The Holy, Glorious and All-praised Leaders of the Apostles, Peter and Paul
Commemorated on June 29
Sermon of Blessed Augustine, Bishop of Hippo (Ipponesia)
On this
present day Holy Church piously remembers the suffering of the Holy Glorious
and All-Praiseworthy Apostles Peter and Paul.
Saint Peter, the
fervent follower of Jesus Christ, for the profound confession of His Divinity:
"Thou art the Christ, the Son of the Living God", – was deemed
worthy by the Saviour to hear in answer: "Blessed art thou, Simon... I
tell thee, that thou art Peter (Petrus), and on this stone (petra) I build My
Church" (Mt. 16: 16-18). On "this stone" (petra), is on that
which thou sayest: "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the Living God",
– it is on this thy confession I build My Church. Wherefore the "thou art
Peter": it is from the "stone" (petra) that Peter (Petrus) is,
and not from Peter (Petrus) that the "stone" (petra) is – just as
how the christian is from Christ, and not Christ from the christian. Do you
want to know, from what sort of "rock" (petra) the Apostle Peter
(Petrus) was named? – Hear ye the Apostle Paul: "I do not want ye not to
know, brethren, – says the Apostle of Christ, – how our fathers were all
under a cloud, and all passed through the sea: and all in Moses were baptised
in the cloud and in the sea. And all thus eating spiritual food, and all thus
drinking spiritual drink: for they did drink from the spiritual accompanying rock:
for the rock indeed was Christ" (1 Cor. 10: 1-4). Here is the from whence
the "Rock" is Peter.
Our Lord Jesus
Christ, in the final days of His earthly life, in the days of His mission to
the race of man, chose from among the disciples His twelve Apostles for
preaching the Word of God. Among them, the Apostle Peter for his fiery ardour
was vouchsafed to occupy the first place (Mt. 10: 2) and to be as it were the
representative person for all the Church. And therefore it is said to him,
preferentially, after the confession: "And I give thee the keys of the
Kingdom of Heaven: and if thou bindest upon the earth, it will be bound in the
Heavens: and if thou loosenest upon the earth, it will be loosened in the
Heavens (Mt.16; 19). Wherefore it was not one man, but rather the One Universal
Church, that received these "keys" and the right "to bind and
loosen". And that actually it was the Church that received this right, and
not exclusively a single person, turn your attention to another place of the
Scriptures, where the same Lord says to also all His Apostles: "Receive ye
the Holy Spirit", – and further after this: "Whoseso sins ye remit,
are remitted them: and whoseso sins ye retain, are retained" (Jn. 20:
22-23); or: "with what ye bind upon the earth, will be bound in Heaven:
and with what ye loosen upon the earth, will be loosened in the Heavens"
(Mt. 18: 18). Thus, it is the Church that binds, the Church that loosens; the
Church, built upon the foundational corner-stone – Jesus Christ Himself (Eph.
2: 20) doth bind and loosen. Let both the binding and the loosening be feared:
the loosening, in order not to fall under this again; the binding, in order not
to remain forever in this condition. Wherefore "by the passions of his own
sins, – says Wisdom, – is each ensnared" (Prov. 5: 22); and except for
Holy Church nowhere is it possible to receive the loosening.
And after His
Resurrection the Lord entrusted the Apostle Peter to shepherd His spiritual
flock not because, that among the disciples only Peter alone was pre-deserved
to shepherd the flock of Christ, but Christ addresses Himself chiefly to Peter
because, that Peter was first among the Apostles and as such the representative
of the Church; besides which, having turned in this instance to Peter alone, as
to the top Apostle, Christ by this confirms the unity of the Church.
"Simon of John, – says the Lord to Peter, – lovest thou Me? – and the
Apostle answered: "Yea, Lord, Thou knowest that I love Thee"; and a
second time it was thus asked, and a second time he thus answered; being asked
a third time, seeing that as it were not believed, he was saddened. But how is
it possible for him not to believe That One, Who knew his heart? And wherefore
then Peter answered: "Lord, Thou knowest all; Thou knowest that I love
Thee". "And sayeth Jesus to him" all three times "Feed My
sheep" (Jn. 20: 15-17). Besides this, the thrice appealing of the Saviour
to Peter and the thrice confession of Peter before the Lord had a particular
beneficial purpose for the Apostle. That one, to whom was given "the keys
of the kingdom" and the right "to bind and to loosen", himself
thrice bound himself by fear and cowardice (Mt. 26: 69-75), and the Lord thrice
loosens him by His appeal and in turn by his confession of strong love. And to
shepherd literally the flock of Christ was acquired by all the Apostles and
their successors. "Attend yourself to all the flock, – urges the Apostle
Paul to church presbyters, – in which the Holy Spirit hath established ye as
bishops, to shepherd the Church of the Lord God, acquired by His Blood"
(Acts 20: 28); and the Apostle Peter to the elders: "Feed among you the
flock of Christ, attending to it not by need, but by will and according to God:
not for unrighteous profit, but zealously: not as commanding parables, but be
an image to the flock. And when is appeared the Prince of pastors, ye will
receive unfading crowns of glory" (1 Pet. 5: 2-4).
