Saint John
Chrysostom on the Eucharistic Body and Blood of Jesus in
Holy Communion.
Taken from his homilies on the Sacred Scriptures.
By: Matthew James Bellisario 2008

The
Divine Liturgy has been celebrated since the time of the
apostles and was instituted by Jesus Christ Himself.
Sacred Scripture as well as the Fathers of the Church
confirm that this Sacred Mystery is at the heart of the
Church. Of course I can pull all of the passages of
Sacred Scripture that pertain to this and list a series
of quotes from the Church Fathers to try and substantiate
this position, but I want to look at only two passages of
Sacred Scripture closely, and one Father of the Church
and how he viewed these passages of Scripture. I will
demonstrate how his interpretations coincide with what
the Catholic and Orthodox Churches teach on the Holy
Eucharist. The subject of Holy Communion and the Body and
Blood of Christ is always a highly debated topic. This
subject in itself is a matter of life and death. Jesus
Christ is the central person of discussion in regard to
this topic. Nothing is of more importance than
understanding how Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ makes
Himself present to His Church.
The early Christians would rather die than miss receiving
our Lord in the Eucharist. Would they die for only a
symbol? Would they risk their lives for only a “spiritual
communion”, something that they could receive apart from
the Liturgy of the Eucharist? The first section of
Scripture that I want to focus on is John 6:55-69 and the
second passage of Sacred Scripture 1 Corinthians
11:24-27. I have taken Saint John Chrysotom's commentary
on these passages from the Christian Classics Ethereal
Library online. I will post the link at the end of the
article. As you read through these please pay attention
to the complete text of Saint John. I won't have to give
much of an explanation after you read it. It pretty much
speaks for itself. Saint John indeed believed that Jesus
Christ was in the flesh present in the Eucharist. Notice
how he talks about a strict carnal interpretation of the
passages as being incorrect. The Jews at that time either
miss the point the He was a Divine Person, or outright
reject His teaching. There is no mincing of words in St.
John's homilies. Many Protestant apologists proclaim that
Saint John is only referencing this passage to Jesus as
Our Lord being crucified for us on the cross, reiterating
the Jesus was true God and true man. This however is only
part of the point. The reference of Christ's humanity and
divinity are related directly to the eating and drinking
of His Body and Blood. I will bold type certain texts
that I find to be of great interest.
Saint John
Chrysostom's homily on the Gospel of John 6:55-69
Ver. 55.
“For My flesh is true “truly,” N.T. meat, and My blood is
true drink.”
What
is that He saith? al. “but what is the, ‘ is true meat ’
?” He either desireth to declare that this is the true
meat which saveth the soul, or to assure them concerning
what had been said,
that they might not suppose the words to be a mere
enigma or parable, but might know that it is by all means
needful to eat the Body. Then He
saith,
Ver. 56.
“He that eateth My flesh, dwelleth in
Me.”
This He
said, showing that such an one is blended
with ἀ νακιρνᾶται
Him. Now what follows seems unconnected, unless we
enquire into the sense; for, saith some one, after
saying, “He that eateth My flesh, dwelleth in Me,” what
kind of a
consequence is it to add,
Ver. 57.
“As the living Father hath sent Me, and I live by the
Father”?
Yet the
words harmonize perfectly. For since He continually spake
of “eternal life,” to prove this point He introduceth the
expression, “dwelleth in Me”; for “if he dwelleth in Me,
and I live, it is plain that he will live also.” Then He
saith, “As the living Father hath sent Me.” This is an
expression of comparison and resemblance, and its meaning
is of this kind, “I live in like manner as the Father
liveth.” And that thou mayest not deem Him unbegotten, He
immediately subjoineth, “by the Father,” not by this to
show that He needeth, in order to live, any power working
in Him, ἐ νεργείας
for He said before, to remove such a suspicion, “As the
Father hath life in Himself, so hath He given to the Son
also to have life in Himself”; now if He needeth the
working of another, it will be found that either the
Father hath not given Him so to have it, and so the
assertion is false, or if He hath so given it, then He
will need no other one to support Him. What then means
the, “By the Father”? He here merely hinteth at the
cause, and what He saith is of this kind: “As the Father
liveth, so I live, and he that eateth Me shall live by
Me.” And the “life” of which He speaketh is not life
merely, but the excellent εὐδόκιμον
life; for that He spake not simply of life, but of that
glorious and ineffable life, is clear from this.
