Discourse on ‘Behold, we are going up to Jerusalem, and the Son of Man will be delivered into the hands of sinners’
Homily for the Fifth Sunday of Great Lent
(Mark 10:32-45)
By Basil of Seleucia (mid-5th century)
Homily for the Fifth Sunday of Great Lent
(Mark 10:32-45)
By Basil of Seleucia (mid-5th century)
The interest of the listeners increases the anxiety of the tongue. The longing of the Church’s assembly for divine teaching increases my fear before the undertaking of speaking. Therefore, the Master, calming the fear of speech, cried out: “Blessed are those who speak into the ears of those who hear,” those who cast the seed of teaching into fertile soil and heap up good doctrines in the threshing floor of the soul. For it is worth laboring for this, hoping to reap the fruits of preaching.
And the Jews, on the one hand, avoided hearing even the prophecies, and the admonitions were also unwelcome to them, as we find written in the Prophets. For it says, “Lord, who has believed our report?” For this reason Jeremiah, seeking a reasonable excuse, put forward his youth: “I am young, and I do not know how to speak.” And Moses, when he was called to the leadership of the people, avoids the honor by accusing himself: “I am weak-voiced and slow of tongue.” The refusal of those sent exposes the disobedient character of the Jews. This race was always God-fighting, and opposed to divine benefactions. At one time they lamented the Egyptian slavery, and when they were delivered, they reviled the one who delivered them. They traversed the sea as though it were a highway; with dusty feet they journeyed upon the deep, and they attributed the benefaction to the calf. Heaven again sent down the flakes of manna, and they below blasphemed, crying out: “Our soul has become utterly dry because of this hollow bread.” A rock followed that flooded the desert with torrents, and a single strike of the rod brought forth many springs of waters. But not even this purified their ungrateful tongue, and despite this enjoyment they said: “When he struck the rock and waters flowed and torrents overflowed, can he also give bread?” Again, when they did not know the way, a cloud journeyed with them, removing ignorance and preventing the burning of the rays. A pillar of fire gave light by night, but they, dishonoring the one who honored them with miracles, said: “Let us appoint leaders and return to Egypt.” Clouds of birds were brought by the wind, preparing for them a meal as for foreign travelers. For forty years their garments, though worn, remained new, overcoming time and nature, and along with the garments, their footwear also remained new out of necessity, to endure the forty years of journeying. When they fought, the course of the elements of nature allied with them, when the sun, taught to delay, hastened the victory by lengthening the duration of the day, so as to make them victors in a single day. By lengthening its course, it shortened the time of the battle — though perhaps it also increased the duration of time — so as not to grieve those already wearied by delaying the victory. After the sun, the stream of the Jordan also stopped, and its current was restrained, yielding them a place to walk. The natural law of flow stood still, awaiting their passage. The kings heard and were troubled; the cities submitted of themselves. Jericho was encircled and cast off the circle of its wall, as if avoiding its inhabitants and hastening toward the Israelites. What was the gratitude for all these things? “Let us appoint leaders and return to Egypt.”







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