21. Moreover, if discourse
must be bestowed upon any, and this so take up the speaker that he
have not time to work with his hands, are all in the monastery able
to hold discourse unto brethren which come unto them from another
kind of life, whether it be to expound the divine lessons, or
concerning any questions which may be put, to reason in an
wholesome manner? Then since not all have the ability, why upon
this pretext do all want to have nothing else to do? Although even
if all were able, they ought to do it by turns; not only that the
rest might not be taken up from necessary works, but also because
it sufficeth that to many hearers there be one speaker. To come now
to the Apostle; how could he find time to work with his hands,
unless for the bestowing of the word of God he had certain set
times? And indeed God hath not willed this either to be hidden from
us. For both of what craft he was a workman, and at what times he
was taken up with dispensing the Gospel, holy Scripture has not
left untold. Namely, when the day of his departure caused him to be
in haste, being at Troas, even on the first day of the week when
the brethren were assembled to break bread, such was his
earnestness, and so necessary the disputation, that his discourse
was prolonged even until midnight,25432543 as though it had slipped from
their minds that on that day it was not a fast:25442544 but when he was making longer stay
in any place and disputing daily, who can doubt that he had certain
hours set apart for this office? For at Athens, because he had
there found most studious inquirers of things, it is thus written
of him: “He disputed therefore with the Jews in the synagogue,
and with the Gentile inhabitants25452545 in the market every day to those
who were there.”25462546 Not, namely, in the synagogue
every day, for there it was his custom to discourse on the sabbath;
but “in the market,” saith he, “every day;” by reason,
doubtless, of the studiousness of the Athenians. For so it follows:
“Certain however of the Epicurean and Stoic philosophers
conferred with him.” And a little after, it says: “Now the
Athenians and strangers which were there spent their time in
nothing else 515but either to tell or to hear
some new thing.” Let us suppose him all those days that he was at
Athens not to have worked: on this account, indeed, was his need
supplied from Macedonia, as he says in the second to the
Corinthians:25472547 though in
fact he could work both at other hours and of nights, because he
was so strong in both mind and body. But when he had gone from
Athens, let us see what says the Scripture: “He disputed,”
saith it, “in the synagogue every sabbath;”25482548 this at Corinth. In Troas,
however, where through necessity of his departure being close at
hand, his discourse was protracted until midnight, it was the first
day of the week, which is called the Lord’s Day: whence we
understand that he was not with Jews but with Christians; when also
the narrator himself saith they were gathered together to break
bread. And indeed this same is the best management, that all things
be distributed to their times and be done in order, lest becoming
ravelled in perplexing entanglements, they throw our human mind
into confusion.