catena aurea mark 14
1. After two days was the feast of the Passover, and of unleavened
bread: and the Chief Priests and the Scribes sought how they might take
him by craft, and put him to death.
2. But they said, Not on the feast day, lest there be an uproar of the people.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Let us now sprinkle our book, and our thresholds with
blood, and put the scarlet thread around the house of our prayers, and
bind scarlet on our hand, as was done to Zarah, that we may be able to
say that the red heifer is slain in the valley. For the Evangelist,
being about to speak of the slaying of Christ, premises, After two days
was; the feast of the Passover, and of unleavened bread.
BEDE; Pascha which in Hebrew is phase, is not called from, Passion, as
many think, but from passing over, because the destroyer, seeing the
blood on the doors of the Israelites, passed by them, and did not smite
them; or the Lord Himself, bringing aid to His people, walked above
them.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Or else phase is interpreted a passing over, but Pascha
means sacrifice. In the sacrifice of the lamb, and the passing of the
people through the sea, or through Egypt, the Passion of Christ is
prefigured, and the redemption of the people from hell, when He visits
us after two days, that is, when the moon is most full, and the age of
Christ is perfect, that when no part at all of it is dark, we may eat
the flesh of the Lamb without spot, who takes away the sins of the
world, in one house, that is, in the Catholic Church, shod with
charity, and armed with virtue.
BEDE; The difference according to the Old Testament between the
Passover and the feast of unleavened bread was, that the day alone on
which the lamb was slain in the evening, that is, the fourteenth moon
of the first month, was called Passover. But on the fifteenth moon,
when they came out of Egypt, the feast of unleavened bread came on,
which solemn time was appointed for seven days, that is, up to the
twenty-first day of the same month in the evening. But the Evangelists
indifferently use the day of unleavened bread for the Passover, and the
Passover for the days of unleavened bread. Wherefore Mark also here
says, After two days was the feast of the Passover, and of unleavened
bread, because the day of the Passover was also ordered to be
celebrated on the days of unleavened bread, and we also, as it were,
keeping a continual passover, ought always to be passing out of this
world.
PSEUDO-JEROME; But iniquity came forth in Babylon from the princes, who
ought to have purified the temple and the vessels, and themselves
according to the law, in order to eat the lamb. Wherefore there
follows: And the Chief Priests and the Scribes sought how they might
take him by craft, and put him to death. Now when the head is slain,
the whole body is rendered powerless, wherefore these wretched men slay
the Head.
But they avoid the feast day, which indeed befits them, for what
feasting can there be for them, who have lost life and mercy? Wherefore
it goes on: But they said, Not on the feast day, lest there be an
uproar of the people.
BEDE; Not indeed, as the words seem to imply, that they feared the
uproar, but they were afraid lest He should be taken out of their hands
by the aid of the people.
THEOPHYL. Nevertheless, Christ Himself had determined for Himself the
day of His Passion; for He wished to be crucified on the Passover,
because He was the true Passover.
3. And being in Bethany in the house of Simon the leper, as he
sat at meat, there came a woman having an alabaster box of ointment of
spikenard very precious; and she broke the box, and poured it on his
head.
4. And there were some that had indignation within themselves, and said, Why was this waste of the ointment made?
5. For it might have been sold for more than three hundred pence, and
have been given to the poor. And they murmured against her.
6. And Jesus said, Let her alone; why trouble you her? she has wrought a good work on me.
7. For you have the poor with you always, and whenever you will you may do them good: but me you have not always.
8. She has done what she could: she is come aforehand to anoint my body to the burying.
9. Verily I say to you, Wherever this Gospel shall be preached
throughout the whole world, this also that she has done shall be spoken
of for a memorial of her.
BEDE; The Lord when about to suffer for the whole world, and to redeem
all nations with His blood, dwells in Bethany, that is, in the house of
obedience; wherefore it is said, And being in Bethany in the house of
Simon the leper, as he sat at meat, there came a woman.
PSEUDO-JEROME; For the fawn amongst the stags ever comes back to his
couch, that is, the Son, obedient to the Father even to death, seeks
for obedience from us.
BEDE; He says of Simon the leper, not because he remained still a leper
at that time, but because having once been such, he was healed by our
Savior; his former name is left, that the virtue of the Healer may be
made manifest.
THEOPHYL. But although the four Evangelists record the anointing by a
woman, there were two women and not one; one described by John, the
sister of Lazarus; it was she who six days before the Passover anointed
the feet of Jesus; another described by the other three Evangelists.
Nay, if you examine, you will find three; for one is described by John,
another by Luke, a third by the other two. For that one described by
Luke is said to be a sinner and to have come to Jesus during the time
of His preaching; but this other described by Matthew and Mark is said
to have come at the time of the Passion, nor did she confess that she
had been a sinner.
AUG. I however think that nothing else can be meant, but that the
sinner who then came to the feet of Jesus was no other than the same
Mary who did this twice; once, as Luke relates it, when coming for the
first time with humility and tears she merited the remission of her
sins. For John also relates this, when he began to speak of the raising
of Lazarus before He came to Bethany, saying, It was that Mary which
anointed the Lord with ointment, and wiped his feet with her hair,
whose brother Lazarus was sick. But what she again did at Bethany is
another act, unrecorded by Luke, but mentioned in the same way by the
other three Evangelists. In that therefore Matthew and Mark say that
the head of the Lord was anointed by the woman, whilst John says the
feet, we must understand that both the head and the feet were anointed
by the woman. Unless because Mark has said that she broke the box in
order to anoint His head, any one is so fond of caviling as to deny
that, because the box was broken, any could remain to anoint the feet
of the Lord. But a man of a more pious spirit w ill contend that it was
not broken so as to pour out the whole, or else that the feet were
anointed before it was broken, so that there remained in the unbroken
box enough to anoint the head.
BEDE; Alabaster is a sort of white marble, veined with various colors
which is often hollowed out for boxes of ointment, because it keeps
things of that nature most uncorrupt. Nard is an aromatic shrub of a
large and thick root, but short, black, and brittle; though unctuous,
it smells like cypress, and has a sharp taste, and small and dense
leaves. Its tops spread themselves out like ears of corn, therefore,
its gift being double, perfumers make much of the spikes and the leaves
of the nard. And this is what is meant by Mark, when he says spikenard
very precious, that is, the ointment which Mary brought for the Lord
was not made of the root of nerd, but even, what made it more precious,
by the addition of the spikes and the leaves, the gratefulness of its
smell and virtue was augmented.
THEOPHYL. Or as is said in Greek, of pistic nard, that is, faithful,
because the ointment of the nard was made faithfully and without
counterfeit.
AUG. It may appear to be a contradiction, that Matthew and Mark after
mentioning two days and the Passover, add afterwards that Jesus was in
Bethany, where that precious ointment is mentioned; whilst John, just
before he speaks a of the anointing, says, that Jesus came into Bethany
six days before the feast. But those persons who are troubled by this,
are not aware that Matthew and Mark do not place that anointing in
Bethany immediately after that two days of which he foretold, but by
way of recapitulation at the time when there were yet six days to the
Passover.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Again in a mystic sense, Simon the leper means the
world, first infidel, and afterwards converted, and the woman with the
alabaster box, means the faith of the Church, who says, My spikenard
sends forth its smell. It is called pistic nard, that is, faithful, and
precious. The house filled with the smell of it is heaven and earth;
the broken alabaster box is carnal desire, which is broken at the Head,
from which the whole body is framed together, whilst He was reclining,
that is, humbling Himself, that the faith of the sinner might be able
to reach Him, for she went up from the feet to the head, and down from
the head to the feet by faith, that is, to Christ and to His members.
It goes on: And there were some that had indignation within themselves,
and said, Why was this loss of the ointment? By the figure synecdoche,
one is put for many, and many for one; for it is the lost Judas who
finds loss in salvation; thus in the fruitful vine rises the snare of
death. Under the cover of his avarice, however, the mystery of faith
speaks; for our faith is bought for three hundred pence, in our ten
senses, that is, our inward and outward senses which are again trebled
by our body, soul, and spirit.
BEDE; And in that he says, And they murmured against her, we must not
understand this to be spoken of the faithful Apostles, but rather of
Judas mentioned in the plural.
THEOPHYL. Or else, it appears to be aptly implied that many disciples
murmured against the woman, because they had often heard our Lord
talking of alms. Judas, however, was indignant, but not with the same
feeling, but on account of his love of money, and filthy gain;
wherefore John also records him alone, as accusing the woman with a
fraudulent intent. But he says, They murmured against her, meaning that
they troubled her with reproaches, and hard words. Then our Lord
reproves His disciples, for throwing obstacles against the wish of the
woman.
Wherefore it goes on: And Jesus said, Let her alone, why trouble you
her? For after she had brought her gift, they wished to prevent her
purpose by their reproaches.
ORIGEN; For they were grieved at the waste of the ointment, which might
be sold for a large sum and given to the poor. This however ought not
to have been, for it was right that it should be poured over the head
of Christ, with a holy and fitting stream; wherefore it goes on, She
has wrought a good work on me. And so effectual is the praise of this
good work, that it ought to excite all of us to fill the head of the
Lord with sweet-smelling and rich offerings, that of us it may be said
that we have done a good work over the head of the Lord. For we always
have with us, as long as we remain in this life, the poor who have need
of the care of those who have made progress in the word, and are
enriched in the wisdom of God; they are not however able always day and
night to have with them the Son of God, that is, the Word and Wisdom of
God.
For it goes on: For you have the poor always with you, and whenever you will you may do them good; but me you have not always.
BEDE; To me, indeed, He seems to speak of His bodily presence, that He
should by no means be with them after His resurrection, as He then was
living with them in all familiarity.
PSEUDO-JEROME. He says also, She has wrought a good work on me, for
whosoever believes on the Lord, it is counted to Him for righteousness.
For it is one thing to believe Him, and to believe on Him, that is, to
cast ourselves entirely upon Him.
It goes on: She has done what she could, she is come aforehand to anoint my body to the burying.
BEDE; As if the Lord said, What you think is a waste of ointment is the service of my burial.
THEOPHYL. For she is come aforehand as though led by God to anoint my
body, as a sign of my approaching burial; by which He confounds the
traitor, as if He said, With what conscience can you confound the
woman, who anoints my body to the burial, and cost not confound
yourself, who will deliver me to death? But the Lord makes a double
prophecy; one that the Gospel shall be preached over the whole world,
another that the deed of the woman shall be praised.
Wherefore it goes on: Verily I say to you, Wherever this gospel shall
he preached throughout the whole world, this also that she has done
shall be spoken of for a memorial of her.
BEDE; Observe also, that as Mary won glory throughout the whole world
for the service which she rendered to the Lord, so, on the contrary, he
who was bold enough to reprove her service, is held in infamy far and
wide; but the Lord in rewarding the good with due praise has passed
over in silence the future shame of the impious.
10. And Judas Iscariot, one of the twelve, went to the Chief Priests, to betray him to them.
11. And when they heard it, they were glad, and promised to give him money. And he sought how he might conveniently betray him.
BEDE; The unhappy Judas wishes to compensate with the price of his
Master for the loss which he thought he had made by the pouring out of
the ointment; wherefore it is said, And Judas Iscariot, one of the
twelve, went to the Chief Priests to betray him to them.
CHRYS. Why do you tell me of his country? would that I could also have
been ignorant of his existence. But there was another disciple called
Judas the zealot, the brother of James, and lest by calling him by this
name there should arise a confusion between the two, he separates the
one from the other. But he says not Judas the traitor, that he may
teach us to be guiltless of detraction, and to avoid accusing others.
In that however he says, one of the twelve, he enhanced the detestable
guilt of the traitor; for there were seventy other disciples, these
however were not so intimate with Him, nor admitted to such familiar
intercourse. But these twelve were approved by Him, these were the
regal band, out of which the wicked traitor came forth.
PSEUDO-JEROME; But he was one of the twelve in number, not in merit,
one in body, not in soul. But he went to the Chief Priests after he
went out and Satan entered into him. Every living thing unites with
what is like itself.
BEDE; But by the words, he went out, it is shown that he was not
invited by the Chief Priests, nor bound by any necessity, but entered
upon this design from the spontaneous wickedness of his own mind.
THEOPHYL. It is said, to betray him to them, that is, to announce to
them when He should be alone. But they feared to rush upon Him when He
was teaching, for fear of the people.
PSEUDO-JEROME; And he promises to betray Him, as his master the devil
said before, All this power I will give you. It goes on, And when they
heard it they were glad, and promised to give him money. They promise
him money, and they lose their life, which he also loses on receiving
the money.
CHRYS. Oh! the madness, yea, the avarice of the traitor, for his
covetousness brought forth all the evil. For covetousness retains the
souls which it has taken, and confines them in every way when it has
bound them, and makes them forget all things, maddening their minds.
Judas, taken captive by this madness of avarice, forgets the
conversation, the table of Christ, his own discipleship, Christ's
warnings and persuasion. For there follows, And he sought how he might
conveniently betray him.
PSEUDO-JEROME; No opportunity for treachery can be found, such that it can escape vengeance here or there.
BEDE; Many in this day shudder at the crime of Judas in selling his
Master, his Lord and his God, for money, as monstrous and horrible
wickedness; they however do not take heed, for when for the sake of
gain they trample on the rights of charity and truth, they are traitors
to God, who is Charity and Truth.
12. And the first day of unleavened bread, when they killed the
Passover, his disciples said to him Where will you that we go and
prepare that you may eat the Passover?
13. And he sent forth two of his disciples, and said to them, Go you
into the city, and there shall meet you a man bearing a pitcher of
water: follow him.
14. And wherever he shall go in, say you to the good man of the house,
The Master said; Where is the guest chamber, where I shall eat the
Passover with my disciples?
15. And he will show you a large upper room furnished and prepared: there make ready for us.
16. And his disciples went forth, and came into the city, and found as he had said to them: and they made ready the Passover.
CHRYS. Whilst Judas was plotting how to betray Him, the rest of the
disciples were taking care of the preparation of the Passover:
wherefore it is said, And the first day of unleavened bread, when they
killed the Passover, his disciples said to him, Where will you that we
go and prepare where you may eat the Passover.
BEDE; He means by the first day of the Passover the fourteenth day of
the first month, when they threw aside leaven, and were wont to
sacrifice, that is, to kill the lamb at even. The Apostle explaining
this says, Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us. For although He
was crucified on the next day, that is, on the fifteenth moon, yet on
the night when the lamb was offered up, He committed to His disciples
the mysteries of His Body and Blood, which they were to celebrate, and
was seized upon and bound by the Jews; thus He consecrated the
beginning of His sacrifice, that is, of His Passion.
PSEUDO-JEROME; But the unleavened bread which was eaten with
bitterness, that is with bitter herbs, is our redemption, and the
bitterness is the Passion of our Lord.
THEOPHYL. From the words of the disciples, Where will you that we go?
it seems evident that Christ had no dwelling-place, and that the
disciples had no houses of their own; for if so, they would have taken
Him thither.
PSEUDO-JEROME; For they say, Where will you that we go? to show us that
we should direct our steps according to the will of God. But the Lord
points out with whom He would eat the Passover, and after l His custom
He sends two disciples, which we have explained above; wherefore it
goes on, And he sent forth two of his disciples, and he said to them,
Go you into the city.
THEOPHYL. He sends two of His disciples, that is, Peter and John, as
Luke says, to a man unknown to Him, implying by this that He might, if
He had pleased, have avoided His Passion. For what could not He work in
other men, who influenced the mind of a person unknown to Him, so that
he received them? He also gives them a sign how they were to know the
house, when He adds, And there shall meet you a man bearing a pitcher
of water.
