catena aurea mark 15
1. And straightway in the morning the Chief Priests held a consultation
with the elders and Scribes and the whole council, and bound Jesus, and
carried him away, and delivered him to Pilate.
2. And Pilate asked him, Art thou the King of the Jews? And he answering said to him, You say it.
3. And the Chief Priests accused him of many things: but he answered nothing.
4. And Pilate asked him again, saying, Answer you nothing? Behold how many things they witness against you.
5. But Jesus yet answered nothing; so that Pilate marveled.
BEDE; The Jews had a custom of delivering him whom they had condemned
to death, bound to the judge. Wherefore after the condemnation of
Christ, the Evangelist adds: And straightway in the morning the Chief
Priests held a consultation with the elders and Scribes and the whole
council, and bound Jesus, and carried him away, and delivered him to
Pilate. But it must be observed, that they did not then first bind Him,
but they bound Him on first taking Him in the garden by night, as John
declares.
THEOPHYL. They then gave Jesus up to the Romans, but were themselves
given up by God into the hands of the Romans, that the Scriptures might
be fulfilled, which say, Recompense them after the work of their hands.
It goes on: And Pilate asked him, Are you the King of the Jews?
BEDE; By Pilate's asking Him about no other accusation, except whether
He was King of the Jews, they are convicted of impiety, for they could
not even find a false accusation against our Savior. It goes on: And he
answering said to him, You say. He answers in this way so as both to
speak the truth, and yet not to be open to cavil.
THEOPHYL. For His answer is doubtful, since it may mean, You say, but I
do say not so. And observe that He does somewhere answer Pilate, who
condemned Him unwillingly, but does not choose to answer the priests
and great men, and judges them unworthy of a reply. It goes on: And the
Chief Priests accused him of many things.
AUG. Luke has also laid open the false charges which they brought
against Him; for he thus relates it: And they began to accuse him,
saying, We found this fellow perverting the nation, and forbidding to
give tribute to Caesar, saying that he himself is Christ a King.
There follows: And Pilate asked him, saying, Answer you nothing? Behold how many things they witness against you.
BEDE; He indeed who condemns Jesus is a heathen, but he refers it to
the people of the Jews as the cause. There follows: But Jesus yet
answered nothing; so that Pilate marveled. He was unwilling to give an
answer, lest He should clear Himself of the charge, and be acquitted by
the Judge, and so the gain resulting from the Cross should be done
away.
THEOPHYL. But Pilate wondered, because, though He was a teacher of the
law, and eloquent, and able by His answer to destroy their accusations,
He did not answer any thing, but rather bore their accusations
courageously.
6. Now at that feast he released to them one prisoner, whomever they desired.
7. And there was one named Barabbas, which lay bound with them that had
made insurrection with him, who had committed murder in the
insurrection.
8. And the multitude crying aloud began to desire him to do as he had ever done to them.
9. But Pilate answered them, saying, Will you that I release to you the King of the Jews?
10. For he knew that the Chief Priests had delivered him for envy.
11. But the Chief Priests moved the people, that he should rather release Barabbas to them.
12. And Pilate answered and said again to them, What will you then that I shall do to him whom you call the King of the Jews?
13. And they cried out again, Crucify him.
14. Then Pilate said to them, Why, what evil has he done? And they cried out the more exceedingly, Crucify him.
15. And so Pilate, willing to content the people, released Barabbas to
them, and delivered Jesus, when he had scourged him, to be crucified.
BEDE; Pilate furnished many opportunities of releasing Jesus, in the
first place contrasting a robber with the Just One. Wherefore it is
said, Now at that feast he released to them one prisoner, whomsoever
they desired.
GLOSS. Which indeed he was accustomed to do, to obtain favor with the
people, and above all, on the feast day, when the people of the whole
province of the Jews flocked to Jerusalem. And that the wickedness of
the Jews might appear the greater, the enormity of the sin of the
robber, whom they preferred to Christ, is next described. Wherefore
there follows: And there was one Barabbas, who lay bound with them that
had made insurrection with him, who had committed murder in the
insurrection. In which words their wickedness is shown both from the
heinousness of his signal crime, in that he had committed murder, and
from the way in which he did it, because he had in doing it raised a
sedition and disturbed the city, and also because his crime was
notorious, for he was bound with seditious persons.
It goes on: And the multitude, when it had come up, began to desire him to do as he had ever done to them.
AUG. No one can feel it a difficulty that Matthew is silent as to their
asking some one to be released to them, which Mark here mentions, for
it is a thing of no consequence that one should mention a thing which
another leaves out. There follows: But Pilate answered them, saying,
Will you that I release to you the King of the Jews?
For he knew that the Chief Priests had delivered him for envy. Some one
may ask, which were the words of which Pilate made use, those which are
related by Matthew, or those which Mark relates; for there seems to be
a difference between, Whom will you that I release to you? Barabbas, or
Jesus which is called Christ? as Matthew has it; and, Will you that I
release to you the King of the Jews. as is here said. But since they
gave to kings the name of Christs, he who said this man or that must
have asked whether they wished the King of the Jews to be released to
them, that is, Christ. It makes no difference to the sense that Mark
has said nothing of Barabbas, wishing only to mention what belonged to
the Lord, since by their answer he sufficiently showed whom they wished
to have released to them.
For there follows, But the Chief Priests moved the people that he should rather release to them Barabbas.
BEDE; This demand which the Jews made with such toil to themselves
still sticks to them. Because, when the choice was given to them they
chose a robber instead of Christ, a murderer instead of the Savior,
they deservedly lost their salvation and their life, and they subjected
themselves to such a degree to robbery and sedition, that they lost
their country and their kingdom which they preferred to Christ, and
never regained their liberty, body or soul.
Then Pilate gives another opportunity of releasing the Savor, when
there follows, And Pilate answered, and said again to them, What will
you then that I should do to the King of the Jews?
AUG. It now is clear enough that Mark means by King of the Jews what
Matthew means by the word Christ; for no kings but those of the Jews
were called Christs. For in this place according to Matthew it is said,
What then shall I do with Jesus which is called Christ? There follows,
And they cried out again, Crucify him,
THEOPHYL. Now see the wickedness of the Jews, and the moderation of
Pilate, though he too was worthy of condemnation for not resisting the
people Fol they cried out, Crucify; he faintly tries to save Jesus from
t their determined sentence, and again puts a question to them.
Wherefore there follows, Then Pilate said to them, Why, what evil has
he done? For he wished in this way to find an opportunity for releasing
Christ, who was innocent.
BEDE; But the Jews giving loose to their madness do not answer the
question of the judge. Wherefore it goes on, And they cried out the
more exceedingly, Crucify him, that those words of the Prophet Jeremiah
might be fulfilled, Mine heritage is to me as a lion in the forest, it
cries out against me.
There follows, And so Pilate, willing to content the people, released
Barabbas to them, and delivered Jesus, when he had scourged him, to be
crucified.
THEOPHYL. He wished indeed to satisfy the people, that is, to do their will, not what was agreeable to justice and to God.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Here are two goats; one is the scape goat, that is, one
loosed and sent out into the wilderness of hell with the sin of the
people; the other is slain, as a lamb, for the sins of those who are
forgiven. The Lord's portion is always slain; the devil's part, (for he
is the master of those men, which is the meaning of Barabbas,) when
freed, is cast headlong into hell.
BEDE; We must understand that Jesus was scourged by no other than
Pilate himself. For John writes, Pilate took Jesus, and scourged him,
which we must suppose that he did, that the Jews might be satisfied
with His pains and insults, and cease from thirsting for His blood.
16. And the soldiers led him away into the hall, called Praetorium; and they call together the whole band.
17. And they clothed him with purple, and platted a crown of thorns, and put it about his head,
18. And began to salute him, Hail, King of the Jews!
19. And they smote him on the head with a reed, and did spit upon him, and bowing their knees worshipped him.
20. And when they had mocked him, they took off the purple from him, and put his own clothes on him.
THEOPHYL. The vainglory of soldiers, ever rejoicing in disorder and in
insult, here displayed what properly belonged to them. Wherefore it is
said, And the soldiers led him away into the hall called Praetorium,
and they call together the whole band, that is, the whole company of
the soldiers, and they clothed him with purple as a king.
BEDE; For since He had been called King of the Jews, and the scribes
and priests had objected to Him as a crime that He usurped rule over
the Jewish people, they in derision strip Him of His former garments,
and put on Him a purple robe, which ancient kings used to wear.
AUG. But we must understand that the words of Matthew, they put on him
a scarlet robe, Mark expresses by clothed him in purple; for that
scarlet robe was used by them in derision for the royal purple, and
there is a sort of red purple, very dike scarlet. It may also be that
Mark mentions some purple which the robe had about it, though it was of
a scarlet color.
BEDE; But instead of the diadem, they put on Him a crown of thorns,
wherefore it goes on, And platted a crown of thorns, and put it about
his head. And for a royal scepter they give Him a reed, as Matthew
writes, and they bow before Him as a king, wherefore there follows, And
began to salute him, Hail, King of the Jews!
And that the soldiers worshipped Him as one who falsely called Himself
God, is clear from what is added: And bowing their knees, worshipped
him, as though He pretended to be God.
PSEUDO-JEROME; His shame took away our shame; His bonds made us free;
by the thorny crown of His head, we have obtained the crown of the
kingdom; by His wounds we are healed.
AUG. It appears that Matthew and Mark here relate things which took
place previously, not that they happened when Pilate had already
delivered Him to be crucified. For John says that these things took
place at Pilate's house; but that which follows, And when they had
mocked him, they took off the purple from him, and put on him his own
clothes, must be understood to have taken place last of all, when He
was already being led to be crucified.
PSEUDO-JEROME; But in a mystic sense, Jesus was stripped of His
clothes, that is, of the Jews, and is clothed in a purple robe, that
is, in the Gentile church, which is gathered together out of the rocks.
Again, putting it off in the end, as offending, He again is clothed
with the Jewish people, for when the fullness of the Gentiles is come
in, then shall all Israel be saved.
BEDE; Or else, by the purple robe, with which the Lord is clothed, is
meant His flesh itself, which He gave up to suffering, and by the
thorny crown which He carried is meant, the taking upon Him of our
sins.
