Book Three I.1. Blessed Job, though the tempter sought his death, grew under the lash to life itself. The ancient enemy had thought to extinguish his goodness, but found instead to his dismay that it had been multiplied. When he saw himself fail in the first contest, he revived himself for other battles of temptation and still had hopes in his impudence of drawing evil from the holy man: for evil cannot believe in goodness, even the goodness it experiences. But now the things that were passed over in the frist trial are brought up again, when it says: Then one day when the sons of God had come and were standing before the Lord, Satan also came in their midst to stand in the sight of God, and the Lord was saying to Satan, 'Whence do you come?' He answers, saying, 'I have gone all around the earth, passing through it to and fro.' And the Lord said to Satan, 'Have you considered my servant Job? For there is none like him on the earth, simple and upright, who fears God and draws back from all evil-doing.' (2.1-3) Because we have discussed these words extensively above, we do better to pass over them now in silence lest we be retarded in getting to new material by continual repetition of what we have already said. (But I do think that when it is said in the voice of God to Satan, 'Whence do you come?' it should not be taken the same as before. When Satan returns beaten from the contest that had been granted to his request and God, who already knows, asks whence he comes, what else does this question do but rebuke the feebleness of Satan's pride? It is as if the divine voice said openly, 'See how you are beaten by one man, a man burdened by the weakness of the flesh, and you try to set yourself up against me, the author of all things.') So it is that when the Lord has recounted the virtues of Job as before, he adds this enumeration of his new triumphs: II.2. 'And still he maintains his innocence.' (2.3) As if to say: 'You have tried your malice, but he has not lost his innocence. Where you thought to lessen his credit, you have rather been forced to serve his reputation yourself, because he preserved the innocence of his mind, which he had possessed with distinction in time of peace, yet more gloriously in time of tribulation.' III.3. 'But you have stirred me up against him, that I should afflict him for nothing.' (2.3) Since God is just and true, it surely must be asked how he can say that he had afflicted blessed Job for nothing. Because he is just, he could not afflict him for nothing; but again because he is true, his words could not have contradicted his deeds. In order that he may be both just and true, saying what is true and doing what is not unjust, we should recognize that blessed Job was afflicted in vain in one sense, but effectively in another sense. Because the one who is just and true says these things of himself, we must demonstrate that what he said was true and what he did was right. It was necessary that the holy man, known to himself and to God alone, should reveal to all who might imitate him how great was his virtue. But he could not give clear examples to others of his virtue if he remained untested. It was brought about therefore that the power of temptation should be the force to display his strength as as model to all, that the whip should reveal what had been hidden in time of tranquility. Under those sufferings his patience grew and the glory of his eventual reward was enhanced by the pains he had suffered. To preserve the truth of what the Lord says and the rightness of what he did, we acknowledge that blessed Job was not tested for nothing, because his merits were increased; and yet it was all for nothing because he is not punished for any offence of his own. Someone is punished for nothing if no guilt is removed thereby; but it is not for nothing if the merits of his virtues are thus increased. 4. But why is it said, "You have stirred me up against him?" Was Truth itself been so enflamed by the words of Satan as to be virtually driven to torment its subjects? Who would believe this of God, when we would rightly believe it unworthy of a just man? But because we do not know how to smite another except when roused up, so we call the divine trial a kind of commotion. The divine voice descends to use our words in order to make divine deeds intelligible to any mortal. The power that created all things without any compulsion and rules over all things without negligence and sustains all things without effort and governs all things without distraction--that power can also punish without anger and so shape human minds according to its own will with a touch of the whip, lest we pass from the light of God's immutability into the shadow land of alienation. IV.5. To which Satan answered, saying, 'Skin for skin! A man will give up everything he has to save his life. But reach out your hand and touch his face and his flesh: then you will see that he will curse you to your face.' (2.4-5) The ancient enemy draws from material things the wherewithal to press a charge against the mind of the blessed man. He says that skin is given for skin because often when we see a blow coming against our face, we put our hands before our very eyelids, to keep the blow from our eyes. Thus we subject one part of the body to a wound to protect a more vulnerable part from injury. Satan knows that we always do this, saying: 'Skin for skin! A man will give up everything he has to save his life.' As if to say, 'Job has borne up calmly under so many blows landing around him just because he fears that he might be struck himself. It is concern for his own flesh that leaves him unmoved by all the losses felt by the emotions of the flesh. While he fears for his own skin, he feels the blows to his family and property the less.' So next Satan demands that his flesh itself be smitten, saying, "But reach out your hand and touch his face and his flesh: then you will see that he will curse you to your face." Earlier he had said, "But reach out your hand and touch his wealth, and see if he does not curse you to your face." Now he would forget his earlier claim and, in defeat, make other claims of other things. But this is still rightly allowed by divine providence, so that the impudent debater should finally fall silent when he has been beaten often enough. V.6. So the Lord said to Satan, 'So: he is in your hand--but preserve his soul.' (2.6) See how once again the permission to test is accompanied by watchful care, as divine providence abandons and protects his chosen one, protects and abandons him, giving up some of what is his, protecting the rest. If he should abandon Job to the hands of so powerful an adversary, what would a mere man be in the face of that? There is, therefore, a balance of pity mixed with the justice of the decision to allow Job to be tested. In one and the same contest the humble servant will profit from his sufferings and the haughty enemy will be brought down by God's generosity. So the holy man is handed over to the hand of the adversary, but in his inmost soul he is protected by the hand of his supporter. He was one of those sheep of whom truth speaks in the gospel: "No one shall snatch them from my hand." In spite of this, it was said to the enemy as he pressed his request, "So: he is in your hand." But the same man is in the hand of God, and in the hand of the devil. God says, "he is in your hand," but immediately adds, "but preserve his soul," clearly showing his pity and his help, for he clings to the one he has handed over, giving but not giving up the man he hands over to the enemy even as he protects him from the enemy's arrows. 7. But why is it said to Satan, "preserve his soul"? How can he preserve something when he is always trying to defile things that have been carefully preserved? But Satan is said to preserve something when in reality he simply does not dare to defile it. In the opposite case, we pray to the Father in the Lord's prayer, "Lead us not into temptation." It is not that the Lord, who constantly protects his flock from temptation in his mercy, is going to lead us into temptation, but not to fortify us against the lures of temptation is, so to speak, to "lead us into temptation." God "leads us not into temptation" when he does not allow us to be tempted beyond our capacity to bear it. So God is said to "lead us into temptation" if he allows us to be led by our adversary, and so the adversary is said to preserve our life when he is kept from overcoming it with temptation. Satan went out therefore from the presence of the Lord. (2.7) How it can be said that Satan departed from the presence of the Lord is clear from our discussion earlier. VI.8. And he afflicted Job with the most terrible sores, from the sole of his foot to the top of his head. (2.7) The blows of temptation must be measured in two ways: what kind they are, and how many they are. Often an abundance of blows is made more bearable if they are of the weaker sort, and often the more severe blows are mitigated if they are few, if, that is, they are many but weak, or few but severe. To show the excesses of the adversary in inflicting his blows upon the holy man, they are said to be not only wicked in nature but, to show their nature more clearly, also of the heaviest number: "He afflicted Job with the most terrible sores": this shows their kind. "From the sole of his foot to the top of his head": this shows their number. Surely there will be no glory lacking to the mind of one whose flesh lacks no suffering. VII.9. And Job was sitting on a dung heap, scraping his oozings with a potsherd. (2.8) Of what is a potsherd made, but mud? But what are the oozings of the body, but mud? So to scrape his oozings with a potsherd is to try to clean mud with mud. The holy man had considered whence the body comes and, with a piece of an earthen vessel he scraped another broken earthen vessel. By this act he shows clearly how he had disciplined the body when it was healthy by taking such dismissive care of it when it is wounded. He shows how little he pampered his healthy flesh when he tended his wounds not with his hands, not with a piece of his clothing, but with a broken potsherd. The potsherd scraped the oozings: he saw himself in the piece of clay, and found a cure for his mind's woes in the cleansing of a physical wound. 10. Often the mind is puffed up with pride by the things with which we surround our bodies. The things with which we surround ourselves conceal the fragility of our body from the eyes of the heart. There are worldly dignitaries, for example, braced by their worldly success, ruling from lofty positions, seeing the obsequiousness of the many serving their every whim: in the face of this they fail to consider their own fragility and do not regard the earthen vessel they bear with them: they forget how swiftly it is broken. But blessed Job, seeing evidence of his fragility in his circumstances and keeping self-abasement clearly before his eyes, is said to have sat not merely on the ground, on some clean spot as he could easily have done, but on a dungheap. He placed his body on a dungheap so that his mind would learn to judge well the value of the flesh that is taken from the earth in the first place. He placed his body on a dungheap so that the stench of the place would remind him how quickly the body will come to such a smelly state itself. 