Letter 57
Against Andronicus
The malevolent forces in the universe fulfil the designs of Providence, inasmuch as
they punish those deserving of punishment, but nevertheless they are abhorred by God and
are to be shunned.
'For I will raise against you,' saith the Lord, 'a race' (Jer xxvii:9)
at hose hands you shall suffer even great woes. And yet those very one though whom He
makes war, He declares that He will in turn assail, for when once they had you in their
power, they showed you no pity, nor did they treat you with humanity. I cannot recall the
exact words of Holy Writ, but I a sure that somewhere in the sacred books God is
represented as speaking in this wise.
Nor did He merely speak in this wise without giving effect to His
words, but in very truth the Babylonian king razed the city of Jerusalem to the ground,
and delivered its people into bondage; furthermore, to this very king himself was soon
afflicted with madness. And thus it happened that, by the justice of God, that city was
made desolate, so that no man would believe that a city has ever stood on the spot.
How, then? Shall any one dare ask God: 'Wherefore dost Thou raise men
against the erring, as Thine avengers, and when they have done service to the Divine Will,
and have become the executioners of those against whom they are sent, hast Thou visited
them with punishment, at the very time when it was meet that they should receive full
payment for their service?'
Has He then awakened us to receive an answer to those questions we put
to Him?
Inasmuch as the Divine law has been violated here, evils have come upon
men; and the forces that make for evil are those which are especially evil, since by the
very abundance of their nature they are also potent in action. Since, then, evils have
come once for all, the work of Divine wisdom and virtue and power is not only to do good--
this is the nature of God, one might say, as it is that of fire to warm, or light to
illuminate-- but most of all to accomplish some good and useful end out of the very evils
that have been devised by certain persons, and to turn to good uses those which seem to be
evil. For this reason it is the part of an adroit wisdom to make use of an occasion even
of evil. And thus, whenever God is in need of avengers, he employs, at one moment, demons
who lead hordes of locusts, at another those whose work are pestilences, or perchance a
barbarous nation, or again a wicked ruler, and, in a word, the natures fitted to commit
public harm. Nevertheless, He hates those very natures, because they are suitable for this
purpose. For God did not make instruments of calamity, but He readily made use of those
appointed by themselves to that end.
The very fact that you have become useful in such a direction, is
precisely that which cuts you off from God. In the same way is one vessel unworthy and
another worthy, and is so esteemed to be for each one is judged according to the use for
which it is provided. A table is a sacred thing, for therein is honoured the God of
friendship and hospitality. Love of the stranger made Abraham God's host. But a whip is an
abominable thing, for it is the servant of anger, and one who has once used it is seized
with regret. But those who are chastised are cared for by God; nor is this a small matter,
to be found worthy of God's oversight and to be purified of our sins through retribution.
Vengeful natures, however, are altogether turned away from God. For
that which is destructive is of course inimical to that which is creative. Nor is this the
avenger's state of mind, whether demon or man, that he is in this contributing service to
God, but rather, gratifying the evil of his nature, he seeks to bring disasters on all and
sundry.
Not, therefore, because the city must needs be ill fated, and because
you accomplished this disaster, is it ordained that you should escape retribution. For a
defence of this sort Judas himself might have brought forward, on the ground that Christ
must needs be crucified to redeem the sins of all. Now it was indeed ordained, 'But,' He
says, ' woe to him through whom it cometh. It were good for that man that he had never
been born' (Matt. Xxvi.24; xviii.7). So then, as far as one can see, the noose was the
sequel of his treachery. But the unseen side no man understand, for it is not in the
understanding of man to compass what might be a punishment for the betrayer of Christ.
Truly it is not a clever line of defence to plead that one has already
served a destiny in the way in which it was bound to be accomplished. It is accordingly of
the first necessity that the Ausurians and Andronicus should suffer a well-merited
punishment for the evils which they have done us.
