E.
But as a thoughtful man, a pensive, a considerative man, that stands
still for a while with his eyes fixed upon the ground before his feet,
when he casts up his head, hath presently, instantly the sun or the
heavens for his object; he sees not a tree, nor a house, nor a steeple
by the way, but as soon as his eye is departed from the earth where it
was long fixed, the next thing he sees is the sun or the heavens; — so
when Moses had fixed himself long upon the consideration of his own
insufficiency for this service, when he took his eye from that low
piece of ground, himself, considered as he was then, he fell upon no
tree, no house, no steeple, no such consideration as this — God may
endow me, improve me, exalt me, enable me, qualify me with faculties
fit for this service, but his first object was that which presented an
infallibility with it, Christ Jesus himself, the Messias himself, &c.
Beautifully imagined, and happily applied.
Ib.
p. 40. B.
That germen Jehovæ, as the prophet Esay calls Christ, that
offspring of Jehova, that bud, that blossom, that fruit of God
himself, the Son of God, the Messiah, the Redeemer, Christ Jesus,
grows upon every tree in this paradise, the Scripture; for Christ was
the occasion before, and is the consummation after, of all Scripture.
If this were meant to the exclusion or neglect of the primary sense, — if
we are required to believe that the sacred writers themselves had such
thoughts present to their minds, — it would, doubtless, throw the doors
wide open to every variety of folly and fanaticism. But it may admit of
a safe, sound, and profitable use, if we consider the Bible as one work,
intended by the Holy Spirit for the edification of the Church in all
ages, and having, as such, all its parts synoptically interpreted, the
eldest by the latest, the last by the first, and the middle by both.
Moses, or David, or Jeremiah (we might in this view affirm) meant so and
so, according to the context, and the light under which, and the
immediate or proximate purposes for which, he wrote: but we, who command the whole scheme of the great dispensation, may see a higher and
deeper sense, of which the literal meaning was a symbol or type; and
this we may justifiably call the sense of the spirit.
Ib.
p. 41. B.
So in our liturgy we stand up at the profession of the creed
thereby to declare to God and his Church our readiness to stand to,
and our readiness to proceed in, that profession.
Another Church might sit down, thereby denoting a resolve to abide in
this profession. These things are indifferent; but charity, love of
peace, and on indifferent points to prefer another's liking to our own,
and to observe an order once established for order's sake, — these are
not indifferent.
Ib.
p. 42. C.
This paragraph is excellent. Alas! how painfully applicable it is to
some of our day!
Ib.
p. 46. C.
Howsoever all intend that this is a name that denotes essence,
being: Being is the name of God, and of God only.
Rather, I should say, 'the eternal antecedent of being;'
I that shall
be in that I will to be
; the absolute will; the ground of being; the
self-affirming
actus purissimus
.
Serm. VI Isaiah liii. 1. p. 52.
A noble sermon in thought and diction.
Ib.
p. 59. E.
Therefore we have a clearer light than this; firmiorem propheticum
sermonem, says St. Peter; we have a more sure word of the
prophets; that is, as St. Augustine reads that place,
clariorem, a more manifest, a more evident, declaration in the
prophets, than in nature, of the will of God towards man, &c.
The sense of this text, as explained by the context, seems to me
this; — that, in consequence of the fulfilment of so large a proportion
of the oracles, the Christian Church has not only the additional light
given by the teaching and miracles of Christ, but even the light
vouchsafed to the old Church (the prophetic) stronger and clearer.
Ib.
p. 60. A.
He spake personally, and he spake aloud, in the declaration of
miracles; but quis credidit auditui Filii? Who believed even
his report? Did they not call his preaching sedition, and call his
miracles conjuring? Therefore, we have a clearer, that is, a nearer
light than the written Gospel, that is, the Church.
True; yet he who should now venture to assert this truth, or even
contend for a co-ordinateness of the Church and the Written Word, must
bear to be thought a semi-Papist, an
ultra
high-Churchman. Still
the truth is the truth.
Serm. VII. John x. 10. p. 62.
Since the Revolution in 1688 our Church has been chilled and starved too
generally by preachers and reasoners Stoic or Epicurean; — first, a sort
of pagan morality was substituted for the righteousness by faith, and
latterly, prudence or Paleyanism has been substituted even for morality.
