catena aurea john 2
1. And the third day there was a marriage in Cana of Galilee; and the mother of Jesus was there:
2. And both Jesus was called, and his disciples, to the marriage.
3. And when they wanted wine, the mother of Jesus said to him, They have no wine.
4. Jesus said to her, Woman, what have I to do with you? My hour is not yet come.
CHRYS. Our Lord being known in Galilee, they invite Him to a marriage:
And the third day there was a marriage in Cana of Galilee.
ALCUIN. Galilee is a province; Cana a village in it.
CHRYS. They invite our Lord to the marriage, not as a great person, but
merely as one they knew, one of the many; for which reason the
Evangelist says, And the mother of Jesus was there. As they invited the
mother, so they invited the Son: and therefore,
Jesus was called, and His disciples to the marriage: and He came, as
caring more for our good, shall His own dignity. He who disdained not
to take upon Him the form of a servant, disdained not to come to the
marriage of servants.
AUG. Let the proud man blush to see the humility of God. Lo, among
other things, the Son of the Virgin comes to a marriage; He who, when
He was with the Father, instituted marriage.
BEDE. His condescension in coming to the marriage, and the miracle He
wrought there, are, even considering them in the letter only, a strong
confirmation of the a faith. Therein too are condemned the errors of
Tatian, Marcion, and others who detract from the honor of marriage. For
if the undefiled bed, and the marriage celebrated with due chastity,
partook at all of sin, our Lord would never have come to one. Whereas
now, conjugal chastity being good, the continence of widows better, the
perfection of the virgin state best, to sanction all these degrees, but
distinguish the merit of each, He deigned to be born of the pure womb
of the Virgin; was blessed after birth by the prophetic voice of the
widow Anna; and now invited in manhood to attend the celebration of a
marriage, honors that also by the presence of His goodness.
AUG. What marvel, if He went to that house to a marriage, Who came into
this world to a marriage. For here He has His spouse whom He redeemed
with His own blood, to whom He gave the pledge of the Spirit, and whom
He united to Himself in the womb of the Virgin. For the Word is the
Bridegroom, and human flesh the bride, and both together are one Son of
God and Son of man. That womb of the Virgin Mary is His chamber, from
which he went forth as a bridegroom.
BEDE. Nor is it without some mysterious allusion, that the marriage is
related as taking place on the third day. The first age of the world,
before the giving of the Law, was enlightened by the example of the
Patriarchs; the second, under the Law, by the writings of the Prophets;
the third, under grace, by the preaching of the Evangelists, as if by
the light of the third day; for our Lord had now appeared in the flesh.
The name of the place too where the marriage was held, Cana of Galilee,
which means, desire of migrating, has a typical signification, viz.
that those are most worthy of Christ, who burn with devotional desires,
and have known the passage from vice to virtue, from earthly to eternal
things.
The wine was made to fail, to give our Lord the opportunity of making
better; that so the glory of God in man might be brought out of its
hiding place: And when they wanted wine, the mother of Jesus said to
Him, They have no wine.
CHRYS. But how came it into the mother's mind to expect so great a
thing from her Son? for he had done no miracle as yet: as we read
afterwards This beginning of miracles did Jesus. His real nature,
however, was beginning now to be revealed by John, and His own
conversations with His disciples; besides that His conception, and the
circumstances of His birth, had from the first given rise to high
expectations in her mind: as Luke tells us, His mother kept all these
sayings in her heart. Why then did she never ask Him to work a miracle
before? Because the time had now come that He should be made known.
Before He had lived so much like an ordinary person, that she had not
had the confidence to ask Him. But now that she heard that John had
borne witness to Him, and that He had disciples, she asks Him
confidently.
ALCUIN. She represents here the Synagogue, which challenges Christ to
perform a miracle. It was customary with the Jews to ask for miracles.
Jesus said to her, Woman, what have I to do with you?
AUG. Some who derogate from the Gospel, and say that Jesus was not born
of the Virgin Mary, try to draw an argument for their error from this
place; for, how, say they, could she be His mother to whom He said,
What have I to do with you? Now who is it who gives this account, and
on whose authority do we believe it? The Evangelist John. But he
himself says, The mother of Jesus was there. Why should He say it,
unless both were true. But did He therefore come to the marriage to
teach men to despise their mother?
CHRYS. That He greatly venerated His mother, we know from St. Luke, who
tells us that He was subject unto His parents. For where parents throw
no obstacle in the way of God's commands, it is our duty to be subject
to them; but when they demand any thing at an unseasonable time, or cut
us off from spiritual things, we should not be deceived into compliance.
AUG. To mark a distinction between His Godhead and manhood, that
according to His manhood He was inferior and subject, but according to
His Godhead supreme, He said, Woman, what have I to do with you?
CHRYS. And for another reason, viz. to prevent any suspicion attaching
to His miracles: for these it was proper should be asked for by those
who wanted them, not by His mother. He wished to show them that He
would perform all in their proper time, not all at once, to prevent
confusion; for He said, Mine hour is not yet come; i.e. I am not yet
known to the persons present; nay, they know not that the wine has
failed; let them find out that first; he who perceives not his want
beforehand, will not perceive when his want is supplied.
