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94Lecture XIV.

On the Words, And Rose Again from the Dead on the Third Day, and Ascended into the Heavens, and Sat on the Right Hand of the Father.

1 Cor. xv. 1–4

Now I make known unto you, brethren, the gospel which I preached unto you….that He hath been raised on the third day according to the Scriptures, &c.

Rejoice, O Jerusalem, and keep high festival, all ye that love Jesus; for He is risen.  Rejoice, all ye that mourned before16551655    Is. lxvi. 10., when ye heard of the daring and wicked deeds of the Jews:  for He who was spitefully entreated of them in this place is risen again.  And as the discourse concerning the Cross was a sorrowful one, so let the good tidings of the Resurrection bring joy to the hearers.  Let mourning be turned into gladness, and lamentation to joy:  and let our mouth be filled with joy and gladness, because of Him, who after His resurrection, said Rejoice16561656    Matt. xxviii. 9, “All hail.”  The usual greeting, Χαίρετε, “Rejoice.”.  For I know the sorrow of Christ’s friends in these past days; because, as our discourse stopped short at the Death and the Burial, and did not tell the good tidings of the Resurrection, your mind was in suspense, to hear what you were longing for.

Now, therefore, the Dead is risen, He who was free among the dead16571657    Ps. lxxxviii. 5Cast off among the dead (R.V.); Cast away (Margin)., and the deliverer of the dead.  He who in dishonour wore patiently the crown of thorns, even He arose, and crowned Himself with the diadem of His victory over death.

2.  As then we set forth the testimonies concerning His Cross, so come let us now verify the proofs of His Resurrection also:  since the Apostle before us16581658    ὁ παρών. i.e. in the text.  1 Cor. xv. 4. affirms, He was buried, and has been raised on the third day according to the Scriptures.  As an Apostle, therefore, has sent us back to the testimonies of the Scriptures, it is good that we should get full knowledge of the hope of our salvation; and that we should learn first whether the divine Scriptures tell us the season of His resurrection, whether it comes in summer or in autumn, or after winter; and from what kind of place the Saviour has risen, and what has been announced in the admirable Prophets as the name of the place of the Resurrection, and whether the women, who sought and found Him not, afterwards rejoice at finding Him; in order that when the Gospels are read, the narratives of these holy Scriptures may not be thought fables nor rhapsodies.

3.  That the Saviour then was buried, ye have heard distinctly in the preceding discourse, as Isaiah saith, His burial shall be in peace16591659    Is. lvii. 2He entereth into peace (R.V.).:  for in His burial He made peace between heaven and earth, bringing sinners unto God:  and, that the righteous is taken out of the way of unrighteousness16601660    Is. lvii. 1that the righteous is taken away from the evil to come (R.V.).:  and, His burial shall be in peace:  and, I will give the wicked for His burial16611661    Is. liii. 9they made His grave with the wicked (R.V.)..  There is also the prophecy of Jacob saying in the Scriptures, He lay down and couched as a lion, and as a lion’s whelp:  who shall rouse Him up16621662    Gen. xlix. 9.?  And the similar passage in Numbers, He couched, He lay down as a lion, and as a lion’s whelp16631663    Num. xxiv. 9..  The Psalm also ye have often heard, which says, And Thou hast brought me down into the dust of death16641664    Ps. xxii. 15..  Moreover we took note of the spot, when we quoted the words, Look unto the rock, which ye have hewn16651665    ἐπεσημειωσάμεθα, “noted for ourselves;” Middle Voice. Is. li. 1:  quoted in Cat. xiii. 35..  But now let the testimonies concerning His resurrection itself go with us on our way.

4.  First, then, in the 11th Psalm He says, For the misery of the poor, and the sighing of the needy, now will I arise, saith the Lord16661666    Ps. xii. 5..  But this passage still remains doubtful with some:  for He often rises up also in anger16671667    Ib. vii. 6:  “Arise, O Lord, in Thine anger., to take vengeance upon His enemies.