For behold the locust which has destroyed our fruits, which has eaten
the crops to the stalk, and stripped the trees to the bark; against him has risen a wind
sweeping headlong to the sea, and has scattered him in the midst of the waves. And as
against this pestilence God has arrayed the south wind, so now has a leader been chosen by
Him against the Ausurians. Oh, may it prove that he is the holiest and most just of all
His generals!
May it be granted to me to acclaim him in the glory of a triumph over
these! 'Happy,' it is said, 'he that shall requite him for their ill deeds. Happy he that
shall dash their infants against the rock' (Psalm cxxxvii.8). What destruction, then,
shall await Andronicus, the pest of the district? What retribution could be worthy of a
soul that works evil only? In my own case, Andronicus is a far heavier ill than all the
blows wherewith God has visited us for my sins, for in addition to our common sufferings,
this man is my own personal evil. Through him the tempter is at work to get me to desert
the service of the altar. But I must take up my discourse a little father back, so as to
add to what you already know what is not known to all of you, and thus give you an orderly
account of my affairs; for in view of what is to follow, it is well for me that you should
have heard this from me.
From childhood leisure and comfort in life have ever appeared to me a
divine blessing which some one has said befits divine natures; and this is naught else but
the culture of the intellect, and its reconciliation with God on the part of the man who
possesses that leisure and profits by it. For the things that concern children or come
into their lives in childhood, I felt but the smallest interest, as also for the affairs
of youth and early manhood. And when I came to a man's estate, I had changed in nothing
from my boyhood's love of a quiet life, but, passing my days as if in a sacred festival, I
strove throughout all my life to preserve a state of spirit gentle and untroubled by
storms.
But, nevertheless, God has not made me useless to men, inasmuch as
oftentimes both cities and private individuals made use of my services in times of need.
For God gave me the power to do the utmost and to will the fairest. None of these services
drew me apart from philosophy, nor cut short my happy letters. For to accomplish with
struggle and pain, and even then scarcely to accomplish at all, all this wastes time and
imbues the spirit with material cares. But he whom speech alone becomes, and persuasion
attends upon his utterance, and his speech prevails with his audience, why should such an
one be sparing in his words, when thereby another might be freed from his evil plight?
Man is an animal to be prized; to be prized indeed, since for his sake
Christ was stretched on the Cross.
Until the present year, it was my divine lot to carry persuasion to
men; and, however lightly affairs, perchance to gain success in them. But now the whole
matter seems to have turned to nothing, with many things which clearly came from God. My
success, too, I always ascribed to Him, and I lived with good hopes in a sacred enclosure,
the universe, an animal ranging at will in freedom, apportioning my life between prayer,
books, and the chase. For that the soul and body may be in health, it is necessary to do
some work on the one hand, and on the other to make supplication to God. With such peace
in life, I spent the years up to the taking over the priesthood, for which office I had
very little courage in comparison with those that have lived before me. I call to witness
the God who rules over all, and whose hidden mysteries I have espoused for your sakes,
that away from human preoccupations and ambitions I have come alone to Him in many places
and at many times. Prostate and upon my knees, I have in suppliant guise prayed for death
rather than the priesthood. For a certain reverence and love for the leisure I had found
in philosophy held me to her, in whose behalf I thought I ought to do and say all things.
But although I overbore men I was myself overcome by God. And as it is common tradition
that he who is judged worthy of this office becomes the intimates of God himself, I took
it over, but bore with great unwillingness the change in my life. Fain as I was to take
refuge in flight, the hope of good things to come, and the fear of worse, checked me.