AUG. Or it was because our Lord as God had not a mother, though as man
He had, and the miracle He was about to work was the act of His
Divinity, not of human infirmity. When therefore His mother demanded a
miracle, He, as though not acknowledging a human birth, when about to
perform a divine work, said, Woman, what have I to do with you? As if
He said, You did not beget that in Me, which works the miracle, My
Divinity. (She is called woman, with reference to the female sex, not
to any injury of her virginity.) But because you brought forth My
infirmity, I will acknowledge you then, when that very infirmity shall
hang on the cross. And therefore He adds, Mine hour is not yet come: as
if to say, I will acknowledge you when the infirmity, of which you are
the mother, shall hang from the cross. He commended His mother to the
disciple, when about to die, and to rise again, before her death. But
note; just as the Manicheans have found an occasion of error and
pretext for their faithlessness in our Lord's word, What have I to do
with you? in the same way the astrologers support theirs from the
words, Mine hour is not yet come. For, say they, if Christ had not been
under the power of fate, He would never have said this. But let them
believe what hat God says below, I have power to lay it (my life) down,
and I have power to take it again: and then let them ask, why He says,
Mine hour is not yet come: nor let them on such a ground subject the
Creator of heaven to fate; seeing that, even were there a fatality in
the stars, the Maker of the stars could not be under the dominion of
the stars. And not only had Christ nothing to do with fate, as you call
it; but neither have you, or any other man. Wherefore said He then,
Mine hour is not yet come? Because He had the power to die when He
pleased, but did not think it expedient yet to exert the power He was
to call the disciples; to proclaim the Kingdom of heaven, to do
marvelous works, to approve His divinity by miracles, His humility by
partaking of the sufferings of our mortal state. And when He had done
all, then the hour was come, not of destiny, but of will, not of
obligation, but of power.
5. His mother said to the servants, Whatsoever he says to you, do it.
6. And there were set there six waterpots of stone, after the manner of
the purifying of the Jews, containing two or three firkins apiece.
7. Jesus said to them, Fill the waterpots with water. And they filled them up to the brim.
8. And he said to them, Draw out now, and bear unto the governor of the feast. And they bore it.
9. When the ruler of the feast had tasted the water that was made wine,
and knew not whence it was: (but the servants which drew the water
knew;) the governor of the feast called the bridegroom,
10. And said to him, Every man at the beginning does set forth good
wine; and when men have well drunk, then that which is worse: but you
have kept the good wine until now.
11. This beginning of miracles did Jesus in Cana of Galilee, and manifested forth his glory; and his disciples believed on him.
CHRYS. Although He had said, Mine hour is not yet come, He afterwards
did what His mother told Him, in order to show plainly, that He was not
under subjection to the hour. For if He was, how could He have done
this miracle before the hour appointed for it? In the next place, He
wished to show honor to His mother, and make it appear that He did not
go counter to her eventually. He would not put her to shame in the
presence of so many; especially as she had sent the servants to Him,
that the petition might come from a number, and not from herself only;
His mother said to the servants, Whatsoever He says to you, do it.
BEDE; As if she said, Though He appear to refuse, He will do it
nevertheless. She knew His pity and mercifulness. And there were set
there six waterpots of stone, after the manner of the purifying of the
Jews, containing two or three firkins apiece. Hydriae are vessels to
hold water: hydor being the Greek for water.
ALCUIN. Vessels to hold water were there, after the manner of the
purifying of Jews. Among other traditions of the Pharisees, they
observed frequent washings
CHRYS Palestine being a dry country, with few fountains or wells, they
used to fill waterpots with water, to prevent the necessity of going to
the river, if they were unclean, and to have materials for washing at
hand. To prevent any unbeliever from suspecting that a very thin wine
was made by the dregs having been left in the vessels, and water poured
in upon them, He says expressly, According to the manner of the
purifying of the Jews: which shows that those vessels were never used
to hold wine.
AUG. A firkin is a certain measure; as urn, amphora, and the like.
Metron is the Greek for measure: whence metreta. Two or three, is not
to be taken to mean some holding two, others three, but the same
vessels holding two or three.
Jesus said to them, Fill the waterpots with water. And they filled them up to the brim.
CHRYS. But why did He not perform the miracle before they had filled
the waterpots, which would have been much more wonderful; inasmuch as
it is one thing to change the quality of some existing substance,
another to make it that substance out of nothing? The latter miracle
would be the more wonderful, but the former would be the more easy of
belief.
And this principle often acts as a check, to moderate the greatness of
our Lord's miracles: He wishes to make them more credible, therefore He
makes them less marvelous; a refutation this of the perverse doctrine
of some, that He was a different Being from the Maker of the world. For
we see He performs most of His miracles upon subject-matter already
existing, whereas were He contrary to the Creator of the world, He
would not use a material thus alien, to demonstrate His own power.
He did not draw out the water Himself which He made wine, but ordered
the servants to do so. This was for the sake of having witnesses of the
miracle; And He said to them, Draw out now, and bear unto the governor
of the feast.
ALCUIN. The Triclinium is a circle of three couches, cline signifying
couch: the ancients used to recline upon couches. And the
Architriclinus is the one at the head of the Triclinium, i.e. the chief
of the guests. Some say that among the Jews, He was a priest, and
attended the marriage in order to instruct in the duties of the married
state.
