catena aurea mark 2
1. And again he entered into Capernaum after some days; and it was noised that he was in the house.
2. And straightway many were gathered together, inasmuch that there was
no room to receive them, no, not so much as about the door: and he
preached the word to them.
3. And they came unto him, bringing one sick of the palsy, which was borne of four.
4. And when they could not come nigh unto him for the press, they
uncovered the roof where he was: and when they had broken it up, they
let down the bed wherein the sick of the palsy lay.
5. When Jesus saw their faith, he said unto the sick of the palsy, Son, your sins be forgiven you.
6. But there were certain of the Scribes sitting there, and reasoning in their hearts,
7. Why does this man thus speak blasphemies? who can forgive sins but God only?
8. And immediately when Jesus perceived in his spirit that they so
reasoned within themselves, he said unto them, Why reason you these
things in your hearts?
9. Whether is it easier to say to the sick of the palsy, Your sins be
forgiven you; or to say, Arise, and take up your bed, and walk?
10. But that you may know that the Son of man has power on earth to forgive sins, (he says to the sick of the palsy,)
11. I say to you, Arise, and take up your bed, and go your way into your house.
12. And immediately he arose, took up the bed, and went forth before
them all; inasmuch that they were all amazed, and glorified God,
saying, We never saw it on this fashion.
BEDE; Because the compassion of God deserts not even carnal persons, He
accords to them the grace of His presence, by which even they may be
made spiritual. After the desert, the Lord returns into the city;
wherefore it is said, And again he entered into Capernaum, &c.
AUG. But in Matthew writes this miracle as if it were done in the city
of the Lord, whilst Mark places it in Capernaum, which would he more
difficult of solution, if Matthew had also named Nazareth. But seeing
that Galilee itself might be called the city of the Lord, who can doubt
but that the Lord did these things in His own city, since He did them
in Capernaum, a city of Galilee; particularly as Capernaum was of such
importance in Galilee as to be called its metropolis? Or else, Matthew
passed by the things which were done after He came into His own city,
until He came to Capernaum, and so adds on the story of the paralytic
healed, subjoining, And, behold, they presented to him a man sick of
the palsy, after he had said that He came into His own city.
PSEUD-CHRYS. Or else, Matthew called Capernaum His city because He went
there frequently, and there did many miracles. It goes on: And it was
noised that he was in the house, &c. For the desire of hearing Him
was stronger than the toil of approaching Him.
After this, they introduce the paralytic, of whom Matthew and Luke
speak; wherefore there follows: And they came unto him bearing one sick
of the palsy, who was carried by four.
Finding the door blocked up by the crowd, they could not by any means
enter that way. Those who carried him, however, hoping that he could
merit the grace of being healed, raising the bed with their burden, and
uncovering the roof, lay him with his bed before the face of the
Savior. And thus is that which is added: And when they could not lay
him before him, &c.
There follows: But when Jesus saw their faith, he said to the sick of
the palsy, Son, your sins be forgiven you. He did not mean the faith of
the sick man, but of his bearers; for it sometimes happens, that a man
is healed by the faith of another.
BEDE; It may indeed be seen, how much each person's own faith weighs
with God, when that of another had such influence that the whole man at
once rose up, healed body and soul, and by one man's merit, another
should have his sins forgiven him.
THEOPHYL. He saw the faith of the sick man himself, since he would not
have allowed himself to be carried, unless he lad had faith to be
healed.
BEDE; Moreover, the Lord being about to cure the man of the palsy,
first loosed the chains of his sins, in order to show that he was
condemned to the loosening of his joints, because of the bonds of his
sins, and could not be healed to the recovery of his limbs, unless
these were first loosened. But Christ's wonderful humility calls this
man, despised, weak, with all the joints of his limbs unstrung, a son,
when the priests did not deign to touch him. Or at least, He therefore
calls him a son, because his sins are forgiven him. It goes on: But
there were certain of the scribes sitting there, and reasoning in their
hearts, Why does this man speak blasphemies?
CYRIL; Now they accuse Him of blasphemy, anticipating the sentence of
His death: for there was a command in the Law, that whosoever
blasphemed should be put to death. And this charge they laid upon Him,
because He claimed for Himself the divine power of remitting sins:
wherefore it is added, Who can forgive sin, save God only? For the
Judge of all alone has power to forgive sin.
