CHAPTER
XIX
AND BRING
US NOT INTO TEMPTATION BUT
DELIVER US FROM EVIL
And bring us not into Temptation but
deliver us from Evil. In Luke the words but deliver us from Evil
are omitted. Assuming that the Savior does not command us to
pray for the impossible, it appears to me to deserve
consideration in what sense we are bidden to pray not to enter
into temptation when all human life on earth is a test.
In that on earth we are beset by the flesh
which wars against the spirit and whose intent is emnity to God
as it is by no means capable of being subject to the law of God,
we are in temptation. That all human life on earth is a trial we
have learned from Job in the words: Is not the life of men on
earth a trial, and the same thing is made plain from the
seventeenth psalm in the words: In you will I be delivered from
trial. Paul, too, writing to the Corinthians says that God
bestows not freedom from temptation but freedom from temptation
beyond one’s power.
More than human temptation has not
possessed you, and God is to be trusted not to let you be
tempted beyond your power but to make the temptation be
accompanied by the outlet of power to endure it. Whether our
wrestling is with the flesh that lusts or wars against the
spirit, or with the soul of all flesh—in other words the ruling
faculty, called the heart, of the body in which it resides—as is
the wrestling of those who are tempted with human temptations,
or, as advanced and maturer athletes, who no longer wrestle with
blood and flesh nor are reviewed in the human temptations which
they have already trampled down, our struggles are with the
principalities and authorities and world-rulers of His darkness
and the Spiritual forces of evil, we have no release from
temptation.
In what sense then does the Savior bid us
pray not to enter into temptation, when God in some sense tempts
all men? Think you, says Judith, not only to the elders of that
day but also to all readers of her writing, of all that He did
with Abraham and all His temptations of Isaac and all that
befell Jacob in Mesopotania of Syria while he shepherded the
flocks of Laban, his mother’s brother. For it is not that
whereas He tested them by fire for the proving of their hearts,
the Lord who, for their admonishment, scourges those who
approach Him, now wreaks vengeance upon us.
And David declares as a general truth
concerning all righteous men that Many are the afflictions of
the righteous, while in the acts the Apostle says: because it is
through many afflictions that we must enter into the kingdom of
God. And if we failed to understand what escapes most men in
reference to prayer that we enter not into temptation, we would
at this point say that the apostles were not heard in their
prayers since throughout their whole time they endured countless
sufferings: in toils more abundantly, in blows more abundantly,
in prisons above measure, in deaths often, while Paul in
particular: five times received forty stripes save one at the
hands of Jews, thrice was beaten with rods, once was stoned,
thrice was shipwrecked, passed a night and a day in the deep, a
man in every way afflicted, in straits, persecuted, cast down,
confessing: Until the present hour we have hungered, thirsted,
gone naked, been buffeted, lacked rest, toiled at work with our
own hands. Reviled, we have blessed; persecuted, we have borne
up; slandered, we have exhorted.
When the apostles have failed in prayer,
we might ask what hope there is for any of their inferiors to
obtain God’s hearing when one prays? One ignorant of the true
meaning of the Savior’s command will have reason to suppose that
the words in the twenty-fifth psalm, Test me, O Lord, and try
me; assay my reins and my heart with fire, are in opposition to
our Lord’s teaching about prayer. And when has anyone ever
believed that those of whom he had complete knowledge were free
of temptations?
And what time can be conceived during
which a man could be lighthearted as though he did not struggle
to avoid sinning? Is a man poor? Let him beware lest one day he
steal and forswear by the name of God. Again, is he rich? Let
him not be lighthearted, for he may become completely false and
say in exaltation, “Who sees me?” Even Paul, for all his riches,
in all manner of discourse and in all manner of knowledge, is
not released from the danger of sinning on their account through
excessive exaltation, but needs a stake of Satan to buffet him
in order that he may not be excessively exalted. Even though a
man may have a comparatively good conscience and fly up in alarm
from things evil, let him read what is said in the second book
of the Chronicles of Hezekiah, who is said to have fallen from
the elevation of his heart.
And if, because I have not dwelt on the
case of the poor, someone is lighthearted—as though poverty
involved no temptation—he must know that the Plotter plots to
cast down the needy and the poor, especially since according to
Solomon, the needy endure no threats. And what need is there to
tell how many, because of their material riches which they had
failed to manage rightly, have found a place in punishment along
with the rich man in the Gospel? And how many, because they bore
poverty ignobly, with behavior more servile and base than was
seemly in Saints, have fallen away from their heavenly hope?