THEOPHYL. Let us also put on the purple and royal robe, because we must
walk as kings treading on serpents and scorpions, and having sin under
our feet. For we are called Christians, that is, anointed ones, just as
kings were then called anointed. Let us also take upon ourselves the
crown of thorns, that is, let us make haste to be crowned with a strict
life, with self-denials and purity.
BEDE; But they smite the head of Christ, who deny that He is very God.
And because men are wont to use a reed to write with, they, as it were,
smite the head of Christ with a reed, who speak against His divinity,
and endeavor to confirm their error by the authority of Holy Writ. They
spit in His face, who spit from them by their accursed words the
presence of His grace. There are some also in this day, who adore Him,
with a sure faith, as very God, but by their perverse actions, despise
His words as though they were fabulous, and think the promises of that
word inferior to worldly allurements. But just as Caiaphas said, though
he knew not what it meant, It is expedient for us that one man should
die for the people, so also the soldiers do these things in ignorance.
20. - And led him out to crucify him.
21. And they compel one Simon a Cyrenian, who passed by, coming out of
the country, the father of Alexander and Rufus, to bear his cross.
22. And they bring him to the place Golgotha, which is, being interpreted, The place of a skull.
23. And they gave him to drink wine mingled with myrrh: but he received it not.
24. And when they had crucified him, they parted his garments, casting lots upon them, what every man should take.
25. And it was the third hour, and they crucified him.
26. And the superscription of his accusation was written over, THE KING OF THE JEWS.
27. And with him they crucify two thieves; the one on his right hand, and the other on his left.
28. And the Scripture was fulfilled, which said, And he was numbered with the transgressors.
GLOSS. After the condemnation of Christ, and the insults heaped upon
Him when He was condemned, the Evangelist proceeds to relate His
crucifixion, saying, And led him out to crucify him.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Here Abel is brought out into the field by his brother,
to be slain by him. Here Isaac comes forth with the wood, and Abraham
with the ram caught in the thicket. Here also Joseph with the sheaf of
which he dreamed, and the long robe steeped in blood. Here is Moses
with the rod, and the serpent hanging on the wood. Here is the cluster
of grapes, carried on a staff. Here is Elisha with the piece of wood
sent to seek for the ax, which had sunk, and which swam to the wood;
that is, mankind, which by the forbidden tree, fell down to hell, but
by the wood of the cross of Christ, and by the baptism of water, swims
to paradise. Here is Jonah out of the wood of the ship sent down into
the sea and into the whale's belly for three days.
There follows: And they compel Simon a Cyrenian, who passed by, coming
out of the country, the father of Alexander and Rufus, to bear his
cross.
THEOPHYL Now John says that He Himself bare His cross, for both took
place; for He first bore the cross Himself, until some one passed, whom
they compelled, and who then carried it. But he mentioned the name of
his sons, to make it more credible and the affirmation stronger, for
the man still lived to relate all that had happened about the cross.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Now since some men are known by the merits of their
fathers, and some by those of their sons, this Simon, who was compelled
to carry the cross, is made known by the merits of his sons, who were
disciples. By this we are reminded, that in this life, parents are
assisted by the wisdom and the merits of their children, wherefore the
Jewish people is always held worthy of being remembered on account of
the merits of the Patriarchs, Prophets, and Apostles. But this Simon
who carries the cross, because he is compelled, is the man who labors
for human praise. For men compel him to work, when the fear and love of
God could not compel him.
BEDE; Or, since this Simon is not called Be a man of Jerusalem, but a
Cyrenian, (for Cyrene is a city of Libya,) fitly is he taken to mean
the nations of the Gentiles, which were once foreigners and strangers
to the covenants, but now by obedience are heirs of God, and joint
heirs with Christ. Whence also Simon is fitly interpreted 'obedient,'
and Cyrene 'an heir.' But he is said to come from a country place, for
a country place is called 'pagos' in Greek, wherefore those whom we see
to be aliens from the city of God, we call pagans. Simon then coming
out from the country carries the cross after Jesus, when the Gentile
nations leaving pagan rites embrace obediently the footsteps of our
Lord's Passion.
There follows: And they bring him to the place Golgotha, which is being
interpreted, the place of Calvary. There are places without the city
and the gate, in which the heads of condemned persons are cut off, and
which receive the name of Calvary, that is, of the beheaded. But the
Lord was crucified there, that where once was the field of the
condemned, there the standards of martyrdom might be lifted up.
PSEUDO-JEROME; But the Jews relate, that in this spot of the mountain
the ram was sacrificed for Isaac, and there Christ is made bald, that
is, separated from His flesh, that is, from the carnal Jews. There
follows: And they gave him to drink wine mingled with myrrh.
AUG. This we must understand to be what Matthew expresses by, mixed
with gall; for he put gall for any thing bitter, and wine mingled with
myrrh is most bitter; although there may have been both gall and myrrh
to make the wine most bitter.
THEOPHYL Or, they may have brought different things, in order, some vinegar and gall, and others wine mixed with myrrh.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Or else, wine mingled with myrrh, that is, vinegar; by it the juice of the deadly apple is wiped away.
BEDE; Bitter the vine which bore the bitter wine, set before the Lord
Jesus, that the Scripture might be fulfilled which said, They gave me
gall to eat, and when I was thirsty, they gave me vinegar to drink.
