"For you rightly and justly say
that the doctors are not in opposition to one another, even as Paul is not in
opposition to James when the one says, By faith is a man justified with- out
works,' while the other wrote, 'Faith without works is dead'; because Paul
spoke of faith before baptism, which is the perfection of confession out of a
pure heart, when it has not previously displayed good works in the world, but
such a man is justified by believing and confessing and being baptized; while
James referred to faith after baptism, when he said that it is dead without
works, if a man does not confirm it by right action. For baptism is the earnest
of a good conversation; since even our Lord, who was to us an instructor, after
He had hallowed the water and been baptized by John and given us the
institution of baptism, went up to the mountain and underwent a struggle with
the tempter and destroyed all his power, thereby guiding us, that we might know
that after the divine cleansing we ought to display a contest in deed and to
struggle according to law with the adversary, therein displaying our virtues.
"But someone will object,
and say, 'Behold ! Paul took Abraham as a proof that a man is justified by
faith without works, saying, "Therefore they that are in the faith are
blessed with the believing Abraham" and, "To him that hath not worked
but hath believed on Him that can justify sinners his faith is reckoned for
righteousness" while James proved by the case of Abraham that a man is not
justified by faith only, but by works confirmed by faith. And how are these not
contradictory? for the same Abraham is an example of those who have not worked
but believed, and of those who have shown faith by faiths.’
Wherefore he said of Abraham also
that" I am ready to explain from the Holy Scriptures. For he who examines
the periods of Abraham's life [will see] that he is an instance of both, of the
faith which before baptism confesses salvation by believing in Christ, and of
that after baptism which is joined with works, which is a reproduction of the
old circumcision of the flesh, which drives away5 the denial of uncircumcision
and brings to us the adoption as sons by God; wherefore Moses also was ordered
to say thus to Far'oh; And say thou unto Far'oh, "Israel is my son, my
firstborn."' Wherefore Paul writes to the Colossians and says, 'In whom ye
were circumcised with a circumcision not made with hands, in the putting off of
the flesh of sins and in the circumcision of Christ, and ye were buried with
Him in baptism.' he was justified by faith without works while he was in un-
circumcision, before he was circumcised, thus pointing to confession before
baptism without works, writing to the Romans, 'To Abraham his faith was
reckoned for righteousness. How? Not through circumcision, but in uncircumcision.'
And he did not speak falsely; for the words of Moses are witness, which say of
God that He said to Abraham, 'Look toward heaven and tell the stars, if thou be
able to tell them'; and He said, 'So shall thy seed be': and Abraham believed
God, and it was reckoned to him for righteousness.
"But again our master James
also took the same Abraham as an example in the faith which saves by works
after baptism, he being then circumcised and not in uncircumcision. And we may
learn from the Scripture; for he writes thus: 'Wilt thou know, O man, that
faith without works is dead? For our father Abraham was justified by works,
when he offered Isaac his son as a burnt-sacrifice. Thou seest that faith
wrought with his works, and by works was made perfect. And the Scripture was
fulfilled which saith," Abraham believed God, and it was reckoned to him
for righteousness: and He was called his friend."' It is easy again for
one who reads the writings of Moses to learn from the book of Genesis that
Abraham, after he was circumcised, offered Isaac as a burnt-sacrifice5 and
fulfilled the commandment and was justified by works, giving us an instance of
faith after baptism, which is a spiritual circumcision, justifying a man by
works; for it is written, 'Abraham was circumcised, and Ishmael his son, and
those born in his house, and those bought with his money from strange peoples';
and then God, trying Abraham, said to him, 'Take thy son, whom thou lovest,
even Isaac, and get thee to the high land; and offer him there as a
burnt-sacrifice.' Accordingly these words of the apostles and those written in
the old law do not seem to be in opposition to one another, but to be one, and
to have been spoken by one spirit concerning faith before baptism, which
justifies the man who presents him-self upon a short confession only without
action, baptism being full salvation if a man depart from the world forthwith,
and another faith, which is after baptism, which requires the proof of good
works and also raises the man to the measure of perfection and to high place.
And so also James very properly says of it that faith is made perfect by works;
since the wise Paul also in another place gives similar teaching respecting
faith, saying that it is made perfect through works: for the Galatians, after
they had been baptized and been reckoned sons of God through the Spirit, were
perverted to Judaism and were circumcised, since they vainly supposed that by
the circumcision of their flesh they gained something in Christ beyond the
uncircumcised; and he wrote to reprove them, saying, 'In Jesus Christ neither
circumcision nor uncircumcision availeth anything; but faith which is worked
out by love.' From this also, therefore, it is plain that that kind of faith
after baptism is of avail and saves with which work is joined and united in
love; and what work done in love is Paul declares and says, 'Love is
long-suffering and kind; love is not envious and excited and puffed up, nor is
it ashamed; and it seeketh not its own, and is not provoked; and it imputeth no
evil; and rejoiceth not in iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth; and it hopeth
all things, and endureth all things. Love doth not quickly fail.' These things
are for the direction of action and labour and toil, that many may be profited
and be saved, when united to faith. And who will dare to find fault? for
respecting this our Lord also said, 'If ye love Me, keep My commandments.' (The
Syriac Chronicle Known as that of Zachariah of Mitylene, Book 9, Chapter 13
[trans. F. J. Hamilton and E. W. Brooks; Byzantine Texts; London: Methuen
& Co., 1899], 239-42)