CHRYS Or thus; It might be said that the guests were drunken, and could
not, in the confusion of their senses, tell whether it were water or
wine. But this objection could not be brought against the attendants,
who must have been sober, being occupied wholly in performing the
duties of their service gracefully and in order. Our Lord therefore bid
the attendants bear to the governor of the feast; who again would of
course be perfectly sober. He did not say, Give to the guests to drink.
HILARY; Water is poured into the waterpots; wine is drawn out into the
chalices; the senses of the drawer out agree not with the knowledge of
the pourer in. The pourer in thinks that water is drawn out; the drawer
out thinks that wine was poured in. When the ruler of the feast had
tasted the water that was made wine, and knew not whence it was, (but
the servants who drew the water knew,) the governor of the feast called
the bridegroom. It was not a mixture, but a creation: the simple nature
of water vanished, and the flavor of wine was produced; not that a weak
dilution was obtained, by means of some strong infusion, but that which
was, was annihilated; and that which was not, came to be.
CHRYS. Our Lord wished the power of His miracles to be seen gradually;
and therefore He did not reveal what He had done Himself, nor did the
ruler of the feast call upon the servants to do so; (for no credit
would have been given to such testimony concerning a mere man, as our
Lord was supposed to be,) but He called the bridegroom, who was best
able to see what was done. Christ moreover did not only make wine, but
the best wine. And (the ruler of the feast) said to him, Every man at
the beginning does set forth good wine, and when men have well drunk,
then that which is worse; but you have kept the good wine until now.
The effects of the miracles of Christ are more beautiful and better
than the productions of nature. So then that the water was made wine,
the servants could testify; that it was made good wine, the ruler of
the feast and the bridegroom.
It is probable that the bridegroom made some answer; but the Evangelist
omits it, only mentioning what it was necessary for us to know, viz.
the water being made wine. He adds, This beginning of miracles did
Jesus in Cana of Galilee. It was very necessary to work miracles just
then, when His devoted disciples were all collected, and present at the
place, attending to what was going on.
ID. Should any say that there is not sufficient proof of this being the
beginning of miracles, because it is added, in Cana of Galilee, as if
some had been preferred elsewhere: we answer, as we did before, that
John says below, That He might be made manifest to Israel, therefore
have I come baptizing. Now if He had performed miracles in the earlier
part of His life, the Jews would not have wanted another person to
point Him out. If our Lord in a short time became so distinguished for
the number of His miracles, that His Name was known to every one, would
He not have been much more so, had He worked miracles from His earliest
years? for the things themselves would have been the more
extraordinary, being performed by a Child, and in so long a time must
have become notorious. It was fit and proper however that He should not
begin to work miracles at so early an age: for men would have thought
the Incarnation a fantasy, and in the extremity of envy would have
delivered Him to be crucified before the appointed time.
AUG. This miracle of our Lord's, turning the water into wine, is no
miracle to those who know that God worked it. For the Same that day
made wine in the waterpots, Who every year makes wine in the vine: only
the latter is no longer wonderful, because it happens uniformly. And
therefore it is that God keeps some extraordinary acts in store for
certain occasions, to rouse men out of their lethargy, and make them
worship Him. Thus it follows, He manifested forth His glory.
ALCUIN. He was the King of glory, and changed the elements because He was their Lord.
CHRYS. He manifests His glory, as far as related to His own act; and if
at the time many knew it not, yet was it afterwards to be heard and
known of all. And His disciples believed in Him. It was probable that
these would believe more readily, and give more attention to what went
on.
AUG. If now for the first time they believed on Him, they were not His
disciples when they came to the marriage. This however is a form of
speech, such as saying that the Apostle Paul was born in Tarsus of
Cilicia; not meaning by this that he was an Apostle then. In the same
way when we hear of Christ's disciples being invited to the marriage,
we should understand not disciples already, but who were to be
disciples.
AUG. But see the mysteries which lie hid in that miracle of our Lord.
It was necessary that all things should be fulfilled in Christ which
were written of Him: those Scriptures were the water. He made the water
wine when He opened to them the meaning of these things, and expounded
the Scriptures; for thus that came to have a taste which before had
none, and that inebriated, which did not inebriate before.
BEDE; At the time of our Lord's appearing in the flesh, the sweet
vinous taste of the law had been weakened by the carnal interpretations
of the Pharisees.
AUG. Now if He ordered the water to be poured out, and then introduced
the wine from the hidden recesses of creation, He would seem to have
rejected the Old Testament. But converting, as He did, the water into
wine, He showed us that the Old Testament was from Himself; for it was
as by His order that the waterpots were filled. But those Scriptures
have no meaning, if Christ be not understood there. Now we know from
what time the law dates, viz. from the foundation of the world. From
that time to this are six ages; the first reckoning from Adam to Noah;
the second, from Noah to Abraham; the third, from Abraham to David; the
fourth, from David to the carrying away into Babylon; the fifth, from
that time to John the Baptist; the sixth, from John the Baptist to the
end of the world. The six waterpots then denote these six ages of
prophecy. The prophecies are fulfilled; the waterpots are full. But
what is the meaning of their holding two or three firkins apiece? Had
He said three only, our minds would have run immediately to the mystery
of the Trinity. Nor perhaps can we reject it, even though it is said,
two or three: for the Father and the Son being named, the Holy Ghost
may be understood by consequence; inasmuch as it is the love between
the Father and the Son, which is the Holy Ghost. Nor should we pass
over another interpretation, which makes the two firkins alluded to the
two races of men, the Jews and the Greeks; and the three to the three
sons of Noah.
ALCUIN. The servants are the doctors of the New Testament, who
interpret the holy Scripture to others spiritually; the ruler of the
feast is some lawyer, as Nicodemus, Gamaliel, or Saul. When to the
former then is committed the word of the Gospel, hid under the letter
of the law, it is the water made wine, being set before the ruler of
the feast. And the three rows of guests at table in the house of the
marriage are properly mentioned; the Church consisting of three orders
of believers, the married, the continent, and the doctors. Christ has
kept the good wine until now, i.e. He has deferred the Gospel till
this, the sixth age.
12. After this he went down to Capernaum, he, and his mother, and
his brethren, and his disciples: and they continued there not many days.
13. And the Jews' passover was at hand, and Jesus went up to Jerusalem.
CHRYS. Our Lord being about shortly to go up to Jerusalem, proceeded to
Capernaum, that He might not take His mother and brethren every where
about with Him: After this he went down to Capernaum, He, and His
mother, and His brethren, and His disciples, and they continued there
not many days.
AUG. The Lord our God is He, high, that He might create us; low, that
He might create us anew; walking among men, suffering what was human,
hiding what was divine. So He has a mother, has brethren, has disciple:
whence He has a mother, thence has He brethren. Scripture frequently
gives the name of brethren, not to those only who are born of the same
womb, or the same father, but to those of the same generation, cousins
by the father's or mother's side. Those who are unacquainted with this
were of speaking, ask, Whence has our Lord brothers? Did Mary bring
forth again? That could not be: with her commenced the dignity of the
virgin state. Abraham was uncle of Lot, and Jacob was nephew to Laban
the Syrian. Yet Abraham and Lot are called brethren; and likewise Jacob
and Laban.
ALCUIN. Our Lord's brethren are the relations of Mary and Joseph, not
the sons of Mary and Joseph. For not only the blessed Virgin, but
Joseph also, the witness of her chastity, abstained from all conjugal
intercourse.
AUG. And His disciples; it is uncertain whether Peter and Andrew and
the sons of Zebedee, were of their number or not at this time. For
Matthew first relates that out Lord came and dwelt at Capernaum, and
afterwards that He called those disciples from their boats, as they
were fishing. Is Matthew perhaps supplying what he had omitted? For
without any mention that it was at a subsequent time, he says, Jesus
walking by sea of Galilee saw two brethren. Or is it better to suppose
that these were other disciples? For the writings of the Evangelists
and Apostles, call not the twelve only, but all who believing in God
were prepared for the kingdom of heaven by our Lord's teaching,
disciples. How is it too that our Lord's journey to Galilee is placed
here before John the Baptist's imprisonment, when Matthew says, Now
when Jesus had heard that John was as cast into prison, he departed
into Galilee: and Mark the same? Luke too, though he says nothing of
John's imprisonment, yet places Christ's visit to Galilee after His
temptation and baptism, as the two former do. We should understand then
that the three Evangelists are not opposed to John, but pass over our
Lord's first coming into Galilee after his baptism; at which time it
was that He converted the water into wine.
EUSEB. When copies of the three Gospels had come to the Evangelist
John, he is reported, while he confirmed their fidelity and
correctness, to have at the same time noticed some omissions,
especially at the opening of our Lord's ministry. Certain it is that
the first three Gospels seem only to contain the events of the year in
which John the Baptist was imprisoned, and put to death. And therefore
John, it is said, was asked to write down those acts of our Savior's
before the apprehension of the Baptist, which the former Evangelists
had passed over. Any one then, by attending, will find that the Gospels
do not disagree, but that John is relating the events of a different
date, from that which the others refer to.
CHRYS. He did not perform any miracle at Capernaum, the inhabitants of
which city were in a very corrupt state, and not well disposed to Him;
He went there however, and stayed some time out of respect to His
mother.
BEDE; He did not stay many days there, on account of the Passover, which was approaching: And the Jews' passover was at hand.
ORIGEN; But what need of saying, of the Jews, when no other nation had
the rite of the Passover? Perhaps' because there are two sorts of
Passover, one human, which is celebrated in a way very different from
the design of Scripture; another the true and Divine, which is kept in
spirit and in truth. To distinguish it then from the Divine, it is
said, of the Jews.
ALCUIN. And He went up to Jerusalem. The Gospels mention two
journeys of our Lord to Jerusalem, one in the first year of His
preaching, before John was sent to prison, which is the journey now
spoken of; the other in the year of His Passion. Our Lord has set us
here an example of careful obedience to the Divine commands. For if the
Son of God fulfilled the injunctions of His own law, by keeping the
festivals, like the rest, with what holy zeal should we servants
prepare for and celebrate them?
