Chapter 16
33. Now if any one says that we need not direct men how or what they should
teach, since the Holy Spirit makes them teachers, he may as well say that we
need not pray, since our Lord says, "Your Father knoweth what things ye have
need of before ye ask Him;" or that the Apostle Paul should not have given
directions to Timothy and Titus as to how or what they should teach others.
And these three apostolic epistles ought to be constantly before the eyes of
every one who has obtained the position of a teacher in the Church. In the
First Epistle to Timothy do we not read: "These things command and teach?"
What these things are, has been told previously. Do we not read there: "Rebuke
not an elder, but entreat him as a father?" Is it not said in the Second
Epistle: "Hold fast the form of sound words,; which thou hast heard of me?"
And is he not there told: "Study to show thyself approved unto God, a workman
that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth?" And in
the same place: "Preach the word; be instant in season, out of season;
reprove, rebuke, exhort, with all longsuffering and doctrine." And so in the
Epistle to Titus, does he not say that a bishop ought to "hold fast the
faithful word as he has been taught, that he may be able by sound doctrine
both to exhort and to convince the gainsayers?" There, too, he says: "But
speak thou the things which become sound doctrine: that the aged men be
sober," and so on. And there, too: "These things speak, and exhort, and rebuke
with all authority. Let no man despise thee. Put them in mind to be subject to
principalities and powers," and so on. What then are we to think? Does the
apostle in any way contradict himself, when, though he says that men are made
teachers by the operation of the Holy Spirit, he yet himself gives them
directions how and what they should teach? Or are we to understand, that
though the duty of men to teach even the teachers does not cease when the Holy
Spirit is given, yet that neither is he who planteth anything, nor he who
watereth, but God who giveth the increase? Wherefore though holy men be our
helpers, or even holy angels assist us, no one learns aright the things that
pertain to life with God, until God makes him ready to learn from Himself,
that God who is thus addressed in the psalm: "Teach me to do Thy will; for
Thou art my God." And so the same apostle says to Timothy himself, speaking,
of course, as teacher to disciple: "But continue thou in the things which thou
hast learned and hast been assured of, knowing of whom thou hast learned
them." For as the medicines which men apply to the bodies of their fellow-men
are of no avail except God gives them virtue (who can heal without their aid,
though they cannot without His), and yet they are applied; and if it be done
from a sense of duty, it is esteemed a work of mercy or benevolence; so the
aids of teaching, applied through the instrumentality of man, are of advantage
to the soul only when God works to make them of advantage, who could give the
gospel to man even without the help or agency of men.