Come then to the 15th Psalm, which says distinctly:  Preserve Me, O Lord, for in Thee 95have I put my trust16681668    Ps. xvi. 1.:  and after this, their assemblies of blood will I not join, nor make mention of their names between my lips16691669    Ib. xvi. 4:  “their drink-offerings of blood will I not offer.”  The Psalmist abhors the bloody rites, and the very names of the false gods.; since they have refused me, and chosen Cæsar as their king16701670    John xix 15.  Cyril applies to the Jews what the Psalmist says concerning those that hasten after another god.:  and also the next words, I foresaw the Lord alway before Me, because He is at My right hand, that I may not be moved16711671    Ps. xvi. 8.:  and soon after Yea and even until night my reins chastened me16721672    Ib. 7.  Quoting from memory, Cyril transposes these sentences..  And after this He says most plainly, For Thou wilt not leave My soul in hell16731673    Ib. 10.  R.V. in Sheol, Sept. in Hades.; neither wilt Thou suffer Thine Holy One to see corruption.  He said not, neither wilt Thou suffer Thine Holy One to see death, since then He would not have died; but corruption, saith He, I see not, and shall not abide in death.  Thou hast made known to Me the ways of life16741674    Ib. 11..  Behold here is plainly preached a life after death.  Come also to the 29th Psalm, I will extol Thee, O Lord, for Thou hast lifted Me up, and hast not made My foes to rejoice over Me16751675    Ib. xxx. 1..  What is it that took place?  Wert thou rescued from enemies, or wert thou released when about to be smitten?  He says himself most plainly, O Lord, Thou hast brought up My soul from hell16761676    Ib. 3.  R.V. from Sheol, Sept. from Hades..  There he says, Thou wilt not leave, prophetically:  and here he speaks of that which is to take place as having taken place, Thou hast brought up.  Thou hast saved Me from them that go down into the pit16771677    Ib. 3..  At what time shall the event occur?  Weeping shall continue for the evening, and joy cometh in the morning16781678    Ib. 5.:  for in the evening was the sorrow of the disciplines, and in the morning the joy of the resurrection.

5.  But wouldst thou know the place also?  Again He saith in Canticles, I went down into the garden of nuts16791679    Cant. iv. 11.; for it was a garden where He was crucified16801680    John xix. 41.  See Index, Golgotha..  For though it has now been most highly adorned with royal gifts, yet formerly it was a garden, and the signs and the remnants of this remain.  A garden enclosed, a fountain sealed16811681    Cant. iv. 12., by the Jews who said, We remember that that deceiver said while He was yet alive, After three days, I will rise:  command, therefore, that the sepulchre be made sure; and further on, So they went, and made the sepulchre sure, sealing the stone with the guard16821682    Matt. xxvii. 63, 65..  And aiming well at these, one saith, and in rest Thou shalt judge them16831683    Job vii. 18:.…try him every moment.  Heb. עגרֶֶ “a wink,” as in Job xxi. 13, misinterpreted in both passages by the LXX. as meaning “rest.”.  But who is the fountain that is sealed, or who is interpreted as being a well-spring of living water16841684    Cant. iv. 15.?  It is the Saviour Himself, concerning whom it is written, For with Thee is the fountain of life16851685    Ps. xxxvi. 9..

6.  But what says Zephaniah in the person of Christ to the disciples?  Prepare thyself, be rising at the dawn:  all their gleaning is destroyed16861686    Zeph. iii. 7they rose early and corrupted all their doings.  The passage is wholly is understood by the Seventy, whom S. Cyril follows.:  the gleaning, that is, of the Jews, with whom there is not a cluster, nay not even a gleaning of salvation left; for their vine is cut down.  See how He says to the disciples, Prepare thyself, rise up at dawn:  at dawn expect the Resurrection.

And farther on in the same context of Scripture He says, Therefore wait thou for Me, saith the Lord, until the day of My Resurrection at the Testimony16871687    Zeph. iii. 8until the day that I rise up to the prey.  For דעלְ, to the prey, the LXX. seem to have read דע“לְְ, to the testimony.  About ten years before these Lectures were delivered, Eusebius (Life of Constantine, III. c. xxviii.), speaking of the discovery of the Holy Sepulchre, a.d. 326, calls it “a testimony to the Resurrection of the Saviour clearer than any voice could give.”.  Thou seest that the Prophet foresaw the place also of the Resurrection, which was to be surnamed “the Testimony.”  For what is the reason that this spot of Golgotha and of the Resurrection is not called, like the rest of the Churches, a Church, but a Testimony?  Why, perhaps, it was because of the Prophet, who had said, until the day of My Resurrection at the Testimony.

7.  And who then is this, and what is the sign of Him that rises?  In the words of the Prophet that follow in the same context, He says plainly, For then will I turn to the peoples a language16881688    Zeph. iii. 9a pure language.:  since, after the Resurrection, when the Holy Ghost was sent forth the gift of tongues was granted, that they might serve the Lord under one yoke16891689    Ib. to serve him with one consent (Marg. shoulder)..  And what other token is set forth in the same Prophet, that they should serve the Lord under one yoke?  From beyond the rivers of Ethiopia they shall bring me offerings16901690    Ib. v. 10..  Thou knowest what is written in the Acts, when the Ethiopian eunuch came from beyond the rivers of Ethiopia16911691    Acts viii. 27..  When therefore the Scriptures tell both the time and the peculiarity of the place, when they tell also the signs which followed the Resurrection, have thou henceforward a firm faith in the Resurrection, and let no one stir thee from confessing Christ risen from the dead16921692    2 Tim. ii. 8..