11. But as we see blessed Job bearing so many losses of property, grieving at the deaths of his children, tolerating so many wounds, scraping his running sores with a shard, sitting on a dunghill, oozing puss: we may well ask why it is that almighty God afflicts so terribly, as if contemptuously, those whom he knows are so dear to him for all eternity. But as I consider the wounds and sufferings of blessed Job, I call to mind the case of John the Baptist, and I am filled with wonder. He was filled with the spirit of prophecy while still in his mother's womb, reborn, if I may say so, before he was born. He was truly a friend of the bridegroom; there never rose one greater among the children of women; he was a prophet and more than a prophet, but he was cast into prison and beheaded to pay for a girl's dancing, and though he was a man of high gravity, he died as the laughing-stock of depraved men. Can we believe that there was any fault in his life to be purged by this disgraceful death? When could he have sinned even in by the way he ate, when all he ate were locusts and wild honey? How could he have sinned by the luxuriousness of his attire when he covered his body with rough camel's hair? What offense could there have been in his way of life when he never left the desert? How could he had defiled himself with his speech when he lived far from the society of men? But again, how could he have been held guilty of keeping silent when he violently reproached those who came out to him, saying, "Generation of vipers, who has shown you how to flee from the coming wrath?" How then are we to understand that Job was singled out for God's praise and still hurled by his blows to lie on a dungheap? How is it that John is praised by the voice of God and still dies at the command of a drunkard to pay for a dance? Why does almighty God so violently despise in this life the people he chose on high before all ages? It must be that he wants to show the faithful in their pity that he thrusts these holy people down to the depths because he knows how high he will raise them with reward later. He casts them outside to face contempt because he leads them on inwardly to the things that are beyond comprehension. Everyone should learn from this how much those God condemns will suffer in the next life if he punishes so much here below the ones he loves. How can we imagine how those who are convicted in the hour of judgment are to be stricken, if we see the lives of those whom the judge himself praises taken away in this manner? VIII.12. His wife said to him, 'Do you still persist with your simplicity? Curse God, and die.' (2.9) The ancient enemy usually tests the human race in two ways. He tries to break the hearts of those who stand to face him with suffering, or to soften them with persuasion. He employs both tactics vigorously against blessed Job. First he assails the lord of the estate with property losses, then he bereaves the father with the deaths of his children, then he smites the healthy man with wounds and infections. But because he sees him infected without but healthy within, and naked without but richer within for his praise of the creator, and cleverly realizing that God's champion is taking strength from his troubles, Satan turns in defeat to the subtleties of persuasion in order to tempt him. For he goes back to his old tricks, and because he knows how Adam can be deceived, he turns again to Eve. He saw blessed Job standing unconquered, in a veritable citadel of virtues, though swamped by so much loss of wealth and so many sufferings and wounds. Job had set his mind on high, and for that reason the enemy's ploys could not penetrate his defenses. So the adversary looks about to see by what path he might ascend to this well-fortified citadel. Near at hand is the man's wife and helpmate. Satan took possession of the woman's heart and found there a kind of ladder by which he could approach the heart of the man. The soul of the wife was his access to the husband. But he won nothing by this device, because the holy man treated the woman as one subjected to him and not placed in authority over him. Speaking the truth, he showed how the serpent had stirred her up to speak perversely. It was appropriate that his manly criticism should discipline her fickle mind, especially because he knew from the first fall of the human race that a woman would not know how to teach rightly. So it is well put through Paul, "I do not permit a woman to teach," for one time when a woman taught she separated us from eternal wisdom. So the ancient enemy loses now at Adam's hands upon a dungheap what he had won from Adam in paradise. He sends the woman, his helper, to inflame Job with wickedly persuasive words, but she finds there instruction and holy teaching. She had been stirred up to ruin her husband, but returns well taught so that she might not be ruined herself. So it happens in battle at the hands of our mighty heroes, that the enemy's weapons are themselves snatched away from him. Where Satan had thought to worsen the pain of Job's wounds, instead he supplies virtue with weapons to use against himself. 13. From the wife's words of wicked persuasion, we should be alert to see that the ancient adversary attempts to sway our state of mind not only by his own actions but even by using the people who are closest to us. When he cannot overwhelm our heart by his own arguments, he creeps up on his goal through the words of those who are close to us. Hence it is written: "Beware of your sons and watch out for your servants." Hence it is said through the prophet: "Let each one protect himself against his neighbor and place not his trust in all his brothers." Hence again it is written: "A man's servants are his enemies." The enemy is clever, and when he sees himself driven away from the hearts of the good, he seeks out those whom they love greatly, and he offers blandishments in the words of the very people who are loved more than others. Thus while the power of love penetrates to the heart, the sword of his arguments readily breaks through to the innermost defenses of rectitude. So therefore it is after the loss of his wealth, after the funerals of his children, after the wounds and rendings of his body, that the ancient enemy incites the wife to speak. 14. We should notice when Satan chooses to attack the man's mind with poisoned words. He adds words to wounds in the hope that the twisted hints of his argument will more easily prevail when the power of suffering is growing. If we consider the sequence of temptations closely we see just how cleverly the enemy rages. First he causes losses to property, losses that had nothing to do with Job's own nature and that did not come near his own flesh. Then he took away his sons, for they were not yet Job's own flesh, yet they were naturally of that flesh. Finally he struck even Job's body. But because he did not succeed in wounding the mind by wounding the body, he now tries to employ the tongue of the woman joined to Job by marriage. While he laments losing in open combat, he hurls a javelin, as if from ambush, through the words of the wife, when she says, "Do you still persist with your simplicity? Curse God and die." He took everything away to tempt Job, but he leaves the woman behind to tempt him: he has ruined everything for the holy man. But it is extraordinarily clever of him to have kept the wife as his helper, to say, "Do you still persist with your simplicity?" Eve returns to her old ways of speech. What does it mean to say, "abandon your simplicity, " but, "cast aside your obedience and eat what is forbidden"? And what is it to say, "Curse God and die," but, "Disobey the command and live beyond the limits with which you were created"? But this strong Adam of ours was lying on a dungheap, though once he had stood, but feebly, in paradise. So he responds immediately to the words of wicked persuasion, saying: IX.15. 'You have spoken like a foolish woman. If we have taken good things from the hand of the Lord, how When refuse the bad?' (2.10) See how the enemy is beaten on all sides, broken on all sides, failing in every kind of temptation, even losing the woman's support he had been used to. At this juncture it is pleasant to consider the holy man, stripped of everything on the outside, but full of God within. When Paul caught sight of the riches of wisdom within himself and saw his body without subject to decay, he said, "We have this treasure in earthen vessels." In blessed Job, the earthen vessel suffered open sores without, but inside the unfailing treasury of wisdom poured forth running words of holy learning, as he said, "If we have taken good things from the hand of the Lord, how shall we refuse the bad?" The good things are the gifts of God, both the temporal and the eternal; the bad things he calls the tribulations he suffers, of which the Lord spoke through the prophet: "I am the Lord and there is no other, shaping the light and creating the darkness, making peace and creating what is evil." After all, it is not that evil things, which have no natural existence of their own, are created by the Lord, but the Lord says that he creates what is bad when he turns things good in themselves into sufferings for us when we act badly. In this way they become bad to sinners by virtue of the suffering they bring, while by their own nature, they are good. Thus, venom is death to man, but life to a serpent. By loving the things around us, we draw away from the love of our creator, and while the mind turns away to subjugate itself to the creatures it loves, it separates itself from the company of its creator. Then the mind must be stricken by the creator through those very things which the mind had set up for itself against the creator. Where man in his pride does not fear to find occasion for sin, there he finds the punishment that will straighten him out. He comes back to the things he had abandoned all the more quickly for seeing that the things he had sought instead are full of suffering for him. So it is well said, "shaping the light and creating the darkness," because when the darkness of suffering is created by our outward sufferings, the light of the mind is accordingly lit within. He is "making peace and creating what is evil," for peace with God is restored to us when created things, which are well made but not well lusted after, are turned into punishments that are, for us, bad. By our own fault we fall out of harmony with God, so it is fitting that we should find peace with Him again through sufferings, so that when the things that are created good become sources of suffering for us, the mind of the sinner should be disciplined and humbly reshaped to be at peace with the creator. Blessed Job calls his sufferings bad because he is thinking of the turmoil from which they arise to strike the unquestioned goodness of health and tranquility. 