Wednesday, 5 September 2012

John the Solitary 'Our hope, our resurrection, and our true life'




Night Office - A Word in Season

WEDNESDAY   Year II

First Reading 2 Timothy 1:1-18

Second Reading
From a treatise of
John of Apamea
(Pr
emier traite, IX, 104-105: se 311,137-13$)

Our hope, our resurrection, and our true life
This mystery of the glorious economy of Christ, who revealed himself and appeared in our world at the end of time, was foreseen, prepared, and hidden before the creation of this world, in the knowledge of God the Father. As the man of God, Paul, says: He chose us in him before the creation of the world. So before the heavens were separated and the firmament was spread out, before the earth appeared and the whole visible world was organized, by his foresight he predestined us, feeble and inferior beings, chose, renewed, sanctified, and formed us in the image of his Son. And this, so that after we had lost and forgotten our greatness, our dignity, our splendour and the glory we received at our creation, thanks to Christ we might be renewed, made perfect, and to the full receive life, the richness and vision of the mysteries of God in his holy world. In his second Letter to Timothy, speaking of our call and our intimacy with God, Paul declares that it is not because of our works, our justice, or our virtue that we are each given glorious hope, but by the grace of God.

He has saved us and called us to a holy life, not because of our works, but in accordance with his own will and his grace, given to us before all time in Christ Jesus, and now revealed through the appearance of our Saviour Jesus Christ. So he has shown us that even before the action of air on the variations of temperature was known, before the sky was adorned with its lights, before the proportions of day and night were known, before the seasons were distin­guished in the composition of the world, and before we ourselves received the stamp and image of a body and became visible in a bodily form, he prepared, disposed, called, and sanctified our living and reasonable world for the happiness, splendour, and glory of his glorious kingdom. With this richness and perfect life he raised our creation to be near him in glory, even before the creation of this world of ours. We, for our part, because of the error which held sway over us, were unable to grasp the degree of greatness which we had received at our creation. It was therefore essential for him who is our greatness and our kingdom, our life and our truth, to reveal himself, so that what had been given to us before the beginning of the world, in the foresight of God the Father, might be revealed to us by Jesus Christ, imaging it for us in himself from beginning to end, namely, from birth to death.
As he clearly images what has happened to our soul and our true life because of error, we must learn from seeing his own humiliation for us to what depths we had fallen from the true height.
If he was crucified for us, it was so that we might learn the extent to which we are prisoners of the corrupting passions and are immersed in the darkness of error. And more than that, by raising the dead in the glory of his Father, he wishes to reveal to us our hope, our resurrection, and our true life.

NOTE:
apamea-cc-mdziedzic
John the Solitary
There is a significant number of works on spirituality, variously attributed in the manuscripts to John the Solitary, John of Apamea, or (incorrectly) John of Lycopolis (or Thebes, died ca. 394). It seems likely that John the Solitary and John of Apamea are two names for the same person, who seems to have lived in the first half of the 5th century. He is not the same person as the John the Egyptian condemned by Philoxenus, or a John of Apamea condemned by a Syrian synod in 786-7.
John must have been educated in both Greek and Syriac, and may have had some training in medicine.


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