For
all men “live,” even unbelievers, and uninitiated,
who eat not of that flesh. Seest
thou that the words relate not to this life, but to that
other? And what He saith is of this kind: “He that eateth
My flesh, when he dieth shall not perish nor suffer
punishment”; He spake not of the general resurrection,
(for all alike rise again,) but concerning the special,
the glorious Resurrection, that which hath a
reward.
Ver. 58.
“This is that bread which came down from heaven; not as
your fathers did eat manna, and are dead; he that eateth
of this bread shall live for
ever.”
Continually
doth He handle the same point, so as to imprint it on the
understanding of the hearers, (for
the teaching on these points was a kind of final
teaching,)
and to confirm the doctrine of the Resurrection
and of eternal life. Wherefore
He mentioneth the Resurrection since He promiseth eternal
life, showing that that life is not now, but after the
Resurrection. Ben. “both because He had said eternal
life, and also showing.” “And whence,” saith some one,
“are these things clear?” From the Scriptures; to them He
everywhere referreth the Jews, bidding them learn these
things from them. And by saying, “Which giveth life to
the world,” He inciteth them to jealousy, that from very
vexation that others should enjoy the gift, they may not
stay without. And continually He remindeth them of the
manna, showing the difference, (between
it and His bread,) and
guiding them to the faith; for if He was able al. “it was
possible.” to support their life for forty years without
harvest, or corn, or other things in course;
ἀ
κολουθίας
much more now will He be able to do so, as having come
for greater ends. Moreover, if those things were but
types, and yet men collected what came down without sweat
or labor; much more shall this be the case, where the
difference is great both in the never dying, and in the
enjoying the true life. And rightly hath He spoken often
of “life,” since this is desired by men, and nothing is
so pleasing to them as not to die. Since even under the
old Covenant, this was the promise, length of life and
many days, but now it is not length merely, but life
having no end. He desireth at the same time to show, that
He now revoketh the punishment caused by sin, annulling
that sentence which condemneth to death, and bringing in
not life merely, but life eternal, contrariwise to the
former things. or, “those
before.”
Ver. 59.
“These things said He in the synagogue, as He taught in
Capernaum.”
[2.] The
place where most of His marvels had been done, so that He
ought there especially to have been listened to. But
wherefore taught He in the synagogue and in the Temple?
As well because He desired to catch the greatest number
of them, as because He desired to show that He was not
opposed to the Father.
Ver. 60.
“But many of the disciples, when they had heard this,
said, This is a hard saying.”
What
means “hard”? Rough, laborious, troublesome. Yet He said
nothing of this kind, for He spake not of a mode of life,
πολιτείας
but of doctrines,
continually handling the faith which is in
Him. What
then means, “is a hard saying”? Is it because it
promiseth life and resurrection? Is it because He said
that He came down from heaven?
Or that it was impossible for one to be saved who
ate not His flesh? Tell me,
are these things “hard”? Who can assert that they are?
What then means “hard”?
It means, “difficult to be
received,” “transcending
their infirmity,” “having much terror.” For they thought
that He uttered words too high for His real character,
and such as were above Himself. Therefore they
said,
“Who can
hear it?”
Perhaps
making excuse for themselves, since they were about to
start away.
Ver. 61,
62. “When Jesus knew in Himself that His disciples
murmured at it,” (for this is an attribute of His Godhead
to bring secret things to light,) “He said unto them,
Doth this offend you? What and if ye shall
see ἴ δητε
θεωρῆτε, G. T.
the Son of Man ascend up where He was
before?”