It is remarkable that
Christ, having said to Peter: "Feed My sheep", – did not say:
"Feed thy sheep", – but rather to feed, good servant, the sheep of
the Lord. "For was Christ divided, or is Paul crucified according to you,
or are ye baptised in the name of Peter or of Paul?" (1 Cor. 1: 13).
"Feed My sheep". Wherefore "wolfish robbers, wolfish oppressors,
deceitful teachers and mercenaries, not being concerned about the flock"
(Mt. 7: 15; Acts 20: 29; 2 Pet. 2: 1; Jn. 10: 12), having plundered a
strange flock and making of the spoils as though it be of their own particular
gain, they think that they feed their flock. Such are not good pastors, as
pastors of the Lord. "The good pastor lays down his life for the
sheep" (Jn. 10: 11), entrusted to Him by the Prince of pastors Himself (1
Pet. 5: 4). And the Apostle Peter, true to his calling, gave his soul for the
very flock of Christ, having sealed his apostleship by a martyr's death, now
glorified throughout all the world.
And the Apostle Paul,
being formerly Saul, was changed from a robbing wolf into a meek lamb; formerly
he was an enemy of the Church, then is manifest as an Apostle; formerly he
stalked it, then preached it. Having received from the high-priests the authority
at large to throw all christians in chains for execution, he was already on the
way, "he breathed with rage and murder against the disciples of the
Lord" (Acts 9: 1), he thirsted for blood, but – "the Living One in
the Heavens mocked him" (Ps. 2: 4). When he, "having persecuted and
vexed" in such manner "the Church of God" (1 Cor. 15: 9; Acts 8:
5), he came nigh to Damascus, and the Lord from Heaven called to him:
"Saul, Saul, wherefore persecutest thou Me?" – and I am here, and I
am there, I am everywhere: here is My head; there is My body. There becomes
nothing of a surprise in this; we ourselves – are members of the Body of
Christ. "Saul, Saul, wherefore persecutest thou Me; it is terrible to thee
to kick against the goad" (Acts 9: 4-5). Saul, however, "trembling
and frightened", cried out: "Who art Thou, Lord?" I am Jesus, –
answered the Lord to him, – Whom thou persecutest". And Saul suddenly
undergoes a change: "What wantest Thou me to do?" – he cries out.
And suddenly for him there is the Voice: "Rise up and go to the city, and
it will be told thee, what thou ought to do" (Acts 9: 6). Here the Lord
sends Ananias: "Rise up go upon the street" to a man, "by the
name of Saul", and baptise him, "for this one is a vessel chosen by
Me, to bear My Name before pagans and rulers and the sons of Israel" (Acts
9: 11, 15, 18). This vessel mustneeds be filled with My Grace. "Ananias
however answered: Lord, I have heard from many about this man, how much evil he
hath done to Thine saints in Jerusalem: and to be here to have the authority
from the high-priests to seize all calling upon Thy Name" (Acts 9: 13-14).
But the Lord urgently commands Ananias: "Search for and fetch him, for
this vessel is chosen by Me: for I shalt tell him, how much mustneeds be for
him to suffer about My Name" (Acts 9: 11, 15-16).
And actually the Lord
did direct the Apostle Paul, what things he had to suffer for His Name. He
instructed him the deeds; He did not stop at the chains, the fetters, the
prisons and shipwrecks; He Himself felt for him in his sufferings, He Himself
guided him towards this day. On a single day is done the memory of the
sufferings of both these Apostles, though they suffered on separate days, but
by the spirit and the closeness of their suffering they constitute one. Peter
went first, Paul followed soon after him, – formerly called Saul, and then
Paul, having transformed in himself his pride into humility, as means also his
very name (Paulus), meaning "small, little, less", – demonstrates
this. What is the Apostle Paul after this? Ask him, and he himself gives answer
to this: "I am, – says he, – the least of the Apostles: but moreso than
all I have laboured, yet not I, but the grace of God, which is with me" (1
Cor. 15: 9-10).
And so, brethren,
celebrating now the memory of the holy Apostles Peter and Paul, remembering
their venerable sufferings, we esteem their true faith and holy life, we esteem
the innocence of their sufferings and pure confession. Loving in them the
sublime quality and imitating them by great exploits, "in which to be
likened to them" (2 Thess. 3: 5-9), and we shall attain to that eternal
bliss which is prepared for all the saints. The path of our life before was
more grievous, thornier, harder, but "how great the cloud of witnesses
enveloping us" (Hebr. 12: 1), having passed by along it, made now for us
easier, and lighter, and more readily-passable. First there passed along it
"the Founder and Fulfiller of faith" our Lord Jesus Christ Himself
(Hebr. 12: 2); His daring Apostles followed after Him; then the martyrs,
children, women, virgins and a great multitude of witnesses. Who acted in them
and helped them on this path? – He that said: "Without Me ye are able to
do nothing" (Jn. 15: 5).
© 1996-2001 by translator Fr. S. Janos.