Friday, September 19, 2025

Patristic Wisdom: Looking to the Fifteenth Sunday after Pentecost

Amos the Prophet by Gustav Dore
Hear now these things, you who are destroying the poor man in the morning
        and are oppressing the beggars of the land,
who are saying, “When will the month passes
        and we will do business,
and the Sabbaths,
        and we will open the treasury,
to make a small measure, to increase the weight,
        and to make an unjust yoke,
to acquire beggars with silver,
        and a humble one for sandals,
        and we will trade from every kind of produce?”
The Lord swears by the arrogance of Jacob;
        He will not forget all your works. (Amos 8:4–7 LXX)

What shall be said to this by those of us who are buyers and sellers of corn, and watch the hardships of the seasons, in order to grow prosperous, and luxuriate in the misfortunes of others, and acquire, not, like Joseph, the property of the Egyptians, as a part of a wide policy, (for he could both collect and supply corn duly, as he also could foresee the famine, and provide against it afar off,) but the property of their fellow countrymen in an illegal manner, for they say, “When will the new moon be gone, that we may sell, and the sabbaths, that we may open our stores?” And they corrupt justice with divers measures and balances, and draw upon themselves the ephah of lead. What shall we say to these things who know no limit to our getting, who worship gold and silver, as those of old worshiped Baal, and Astarte and the abomination Chemosh? …

Join with us, divine and sacred person, in considering these questions, with the store of experience, that source of wisdom, which you have gathered in your long life. Herewith instruct your people. Teach them to break their bread to the hungry, to gather together the poor that have no shelter, to cover their nakedness and not neglect those of the same blood, and now especially that we may gain a benefit from our need instead of from abundance, a result which pleases God more than plentiful offerings and large gifts. After this, nay before it, show yourself, I pray, a Moses, or Phinehas today. Stand on our behalf and make atonement, and let the plague be stayed, either by the spiritual sacrifice, or by prayer and reasonable intercession. Restrain the anger of the Lord by your mediation: avert any succeeding blows of the scourge. He knows to respect the hoary hairs of a father interceding for his children. Entreat for our past wickedness: be our surety for the future. Present a people purified by suffering and fear. Beg for bodily sustenance, but beg rather for the angels’ food that comes down from heaven. So doing, you will make God to be our God, will conciliate heaven, will restore the former and latter rain: the Lord shall show loving-kindness and our land shall yield her fruit; our earthly land its fruit which lasts for the day, and our frame, which is but dust, the fruit which is eternal, which we shall store up in the heavenly winepresses by your hands, who presents both us and ours in Christ Jesus our Lord, to whom be glory for evermore. Amen.

Gregory of Nazianzus, Oration 16.19–20

No comments: