Chrysostom
Good and Faithful Servant
When you tell me that you corrected the lie spoken against you, this was rightly done. A falsehood left unchallenged can breed greater harm. But now I urge you to guard your own heart with equal care, lest the offense kindle a fire within you that is harder to quench than any office quarrel. You ask for them to be caught in the damage they do, and for truth to come to light. That is a natural cry, yet examine yourself: do you desire their exposure for the sake of justice, or because you smart under the sting of their words? If we are not watchful, the desire to see others shamed can turn us into accusers wearing the mask of zeal, while we ourselves become gossips and triflers, spreading the very discord we claim to hate.
I counsel you to look first to the peace of your own soul. Among wars the most perilous is the one we fight within ourselves, when anger and resentment war against the spirit. If that battle rages, external quiet will do you no good. Strive, then, to say with the Psalmist, “I am for peace; but when I speak, they are for war.” So far as it lies in you, be at peace with these coworkers. This does not mean you pretend their actions are good, or that you never speak the truth. When a lie touches you directly, you may correct it calmly, as you have done. But do not let your mind dwell on making them pay; do not fill your soul with tempests over what you cannot control. Instead, commit the matter to God, who sees hidden things, and who often chooses not to expose sinners publicly but to leave them to their own conscience, seeking rather their good than their humiliation.
If you repeat the tale of their misdeeds to others, even under the guise of asking prayer, you risk becoming what you condemn. We ought to shade over and conceal the failings of neighbors, not parade them. Let your conversation be about those who call on the Lord with a pure, unfeigned faith, peaceable, not contentious. Associate with such, and as for the rest, refuse to be drawn into their weaving of scandal.
I will pray with you, not chiefly that they be caught, but that the God of all peace would quiet this storm, bring truth to light in His own time, and keep your heart steadfast in all godliness and honesty. For this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Savior, who desires that all should come to the knowledge of the truth. May He grant you an inner peace that no enemy can steal, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
I counsel you to look first to the peace of your own soul. Among wars the most perilous is the one we fight within ourselves, when anger and resentment war against the spirit. If that battle rages, external quiet will do you no good. Strive, then, to say with the Psalmist, “I am for peace; but when I speak, they are for war.” So far as it lies in you, be at peace with these coworkers. This does not mean you pretend their actions are good, or that you never speak the truth. When a lie touches you directly, you may correct it calmly, as you have done. But do not let your mind dwell on making them pay; do not fill your soul with tempests over what you cannot control. Instead, commit the matter to God, who sees hidden things, and who often chooses not to expose sinners publicly but to leave them to their own conscience, seeking rather their good than their humiliation.
If you repeat the tale of their misdeeds to others, even under the guise of asking prayer, you risk becoming what you condemn. We ought to shade over and conceal the failings of neighbors, not parade them. Let your conversation be about those who call on the Lord with a pure, unfeigned faith, peaceable, not contentious. Associate with such, and as for the rest, refuse to be drawn into their weaving of scandal.
I will pray with you, not chiefly that they be caught, but that the God of all peace would quiet this storm, bring truth to light in His own time, and keep your heart steadfast in all godliness and honesty. For this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Savior, who desires that all should come to the knowledge of the truth. May He grant you an inner peace that no enemy can steal, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.