AUG. Mark says a pitcher, Luke a two-handled vessel; one points out the
kind of vessel, the other the mode of carrying it; both however mean
the same truth.
BEDE; And it is a proof of the presence of His divinity, that in speaking with His disciples,
He knows what is to take place elsewhere; wherefore it follows, And his
disciples went forth, and came into the city, and found as he had said
to them; and they made ready the Passover.
CHRYS. Not our Passover, but in the meanwhile that of the Jews; but He
did not only appoint ours, but Himself became our Passover. Why too did
He eat it? Because He was made under the Law, to redeem them that were
under the Law, and Himself give rest to the Law. And lest any one
should say that He did away with it, because He could not fulfill its
hard and difficult obedience, He first Himself fulfilled it, and then
set it to rest.
PSEUDO-JEROME. And in a mystical sense the city is the Church,
surrounded by the wall of faith, the man who meets them is the
primitive people, the pitcher of water is the law of the letter.
BEDE; Or else, the water is the layer of grace, the pitcher points out
the weakness of those who were to show that grace to the world.
THEOPHYL. He who is baptized carries the pitcher of water, and he who
bears baptism upon him comes to his rest, if he lives according to his
reason; and he obtains rest, as being in the house. Wherefore it is
added, Follow him.
PSEUDO-JEROME; That is, him who leads to the lofty place, where is the
refreshment prepared by Christ. The lord of the house is the Apostle
Peter, to whom the Lord has entrusted His house; that there may be one
faith under one Shepherd. The large upper-room is the wide-spread
Church, in which the name of the Lord is spoken of, prepared by a
variety of powers and tongues.
BEDE; Or else, the large upper-room is spiritually the Law, which comes
forth from the narrowness of the letter, and in a lofty place, that is,
in the lofty chamber of the soul, receives the Savior. But it is
designedly that the names both of the bearer of the water, and of the
lord of the house, are omitted, to imply that power is given to all who
wish to celebrate the true Passover, that is, to be embued with the
sacraments of Christ, and to receive Him in the dwelling-place of their
mind.
THEOPHYL. Or else, the lord of the house is the intellect, which points
out the large upper room, that is, the loftiness of intelligences, and
which, though it be high, yet has nothing of vain glory, or of pride,
but is prepared and made level by humility. But there, that is, in such
a mind Christ's Passover is prepared by Peter and John, that is by
action and contemplation.
17. And in the evening he comes with the twelve.
18. And as they sat and did eat, Jesus said, Verily I say to you, One of you which eats with me shall betray me.
19. And they began to be sorrowful, and to say to him one by one, Is it I? and another said, Is it I?
20. And he answered and said to them, It is one of the twelve, that dips with me in the dish.
21. The Son of man indeed goes, as it is written of him: but woe to
that man by whom the Son of man is betrayed! good were it for that man
if he had never been born.
BEDE; The Lord who had foretold His Passion, prophesied also of the
traitor, in order to give him room for repentance, that understanding
that his thoughts were known, he might repent. Wherefore it is said,
And in the evening he comes with the twelve.
And as they sat and did eat, Jesus said, Verily I say to you, One of you which eats with me shall betray me.
CHRYS. Where it is evident that He did not proclaim him openly to all,
lest He should make him the more shameless; at the same time He did not
altogether keep it silent, lest thinking that he was not discovered, he
should boldly hasten to betray Him.
THEOPHYL. But how could they eat reclining, when the law ordered that
standing and upright they should eat the Passover? It is probable that
they had first fulfilled the legal Passover, and had reclined, when He
began to give them His own Passover.
PSEUDO-JEROME; The evening of the day points out the evening of the
world; for the last, who are the first to receive the penny of eternal
life, come about the eleventh hour. All the disciples then are touched
by the Lord; so that there is amongst them the harmony of the harp, all
the well attuned strings answer with accordant tone; for it goes on:
And they began to be sorrowful, and to say to him one by one, Is it I?
One of them however, unstrung, and steeped in the love of money, said,
Is it I, Lord? as Matthew testifies.
THEOPHYL. But the other disciples began to be saddened on account of
the word of the Lord; for although they were free from this passion,
yet they trust Him who knows all hearts, rather than themselves. It
goes on: And he answered and said to them, It is one of the twelve,
that dips with me in the dish.
BEDE; That is, Judas, who when the others were sad and held back their
hands, puts forth his hand with his Master into the dish. And because
He had before said, One of you shall betray me, and yet the traitor
perseveres in his evil, He accuses him more openly, without however
pointing out his name.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Again, He says, One out of the twelve, as it were
separate from them, for the wolf carries away from the flock the sheep
which he has taken, and the sheep which quits the fold lies open to the
bite of the wolf.
But Judas does not withdraw his foot from his traitorous design though
once and again pointed at, wherefore his punishment is foretold, that
the death denounced upon him might correct him, whom shame could not
overcame; wherefore it goes on: The Son of man indeed goes, as it is
written of him.
THEOPHYL. The word here used, goes, shows that the death of Christ was not forced but voluntary.
PSEUDO-JEROME; But because many do good, in the way that Judas did,
without its profiting them, there follows: Woe to that man by whom the
Son of man is betrayed! good were it for that man if he had never been
born.
BEDE; Woe too to that man, today and for ever, who comes to the Lord's
table with an evil intent. For he, after the example of Judas, betrays
the Lord, not indeed to Jewish sinners, but to his own sinning members.
It goes on: Good were it for that man if he had never been born.
PSEUDO-JEROME; That is, hidden in his mother's inmost womb, for it is better for a man not to exist than to exist for torments.
THEOPHYL. For as respects the end for which he was designed, it would
have been better for him to have been born, if he had not been the
betrayer, for God created him for good works; but after he had fallen
into such dreadful wickedness, it would have been better for him never
to have been born.
22. And as they did eat, Jesus took bread, and blessed, and broke it, and gave to them, and said, Take, eat: this is my body.
23. And he took the cup, and when he had given thanks, he gave it to them: and they all drank of it.
24. And he said to them, This is my blood of the new testament, which is shed for many.
25. Verily I say to you, I will drink no more of the fruit of the vine,
until that day that I drink it new in the kingdom of God.
BEDE; When the rites of the old Passover were finished, He passed to
the new, in order, that is, to substitute the Sacrament of His own Body
and Blood, for the flesh and blood of the lamb. Wherefore there
follows: And as they did eat, Jesus took bread; that is, in order to
show that He Himself is that person to whom the Lord swore, You are a
Priest for ever after the order of Melchizedec. There follows: And
blessed, and broke it.
THEOPHYL. That is, giving thanks, He broke it, which we also do, with the addition of some prayers.
BEDE; He Himself also breaks the bread, which He gives to His
disciples, to show that the breaking of His Body was to take place, not
against His will, nor without His intervention; He also blessed it,
because He with the Father and the Holy Spirit filled His human nature,
which He took upon Him in order to suffer, with the grace of Divine
power. He blessed bread and brake it, because He deigned to subject to
death His manhood, which He had taken upon Him, in such a way as to
show that there was within it the power of Divine immortality, and to
teach them that therefore He would the more quickly raise it from the
dead. There follows: And gave to them, and said, Take, eat: this is my
body.
THEOPHYL. That, namely, which I now give and which you take. But the
bread is not a mere figure of the Body of Christ, but is changed into
the very Body of Christ. For the Lord said, The bread which I give you
is my flesh. But the flesh of Christ is veiled from our eyes on account
of our weakness, for bread and wine are things to which we are
accustomed, if however we saw flesh and blood we could not bear to take
them. For this reason the Lord bending Himself to our weakness keeps
the forms of bread and wine, but changes the bread and wine into the
reality of His Body and Blood.