AUG. That which follows, But he received it not, must mean, He received
it not to drink, but only tasted it, as Matthew witnesses. And what the
same Matthew relates, he would not drink, Mark expresses by, he
received it not, but was silent as to His tasting it.
PSEUDO-JEROME; He also refused to take sin for which He suffered,
wherefore it is said of Him, I then paid the things that I never took.
There follows: And when they had crucified him, they parted his
garments, casting lots upon them, what every man should take. In this
place salvation is figured by the wood; the first wood was that of the
tree of knowledge of good and evil; the second wood is one of unmixed
good for us, and is the wood of life. The first hand stretched out to
the wood caught hold of death; the second found again the life which
had been lost. By this wood we are carried through a stormy sea to the
land of the living, for by His cross Christ has taken away our torment,
and by His death has killed our death.
With the form of a serpent He kills the serpent, for the serpent made
out of the rod swallowed up the other serpents. But what means the
shape itself of the cross, save the four quarters of the world; the
East shines from the top, the North is on the right, the South on the
left, the West is firmly fixed under the feet. Wherefore the Apostle
says: That we may know what is the height, and breadth, and length, and
depth. Birds, when they fly in the air, take the shape of a cross; a
man swimming in the waters is borne up by the form of a cross. A ship
is blown along by its yards, which are in the shape of the cross. The
letter Tau is written as the sign of salvation and of the cross.
BEDE; Or else, in the transverse beam of the cross, where the hands are
fixed, the joy of hope is set forth; for by the hands we understand
good works, by its expansion the joy of him who does them, because
sadness puts us in straits. By the height to which the head is joined,
we understand the expectation of reward from the lofty righteousness of
God; by the length, over which the whole body is stretched, patience,
wherefore patient men are called long-suffering; by the depth, which is
fixed in the ground, the hidden Sacrament itself. As long therefore as
our bodies work here to the destruction of the body of sin, it is the
time of the cross for us.
THEOPHYL. But their casting lots for His garments was also meant as an
insult, as though they were dividing the clothes of a king; for they
were coarse and of no great value. And John's Gospel shows this more
clearly, for the soldiers, though they divided every thing else into
four parts, according to their number, cast lots for the coat, which
was without seam, woven form the top throughout.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Now the garments of the Lord are His commandments, by
which His body, that is, the Church, is covered, which the soldiers of
the Gentiles divide amongst themselves, that there may be four classes
with one faith, the married, and the widowed, those who bear rule, and
those who are separate. They cast lots for the undivided garment, which
is peace and unity. It goes on: And it was the third hour, and they
crucified him. Mark has introduced this truly and rightly, for at the
sixth hour darkness overspread the earth, so that no one could move his
head.
AUG. If Jesus was given up to the Jews' to be crucified, when Pilate
sat down at his tribunal about the sixth hour, as John relates, how
could He be crucified at the third hour, as many persons have thought
from not understanding the words of Mark? First then let us see at what
hour He might have been crucified, then we shall see why Mark said that
He was crucified at the third hour. It was about the sixth hour when He
was given up to be crucified by Pilate sitting on his judgment seat, as
has been said, for it was not yet fully the sixth hour, but about the
sixth, that is, the fifth was over, and some of the sixth had begun, so
that those things which are related of the crucifixion of our Lord took
place after the finishing of the fifth, and at the commencement of the
sixth, until, when the sixth was completed and He was hanging on the
cross, the darkness which is spoken of took place.
Let us now consider, why Mark has said, It was the third hour. He had
already said positively, And when they had crucified him, they parted
his garments; as also the others declare, that when He was crucified
His garments were divided. Now if Mark had wished to fix the time of
what was done, it would have been enough to say, And it was the third
hour why did He add, and they crucified him, unless it was that he
wished to point to something which had gone before, and which if
inquired into would be explained, since that same Scripture was to be
read at a time, when it was known to the whole Church at what hour our
Lord was crucified, by which means any error might be taken away, and
any falsehood be refuted. But because he knew that the Lord was fixed
to the cross not by the Jews but by the soldiers, as John very plainly
shows, he wished to intimate that the Jews had crucified Him, since
they cried out, Crucify Him, rather than those who executed the orders
of their chief according to their duty. It is therefore implied, that
it took place at the third hour when the Jews cried out, Crucify Him,
and it is most truly shown that they crucified Him, when they so cried
out. But in the attempt of Pilate to save the Lord, and the tumultuous
opposition of the Jews, we understand that a space of two hours was
consumed, and that the sixth hour had begun, before the end of which,
those things occurred which are related to have taken place from the
time when Pilate gave up the Lord, and the darkness overspread the
earth. Now he who will apply himself to these things, without the
hard-heartedness of impiety, will see that Mark has fitly placed it at
the third hour, in the same place as the deed of the soldiers who were
the executors of it is related. Therefore lest any one should transfer
in his thoughts so great a crime from the Jews to the soldiers, he says
it was as the third hour, and they crucified him, that the fault might
rather by a careful inquirer be charged to them, who, as he would find,
had at the third hour cried out for His crucifixion, whilst at the same
time it would be seen that what was done by the soldiers was done at
the sixth hour.