This also
He doth in the case of Nathanael, saying, “Because I said
unto thee, I saw thee under the fig-tree, believest thou?
Thou shalt see greater things than these.” ( c. i. 50.)
And to Nicodemus, “No man hath ascended up to heaven but
the Son of man which is in heaven.” ( c. iii. 13.) What
then, doth He add difficulties to difficulties? No, (that
be far from Him,) but by the greatness of the doctrines,
and the number of them, He desireth to bring them over.
For if one had said simply, “I have come down from
heaven,” and added nothing more, he would have been the
more likely to offend them; but He who said, “My body is
the life of the world”; He who said, “As the living
Father hath sent Me, so I live by the Father”; and who
said, “I have come down from heaven,” solves the
difficulty. For the man who utters any one great thing
concerning himself may perhaps be suspected of feigning,
but he who connects together so many one after another
removes all suspicion. All that He doth and saith is
intended to lead them away from the thought, that Joseph
was His father. And it was not with a wish to strengthen,
but rather to do away that stumbling-block, that He said
this. For whosoever deemed that He was Joseph’s son could
not receive His sayings, while one that was persuaded
that He had come down from heaven, and would ascend
thither, might more easily give heed to His words: at the
same time He bringeth forward also another explanation,
saying,
Ver. 63.
“It is the Spirit that quickeneth, the flesh profiteth
nothing.”
His
meaning is, “Ye must hear spiritually what relateth to
Me, for he who heareth carnally is not profited, nor
gathereth any advantage.” It was carnal to question how
He came down from heaven, to deem that He was the son of
Joseph, to ask, “How can he give us His flesh to eat?”
All this was carnal, when they ought to have understood
the matter in a mystical and spiritual sense. “But,”
saith some one,
“how could they understand what the ‘eating flesh’
might mean?” Then it was their duty to wait for the
proper time and enquire, and not to abandon
Him.
“The words
that I speak unto you, they are spirit and they are
life.”
That is,
they are divine and spiritual,
have nothing carnal about
them,
are not subject to the laws of physical
consequence, but are free from any such
necessity, are
even set above the laws appointed for this world, and
have also another and a different meaning. Now as in this
passage He said “spirit,” instead of “spiritual,” so when
He speaketh of “flesh,” He meant not “carnal things,” but
“carnally hearing,” and alluding at the same time to
them, because they ever desired carnal things when they
ought to have desired spiritual. For if a man receives
them carnally, he profits nothing.
“What then, is not His flesh, flesh?” Most
certainly. “How then saith He, that the flesh profiteth
nothing?” He speaketh not of His own flesh, (God forbid!)
but of those who received His words in a carnal
manner. But what
is “understanding carnally”? It is looking merely to what
is before our eyes, without imagining anything beyond.
This is understanding carnally. But we must not judge
thus by sight, but must look into all mysteries with the
eyes within.
This is seeing spiritually. He that eateth not His
flesh, and drinketh not His blood, hath no life in him.
How then doth “the flesh profit nothing,” if without it
we cannot live? Seest thou that the words, “the flesh
profiteth nothing,” are spoken not of His own flesh, but
of carnal hearing?
Ver. 64.
“But there are some of you that believe
not.”
Again,
according to His custom, He addeth weight to His words,
by foretelling what would come to pass, and by showing
that He spake thus not from desire of honor from them,
but because He cared for them. And when He said “some,”
He excepted the disciples. For at first He said, “Ye have
both seen Me, and believe not” ( ver. 36 ); but here,
“There are some of you that believe
not.”
For He
“knew from the beginning who they were that believed not,
and who should betray Him.”
Ver. 65.
“And He said, Therefore said I unto you, that no man can
come unto Me except it were given unto Him from above
from My Father.”