BEDE; Who remits sin by those also to whom he has assigned the power of
remitting, and therefore Christ is proved to be very God, for He is
able to remit sins as God. The Jews then are in error, who although
they hold the Christ both to be God, and to be able to remit sins, do
not however believe that Jesus is the Christ. But the Arians err much
more madly, who although overwhelmed with the words of the Evangelist,
so that they cannot deny that Jesus is the Christ, and can remit sin,
nevertheless fear not to deny that He is God.
But He Himself, desiring to shame the traitors both by His knowledge of
things hidden and by the virtue of His works, manifests Himself to be
God. For there follows: And immediately when Jesus perceived in his
spirit that they so reasoned, he said to them, Why reason you these
things in your hearts? In which He shows Himself to be God, since He
can know the hidden things of the heart; and in a manner though silent
He speaks thus, With the same power and majesty, by which I look upon
your thoughts, I can forgive the sins of men.
THEOPHYL. But though their thoughts were laid bare, still they remain
insensible, refusing to believe that He who knew their hearts could
forgive sins, wherefore the Lord proves to them the cure of the soul by
that of the hotly, showing time invisible by the visible, that which is
more difficult by that which is easier, although they did not look upon
it as such. For the Pharisees thought it more difficult to heal the
body, as being more open to view; but the soul more easy to cure,
because the cure is invisible; so that they reasoned thus, Lo, He does
not now cure the body, but heals the unseen soul; if He had had more
power, lie would at once have cured the body, and not have fled for
refuge to the unseen world. The Savior, therefore, showing that He can
do both, says, which is the easier? as if He said, I indeed by the
healing of time body, which is in reality more easy, but appears to you
more difficult, will prove to you the health of the soul, which is
really more difficult.
PSEUD-CHRYS. And because it is easier to say than to do, there was
still manifestly something to say in opposition, for the work was not
yet manifested; wherefore He subjoins, But that you may know, &c.
as if He said, Since you doubt my word, I will bring on a work which
will confirm what was unseen. But He says in a marked manner, On earth
to forgive sins, that He might show that He has joined the power of the
divinity to the human nature by an inseparable union, because although
He was made man, yet He remained the Worth of God; and although by an
economy He conversed on the earth with men, nevertheless He was not
prevented from working miracles and from giving remission of sins. For
his human nature did not in any thing take away from these things which
essentially belonged to His Divinity, nor the Divinity hinder the Word
of God from becoming on earth, according to the flesh, time Son of Man
without change and in truth.
THEOPHYL. Again, He Says, Take up your bed, to prove the greater
certainty of the miracle, showing that it is not a mere illusion; and
at time same time to show that He not only healed, but gave strength;
thus He not only turns away souls from sin, but gives them the power of
working out the commandments.
BEDE; A carnal sign therefore is given, that the spiritual sign may be
proved, although it belongs to the same power to do away with the
distempers of both soul and body, whence it follows: And immediately he
arose, took up the bed, and went forth before them all.
CHRYS. Further, He first healed by the remission of sins that which He
had come to seek, that is, a soul, so that when they faithlessly
doubted, then He might bring forward a work before them, and in this
way His word might be confirmed by the work, and a hidden sign be
proved by an open one, that is, the health of the soul by the healing
of the body.
BEDE; We are also informed, that many sicknesses of body arise from
sins, and therefore perhaps sins are first remitted, that the causes of
sickness being taken away, health may be restored. For men are
afflicted by fleshly troubles for five causes, in order to increase
their merits, as Job and the Martyrs; or to preserve their lowliness,
as Paul by the messenger of Satan; or that they may perceive amid
correct their sins, as Miriam, the sister of Moses, and this paralytic;
or for the glory of God, as the man born blind and Lazarus; or as the
beginnings of the pains of damnation, as Herod and Antiochus. But
wonderful is the virtue of the divine power, where without the least
interval of time, by time command of the Savior, a speedy health
accompanies His words. Wherefore there follows: Insomuch that they were
all amazed. Leaving the greater thing, that is, the remission of sins,
they only wonder at that which is apparent, that is, the health of the
body.
