Chrysostom
Good and Faithful Servant
Do not place your trust in the destruction of your enemies, but in the building of your own soul. You cry out for their lies to be revealed and their hearts melted, yet hear what is written: "Their throat is an open sepulchre; with their tongues have they used deceit; the poison of asps is under their lips." This is the state of all who are under sin, and you must not be surprised that the world acts like the world. But take care that your own heart and mind not be polluted. If we will be at peace, God will be with us, but if we raise up war within ourselves through fear and suspicion, the God of peace withdraws. Peace and virtue place the soul in safety. Begin on your part, and then you shall draw God toward you.
You plead that no weapon formed against you shall prosper, yet you arm yourself daily with the weapons of anxiety and accusation. "We have become tattlers," ready to make accusations, prepared for condemning. Even if no other evil thing had been done by us, this were sufficient to ruin us. Hear the wise man: "Hast thou heard a word? Let it die in thee, be bold; it will not burst thee." Do not let your heart travail over every word spoken against you, as a woman in labor. That path leads only to destruction and misery.
As for the accusations you fear from others, remember that against an elder receive not an accusation lightly. False witnesses are rare, and the truth can be discovered upon examination. But what is required of you is to give no cause of stumbling, no handle of accusation. Think on these things: whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honorable, whatsoever things are pure. If you fill your mind with the schemes and venom of others, you leave no room for Christ to be formed in you.
You ask for a safe bubble of love, yet the safety Christ gives is not the absence of trials but the presence of virtue. He that is temperate and lives orderly, even before his departure, is crowned and lives in peace, being delivered from unseemliness and the dangers of accusation. Justice makes men friends; covetousness, envy, and fear make them enemies. Seek first the righteousness that comes from repentance. There is no second baptism, but repentance has great force and is able to set free from the burden of sins and establish in safety even one who has come to the very depth of wickedness.
The way of peace you have not known if you seek it by willing the downfall of another's tongue. Bless your enemies truly, not by asking God to merely stop their mouths while their hearts remain unchanged, but by melting your own heart so that you cease to be an enemy to anyone, even in your secret thoughts. Then sleep shall come over you with perfect safety, and no care, no lamenting, will find a home in your breast.
You plead that no weapon formed against you shall prosper, yet you arm yourself daily with the weapons of anxiety and accusation. "We have become tattlers," ready to make accusations, prepared for condemning. Even if no other evil thing had been done by us, this were sufficient to ruin us. Hear the wise man: "Hast thou heard a word? Let it die in thee, be bold; it will not burst thee." Do not let your heart travail over every word spoken against you, as a woman in labor. That path leads only to destruction and misery.
As for the accusations you fear from others, remember that against an elder receive not an accusation lightly. False witnesses are rare, and the truth can be discovered upon examination. But what is required of you is to give no cause of stumbling, no handle of accusation. Think on these things: whatsoever things are true, whatsoever things are honorable, whatsoever things are pure. If you fill your mind with the schemes and venom of others, you leave no room for Christ to be formed in you.
You ask for a safe bubble of love, yet the safety Christ gives is not the absence of trials but the presence of virtue. He that is temperate and lives orderly, even before his departure, is crowned and lives in peace, being delivered from unseemliness and the dangers of accusation. Justice makes men friends; covetousness, envy, and fear make them enemies. Seek first the righteousness that comes from repentance. There is no second baptism, but repentance has great force and is able to set free from the burden of sins and establish in safety even one who has come to the very depth of wickedness.
The way of peace you have not known if you seek it by willing the downfall of another's tongue. Bless your enemies truly, not by asking God to merely stop their mouths while their hearts remain unchanged, but by melting your own heart so that you cease to be an enemy to anyone, even in your secret thoughts. Then sleep shall come over you with perfect safety, and no care, no lamenting, will find a home in your breast.