CHRYS. Even now also that Christ is close to us; He who prepared that
table, Himself also consecrates it. For it is not man who makes the
offerings to be the Body and Blood of Christ, but Christ who was
crucified for us. The words are spoken by the mouth of the Priest, and
are consecrated by the power and the grace of God. By this word which
He spoke, This is my body, the offerings are consecrated; and as that
word which says, Increase and multiply, and fill the earth, was sent
forth but once, yet has its effect throughout all time, when nature
does the work of generation; so also that voice was spoken once, yet
gives confirmation to the sacrifice through all the tables of the
Church even to this day, even to His advent.
PSEUDO-JEROME; But in a mystical sense, the Lord transfigures into
bread His body, which is the present Church, which is received in
faith, is blessed in its number, is broken in its sufferings, is given
in its examples, is taken in its doctrines; and He forms His Blood in
the chalice of water and wine mingled together, that by one we may be
purged from our sins, by the other redeemed from their punishment. For
by the blood of the lamb our houses are preserved from the smiting of
the Angel, and our enemies perish in the waters of the Red sea, which
are the sacraments of the Church of Christ. Wherefore it goes on: And
he took the cup, and when he had given thanks, he gave it to them. For
we are saved by the grace of the Lord, not by our own deserts.
GREG. When His Passion was approaching, He is said to have taken bread
and given thanks. He therefore gave thanks, who took upon Him the
stripes of other men's wickedness; He who did nothing worthy of
smiting, humbly gives a blessing in His Passion, to show us, what each
should do when beaten for his own sins, since He Himself bore calmly
the stripes due to the sin of others; furthermore to show us, what we
who are the subjects of the Father should do under correction, when He
who is His equal gave thanks under the lash.
BEDE; The wine of the Lord's cup is mixed with water, because we should
remain in Christ and Christ in us. For on the testimony of John, the
waters are the people, and it is not lawful for any one to offer either
wine alone, or water alone, lest such an oblation should mean that the
head may be severed from the members, and either that Christ could
suffer without love for our redemption, and that we can be saved or be
offered to the Father without His Passion. It goes on: And they all
drank of it.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Happy intoxication, saving fullness, which the more we drink gives the greater sobriety of mind!
THEOPHYL. Some say that Judas did not partake in these mysteries, but
that he went out before the Lord gave the Sacrament. Some again say
that He gave him also of that Sacrament.
CHRYS. For Christ offered His blood to him who betrayed Him, that he
might have remission of his' sins, if he had chosen to cease to be
wicked.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Judas therefore drinks and is not satisfied, nor can he
quench the thirst of the everlasting fire, because he unworthily
partakes of the mysteries of Christ. There are some in the Church whom
the sacrifice does not cleanse, but their foolish thought draws them on
to sin, for they have plunged themselves in the stinking slough of
cruelty.
CHRYS. Let there not be therefore a Judas at the table of the Lord;
this sacrifice is spiritual food, for as bodily food, working on a
belly filled with humors which are opposed to it, is hurtful, so this
spiritual food if taken by one polluted with wickedness, rather brings
him to perdition, not by its own nature, but through the fault of the
recipient. Let therefore our mind be pure in all things, and our
thought pure, for that sacrifice is pure. There follows: And he said to
them, This is my blood of the New Testament, which is shed for many.
BEDE; This refers to the different circumstances of the Old Testament,
which was consecrated by the blood of calves and of goats; and the
lawgiver said in sprinkling it, This is the blood of the Testament
which God has enjoined to you. It goes on: Which is shed for many.
PSEUDO-JEROME; For it does not cleanse all. It goes on: Verily I say to
you, I will drink no more of the fruit of the vine, until that day that
I drink it new in the kingdom of God.
THEOPHYL. As if He had said, I will not drink wine until the
resurrection; for He calls His resurrection the kingdom, as He then
reigned over death. But after His resurrection He ate and drank with
His disciples, showing that it was He Himself who had suffered. But He
drank it new, that is, in a new and strange manner, for He had not a
body subject to suffering, and requiring food, but immortal and
incorruptible. We may also understand it in this way. The vine is the
Lord Himself, by the offspring of the vine is meant mysteries, and the
secret understanding, which He Himself begets, who teaches man
knowledge. But in the kingdom of God, that is, in the world to come, He
will drink with His disciples mysteries and knowledge, teaching us new
things, and revealing what He now hides.
BEDE; Or else, Isaiah testifies that the synagogue is called the vine
or the vineyard of the Lord, saying, The vineyard of the Lord of hosts
is the house of Israel. The Lord therefore when about to go to His
Passion, says, I will drink no more of the fruit of the vine, as if He
had said openly, I will no longer delight in the carnal rites of the
synagogue, in which also these rites of the Paschal Lamb have held the
chief place. For the time of my resurrection shall come, that day shall
come, when in the kingdom of heaven, that is, raised on high with the
glory of immortal life, I will be filled with a new joy, together with
you, for the salvation of the same people born again of the fountain of
spiritual grace.
PSEUDO-JEROME; But we must consider that here the Lord changes the
sacrifice without changing the time; so that we never celebrate the
Caena Domini before the fourteenth moon. He who celebrates the
resurrection on the fourteenth moon, will celebrate the Caena Domini on
the eleventh moon, which was never done in either Old or New Testament.
26. And when they had sung an hymn, they went out into the mount of Olives.
27. And Jesus said to them, All you shall be offended because of me
this night: for it is written, I will smite the shepherd, and the sheep
shall be scattered.
28. But after that I am risen, I will go before you into Galilee.
29. But Peter said to him, Although all shall be offended, yet will not I.
30. And Jesus said to him, Verily I say to you, That this day, even in
this night, before the cock crow twice, you shall deny me thrice.
31. But he spoke the more vehemently, If I should die with you, I will not deny you in any wise. Likewise also said they all.
THEOPHYL. As they returned thanks, before they drank, so they return
thanks after drinking; wherefore it is said, And when they had sung a
hymn, they went out into the mount of Olives, to teach us to return
thanks both before and after our food.
PSEUDO-JEROME; For by a hymn he means the praise of the Lord, as is
said in the Psalms, The poor shall eat and be satisfied; they that seek
after the Lord shall praise him. And again, All such as be fat upon
earth have eaten and worshipped.
THEOPHYL. He also shows by this that He was glad to die for us, because
when about to be betrayed, He deigned to praise God. He also teaches us
when we fall into troubles for the sake of the salvation of many, not
to be sad, but to give thanks to God, who through our distress works
the salvation of many.
BEDE; That hymn in the Gospel of John may also be meant, which the Lord
sang, returning thanks to the Father, in which also He prayed, raising
His eyes to heaven, for Himself and His disciples, and those who were
to believe, through their word.
THEOPHYL. Again, He went out into a mountain, that they might come to
Him in a lonely place, and take Him without tumult. For if they had
come to Him, whilst He was abiding in the city, the multitude of the
people would have been in an uproar, and then His enemies, who took
occasion against Him, should seem to have slain Him justly, because He
stirred up the people.
BEDE; Beautifully also does the Lord lead out His disciples, when they
had tasted His Sacraments, into the mount of Olives, to show typically
that we ought through the reception of the Sacraments to rise up to
higher gifts of virtue, and graces of the Holy Ghost, that we may be
anointed in heart.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Jesus also is held captive on the mount of Olives,
whence He ascended to heaven, that we may know, that we ascend into
heaven from that place in which we watch and pray; there we are bound
and do not tend back again to earth.
BEDE; But the Lord foretells to His disciples what is about to happen
to them, that when they have gone through it, they may not despair of
salvation, but work out their repentance, and be freed; wherefore there
follows: And Jesus said to them, All you shall be offended because of
me this night.
PSEUDO-JEROME; All indeed fall, but all do not remain fallen. For shall
not he who sleeps also rise up again? It is a camel thing to fall, but
devilish to remain lying when fallen.