8.  Now take also another testimony in the 9687th Psalm, where Christ speaks in the Prophets, (for He who then spoke came afterwards among us):  O Lord, God of My salvation, I have cried day and night before Thee, and a little, farther on, I became as it were a man without help, free among the dead16931693    Ps. lxxxviii. 1, 4, 5..  He said not, I became a man without help; but, as it were a man without help.  For indeed He was crucified not from weakness, but willingly and His Death was not from involuntary weakness.  I was counted with them that go down into the pit16941694    Ib. v. 4..  And what is the token?  Thou hast put away Mine acquaintance far from Me16951695    Ib. v. 8. (for the disciples have fled).  Wilt Thou shew wonders to the dead16961696    Ib. v. 10.?  Then a little while afterwards:  And unto Thee have I cried, O Lord; and in the morning shall my prayer come before Thee16971697    Ib. v. 13..  Seest thou how they shew the exact point of the Hour, and of the Passion and of the Resurrection?

9.  And whence hath the Saviour risen?  He says in the Song of Songs:  Rise up, come, My neighbour16981698    Cant. ii. 10Rise up, my love, my fair one, and come away.:  and in what follows, in a cave of the rock16991699    v. 14in the clefts of the rock.!  A cave of the rock He called the cave which was erewhile before the door of the Saviour’s sepulchre, and had been hewn out of the rock itself, as is wont to be done here in front of the sepulchres.  For now it is not to be seen, since the outer cave was cut away at that time for the sake of the present adornment.  For before the decoration of the sepulchre by the royal munificence, there was a cave in the front of the rock17001700    See Index, Sepulchre..  But where is the rock that had in it the cave?  Does it lie near the middle of the city, or near the walls and the outskirts?  And whether is it within the ancient walls, or within the outer walls which were built afterwards?  He says then in the Canticles:  in a cave of the rock, close to the outer wall17011701    Cant. ii. 14in the clefts of the rock, in the secret places of the stairs.  The Revised Version reads, in the covert of the steep place..

10.  At what season does the Saviour rise?  Is it the season of summer, or some other?  In the same Canticles immediately before the words quoted He says, The winter is past, the rain is past and gone17021702    Cant. ii. 11.  In παρῆλθεν, ἐπορεύθη ἑαυτῷ the LXX. have imitated the pleonastic use of ןֹל after verbs of motion, corresponding to our idiom “Go away with you,” and to the Dativus Ethicus in Greek and Latin.  See Gesenius Lexicon on this use of לְ, and Ewald, Introductory Grammar, § 217, l. 2.; the flowers appear on the earth; the time of the pruning is come17031703    Cant. ii. 12the singing of birds.  The Hebrew word (רימִזָ֯ means either “cutting,” as in the LXX. τομῆς, Symmachus κλαδεύσεως , and R.V. Marg. “pruning,” or as in A.V. “singing.”.  Is not then the earth full of flowers now, and are they not pruning the vines?  Thou seest how he said also that the winter is now past.  For when this month Xanthicus17041704    Xanthicus is the name of the sixth month in the Macedonian Calendar, corresponding nearly to the Jewish Nisan (Josephus, Antiq. II. xiv. 6), and to the latter part of Lent and Easter.  On the tradition that the Creation took place at this season, see S. Ambrose, Hexæmeron, I. c. 4, § 13. is come, it is already spring.  And this is the season, the first month with the Hebrews, in which occurs the festival of the Passover, the typical formerly, but now the true.  This is the season of the creation of the world:  for then God said, Let the earth bring forth herbage of grass, yielding seed after his kind and after his likeness17051705    Gen. i. 11grass, the herb yielding seed.
   The LXX. give an irregular construction,

   Βοτανὴν χόρτου σπεῖρον σπέρμα.
.  And now, as thou seest, already every herb is yielding seed.  And as at that time God made the sun and moon and gave them courses of equal day (and night), so also a few days since was the season of the equinox.

At that time God said, let us make man after our image and after our likeness17061706    Gen. i. 26.  “The ancient Church very accurately distinguished between εἰκών (image) and ὁμοίωσις (likeness), and the Greek Church does the same in its Confession.  The latter phrase expresses man’s destination, which is not to be regarded as carried out at the moment of creation.  (Dorner, System of Christian Doctrine, E. Tr. II. p. 78).  The image lies in the permanent capacities of man’s nature (Gen. ix. 6; 1 Cor. xi. 7; Jas. iii. 9), the likeness in their realisation in moral conformity with God (ὁμοήθειαν Θεοῦ, Ignatius, Magnes vi).  “The image of God is a comprehensive thing.…To this belongs man’s intellective power, his liberty of will, his dominion over the other creatures flowing from the two former.  These make up the τὸ οὐσιῶδες, that part of that divine image which is natural and essential to man, and consequently can never be wholly blotted out, defaced, or extinguished, but still remains even in man fallen.  But beside these the Church of God hath ever acknowledged, in the first man, certain additional ornaments, and as it were complements of the divine image, such as immortality, grace, holiness, righteousness, whereby man approached more nearly to the similitude and likeness of God.  These were (if I may so speak) the lively colours wherein the grace, the beauty, and lustre of the divine image principally consisted; these colours faded, yea, were defaced and blotted out by man’s transgression.  (Bull, The State of Man before the Fall, Vol. ii. p. 114, Ox.).  Cf. Iren. (V. vi. § 1; xvi. § 2); Tertullian (de Baptismo, c. 5); Clem. Alex. (Exhort. c. 12); Origen (c. Cels. IV. 30)..  And the image he received, but the likeness through his disobedience he obscured.  At the same season then in which he lost this the restoration also took place.  At the same season as the created man through disobedience was cast out of Paradise, he who believed was through obedience brought in.  Our Salvation then took place at the same season as the Fall:  when the flowers appeared, and the pruning was come.