PSEUDO-AUG. Therefore he wishes to imply that it was the Jews who
passed sentence, concerning the crucifixion of Christ at the third
hour; for every condemned person is considered as dead, from the moment
that sentence is passed upon him. Mark therefore showed that our Savior
was not crucified by the sentence of the judge, because it is difficult
to prove the innocence of a man so condemned.
AUG. Still there are not wanting persons who assert that the
preparation, mentioned by John, Now it was the preparation about the
sixth hour, was really the third hour of the day. For they say that on
the day before the sabbath day, there was a preparation of the passover
of the Jews, because on that sabbath, they began the unleavened bread;
but however that the true passover, which is now celebrated on the day
of our Lord's Passion, that is, the Christian not the Jewish passover,
began to be prepared, or to have its parasceue, from that ninth hour of
the night, when His death began to be prepared by the Jews; for
parasceue means preparation. Between that hour therefore of the night
and His crucifixion occurs the sixth hour of preparation, according to
John, and the third hour of the day, according to Mark.
What Christian would not give in to this solution of the question,
provided that we could find some circumstance, from which we might
gather that this preparation of our Passover, that is, of the death of
Christ, began at the ninth hour of the night,? For if we say that it
began when our Lord was taken by the Jews, it was still early in the
night, but if when our Lord was carried away to the house of the father
in law of Caiaphas, where also He was heard by the chief priests, the
cock had not crowed; but if when He was given up to Pilate, it is very
plain that it was morning.
It remains therefore that we must understand the preparation of our
Lord's death to have commenced when all the Chief Priests pronounced,
He is guilty of death. For there is nothing absurd in supposing that
that was the ninth hour of the night so that we may understand that
Peter's denial is put out of its order after it really happened. It
goes on: And the superscription of his accusation was written over, THE
KING OF THE JEWS.
THEOPHYL. They wrote this superscription, as the reason why He was
crucified, thus wishing to reprove His vainglory in making Himself a
king, that so the passers by might not pity Him, but rather hate Him as
a tyrant.
PSEUDO-JEROME; He wrote it in three languages, in Hebrew, Melech
Jeudim; in Greek, in Latin, Rex confessorum. These three languages were
consecrated to be the chief, in the superscription on the cross, that
every tongue might record the treachery of the Jews.
BEDE; But this superscription on the cross shows, that they could not
even in killing Him take away the kingdom over them from Him who was
about to render to them according to their works. There follows: And
with him they crucify two thieves, the one on his right hand, the other
on his left.
THEOPHYL. They did this that men might have a bad opinion of Him, as
though He also were a robber and a malefactor. But it was done by
Providence to fulfill the Scriptures. There follows: And the Scripture
was fulfilled which said, And he was numbered with the transgressors.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Truth was numbered with the wicked; He left one on His
left hand, the other He takes on the right, as He will do at the last
day. With a similar crime they are allotted different paths; one
precedes Peter into Paradise, the other Judas into hell. A short
confession won for him a long life, and a blasphemy which soon ended is
punished with endless pain.
BEDE; Mystically, however, the thieves crucified with Christ signify
those, who by their faith and confession of Christ undergo either the
struggle of martyrdom, or some rules of a stricter discipline. But
those who do these deeds for the sake of endless glory, are signified
by the faith of the right hand robber; those again who do them for
worldly praise copy the mind and the acts of the left hand robber.
THEOPHYL Or else; the two robbers were meant to point out the two
people, that is, the Jews and the Gentiles, for both were evil, the
Gentile as transgressing natural law, but the Jew by breaking the
written law, which the Lord had delivered to them; but the Gentile was
penitent, the Jew a blasphemer to the end. Between whom our Lord is
crucified, for He is the corner stone, which binds us together.
29. And they that passed by railed on him, wagging their heads,
and saying, Ah, you that destroys the temple, and builds it in three
days,
30. Save yourself, and come down from the cross.
31. Likewise also the Chief Priests mocking said among themselves with the Scribes, He saved others; himself he cannot save.
32. Let Christ, the King of Israel descend now from the cross, that we
may see and believe. And they that were crucified with him reviled him.
PSEUDO-JEROME; The foal of Judah has been tied to the vine, and his
clothes dyed in the blood of the grape, and the kids tear the vine,
blaspheming Christ, and wagging their heads. Wherefore it is said: And
they that passed by railed on him, wagging their heads, and saying, Ah,
you that destroys the temple.
THEOPHYL. For the passers by blasphemed Christ, reproaching Him as a
seducer. But the devil moved them to bid Him come down from the Cross;
for he knew that salvation was being won by the Cross, therefore he
again proceeded to tempt Christ, so that if He came down from the
Cross, he might be certain that He is not truly the Son of God, and so
the salvation, which is by the Cross, might be done away. But He being
truly the Son of God, did not come down; for if He ought to have come
down, He would not have ascended there at all; but since He saw that in
this way salvation must be effected, He underwent the crucifixion, and
many other sufferings, to the finishing of His work.
It goes on: Likewise also the Chief Priests mocking said among
themselves with the Scribes, He saved others, himself he cannot save.
They said this, to do away with His miracles, as though those which He
had done were but the semblance of them, for by working miracles He
saved many.