16. But we should especially note in his words with what skill and care he musters his presence of mind against his wife's arguments, when he says, "If we have taken good things from the hand of the Lord, how shall we refuse the bad?" It is a great source of consolation in time of troubles to recall in adversity the many gifts of our creator. What sorrow brings will not break us if we bring to mind quickly the support that comes from God's gifts. So it is written: "On good days, be not unmindful of the bad ones, and on bad days be not unmindful of the good ones." Whoever receives gifts but at the time fears no punishment rapidly falls into pride through his glee. If a man is worn down by punishing troubles, but in the midst of those troubles does not console himself by thinking of the gifts that have come his way in the past, his peace of mind is rapidly destroyed by despair that sets in on all sides. So therefore the two attitudes are to be joined together, each supporting the other at all times. Recollection of God's gifts tempers the pain of suffering, and fear of suffering should check the glee we feel on receiving those gifts. The holy man therefore, to ease his worried mind in his sufferings, considers the delights of God's gifts, saying, "If we have taken good things from the hand of the Lord, how shall we refuse the bad?" So it was fitting that he prefaced this by saying, "you have spoken like a foolish woman." Because it is the woman's sense, not her sex, that is against her, he does not say, "you have spoken like a woman," but "like a foolish woman," to show that her wicked ideas are the result of chance foolishness, not her inborn nature. X.17. In all this Job did not sin with his lips. (2.10) We sin with our lips in two ways: when we say what is wrong or keep silent what is right. If silence was not sometimes a sin, the prophet would not have said, "Woe is me, that I have kept silent." In all that he did blessed Job did not sin with his lips, for he spoke no arrogant words against the one who struck him, nor did he stifle a just response to his wife's persuasions. He sinned not by speaking, nor by keeping silent, giving thanks to the father who was testing him and serving up wise doctrine to meet his wife's wicked arguments. Because he knew what he owed to God, and what he owed his neighbor (specifically, patience to his creator, wisdom to his wife), he therefore taught his wife by his rebuke and praised God by giving thanks. But which of us, if we should receive even a single wound of all those with which Job was smitten, would not soon lie prostrate at the very center of our being? See how he was laid low on the outside by the wounds of the flesh, but remained strong and erect within, protected by strength of mind. There he saw pass beneath him every arrow shot from without by the avenging hand of his rampaging enemy. He alertly snatched up the arrows fired directly, that wounded the flesh, and the ones fired obliquely, that came in his wife's words. Our champion, caught up in the heat of the battle on all sides, opposed the shield of his patience to those arrows. He goes out in the face of a hail of weapons, for his mind is like a shield whose facets are the several virtues by which he is distinguished. 18. But the more heroically the ancient enemy is defeated, the more passionately he is driven to devise new traps. Because the wife had fallen silent under Job's reproaches, he immediately summoned others to rise to the task of rebuke and insult. Just as he had sought to increase the pain of Job's earlier losses by repeated reports of disaster, so now he attacks the stout heart with repeated barrages of insult. XI.19. Three friends of Job heard all the evil that had befallen him and they came, each from his own home: Eliphaz the Themanite, Baldad the Suhite, and Sophar the Naamathite. For they had agreed that they would come jointly to see Job and console him. (2.11) From the way they joined to come to console the afflicted friend, we see how great was their charity towards each other and towards the victim. Their zeal and good intentions are demonstrated merely by scripture's testimony that they were friends of so great a man, yet this very intention of theirs is shadowed in the eyes of the punishing judge when they burst forth in speech full of indiscretion. XII.20. And when they looked upon him from afar, they did not recognize him; crying out they wept, rent their garments, and scattered dust to the heavens upon their heads. (2.12) Because illness had changed the appearance of the victim, the friends cry out and weep, rend their garments, and sprinkle dust on their heads. When they see that the one they come to see is changed, spontaneous sympathy changes the appearance even of those who come to console. The way of consolation is to try to lift the victim from his grief first by joining with him in sorrow and weeping. It is impossible to console someone with whose suffering you do not sympathize, for the further aloof you stand from his suffering, the less will the victim, whose state of mind you do not share, be willing to accept your consolation. The mind must be softened to be at one with the sufferer, embrace him, and thus lift him up. Iron cannot be joined to iron, unless both pieces are softened by the heat of the flame. What is soft cannot be joined with what is hard unless the hardness of the latter is softened and tempered so that it might almost become the very thing to which we seek to attach it. We cannot help the fallen to stand, unless we stoop from our rigid height first, for the posture of the erect is too far different from that of the fallen, and if we decline to bend, we can never lift. The friends of the blessed Job, therefore, who came to lift him from his grief, necessarily took care to grieve along with him, and when they saw his wounded body took care to rend their own garments. When they saw his visage altered, they took care to dirty their own heads with dust. Thus the afflicted friend would more readily hear their words, since he saw something of his own affliction in them. 21. But we must realize that whoever wishes to console the afflicted must set a limit to his own compassionate grief, or he will not only fail to ease the victim's mind but even, if he should grieve too deeply, burden the soul of the victim with the weight of despair. Our compassion should match the sufferings of the afflicted in a way that moderates and supports, but does not exacerbate and weigh down. So perhaps we might conclude that the friends of blessed Job were too much afflicted with grief when they came to console him. They saw the victim's sufferings but did not know his mind, and so they fell to sorrowing beyond measure, as if the victim, for all his strength, had been wounded in body but had fallen also in his heart. XII.22. They sat with him on the ground seven days and seven nights; none said a word to him, for they saw his sorrow was overwhelming. (2.13) We do not know whether they sat by poor Job for seven days and seven nights without interruption, or whether they came to him repeatedly and frequently over that period. Often we say we did something for so many days, even though we were not constantly busy with it for that time. Sacred scripture often takes the whole for the part, just as it takes the part for the whole. It takes the part for the whole when it describes the household of Jacob: "Jacob went into Egypt with seventy souls." Mentioning souls, it clearly intends us to understand bodies as well. On the other hand, scripture takes the whole for the part when Mary Magdalene at the tomb complains that "They have taken the Lord from the tomb and we do not know where they have put him." She had come looking only for the body of the Lord, but speaks as if the Lord had been entirely taken away at once. It is not clear in this present passage whether the whole is to be taken for the part. 23. But we must not fail to notice that they were long silent and were rebuked when at last they spoke. Some there are who blurt out speaking hastily and continue carelessly what they began in haste. And some there are who begin speaking reluctantly, but once they begin, cannot keep their words in check. Seeing Job's suffering, his friends kept long silent. But beginning late, they spoke without caution, because they would not spare Job's feelings. They held their tongues, lest they begin rashly, but once they began they used no moderation to keep their consolation from becoming insult. They came with the good intention of offering consolation, but this pure gift they offered out of compassion to God was spoiled by their thoughtless speech. Indeed, it is written, "If you bring your offering rightly, but do not apportion it rightly, you have sinned." We bring our offering rightly when we act with good intentions, but we apportion it wrongly if we do not carry out our intentions with care and attention. To apportion offerings rightly is to discern our own laudable enthusiasms correctly. The one who puts off doing this, even if he brings his offering rightly, is a sinner. 24. Often we act with good intentions, but when we neglect to use discernment and care we fail to see the goal by which our actions will be judged. And so sometimes what we thought would be matter for praise becomes the basis of accusation against us. Anyone who considers the actions of Job's friends cannot fail to see the compassion that brought them to him. We should measure carefully the charity of their act, to come together as one at the side of the afflicted man. We should value their long-suffering patience, to sit silently by for seven days and nights. We should regard their compassion and sympathy, to sully their own heads with dust. But when they began to speak, thinking to win praise for their virtue, they made themselves liable to reproach. Often the uncautious find that what begins with thought only of reward is turned into sin in the end. They lost with their rash words the reward they had bought with their labors. If divine grace had not commanded them to offer sacrifice in atonement, they could have been justly punished by the Lord for just that which they thought would be wondrous pleasing to the Lord. They displease the judge by the self-satisfied way they deign to speak as if in defense of the judge himself. We say these things now to remind our readers to think carefully about the things they themselves do with bad intentions and beware of the Lord's punishment, when they see him punish so severely deeds begun with good intention but tainted with neglect and carelessness. Who would not think himself to have earned a reward if he had either defended God in the eyes of his neighbor or even at least sat silently by for seven days and nights out of compassion for a neighbor? And still the friends of blessed Job found no reward for their labors, only guilt, for though they knew how good was the consolation they offered, they did not know how to balance it with the restraint of discernment. Whence we learn it is necessary to consider not only what we do, but also the care with which we do it. We should do not evil at all, but we should also do no uncautious good. The prophet admonishes us to perform good deeds with care, saying, "Cursed is the man who does the Lord's work carelessly." Let this example profit us in this way, that we remember to tremble in the presence of the searching and boundless scrutiny of the awesome judge, not only for the sins we have committed, but as well for the good deeds (if there are any) we have done. Often what had been thought before a virtue becomes a fault when subjected to God's judgment, and where a fitting reward was expected, just punishment is found instead. 25. We have discussed this passage now briefly according to the historical sense. Let us turn to the mystery of allegory. We spoke at the outset of this work about the unity of head and body and discussed carefully the great bond of charity between them. The Lord still suffers much here in the body (which is us) and yet his body (the church) already rejoices with its head (the Lord) in heaven. Now therefore we should depict the sufferings of the head, just to show how much it still suffers through its body. If our sufferings did not affect the head, he would never have cried out from heaven on behalf of his afflicted limbs to the persecutor, "Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?" If our sufferings were not pains for him, Paul would not have said, in affliction after his conversion, "I make up for the sufferings that Christ lacks, in my own flesh." And still, rejoicing in the resurrection of the head, he speaks of the one who "brought us to life again and made us to sit with him in the heavens." Sufferings and persecution kept him bound on earth, but though weighed down by his pains he was already living vicariously in heaven through the glory of the head. Because we know that head and body are always united, so we begin with the sufferings of the head to show subsequently the pains of the body. We will not bother to repeat what we have already said repeatedly about Satan coming before the Lord, about their conversation, and the praises of Job spoken by their creator, for if the mind is long bogged down in matters already treated in detail, it is kept from getting to new material. We will make a beginning for our allegorical treatment, therefore, where we find something new said after the phrases already often repeated. XIV.26. 