ORIGEN; In a mystical sense, it was meet that after the marriage in
Cana of Galilee, and the banquet and wine, our Lord should take His
mother, brethren, and disciples to the land of consolation (as
Capernaum signifies ) to console, by the fruits that were to spring up
and by abundance of fields, those who received His discipline, and the
mind which had conceived Him by the Holy Ghost; and who were there to
be holpen. For some there are bearing fruit, to whom our Lord Himself
comes down with the ministers of His word and disciples, helping such,
His mother being present. Those however who are called to Capernaum, do
not seem capable of His presence long: that is, a land which admits
lower consolation, is not able to take in the enlightenment from many
doctrines; being capable to receive few only.
ALCUIN. Or Capernaum, we may interpret "a most beautiful village," and
so it signifies the world, to which the Word of the Father came down.
BEDE; But He continued there only a few days, because he lived with men in this world only a short time.
ORIGEN; Jerusalem, as our Savior Himself said, is the city of the great
King, into which none of those who remain on earth ascend, or enter.
Only the soul which has a certain natural loftiness, and clear insight
into things invisible, is the inhabitant of that city. Jesus alone goes
up thither. But His disciples seem to have been present afterwards. The
zeal of Your house has eaten me up. But it is as though in every one of
the disciples who went up, it was Jesus who went up.
14. And found in the temple those that sold oxen and sheep and doves, and the changers of money sitting:
15. And when he had made a scourge of small cords, he drove them all
out of the temple, and the sheep, and the oxen; and poured out the
changers' money, and overthrew the tables;
16. And said to them that sold doves, Take these things hence; make not my Father's house a house of merchandise.
17. And his disciples remembered that it was written, The zeal of your house has eaten me up.
BEDE; Our Lord on coming to Jerusalem, immediately entered the temple
to pray; giving us an example that, wheresoever we go, our first visit
should be to the house of God to pray. And He found in the temple those
that sold oxen and sheep, and doves, and the changers of money sitting.
AUG. Such sacrifices were prescribed to the people, in condescension to
their carnal minds; to prevent them from turning aside to idols. They
sacrificed sheep, and oxen, and doves.
BEDE; Those however, who came from a distance, being unable to bring
with them the animals required for sacrifice, brought the money
instead. For their convenience the Scribes and Pharisees ordered
animals to be sold in the temple, in order that, when the people had
bought and offered them afterwards, they might sell them again, and
thus make great profits. And changers of money sitting; changers of
money sat at the table to supply change to buyers and sellers. But our
Lord disapproving of any worldly business in His house, especially one
of so questionable a kind, drove out all engaged in it.
AUG. He who was to be scourged by them, was first of all the scourger;
and when He had made a scourge of small cords, He drove them all out of
the temple.
THEOPEHYL. Nor did He cast out only those who bought and sold, but
their goods also: The sheep, and the oxen and poured out the changers'
money, and overthrew the tables, i.e. of the money changers, which were
coffers of pence.
ORIGEN; Should it appear something out of the order of things, that the
Son of God should make a scourge of small cords, to drive them out of
the temple? We have one answer in which some take refuge, viz. the
divine power of Jesus, Who, when He pleased, could extinguish the wrath
of His enemies however innumerable, and quiet the tumult of their
minds: The Lord brings the counsel of the heathen to nought. This act
indeed exhibits no less power, than His more positive miracles; nay
rather, more than the miracle by which water was converted into wine:
in that there the subject-matter was inanimate, here, the minds of so
many thousands of men are overcome.
AUG. It is evident that this was done on two several occasions; the first mentioned by John, the last by the other three.
ORIGEN; John says here that He drove out the sellers from the temple;
Matthew, the sellers and buyers. The number of buyers was much greater
than of the sellers: and therefore to drive them out was beyond the
power of the carpenter's Son, as He was supposed to be, had He not by
His divine power put all things under Him, as it is said.
BEDE; The Evangelist sets before us both natures of Christ: the human
in that His mother accompanied Him to Capernaum; the divine, in that He
said, Make not My Father's house an house of merchandise
CHRYS. Lo, He speaks of God as His Father, and they are not angry, for
they think He means it in a common sense. But afterwards when He spoke
more openly, and showed that He meant equality, they were enraged. In
Matthew's account too, on driving them out, He says, You have made it
(My Father's house) a den of thieves. This was just: before His
Passion, and therefore He uses severer language. But the former being
at the beginning of His miracles, His answer is milder and more
indulgent.
AUG. So that temple was still a figure only, and our Lord cast out of
it all who came to it as a market. And what did they sell? Things that
were necessary for the sacrifice of that time. What if He had found men
drunken? If the house of God ought not to be a house of merchandise,
ought it to be a house of drunkenness?
CHRYS. But why did Christ use such violence? He was about to heal on
the Sabbath day, and to do many things which appeared to them
transgressions of the Law. That He might not appear therefore to be
acting contrary to God, He did this at His own peril; and thus gave
them to understand, that He who exposed Himself to such peril to defend
the decency of the house, did not despise the Lord of that house. For
the same reason, to show His agreement with God, He said not, the Holy
house, but, My Father's house.
It follows, And His disciples remembered what was written; The zeal of your house has eaten me up.
BEDE; His disciples seeing this most fervent zeal in Him, remembered
that it was from zeal for His Father's house that our Savior drove the
ungodly from the temple.
ALCUIN. Zeal, taken in a good sense, is a certain fervor of the Spirit,
by which the mind, all human fears forgotten, is stirred up to the
defense of the truth.
AUG. He then is eaten up with zeal for God's house, who desires to
correct all that he sees wrong there; and, if he cannot correct,
endures and mourns. In your house you busy yourself to prevent matters
going wrong; in the house of God, where salvation is offered, ought you
to be indifferent? Have you a friend? admonish him gently; a wife?
coerce her severely; a maid-servant? even compel her with stripes. Do
what you are able, according to your station.
ALCUIN. To take the passage mystically, God enters His Church
spiritually every day, and marks each one's behavior there. Let us be
careful then, when we are in God's Church, that we indulge not in
stories, or jokes, or hatreds, or lusts, lest on a sudden He come and
scourge us, and drive us out of His Church.
ORIGEN; It is possible even for the dweller in Jerusalem to incur
guilt, and even the most richly endowed may stray. And unless these
repent speedily, they lose the capacity wherewith they were endued. He
finds them in the temple, i.e. in sacred places, or in the office of
enunciating the Church's truths, some who make His Father's house an
house of merchandise; i.e. who expose to sale the oxen whom they ought
to reserve for the plough, lest by turning back they should become
unfit for the kingdom of God: also who prefer the unrighteous mammon to
the sheep, from which they have the material of ornament; also who for
miserable gain abandon the watchful care of them who are called
metaphorically doves, without all gall or bitterness. Our Savior
finding these in the holy house, makes a scourge of small cords, and
drives them out, together with the sheep and oxen exposed for sale,
scatters the heaps of money, as unbeseeming in the house of God, and
overthrows the tables set up in the minds of the covetous, forbidding
them to sell doves in the house of God any longer. I think too that He
meant the above, as a mystical intimation that whatsoever was to be
performed with regard to that sacred oblation by the priests, was not
to be performed after the manner of material oblations, and that the
law was not to be observed as the carnal Jews wished. For our Lord, by
driving away the sheep and oxen, and ordering away the doves, which
were the most common offerings among the Jews, and by overthrowing the
tables of material coins, which in a figure only, not in truth, bore
the Divine stamp, (i.e. what according to the letter of the law seemed
good,) and when with His own hand He scourged the people, He as much as
declared that the dispensation was to be broken up and destroyed, and
the kingdom translated to the believing from among the Gentiles.
AUG. Or, those who sell in the Church, are those who seek their own,
not the things of Jesus Christ. They who will not be bought, think they
may sell earthly things. Thus Simon wished to buy the Spirit, that he
might sell Him: for he was one of those who sell doves. (The Holy
Spirit appeared in the form of a dove.) The dove however is not sold,
but is given of free grace; for it is called grace.
BEDE; They then are the sellers of doves, who, after receiving the free
grace of the Holy Spirit, do not dispense it freely , as they are
commanded, but at a price: who confer the laying on of hands, by which
the Holy Spirit is received, if not for money, at least for the sake of
getting favor with the people, who bestow Holy Orders not according to
merit, but favor.
AUG. By the oxen may be understood the Apostles and Prophets, who have
dispensed to us the holy Scriptures. Those who by these very Scriptures
deceive the people, from whom they seek honor, sell the oxen; and they
sell the sheep too, i.e. the people themselves; and to whom do they
sell them, but to the devil? For that which is cut off from the one
Church, who takes away, except the roaring lion, who goes about every
where, and seeks whom he may devour?
BEDE; Or, the sheep are works of purity and piety, and they sell the
sheep, who do works of piety to gain the praise of men. They exchange
money in the temple, who, in the Church, openly devote themselves to
secular business. And besides those who seek for money, or praise, or
honor from Holy Orders, those too make the Lord's house a house of
merchandise, who do not employ the rank, or spiritual grace, which they
have received in the Church at the Lord's hands, with singleness of
mind, but with an eye to human recompense.
AUG. Our Lord intended a meaning to be seen in His making a scourge of
small cords, and then scourging those who were carrying on the
merchandise in the temple. Every one by his sins twists for himself a
cord, in that he goes on adding sin to sin. So then when men suffer for
their iniquities, let them be sure that it is the Lord making a scourge
of small cords, and admonishing them to change their lives: which if
they fail to do, they will hear at the last, Bind him hand and foot.
BEDE; With a scourge then made of small cords, He cast them out of the
temple; for from the part and lot of the saints are cast out all, who,
thrown externally among the Saints, do good works hypocritically, or
bad openly. The sheep and the oxen too He cast out, to show that the
life and the doctrine of such were alike reprobate. And He overthrew
the change heaps of the money-changers and their tables, as a sign
that, at the final condemnation of the wicked, He will take away the
form even of those things which they loved. The sale of doves He
ordered to be removed out of the temple, because the grace of the
Spirit, being freely received, should be freely given.
ORIGEN; By the temple we may understand too the soul wherein the Word
of God dwells; in which, before the teaching of Christ, earthly and
bestial affections had prevailed. The ox being the tiller of the soil,
is the symbol of earthly affections: the sheep, being the most
irrational of all animals, of dull ones; the dove is the type of light
and volatile thoughts; and money, of earthly good things; which money
Christ cast out by the Word of His doctrine, that His Father's house
might be no longer a market.
18. Then answered the Jews and said to him, What sign show you to us, seeing that you do these things?
19. Jesus answered and said to them, Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up.
20. Then said the Jews, Forty and six years was this temple in building, and will you rear it up in three days?
21. But he spoke of the temple of his body.
22. When therefore he was risen from the dead, his disciples remembered
that he had said this to them: and they believed the Scripture, and the
word which Jesus had said.
THEOPHYL. The Jews seeing Jesus thus acting with power, and having
heard Him say, Make not My Father's house a house of merchandise, ask
of Him a sign; Then answered the Jews and said to Him, What sign show
You to us, seeing that You do these things?
CHRYS. But were signs necessary for His putting a stop to evil
practices? Was not the having such zeal for the house of God, the
greatest sign of His virtue? They did not however remember the
prophecy, but asked for a sign; at once irritated at the loss of their
base gains, and wishing to prevent Him from going further. For this
dilemma, they thought, would oblige Him either to work miracles, or
give up His present course.
But He refuses to give them the sign, as He did on a like occasion,
when He answers, An evil and adulterous generation seeks after a sign,
and there shall no sign be given it, but the sign of Jonas the prophet;
only the answer is more open there than here. He however who even
anticipated men's wishes, and gave signs when He was not asked, would
not have rejected here a positive request, had He not seen a crafty
design in it. As it was, Jesus answered and said to them, Destroy this
temple, and in three days I will raise it up.
BEDE; For inasmuch as they sought a sign from our Lord of His right to
eject the customary merchandise from the temple, He replied, that that
temple signified the temple of His Body, in which was no spot of sin;
as if He said, As by My power I purify your inanimate temple from your
merchandise and wickedness; so the temple of My Body, of which that is
the figure, destroyed by your hands, on the third day I will raise
again.
THEOPHYL. He does not however provoke them to commit murder, by saying,
Destroy; but only shows that their intentions were not hidden from Him.
Let the Arians observe how our Lord, as the destroyer of death, says, I
will raise it up; that is to say, by My own power.
AUG. The Father also raised Him up again; to Whom He says, Raise You me
up, and I shall reward them. But what did the Father do without the
Word? As then the Father raised Him up, so did the Son also: even as He
said below, I and My Father are one.
CHRYS. But why does He give them the sign of His resurrection? Because
this was the greatest proof that He was not a mere man; showing, as it
did, that He could triumph over death, and in a moment overthrow its
long tyranny.
ORIGEN. Both those, i.e. both the Body of Jesus and the temple, seem to
me to be a type of the Church, which with lively stones is built up
into a spiritual house, into an holy priesthood; according to St. Paul,
You are the body of Christ, and members in particular. And though the
structure of stones seem to be broken up, and all the bones of Christ
scattered by adversities and tribulations, yet shall the temple be
restored, and raised up again in three days, and established in the new
heaven and the new earth. For as that sensible body of Christ was
crucified and buried, and afterward rose again; so the whole body of
Christ's saints was crucified with Christ, (each glorying in that
cross, by which He Himself too was crucified to the world,) and, after
being buried with Christ, has also risen with Him, walking in newness
of life. Yet have we not risen yet in the power of the blessed
resurrection, which is still going on, and is yet to be completed.
Whence it is not said, On the third day I will build it up, but, in
three days; for the erection is being in process throughout the whole
of the three days.
THEOPHYL. The Jews, supposing that He spoke of the material temple,
scoffed: Then said the Jews, Forty and six years was this temple in
building, and will You rear it up in three days?
ALCUIN. Note, that they allude here not to the first temple under
Solomon, which was finished in seven years, but to the one rebuilt
under Zorobabel. This was forty-six years building, in consequence of
the hindrance raised by the enemies of the work.
ORIGEN. Or some will reckon perhaps the forty and six years from the
time that David consulted Nathan the Prophet on the building of the
temple. David from that time was busy in collecting materials. But
perhaps the number forty may with reference to the four corners of the
temple allude to the four elements of the world, and the number six, to
the creation of man on the sixth day.
AUG. Or it may be that this number fits in with the perfection of the
Lord's Body. For six times forty-six are two hundred and seventy-six
days, which make up nine months and six days, the time that our Lord's
Body was forming in the womb; as we know by authoritative traditions
handed down from our fathers, and preserved by the Church. He was,
according to general belief, conceived on the eighth of the Kalends of
April, the one which He suffered, and born on the eighth of the Kalends
of January. The intervening time contains two hundred and seventy-six
days, i.e. six multiplied by forty.
AUG. The process of human conception is said to be this. The first six
days produce a substance like milk, which in the following nine is
converted into blood; in twelve more is consolidated, in eighteen more
is formed into a perfect set of limbs, the growth and enlargement of
which fills up the rest of the time till the birth. For six, and nine,
and twelve, and eighteen, added together are forty-five, and with the
addition of one (which stands for the summing up, all these numbers
being collected into one) forty-six. This multiplied by the number six,
which stands at the head of this calculation, makes two hundred and
seventy-six, i.e. nine months a and six days. It is no unmeaning
information then that the temple was forty and six years building; for
the temple prefigured His Body, and as many years as the temple was in
building, so many days was the Lord's Body in forming.