Then, again, I listened to certain aged saints who averred that God was acting as my
shepherd, and one of these said in conversation that the Holy Spirit is joyful, and fills
with joy those who receive Him; adding that demons disputed the possession of me with God,
and that I am wounding them by espousing the better side. 'But even if they cause you some
trouble,' he said, ' none the less the philosopher priest is not neglected by God.' I ,
then, for I am not easily puffed up with pride, or prone to pleading my own cause
brilliantly, blamed only my own ill fortune, nor ascribed aught to an envious demon. I do
not think I have sufficient virtue in me to stir up the evil powers. Rather did I fear
that being myself a sinner, I should unworthily handle the mysteries of God. My soul was
prophetic of the misfortune into which I speedily slipped. Nay, no sooner was I here than
all horrors were here, and the chorus leader of them all was Andronicus, a demon of war,
gorged with disasters, gloating over the ruins of the city. Alas, everywhere in the
market-place the groaning of men, the wailing of women, the lamentations of children! He
invested the city with semblance of one taken by storm. He cut off the fairest part of it,
and was responsible for its new name, 'The Place of Vengeance', making the royal
colonnade, of old the court of justice, into a place of execution.
He offered all this as an altar and a communion table for the demons of
vengeance in whose number he had enrolled himself. Alas, with how many tears of the
citizens has he feasted them!
What Taurosythians, what Lacedaemonians ever honoured their own Artemis
on such a scale with the blood that ran from their scourgings? At once every one rushed to
me; from all sides I was pressed to hear and to see atrocities. When I admonished
Andronicus, I failed to convince him, when I upbraided him, I only irritated him. The
crisis which had no arisen exposed our weakness, which until this moment God had concealed
from men, for as I had always enjoyed the credit for all that had prospered, my fellow
citizens got the idea that I was a man of power. And this Is the most bitter of
misfortunes that have befallen me; I am condemned in the light of the hope of me felt by
those to whom I have been a stranger. For I do not succeed in persuading them that I have
not the power they ascribe to me; rather do they insist on my potency to gain all just
ends. All that remains to me, therefore, is grief and shame. Then, suddenly I suffer in my
soul, and my cares are complex. There are images of material things before me, and God is
far distant.
If all that happened through Andronicus may be taken as signifying the
attacks of demons, in that case they did all they desired. No longer did I enjoy the
erstwhile sweetness of spirit in my prayers. Only the forms of prayer were there, while I
was swept about on all sides of these affairs of mine, distracted by anger, grief, and all
kinds of suffering.
Yet it is through the intellect that we have communion with God,
whereas the tongue purveys to men the things which concern man. Accordingly, if I have had
the misfortune to be inattentive in my prayers, the result makes that obvious. For when my
life was changed, not only in this way did I have the benefit of the change and encounter
evil, to wit by turning to practical matters through neglect of prayer, but behold, I ,
who still the other day had lived untouched by grief, saw lying dead one who, I had
prayed, might outlive me. So bitter is the reception with which the city has welcomed me.
In this way do the affairs of men move, at one moment upward, at another downward; and the
tide sets in, carrying many things heaped together, at one moment the lucky, at another
the unlucky. But in my own case, when it befell me to lose the dearest of sons, I was sore
tempted to inflict an awful blow upon myself. To such an extent I was overcome by grief.
Face to face with other things, I am a man, I say this before those who well know
it, and for the most part I obey the dictates of reason, but I am so overcome by affection
the unreason gets the upper hand over reason. Therefore not by the tenets of philosophy
have I overcome my present trouble; it is Andronicus who has been the driving force. It is
he who has made me keep my mind upon the misfortunes I share with others. Troubles have
come to me which are the antidotes of my own troubles, drawing me to themselves, and
driving out suffering with suffering.
Along with the bitter consciousness of present misfortunes there comes
to me the memory of the great blessings of the past, out of what experiences I have come
into my present circumstances, and in a word, how I live unhappily deprived of everything
at once. The greatest of the evils afflicting me, and one which makes my life a difficult
one to find hope in, is that whereas aforetime I was accustomed to be never without a
response in my prayers to God, now for the first time I know that I have prayed in vain.