A Christian preacher ought to preach Christ alone, and all things in him
and by him. If he find a dearth in this, if it seem to him a
circumscription, he does not know Christ, as the
pleroma
, the
fullness. It is not possible that there should be aught true, or seemly,
or beautiful, in thought, will, or deed, speculative or practical, which
may not, and which ought not to, be evolved out of Christ and the faith
in Christ; — no folly, no error, no evil to be exposed, or warred
against, which may not, and should not, be convicted and denounced from
its contrariancy and enmity to Christ. To the Christian preacher Christ
should be in all things, and all things in Christ: he should abjure
every argument that is not a link in the chain, of which Christ is the
staple and staple ring.
Ib.
p. 64.
In this page Donne passes into rhetorical extravagance, after the manner
of too many of the Fathers from Tertullian to Bernard.
Ib.
p. 66. A.
Some of the later authors in the Roman Church ... have noted (in
several of the Fathers) some inclinations towards that opinion,
that the devil retaining still his faculty of free-will, is therefore
capable of repentance, and so of benefit by this coming of Christ.
If this be assumed, — namely, the free-will of the devil, — as a
consequence would indeed follow his capability of repenting, and the
possibility that he may repent. But then he is no longer what we mean by
the devil; he is no longer the evil spirit, but simply a wicked soul.
Ib.
p. 68. C.
As though God had said Qui sum, my name is I am; yet in
truth it is Qui ero, my name is I shall be.
Nay,
I will or shall be in that I will to be
. I am that only one
who is self-originant,
causa sui
, whose will must be contemplated
as antecedent in idea to or deeper than his own co-eternal being. But
'antecedent,' 'deeper,' &c. are mere
vocabula impropria
, words of
accommodation, that may suggest the idea to a mind purified from the
intrusive phantoms of space and time, but falsify and extinguish the
truth, if taken as adequate exponents.
Ib.
p. 69. C.
We affirm that it is not only as impious and irreligious a thing, but
as senseless and as absurd a thing, to deny that the Son of God hath
redeemed the world, as to deny that God hath created the world.
A bold but a true saying. The man who, cannot see the redemptive agency
in the creation has but a dim apprehension of the creative power.
Ib.
D. E. p. 70. A.
These paragraphs exhibit a noble instance of giving importance to the
single words of a text, each word by itself a pregnant text. Here, too,
lies the excellence, the imitable, but alas! unimitated, excellence of
our divines from Elizabeth to William III.
Ib.
D.
, that our clergy did but know and see that their tithes and glebes
belong to them as officers and functionaries of the nationalty, — as
clerks, and not exclusively as theologians, and not at all as ministers
of the Gospel; — but that they are likewise ministers of the Church of
Christ, and that their claims and the powers of that Church are no more
alienated or affected by their being at the same time the established
clergy, than they are by the common coincidence of being justices of the
peace, or heirs to an estate, or stockholders!
The Romish divines
placed the Church above the Scriptures; our present divines give it no
place at all.
But Donne and his great contemporaries had not yet learnt to be afraid
of announcing and enforcing the claims of the Church, distinct from, and
coordinate with, the Scriptures. This is one evil consequence, though
most un-necessarily so, of the union of the Church of Christ with the
national Church, and of the claims of the Christian pastor and preacher
with the legal and constitutional rights and revenues of the officers of
the national clerisy. Our clergymen in thinking of their legal rights,
forget those rights of theirs which depend on no human law at all.
Ib.
p. 71. A.
This is the difference between God's mercy and his judgments, that
sometimes his judgments may he plural, complicated, enwrapped in one
another; but his mercies are always so, and cannot be otherwise.
A just sentiment beautifully expressed.
Ib.
C.
Whereas the Christian religion is, as Gregory Nazianzen says,
simplex et nuda, nisi prave in artem difficillimam
converteretur: it is a plain, an easy, a perspicuous truth.