THEOPHYL. The Lord allowed them to fall that they might not trust in
themselves, and lest He should seem to have prophesied, what He had
said, as an open accusation of them, He brings forward the witness of
Zechariah the Prophet; wherefore it goes on: For it is written, I will
smite the shepherd, and the sheep shall be scattered.
BEDE; This is written in different words in Zacharias, and in the
person of the Prophet it is said to the Lord; Smite the shepherd, and
the sheep shall be scattered.
PSEUDO-JEROME; For the Prophet prays for the Passion of the Lord, and
the Father answers, I will smite the shepherd according to the prayers
of those below. The Son is sent and smitten by the Father, that is, He
is made incarnate and suffers.
THEOPHYL. But the Father says, I will smite the shepherd, because He
permitted him to be smitten. He calls the disciples sheep, as being
innocent and without guile. At last He consoles them, by saying, But
after that I am risen I will go before you into Galilee.
PSEUDO-JEROME; In which the true resurrection is promised, that their
hope may not be extinguished. There follows: But Peter said to him,
Although all shall be offended, yet will not I. Lo, a bird unfledged
strives to raise itself on high; but the body weighs down the soul, so
that the fear of the Lord is overcome by the fear of human death.
BEDE; Peter then promised in the ardor of his faith, and the Savior as
God knew what was to happen. Wherefore it goes on: And Jesus said to
him, Verily I say to you, that this day, even in this night, before the
cock crow twice, you shall deny me thrice.
AUG. Though all the Evangelists say that the Lord foretold that Peter
was to deny before the cock crew, Mark alone has related it more
minutely, wherefore some from inattention suppose that he does not
agree with the others. For the whole of Peter's denial is threefold; if
it had begun altogether after the cock crew, the other three
Evangelists would seem to have spoken falsely, in saying, that before
the cock crew, he would deny him thrice. Again, if he had finished the
entire threefold denial before the cock began to crow, Mark would in
the person of the Lord seem to have said needlessly, Before the cock
crow twice, you shall deny me thrice. But because that threefold denial
began before the first cock-crowing, the other three did not notice
when Peter was to finish it, but how great it was to be, that is,
threefold, and when it was to begin, that is, before the cock crew,
although the whole was conceived in his mind, even before the first
cock crew; but Mark has related more plainly the interval between his
words themselves.
THEOPHYL. We are to understand that it happened thus; Peter denied
once, then the cock crew, but after he had made two more denials, then
the cock crew for the second time.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Who is the cock, the harbinger of day, but the Holy
Ghost? by whose voice in prophecy, and in the Apostles, we are roused
from our threefold denial, to most bitter tears after our fall, for we
have thought evil of God, spoken evil of our neighbors, and done evil
to ourselves.
BEDE; The faith of the Apostle Peter, and his burning love for our
Lord, is shown in what follows. For it goes on: But he spoke the more
vehemently, If I should die with you, I will not deny you in any wise.
THEOPHYL. The other disciples also showed a fearless zeal. For there
follows, Likewise also said they all, but nevertheless they acted
against the truth, which Christ had prophesied.
32. And they came to a place which was named Gethsemane: and he said to his disciples, Sit you here, while I shall pray.
33. And he takes with him Peter and James and John, and began to be sore amazed, and to be very heavy;
34. And said to them, My soul is exceeding sorrowful to death: tarry you here, and watch.
35. And he went forward a little, and fell on the ground, and prayed that if it were possible, the hour might pass from him.
36. And he said, Abba, Father, all things are possible to you; take
away this cup from me: nevertheless not what I will, but what you will.
37. And he comes, and finds them sleeping, and said to Peter, Simon, sleep you? could not you watch one hour?
38. Watch you and pray, lest you enter into temptation. The spirit truly is ready, but the flesh is weak.
39. And again he went away, and prayed, and spoke the same words.
40. And when he returned, he found them asleep again, (for their eyes were heavy,) neither wist they what to answer him.
41. And he comes the third time, and said to them, Sleep on now, and
take your rest: it is enough, the hour is come; behold, the Son of man
is betrayed into the hands of sinners.
42. Rise up, let us go; lo, he that betrays me is at hand.
GLOSS. After that the Lord, had foretold the offense of His disciples,
the Evangelist gives an account of His prayer, in which He is supposed
to have prayed for His disciples; and first describing the place of
prayer, he says, And they came to a place which was named Gethsemane.
BEDE; The place Gethsemane, in which the Lord prayed, is shown up to
this day at the foot of the Mount of Olives. The meaning of Gethsemane
is, the valley of the fat, or of fatness. Now when our Lord prays on a
mountain, He teaches us that we should when we pray ask for lofty
things; but by praying in the valley of fatness, He implies that in our
prayer humility and the fatness of interior love must be kept. He also
by the valley of humility and the fatness of charity underwent death
for us.
PSEUDO-JEROME; In the valley of fatness also, the fat bulls beset Him.
There follows, And he said to his disciples, Sit you here, while I
shall pray; they are separated from Him in prayer, who are separated in
His Passion; for He prays, they sleep, overcome by the sloth of their
heart.
THEOPHYL. It was also His custom always to pray by Himself, in order to
give us an example, to seek for silence and solitude in our prayers.
There follows: And he takes with him Peter, and James, and John. He
takes only those who had been witnesses of His glory on Mount Tabor,
that they who had seen His glory might also see His sufferings, and
learn that He is really man, in that He is sorrowful. Wherefore there
follows: And began to be sore amazed, and very heavy. For since He had
taken on Himself the whole of human nature, He took also those natural
things which belong to man, amazement, heaviness, and sorrow; for men
are naturally unwilling to die.
Wherefore it goes on: And he said to then, My soul is exceeding sorrowful to death.
BEDE; As being God, dwelling in the body, He shows the frailty of
flesh, that the blasphemy of those who deny the mystery of His
Incarnation might find no place; for having taken up a body, He must
needs also take up all that belongs to the body, hunger, thirst, pain,
grief; for the Godhead cannot suffer the changes of these affections.
THEOPHYL. But some have understood this, as if He had said, I am
sorrowful, not because I am to die, but because the Jews, my
countrymen, are about to crucify me, and by these means to be shut out
from the kingdom of God.
PSEUDO-JEROME; By this also we are taught to fear and to be sorrowful
before the judgment of death, for not by ourselves, but by Him only,
can we say, The prince of this world comes, and has nothing in Me.
There follows: Tarry you here, and watch.
BEDE; He does not mean natural sleep by the sleep which He forbids, for
the time of approaching danger did not allow of it, but the sleep of
unfaithfulness, and the torpor of the mind. But going forward a little,
He falls on His face, and shows his lowliness of mind, by the posture
of His body. Wherefore there follows: And he went forward a little, and
fell on the ground, and prayed that, if it were possible, the hour
might pass from him.
AUG. He said not, if He could do it, but if it could be done; for
whatever He wills is possible. We must therefore understand, if it be
possible, as if it were; if He is willing.
And lest any one should suppose that He lessened His Father's power, he
shows in what sense the words are to be understood; for there follows,
And he said, Abba, Father, all things are possible to you. By which He
sufficiently shows, that the words, if it be possible, must be
understood not of any impossibility, but of the will of His Father. As
to what Mark relates, that he said not only Father, but Abba, Father,
Abba is the Hebrew for Father. And perhaps the Lord said both words, on
account of some Sacrament contained in them; wishing to show that He
had taken upon Himself that sorrow in the person of His body, the
Church, to which He was made the chief corner stone, and which came to
Him, partly from the Hebrews, who are represented by the word Abba,
partly from the Gentiles, to whom Father belongs.
BEDE; But He prays, that the cup may pass away, to show that He is very
man, wherefore He adds: Take away this cup from me. But remembering why
He was sent, He accomplishes the dispensation for which He was sent,
and cries out, But not what I will, but what you will. As if He had
said, If death can die, without my dying according to the flesh, let
this cup pass away; but since this cannot be otherwise, not what I
will, but what you will. Many still are sad at the prospect of death,
but let them keep their heart right, and avoid death as much as they
can; but if they cannot, then let them say what the Lord said for us.
PSEUDO-JEROME; By which also He ceases not up to the end to teach us to
obey our fathers, and to prefer their will to ours. There follows: And
he comes, and finds them sleeping. For as they are asleep in mind, so
also in body. But after His prayer, the Lord coming, and seeing His
disciples sleeping, rebukes Peter alone. Wherefore it goes on: And said
to Peter, Simon, sleep you? could not you watch with me one hour? As if
He had said, If you could not watch one hour with me, how wilt thou be
able to despise death, thou who promises to die with me?
It goes on: Watch and pray, that you enter not into temptation, that is, the temptation of denying me.
BEDE; He does not say, Pray that you may not be tempted, because it is
impossible for the human mind not to be tempted, but that you enter not
into temptation, that is, that temptation may not vanquish you.
PSEUDO-JEROME; But he is said to enter into temptation, who neglects to
pray. There follows: The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is
weak.
THEOPHYL. As if He had said, Your spirit indeed is ready not to deny
me, and for this reason you promise; but your flesh is weak, in that
unless God give power to your flesh through prayer, you shall enter
into temptation.
BEDE; He here represses the rash, who think that they can compass
whatever they are confident about. But in proportion as we are
confident from the ardor of our mind, so let us fear from the weakness
of our flesh. For this place makes against those, who say that there
was but one operation in the Lord and one will. For He shows two wills,
one human, which from the weakness of the flesh shrinks from suffering;
one divine, which is most ready.
It goes on: And again he went away and prayed, and spoke the same words.
THEOPHYL. That by His second prayer He might show Himself to be very
man. It goes on: And when he returned, he found them asleep again; He
however did not rebuke them severely. For their eyes were heavy, (that
is, with sleep,) neither wist they what to answer him. By this learn
the weakness of men, and let us not, whom even sleep can overcome,
promise things which are impossible to us. Therefore He goes away the
third time to pray the prayer mentioned above.
Wherefore it goes on: And he comes the third time and said to them,
Sleep on now, and take your rest. He is not vehement against them,
though after His rebuke they had done worse, but He tells them
ironically, Sleep on now, and take your rest, because He knew that the
betrayer was now close at hand. And that He spoke ironically is
evident, by what is added: It is enough, the hour is come; behold, the
Son of man is betrayed into the hands of sinners. He speaks this, as
deriding their sleep, as if He had said, Now indeed is a time for
sleep, when the traitor is approaching.
Then He says; Arise, let us go; lo, he that betrays me is at hand; he
did not say this to bid them fly, but that they might meet their
enemies.
AUG. Or else; In that it is said, that after He had spoken these words,
Sleep on now, and take your rest, He added, It is enough, and then, the
hour is come; behold, the Son of man is betrayed, we must understand
that after saying, Sleep on now, and take your rest, our Lord remained
silent for a short time, to give space for that to happen, which He had
permitted; and then that He added, the hour is come; and therefore He
puts in between, it is enough, that is, your rest has been long enough.
PSEUDO-JEROME; The threefold sleep of the disciples points out the
three dead, whom our Lord raised up; the first, in a house; the second,
at the tomb; the third, from the tomb. And the threefold watch of the
Lord teaches us in our prayers, to beg for the pardon of past, future,
and present sins.
43. And immediately, while he yet spoke, comes Judas, one of the
twelve, and with him a great multitude with swords and staves, from the
Chief Priests and the Scribes and the elders.
44. And he that betrayed him had given them a token, saying, Whomever I
shall kiss, that same is he; take him, and lead him away safely.
45. And as soon as he was come, he goes straight way to him, and said, Master, Master, and kissed him.
46. And they laid their hands on him, and took him.
47. And one of them that stood by drew a sword, and smote a servant of the High Priest, and cut off his ear.
48. And Jesus answered and said to them, Are you come out, as against a thief, with swords and with staves to take me?
49. I was daily with you in the temple teaching, and you took me not: but the Scriptures must be fulfilled.
50. And they all forsook him, and fled.
51. And there followed him a certain young man, having a linen cloth
cast about his naked body; and the young men laid hold on him:
52. And he left the linen cloth, and fled from them naked.
BEDE; After that our Lord had prayed three times, and had obtained by
His prayers that the fear of the Apostles should be amended by future
repentance, He, being tranquil as to His Passion, goes to His
persecutors, concerning the coming of whom the Evangelist says, And
immediately, while he yet spoke, comes Judas Iscariot, one of the
twelve.
THEOPHYL. This is not put without reason, but to the greater conviction
of the traitor, since though he was of the chief company amongst the
disciples, he turned himself to furious enmity against our Lord. There
follows: And with him a great multitude with swords and staves from the
Chief Priests and the Scribes and the elders.
PSEUDO-JEROME; For he who despairs of help from God, has recourse to the power of the world.
BEDE; But Judas had still something of the shame of a disciple, for he
did not openly betray Him to his persecutors, but by the token of a
kiss. Wherefore it goes on: And he that betrayed him had given them a
token, saying, Whomever I shall kiss, that same is he; take him, and
lead him away safely.
THEOPHYL. See how in his blindness he thought to deceive Christ by the
kiss, so as to be looked upon by Him as His friend. But if you were a
friend, Judas, how did you come with His enemies? But wickedness is
ever without foresight. It goes on: And as soon as he was come, he goes
straightway to him, and said, Master, master; and kissed him.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Judas gives the kiss as a token, with poisonous guile, just as Cain offered a crafty, reprobate sacrifice.
BEDE; With envy and with a wicked confidence, he calls Him master, and
gives Him a kiss, in betraying Him. But the Lord receives the kiss of
the traitor, not to teach us to deceive, but lest he should seem to
avoid betrayal, and at the same time to fulfill that Psalm, Among them
that are enemies to peace I labor for peace.
It goes on: And they laid hands on him, and took him.
PSEUDO-JEROME; This is the Joseph who was sold by his brethren, and
into whose soul the iron entered. There follows: And one of them that
stood by drew a sword, and, smote a servant of the High Priest, and cut
off his ear.
BEDE; Peter did this, as John declares, with the same ardent mind with
which he did all things; for he knew how Phineas had by punishing
sacrilegious persons received the reward of righteousness and of
perpetual priesthood.
THEOPHYL. Mark conceals his name, lest he should seem to be praising
his master for his zeal for Christ Again, the action of Peter points
out that they were disobedient and unbelieving, despising the
Scriptures; for if they had had ears to hear the Scriptures, they would
not have crucified the Lord of glory. But he cut off the ear of a
servant of the High Priest, for the Chief Priests especially passed
over the Scriptures, like disobedient servants.
It goes on; And Jesus answered and said to them, Are you come out as against a thief, with swords and with staves to take me?
BEDE; As if He had said, it is foolish to seek with swords and staves
Him, who offers Himself to you of His own accord and to search, as for
one who hides Himself, by night and by means of a traitor, for Him who
taught daily in the temple.
THEOPHYL. This, however, is a proof of His divinity, for when He taught
in the temple they were unable to take Him, although He was in their
power, because the time of His Passion had not yet come; but when He
Himself was willing, then He gave Himself up, that the Scriptures might
be fulfilled, for he was led as a lamb to the slaughter, not crying nor
raising His voice, but suffering willingly.
It goes on: And they all forsook him and fled.
BEDE; In this is fulfilled the word, which the Lord had spoken, that
all His disciples should be offended in Him that same night. There
follows: And there followed him a certain young man, having a linen
cloth cast about his naked body, that is, he had no other clothing but
this linen cloth.
It goes on: And they laid hold on him, and he left the linen cloth, and
fled from them naked. That is, he fled from them, whose presence and
whose deeds he abhorred, not from the Lord, for whom his love remained
fixed in his mind, when absent from Him in body.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Just as Joseph left his mantle behind him, and fled
naked from the wanton woman; so also let him, who would escape the
hands of the evil ones, quit in mind all that is of the world, and fly
after Jesus.
THEOPH. It appears probable that this young man was of that house,
where they had eaten the Passover. But some say that this young man was
James, the brother of our Lord, who was called Just; who after the
ascension of Christ received from the Apostles the throne of the
bishopric of Jerusalem.
GREG. Or, he says this of John, who, although he afterwards returned to
the cross to hear the words of the Redeemer, at first was frightened
and fled.
BEDE; For that he was a young man at that time, is evident from his
long sojourn in the flesh. Perhaps he escaped from the hands of those
who held him for the time, and afterwards got back his garment and
returned, mingling under cover of the darkness with those who were
leading Jesus, as though he was one of them, until he arrived at the
door of the High Priest, to whom he was known, as he himself testifies
in the Gospel. But as Peter, who washed away the sin of his denial with
the tears of penitence, shows the recovery of those who fall away in
time of martyrdom, so the other disciples who prevented their actual
seizure, teach the prudence of flight to those who feel themselves
unequal to undergo tortures.
53. And they led Jesus away to the High Priest: and with him were
assembled all the Chief Priests and the elders and the Scribes.
54. And Peter followed him afar off, even into the palace of the High
Priest: and he sat with the servants, and warmed himself at the fire.
55. And the Chief Priests and all the council sought for witness against Jesus to put him to death; and found none.
56. For many bare false witness against him, but their witness agreed not together.
57. And there arose certain, and bare false witness against him, saying,
58. We heard him say, I will destroy this temple that is made with
hands, and within three days I will build another made without hands.
59. But neither so did their witness agree together.
GLOSS. The Evangelist had related above how our Lord had been taken by
the servants of the Priests, now he begins to relate how He was
condemned to death in the house of the High Priest: wherefore it is
said, And they led Jesus away to the High Priest.
BEDE; He means by the High Priest Caiaphas, who (as John writes) was
High Priest that year, of whom Josephus relates that he bought his
priesthood of the Roman Emperor. There follows: And with him were
assembled all the Chief Priests and the elders and the scribes.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Then took place the gathering together of the bulls
among the heifers of the people. It goes on: And Peter followed him
afar off, even into the palace of the High Priest. For though fear
holds him back, love draws him on.
BEDE; But rightly does he follow afar off, who is just about to betray
Him; for he could not have denied Christ, if he had remained close to
Him. There follows, And he sat with the servants, and warmed himself at
the fire.
PSEUDO-JEROME; He warms himself at the fire in the hall, with the
servants. The hall of the High Priest is the enclosure of the world,
the servants are the devils, with whom whoever remains cannot weep for
his sins; the fire is the desire of the flesh.
BEDE; For charity is the fire of which it is said, I am come to send
fire on the earth, which flame coming down on the believers, taught
them to speak with various tongues the praise of the Lord. There is
also a fire of covetousness, of which it is said, They are all
adulterers as an oven; this fire, raised up in the hall of Caiaphas by
the suggestion of an evil spirit, was arming the tongues of the
traitors to deny and blaspheme the Lord. For the fire lit up in the
hall amidst the cold of the night was a figure of what the wicked
assembly was doing within; for because of the abounding of iniquity the
love of many waxes cold. Peter, who for a time was benumbed by this
cold, wished as it were to be warmed by the coals of the servants of
Caiaphas, because He sought in the society of traitors the consolation
of worldly comfort.
It goes on, And the Chief Priests and all the council sought for witness against Jesus to put him to death.
THEOPHYL. Though the law commanded that there should be but one High
Priest, there were then many put into the office, and stripped of it,
year by year, by the Roman emperor. He therefore calls chief priests
those who had finished the time allotted to them, and had been stripped
of their priesthood. But their actions are a sign of their judgment,
which they carried on as they had prejudged, for they sought for a
witness, that they might seem to condemn and destroy Jesus with
justice.
PSEUDO-JEROME; But iniquity lied as the queen did against Joseph, and
the priests against Susannah, but a flame goes out, if it has no fuel;
wherefore it goes on, And found none. For many bare false witness
against him, but their witness agreed not together. For whatever is not
consistent is held to be doubtful.
There follows, And there arose certain, and bare false witness against him, saying, We heard him say,
I will destroy this temple that is made with hands, and within three
days I will build another made without hands. It is usual with heretics
out of the truth to extract the shadow; He did not say what they said,
but something like it, of the temple of His body, which He raised again
after two days.
THEOPHYL. For the Lord had not said, I will destroy, but, Destroy, nor did He say, made with hands, but, this temple.
BEDE; He had said also, I will raise up, meaning a thing with life and
soul, and a breathing temple. He is a false witness, who understands
words in a sense, in which they are not spoken.
60. And the High Priest stood up in the midst, and asked Jesus,
saying, Answer you nothing? what is it which these witness against you?
61. But he held his peace, and answered nothing. Again the High Priest
asked him, and said to him, Are you the Christ, the Son of the Blessed?
62. And Jesus said, I am: and you shall see the Son of man sitting on
the right hand of power, and coming in the clouds of heaven.
63. Then the High Priest rent his clothes, and said, What need we any further witnesses?
64. You have heard the blasphemy: what think you? And they all condemned him to be guilty of death.
65. And some began to spit on him, and to cover his face, and to buffet
him, and to say to him Prophesy: and the servants did strike him with
the palms of their hands.
BEDE; The more Jesus remained silent before the false witnesses who
were unworthy of His answer, and the impious priests, the more the High
Priest, overcome with anger, endeavored to provoke Him to answer, that
he might find room for accusing Him, from any thing whatever which He
might say. Wherefore it is said, And the High Priest stood up in the
midst, and asked Jesus, saying, Answer you nothing? what is it which
these witness against you? The High Priest, angry and impatient at
finding no room for accusation against Him, rises from his seat, thus
showing by the motion of his body the madness of his mind.
PSEUDO-JEROME; But our God and Savior Himself, Who brought salvation to
the world, and assisted mankind by His love, is led as a sheep to the
slaughter, without crying, and remained mute and kept silence yes even
from good words. Wherefore it goes on, But he held his peace, and
answered nothing. The silence of Christ is the pardon for the defense
or excuse of Adam.
THEOPHYL. But He remained silent because He knew that they would not
attend to his words; wherefore He answered according to Luke, If I tell
you, you will not believe. Wherefore there follows, Again the High
Priest asked him, and said to him, Are you the Christ, the Son of the
Blessed? The High Priest indeed puts this question, not that he might
learn of Him and believe, but in order to seek occasion against Him.
But he asks, Art thou the Christ, the Son of the Blessed, because there
were many Christs, that is, anointed persons, as Kings and High
Priests, but none of these was called the Son of the Blessed God, that
is, the Ever-praised.
PSEUDO-JEROME; But they looked from afar off for Him, whom though near
they cannot see, as Isaac from the blindness of his eyes does not know
Jacob who was under his hands, but prophesies long before things which
were to come to him. It goes on, Jesus said, I am; namely, that they
might be inexcusable.
THEOPHYL. For He knew that they would not believe, nevertheless He
answered them, lest they should afterwards say, If we had heard any
thing from Him, we would have believed on Him; but this is their
condemnation, that they heard and did not believe.
AUG. Matthew, however, does not say that Jesus answered I am, but, You
have said. But Mark shows, that the words I am were equivalent to You
have said. There follows, And you shall see the Son of Man sitting on
the right hand of power, and coming in the clouds of heaven.
THEOPHYL. As if He had said, you shall see Me as the Son of Man sitting
on the right hand of the Father, for He here calls the Father power. He
will not however come without a body, but as He appeared to those who
crucified Him, so will He appear in the judgment.