[3.] Here
the Evangelist intimates to us the voluntary character of
the Dispensation, and His endurance of evil. Nor is the,
“from the beginning,” put here without a cause, but that
thou mayest be aware of His foreknowledge from the first,
and that before the words were uttered, and not after the
men had murmured nor after they had been offended, He
knew the traitor, but before, which was an attribute of
Godhead. Then He added, “Except it be given him from
above from My Father”; thus persuading them to deem God
His Father, not Joseph, and showing them that it is no
common thing to believe in Him. As though He had said,
“Unbelievers disturb Me not; trouble Me not, astonish Me
not. I know of old before they were created, I know to
whom the Father hath given to believe;” and do thou, when
thou hearest that “He hath given,” imagine not merely an
arbitrary distribution, ἀ ποκλήρωσιν
but that if any hath rendered himself worthy to receive
the gift, he hath received it.
Ver. 66.
“From that time many of His disciples went back, and
walked no more with Him.”
Rightly
hath the Evangelist said, not that they “departed,” but
that they “went back”; showing that they cut themselves
off from any increase in virtue, and that by separating
themselves they lost the faith which they had of
old. But this
was not the case with the twelve; wherefore He saith to
them,
Ver. 67.
“Will ye also go away?”
Again
showing that He needeth not their ministry and service,
and proving to them that it was not for this that He led
them about with Him. For how could He when He used such
expressions even to them? But why did He not praise them?
why did He not approve them? Both because He preserved
the dignity befitting a teacher, and also to show them
that they ought rather to be attracted by this mode of
dealing. For had He praised them, they might, supposing
that they were doing Him a favor, have had some human
feeling; but by showing them that He needed not their
attendance, He kept them to Him the more. And observe
with what prudence He spake. He said not, “Depart ye,”
(this would have been to thrust them from Him,) but asked
them a question, “Will ye also go away?” the expression
of one who would remove all force or compulsion, and who
wished not that they should be attached to Him through
any sense of shame, but with a sense of favor. By not
openly accusing, but gently glancing at them, He showeth
what is the truly wise course under such circumstances.
But we feel differently; with good reason, since we do
everything holding fast our own honor, and therefore
think that our estate is lowered by the departure of
those who attend on us. But He neither flattered nor
repulsed them, but asked them a question. Now this was
not the act of one despising them, but of one wishing
them not to be restrained by force and compulsion: for to
remain on such terms is the same as to depart. What then
saith Peter?
Ver. 68,
69. “To whom shall we go? Thou hast the words of eternal
life. And we believe and are sure that Thou art the
Christ, the Son of the living
God.”
Seest
thou that it was not the words that caused offense, but
the heedlessness, and sloth, and wrong-mindedness of the
hearers? For even had He not spoken, they would have been
offended, and would not have ceased to be ever anxious
about bodily food, ever nailed to earth. Besides, the
disciples heard at the same time with the others, yet
they declared an opinion contrary to theirs, saying, “To
whom shall we go?” An expression indicating much
affection, for it shows that their Teacher al. “Christ.”
was more precious to them than anything, than father or
mother, or any possessions, or, “anything that is.” and
that if they withdrew from Him, they had not then whither
to flee. Then lest it should seem that he had said, “to
whom shall we go?” because there were none that would
receive them, he straightway added, “Thou hast the words
of eternal life.”
For the Jews listened carnally, and with human
reasonings, but the disciples spiritually, and committing
all to faith. Wherefore
Christ said, “The words which I have spoken unto you are
spirit”; that is, “do not suppose that the teaching of My
words is subject to the rule of material consequences, or
to the necessity of created things. Things spiritual are
not of this nature, nor endure to submit to the laws of
earth.” This also Paul declareth, saying, “Say not in
thine heart, Who shall ascend into heaven? (that is, to
bring Christ down;) or, Who shall descend into the deep?
(that is, to bring up Christ again from the dead.”) (
Rom. x. 6, 7.)
