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Werke Johannes Chrysostomus (344-407) In epistulam ii ad Corinthios argumentum et homiliae 1-30 (CCEL) Homilies on the Second Epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians
Homily I.

4.

"For as the sufferings of Christ abound unto us, even so our comfort also aboundeth through Christ." Not to depress the disciples by an aggravated account of his sufferings; he declareth on the other hand that great and superabundant was the consolation also, and lifteth up 1 their heart not hereby alone, but also by putting them in mind of Christ and calling the sufferings "His," and 2 prior to the consolation deriveth a comfort from the very sufferings themselves. For what joy can I have so great as to be partaker with Christ, and for His sake to suffer these things? What consolation can equal this? But not from this source only does he raise the spirits of the afflicted, but from another also. Ask you what other? In that he saith, "abound:" for he doth not say, "As the sufferings of Christ" are "in us," but as they "abound," thereby declaring that they endure not His sufferings only, but even more than these 3 . For, saith he, "not whatsoever He suffered, that have we suffered; "but even more 4 ," for, consider, "Christ was cast out, persecuted, scourged, died," but we, saith he, "more than all this," which even of itself were consolation enough. Now let no one condemn this speech of boldness; for he elsewhere saith, "Now I rejoice in my sufferings, and fill up on my part that which is lacking of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh." (Col. i. 24.) Yet neither here nor there is it from boldness or any presumptousness. For as they wrought greater miracles than He according to that saying of His, "he that believeth on Me shall do greater works than these," (John xiv. 12.) but all is of Him that worketh in them; so did they suffer also more than He, but all again is of Him that comforteth them, and fitteth them to bear the evils that betide them.

With which respect Paul aware how great a thing he had said, doth again remarkably restrain it by adding, "So our comfort also aboundeth through Christ;" thus at once ascribing all to Him, and proclaiming herein also His loving-kindness; for, he saith not, "As our affliction, such our consolation;" but "far more;" for, he saith not, "our comfort is equal to our sufferings," but, "our comfort aboundeth," so that the season of struggles was the season also of fresh crowns. For, say, what is equal to being scourged for Christ's sake and holding converse with God; and being more than match for all things, and gaining the better of those who cast us out, and being unconquered by the whole world, and expecting hence such good things "as eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man!" (1 Cor. ii. 9.) And what is equal to suffering affliction for godliness' sake, and receiving from God consolations infinite, and being rescued from sins so great, and counted worthy of the Spirit, and of being sanctified and justified, and regarding no man with fear and trembling, and in peril itself outshining all.


  1. anistesin. The word has here probably the double sense, "raiseth up the depressed," and "lifteth upward towards heaven." ↩

  2. pro tes parakleseos. ↩

  3. St. Chrysostom does not, of course, mean, for an instant, to compare the sufferings of the Apostles with those of our Lord in themselves, but in one point only, their number. His sufferings alone were meritorious and well-pleasing in themselves, their's in Him only; His turned away the Father's wrath, their's were accepted by Him, when reconciled; His were spiritual also, their's bodily only; His were borne by His own power, through His divinity, their's not by their own, but through His indwelling Spirit; but, while of course, beyond all thought inferior in every other respect, S. Chrysostom infers from the Apostle's words, that their bodily sufferings outnumber His, though these also were, (he insists throughout) not their's, but His in these His members, bestowed by Him, borne through Him and acceptable in Him. The whole comment is a development of the word perisseuei "aboundeth," whence he infers that they were "more abundant," perissa: (as, plainly, the bodily sufferings of the army of Martyrs have been more numerous.) Yet though true, the statement, if repeated by one less reverent and not corrected by the vivid consciousness that these too were His sufferings, would become profane. ↩

  4. perissa, perisseuei. ↩

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Homilies on the Second Epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians

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Theologische Fakultät, Patristik und Geschichte der alten Kirche
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