A religion of ideas, spiritual truths, or truth-powers, — not of notions
and conceptions, the manufacture of the understanding, — is therefore
simplex et nuda
, that is, immediate; like the clear blue heaven
of Italy, deep and transparent, an ocean unfathomable in its depth, and
yet ground all the way. Still as meditation soars upwards, it meets the
arched firmament with all its suspended lamps of light. O, let not the
simplex et nuda
of Gregory be perverted to the Socinian, 'plain
and easy for the meanest understandings!' The truth in Christ, like the
peace of Christ, passeth all understanding. If ever there was a
mischievous misuse of words, the confusion of the terms, 'reason' and
'understanding,' 'ideas' and 'notions,' or 'conceptions,' is most
mischievous; a Surinam toad with a swarm of toadlings sprouting out of
its back and sides.
Serm. VIII. Mat. v. 16. p. 77.
Ib.
C.
Either of the names of this day were text enough for a sermon,
Purification or Candlemas. Join we them together, and raise we only
this one note from both, that all true purification is in the light,
&c.
The illustration of the name of the day contained in the first two or
three paragraphs of this sermon would be censured as quaint by our
modern critics. Would to heaven we had but even a few preachers capable
of such quaintnesses!
Ib.
D.
Every good work hath faith for the root; but every faith hath not good
works for the fruit thereof.
Faith, that is, fidelity — the fealty of the finite will and
understanding to the reason,
the light that lighteth every man that
cometh into the world
, as one with, and representative of, the
absolute will, and to the ideas or truths of the pure reason, the
supersensuous truths, which in relation to the finite will, and as meant
to determine the will, are moral laws, the voice and dictates of the
conscience; — this faith is properly a state and disposition of the will,
or rather of the whole man, the I, or finite will, self-affirmed. It is
therefore the ground, the root, of which the actions, the works, the
believings, as acts of the will in the understanding, are the trunk and
the branches. But these must be in the light. The disposition to see
must have organs, objects, direction, and an outward light. The three
latter of these our Lord gives to his disciples in this blessed sermon
on the Mount, preparatorily, and, as Donne rightly goes on to observe,
presupposing faith as the ground and root. Indeed the whole of this and
the next page affords a noble specimen, how a minister of the Church of
England should preach the doctrine of good works, purified from the
poison of the practical Romish doctrine of works, as the mandioc is
evenomated by fire, and rendered safe, nutritious, a bread of life. To
Donne's exposition the heroic Solifidian, Martin Luther himself, would
have subscribed, hand and heart.
Ib.
p. 78. C.
And therefore our latter men of the Reformation are not to be blamed,
who for the most, pursuing St. Cyril's interpretation, interpret this
universal light that lighteneth every man to be the light of
nature.
The error here, and it is a grievous error, consists in the word
'nature.' There is, there can be, no light of nature: there may be a
light in or upon nature; but this is the light that shineth down into
the darkness, that is, the nature, and the darkness comprehendeth it
not. All ideas, or spiritual truths, are supernatural.
Ib.
p. 79.
Throughout this page, Donne rather too much plays the rhetorician. If
the faith worketh the works, what is true of the former must be equally
affirmed of the latter; —
causa causæ causa causati
. Besides, he
falls into something like a confusion of faith with belief, taken as a
conviction or assent of the judgment. The faith and the righteousness of
a Christian are both alike his, and not his — the faith of Christ in him,
the righteousness in and for him.
I am crucified with Christ:
nevertheless I live; yet, not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life
which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who
loved me, and gave himself for me .
Donne was a truly great man; but, after all, he did not possess that
full, steady, deep, and yet comprehensive, insight into the nature of
faith and works which was vouchsafed to Martin Luther. Donne had not
attained to the reconciling of distinctity with unity, — ours, yet God's;
God's, yet ours.
Ib.
D.
Velle et nolle nostrum est, to assent, or to dis-assent, is our
own.
Is not this, even with the saving afterwards, too nakedly expressed?
Ib.
And certainly our works are more ours than our faith is; and man
concurs otherwise in the acting and perpetration of a good work, than
he doth in the reception and admission of faith.
Why? Because Donne confounds the act of faith with the assent of the
fancy and understanding to certain words and conceptions. Indeed, with
all my reverence for Dr. Donne, I must warn against the contents of this
page, as scarcely tenable in logic, unsound in metaphysics, and unsafe,
slippery divinity; and principally in that he confounds
faith — essentially an act, the fundamental work of the Spirit — with
belief, which is then only good when it is the effect and accompaniment
of faith.
Ib.
p. 80. D.
Because things good in their institution may he depraved in their
practice — ergone nihil ceremoniarum rudioribus dabitur, ad juvandam
eorum imperitiam?