AUG. Or thus, if you take the four Greek words, anatole, the east;
dysis, the west; arctos, the north; and mesembria, the south; the first
letters of these words make Adam. And our Lord says that He will gather
together His saints from the four winds, when He comes to judgment. Now
these letters of the word Adam, make up, according to Greek figuring,
the number of the years during which the temple was building. For in
Adam we have alpha, one; delta, four; alpha again, one; and forty;
making up together forty-six. The temple then signifies the body
derived from Adam; which body our Lord did not take in its sinful
state, but renewed it, in that after the Jews had destroyed it, He
raised it again the third day. The Jews however, being carnal,
understood carnally; He spoke spiritually. He tells us, by the
Evangelist, what temple He means; But He spoke of the temple of His
Body.
THEOPHYL. From this Apollinarius draws an heretical inference: and
attempts to show that Christ's flesh was inanimate, because the temple
was inanimate. In this way you will prove the flesh of Christ to be
wood and stone, because the temple is composed of these materials. Now
if you refuse to allow what is said, Now is My soul troubled; and, I
have power to lay it (My life) down, to be said of the rational soul,
still how will you interpret, Into Your hands, O Lord, I commend My
spirit? you cannot understand this of an irrational soul: or again, the
passage, You shall not leave My soul in hell.
ORIGEN. Our Lord's Body is called the temple, because as the temple
contained the glory of God dwelling therein, so the Body of Christ,
which represents the Church, contains the Only-Begotten, Who is the
image and glory of God.
CHRYS. Two things there were in the mean time very far removed from the
comprehension of the disciples: one, the resurrection of our Lord's
Body: the other, and the greater mystery, that it was God who dwelt in
that Body: as our Lord declares by saying, Destroy this temple, and in
three days I will raise it up.
And thus it follows, When therefore He had risen from the dead, His
disciples remembered that He had said this to them: and they believed
the Scripture, and the word which Jesus had said.
ALCUIN. For before the resurrection they did not understand the
Scriptures, because they had not yet received the Holy Ghost, Who was
not yet given, because Jesus was not yet glorified. But on the day of
the resurrection our Lord appeared and opened their meaning to His
disciples; that they might understand what was said of Him in the Law
and the Prophets. And then they believed the prediction of the Prophets
that Christ would rise the third day, and the word which Jesus had
spoken to them: Destroy this temple, &c.
ORIGEN. But (in the mystical interpretation) we shall attain to the
full measure of faith, at the great resurrection of the whole body of
Jesus, i.e. His Church; inasmuch as the faith which is from sight, is
very different from that which sees as through a glass darkly.
23. Now when he was in Jerusalem at the passover, on the feast
day, many believed in his name, when they saw the miracles which he did.
24. But Jesus did not commit himself to them, because he knew all men.
25. And needed not that any should testify of man: for he knew what was in man.
BEDE. The Evangelist has related above what our Lord did on his way to
Jerusalem; now He relates how others were affected towards Him at
Jerusalem; Now when He was in Jerusalem at the Passover, in the feast
day, many believed in His Name, when they saw the miracles which He
did.
ORIGEN. But how was it that many believed in Him from seeing His
miracles? for he seems to have performed not supernatural works at
Jerusalem, except we suppose Scripture to have passed them over. May
not however the act of His making a scourge of small cords, and driving
all out of the temple, be reckoned a miracle?
CHRYS Those had been wiser disciples, however, who were brought to
Christ not by His miracles, but by His doctrine. For it is the duller
sort who are attracted by miracles; the more rational are convinced by
prophecy, or doctrine. And therefore it follows, But Jesus did not
commit Himself to them.
AUG. What means this, Many believed in His Name but Jesus did not
commit Himself to them? Was it that they did not believe in Him, but
only pretended that they did? In that case the Evangelist would not
have said, Many believed in His Name. Wonderful this, and strange, that
men should trust Christ, and Christ trusts not Himself to men;
especially considering that He was the Son of God, and suffered
voluntarily, or else need not have suffered at all. Yet such are all
catechumens. If we say to a catechumen, Believe you in Christ? he
answers, I do believe, and crosses himself. If we ask him, Do you eat
the flesh of the Son of man? he knows not what we say for Jesus has not
committed Himself to him.
ORIGEN. Or, it was those who believed in His Name, not in Him, to whom
Jesus would not commit Himself. They believe in Him, who follow the
narrow way which leads to life; they believe in His Name, who only
believe the miracles.
CHRYS. Or it means that He did not place confidence in them, as perfect
disciples, and did not, as if they were brethren of confirmed faith,
commit to them all His doctrines, for He did not attend to their
outward words, but entered into their hearts, and well knew how
short-lived was their zeal. Because He knew all men, and needed not
that any should testify of man, for He knew what was in man. To know
what is in man's heart, is in the power of God alone, who fashioned the
heart. He does not want witnesses, to inform Him of that mind, which
was of His own fashioning.
AUG. The Maker knew better what was in His own work, than the work knew
what was in itself. Peter knew not what was in himself when he said, I
will go with You to death; but our Lord's answer showed that He knew
what was in man; Before the cock crow, you shall thrice deny Me.
BEDE. An admonition to us not to be confident of ourselves, but ever
anxious and mistrustful; knowing that what escapes our own knowledge,
cannot escape the eternal Judge.
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