Then, too, I see that my house is faring evilly, and I am forced to dwell in my ill-fated
native town. Exposed at all, one to whom they come for sympathy, and to lament, each one
over his own sorrows, I can now only offer these a useless pity. Furthermore, I am ashamed
of the case of a citizen who is in misfortune, and has had public money stolen from him,
and lo! comes Andronicus, reclaiming more than ten thousand staters, even deciding to kill
him, without granting a respite, on account of the one thousand still due, or rather on my
account. Yes, on my account, he keeps him guarded in an impregnable fortress in the like
of which the children of the poets represent the Titans are enchained. In order that he
may not be taken away by me, so he says, he has given orders that the man shall not have
food brought to him for five days, all entrance of bread having been forbidden to the
jailers. But only the other day every one heard him loudly declare that the citizen's
death would be worth more to him than the thousand staters. Again, when men come about him
to purchase the estates, he proceeds to terrorize them, to throw them into confusion, and
he drives them away by any means whatsoever. For of the money, as I think, he has no need;
rather stands he in need of this man's death. Now I am not strong enough to attack walls
so solid, nor sufficiently adroit to enter into his cell by stealth, and rescue him from
his plight.
Nor, some say, do they permit any one to enter there. For his servants
are by nature such as they are, but now they are living after the pattern of Andronicus,
who governs to the dishonour of the Church.
I do not trouble about the extent of the forces he has combined against
me; nay, I should even be grateful to him if I were to receive a dishonour at his hands,
for so long as it were in the service of God, I should regard it as of the nature of
martyrdom. For remember who he was, as compared with me. Indeed, if nothing else, I am
descended from those men whose lineage, beginning with Eurysthenes who settled the Dorians
in Sparta, and going down to my own father, has been engraved on the public monuments,
whereas this fellow cannot tell the name of his own grandfather, nor even of his father,
except by guess, and from a tunny fisher's perch on a crag he has come at a bound into the
governor's chariot.
Let him stand back in awe, therefore, of the light which shines in the
city, and be ashamed of his defects. As for myself, up to the time when I took priest's
orders, I was loaded with honour, and dishonour I never tasted. But now I cannot rejoice
in honour, nor do I grieve if slighted, for neither of these things appears any longer to
have been brought upon me by their author, but both must be referred to God himself.
Wherefore this all-daring fellow, when he can disturb me to butt against God himself, and
to this end raises his voice publicly before people herded and assembled together. You
shall hear his words presently, when the letter is read to all the churches throughout the
world.
Such is the nature that has remained without education, once it has
acquired power. It strives to shatter heaven with its head. So be it, then, let him rule;
let him give rein to his nature; to his opportunity; let him kill and bind whomsoever of
the citizens he pleases. But for us it is enough to remain in the rank wherein God has
placed us, to be separated from the fellowship of evil, 'to keep our ears pure from
grievous evil-speaking', and despair of the cause of the unjustly treated. And our defence
before you and the people will be that we have tried in vain. No doubt it became one who
had any greatness in him, to act thus even before this experience had come to him. But I
have waited to make you convinced with me, by the logic of facts, that to join together
political ability with the priesthood is to combine the incompatible.
The past ages made the same men priests and judges. The Egyptians and
the Hebrew nation were for long ruled over by their priests. Then, later, it seems to be,
when the Divine work was executed in a humane spirit, God separated the two ways of life.
One of these was appointed to the priestly, and the other to the governing order. Some He
turned over to matter, and others He associated with Himself. And so some have been
marshalled for practical affairs, but we to remain in our life of prayer. For each class
God asks that which is fair, and just. Why then do you move backwards, why do you seek to
fit together those things which have been separated by God, you who demand not that we
should govern, but that we should govern badly? Nothing could be more unfortunate as this.
Do you need a protector? Walk to the administrator of the laws of the state. Do you want
anything of God? Go to the priest of the city,-- not that you shall always find there what
you seek, though for my part I shall do my utmost. And if any one is disposed to leave me
tranquility, perchance I shall have the powers, some day; for at the same moment does not
turn away from matter and towards God.
