we have followed you; what then shall we have? And some will keep these things according to the letter, while another, refuting the literal sense as not being sublime, will interpret it allegorically. The one, then, who adheres to the letter will say such things: Just as in the case of giving, God, accepting not the thing given but the choice of the giver, justifies and better accepts the one who has given the lesser thing with a more perfect choice over the one who has given the more out of greater means and with an inferior disposition (as is clear from what is written about the great gift of the rich and the two mites, which the widow, for the account of the poor, cast into the treasury), so also in the case of those who for the love of the divine have left what they possess, that they might follow the Christ of God without distraction, doing all things according to his word, the one who has left more is not in every case more acceptable than the one who has left less, and especially when one happens to have left the lesser things with his whole soul, compared to the one who seems to have despised the greater things. If, then, Peter left behind small and worthless things along with his brother Andrew, when they both heard, 'Come, follow me, and I will make you fishers of men,' 'immediately they left their nets and followed him,' yet it is not reckoned as a small thing by God, who perceived that they had done this from such a disposition, that even if they had possessed many possessions and very great property, they would not have been held back by them nor would their impulse to follow Jesus have been hindered. And confident (I think) in his choice rather than in the material substance of what he had left, Peter spoke boldly to Jesus, 'Behold, we have left everything and have followed you; what then shall we have?' But it is likely to understand that he had left not only his nets but also his house and his wife, whose mother, when Jesus visited, was delivered from the fever; and one might suppose that it is possible he also left behind children, and it is not impossible that he left some small property. Therefore, a great thing is shown concerning Peter and his brother, since, upon hearing 'Come, follow me, and I will make you fishers of men,' without any delay 'they immediately left their nets and followed him,' not imitating the one who said, 'But first permit me to go to my house and bid farewell to those in my household,' nor doing anything similar to the one who said, 'Permit me first to go and bury my father.' And pay careful attention that, being worthily struck by the command of Jesus and by his promise, and believing that by leaving the small craft of fishing for fish they were about to catch men for salvation, and being, as it were, wounded both by their love for Jesus and by the philanthropic ministry he promised them, being about to hunt for men, 'they immediately left their nets' and, as it were, forgetting those at home, 'they followed him,' so that it was worthy for Peter to glory in that impulse and to have said the aforementioned. At the same time, it must be observed that Peter said this having understood the word spoken by Jesus: 'If you wish to be perfect, go, sell your possessions and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven, and come, follow me,' and having seen the young man who heard it go away with sorrow, since he had preferred his many possessions on earth to becoming perfect in God, and having understood the difficulty for the rich man to enter into the kingdom of heaven, as if he himself were doing no easy thing in having left everything and followed the Savior, he said the words set forth. Wherefore, to the bold Peter the Savior answers with the things of the great promise that follows, about how Peter would be one of the judges of Israel. 15.22 But he who scorns the literal sense as not sufficient to persuade a sublime hearer, just as other words of Scripture have their majesty in the allegorical interpretation, will say such things, that the statement 'behold, we have left everything and have followed you,' when a small net and a poor house and a toilsome life in poverty have been left, is not