“Thou
hast the words of eternal life.” These men already
admitted the Resurrection, and all the apportionment or,
“rest,” ληξιν which shall be there. And observe the
brotherly and affectionate man, how he maketh answer for
all the band. For he said not, “I know,” but, “We know.”
Or rather, observe how he goes to the very words of his
Teacher, not speaking as did the Jews. They said, “This
is the son of Joseph”; but he said, “Thou art the Christ,
the Son of the living God”; and “Thou hast the words of
eternal life”; having perhaps heard Him say, al. “often
say.” “He that believeth on Me “Him (the Son),” N.T. hath
eternal life, and I will raise him up at the last day.”
For he showed that he retained all that had been said, by
recalling the very words. What then did Christ? He
neither praised nor expressed admiration of Peter, though
He had elsewhere done so; but what saith He?
Saint John's words here give us a view of how he
interpreted this passage of Sacred Scripture. There are
those who try and relate this text to only Christ as God
being crucified and not being related to the Eucharist or
the action that Our Lord told us to do in remembrance of
Him. To remove all doubt as to the reference of Saint
John we move over to his commentary on
1st
Corinthians
11:24-27. Once again I have bold typed and underlined
certain passages to pay attention to. I have taken the
passage of Scripture from DRBO.Org which is the Douay
Rheims Bible online.
24 And giving
thanks, broke, and said: Take ye, and eat: this is my
body, which shall be delivered for you: this do for the
commemoration of me. 25 In like manner also the chalice,
after he had supped, saying: This chalice is the new
testament in my blood: this do ye, as often as you shall
drink, for the commemoration of me.
26 For as often as you shall eat this bread, and drink
the chalice, you shall show the death of the Lord, until
he come. 27 Therefore whosoever shall eat this bread, or
drink the chalice of the Lord unworthily, shall be guilty
of the body and of the blood of the Lord.
Ver. 24.
“And when He had given thanks, He brake it, and said,
Take, eat: this is My Body, which is broken for you: this
do in remembrance of me.”
Wherefore
doth he here make mention of the
Mysteries? Because
that argument was very necessary to his present purpose.
As thus: “Thy Master,” saith he, “counted all worthy of
the same Table, though it be very awful and far exceeding
the dignity of all: but thou considerest them to be
unworthy even of thine own, small and mean as we see it
is; and while they have no advantage over thee in
spiritual things, thou robbest them in the temporal
things. For neither are these thine
own.”
However,
he doth not express himself thus, to prevent his
discourse becoming harsh: but he frames it in a gentler
form, saying, that “the Lord Jesus in the night in which
He was betrayed, took bread.”
And
wherefore doth he remind us of the time, and of that
evening, and of the betrayal? Not indifferently nor
without some reason, but that he might exceedingly fill
them with compunction, were it but from consideration of
the time. For even if one be a very stone, yet when he
considers that night, how He was with His disciples,
“very heavy,” how He was betrayed, how He was bound, how
He was led away, how He was judged, how He suffered all
the rest in order, he becometh softer than wax, and is
withdrawn from earth and all the pomp of this world.
Therefore he leads us to the remembrance of all those
things, by His time, and His table, and His betrayal,
putting us to shame and saying, “Thy Master gave up even
Himself for thee: and thou dost not even share a little
meat with thy brother for thine own
sake.”
But how
saith he, that “he received it from the Lord?” since
certainly he was not present then but was one of the
persecutors. That thou mayest know that the first table
had no advantage above that which cometh after it. For
even to-day also it is He who doeth all, and delivereth
it even as then.
And not
on this account only doth he remind us of that night, but
that he may also in another way bring us to compunction.
For as we particularly remember those words which we hear
last from those who are departing; and to their heirs if
they should venture to transgress their commands, when we
would put them to shame we say, “Consider that this was
the last word that your father uttered to you, and until
the evening when he was just about to breathe his last he
kept repeating these injunctions:” just so Paul,
purposing hence also to make his argument full of
awfulness; “Remember,” saith he, “that this was the last
mysterious rite μυσταγωγίαν. He
gave unto you, and in that night on which He was about to
be slain for us,
He commanded these things, and having delivered to
us that Supper after that He added nothing
further.”