Contemplation is the end and aim of the priesthood, if it does not
belie its name. But contemplation and action do not deign to mingle. For impulse is the
beginning of all action, and no impulses is free from passion. For it is not lawful, He
says, that the man who is not pure should handle that which is pure. 'Be still and learn
that I am God' (Psalm xlv:11). He has need of leisure, who is a bishop and a philosopher.
I do not condemn bishops who are occupied with practical matters, for knowing of myself
that I am hardly equal to the one of two things, I admire all the more those who are
competent in both fields.
Power to serve two masters is not in me. Nevertheless, if there are
some who are not injured even by a condescension, they would be able both to be bishops,
and to conduct the affairs of cities. A sunbeam, even if it consorts with mud, remains
pure and undefiled. But I, in like case, should need springs and the sea itself to cleanse
me. If it was possible for an angel to live more than thirty years among men, and to
absorb no evil from matter for enjoyment, of what use was it that the son of God should
come down to us? It is the acme of power to mix with the inferior, and at the same time to
remain steadfast in our true nature, and in no way to represent passion. This is worthy of
praise in God, but it is a course to be shunned by men, who must be on his guard against
the weakness of his nature.
According to those principles shall I pass my life with you.
Nevertheless, I reserve to myself the right of judging when times and seasons are
opportune, so that when it is possible I may come down, that I may do some great good when
the chance arises. Thus does God Himself govern His own kingdom.
But absorption is the terrible thing; for this evil the Divine Nature
does not admit of, nor does any man who regulates his life according to the Divine
Example. If I become absorbed in my money and my possessions, If you become aware that I
am for ever receiving same time that I am grudging in the measure of time I give to your
affairs-- in that case I am an impostor and deserve no forgiveness. But if, on the other
hand, I have neglected my domestic affairs, the better to cultivate the activities of the
intellect, is it so surprising if I ask you to do the same? But since we do not please you
with these opinions, inasmuch as there are others who are able to serve equally well in
both fields, it is always in your power to decide the best course for the city, for the
churches, and for me. The priesthood I shall not decline. May the power of Andronicus
never go as far as that!
But just as when a philosopher I sought not the public, nor courted the
applause of the theatre, nor even opened a lecture room-- and yet I was in very truth, and
may I ever be, a philosopher-- so now I have no desire to be a popular bishop.
All men cannot do all things. Living by myself and communing with God
through my reason, when I descend from the realms of contemplation, I can hold useful
converse with one or two at a time, and these must not belong to the crowd, but be as such
as, either by the character they have been allotted, or the education they have been
blessed with, admire the soul rather than the body. By so handling affairs at long
intervals and at my own leisure, I might be useful at an opportune moment. On the other
hand, when I am overwhelmed by these things, I am forgetful of myself, and only injure the
success of the business I am engaged in. For it is not possible to do anything well if one
hates it. The man who is carrying out what is not the resolution of his best judgement,
goes disheartened to that which needs his personal supervision. But the man who is
unsuited for leisure, and who when leisure comes cannot in any way profit by it, who is
the very last word in the way of a public servant, a spacious spirit adequate to the cares
of all, and who, since it is his nature, willing to act, that man will assuredly be
grateful to the circumstances which draw him near to them, for they furnish material for
his very nature. The greatest aid to success is the love for the thing itself. Therefore
you must all choose the most useful man in the place of us, who can with difficulty save
ourselves.
Why do you protest? Is it because this has never yet taken place that
it should be thought that it cannot even now take place? Many necessary things has time
found and righted, nor do all things happen according to a pattern, and of those which
have happened, each one had a beginning, and, before it came into existence, was not yet.
Usefulness is more deserving of preference than custom. Let us start the best custom on
its way. Let the man be chosen to succeed us, or chosen to act with us, but by all means
let him be chosen. Whoever he be, he will appear far wise than I, so far as politics are
concerned, and he will be able to conciliate and manage those miserable wretches for your
sake.
Now if this does not yet seem good to you, let us postpone the matter
to a later date. For one may take up this matter both individually and in common. Now in
what terms the council has attacked Andronicus' madness, listen.