'But you have stirred me up against him, that I should afflict him for nothing.' (2.3) If blessed Job takes the part of our Redeemer in the time of his passion, how is it that the Lord says to Satan, "you have stirred me up against him"? The Mediator of God and man, the man Christ Jesus, came to bear the sufferings of our mortality in order to erase the guilt of our sins. But how does the Father claim that Satan stirred him to move against one who was of one and the same nature as the father, when it is clear that no inequality of power, no diversity of will disturbs the harmonious unity of Father and Son? But yet the one who is equal to the father by virtue of his divinity came in the flesh to suffer for us. He would not have undergone these sufferings if he had not taken on the appearance of a man to redeem it from its doom. If the first man had not sinned, the second man would never have come to bear the indignities of the passion. So when the first man was stirred to move away from the Lord by Satan, then is the Lord himself stirred up against the second man. So it is true to say that Satan stirred up the Lord to afflict Job, for he was the one who brought the first man in paradise down from the height of justice through the sin of disobedience. If Satan had not dragged the first Adam to the soul's death as punishment for voluntary sin, the second Adam would never have come, without sin, to accept the voluntary death of the flesh. So it is well said of our Redeemer, "You have stirred me up against him, that I should afflict him for nothing." As if to say openly: 'Since he does not die for his own sake but for another's, you stirred me up to afflict him when you drew the other away from me by your cunning arguments.' Then it is appropriately added, "for nothing." It is for nothing that someone is afflicted if he is weighed down with the punishment for sin but has never been tainted by the stain of that sin. It was for nothing that he was afflicted when he was made flesh and, having no sins of his own to admit, nevertheless undertook without guilt the punishment due to those who live by the flesh. This is what it means when he says through the prophet, "What I did not take, for that I paid the penalty." The other one had been created to live in paradise, but in his pride tried to snatch away the appearance of divine power. The Mediator paid the penalty for that pride though free of guilt himself. Thus a certain wise man says to the Father, "Since you are just, you arrange all things justly. You also condemn the one who ought not be punished." 27. But we must ask how it is that he is just and arranges all things justly, if he condemns the one who ought not be punished. Our Mediator should not have been punished on his own account, for he had been touched by no stain of guilt. But if he did not accept an unearned guilt, he would never have freed us from the death we had earned. Since the father is just, therefore, he punishes a just man and arranges all things justly, because he justifies all men by punishing one who is without sin in place of all the sinners. In that way, the elect might rise to the summit of righteousness, because the one who is above all things bore the penalties of our unrighteousness. Where it says in the one place that he is condemned when he should not be, here it says that he is afflicted "for nothing." Taken in himself he was afflicted for nothing, but not for nothing when we consider what we ourselves have done. The rust of sin could not be scoured away except by the fire of suffering. So he came without fault to subject himself to suffering voluntarily, so that the punishments due our sins might rightly lose their victims by wrongly seizing hold of one who had been free of them. He was afflicted for nothing, and not for nothing, for he had no sin in himself, but by his own blood he washed away the stain of our sin. XV.28. 'To which Satan answered, saying, 'Skin for skin; a man will give up everything he has to save his life. But reach out your hand and touch his face and his flesh: then you will see that he will curse you to your face.' (2.4-5) When the evil spirit sees our Redeemer resplendent with miracles, he cries out, "We know who you are, holy one of God." The one who said this recognized the son of God and feared him. But sometimes, when he saw our Lord was capable of suffering, he thought (for he knew nothing of the power of divine pity) that he was merely a man. He had learned that there were many placed in pastoral positions with an appearance of holiness who were altogether strangers to the inner workings of charity and took no thought for the sufferings of another. Taking him to be like the others, Satan was angry that he could not be overcome by such losses and burned to touch Job's's flesh with suffering, and said, "Skin for skin; a man will give up everything he has to save his life. But reach out your hand and touch his face and his flesh: then you will see that he will curse you to your face." As if to say openly: 'He fails to react to events outside himself; then we will truly see what sort he is, if he experiences in himself that which will make him suffer.' When Satan seeks these things, he speaks not with real words, but with his desires; when his followers seek them, they fit words to their desires. He himself spoke through his followers, as we hear in the voice of the prophet, "Let us put the wood in his bread, and let us erase him from the land of the living." To put wood in bread is to raise the gibbet of the cross on which to fix his body. They think they can erase his life from the land of the living when they think him mortal and think to put an end to him with death. XVI.29. So the Lord said to Satan, 'So: he is in your hand--but only preserve his soul.' (2.6) Who would be so mad as to think that the creator of all things was given over to the hands of Satan? But if we have learned from truth, who of us does not know that all those who lived wickedly are joined to Satan as limbs of his body? Pilate was one of Satan's limbs, failing to recognize even on the brink of death the Lord come to our redemption. The leaders of the priests were Satan's body, when they attempted to drive the Redeemer of the world from the world, pursuing him even to the cross. When therefore our Lord gave himself over into the hands of Satan's limbs, what else was he doing than allowing the hand of Satan to hold sway over him? His mission was to die on the outside, so that we might be freed within and without. If we take the "hand of Satan" to be his power, Christ suffered the force of his hand in the flesh when he felt that power even in the spittle, the blows, the whips, the cross, and the lance of his passion. So he said to Pilate, one of Satan's limbs, when he came to his hour of passion, "You would not have power over me if it had not been given to you from above." But this power to which he had submitted outwardly he still put to his own uses inwardly. Pilate (or Satan, who was Pilate's leader) was under the power of the one over whom he took power. The one from above arranged to undergo what he did at the hands of his persecutor, so that the cruelty that came from the wicked minds of the faithless could still work to the advantage of all the elect. It was inner compassion that determined him to suffer wicked things outwardly. This is why it is said of him at the last supper, "Jesus knew that the Father gave all things into his hands, and that he had come from God and that he was going to God: so he rose from supper and put aside his garments." See how, just as he was about to fall into the hands of his persecutors, he knew that he had even those persecutors in his power. It is clear that if he knew he had received all things, he must have possessed even those by whom he was possessed. Everything their malice was allowed to try against him he could inflict upon himself in the name of pity and compassion. So let it be said to Satan, "So: he is in your hand," for the raving Satan won permission to smite his flesh, little knowing that he still served the Lord's power. 30. Satan is commanded to spare the soul [anima], not because he is prohibited from touching it, but because he is thus shown to be unable to overpower it. The soul of our Redeemer is not upset by the force of temptation, the way it is with mere men like ourselves, who are often shaken by temptation's onrush. Our enemy was unable so much as to budge the mind of the mediator of God and man with temptation, even though he was permitted to take him up on a lofty mountain, to promise to give him the kingdoms of the world, to show him stones to be turned to bread. The Mediator bore with all this without, while his mind clung firmly to its divine strength within. Even if he was sometimes troubled and groaned in the spirit, he still arranged in his divine power how much he would be troubled in his human weakness, governing all things serenely and showing himself troubled to make up for human weakness. He remained calm within himself, arranging everything that he would do with a show of distress to manifest the humanity he had accepted. 31. When we love rightly, there is nothing in all creation dearer to us than our soul; thus we try to do justice to the weight of our love for others by saying we love them as much as our soul. Here then Job's's soul can stand for the life of the elect. When Satan is allowed to smite the flesh of the Redeemer, he is kept back from his soul, for when he takes power over the body to make it suffer, he loses his power over the elect, and when the flesh of the Redeemer dies on the cross, the minds of the elect are strengthened against temptation. So therefore it can be said, "So: he is in your hand--but only preserve his soul," as if to say, 'Have your way with his body and lose all rights of perverse dominion over his chosen ones, whom he has possessed in foreknowledge from all eternity.' 