Next also
he proceeds to recount the very things that were done,
saying, “He took bread, and, when He had given thanks, He
brake it, and said, Take, eat: this is My Body, which is
broken for you.” If therefore thou comest for a sacrifice
of thanksgiving, εὐχαριστία.
do thou on thy part nothing unworthy of that sacrifice:
by no means either dishonor thy brother, or neglect him
in his hunger; be not drunken, insult not the Church. As
thou comest giving thanks for what thou hast enjoyed: so
do thou thyself accordingly make return, and not cut
thyself off from thy neighbor.
Since Christ for His part gave equally to all,
saying, “Take, eat.” He gave His Body equally, but dost
not thou give so much as the common bread equally? Yea,
it was indeed broken for all alike, and became the Body
equally for all.
Ver. 25.
“In like manner also the cup after supper, saying, This
cup is the New Covenant in My Blood: this do, as oft as
ye drink of it, in remembrance of
Me.”
What
sayest thou? Art thou making a remembrance of Christ, and
despisest thou the poor and tremblest not? Why, if a son
or brother had died and thou wert making a remembrance of
him, thou wouldst have been smitten by thy conscience,
hadst thou not fulfilled the custom and invited the poor:
and when thou art making remembrance of thy Master, dost
thou not so much as simply give a portion of the
Table?
But what
is it which He saith, “This cup is the New Covenant?”
Because there was also a cup of the Old Covenant; the
libations and the blood of the brute
creatures.
For after sacrificing, they used to receive the
blood in a chalice and bowl and so pour it out. Since
then instead of the blood of beasts He brought in His own
Blood; lest any should be troubled on hearing this, He
reminds them of that ancient
sacrifice.
[6.]
Next, having spoken concerning that Supper, he
connects the things present with the things of that time,
that even as on that very evening and reclining on that
very couch and receiving from Christ himself this
sacrifice, so also now might men be affected; and he
saith,
Ver. 26.
“For as often as ye eat this bread, and drink this cup,
ye proclaim the Lord’s death till He
come.”
For as
Christ in regard to the bread and the cup said, “Do this
in remembrance of Me,” revealing to us the cause of the
giving of the Mystery, and besides what else He said,
declaring this to be a sufficient cause to ground our
religious fear upon:—(for when thou considerest what thy
Master hath suffered for thee, thou wilt the better deny
thyself:)—so also Paul saith here: “as often as ye eat ye
do proclaim His death.” And this is that Supper. Then
intimating that it abides unto the end, he saith, “till
He come.”
Ver. 27.
“Wherefore whosoever shall eat this bread and drink the
cup of the Lord unworthily, shall be guilty of the Body
and the Blood of the Lord.”
Why so?
Because he poured it out, and makes the thing appear a
slaughter and no longer a sacrifice. Much therefore as
they who then pierced Him, pierced Him not that they
might drink but that they might shed His blood: so
likewise doth he that cometh for it unworthily and reaps
no profit thereby. Seest thou how fearful he makes his
discourse, and inveighs against them very exceedingly,
signifying that if they are thus to drink,
they partake unworthily of the
elements τῶν
προκέιμενων.?
For how can it be other than unworthily when it is he who
neglects the hungry? who besides overlooking him puts him
to shame? Since if not giving to the poor casteth one out
of the kingdom, even though one should be a virgin; or
rather, not giving liberally: (for even those virgins too
had oil, only they had it not abundantly:) consider how
great the evil will prove, to have wrought so many
impieties?
“What
impieties?” say you. Why sayest thou, what
impieties?