Some ceremonies may be for the conservation of order and civility, or to
prevent confusion and unseemliness; others are the natural or
conventional language of our feelings, as bending the knees, or bowing
the head; and to neither of these two sorts do I object. But as to the
adjuvandam rudiorum imperitiam
, I protest against all such
ceremonies, and the pretexts for them,
in toto
. What? Can any
ceremony be more instructive than the words required to explain the
ceremony? I make but two exceptions, and those where the truths
signified are so vital, so momentous, that the very occasion and
necessity of explaining the sign are of the highest spiritual value.
Yet, alas! to what gross and calamitous superstitions have not even the
visible signs in Baptism and the Eucharist given occasion!
Ib.
p. 81. E.
Blessed St. Augustine reports, (if that epistle be St. Augustine's)
that when himself was writing to St. Hierome, to know his opinion of
the measure and quality of the joy and glory of heaven, suddenly in
his chamber there appeared ineffabile lumen, says he, an
unspeakable, an unexpressible light, ... and out of that light issued
this voice, Hieronymi anima sum, &c.
The grave recital of this ridiculous legend is one instance of what I
have called the Patristic leaven in Donne, who assuredly had no belief
himself in the authenticity of this letter. But yet it served a purpose.
As to Master Conradus, just above, who could read at night by the light
at his fingers' ends, he must of course have very recently been shaking
hands with Lucifer.
Ib.
p. 83. D.
Eve's recognition upon the birth of her first son, Cain I have
gotten, I possess a man from the Lord.
I have gotten the Jehovah-man
, is, I believe, the true rendering
and sense of the Hebrew words. Eve, full of the promise, supposed her
first-born, the first-born on earth, to be the promised deliverer.
|
Ib. p. 84. D. E. |
|
Serm. IX. Rom. xiii. 7. p. 86, |
Admirable passages.
(side-note) |
Ib. p. 90. A.
That soul that is accustomed, &c.
|
|
Ib. p. 94. A. B. |
Serm. XII. Mat. v. 2. p. 112.
Ib.
B. C. D.
The disposition of our Church divines, under James I, to bring back the
stream of the Reformation to the channel and within the banks formed in
the first six centuries of the Church, and their alienation from the
great patriarchs of Protestantism, Luther, Calvin, Zuinglius, and
others, who held the Fathers of the
ante
-Papal Church, with
exception of Augustine, in light esteem, this disposition betrays itself
here and in many other parts of Donne. For here Donne plays the Jesuit,
disguising the truth, that even as early as the third century the Church
had begun to Paganize Christianity, under the pretext, and no doubt in
the hope, of Christianizing Paganism. The mountain would not go to
Mahomet, and therefore Mahomet went to the mountain.
Ib.
p. 115. A.
An excellent passage.
Ib.
p. 117. E.
And therefore when the prophet says, Quis sapiens, et intelliget hæc?
Who is so wise as to find out this way? he places this cleanness
which we inquire after in wisdom. What is wisdom?
The primitive Church appropriated the name to the third
hypostasis
of
the Trinity; hence
Sancta Sophia
became the distinctive name of the
Holy Ghost; and the temple at Constantinople, dedicated by Justinian to
the Holy Ghost, is called the Church — alas! now the mosque — of Santa
Sophia. Now this suggests, or rather implies, a far better and more
precise definition of wisdom than Donne's. The distinctive title of the
Father, as the Supreme Will, is the Good; that of the only-begotten
Word, as the Supreme Reason, (
Ens Realissimum
,
Greek: Ho_O N
the
Being) is the True; and the Spirit proceeding from the Good through the
True is the Wisdom. Goodness in the form of truth is wisdom. Wisdom is
the pure will, realizing itself intelligently, or the good manifesting
itself as the truth, and realized in the act. Wisdom, life, love,
beauty, the beauty of holiness, are all
synonyma
of the Holy Spirit.
6, December, 1831.
Ib.
p. 121. A.
The Arians' opinion, that God the Father only was invisible, but the
Son and the Holy Ghost might be seen.
Here we have an instance, one of many, of the inconveniences and
contradictions that arise out of the assumed contrary essences of body
and soul; both substances, and independent of each other, yet so
absolutely diverse as that the one is to be defined by the negation of
the other.
Serm. XIII. Job xvi. 17, 18, 19. p. 127.
Ib.
p. 129. A. B. C.
Ib.
pp. 134. 135.
Truly excellent.
Serm. XV. 1 Cor. xv. 26. p. 144.
Ib.
D.
Who, then, is this enemy? an enemy that may thus far think himself
equal to God, that as no man ever saw God, and lived; so no man ever
saw this enemy, and lived; for it is death.
This borders rather too closely on the Irish Franciscan's conclusion to
his sermon of thanksgiving: "Above all, brethren, let us thankfully laud
and extol God's transcendant mercy in putting death at the end of life,
and thereby giving us all time for repentance!"
Dr. Donne was an eminently witty man in a very witty age; but to the
honour of his judgment let it be said, that though his great wit is
evinced in numberless passages, in a few only is it shown off. This
paragraph is one of those rare exceptions.
N. B. Nothing in Scripture, nothing in reason, commands or authorizes us
to assume or suppose any bodiless creature. It is the incommunicable
attribute of God. But all bodies are not flesh, nor need we suppose that
all bodies are corruptible.
There are bodies celestial
. In the
three following paragraphs of this sermon, we trace wild fantastic
positions grounded on the arbitrary notion of man as a mixture of
heterogeneous components, which Des Cartes shortly afterwards carried
into its extremes. On this doctrine the man is a mere phenomenal result,
a sort of brandy-sop or toddy-punch. It is a doctrine unsanctioned by,
and indeed inconsistent with, the Scriptures. It is not true that body
plus
soul makes man. Man is not the
syntheton
or
composition of body and soul, as the two component units. No; man is the
unit, the
prothesis
, and body and soul are the two poles, the
positive and negative, the
thesis
and
antithesis
of the
man; even as attraction and repulsion are the two poles in and by which
one and the same magnet manifests itself.
Ib.
p. 146. B.
For it is not so great a depopulation to translate a city from
merchants to husbandmen, from shops to ploughs, as it is from many
husbandmen to one shepherd; and yet that hath been often done.
For example, in the Highlands of Scotland in our own day.
Ib.
p. 148. A.
The ashes of an oak in the chimney are no epitaph of that oak, to tell
me how high or how large that was. It tells me not what flocks it
sheltered while it stood, nor what men it hurt when it fell. The dust
of great persons' graves is speechless too, it says nothing, it
distinguishes nothing.
As soon the dust of a wretch whom thou wouldst
not, as of a prince whom thou couldst not, look upon, will trouble
thine eyes, if the wind blow it thither; and when a whirlwind hath
blown the dust of the churchyard unto the church, and the man sweeps
out the dust of the church into the church-yard, who will undertake to
sift those dusts again, and to pronounce; — this is the patrician, this
is the noble, flour, and this the yeomanly, this the plebeian, bran.
8
Very beautiful indeed.
Ib.
p. 149. C.
But when I lie under the hands of that enemy, that hath reserved
himself to the last, to my last bed; then when I shall be able to stir
no limb in any other measure than a fever or a palsy shall shake them;
when everlasting darkness shall have an inchoation in the present
dimness of mine eyes, and the everlasting gnashing in the present
chattering of my teeth, and the everlasting worm in the present
gnawing of the agonies of my body and anguishes of my mind; when the
last enemy shall watch my remediless body, and my disconsolate soul
there, — there, where not the physician in his way, perchance not the
priest in his, shall be able to give any assistance; and when he hath
sported himself with my misery, &c.
is powerful; but is too much in the style of the monkish preachers:
Papam redolet
. Contrast with this Job's description of death,
and St. Paul's
sleep in the Lord
.
Ib.
p. 150. A.
Neither doth Calvin carry those emphatical words which are so often
cited for a proof of the last resurrection, — that he knows his
Redeemer lives, that he knows he shall stand the last man upon earth,
that though his body be destroyed, yet in his flesh and with his eyes
shall he see God — to any higher sense than so, that how low soever
he be brought, to what desperate state soever he be reduced in the
eyes of the world, yet he assures himself of a resurrection, a
reparation, a restitution to his former bodily health, and worldly
fortune which he had before. And such a resurrection we all know Job
had.
I incline to Calvin's opinion, but am not decided.