32. Satan went out therefore from the presence of the Lord and afflicted Job with the most terrible sores, from the sole of his foot to the top of his head. (2.7) None of the elect comes into this life without suffering the hostility of the enemy. The limbs of our Lord's body from the beginning of time, though they live faithfully, have suffered much cruelty. Does not Abel show himself to have been one of the Lord's limbs? He gave a foreshadowing of the Lord's death not only in the pleasing sacrifice he offered, but even in the way he accepted death in silence. Of him it is written, "Like a lamb before the shearer he will be silent and not open his mouth." From the foundation of the world, Satan has tried to destroy the body of the Redeemer. From the sole of his foot, therefore, to the top of his head, he inflicted wounds, beginning with the first people and continuing in his fury until he came to the very head of the church. XVIII.33. He was scraping his oozings with a potsherd. (2.8) In the hand of the Lord, what else is this potsherd but the flesh he took from our earthy nature? A shard is hardened by fire, while the flesh of the Lord came forth from his sufferings all the stronger. Dying in his infirmity, he rose again from death without infirmity. So it is rightly said through the prophet: "My strength is hardened like a potsherd." His strength hardened like a potsherd when he fortified the weakness of the flesh he had accepted with the fire of his sufferings. But what should we understand by the oozings if not sin? Flesh and blood usually stand for the sins of the flesh, whence it is said through the psalmist, "Free me from blood." The oozing here is the blood's festering. So what is this ooze but the sins of the flesh grown worse with long habit? A wound begins to ooze, therefore, when a fault long neglected grows worse with habit. So the mediator of God and men, the man Christ Jesus, handed over his body to the hands of his persecutors, scraping his pus with a shard in that he cleansed away sin from the flesh. "For he came," as it is written, "in the likeness of sinful flesh, so that he might condemn sin of sin." When he offered the innocence of his flesh to the enemy, he wiped away the defilement of our flesh, and through the flesh by which the enemy held us prisoner he set us free. What we had made a tool of sin was transformed by our mediator into the armor of justice. With a shard, therefore, the pus is scraped, when sin is defeated by the flesh. XIX.34. He was sitting on a dungheap. (2.8) He was not sitting in the forum where the law thunders forth, nor in some great edifice on a lofty throne, but on a dungheap. For the Redeemer of the human race took on flesh (Paul attests this), "choosing what was weak in the world to overthrow the mighty." And was not our Redeemer sitting on a dungheap as buildnigs toppled when he settled peacefully among the pagans he had formerly rejected, leaving behind the Jews with their pride? He is wounded and away from home, because he suffered the hostility of Judea, was despised by his own race, and felt the pain of his sufferings, as John bears witness, saying, "He came to his own and his own received him not." But the Truth itself tells us how it is that he settled peaceably on the dunghill, for it says, "There will be more joy in heaven for one sinner doing penance than for ninety-nine just souls in no need of penance." He sits sorrowfully on a dungheap, for he freely embraces the hearts of the penitent after all their sins. For are not the hearts of the penitent a kind of dungheap? They weep for their sins as they regard their lives and put off their old selves as if they were heaping up their dung before them. In his troubles Job did not head for the mountain, but he stayed on the dungheap, because when our Redeemer came to his passion, he left behind the haughty hearts of the proud and found peace with the humble and the afflicted. He revealed this of himself even before the incarnation, when he said through the prophet, "To whom shall I look if not the man who is humble and peaceful and in awe of my words?" 35. Who can count up how many injuries he suffered at men's hands, this one whose compassion brought so many gifts to men? Who can count up how much he endures even now, even while he reigns from heaven over the hearts of the faithful? He suffers daily everything that his elect suffer at the hands of the reprobate. Though the head of this body (we are the body) has raised himself free above all things, he still senses the injuries inflicted by the wicked through his body which remains here below. But why must we say these things about the infidels, when we see many of those in the church itself who are devoted to things of the flesh, fighting with their wicked lives against the life of the Redeemer? There are those who pursue him with perverse deeds because they cannot use swords, who become enemies of the good when they see they cannot get what they want in the church. They involve themselves not only in wicked deeds but even work to twist the rectitude of the just away into perversity. They fail to keep their sight fixed on eternity and give way mean-spiritedly to a desire for things of this world. Their fall from eternity is more drastic, for they treating the temporal goods they see as if they were the only goods. The simplicity of the just disturbs them, so when they find a chance to unsettle the just, they urge their own two-facedness upon their brethren. So what follows is particularly fitting: XX.36. His wife said to him, 'Do you still persist with your simplicity? Curse God and die.' (2.9) Whose part is the wickedly persuasive woman playing, if not that of those church members who live according to the flesh and are all the more a burden to the just for their worldly ways because by the words with which they professed their faith they are inside the church itself. They would do less harm if the church had not let them in and made a place for them in the inner chamber of faith. When she receives them with their profession of faith, she makes it impossible for herself to avoid contact with them. This is the meaning of the story of the woman who touched our Redeemer in the middle of a pressing crowd; straightaway our Redeemer said, "Who touched me?" When his disciples answered, "Crowds are all around you and harassing you and you say, 'Who touched me'?" he answers, "Someone touched me, for I know the power went out from me." 37. Many press around the Lord but one woman touches him, for all the worldly people in the church press upon the one from whom they are really very distant. The only ones who touch him are the ones joined to him in true humility. The crowd presses upon him, because the mob of worldly people are more of a burden for having been allowed to come into the church. It presses upon but does not touch him, because although it is insistently present in one way, it is altogether absent in the way it lives. Sometimes they trouble us with their evil words, but sometimes only with their wicked ways. Sometimes they try to persuade us of their beliefs, while sometimes, even if they do not argue their case, they still give constant example of their iniquity. So they entice us towards evil by their words and example and become thereby our persecutors. At their hands we face the contests of temptation, which we must win, if only in our hearts. 38. We must beware that the worldly members of the church sometimes try to urge wickedness upon us by fear, sometimes by bold pride. While they themselves go astray through cravenness or pride, they try to instill the same qualities in us, as if out of love. Peter's mind was still worldly before the death and resurrection of the Redeemer, while the son of Sarvia clung to David his leader still with a worldly mind, but the one sinned out of fear, the other out of pride. The one, hearing of the death of his master, said, "Far be it from you, Lord, this will not be for you." The other could not bear the insults against his leader and said, "Shall not Semei die for these words, since he has cursed the anointed one of the Lord?" But to the first it was quickly said, "Get thee behind me, Satan;" and the other soon heard with his brother, "What have I to do with you, sons of Sarvia?" These men, when they tried to argue for wickedness, are expressly compared to the apostate angels, using soft words to lead us astray to sin in the guise of loving friends. The ones who give way to this sin out of pride are much worse than those who yield through fear. It is the ones who sin out of pride whose part the wife of blessed Job takes here, proudly tempting her husband and saying, "Do you still persist with your simplicity? Curse God and die." She reproaches her husband's simplicity, because he turned away from everything that would perish and fixed his heart's pure desire only on what was eternal. It is as if she said, 'Why do you simple-mindedly seek what is eternal and groan through your present trials so calmly? Be bold, scorn the things of eternity and escape your present sufferings, even at the cost of death.' We learn something about the virtue of the elect in the face of all that they put up with from worldly members of the church when we hear the words of this man, wounded but unscathed, sitting down but standing tall, when he says: XXI.39. 'You have spoken like a foolish woman. If we have taken good things from the hand of the Lord, how shall we refuse the bad?' (2.10) Holy men on the battlefield of temptation, attacked by the blows of some, tempted by the words of others, defend themselves with the shield of patience against the first, and launch spears of doctrine against the other. Their virtue teaches them to stand up to both kinds of battle, teaching the perverse with deep inner wisdom and facing violent men boldly without. These they correct with teaching, those they defeat with endurance. They scorn their attacking enemies by a show of long-suffering, while they lead their weaker brethren home to safety out of compassion. They resist the attackers to keep them from destroying others, while they fear for the others, hoping to keep them from losing the path of righteousness altogether. 40. Let us see how the warrior of the Lord's camps does battle in each of these ways. He says, "Battles without, fears within." He counts off the battles he has endured externally, saying, "In danger of flood, in danger of thieves, in danger from family, in danger from foreigners, in danger in the city, in danger in the desert, in danger on the sea, in danger among unfaithful brothers." But of the other battle, in which he launches his arrows, he adds, "in toil and pain, in sleepless nights without number, in hunger and thirst, in repeated fastings, in cold and nakedness." But in the middle of such contests, hear how he tells of the watches he keeps to guard the camps of the Lord; for he adds, "Beside dangers from without, there is with me daily my concern for all the churches." See how he bravely undertakes these battles and exerts himself in his mercy to protect his neighbors. He recounts the evils he suffers, and he adds the good deeds he performs. Let us consider therefore how great is his labor, as he bears up under external attacks at the same time that he is full of care for others within. His outward battles are the lashes of persecution by which he is flayed, the chains by which he is bound. Within he endures his fear that his sufferings may harm, not himself, but those he cares for. So he writes to them, saying, "Let no one be disturbed by these troubles. For you know that this is what we are here for." In his own sufferings, he fears that others may fall, that his followers may see him feeling the whip for the faith and decline to declare their own faith. O the depth of his charity! He takes no thought for his own sufferings and takes care that his followers yield to no wicked persuasion in their hearts. He despises the wounds of his body and offers healing care for the wounds of others' hearts. Just men have this characteristic, that in the midst of their own troubles they do not lose their concern for others' welfare. They suffer for their own pains while looking out for the others' needs by their instruction. They are like great physicians stricken down by illness. They endure the ripping open of their own wounds and offer healing balm to others. It is much, much easier either to teach when you have nothing to suffer or to suffer and endure if you are not teaching. But holy men exert themselves strenuously in both ways. If they are perchance struck by troubles, they take on this external combat in such a way that they think carefully how they can keep their neighbors from being wounded within. Holy men and brave stand on the battle line and hurl their darts against the enemy on one side, while on the other they shield the weaker ones behind themselves. So they swiftly turn from one side to the other with vigilance and care. They deal wounds boldly ahead and protect the timorous from wounds behind. So because holy men know how to endure attacks without and correct errors within, let it rightly be said, "You have spoken like a foolish woman." Since it is said to the elect, "Act manfully and let your heart be comforted," so the minds of worldly people who abandon the Lord in their fickleness are not inappropriately called "women." 