Thou hast partaken of such a Table and when thou
oughtest to be more gentle than any and like the angels,
none so cruel as thou art become. Thou hast tasted the
Blood of the Lord, and not
even thereupon dost thou acknowledge thy brother. Of what
indulgence then art thou worthy? Whereas if even before
this thou hadst not known him,
thou oughtest to have come to the knowledge of him
from the Table; but now thou dishonorest the Table
itself; he
having been deemed worthy to partake of it and thou not
judging him worthy of thy meat. Hast thou not heard how
much he suffered who demanded the hundred pence? how he
made void the gift vouchsafed to him154154
ἐξενεχθεῖσαν,
perhaps “officially declared.”? Doth it not come into thy
mind what thou wert and what thou hast become? Dost thou
not put thyself in remembrance that if this man be poor
in possessions, thou wast much more beggarly in good
works, being full of ten thousand sins? Notwithstanding,
God delivered thee from all those and counted thee worthy
of such a Table: but thou art not even thus become more
merciful: therefore of course nothing else remaineth but
that thou shouldest be “delivered to the
tormentors.”
[7.]
These words let us also listen to, all of us, as many as
in this place approach with the poor to this holy Table,
but when we go out, do not seem even to have seen them,
but are both drunken and pass heedlessly by the hungry;
the very things whereof the Corinthians were accused. And
when is this done? say you. At all times indeed, but
especially at the festivals, where above all times it
ought not so to be.
Is it not so, that at such times, immediately
after Communion, drunkenness succeeds and contempt of the
poor? And having partaken of the Blood,
when it
were a time for thee to fast and watch, thou givest
thyself up to wine and revelling. And yet if thou hast by
chance made thy morning meal on any thing good, thou
keepest thyself lest by any other unsavory viand thou
spoil the taste of the former: and now that thou hast
been feasting on the Spirit thou bringest in a satanical
luxury.
Consider, when the Apostles partook of that holy
Supper, what they did: did they not betake themselves to
prayers and singing of hymns? to sacred
vigils? to that
long work of teaching, so full of all self-denial? For
then He related and delivered to them those great and
wonderful things, when Judas had gone out to call them
who were about to crucify Him. Hast thou not heard how
the three thousand also who partook of the Communion
continued even in prayer and teaching, not in drunken
feasts and revellings?
But thou before thou hast partaken fastest, that
in a certain way thou mayest appear worthy of the
Communion: but when thou hast partaken, and thou oughtest
to increase thy temperance, thou undoest
all. And yet
surely it is not the same to fast before this and after
it. Since although it is our duty to be temperate at both
times, yet most particularly after we have received the
Bridegroom. Before, that thou mayest become worthy of
receiving: after,
that thou mayest not be found unworthy of what
thou hast received.
“What
then? ought we to fast after receiving?” I say not this,
neither do I use any compulsion. This indeed were well:
however, I do not enforce this, but I exhort you not to
feast to excess. For if one never ought to live
luxuriously, and Paul showed this when he said, “she that
giveth herself to pleasure is dead while she liveth” (1
Tim. v. 6.); much more will she then be dead. And if
luxury be death to a woman, much more to a man: and if
this done at another time is fatal, much more after the
communion of the Mysteries. And dost thou having taken
the bread of life, do an action of death and not shudder?
Knowest thou not how great evils are brought in by
luxury? Unseasonable laughter, disorderly expressions,
buffoonery fraught with perdition, unprofitable trifling,
all the other things, which it is not seemly even to
name.
And these things thou doest when thou hast enjoyed
the Table of Christ, on that day on which thou hast been
counted worthy to touch His flesh with thy
tongue. What then
is to be done to prevent these things? Purify thy right
hand,
thy tongue, thy lips, which have become a
threshold for Christ to tread upon.
