← LineageFrom the Fathers for · Saturday, 30 March 2024

Basil on fruit and good works

A tree is known by its fruit; a man by his deeds. A good deed is never lost.

Plain English

Basil's theology is never far from moral practice. The test of a life is the fruit it bears in concrete deeds.

Why it matters

It captures the pastoral side of Basil: doctrine, charity, and discipline belong together.

About Basil

Basil refused to separate doctrine from the life of the church. He fought Arian theology, wrote On the Holy Spirit, organised monastic communities, and built institutions for the poor and sick around Caesarea. His importance is not only that he defended Nicene faith, but that he showed what that faith looked like in prayer, ascetic discipline, preaching, and public mercy. Gregory of Nazianzus and Gregory of Nyssa carried parts of his work forward after his early death.

Lifespan
330 – 379
Era
Nicene
Born in
Caesarea Mazaca
See
Caesarea Mazaca
Region
Asia Minor
Read more about Basil of Caesarea
·XFacebookRedditEmail

Daily Patristic Wisdom in your inbox

Get one early Church quote each morning, with historical context in plain English. Free. Unsubscribe whenever.

Today: Basil on fruit and good works — Patristic Lineage