Even they who are midway between these extremes of riches and
poverty are not by any means released from sinning according to
their possession, moderate though it be.
Again, one who is in bodily health and
well being imagines that by virtue of his mere health and well
being he is outside of all temptation. And yet, whose sin it is,
apart from those in well being and in health, to corrupt the
temple of God, no one will venture to say because the meaning of
the passage is clear to everyone. And who in sickness has
escaped the incitements to corrupt the temple of God, having
leisure at such time and readily admitting thoughts of unclean
things, not to speak of all the others things beside these which
trouble him unless he guards his heart with all vigilance?
Many a man, overcome by troubles and
incapable of bearing sickness manfully, has been shown to be
suffering at the time from sickness rather of the soul than of
the body, and many another, ashamed to bear the name of Christ
nobly, has, through shunning disrepute, fallen into eternal
shame. Again, a man may think that he has respite from
temptation when he is in honor among men. Yet is not the Lord’s
saying, They have their reward from men, proclaimed to those who
are elated over their popularity? Do not the words strike
dismay: How can you have come to believe, when you have received
glory from one another, and seek not the glory which is from God
alone?
And what need is there for me to recount
the crimes done in pride by the reputed noble, and the fawning
submission of the so-called low born towards the reputed noble
by reason of their ignorance, a submission which separates from
God men who are devoid of genuine friendliness but feign that
fairest of human possessions—love. The whole life of man on
earth is therefore a trial, as has already been said. Let us for
that reason pray for deliverance from trial not through being
exempt from it—that is an utter impossibility for beings on
earth—but through not succumbing under it.
It is when a man succumbs in the moment of
tempting, I take it, that he enters into temptation, being held
in its nets. Into those nets the Savior entered for the sake of
those who had already been caught in them, and in the words of
the Song of Songs, looking out through the meshwork makes answer
to those who have been already caught by them and have entered
into temptation, and says to those who form His bride: Arise, my
dear one, my fair one, my dove. To bring home the fact that
every time is one of temptation on earth, I will add that even
he who meditates upon the law of God day and night and makes a
practice of carrying out the saying, A righteous man’s mouth
shall meditate on wisdom, has no release from being tempted. How
many in their devotion to the examination of the divine
Scriptures have, through misunderstanding the messages contained
in Law and Prophets, devoted themselves to godless and impious
or to foolish and ridiculous opinions?
What need is there for me to answer, when
there are countless examples of such mistakes among those who do
not seem to be open to the charge of righteousness in their
reading? The same fate has also overtaken many in their reading
of the Apostles and Gospels inasmuch as, through their own lack
of discernment, they fashion in imagination a Son or a Father
other than the One divinely conceived and truly recognized by
Holy Writ. For one who fails to have true thoughts of God or His
Christ has fallen away from the true God and from His Only
Begotten, and his worship of the imaginary Father and Son,
fashioned by his lack of discernment, is no real worship. Such
is his fate through having failed to recognize the temptation
present in the reading of Holy Writ to arm himself and take a
stand as for a struggle already upon him.
We ought therefore to pray, not that we be
not tempted—that is impossible—but that we be not encompassed by
temptation, the fate of those who are open to it and are
overcome. Now since, outside of the Lord’s Prayer, it is written
Pray that you enter not into temptation, the force of which may
perhaps be clear from what has already been said, whereas in the
Lord’s prayer we ought to say to God our Father, Bring us not
into Temptation, it is worth seeing in what sense we ought to
think of God as leading one who does not pray or is not heard
into temptation. If entering into temptation means being
overcome, it is manifestly out of the question to think that God
leads anyone into temptation as though He delivered him to be
overcome.
The same difficulty awaits one no matter
in what sense one may interpret the words Pray that you enter
not into temptation, for if it is an evil to fall into
temptation, which we pray may not be our fate, must it not be
out of place to think of the Good God, who is incapable of
bearing evil fruits, as encompassing anyone with evils? It is of
service to cite in this connection what Paul has said in the
Epistle to Romans—thus: Claiming to be wise they became foolish
and changed the glory of the incorruptible God into the likeness
of an image of corruptible man and of winged and four footed and
creeping things. Wherefore God delivered them in the lusts of
their hearts unto uncleanness to the dishonoring of their bodies
among themselves; and shortly after:
Therefore God delivered them unto passions
of dishonor: for both their females changed the natural use into
the unnatural, and the males likewise setting aside the natural
use of the female, were consumed . . . and so on. And again
shortly after: And as they proved not to have God in full
knowledge, God delivered them unto a reprobate mind to do the
unseemly.
