The two lives |
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There
are two ways of life that God has commended to the Church. One is
through faith, the other is through vision. One is in pilgrimage through
a foreign land, the other is in our eternal home; one in labour, the
other in repose; one in a journey to our homeland, the other in that
land itself; one in action, the other in the fruits of contemplation.
The first life, the life of action, is personified by
the Apostle Peter; the contemplative life, by John. The first life is
passed here on earth until the end of time, when it reaches its
completion; the second is not fulfilled until the end of the world, but
in the world to come it lasts for ever. For this reason Peter is told
“Follow me”, but Jesus adds, “If I want John to stay behind till I come,
what does it matter to you? You are to follow me”.
You are to follow me by imitating me in the enduring
suffering; he is to remain till I come to restore the blessings that
last for ever. To put it more clearly: let action, which is complete in
itself, follow me and follow the example of my passion; but let
contemplation, which has only begun, remain until I come, wait until the
moment of its completion.
It is the fullness of patience to follow Christ
loyally even to death; the fullness of knowledge lies in wait until
Christ comes again, when it will be revealed and made manifest. The ills
of this world are endured in the land of the dying; the good gifts of
God will be revealed in the land of the living.
We should not understand “I want him to stay behind until I come” as meaning to remain permanently but rather to wait: what is signified by John will not be fulfilled now, but it will
be fulfilled, when Christ comes. On the other hand, what is signified
by Peter, to whom Jesus says “follow me”, must be realized now or it
will never be fulfilled.
But we should not separate these great apostles. They
were both part of the present life symbolized by Peter and they were
both part of the future life symbolized by John. Considered as symbols,
Peter followed Christ and John remained; but in their living faith both
endured the evils of the present life and both looked forward to the
future blessings of the coming life of joy.
It is not they alone that do this but the whole of the
holy Church, the bride of Christ, who needs to be rescued from the
trials of the present and to be brought to safety in the joys of the
future. Individually, Peter and John represent these two lives, the
present and the future; but both journeyed in faith through this
temporal life and both will enjoy the second life by vision, eternally.
All the faithful form an integral part of the body of
Christ, and therefore, so that they may be steered through the perilous
seas of this present life, Peter, first among the Apostles, has received
the keys of the kingdom of heaven, to bind and loose from sin. And also
for the sake of the faithful, so that they may keep the still and
secret heart of his mode of life, John the evangelist rested on Christ’s
breast.
It is not Peter alone who binds and looses sins, but
the whole Church. It is not John alone who has drunk at the fountain of
the Lord’s breast and pours forth what he had drunk in his teaching of
the Word being God in the beginning, God with God, of the Trinity and
Unity of God — of all those things which we shall see face to face in
his kingdom but now, before the Lord comes, we see only in images and
reflections — not John alone, for the Lord himself spreads John’s gospel
throughout the world, giving everyone to drink as much as he is capable
of absorbing.
St Augustine's homilies on St John's gospel
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