THEOPHYL. This is not however the paralytic, whose cure is related by
John, for he had no man with him , this one had four; he is cured in
the pool of the sheep market, but this one in a house. It is the same
man, however, whose cure is related by Matthew and Mark. But
mystically, Christ is still in Capernaum, in the house of consolation.
BEDE; Moreover, whilst the Lord is preaching in the house, there is not
room for them , not even at the door, because whilst Christ is
preaching in Judea, the Gentiles are not yet able to enter to hear Hum,
to whom, however, though placed without, he directed the words of His
doctrine by His preachers.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Again, the palsy is a type of the torpor, in which man
lies slothful in the softness of the flesh, though desiring health.
THEOPHYL. If therefore I, having the powers of my mind unstrung,
remain, whenever I attempt any thing good without strength, as a
palsied man, and if I be raised on high by the four Evangelists, and be
brought to Christ, and there hear myself called son, then also are my
sins quitted by me; for a man is called the son of God because he works
the commandments.
BEDE; Or else, because there are four virtues, by which a man is
through an assured heart exalted so that he merits safety; which
virtues some call prudence, fortitude, temperance, and justice. Again,
they desire to bring the palsied man to Christ, but they are impeded on
every side by the crowd which is between them, because often the soul
desires to be renewed by the medicine of Divine grace, but through the
sluggishness of the groveling body is held back by the hindrance of old
custom. Oftentimes amidst the very sweetnesses of secret prayer, and,
as it may be called, the pleasant converse with God, a crowd of
thoughts, cutting off the clear vision of the mind, shuts out Christ
from its sight. Let us not then remain in the lowest ground, where the
crowds are bustling, but aim at the roof of the house, that is, the
sublimity of the Holy Scripture, and meditate on the law of the Lord.
THEOPHYL. But how should I be borne to Christ, if the roof be not
opened. For the roof is the intellect, which is set above all those
things which are within us; here it has much earth about it in the
tiles which are made of clay, I mean, earthly things: but if these be
taken away, the virtue of the intellect within us is freed from its
load. After this let it be let down, that is, humbled. For it does not
teach us to be puffed up, because our intellect has its load cleared
away, but to be humbled still more.
BEDE; Or else, the sick man is let down after the roof is opened,
because, when the Scriptures are laid open to us, we arrive at the
knowledge of Christ, that is, we descend to His lowliness, by the
dutifulness of faith. But by the sick man being let down with his bed,
it is meant that Christ should be known by man, whilst yet in the
flesh. But by rising from the bed is meant the soul's rousing itself
from carnal desires, in which it was lying in sickness. To take up the
bed is to bridle the flesh itself by the bands of continence, and to
separate it from earthly pleasures, through the hope of heavenly
rewards. But to take up the bed and to go home is to return to
paradise. Or else the man, now healed, who had been sick carries back
home his bed, when the soul, after receiving remission of sins,
returns, even though encompassed with the body, to its internal watch
over itself.
THEOPHYL. It is necessary to take up also one's bed, that is the body,
to the working of good. For then shall we be able to arrive at
contemplation, so that our thoughts should say within us, never have we
seen in this way before, that is never understood as we have done since
we have been cured of the palsy; for he who is cleansed from sin, sees
more purely.
13. And he went forth again by the sea side; and all the multitude resorted unto him, and he taught them.
14. And as he passed by, he saw Levi the son of Alphaeus sitting at the
receipt of custom, and said unto him, Follow me. And he arose and
followed him.
15. And it came to pass, that as Jesus sat at meat in his house, many
Publicans and sinners sat also together with Jesus and his disciples;
for there were many, and they followed him.
16. And when the Scribes and Pharisees saw him eat with Publicans and
sinners, they said unto his disciples, How is it that he eats and
drinks with Publicans and sinners?
17. When Jesus heard it, he said unto them, They that are whole have no
need of the physician, but they that are sick: I came not to call the
righteous, but sinners to repentance.
BEDE; After that the Lord taught at Capernaum, He went to the sea, that
He might not only set in order the life of men in towns, but also might
preach the Gospel of the kingdom to those who dwelt near the sea, and
might teach them to despise the restless motions of those things which
pass away like the waves of the sea, and to overcome them by the
firmness of faith; wherefore it is said, And he went forth again to the
sea, and all the multitude, &c.