We may simply confront dividers of the
Godhead with all these passages and put these questions to them
since they hold that the good Father of Our Lord is distinct
from the God of the law. Is it the good God who leads into
temptation one who fails in prayer? Is it the Father of the Lord
who delivers in the lusts of their hearts those who have already
done some sin unto uncleanness to the dishonoring of their
bodies among themselves?
Is it He who, as they themselves say, is
free from judging and punishing, who delivers unto passions of
dishonor and unto a reprobate mind to do the unseemly men who
would not have fallen into the lusts of their hearts had they
not been delivered to them by God, who would not have succumbed
to passions of dishonor had they not been delivered to them by
God, and who would not have lapsed into a reprobate mind but for
the fact that the so condemned had been delivered to it by God.
I am well aware that these passages will
trouble such thinkers exceedingly. Indeed they have fashioned in
imagination a God other than the Maker of heaven and earth,
because they find many such passages in the Law and the Prophets
and have been offended by the author of such utterances as not
good. But I on my part, for the sake of that question, raised in
connection with the words Bring us not into Temptation, which
led to my citation of the apostle’s words also, must now
consider whether I in turn find a solution of apparent
contradictions worth considering. Well, it is my belief that God
rules over each rational soul, having regard to its everlasting
life, in such a way that it is always in possession of free will
and is itself responsible alike for being, in the better way, in
progress towards the perfection of goodness, or otherwise for
descending as the result of heedlessness to this or that degree
of aggravation of vice.
Accordingly, since a swift and somewhat
short cure gives rise in some men to a contempt for the disease
into which they have fallen, with the possible result of their
incurring it a second time, He will in such other cases with
good reason allow the vice to increase to a certain extent,
suffering it even to be aggravated in them to the verge of
incurableness, in order that they may be sated through long
continuance in the evil and through surfeit of the sin for which
they lust, and may be brought to a sense of their injury, and,
having learned to hate what formerly they welcomed, may be
enabled when cured to enjoy more steadfastly the health which
their cure has brought to their souls. So it was that the mixed
throng among the Children of Israel, once fell into lust.
Sitting down they and the Children of
Israel cried out saying, “Who will give us flesh to eat? We
remember the fish we used to eat freely in Egypt, and the
cucumbers and melons and leeks and onions and garlic, but now is
our soul parched; our eyes are on nothing save the manna.” Then,
shortly after, it is said: And Moses heard them crying in their
tribes; each was at his door. And again shortly after the Lord
says to Moses: And you shall say to the people, “Sanctify
yourselves for the morrow, and eat flesh, because you have cried
before the Lord saying, ‘Who will give us flesh to eat, because
it was well with us in Egypt,’ and the Lord shall give you flesh
to eat. So eat flesh! Eat it not one nor two nor five days, not
ten nor twenty days; for a month of days eat till it issue from
your nostrils, and it shall make you ill, because you have
disobeyed the Lord who is among you, and have cried before Him,
‘Wherefore have we left Egypt?’” Let us therefore see whether
the narrative I have laid before you as a parallel is of help
towards a solution of the apparent contradiction in the clause
Bring us not into temptation and in the words of the apostle.
Having fallen into lust, the mixed throng among the Children of
Israel cried and the Children of Israel with them.
Plainly so long as they were without the
objects of their lust, they were not able to be sated with them
or cease their passion. In fact, it was the will of the
benevolent and good God, in giving them the object of their
lust, not to give it in such a way that any lust should be left
in them. For that reason He tells them to eat the flesh not one
day—for had they partaken of the flesh a short time their
passion would have remained in their soul which would have been
kindled and set ablaze by it—nor does He give them the object of
their lust for two days.
It being His will to make it excessive for
them, He utters what is, to one who can understand, a threat
rather than a promise of their apparent gratification, saying,
“Neither shall you pass five days eating the flesh nor twofold
those, nor yet twofold those again, but eat flesh for a whole
mouth, until such time as your imagined good shall issue from
your nostrils with choleric affection, and with it your culpable
and base lust for it. So shall I set you free from all further
lust of living, that when you have come out in such condition
you may be pure from lust and may remember all the troubles
through which you were set free from it.