11.  A garden was the place of His Burial, and a vine that which was planted there:  and He hath said, I am the vine17071707    John xv. 1.  The Benedictine Editor has a different punctuation:  “and the vine which was planted there hath said, And I am the Vine.”!  He was planted therefore in the earth in order that the curse which came because of Adam might be rooted out.  The earth was condemned to thorns and thistles:  the true Vine sprang up out of the earth, that the saying might be fulfilled, Truth sprang up out of the earth, and righteousness 97looked down from heaven17081708    Ps. lxxxv. 11..  And what will He that is buried in the garden say?  I have gathered My myrrh with My spices:  and again, Myrrh and aloes, with all chief spices17091709    Cant. v. 1; iv. 14.  Compare Cat. xiii. 32..  Now these are the symbols of the burying; and in the Gospels it is said, The women came unto the sepulchre bringing the spices which they had prepared17101710    Luke xxiv. 1.:  Nicodemus also bringing a mixture of myrrh and aloes17111711    John xix. 39..  And farther on it is written, I did eat My bread with My honey17121712    Cant. vi. 1my honeycomb with my honey.:  the bitter before the Passion, and the sweet after the Resurrection.  Then after He had risen He entered through closed doors:  but they believed not that it was He:  for they supposed that they beheld a spirit17131713    Luke xxiv. 37..  But He said, Handle Me and see.  Put your fingers into the print of the nails, as Thomas required.  And while they yet believed not for joy, and wondered, He said unto them, Have ye here anything to eat?  And they gave Him a piece of a broiled fish and honeycomb17141714    Ib. v. 41..  Seest thou how that is fulfilled, I did eat My bread with My honey.

12.  But before He entered through the closed doors, the Bridegroom and Suitor17151715    ὁ θεραπευτής.  In connexion with “Bridegroom,” and “Him whom my soul loveth” the meaning “Suitor” is more appropriate than “Physician.” of souls was sought by those noble and brave women.  They came, those blessed ones, to the sepulchre, and sought Him Who had been raised, and the tears were still dropping from their eyes, when they ought rather to have been dancing with joy for Him that had risen.  Mary came seeking Him, according to the Gospel, and found Him not:  and presently she heard from the Angels, and afterwards saw the Christ.  Are then these things also written?  He says in the Song of Songs, On my bed I sought Him whom my soul loved.  At what season?  By night on my bed I sought Him Whom my soul loved:  Mary, it says, came while it was yet dark.  On my bed I sought Him by night, I sought Him, and I found Him not17161716    Cant. iii. 1; John xx. 1..  And in the Gospels Mary says, They have taken away my Lord, and I know not where they have laid Him17171717    John xx. 13..  But the Angels being then present cure their want of knowledge; for they said, Why seek ye the living among the dead17181718    Luke xxiv. 5.?  He not only rose, but had also the dead with Him when He rose17191719    Matt. xxvii. 52..  But she knew not, and in her person the Song of Songs said to the Angels, Saw ye Him Whom my soul loved?  It was but a little that I passed from them (that is, from the two Angels), until I found Him Whom my soul loved.  I held Him, and would not let Him go17201720    Cant. iii. 3, 4..

13.  For after the vision of the Angels, Jesus came as His own Herald; and the Gospel says, And behold Jesus met them, saying, All hail! and they came and took hold of His feet17211721    Matt. xxviii. 9..  They took hold of Him, that it might be fulfilled, I will hold Him, and will not let Him go.  Though the woman was weak in body, her spirit was manful.  Many waters quench not love, neither do rivers drown it17221722    Cant. viii. 7.; He was dead whom they sought, yet was not the hope of the Resurrection quenched.  And the Angel says to them again, Fear not ye; I say not to the soldiers, fear not, but to you17231723    Matt. xxviii. 5.  The emphatic ὑμεῖς is rightly interpreted by Cyril as distinguishing the women from the frightened sentinels.; as for them, let them be afraid, that, taught by experience, they may bear witness and say, Truly this was the Son of God17241724    Matt. xxvii. 54.; but you ought not to be afraid, for perfect love casteth out fear17251725    1 John iv. 18.Go, tell His disciples that He is risen17261726    Matt. xxviii. 7.; and the rest.  And they depart with joy, yet full of fear; is this also written? yes, the second Psalm, which relates the Passion of Christ, says, Serve the Lord with fear, and rejoice unto Him with trembling17271727    Ps. ii. 11.;—rejoice, because of the risen Lord; but with trembling, because of the earthquake, and the Angel who appeared as lightning.