BEDE; If therefore to you, O Jew, O Pagan, and heretic, the contempt,
weakness, and cross in Christ are a subject of scorn, see how by this
the Son of Man is to sit at the right hand of the Father, and to come
in His majesty on the clouds of heaven.
PSEUDO-JEROME; The High Priest indeed asks the Son of God, but Jesus in
His answer speaks of the Son of Man, that we may by this understand
that the Son of God is also the Son of Man; and let us not make a
quaternity in the Trinity, but let man be in God and God in man. And He
said, Sitting on the right hand of power, that is, reigning in life
everlasting, and in the Divine power. He says, And coming with the
clouds of heaven. He ascended in a cloud, He will come with a cloud;
that is, He ascended in that body alone, which He took of the Virgin,
and He will come to judgment with the whole Church, which is His body
and His fullness.
LEO; But Caiaphas, to increase the odiousness of what they had heard,
rent his clothes, and without knowing what his frantic action meant, by
his madness, deprived himself of the honor of the priesthood,
forgetting that command, by which it is said of the High Priest, He
shall not uncover his head or rend his clothes. For there follows: Then
the High Priest rent his clothes, and said, What need, we any further
witnesses? you have heard, the blasphemy: what think you?
THEOPHYL. The High Priest does after the manner of the Jews; for
whenever any thing intolerable or sad occurred to them, they used to
rend their clothes. In order then to show that Christ had spoken great
and intolerable blasphemy, he rent his clothes.
BEDE; But it was also with a higher mystery, that in the Passion of our
Lord the Jewish priest rent his own clothes, that is, his ephod, whilst
the garment of the Lord could not be rent, even by the soldiers, who
crucified Him. For it was a figure that the Jewish priesthood was to be
rent on account of the wickedness of the priests themselves. But the
solid strength of the Church, which is often called the garment of her
Redeemer, can never be torn asunder.
THEOPHYL. The Jewish priesthood was to be rent from the time that they
condemned Christ as guilty of death; wherefore there follows, And they
all condemned him to be guilty of death.
PSEUDO-JEROME; They condemned Him to be guilty of death, that by His
guiltiness He might absolve our guilt. It goes on: And some began to
spit on him, and to cover his face, and to buffet him, and to say to
him, Prophesy: and the servants did strike him with the palms of their
hands; that is, that by being spit upon He might wash the face of our
soul, and by the covering of His face, might take away the veil from
our hearts, and by the buffets, which were dealt upon His head, might
heal the head of mankind, that is, Adam, and by the blows, by which He
was smitten with the hands, His great praise might be testified by the
clapping of our hands and by our lips, as it is said, O clap your
hands: together, all you people.
BEDE; By saying, Prophesy, who is he that smote you, they mean to
insult Him, because He wished to be looked upon as a prophet by the
people.
AUG. We must understand by this, that the Lord suffered these things
till morning, in the house of the High Priest, whither He had first
been brought.
66. And as Peter was beneath in the palace, there comes one of the maids of the High Priest:
67. And when she saw Peter warming himself, she looked upon him, and said, And you also were with Jesus of Nazareth.
68. But he denied, saying, I know not, neither understand I what you say. And he went out into the porch; and the cock crew.
69. And a maid saw him again, and began to say to them that stood by, This is one of them.
70. And he denied it again. And a little after, they that stood by said
again to Peter, Surely you are one of them: for you are a Galilaean,
and your speech agrees thereto.
71. But he began to curse and to swear, saying, I know not this man of whom you speak.
72. And the second time the cock crew. And Peter called to mind the
word that Jesus said to him, Before the cock crow twice, you shall deny
me thrice. And when he thought thereon, he wept.
AUG. Concerning the temptation of Peter, which happened during the
injuries before mentioned, all the Evangelists do not speak in the same
order. For Luke first relates the temptation of Peter, then these
injuries of the Lord; but John begins to speak of the temptation of
Peter, and then puts in some things concerning our Lord's
ill-treatment, and adds, that He was sent from there to Caiaphas the
High Priest, and then he goes back to unfold the temptation of Peter,
which he had begun. Matthew and Mark on the other hand first notice the
injuries done to Christ, then the temptation of Peter. Concerning which
it is said, And as Peter was beneath in the palace, there comes one of
the maids of the High Priest.
BEDE; But what can be meant by his being first recognized by a woman,
when men were more able to know him, if it be not that that sex might
be seen to sin in the death of our lord, and that sex be redeemed by
His Passion?
It goes on: But he denied, saying, I know not, neither understanding I what you say.
PSEUDO-JEROME, Peter when he had not the Spirit yielded and lost
courage at the voice of a girl, though with the Spirit he was not
afraid before princes and kings.
THEOPHYL. The Lord allowed this to happen to him by His providence,
that is, lest he should be too much elated, and at the same time, that
he might prove himself merciful to sinners, as knowing from himself the
result of human weakness. There follows: And he went out into the
porch; and the cock crew.
BEDE; The other Evangelists do not mention this crowing of the cock;
they do not however deny the fact, as also some pass over many other
things in silence, which others relate. There follows: And a maid saw
him again, and began to say to them that stood by, This is one of them.
AUG. This maid is not the same, but another, as Matthew says. Indeed we
must also understand, that in this second denial he was addressed by
two persons, that is, by the maid whom Matthew and Mark mention, and by
another person, of whom Luke takes notice. It goes on: And he denied it
again. Peter had now returned, for John says that he denied Him again
standing at the fire; wherefore the maid said what has been mentioned
above, not to him, that is, Peter, but to those who, when he went out,
had remained, in such a way however that he heard it; wherefore coming
back and standing again at the fire, he contradicted them, and denied
their words. For it is evident, if we compare the accounts of all the
Evangelists on this matter, that Peter did not the second time deny him
before the porch, but within the palace at the fire, whilst Matthew,
and Mark who mention his having gone out are silent, for the sake of
brevity, as to his return.
BEDE; By this denial of Peter we learn, that not only he denies Christ,
who says that He is not the Christ, but he also, who although he is a
Christian, denies himself to be such. For the Lord did not say to
Peter, You shall deny thyself to be my disciple, but, You shall deny
me; he therefore denied Christ, when he said that he was not His
disciple. There follows: And a little after, they that stood by said
again to Peter, Surely you are one of them, for you are a Galilaean,
and your speech agrees thereto. Not that the Galileans spoke a
different tongue from the inhabitants of Jerusalem, for they were both
Hebrews, but that each province and region has its own peculiarities,
and cannot avoid a vernacular pronunciation.
THEOPHYL. Therefore Peter was seized with fear, and forgetting the word
of the Lord, which said, Whoever shall confess me before men, him will
I confess before my Father, he denied our Lord; wherefore there
follows: But he began to curse and to swear, saying, I know not this
man of whom you speak.
BEDE; How hurtful is it to speak with the wicked. He denies before
infidels that he knows the man, whom, amongst the disciples, he had
confessed to be God. But the Scripture is wont to point out a Sacrament
of the causes of things, by the state of the time; thus Peter, who
denied at midnight, repented at cock crow; wherefore it is added: And
the second time the cock crew. And Peter called to mind the word which
Jesus said to him, Before the cock crow twice, you shall deny me
thrice. And he began to weep.
THEOPHYL. For tears brought Peter by penitence to Christ. Confounded
then be the Novatians, who he say that he who sins after receiving
baptism, is not received to the remission of his sin. For behold Peter,
who had also received the Body and Blood of the Lord, is received by
penitence; for the failings of saints are written, that if we fall by
want of caution, we also may be able to run back through their example,
and hope to be relieved by penitence.
PSEUDO-JEROME; But in a mystical sense, the first maid means the
wavering, the second, the assent, the third man is the act. This is the
threefold denial which the remembrance of the word of the Lord washes
away through tears. The cock then crows for us when some preacher stirs
up our hearts by repentance to compunction. We then begin to weep, when
we are set on fire within by the spark of knowledge, and we go forth,
when we cast out what we were within.
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