BEDE; Thus also they confess, though against their will, that He saved
many. Therefore your words condemn you, for He who saved others could
have saved Himself. It goes on: Let Christ the King of Israel descend
now from the cross, that we may see and believe.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Afterwards they saw Him arise from the grave, though
they would not believe that He could come down from the tree of the
Cross. Where, O Jews, is your lack of faith? Your own selves I appeal
to; your own selves I bring as judges. How much more wonderful is it
that a dead man should arise, than that one yet living should choose to
come down from the cross. you asked but small things, till greater
should have come to pass; but your want of faith could not be healed by
signs much greater than those for which you sought. Here all have gone
out of the way, all are become abominable. Wherefore it goes on: And
they that were crucified with him reviled.
AUG. How can this be, when according to Luke one only reviled Him, but
was rebuked by the other who believed on God; unless we understand that
Matthew and Mark, who touched but slightly on this place, put the
plural for the singular number?
THEOPHYL. Or else, both at first reviled Him, then one recognizing Him as innocent, rebukes the other for blaspheming Him.
33. And when the sixth hour was come, there was darkness over the whole land until the ninth hour.
34. And at the ninth hour Jesus cried with a loud voice, saying, Eloi,
Eloi, lame sabachthani? which is, being interpreted, My God, my God,
why have you forsaken me?
35. And some of them that stood by, when they heard it, said, Behold, he calls Elias.
36. And one ran and filled a sponge full of vinegar, and put it on a
reed, and gave him to drink, saying, Let alone; let us see whether
Elias will come to take him down.
37. And Jesus cried with a loud voice, and gave up the ghost.
BEDE; This most glorious light took away its rays from the world, lest
it should see the Lord hanging, and lest the blasphemers should have
the benefit of its light. Wherefore it goes on: And when the sixth hour
was come, there was darkness over the whole land until the ninth hour.
AUG. Luke added to this account the cause of the darkness, that is, the darkening of the sun.
THEOPHYL. If this had been the time for an eclipse, some one might have
said that this that happened was natural, but it was the fourteenth
moon, when no eclipse can take place. There follows: And at the ninth
hour Jesus cried with a loud voice, saying, Eloi, Eloi, lama
sabachthani.
PSEUDO-JEROME; At the ninth hour, the tenth piece of money which had been lost is found, by the overturning of the house.
BEDE; For when Adam sinned, it is also written that he heard the voice
of the Lord, walking in paradise, in the cool after mid-day; and in
that hour when the first Adam by sinning brought death into the world,
in that same hour the second Adam by dying destroyed death. And we must
observe, that our Lord was crucified, when the sun was going away from
the center of the world; but at sunrise He celebrated the mysteries of
His resurrection; because He died for our sins, but rose again for our
justification. Nor need you wonder at the lowliness of His words, at
the complaints as of one forsakes, when you look on the offense of the
cross, knowing the form of a servant. For as hunger, and thirst, and
fatigue were not things proper to the Divinity, but bodily affections;
so His saying, Why have you forsaken me? was proper to a bodily voice,
for the body is never naturally wont to wish to be separated from the
life which is joined to it. For although our Savior Himself said this,
He really showed the weakness of His body; He spoke therefore as man,
bearing about with Him my feelings, for when placed in danger we fancy
that we are deserted by God.
THEOPHYL. Or, He speaks this as man crucified by God for me, for we men
have been forsaken by the Father, but He never has. For hear what He
says; I am not alone, because the Father is with me. Though He may also
have said this as being a Jew, according to the flesh, as though He had
said, Why have you forsaken the Jewish people, so that they have
crucified Your Son? For as we sometimes say, God has put on me, that
is, my human nature, so here also we must understand you have forsaken
me, to mean my nature, or the Jewish people.
It goes on: And some of them that stood by, when they heard it, said, Behold, he called Elias.
BEDE; These however I suppose were Roman soldiers who did not
understand the peculiarity of the Hebrew tongue, but, from His calling
Eloi, thought that Elias was called by Him. But if the Jews are
understood to have said this, they must be supposed to do this, as
accusing Him of folly in calling for the aid of Elias.
It goes on: And one ran and filled a sponge full of vinegar, and put it
on a reed: and gave him to drink saying, let alone: let us see whether
Elias will come to take him down. John shows more fully the reason why
the vinegar was given to the Lord to drink, saying, that Jesus said, I
thirst, that the Scriptures might be fulfilled. They however applied a
sponge full of vinegar to His mouth.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Here he points out a similitude for the Jews; a sponge
on a reed, weak, dry, fit for burning; they fill it with vinegar, that
is, with wickedness and guile.
AUG. Matthew has not related, that the man who brought the sponge
filled with vinegar, but that the others spoke about Elias; from whence
we gather that both said it.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Though the flesh was weak, yet the heavenly voice, which
said, Open me the gates of righteousness, waxed strong. Wherefore there
follows: And Jesus cried with a loud voice, and gave up the ghost. We
who are of the earth die with a very low voice, or with no voice at
all; but He who descended from heaven breathed His last with a loud
voice.
THEOPHYL. He who both rules over death and commands it dies with power,
as its Lord. But what this voice was is declared by Luke: Father, into
your hands I commend my spirit. For Christ would have us understand by
this, that from that time the souls of the saints go up into the hands
of God. For at first the souls of all were held in hell, till He came,
who preached the opening of the prison to the captives.
