Saint Gregory of Nyssa: First Homily on the Song of Songs[1]
(332-398)
Your breasts are better than wine, and the scent of your perfumes is beyond all ointments.
[SoS 1:1-
2]
What is signified by these words is, in our opinion, neither trivial nor unimportant. Through
the comparison of milk from the divine breasts with the enjoyment obtained from wine we learn, I think,
that all human wisdom, science, power of observation and comprehension of imagination cannot match the
simple nourishment of the divine teaching. Milk, the food of infants, comes from the breasts. On the other
hand, wine, with its strength and warming capacity, is enjoyment for the perfect [mature]. However, the
perfection of the wisdom of the world is less than the childlike teaching of the divine world. Hence the
divine breasts are better than human wine, and the scent of divine perfumes is lovelier than any fragrance.
[1] Casimir McCambley, tr., Saint Gregory of Nyssa: Commentary on the
Song of Songs (Brookline, MA: Hellenic College Press, 1987), p. 52. Return to contents page