Thus you shall be enabled either not to
fall into it again, or, should that ever happen through
forgetfulness during the long lapse of time of your sufferings
on account of lust, if you take no heed to yourselves and not
appropriate the Word that completely frees you from every
passion, if you fall into evil and at a later time, through
having come to lust again for creation, require a second time to
obtain the objects of your lust—in hatred of that object revert
again to the good and heavenly nourishment through despising
that which you longed for the most.”
The like fate, accordingly, will overtake
those who have changed the glory of the incorruptible God into
the likeness of an image of corruptible man and of winged and
four-footed and creeping things, and who are forsaken of God and
thereby delivered in the lusts of their hearts unto uncleanness
to the dishonoring of their bodies as men who have brought down
to soulless insensible matter the name of Him who has bestowed
upon all sentient rational beings not only sense but even
rational sense, and to some indeed a complete and excellent
sense and intelligence. Such men are reasonably delivered to
passion of dishonor by the God whom they have forsaken, being
forsaken by Him in return, receiving the requital of error
through which they came to love the itch for pleasure.
For it is more of a requital of their
error for them to be delivered to passions of dishonor than to
be cleansed by the fire of Wisdom and to have each of their
debts exacted from them in prison to the last farthing. For in
being delivered to passions of dishonor which are not only
natural but many of the unnatural, they are debased and hardened
by the flesh and become as though they had no soul or
intelligence any longer but were flesh entirely, whereas in fire
and prison they receive not requital of their error but
benefaction for the cleansing of the evil contracted in their
error, along with salutary sufferings attendant in the
pleasure-loving and are thereby set free from all stain and
blood in whose defilement and pollution they had to their own
undoing been unable even to think of being saved.
So their God shall wash away the stain of
the sons and daughters of Zion and shall cleanse away the blood
from their midst with a spirit of judgment and a spirit of
burning: for He comes in as the fire of a furnace and as soap,
washing and cleansing those who are in need of such remedies
because it has not been their clear desire to have knowledge of
God. After being delivered to these remedies they will of their
own accord hate the reprobate mind, for it is God’s will that a
man acquire goodness not as under necessity but of his own
accord. Some, it may well be, will have had difficulty in
perceiving the baseness of evil as the result of long
familiarity with it, but then turning away from it as falsely
taken to be good.
Consider too, whether God’s reason for
hardening the heart of Pharaoh also is that he may, because
hardened, be unable to say, as in fact he did, “The Lord is
righteous, but I and my people are impious.” Rather it is that
he needs more and more to be hardened and to undergo certain
sufferings, in order that he may not, as the result of a too
speedy end to the hardening, despise hardening as an evil and
frequently again deserve to be hardened.
If their nets are not wrongfully stretched
for birds, according to the statement in the Proverbs, but God
rightly leads men into the snare, as one has said, You led us
into the snare, and if not even a sparrow, cheapest of birds,
falls into the snare without the counsel of the Father, its fall
into the snare being due to the failure to use aright its
control of its wings given to it to soar, let us pray to do
nothing to deserve being brought into temptation by the
righteous judgment of God, as in the case with everyone who is
delivered by God in the lusts of his own heart unto uncleanness,
or delivered unto passions of dishonor, or as not having proved
to have God in full knowledge, is delivered unto a reprobate
mind to do the unseemly. The use of temptation is somewhat as
follows. Through temptations the content of our soul, which is a
secret to all except God, ourselves included, becomes manifest,
in order that it may no longer be a secret to us what manner of
men we are but that we may have fuller knowledge of ourselves
and realize, if we choose, our own evils and be thankful for the
blessings manifested to us through temptations. That the
temptations which befall us take place for the revealing of our
true nature or the discerning of what is hidden in our heart, is
set forth by the Lord’s saying in Job and by the scripture in
Deuteronomy, which runs thus: Think you that I have uttered
speech to you for any reason other than that you may be revealed
as righteous?
And in Deuteronomy: He afflicted you and
starved you and gave you manna to eat, and He led you about in
the wilderness where biting serpents and scorpions and thirst
are, that the things in your heart might be discerned. And if we
desire references to plain history, it is matter of knowledge
that Eve’s readiness to be deceived and unsoundness of thought
did not originate when in disobedience to God she hearkened to
the serpent, but had already been betrayed, the reason for the
serpent’s having engaged her being that with its peculiar wisdom
it had perceived her weakness.