14.  Though, therefore, Chief Priests and Pharisees through Pilate’s means sealed the tomb; yet the women beheld Him who was risen.  And Esaias knowing the feebleness of the Chief Priests, and the women’s strength of faith, says, Ye women, who come from beholding, come hither17281728    Isa. xxvii. 11The women shall come, and set them on fire.; for the people hath no understanding;—the Chief Priests want understanding, while women are eye-witnesses.  And when the soldiers came into the city to them, and told them all that had come to pass, they said to them, Say ye, His disciples came by night, and stole Him away while we slept17291729    Matt. xxviii. 13.?  Well therefore did Esaias foretell this also, as in their persons, But tell us, and relate to us another deceit17301730    Isa. xxx. 10..  He who rose again, is up, and for a gift of money they persuade the soldiers; but they persuade not the kings of our time.  The soldiers then surrendered the truth for silver; but the kings of this day have, in their piety, built this holy Church of the Resurrection of God our Saviour, inlaid with silver and wrought with gold, in which we are assembled17311731    Cf. Euseb. (Life of Const. III. 36.).; and embellished it with the treasures of silver and gold and precious stones.  And if this come to the governor’s ears, they say, we will persuade him17321732    Matt. xxxviii. 14..  Yea, though ye persuade the soldiers, yet ye will not persuade the world; for why, as Peter’s guards were condemned when he escaped out of the prison, were not 98they also who watched Jesus Christ condemned?  Upon the former, sentence was pronounced by Herod, for they were ignorant and had nothing to say for themselves; while the latter, who had seen the truth, and concealed it for money, were protected by the Chief Priests.  Nevertheless, though but a few of the Jews were persuaded at the time, the world became obedient.  They who hid the truth were themselves hidden; but they who received it were made manifest by the power of the Saviour, who not only rose from the dead, but also raised the dead with Himself.  And in the person of these the Prophet Osee says plainly, After two days will He revive us, and in the third day we shall rise again, and shall live in His sight17331733    Hos. vi. 2..

15.  But since the disobedient Jews will not be persuaded by the Divine Scriptures, but forgetting all that is written gainsay the Resurrection of Jesus, it were good to answer them thus:  On what ground, while you say that Eliseus and Elias raised the dead, do you gainsay the Resurrection of our Saviour?  Is it that we have no living witnesses now out of that generation to what we say?  Well, do you also bring forward witnesses of the history of that time.  But that is written;—so is this also written:  why then do ye receive the one, and reject the other?  They were Hebrews who wrote that history; so were all the Apostles Hebrews:  why then do ye disbelieve the Jews17341734    Instead of τοῖς ᾽Ιουδαίοις the Jerusalem Editor adopts from Cod. A. τοῖς ἰδίοις, “Your own countrymen,” a better reading in this place, if it had more support from mss.  The Latin in Milles has only “Cur igitur non creditis?”?  Matthew who wrote the Gospel wrote it in the Hebrew tongue17351735    The statements of Papias, Irenæus, Origen, Eusebius, Epiphanius, and Jerome, concerning a Hebrew Gospel of S. Matthew are ably discussed by Dr. Salmon (Introduction to N.T. Lect. X.), who comes to the conclusion that the Canonical Gospel was not translated from Hebrew (Aramaic), but originally written in Greek.; and Paul the preacher was a Hebrew of the Hebrews; and the twelve Apostles were all of Hebrew race:  then fifteen Bishops of Jerusalem were appointed in succession from among the Hebrews17361736    This statement may have been derived either from Eusebius (Hist. Eccl.. IV. c. 5), or from the “written records” (ἐγγράφων), from which he had learned that “until the siege of the Jews which took place under Adrian (135 a.d.), there were fifteen bishops in succession there, all of whom are said to have been of Hebrew descent.”  See the list of names, and the notes on the passage in this Series..  What then is your reason for allowing your own accounts, and rejecting ours, though these also are written by Hebrews from among yourselves.

16.  But it is impossible, some one will say, that the dead should rise; and yet Eliseus twice raised the dead,—when he was alive, and also when dead.  Do we then believe, that when Eliseus was dead, a dead man who was cast upon him and touched him, arose and is Christ not risen?  But in that case, the dead man who touched Eliseus, arose, yet he who raised him continued nevertheless dead:  but in this case both the Dead of whom we speak Himself arose, and many dead were raised without having even touched Him.  For many bodies of the Saints which slept arose, and they came out of the graves after His Resurrection, and went into the Holy City17371737    Matt. xxvii. 52, 53., (evidently this city, in which we now are17381738    The Archdeacon of Jerusalem, Photius Alexandrides, observes that “by this parenthetic explanation Cyril perhaps wished to refute the opinion which some favoured that these saints which slept and were raised entered into the heavenly Jerusalem.”  See Euseb. Dem. Evang. IV. 12.,) and appeared unto many.  Eliseus then raised a dead man, but he conquered not the world; Elias raised a dead man, but devils are not driven away in the name of Elias.  We are not speaking evil of the Prophets, but we are celebrating their Master more highly; for we do not exalt our own wonders by disparaging theirs; for theirs also are ours; but by what happened among them, we win credence for our own.

