"The desire to rule is the mother of heresies."

I’ve seen this quote attributed to St. John Chrysostom, mostly on various libertarian-leaning political sites. But I’ve never actually seen it in context.

Does anyone know if a) St. Chyrsostom actually said this and b) what he meant by it? It certainly sounds cool, but I’m not sure I really know what it means.

Comments

6 responses to “"The desire to rule is the mother of heresies."”

  1. Wilson

    I’ve found it. It’s in the Commentary on the Epistle to the Galatians — specifically, a commentary on Gal. 5:13:

    Here again he hints that strife and party-spirit, love of rule and presumptousness, had been the causes of their error, for the desire of rule is the mother of heresies. By saying, “Be servants one to another,” he shows that the evil had arisen from this presumptuous and arrogant spirit, and therefore he applies a corresponding remedy. As your divisions arose from your desire to domineer over each other, “serve one another;” thus will ye be reconciled again. However, he does not openly express their fault, but he openly tells them its corrective, that through this they may become aware of that; as if one were not to tell an immodest person of his immodesty, but were continually to exhort him to chastity. He that loves his neighbor as he ought, declines not to be servant to him more humbly than any servant. As fire, brought into contact with wax, easily softens it, so does the warmth of love dissolve all arrogance and presumption more powerfully than fire. Wherefore he says not, “love one another,” merely, but, “be servants one to another,” thus signifying the intensity of the affection. When the yoke of the Law was taken off them that they might not caper off and away another was laid on, that of love, stronger than the former, yet far lighter and pleasanter. …

  2. Lee

    Thanks for the citation! Gotta love the internet.

  3. Joshie

    Thanks Wilson! Any links to it in Greek?

  4. Lee

    Show-off.

  5. Joshie

    Don’t be ho misōn!

  6. Lee

    I assume that means “playa-hatin.’”

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