Nor was it the beginning of evil in Cain
where he slew his brother, for already the heart-knowing God had
little regard for Cain and his sacrifices. It was simply that
his wickedness became manifest when he took Abel’s life. Had
Noah not drunk of the wine that he cultivated and become
intoxicated and uncovered himself, neither Ham’s indiscretion
and irreverence towards his father nor his brother’s reverence
and modesty towards their parent would have been revealed.
Though Esau’s plot against Jacob seemed to
have provided an excuse for his being deprived of the blessing,
his soul even before that had roots of fornication and
profanity. And we should never have known of the splendor of
Joseph’s self-control, prepared as he was against falling a
victim to any lust, had his master’s wife not fallen in love
with him. Let us therefore, in the intervals between the
succession of temptations, make a stand against the impending
trial, and prepare ourselves for all possible contingencies—in
order that, come what may, we may not be convicted of
unreadiness but may be shown to have braced ourselves with the
utmost care. For when we have carried out all our part, the
deficiency caused by human weakness will be filled up by God who
cooperates for good in all things with those who love Him, and
whose future growth has been foreseen according to His unerring
knowledge.
In the words Bring us not into Temptation
Luke seems to me to have virtually taught Deliver us from Evil
also. In any case it is natural that the Lord should have
addressed the briefer form to the disciple as he had already
been helped, but the more explicit to the many who were in need
of clearer teaching. God delivers us from Evil, not when the
enemy does not engage us at all in conflict through any of his
own wiles or those of the ministers of his will, but when we
make a manful stand against contingencies and are victorious.
In that sense I have also taken the words:
Many are the afflictions of the righteous: and He delivers them
from them all. For God delivers us from afflictions not when
afflictions are no more—and surely Paul’s expression in
everything afflicted implies that affliction had never yet
ceased—but when, by God’s help, under affliction we are not
straitened.
According to a usage native to Hebrews,
‘affliction’ denotes misfortune that happens without reference
to a human will, whereas ‘straitening’ refers to the will
overcome by affliction and surrendered to it: hence Paul well
says: in everything afflicted but not impoverished. And I
consider the words in Psalms In affliction you set me at large
to be similar, for by ‘setting at large’ is meant the joyousness
and cheerfulness of temper which comes to us from God in the
season of misfortune through the cooperation and presence of
God’s encouraging and saving Word. We are accordingly to
understand deliverance from evil in the same way. God delivered
Job, not through the Devil’s failure to receive authority to
beset him with certain temptations—for he did receive it—but
through his own avoidance of sin in the sight of God amidst all
that befell him and through the exhibition of his righteousness.
Thus he who had said: Does Job revere God
for nothing? Have you not fenced about with a circle his goods
without and his goods within the house and the goods of all who
are his, and blessed his work and made his flocks and herds to
abound on the earth? But send forth your hand, and touch all
that he has, and surely he will curse you to your face, was put
to shame as having thereby spoken falsely against Job, for he,
after all his suffering, did not, as the Adversary said, curse
God to His face, but even when delivered to the tempter he
continued steadfastly blessing God, reproving his wife for
saying Speak you some word against God and die, and rebuking her
in the words: As one of the senseless women have you spoken.
If we have accepted the good from the
Lord’s hand, shall we not endure the evil? And a second time
concerning Job the Devil said to the Lord: Skin for skin; all
that the man has he will pay for his soul. Nay but send forth
your hand and touch his bones and his flesh, and surely he will
curse you to your face. But he is overcome by the champion of
virtue and shown to be a liar, for Job inspite of the severest
sufferings stood firm committing no sin with his lips in the
sight of God. Two falls did Job wrestle and conquer, but no
third such struggle did he undergo, for the threefold wrestling
had to be reserved for the Savior, as it is recorded in the
three Gospels, when the Savior known in human form thrice
conquered the Enemy. In order therefore to ask of God
intelligently that we enter not into temptation and that we be
delivered from Evil, let us consider these things and
investigate them in our own minds more carefully. Through
hearkening unto God let us become worthy to be heard by Him, and
let our entreaty be that when tempted we may not be brought to
death, and that when assailed by flaming darts of evil, we may
not be set on fire by them.
All whose hearts are (as one of the Twelve
Prophets says, as an ember-pan) are set on fire by them, but not
so they who with the shield of faith quench all the flaming
darts aimed at them by the Evil One, since they have within
themselves rivers of water springing up into life eternal which
do not let the fire of the Evil One prevail but readily undo it
with the flood of their inspired and saving thought that is
impressed by contemplation of the truth upon the soul of him
whose study is to be spiritual.
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