17.  But again they say, “A corpse then lately dead was raised by the living; but shew us that one three days dead can possibly arise, and that a man should be buried, and rise after three days.”  If we seek for Scripture testimony in proof of such facts, the Lord Jesus Christ Himself supplies it in the Gospels, saying, For as Jonas was three days and three nights in the whale’s belly; so shall the Son of man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth17391739    Matt. xii. 40..  And when we examine the story of Jonas, great is the force17401740    “ἐνέργεια [Forte ἐνάργεια, Edit.].”  This conjecture of the Benedictine Editor is recommended by the very appropriate sense “distinctness of the resemblance,” but seems to have no ms. authority. of the resemblance.  Jesus was sent to preach repentance; Jonas also was sent:  but whereas the one fled, not knowing what should come to pass; the other came willingly, to give repentance unto salvation.  Jonas was asleep in the ship, and snoring amidst the stormy sea; while Jesus also slept, the sea, according to God’s providence17411741    κατ᾽ οἰκονομίαν., began to rise, to shew in the sequel the might of Him who slept.  To the one they said, Why art thou snoring?  Arise, call upon thy God, that God may save us17421742    Jonah i. 6.; but in the other case they say unto the Master, Lord, save us17431743    Matt. viii. 25, 26..  Then they said, Call upon thy God; here they say, save Thou.  But the one says, Take me, and cast me into the sea; so shall the sea be calm unto you17441744    Jonah i. 12.; the other, Himself rebuked the winds and the sea, and there was a great calm17451745    Matt. viii. 25, 26..  The one was cast into a whale’s belly:  but the other of His own accord went down thither, where the invisible whale of death is.  And He went down of His own accord, that death 99might cast up those whom he had devoured, according to that which is written, I will ransom them from the power of the grave; and from the hand of death I will redeem them17461746    Hosea xiii. 14..

18.  At this point of our discourse, let us consider whether is harder, for a man after having been buried to rise again from the earth, or for a man in the belly of a whale, having come into the great heat of a living creature, to escape corruption.  For what man knows not, that the heat of the belly is so great, that even bones which have been swallowed moulder away?  How then did Jonas, who was three days and three nights in the whale’s belly, escape corruption?  And, seeing that the nature of all men is such that we cannot live without breathing, as we do, in air, how did he live without a breath of this air for three days?  But the Jews make answer and say, The power of God descended with Jonas when he was tossed about in hell.  Does then the Lord grant life to His own servant, by sending His power with him, and can He not grant it to Himself as well?  If that is credible, this is credible also; if this is incredible, that also is incredible.  For to me both are alike worthy of credence.  I believe that Jonas was preserved, for all things are possible with God17471747    Matt. xix. 26.; I believe that Christ also was raised from the dead; for I have many testimonies of this, both from the Divine Scriptures, and from the operative power even at this day17481748    Cf. Cat. iv. 13; xiii. 3. of Him who arose,—who descended into hell alone, but ascended thence with a great company; for He went down to death, and many bodies of the saints which slept arose17491749    Matt. xxvii. 52. through Him.

19.  Death was struck with dismay on beholding a new visitant descend into Hades, not bound by the chains of that place.  Wherefore, O porters of Hades, were ye scared at sight of Him?  What was the unwonted fear that possessed you?  Death fled, and his flight betrayed his cowardice.  The holy prophets ran unto Him, and Moses the Lawgiver, and Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob; David also, and Samuel, and Esaias, and John the Baptist, who bore witness when he asked, Art Thou He that should come, or look we for another17501750    Ib. xi. 3.?  All the Just were ransomed, whom death had swallowed; for it behoved the King whom they had proclaimed, to become the redeemer of His noble heralds.  Then each of the Just said, O death, where is thy victory?  O grave, where is thy sting17511751    1 Cor. xv. 55.  On the opinion that the Patriarchs, Prophets, and Righteous men were redeemed by Christ in Hades, compare Irenæus (Hær. I. xxvii. § 3; IV. xxvii. §2), Clem. Alex. (Stromat. vi. c. 6), Origen (In Genes. Hom. xv. § 5).?  For the Conqueror hath redeemed us.