Consider
the time in which thou didst draw near and set forth a
material table, raise thy mind to that Table, to the
Supper of the Lord, to the vigil of the disciples, in
that night, that holy night. Nay, rather should one
accurately examine, this very present state is night. Let
us watch then with the Lord, let us be pricked in our
hearts with the disciples. It is the season of prayers,
not of drunkenness; ever indeed, but especially during a
festival. For a festival is therefore appointed, not that
we may behave ourselves unseemly, not that we may
accumulate sins, but rather that we may blot out those
which exist.
I know,
indeed, that I say these things in vain, yet will I not
cease to say them. For if ye do not all obey, yet surely
ye will not all disobey; or rather, even though ye should
all be disobedient, my reward will be greater, though
yours will be more condemnation. However, that it may not
be more, to this end I will not cease to speak. For
perchance, perchance, by my perseverance I shall be able
to reach you.
Wherefore
I beseech you that we do not this to condemnation; let us
nourish Christ, let us give Him drink, let us clothe Him.
These things are worthy of that Table. Hast thou heard
holy hymns? Hast thou seen a spiritual marriage? Hast
thou enjoyed a royal Table? Hast thou been filled with
the Holy Ghost? Hast thou joined in the choir of the
Seraphim? Hast thou become partaker of the powers above?
Cast not away so great a joy, waste not the treasure,
bring not in drunkenness, the mother of dejection, the
joy of the devil, the parent of ten thousand evils. For
hence is a sleep like unto death, and heaviness of head,
and disease, and obliviousness, and an image of dead
men’s condition. Further, if thou wouldst not choose to
meet with a friend when intoxicated, when thou hast
Christ within, durst thou, tell me, to thrust in upon Him
so great an excess?
But dost
thou love enjoyment? Then, on this very account cease
being drunken. For I, too, would have thee enjoy thyself,
but with the real enjoyment, that which never fadeth.
What then is the real enjoyment, ever blooming? Invite
Christ to sup ἐπ
ἂριστον.
(Rev. ii. 20.) with thee; give Him to partake of thine,
or rather of His own. This bringeth pleasure without
limit, and in its prime everlastingly. But the things of
sense are not such; rather as soon as they appear they
vanish away; and he that hath enjoyed them will be in no
better condition than he who hath not, or rather in a
worse. For the one is settled as it were in a harbor, but
the other exposes himself to a kind of torrent, a
besieging army of distempers, and hath not even any power
to endure the first swell of the sea.156156
τήν
ζάλην
ταύτην.
That
these things be therefore not so, let us follow after
moderation. For thus we shall both be in a good state of
body, and we shall possess our souls in security, and
shall be delivered from evils both present and future:
from which may we all be delivered, and attain unto the
kingdom, through the grace and mercy of our Lord Jesus
Christ, with Whom to the Father, together with the Holy
Spirit, be glory, power, and honor, now and ever, and
world without end. Amen.
Saint John in
this homily shows us how serious it is to receive Our
Lord worthily at the Table. He continually references
those who pretend to be living a holy life, and then
after receiving Our Lord they go and live like heathens.
This homily makes it very apparent that Saint John was
talking about receiving Christ literally in the flesh. He
speaks of the
tongue touching Our Lord, and our
lips and tongue being a threshold for our Lord. These two
passages of Sacred Scripture affirm what the Catholic
Church believes in the Eucharist as well as the Orthodox
Churches. Saint John wrote these homilies in the
4th
century. We
can see clearly that this was not a symbolic
interpretation, nor was it just referring to Christ
crucified in the flesh only, but to show that the Body
and Blood of Christ given on the cross was the same as
whom they were receiving at the Table. Saint John
references the Table of Our Lord, the Last Supper, and
how it become present to them as it was when Christ
instituted the Supper. Saint John also refers to eating
Our Lord's Flesh and drinking His Blood many times, and
nowhere does he refer to this as being anything symbolic.
Please read these homilies with intellectual honesty. I
believe these texts speak for themselves. For your
reference I have linked the websites below so you can
further research these texts for yourself.
Matthew James Bellisario 2008
Christian Ethereal
Library
Douay Rheims Bible
Online