THEOPHYL. Or else, after the miracle, He goes to the sea, as if wishing
to be alone, but the crowd runs to Him again, that you might learn,
that the more you fly from glory, the more she herself pursues you; but
if you follow her, she will fly from you. The Lord passing on from
thence called Matthew; wherefore there follows, And as he passed by, he
saw Levi the son of Alpheus sitting, &c.
CHRYS. Now this is the same publican who is named by all the
Evangelists; Matthew by Matthew; simply Levi by Luke; and Levi, the son
of Alphaeus, by Mark; for he was the son of Alphaeus. And you may find
persons with two names in other parts of Scripture; as Moses' father in
law is sometimes called Jethro, sometimes Raguel.
BEDE; So also the same person is called Levi and Matthew; but Luke and
Mark, on account of their reverence and the honor of the Evangelist,
are unwilling to put the common name, while Matthew is a just accuser
of himself, and calls himself Matthew and publican he wishes to show to
his hearers that no one who is converted should despair of his
salvation, since he himself was suddenly changed from a publican into
an Apostle. But he says that he was sitting at the 'teloneum', that is,
the place where the customs are looked after and administered. For
'telos' in Greek is the same as 'vectigal,' customs, in Latin.
THEOPHYL. For he sat at the receipt of custom, either, as is often
done, exacting from some, or making up accounts, or doing some actions
of that sort, which publicans are wont to do in their abodes, yes this
man, who was raised on high from this state of life that he might leave
all things and follow Christ. Wherefore it goes on, And he says to him,
Follow me, &c.
BEDE; Now to follow is to imitate, and therefore in order to imitate
the poverty of Christ, in the feeling of his soul even more than in
outward condition, he who used to rob his neighbor's wealth, now leaves
his own. And not only did he quit the gain of the customs, but he also
despised the peril, which might come from the princes of this world,
because he left the accounts of the customs imperfect and unsettled.
For the Lord Himself, Who externally, by human language, called Him to
follow, inflamed him inwardly by divine inspiration to follow Him the
moment that He called him.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Thus then Levi, which means Appointed, followed from the
custom-house of human affairs, the Word, Who says, He who does not quit
all that he has, cannot be my disciple.
THEOPHYL. But he who used to plot against others becomes so benevolent,
that he invites many persons to eat with him. Wherefore it goes on; And
it came to pass, that as Jesus sat at meat in his house.
BEDE; The persons here called publicans are those who exact the public
customs, or men who farm the customs of the exchequer or of republics;
moreover, those also, who follow after the gain of this world by
business, are called by the same name. They who had seen that the
publican, converted from his sins to better things, had found a place
of pardon, even for this reason themselves also do not despair of
salvation. And they come to Jesus, not remaining in their former sins,
as the Pharisees and Scribes complain, but in penitence, as the
following words of the Evangelist show, saying, For there were many who
followed him. For the Lord went to the feasts of sinners, that he might
have an opportunity of teaching them, and might set before his
entertainers spiritual meats, which also is carried on in mystical
figures. For he who receives Christ into his inward habitation is fed
with the highest delights of overflowing pleasures. Therefore the Lord
enters willingly, and takes up His abode in the affection of him who
has believed on Him; and this is the spiritual banquet of good works,
which the rich cannot have, and on which the poor feast.
THEOPHYL. But the Pharisees blame this, making themselves pure. Whence
there follows: And when the Scribes and Pharisees saw him eat, &c.
BEDE; If by the election of Matthew and calling of the publicans, the
faith of the Gentiles is expressed, who formerly were intent on the
gains of this world; certainly the haughtiness of the Scribes and
Pharisees intimates the envy of the Jewish people, who are vexed at the
salvation of the Gentiles. It goes on: When Jesus heard it, he said to
them, They that are whole need not the physician, but they that are
sick. The aims at the Scribes and Pharisees, who, thinking themselves
righteous, refused to keep company with sinners. He calls Himself the
physician, Who, by a strange mode of healing, was wounded on account of
our iniquities, and by His wound we are healed. And He calls those
whole and righteous, who, wishing to establish their own righteousness,
are not subject to the righteousness of God. Moreover He calls those
rich and sinners, who, overcome by the consciousness of their own
frailty, and seeing that they cannot be justified by the Law, submit
their necks to the grace of Christ by repentance. Wherefore it is
added, For I came not for all the righteous, but sinners, &c.