20.  Of this our Saviour the Prophet Jonas formed the type, when he prayed out of the belly of the whale, and said, I cried in my affliction, and so on; out of the belly of hell17521752    Jonah ii. 2., and yet he was in the whale; but though in the whale, he says that he is in Hades; for he was a type of Christ, who was to descend into Hades.  And after a few words, he says, in the person of Christ, prophesying most clearly, My head went down to the chasms of the mountains17531753    Ib. v. 6:  (R.V.) I went down to the bottoms of the mountains:  the earth with her bars closed upon me for ever.; and yet he was in the belly of the whale.  What mountains then encompass thee?  I know, he says, that I am a type of Him, who is to be laid in the Sepulchre hewn out of the rock.  And though he was in the sea, Jonas says, I went down to the earth, since he was a type of Christ, who went down into the heart of the earth.  And foreseeing the deeds of the Jews who persuaded the soldiers to lie, and told them, Say that they stole Him away, he says, By regarding lying vanities they forsook their own mercy17541754    v. 8..  For He who had mercy on them came, and was crucified, and rose again, giving His own precious blood both for Jews and Gentiles; yet say they, Say that they stole Him away, having regard to lying vanities17551755    By lying vanities are meant in the original “vain idols.”.  But concerning His Resurrection, Esaias also says, He who brought up from the earth the great Shepherd of the sheep17561756    Isa. lxiii. 11; (R.V.), Where is He that brought them up out of the sea with the shepherds (Marg. shepherd) of His flock?  Cyril’s reading, ἐκ τῆς γῆς instead of ἐκ τῆς θαλάσσης is found in the Alexandrine ms. of the Septuagint.  Athanasius (Ad Serapion, Ep. i. 12) has the same reading and interpretation as Cyril.  By “the shepherds” are probably meant Moses and Aaron:  cf. Ps. lxxvii. 20Who leddest Thy people like sheep by the hand of Moses and Aaron.
   Heb. xiii. 20Now the God of peace, that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, that great Shepherd of the sheep, &c.  The word “great” is added by the Author of the Epistle to the Hebrews not by Isaiah.
; he added the word, great, lest He should be thought on a level with the shepherds who had gone before Him.

21.  Since then we have the prophecies, let faith abide with us.  Let them fall who fall through unbelief, since they so will; but thou hast taken thy stand on the rock of the faith in the Resurrection.  Let no heretic ever persuade thee to speak evil of the Resurrection.  For to this day the Manichees say, that, the resurrection of the Saviour was phantom-wise, and not real, not heeding Paul who says, Who was made of the seed of David according to the flesh; and again, By the resurrection of Jesus Christ our Lord from the dead17571757    Rom. i. 3, 4.  Cyril in his incomplete quotation of v. 4 makes ᾽Ιησοῦ Χριστοῦ τοῦ Κ. ἡμ. depend on ἀναστάσεως.  The right order and construction is given in R.V. who was declared to be the Son of God.…by the resurrection of the dead; even Jesus Christ our Lord..  And again he aims at them, and speaks thus, Say not in 100thine heart, who shall ascend into heaven; or who shall descend into the deep? that is, to bring up Christ from the dead17581758    Rom. x. 6, 7.; and in like manner warning as he has elsewhere written again, Remember Jesus Christ raised from the dead17591759    2 Tim. ii. 8.; and again, And if Christ be not risen, then is our preaching vain, and your faith also vain.  Yea, and we are found false witnesses of God; because we testified of God that He raised up Christ, whom He raised not up17601760    1 Cor. xv. 14, 15..  But in what follows he says, But now is Christ risen from the dead, the first fruits of them that are asleep17611761    Ib. v. 20.;—And He was seen of Cephas, then of the twelve; (for if thou believe not the one witness, thou hast twelve witnesses;) then He was seen of above five hundred brethren at once17621762    Ib. 5, 6.; (if they disbelieve the twelve, let them admit the five hundred;) after that He was seen of James17631763    Ib. 7.  This appearance of Christ to James is not mentioned in the Gospels.  Jerome (Catalog. Script. Eccles. p. 170 D) mentions a tradition that James had taken an oath that he would eat no bread from the hour in which he had drunk the Cup of the Lord, until he should see Him rising from the dead.  Wherefore the Saviour immediately after He had risen appeared to James and commanded him to eat., His own brother, and first Bishop of this diocese.  Seeing then that such a Bishop originally17641764    For τοιούτου τοίνυν ἐπισκόπου πρωτοτύπως ἰδόντος Codd. Roe, Casaub. have τοῦ τοίνυν πρωτοτύπου ἐπισκόπου ἰδόντος, which gives the better sense—“since therefore the primary Bishop saw, &c.”  On the meaning of παροικία, and the extent of a primitive Diocese, see Bingham. IX. c. 2. saw Christ Jesus when risen, do not thou, his disciple, disbelieve him.  But thou sayest that His brother James was a partial witness; afterwards He was seen also of me17651765    1 Cor. xv. 8. Paul, His enemy; and what testimony is doubted, when an enemy proclaims it?  “I, who was before a persecutor17661766    1 Tim. i. 13., now preach the glad tidings of the Resurrection.”