38. And the veil of the temple was rent in two from the top to the bottom.
39. And when the centurion, which stood over against him, saw that he
so cried out, and gave up the ghost, he said, Truly this man was the
Son of God.
40. There were also women looking on afar off among whom was Mary
Magdalene, and Mary the mother of James the less and of Joses, and
Salome;
41. (Who also, when he was in Galilee, followed him, and ministered to
him;) and many other women which came up with him to Jerusalem.
GLOSS. After the Evangelist has related the Passion and the death of
Christ, he now goes on to mention those things which followed after the
death of our Lord. Wherefore it is said: And the veil of the temple was
rent in two from the top to the bottom.
PSEUDO-JEROME; The veil of the temple is rent, that is, the heaven is opened.
THEOPHYL. Again, God by the rending of the veil implied that the grace
of the Holy Spirit goes away and is rent from the temple, so that the
Holy of Holies might be seen by all; also that the temple will mourn
amongst the Jews, when they shall deplore their calamities, and rend
their clothes. This also is a figure of the living temple, that is, the
body of Christ, in whose Passion His garment is torn, that is, His
flesh. Again, it means another thing; for the flesh is the veil of our
temple, that is, of our mind. But the power of the flesh is torn in the
Passion of Christ, from the top to the bottom, that is, from Adam even
down to the latest man; for also Adam was made whole by the Passion of
Christ, and his flesh does not remain under the curse, nor does it
deserve corruption, but we all are gifted with incorruption.
And when the centurion who stood, over against him saw. He who commands
a hundred soldiers is called a centurion. But seeing that He died with
such power as the Lord, he wondered and confessed.
BEDE; Now the cause of the centurion's wonder is clear, that seeing
that the Lord died in that way, that is, sent forth His spirit, he
said, Truly this man was the Son of God. For no one can send forth his
own spirit, but He who is the Creator of souls.
AUG. This also he most of all wondered at, that after that voice which
He sent forth as a figure of our sin, He immediately gave up His
spirit. For the spirit of the Mediator showed that no penalty of sin
could have had power to cause the death of His flesh; for it did not
leave the flesh unwillingly, but as it willed, for it was joined to the
Word of God in the unity of person.
PSEUDO-JEROME; But the last are now made the first. The Gentile people
confesses. The blinded Jew denies, so that their error is worse than
the first.
THEOPHYL. And so the order is inverted, for the Jew kills, and the
Gentile confesses; the disciples fly, and the women remain. For there
follows: There were also women looking on afar off, amongst whom was
Mary Magdalene, and Mary the mother of James the less and of Joses, and
Salome.
ORIGEN; But it seems to me, that here three women are chiefly named, by
Matthew and Mark. Two indeed are set down by each Evangelist, Mary
Magdalene, and Mary the mother of James; the third is called by
Matthew, the mother of the sons of Zebedee, but by Mark she is called
Salome.
BEDE; He means by James the Less, the son of Alphaeus, who was also
called the brother of our Lord, because he was the son of Mary, our
Lord's mother's sister, whom John mentions, saying, Now there stood by
the cross of Jesus his mother and his mother's sister, Mary of
Cleophas, and Mary Magdalene. And he seems to call her Mary of
Cleophas, from her father or some relation. But he was called James the
Less, to distinguish him from James the Great, that is, the son of
Zebedee, who was called amongst the first of the Apostles by our Lord.
Further, it was a Jewish custom, nor was it thought blamable after the
manners of an ancient people, that women should furnish to teachers
food and clothing out of their substance. Wherefore there follows: Who
also when he was in Galilee followed him, and ministered to him. They
ministered to the Lord of their substance, that He might reap their
carnal things whose spiritual things they reaped, and that He might
show forth a type for all masters, who ought to be content with food
and clothing from their disciples. But let us see what companions He
had with Him, for it goes on: And many other women which came up with
him into Jerusalem.
PSEUDO-JEROME; As the female sex through the virgin Mary is not shut
out from salvation, so it is not thrust away from the knowledge of the
mystery of the cross, and of the resurrection, through the widow Mary
Magdalene, and the ethers, who were mothers.
42. And now when the even was come, because it was the preparation, that is, the day before the sabbath,
43. Joseph of Arimathea, an honorable counselor, which also waited for
the kingdom of God, came, and went in boldly to Pilate, and craved the
body of Jesus.
44. And Pilate marveled if he were already dead: and calling to him the
centurion, he asked him whether he had been any while dead.
45. And when he knew it of the centurion, he gave the body to Joseph.
46. And he bought fine linen, and took him down, and wrapped him in the
linen, and laid him in a sepulcher which was hewn out of a rock, and
rolled a stone to the door of the sepulcher.
47. And Mary Magdalene and Mary the mother of Joses beheld where he was laid.
GLOSS. After the passion and death of Christ, the Evangelist relates
His burial, saying, And now when the even was come, because it was the
preparation, that is, the day before the sabbath, Joseph of Arimathaea.