THEOPHYL. Not indeed that they should continue sinners, but be converted to that repentance.
18. And the disciples of John and of the Pharisees used to fast:
and they come and say to him, Why do the disciples of John and of the
Pharisees fast, but your disciples fast not?
19. And Jesus said unto them, Can the children of the bride-chamber
fast, while the bridegroom is with them? as long as they have the
bridegroom with them, they cannot fast.
20. But the days will come, when the bridegroom shall be taken away from them, and then shall they fast in those days.
21. No man also sews a piece of new cloth on an old garment: else the
new piece that filled it up takes away from the old, and the rent is
made worse.
22. And no man puts new wine into old bottles: else the new wine does
burst the bottles, and the wine is spilled, and the bottles will be
marred: but new wine must be put into new bottles.
GLOSS. As above, the Master was accused to the disciples for keeping
company with sinners in their feasts, so now, on the other hand, the
disciples are complained of to the Master for their omission of fasts,
that so matter for dissension might arise amongst them. Wherefore it is
said, And the disciples of John and the Pharisees used to fast.
THEOPHYL. For the disciples of John being in an imperfect state, continued in Jewish customs.
AUG. But it may be thought that he added Pharisees, because they joined
with the disciples of John in saying this to the Lord, whilst in
Matthew relates that the disciples of John alone said it: but the words
which follow rather show that those who said it spoke not of
themselves, but of others. For it goes on, And they come and say unto
him, Why do the disciples, &c. For these words show, that the
guests who were there came to Jesus, and had said this same thing to
the disciples, so that in the words which he uses, they came, he speaks
not of those same persons, of whom he had said, And the disciples of
John and the Pharisees were fasting. But as they were fasting, those
persons who remembered it, come to him. Matthew then says this, And
there came to him the disciples of John, saying, because the Apostles
also were there, and all eagerly, as each could, objected these things.
CHRYS. The disciples of John, therefore, and of the Pharisees, being
jealous of Christ, ask Him, whether He alone of all men with His
disciples could, without abstinence and toil, conquer in the fight of
the passions.
BEDE; But John did not drink wine and strong drink, because he who has
no power by nature, obtains more merit by abstinence. But why should
the Lord, to whom it naturally belonged to forgive sins, shun those
whom he could make more pure, than those who fast? But Christ also
fasted, lest He should break the precept, He ate with sinners, that you
might see His grace, and acknowledge His power. It goes on; And Jesus
said to them, Can the children, &c.
AUG. Mark here calls them children of the nuptials, whom Matthew calls
children of the bridegroom; for we understand the children of the
nuptials to be not only those of the bride-groom, but also of the
bride.
PSEUD-CHRYS. He then calls Himself a bridegroom, as if about to be
betrothed to the Church. For the betrothal is giving an earnest,
namely, that of the grace of the Holy Ghost, by which the world
believed.
THEOPHYL. He also calls Himself a bridegroom, not only as betrothing to
Himself virgin minds, but because the time of His first coming is not a
time of sorrow, nor of sadness to believers, neither does it bring with
it toil, but rest. For it is without any works of the law, giving rest
by baptism, by which we easily obtain salvation without toil. But the
sons of the nuptials or of the Bridegroom are the Apostles; because
they, by the grace of God, are made worthy of every heavenly blessing,
by the grace of God, and partakers of every joy.
PSEUD-CHRYS. But intercourse with Him, He says, is far removed from all
sorrow, when He adds, As long as they have the bridegroom with them,
they cannot fast. He is sad, from whom some good is far removed; but be
who has it present with him rejoices, and is not sad.
But that He might destroy their elation of heart, and show that He
intended not His own disciples to be licentious, He adds, But the days
will come when the bridegroom shall be taken, &c. as if He said,
The time will come, when they will show their firmness; for when the
Bridegroom shall be taken from them, they will fast as longing for His
coming, and in order to unite to Him their spirits, cleansed by bodily
suffering. He shows also that there is no necessity for His disciples
to fast, as having present with them the Bridegroom of human nature,
Who every where executes the words of God, and Who gives the seed of
life. The sons of the Bridegroom also cannot, because they are infants,
be entirely conformed to their Father, the Bridegroom, Who, considering
their infancy, deigns to allow them not to fast: but when the
Bridegroom is gone, they will fast, through desire of Him; when they
have been made perfect, they will be united to the Bridegroom in
marriage, and will always feast at the king's banquet.
