragrance of a life conformed to Christ. In this way, you may win them without a word, as your chaste conduct and reverence shine.
The afflictions and evil persons from which you pray deliverance are no surprise to the Master. He permitted Paul to be weighed down exceedingly beyond his power in Asia, in order that he might learn not to trust in himself but in God who raises the dead. So it may be with your elders: the thorn in the flesh, the opposition of unreasonable men, the lingering sickness, all serve to bring them to the end of their own strength, that the power of Christ may rest upon them. Therefore, pray not only for the removal of the trial but for the perfecting of their faith in it. The Lord is able to restrain the evil one and keep them from the hour of trial; yet sometimes He leaves us in the world for a season, sanctifying us by the truth, that we may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.
Do not receive an accusation against an elder lightly, even in your heart. It is easy when they falter or resist the Word to grow impatient, to judge them as hard ground or thorny soil. But remember: you do not see the whole field. The sower went out to sow, and some seed fell on the path and was snatched away, some on rock, some among thorns. Yet the same sower continued scattering seed, for he knew that the good soil would yield a hundredfold. Your task is to keep scattering the seed of prayer, of Scripture spoken in season, of honor and loving-kindness. The yielding is in God’s hands. By honoring them, you lay hold of the promise that it may go well with you and you may live long in the land. This promise is sure; do not let present hardship cloud it.
The peace of Jerusalem, the household of faith, the church, and the heart where Christ dwells, that peace is yours as you abide in the vine. Pray for peace within their walls, and let the answer begin in you: be yourself a temple of the Holy Spirit, where the Word dwells richly, where the mind is renewed and prepared for action. Then the fruit of true discipleship will appear: you will bear fruit among those beyond your sphere, beginning with your own kindred. Even now, the Lord is working, though the fig tree has not yet blossomed.
He who began a good work in them and in you will complete it. The sickness is not unto death, but unto life. Only keep abiding, keep honoring, keep loving, and leave the times and seasons to the Father. In this way, the Word will spread rapidly and be glorified, and your joy will be complete.
You ask for renewed minds, for deliverance from evil, for them to grow in grace. This is a right and holy desire. But I urge you: do not imagine that a single prayer or a sudden healing completes the work. A tree may receive ten strokes of the axe and remain standing, and then a single blow brings it down. Yet that final stroke owes its power to the ten that went before. So it is with the soul. The words of Scripture you speak over them, the honor you show, the silent prayers you offer, they are all strokes from the divine Husbandman. Do not grow weary because you do not see immediate fruit. The root is being loosened, though the trunk seems unmoved. A man may hear ten sermons and appear insensible, and then at one hearing be converted. Continue to share the Word as they are enabled to hear, never despising the day of small things.
But be attentive yourself to the manner of your hearing. It is not enough to be free from love of riches or to be unmanly in softness; one must be careful in the hearing of the Word and continual in recalling it. You ask for fresh truths day and night, and rightly so, but take care that you do not merely seek the novelty of knowledge. The craving for the sincere milk of the Word is good, yet it must lead to solid food, to the doing of the word, not only the hearing. Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly, and it will become flesh in your own life first, then spread rapidly through your household. For how shall you offer healing medicine to others if you remain sick yourself? The physician attends to his own health in order to serve the sick.
Above all, pursue love. Though one have faith and knowledge and prophecy and tongues and gifts and healing and a perfect life and even martyrdom, if love is absent, they profit nothing. It is love that makes your prayers for deliverance from evil acceptable. It is love that covers a multitude of sins in the ones you honor. If any among them seem incurably diseased, still you are bidden to do your part. Judas himself was incurably ill, yet God did not cease attending upon him, even washing his feet. How much more should you, a fellow servant, not abandon those bound to you by nature? The devil wages war against his own kindred, seeking to divide families and set father against son, but you have been called to be a peacemaker, to honor parents not merely with outward gestures but with the sweet fragrance of a life conformed to Christ. In this way, you may win them without a word, as your chaste conduct and reverence shine.
The afflictions and evil persons from which you pray deliverance are no surprise to the Master. He permitted Paul to be weighed down exceedingly beyond his power in Asia, in order that he might learn not to trust in himself but in God who raises the dead. So it may be with your elders: the thorn in the flesh, the opposition of unreasonable men, the lingering sickness, all serve to bring them to the end of their own strength, that the power of Christ may rest upon them. Therefore, pray not only for the removal of the trial but for the perfecting of their faith in it. The Lord is able to restrain the evil one and keep them from the hour of trial; yet sometimes He leaves us in the world for a season, sanctifying us by the truth, that we may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.
Do not receive an accusation against an elder lightly, even in your heart. It is easy when they falter or resist the Word to grow impatient, to judge them as hard ground or thorny soil. But remember: you do not see the whole field. The sower went out to sow, and some seed fell on the path and was snatched away, some on rock, some among thorns. Yet the same sower continued scattering seed, for he knew that the good soil would yield a hundredfold. Your task is to keep scattering the seed of prayer, of Scripture spoken in season, of honor and loving-kindness. The yielding is in God’s hands. By honoring them, you lay hold of the promise that it may go well with you and you may live long in the land. This promise is sure; do not let present hardship cloud it.
The peace of Jerusalem, the household of faith, the church, and the heart where Christ dwells, that peace is yours as you abide in the vine. Pray for peace within their walls, and let the answer begin in you: be yourself a temple of the Holy Spirit, where the Word dwells richly, where the mind is renewed and prepared for action. Then the fruit of true discipleship will appear: you will bear fruit among those beyond your sphere, beginning with your own kindred. Even now, the Lord is working, though the fig tree has not yet blossomed.
He who began a good work in them and in you will complete it. The sickness is not unto death, but unto life. Only keep abiding, keep honoring, keep loving, and leave the times and seasons to the Father. In this way, the Word will spread rapidly and be glorified, and your joy will be complete.