BEDE; What is called, parasceue in Greek, is in Latin praeparatio; by
which name those Jews, who lived amongst Greeks, used to call the sixth
day of the week, because on that day they used to prepare what was
necessary for the rest of the sabbath day. Because then man was made on
the sixth day, but on the seventh the Creator rested from all His work,
fitly was our Savior crucified on the sixth day, and thus fulfilled the
mystery of man's restoration. But on the sabbath, resting in the tomb,
He was waiting for the event of the resurrection, which was to come on
the eighth day. So we must also in this age of time be crucified to the
world; but in the seventh day, that is, when a man has paid the debt to
death, our bodies indeed must rest in the grave, but our souls after
good works in hidden peace with God; till in the eighth period, even
our bodies themselves, glorified in the resurrection, receive
incorruption together with our souls.
But the man who buried the body of the Lord must needs by his righteous
merits have been worthy, and by the nobility of worldly power able to
perform this service. Therefore it is said, An honorable counselor,
which also waited for the kingdom of God. He is called in Latin,
decurio, because he is of the order of the curia, and served the office
of a provincial magistracy; this officer was also called curialis, from
his care of civic duties. Arimathaea is the same as Ramathain, the city
of Elkanah and Samuel.
PSEUDO-JEROME; It is interpreted, taking down, of which was Joseph, who
came to take down the body of Christ from the cross. There follows:
Came and went in boldly to Pilate, and craved the body of Jesus.
THEOPHYL. He was bold with a praiseworthy boldness; for he did not
consider within himself, I shall fall from my rich estate, and I shall
be expelled by the Jews, if I beg for the body of Him, who was
condemned as a blasphemer. It goes on: And Pilate marveled if he were
already dead. For he thought that He should continue long alive upon
the cross, as also the thieves used to live long, upon the instrument
of their execution. It goes on: And calling to him the centurion, he
asked him if he had been any while dead; that is, before the time when
other executed persons usually died.
There follows: And when he knew it of the centurion, (that is, that He was dead,) he gave the body to Joseph.
BEDE; But it was not an obscure person, nor a man of mean rank, who
could come to the governor and obtain the body. There follows: And he
bought fine linen, and took him down, and wrapped him in the linen.
THEOPHYL. Burying the precious body preciously; for being a disciple of
our Lord, he knew how greatly the Lord's body ought to be honored.
BEDE; By this however, according to a spiritual meaning, we may
understand that the body of the Lord should not be wrapped in gold or
gems, or silk, but in a clean linen cloth. Hence it became a custom in
the Church that the sacrifice of the altar should not be celebrated in
silk, or in a dyed cloth, but in linen produced from the earth just as
the body of the Lord was wrapped in clean linen; as, we read in the
Pontifical acts, it was ordered by the blessed Sylvester. Though it has
also another meaning, that he who receives Jesus in a pure mind wraps
Him in clean linen. There follows: And laid him in a sepulcher which
was hewn out of a rock, and rolled a stone to the door of the
sepulcher. It is said that the sepulcher of the Lord is a round cell,
hewn out of the rock which was around it, so high, that a man standing
upright could scarcely touch the roof with his outstretched hand; and
it has an entrance to the east, to which the great stone was rolled,
and placed upon it. In the northern part of it is the tomb itself, that
is, the place where our Lord's body lay, made of the same rock, seven
feet in length, raised three palms higher than the floor. It is not
open from above, but on the south side, the whole of which is open, and
through which the body was brought in. The color of the sepulcher and
of the recess is said to be a mixed white and red.
PSEUDO-JEROME; By the burial of Christ we rise again, by His going down
into hell we mount up into heaven; here is found the honey in the mouth
of the dead lion.
THEOPHYL. Let us too imitate Joseph, taking to ourselves the body of
Christ by Unity, and let us place it in a sepulcher, hewn out of the
rock, that is, in a soul recollected, never forgetful of God; for this
is a soul hewn out of the rock, that is, out of Christ, for He is our
rock, who holds together our strength. We ought also to wrap Him in
linen, that is, to receive Him in a pure body; for the linen is the
body which is the clothing of the soul. We must, however, not throw
open, but wrap Him up; for He is secret, closed and hidden.
There follows: And Mary Magadalene and Mary the mother of Joses beheld where he was laid.
BEDE; We read in Luke, that His acquaintances and the women who had
followed Him stood afar off. When these then who were known to Jesus
returned home after the burial of His body, the women alone, who were
bound to Him with a closer love, after following the funeral, took care
to see how He was laid, that they might be able at a fitting season to
offer Him the sacrifice of their devotion. But on the day of the
parasceue, that is, of the preparation, the holy women, that is, humble
souls, do the same, when they burn with love for the Savior, and
diligently follow the steps of His Passion in this life, where their
future rest is to be prepared; and they weigh with a pious minuteness
the order in which His passion was accomplished, if perchance they be
able to imitate it.
PSEUDO-JEROME; These things also fit the Jewish people, which finally
is believing, which is ennobled by faith to become the child of
Abraham. It lays aside its despair, it waits for the kingdom of God, it
goes in to the Christians, that it may be baptized; which is implied by
the name of Pilate, which is interpreted, 'One who works with a
hammer,' that is, he who subdues the iron nations, that he may rule
them with a rod of iron. It seeks for the sacrifice, that is, the
viaticum, which is given to penitents at their last end, and wraps it
up in a heart clean and dead to sin; it makes it firm in the safeguard
of faith, and shuts it up with the covering of hope, through works of
charity; (for the end of the commandment is charity;) whilst the elect,
who are the stars of the sea, are looking on from afar, for, if it be
possible, the very elect shall be offended.
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