41. If we have taken good things from the hand of the Lord, how shall we refuse the bad? This is as if to say, 'If we are reaching for eternal goodness, what surprise is it if we suffer temporal evil?' Paul had fixed his eye firmly on this goodness when he endured the injuries he suffered, saying, "The sufferings of the present time are not to be measured alongside the coming glory which will be revealed in us." In all this Job did not sin with his lips. When holy men bear persecution within and without, not only do they not burst forth with insults against God, but they launch no angry words against their adversaries. Peter, leader of good men, rightly admonishes, "Let none of you suffer like a murderer, or a thief, or an evil-sayer." An evil-sayer suffers when in a moment of suffering he lets go with insults at least against the one persecuting him. But because the body of the Redeemer (namely the holy church) bears its burden of suffering in such a way that it does not overstep the bounds of humility in its words, it is rightly said of Job as he suffered: XXII.42. In all this Job did not sin with his lips, nor did he utter any folly against God. Three friends of Job heard all the evil that had befallen him and they came, each from his own home: Eliphaz the Themanite, Baldad the Suhite, and Sophar the Naamathite. (2.10-11) In the preface of this work we said that the friends of blessed Job, even if they came to him with good intentions, nevertheless represent the heretics because they fall into error by speaking without discernment. So it is said to them by blessed Job, "I wish to dispute with God, first showing you to be manufacturers of lies and worshippers of false dogmas." Through all the history of the holy church on pilgrimage in this world, as it suffers its wounds and grieves for those who fall away from it, it must in addition put up with the presence of enemies of Christ wearing the name of Christ. To increase its sorrow, the heretics even gather to quarrel and pierce the church with the arrows of their senseless words. 43. It is well said, "they came, each from his own home." The home of heretics is pride itself, for if their hearts had not first grown swollen and proud, they would not have come forth to battle with their wicked teachings. Pride is the home of the wicked just as humility is the home of the good. Of that home it is said through Solomon, "If the spirit of the one who has power should lord it over you, do not leave your home." As if to say, 'If you see the spirit of the tempter about to overcome you, do not let go of the humility of repentance.' He shows that he means our home to be understood as the penitent humility by his next words, where he says, "For healing shall make great sins to cease." For what is mournful humility but the medicine of sin? So the heretics come from their own homes because they are moved against the holy church out of pride. 44. The perversity of their actions can be understood from the translation of their names. For they are called Eliphaz, Baldad and Sophar. As we said above, Eliphaz means "contempt of God," for if heretics did not despise God, they would never have thought wicked thoughts about him. But Baldad means "oldness alone," for while they refuse to be bound by truth and seek victories for their perverse ideas, they fail to convert themselves to the new life and what they seek comes from oldness alone. Now Sophar means "destruction of the watchtower," for those who are inside the holy church behold the mysteries of their Redeemer humbly in true faith, but when heretics come along with their false claims, they destroy the watchtower, for they distract the minds of those whom they tempt away from the attentive watchfulness of direct vision. 45. The places from which they come are named in ways appropriate to the deeds of heretics, for they are said to be a Themanite, a Suhite, and a Naamathite. Now Thema is interpreted, "south wind," Suhi, "speaker," and Naama, "attractiveness." But who does not know that the south wind is a warm wind? Heretics are fired with zeal to be wise, so they seek to be warmer than is necessary. For laziness is a thing of numbing chill, while the restlessness of unrestrained curiosity stems from unrestrained warmth. Because they seek the heat of wisdom more ardently than they should, they are said to come from the direction of the south wind. Paul took care to restrain the minds of the faithful from this warmth of unrestrained wisdom when he said, "Not to be more wise than the wisdom that is fitting, but to be wise in moderation." This is why David attacked the Valley of the Salt-pits, for in the hour of his judgment our Redeemer wipes out the foolishness of unrestrained cleverness in those who thing wrongly of him. But Suhi is called "speaking," for the Suhites desire to have their warmth not to live well but to speak proudly. They are said to come from Thema and Suhi, that is, from warmth and talkativeness, because they show their study of scripture comes not from the heart of charity but from the empty words of eager chatter. Now Naama is translated "attractiveness," because the Naamathites do not wish to be learned but to seem so, and so they take on by their learned words the appearance of those who live well. Through the warmth of chatter they present an image of attractiveness, to persuade us to evil through attractive words with which they cleverly conceal the foulness of their lives. Neither are these names carelessly arranged in the narration: first Thema, then Suhi, finally Naama appears, because excessive warmth lights them first, then their polished words prop them up, and then finally they show themselves to men all attractive in their hypocrisy. XXIII.46. For they had agreed they would come jointly to see Job and console him. (2.11) Heretics are said to agree when they join their thoughts in wicked concord against the church. Insofar as they defect from the truth, they agree with one another in falsehood. Now all those who teach us about eternity are consoling us for the sufferings of our journey, but heretics, desiring to teach the church their own doctrines, also present themselves as if to give consolation. It is nothing to marvel at that those who take the part of the adversaries should bear the name of friends, since it was said even to the traitor himself, "Friend, for what have you come?" And the rich man who was burning in the fire of hell is called "son" by Abraham. Even if the wicked refuse to accept correction from us, it is still fitting that we call them names that spring from our own kindness, not from their wickedness. XXIV.47. And when they looked upon him from afar, they did not recognize him. (2.12) When heretics look upon the works of the holy church, they are looking "up on" it, for they are in the lowest place and when they consider the church's works, they see things placed on high. But they do not recognize the church in its sufferings. For the church seeks to take on the evils of this world, in order to come to its eternal reward purged clean. Often it shies away from prosperity and rejoices to learn from discipline. Heretics, who seek present glory as a great thing, do not recognize the church covered with wounds. What they see in the church they do not find when they read their own hearts. The church advances even in adversity, while they stay stuck in their stupor, because they do not understand from their own experience the things they see before them. XXV.48. They rent their garments, and scattered dust to the heavens upon their heads. (2.12) The garments of the church we take to be all its faithful people, just as it says through the prophet: "You shall be clothed with all these people as with adornment." By this reading, the garments of the heretics are all the people who join together with them and are wrapped up in their errors. Heretics have this characteristic, that they cannot for long stay at the level they reach upon leaving the church, but daily they fall into worse things and as their thoughts continue to go astray they divide themselves into many factions and are separated from each other the more by argument and confusion. So because they wound and rend and divide those whom they have joined to their wickedness, it may well be said that the friends who come rend their garments. With torn garments, the body is revealed, for often the malice of their hearts is revealed when their followers are torn from each other. Discord reveals their treachery, previously shut up under a show of guilty harmony. 49. But they scatter dust to the heavens upon their heads. What is that dust but intelligence that is bound to earthly things? What is the head if not the mind that governs? What is heaven, if not the command that speaks from above? To scatter dust over one's head to the heavens is to pervert the mind with worldly thoughts and to attach earthly interpretations to heavenly words. For they discuss the divine words rather than accept them. They sprinkle the dust over their heads because they go beyond the powers of their minds, reading worldly ideas into the commands of God. XXVI.50. They sat with him on the ground seven days and seven nights. (2.13) What we see by day we recognize; but at night we either see nothing in our blindness or we are confused by doubt as to what we see. Day stands for understanding, therefore, and night for ignorance. By the number seven is meant the totality of everything: so all this transient age is completed in no more than seven days. The friends of blessed Job are said to have sat with him seven days and seven nights, because both in the things in which they do see the true light and in those things in which they bear the darkness of ignorance they make as if to condescend to the church in its weakness. They are really preparing the snares of deception under a show of kind words. They are swollen with pride for what they know and for what they do not know, and secretly they think themselves great; but still sometimes they bow to the church, at least in appearance, and inject their poison with soft words. To sit upon the ground, therefore, is to display an image of humility, hoping to press their haughty ideas the more convincingly behind a show of humility. 51. The ground [terra] can also represent the incarnation of the Mediator. Thus it is said to Israel, "You shall make an altar of dirt [terra] for me." To make an altar of dirt for God is to hope in the incarnation of the Mediator. Our offering is accepted by God when our humility places on this altar (that is, in its faith in the Lord's incarnation) whatever it does. We place an offering on an altar of dirt if we fortify what we do with faith in the incarnation. But there are some heretics who do not deny the fact of the Mediator's incarnation, but who either think otherwise than the truth about his divinity or disagree about the nature of that incarnation. The ones who profess the true incarnation of the Redeemer with us are the ones sitting with Job on the ground as equals. But they are said to have sat there for seven days and seven nights on the ground, for whether they are able to see something of the fulness of truth or whether they are blinded by the darkness of folly, they cannot deny the mystery of the incarnation. To sit with blessed Job on the ground is to believe in the true flesh of the Redeemer along with holy church. 