22.  Many witnesses there are of the Saviour’s resurrection.—The night, and the light of the full moon; (for that night was the sixteenth17671767    If the Crucifixion took place on the 14th of Nisan, the following night would begin the 15th, and the next night the 16th.;) the rock of the sepulchre which received Him; the stone also shall rise up against the face of the Jews, for it saw the Lord; even the stone which was then rolled away17681768    Cf. Cat. xiii. 39., itself bears witness to the Resurrection, lying there to this day.  Angels of God who were present testified of the Resurrection of the Only-begotten:  Peter and John, and Thomas, and all the rest of the Apostles; some of whom ran to the sepulchre, and saw the burial-clothes, in which He was wrapped before, lying there after the Resurrection; and others handled His hands and His feet, and beheld the prints of the nails; and all enjoyed together that Breath of the Saviour, and were counted worthy to forgive sins in the power of the Holy Ghost.  Women too were witnesses, who took hold of His feet, and who beheld the mighty earthquake, and the radiance of the Angel who stood by:  the linen clothes also which were wrapped about Him, and which He left when He rose;—the soldiers, and the money given to them; the spot itself also, yet to be seen;—and this house of the holy Church, which out of the loving affection to Christ of the Emperor Constantine of blessed memory, was both built and beautified as thou seest.

23.  A witness to the resurrection of Jesus is Tabitha also, who was in His name raised from the dead17691769    Acts ix. 41.; for how shall we disbelieve that Christ is risen, when even His Name raised the dead?  The sea also bears witness to the resurrection of Jesus, as thou hast heard before17701770    See § 17, above..  The drought of fishes also testifies, and the fire of coals there, and the fish laid thereon.  Peter also bears witness, who had erst denied Him thrice, and who then thrice confessed Him; and was commanded to feed His spiritual17711771    νοητά. sheep.  To this day stands Mount Olivet, still to the eyes of the faithful all but displaying Him Who ascended on a cloud, and the heavenly gate of His ascension.  For from heaven He descended to Bethlehem, but to heaven He ascended from the Mount of Olives17721772    St. Luke (xxiv. 50) describes the Ascension as taking place at Bethany, but the tradition, which Cyril follows, had long since fixed the scene on the summit of the Mount of Olives, a mile nearer to Jerusalem; and here the Empress Helena had built the Church of the Ascension (Eusebius, Life of Constantine, III. 43; Demonstr. Evang. VI. xviii. 26).  There is nothing in Cyril’s language to warrant the Benedictine Editor’s suggestion that he alludes to the legend, according to which the marks of Christ’s feet were indelibly impressed on the spot from which He ascended.  In the next generation St. Augustine seems to countenance the miraculous story (In Joh. Evang. Tract xlvii.):  “There are His footsteps, now adored, where last He stood, and whence He ascended into heaven.”  The supposed trace of one foot is still shewn on Mount Olivet; “the other having been removed by the Turks is now to be found in the Chapel of S. Thecla, which is in the Patriarch’s Palace” (Jerusalem Ed.).  Compare Stanley, Sinai and Palestine, c. xiv.; Dictionary of Bible, Olives Mount of.; at the former place beginning His conflicts among men, but in the latter, crowned after them.  Thou hast therefore many witnesses; thou hast this very place of the Resurrection; thou hast also the place of the Ascension towards the east; thou hast also for witnesses the Angels which there bore testimony; and the cloud on which He went up, and the disciples who came down from that place.

24.  The course of instruction in the Faith would lead me to speak of the Ascension also; but the grace of God so ordered17731773    ᾠκονόμησε.  In this word, as also in the phrase below, κατ᾽ οἰκονομίαν τῆς Θείας χάριτος, Cyril refers to the order of reading the Scriptures as part of a dispensation established by Divine grace. it, that thou heardest most fully concerning it, as far as our weakness allowed, yesterday, on the 101Lord’s day; since, by the providence of divine grace, the course of the Lessons17741774    ἀναγνωσμάτων a term including the portions of Scripture (περικοπαί) appointed for the Epistle and Gospel as well as the daily lessons from the Old and New Testaments. in Church included the account of our Saviour’s going up into the heavens17751775    The section Luke xxiv. 36–53, which in the Eastern Church is the Gospel for Ascension Day, is also one of the “eleven morning Gospels of the Resurrection (εὐαγγέλια ἀναστασιμὰ ἑωθινά), which were read in turn, one every Sunday at Matins.”  Dictionary of Chr. Antiq. “Lectionary.”  This Lecture being delivered on Monday, the Section in question had been read on the preceding day.; and what was then said was spoken principally for the sake of all, and for the assembled body of the faithful, yet especially for thy sake17761776    μάλιστα μὲν…ἐξαιρέτως δέ..  But the question is, didst thou attend to what was said?  For thou knowest that the words which come next in the Creed teach thee to believe in Him “Who rose again the third day, and ascended into Heaven, and sat down on the right hand of the Father.”  I suppose then certainly that thou rememberest the exposition; yet I will now again cursorily put thee in mind of what was then said.  Remember what is distinctly written in the Psalms, God is gone up with a shout1777