THEOPHYL. We must also understand, that every man whose works are good
is the son of the Bridegroom; he has the Bridegroom with him, even
Christ, and fasts not, that is, does no works of repentance, because he
does not sin: but when the Bridegroom is taken away by the man's
falling into sin, then lie fasts and is penitent, that he may cure his
sin.
BEDE; But in a mystical sense, it may thus be expressed; that the
disciples of John and the Pharisees fast, because every man who boasts
of the works of the law without faith, who follows the traditions of
men, and receives the preaching of Christ with his bodily ear, and not
by the faith of the heart, keeps aloof from spiritual goods, and wastes
away with a fasting soul. But he who is incorporated into the members
of Christ by a faithful love cannot fast, because he feasts upon His
Body and Blood. It goes on, No one sews a piece of rough that is new
cloth on an old garment: else the new piece that fills it up takes away
from the old, and the rent is made worse.
PSEUD-CHRYS. As if He said, because these are preachers of the New
Testament, it is not possible that they should serve old laws; but you
who follow old customs, fitly observe the fasts of Moses. But for
these, who are about to hand down to men new and wonderful observances,
it is not necessary to observe the old traditions, but to be virtuous
in mind; some time or other however they will observe fasting with
other Virtues. But this fasting is different from time fasting of the
law, for that was one of restraint, this of goodwill; on account of the
fervor of the Spirit, Whom they cannot yet receive, Wherefore it goes
on, And no one puts new wine into old bottles: else the new wine does
burst the bottles, and the wine is spilled, and the bottles will be
marred: but new Wine must be put in new bottles.
BEDE; For He compares His disciples to old bottles, who would burst at
spiritual precepts, rather than be held in restraint by them. But they
will be new bottles, when after the ascension of the Lord, they are
renewed by desiring His consolation, and then new wine will come to the
new bottles, that is, the fervor of the Holy Ghost will fill the hearts
of spiritual men. A teacher must also take heed not to commit the
hidden things of new mysteries to a soul, hardened in old wickedness.
THEOPHYL. Or else the disciples are likened to old garments on account
of the infirmity of their minds, on which it was not fitting to impose
the heavy command of fasting.
BEDE; Neither was it fitting to sew on a new piece; that is, a portion
of doctrine which teaches a general fast from all the joy of temporal
delights; for if this be done, the teaching is rent, and agrees not
with the old part. But by a new garment is intended good works, which
are done externally, and by the new wine, is expressed the fervor of
faith, hope, and charity, by which we are reformed in our minds.
23. And it came to pass, that he went through the corn fields on
the sabbath day; and his disciples began, as they went, to pluck the
ears of corn.
24. And the Pharisees said to him, Behold, why do they on the sabbath day that which is not lawful?
25. And he said to them, Have you never read what David did, when he
had need, and was an hungered, he, and they that were with him?
26. How he went into the house of God, in the days of Abiathar the High
Priest, and did eat the show-bread, which is not lawful to eat but for
the priests, and gave also to them which were with him?
27. And he said to them, The sabbath was made for man, and not man for the sabbath:
28. Therefore the Son of man is Lord also of the sabbath.
PSEUD-CHRYS. The disciples of Christ, freed from the figure, and united
to the truth, do not keep the figurative feast of the sabbath,
wherefore it is said, And it came to pass, that he went through the
corn fields on the sabbath day; and his disciples began, as they went,
to pluck the ears of corn.
BEDE; We read also in the following part, that they who came and went
away were many, and that they had not time enough to take their food,
wherefore, according to man's nature, they were hungry.
CHRYS. But being hungry, they no ate simple food, not for pleasure, but
on account of the necessity of nature. The Pharisees however, serving
the figure and the shadow, accused the disciples of doing wrong.
Wherefore there follows, But the Pharisees said to him, Behold, why do
they on the sabbath day that which is not lawful.