52. But sometimes heretics are instruments of savage punishment for us, sometimes they attack us with words alone, sometimes they stir us up when we are at peace, while sometimes they remain quiet if they see us silent: friends in silence, they oppose us when we speak. So because blessed Job had not yet said anything to them, it is rightly added, "No one said a word to him." We have silent adversaries if we fail to propagate sons for the true faith by our preaching. But if we begin to speak the truth, soon we hear the heavy insults of their response: they immediately leap to oppose us and break out bitterly against us. They fear that the hearts which folly bears down to the depths should be pulled up on high again by the voice of one speaking truth. So because, as we said, our adversaries love us when we are silent, and hate us when we speak, it is rightly said of Job when he was silent: XXVII.53. No one said a word to him. (2.13) Sometimes when idleness and inertia keep the hearts of the faithful sitting quietly, heretics scatter the seeds of error abroad. But when they see that the minds of the good are full of deep wisdom, longing to return to the heavenly homeland, sorrowing much over the toils of exile here, they restrain their tongues with careful circumspection, because they see that they should speak in vain against the hearts of those who sorrow and so they keep silence. So it is rightly added, after it says, "No one said a word to him," by way of expressing the cause of their silence: XXVIII.54. For they saw his grief was overwhelming. (2.13) When the powerful sorrow that comes from the love of God has pierced our heart, the enemy fears to speak his wicked words, for he sees that if he attacked the mind thus intent, he would not only fail to turn it toward perversity, but he might even lose, by stirring up the mind, those souls he already held. 55. Perhaps it troubles some readers that we have interpreted this passage in such a way that the good deeds of Job's friends represent evil acts of heretics. But it is very often the case that something is right when read literally but wrong when understood allegorically. Just as frequently, something may be a cause of damnation taken as historical fact, but when written down it becomes a prophecy of some good thing. We can show this more quickly if we take a single text of scripture to show both tendencies. For who could there be, whether faithful or infidel, who would not be entirely repelled by hearing that David went walking on his terrace and lusted after Bersheba, the wife of Urias? When Urias returned home from battle, David urged him to return home to wash his feet. But Urias answered him, "The ark of the Lord is camped in a tent and I should rest in my house?" David received Urias at his own table and gave him letters that would be the cause of his death. When David is walking on his terrace, whom does he foreshadow but the one of whom it is written, "He placed his tent in the sun"? What does it mean to bring Bersheba to his house but to take the law of the letter, wed to a worldly people, and join it to oneself in spiritual understanding? Bersheba means "the seventh well," because of course through knowledge of the law, with the infusion of spiritual grace, perfect wisdom is offered to us. But whom does Urias represent if not the Jewish people? His name translates, "my light is of God." Now the Jewish people may be said to glory in the light of God because it is exalted by knowledge of the law it has received. But David takes away Urias's wife and joins her to himself. This means that the Redeemer appearing in the flesh "strong of hand" (which is what "David" means) showed that the law spoke, in the spiritual sense, of himself and showed that it was no longer the possession of the Jewish people (who read it literally) and so joined it to himself, when he declared that he had been proclaimed on its pages. David urges Urias to go home and wash his feet because the incarnate Lord came to the Jewish people commanding that they heed their consciences and wash away the stain of their deeds with tears, so that they might understand the commands of the law spiritually and, finding at last the font of baptism after living under such harsh rules, they might resort to water after their labors. But Urias remembered that the ark of the Lord was dwelling in a tent and answered that he could not enter his own house. This is as if the Jewish people were to say, 'I observe God's commands in sacrifices of flesh and I have no need to give ear to the spiritual understanding with my conscience.' To say that the ark is dwelling in a tent is to treat the commands of God only as a matter of giving service in sacrifices of flesh. So when Urias did not want to return home, David invited him to his own table, for though the Jewish people refused to heed their conscience, the Redeemer still came and preached his spiritual commands to them, saying, "if you would believe Moses, you would perhaps also believe me, for he wrote of me." The Jewish people possessed the law that spoke of the divinity of the one in whom the same people refused to believe. So Urias was sent to Joab with the letters that would be the death of him, because the Jewish people bears with it the law whose words of rebuke will be the cause of its death. By holding on to the commands of the law that it refused to fulfill, it was surely carrying the judgment by which it would be condemned. What could be more criminal than this deed of David's? What could be more innocent than Urias? But again in a mystic sense [per mysterium], what could be more holy than David, what could be more faithless than Urias? By the sin of the one, innocence is foretold prophetically, while sin is prophesied by the innocence of the other. It is not therefore inappropriate that the good deeds of Job's friends, should be read as the evil deeds of heretics. The power of sacred scripture recounts the past in such a way that the future is revealed, and so it can approve the deed of the doer only to rebuke it in a mystic sense. It can condemn some deeds done in fact to preach other deeds in the mystic sense. 56. We have now worked through the knots of allegorical mystery line by line; let us now turn to touch briefly on the moral interpretation. The mind hastens to clarify what is obscure; if it is long delayed with what is obvious, it is hindered from coming to knock (as it should) on doors that are closed. Often the ancient enemy launches his war of temptation against our mind, then rests from the contest for a while, not to put an end to his malice but to render hearts carefree in time of respite. Then suddenly he returns to capture them more easily for attacking unexpectedly. This is why he returns to tempt the blessed man again and asks Job be tortured directly, which the divine pity allows with a concession, saying, XXIX.57. 'So: he is in your hand--but only preserve his soul.' (2.6) For he abandons us the better to protect us. He protects us so that he might reveal to us the weakness of our condition in the hour of temptation that he allows. Satan quickly went out from God's presence and wounded his victim from the sole of his foot to the top of his head, for when he has his opportunity he begins with the least things, working up to the greater, meaning to offer temptation to the mind by piercing the whole body with the wounds. But he did not succeed in reaching the soul with his blows, because inside, beneath all thought, beneath the wounds left by the pleasures that were indulged, the integrity of the secret will resisted. Though self-indulgence should gnaw at the mind, it could not turn aside the constancy of holy rectitude to accept the soft delights of sin. We ought nevertheless to clean the wounds that pleasure inflicts with the harsh penances and with strict punishment purify whatever dissolute thoughts spring up in the mind. So it is well added, XXX.58. He was scraping his oozings with a potsherd. (2.8) What is the potsherd but harsh punishment? What is the oozing flesh but the effusion of unlawful thoughts? Stricken, we scrape our oozing flesh with a shard when we judge ourselves harshly and thus purify ourselves from the pollution of unlawful thought. The shard can also stand for the vulnerability of mortality. Then to clean the flesh with a shard is to consider the vulnerability of mortality and where it leads, and to clean away the foulness of delight in wretched things. To consider how quickly flesh comes to dust is to defeat swiftly the shameful inner motions of the flesh. When temptation pours wicked thought into the mind, it is as if pus is oozing from a wound. But the wound is quickly cleaned if we hold in our hands the shard that brings us to consider our vulnerable mortality. 59. Nor should we underestimate the importance of the things we turn over idly in our mind, even if they do not stir us to action. In this way the Redeemer came to clean our wounds with a shard when he said, "You have heard that it was said to the ancients, Thou shalt not commit adultery. But I say to you that if anyone look at a woman to lust after her, he has already committed adultery with her in his heart." The wound is cleaned, therefore, when guilt is cut away not only from our deeds but even from our thoughts. This is why Jerobaal saw an angel while he was winnowing grain from chaff. At the angel's command he cooked a goat, placed it upon a rock, and poured the juice of the flesh over it. The angel touched it with his staff and fire came from the rock and consumed it. What does it mean to flail the grain but to use right judgment in separating the grains of virtue from the chaff of vice? An angel appears to those who do this, because the Lord more openhandedly reveals inner secrets, when we cleanse ourselves from outer things. The angel commands that a goat be killed (that is, that all the desires of our flesh be sacrificed) and its flesh placed upon a rock and the broth poured over it. What else is the rock if not the one of whom it was said through Paul, "but the rock was Christ"? We place the flesh upon a rock when we crucify our body in imitation of Christ. We pour broth over the offering when we empty ourselves of the thoughts of the flesh in following Christ's manner of life. For we pour the juice of the flesh over a rock when the mind is emptied from the torrents of the thoughts of the flesh. The angel soon touches the offering with a rod, because the power of divine assistance cannot be far away from our thoughts at such a time. Fire comes from the rock and consumes flesh and broth because the spirit breathed forth by our Redeemer fires our heart with such a flame of compunction that every illicit thought and deed within it is burned up completely. Pouring the juice over the rock is the same as to clean the wound with a shard. The perfected mind watches carefully therefore, that it might not only abstain from wrongful action but even clean away the dregs of foul thoughts in itself. Often enough in the hour of victory the battle begins again, and when impurity of thought is vanquished, the mind of the victor swells with pride. So the mind must be raised up through purification and still kept low in humility. So when it is said of the holy man, "he was scraping his oozings with a shard," it is immediately and fittingly added: XXI.60. Sitting on a dung heap. (2.8) To sit on a dungheap is to be conscious of our worthlessness and lowliness. We