AUG. For it was a precept in Israel, delivered by a written law, that
no one should detain a thief found in his fields unless he tried to
take something away with him. For the man, who had touched nothing else
but what he had eaten, they were commanded to allow to go away free and
unpunished. Wherefore the Jews accused our Lord's disciples, who were
plucking the ears of corn, of breaking the sabbath, rather than of
theft.
PSEUD-CHRYS. But our Lord brings forward David, to whom it once
happened to eat though it was forbidden by the law, when he touched the
Priest's food, that by his example, he might do away with their
accusation of the disciples. For there follows, Have you never read,
&c.
THEOPHYL. For David, when flying from the face of Saul, went to the
Chief Priest, and ate the show-bread , and took away the sword of
Goliath, which things had been offered to the Lord. But a question has
been raised how the Evangelist called Abiathar at this time High
Priest, when the Book of Kings calls him Abimelech.
BEDE; There is, however, no discrepancy, for both were there, when
David came to ask for bread, and received it: that is to say,
Abimelech, the High Priest, and Abiathar his son; but Abimelech having
been slain by Saul, Abiathar fled to David, and became the Companion of
all his exile afterwards. When he came to the throne, he himself also
received the rank of High Priest, amid the son became of much greater
excellence than the falter, and therefore was worthy to be mentioned as
the High Priest, even during his father's life-time It goes on: And he
said to them, the sabbath was made for man, and not man for the
sabbath.
For greater is the care to be taken of the health and life of a man,
than the keeping of the sabbath. Therefore the sabbath was ordered to
be observed in such a way, that, if there were a necessity, he should
not be guilty, who broke the sabbath-day; therefore it was not
forbidden to circumcise on the sabbath, because that was a necessary
work. And the Maccabees, when necessity pressed on them, fought on the
Sabbath-day. Wherefore, His disciples being hungry, what was not
allowed in the law became lawful through their necessity of hunger; as
now, if a sick man break a fast, he is not held guilty in any way.
It goes on: Therefore the Son of man is Lord, &c. As if he said,
David the king is to be excused for feeding on the food of the priests,
how much more the Son of man, the true King and Priest, and Lord of the
sabbath, is free from fault, for pulling ears of corn on the
sabbath-day.
PSEUD-CHRYS. He calls himself properly, Lord of the sabbath, and Son of
man, since being the Son of God, he deigned to be called Son of man,
for the sake of men. Now the law has no authority over the Lawgiver and
Lord, for more is allowed the king, than is appointed by the law. The
law is given to the weak indeed, but not to the perfect and to those
who work above what the law enjoins.
BEDE; But in a mystical sense the disciples pass through the corn
fields, when the holy doctors look with the care of a pious solicitude
upon those whom they have initiated in the faith, and who, it is
implied, are hungering for time best of all things, the salvation of
men. But to pluck the ears of corn means to snatch men away from the
eager desire of earthly things. And to rub with the hands is by
examples of virtue to put from the purity of their minds the
concupiscence of the flesh, as men do husks.
To eat the grains is when a man, cleansed from the filth of vice by the
months of preachers, is incorporated amongst the members of the Church.
Again, fitly are the disciples related to have done this, walking
before the face of the Lord, for it is necessary that the discourse of
the doctor should come first, although the grace of visitation from on
high, following it, must enlighten the heart of the hearer. And well,
on the sabbath-day, for the doctors themselves in preaching labor for
the hope of future rest, and teach their hearers to toil over their
tasks for the sake of eternal repose.
THEOPHYL. Or else, because when they have rest from their passions,
then are they made doctors to head others to virtue, plucking away from
them earthly things.
BEDE; Again, if they walk through the corn fields with the Lord, who
rejoice in meditating upon His sacred words. They hunger, when they
desire to find in them the bread of life; and they hunger on sabbath
days, as soon as their minds are in a soothing rest, and they rejoice
in freedom from troubled thoughts; they pluck the ears of corn, and by
rubbing, cleanse them, till they come to what is fit to eat, when by
meditation they take to themselves the witness of the Scriptures, to
which they arrive by reading, and discuss them continually, until they
find in them the marrow of love; this refreshment of the mind is truly
unpleasing to fools, but is approved by the Lord.
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