sit on a dungheap when we bring back to mind in repentance the things we have done wrong. Then when we look upon the offal of our sins, we can restrain all the pride that stirs in our heart. That man is truly sitting on a dungheap who looks upon his own weakness with care and refuses to take pride in the goodness that has come to him through grace. Was not Abraham sitting on his own dungheap when he said, "Shall I speak to my Lord, when I am dust and ashes?" We can clearly see where he places himself, when he thinks himself to be dust and ashes, even when he is speaking with God. If a man who was lifted up to speak with God could so despise his own worth, we must think carefully about the punishment that will strike us if we do not reach such heights, yet boast of little things. There are those who think great thoughts about themselves when they are busied with little deeds. They lift up their minds on high and think that the excel all others by their merits and virtues. These are surely leaving behind the dunghill of humility within themselves and climbing the heights of pride, imitating the one who was first to lift himself up (and overthrew himself in the process)--imitating the one who was not content with the marks of high favor that he had received, and said, "I shall rise to heaven, I shall exalt my throne above the stars of heaven." And in his evil, Babylon is joined to him, she who is the jumbled mass of sinners and who says, "I sit here as a queen and I am not a widow." Whoever swells up within is placing himself on a high place in his own eyes, but he really presses himself down to the depths by refusing to think truthfully about his weakness. Then there are those who do not seek to do good themselves, but when they see others sin they get the idea that they themselves are just in comparison to the rest. There is indeed no one single fault that pierces the hearts of all. One man is snared by pride, another is tripped by wrath, another is tormented by greed, another is inflamed with lust. Very often it happens that someone weighed down by pride can see how anger enrages someone else, and because anger is not his own vice he considers himself better than the angry one and boasts within of his own calm fairness, because he fails to see the vice that by which he is himself more tenaciously held. Often as well a man wounded with greed sees another plunge in the whirlpool of lust. Because he sees himself free of the defilement of the flesh, he pays no heed to the defiling stains of spiritual vice within. While he judges in another the evil he is free from, he does not see the evil that is his. So it happens that while the mind is distracted judging another, it is deprived of the light of self-judgment. He is all the more proudly hostile towards another's vices for the way he neglects his own. 61. On the other hand, people who truly strive for the heights of virtue quickly take their own vices to heart when they hear of another's sins. They understand the other's sins better for regretting their own more truly. Because every one of the elect restrains himself with thought of his own weakness, it can rightly be said that the holy man sits on a dungheap in sorrow. The one who truly humbles himself makes progress by looking unflinchingly upon the stains of sin by which he is covered. We must know that often the mind is touched by eager temptation in time of prosperity, but still sometimes we suffer adversity without and at the same time are wearied by the press of temptation within, so that the whip tortures the flesh and still the flesh pours its suggestions into the mind. So it is well that after so many wounds inflicted on Job, there should then be attached the words of his wife trying to lead him to evil, saying: XXXII.62. 'Do you still persist with your simplicity? Curse God, and die.' (2.9) This wife full of wicked persuasion represents the thoughts of the flesh harassing the mind. For as it has often been said we are worn down by the lash on the outside and worn out by the suggestions of the flesh within. This is what Jeremiah laments, saying, "The sword is abroad killing, and at home a like death waits." For the sword is abroad killing when punishment strikes us from without and brings us to a halt. A like death waits at home because the one who bears these lashes is still not free of the stain of temptation in his conscience within. Hence David says, "Let them be like dust in the face of the wind, and the angel of the Lord assailing them."81 The one who is swept away by the gust of temptation in his heart is the one taken up like dust before the wind. When divine punishment strikes at such a time, who will doubt that this is the assailing angel of the Lord? 63. But it is one way with the reprobate, another with the elect. The hearts of the reprobate are tempted, and they give in; the hearts of the just face temptation but fend it off. The reprobate are taken by a delight in temptation, and even if what is wickedly suggested is displeasing for the moment, there comes a time when it becomes pleasing after deliberation. But the elect face the arrows of temptation, resist them dauntlessly, and are wearied in the process; if the mind in temptation is then sometimes taken a little with delight, nevertheless the elect blush at the surreptitious entry of this delight and rebuke with bold censure whatever fleshly desire they see rise up within them. XXXIII.64. 'You have spoken like a foolish woman. If we have taken good things from the hand of the Lord, how shall we refuse the bad?' (2.10) It is right that the holy mind should reject with spiritual discipline whatever impudent whisperings of the flesh it hears, lest the flesh might speak harshly and provoke anger or speak softly and lead to lust and dissipation. Manly censure, rebuking illicit hints and thoughts, restrains the dissolute weakness of turpitude, saying, "You have spoken like a foolish woman." And again reflection on God's gifts restrains the exasperation of harsh thoughts, saying, "if we have taken good things from the hand of the Lord, how shall we refuse the bad?" Whoever tries to subdue the vices and strive to reach the eternal heights of inner reward with long strides of true intentions, seeing himself surrounded on all sides in the war of the vices, girds himself up staunchly with the arms of virtue. He fears oncoming arrows less for having fortified his breast against them. 65. Often when we try to protect ourselves with the armor of virtue in the war against temptation, there are vices that lurk under the guise of virtue and come to us with smiling face, but we recognize and understand their hostility. So the friends of blessed Job come together as if to console him, but they break out in insults, because the lurking vices take on the appearance of virtue but attack us like enemies. So often unrestrained wrath masks as justice, and weak laxity wants to be taken for mercy. Often heedless fear passes as humility, while unchecked pride claims to be freedom of spirit. The friends therefore come to console but slip into hostile criticism, because the vices, whitewashed with the appearance of virtue, begin with a smiling appearance but soon trouble us with their harsh opposition. XXIV.66. For they had agreed that they would come jointly to see Job and console him. (2.10) The vices agree together under the guise of virtue because there are vices which are joined in league among themselves against us, like pride and anger, laxity and fear. Anger is close to pride, laxity to fear. So they come towards us in agreement, these vices joined together by a kinship of depravity against us. But if we have come to know the misery of our captivity here, and if in our inmost hearts we are sorrowing out of love for our eternal homeland, the vices that ambush the wickedly happy cannot prevail against the sadly good. XXXV.67. And when they looked upon him from afar, they did not recognize him. (2.12) The vices do not recognize us in time of affliction, for as soon as they strike a saddened heart, they are repelled and denied. When we were happy they knew us, inasmuch as they penetrated our defenses, now they cannot recognize us in our grief, because they are defeated by our strength. But the ancient enemy sees that he has been discovered in them, and hides himself all the more under a show of virtue. XXXVI.68. Crying out, they wept, rent their garments, and scattered dust to the heavens upon their heads. They sat with him on the ground seven days and seven nights. (2.12) Pity is indicated by their weeping, discernment by their torn garments, energy for good works by the dust of the head, humility by their sitting down. For sometimes the insidious enemy masquerades at pity in order to lead us to the limits of cruelty, as when he prevents the present punishment of guilt, so that what is not checked here will be greeted later by the fire of gehenna. Sometimes he places the appearance of discernment before our eyes and leads us into the snares of indiscretion, as when at his instigation we prudently let ourselves have more to eat as a concession to illness, thus uncautiously stirring up the war of the flesh against us. Sometimes he creates the illusion of energy for good works but through this introduces restlessness in the face of toil, as when someone is unable to relax at all and fears to be thought lazy. Sometimes he displays a show of humility in order to remove our usefulness, as when he tells some that they are more feeble and useless than they in fact are, so that by thinking themselves too unworthy, they will come to fear to be involved in matters in which they could be of use to their neighbors. 69. But the hand of compunction, working subtly, discerns these virtues hidden by the ancient enemy under a pretense of virtue. The one who is truly sorrowful within is boldly provident in seeing what is to be done, and what not to be done, in the world outside. For if the power of compunction touches us deep within, all the clamor of wicked temptation falls silent. XXXVII.70. No one said a word to him, for they saw his grief was overwhelming. (2.13) For if the heart is truly sorrowful, the vices will not find their tongue against us. For when the life of righteousness is sought wholeheartedly, the useless suggestion of evil is blocked out. Indeed, if we are in the habit of girding ourselves energetically against the enticements of vice, we turn those vices to the service of virtue. Anger may possess some people, but if they subject it to rational control they turn it to the beneficial service of holy zeal. Pride lifts some people, but if they bow their soul in fear of God, they turn their pride to serve in the defense of justice with a voice of freedom and authority. The power of the flesh entices some people, but if they subdue the body in the performance of works of mercy they can win the rewards of pity where they had suffered the goad of wickedness. So it is well that blessed Job made a burnt offering for his friends after all their quarrels. He had borne them as enemies through their long conflict, but made them his fellow citizens again through sacrifice; for when we subdue all our vicious thoughts and turn them into virtues, it is as if we are changing the hostility of our temptations through the offering of our good intentions into friendly hearts. Let it be enough for us to have treated this material triply in three volumes. We have planted a root strong here at the outset of the work as if to provide support for the tree that is to be born, so that we may later bring out the branches of our discussion as the ... ... may require. (One footnote left over: Psalm 34.5. Sequence messed up someplace.)