catena aurea mark 5
1. And they came over to the other side of the sea, into the country of the Gadarenes.
2. And when he was come out of the ship, immediately there met him out of the tombs a man with an unclean spirit,
3. Who had his dwelling among the tombs; and no man could bind him, no, not with chains:
4. Because that he had been often bound with fetters and chains, and
the chains had been plucked asunder by him, and the fetters broken in
pieces: neither could any man tame him.
5. And always, night and day, he was in the mountains, and in the tombs, crying, and cutting himself with stones.
6. But when he saw Jesus afar off, he ran and worshipped him,
7. And cried with a loud voice, and said, What have I to do with you,
Jesus, you Son of the most high God? I adjure you by God, that you
torment me not.
8. For he said to him, Come out of the man, you unclean spirit.
9. And he asked him, What is your name? And he answered, saying, My name is Legion: for we are many.
10. And he besought him much that he would not send them away out of the country.
11. Now there was nigh to the mountains a great herd of swine feeding.
12. And all the devils besought him, saying, Send us into the swine, that we may enter into them.
13. And forthwith Jesus gave them leave. And the unclean spirits went
out, and entered into the swine: and the herd ran violently down a
steep place into the sea, (they were about two thousand;) and were
choked in the sea.
14. And they that fed the swine fled, and told it in the city, and in
the country. And they went out to see what it was that was done.
15. And they come to Jesus, and see him that was possessed with the
devil, and had the legion, sitting, and clothed, and in his right mind:
and they were afraid.
16. And they that saw it told them how it befell to him that was possessed with the devil, and also concerning the swine.
17. And they began to pray him to depart out of their coasts.
18. And when he was come into the ship, he that had been possessed with the devil prayed him that he might be with him.
19. However Jesus suffered him not, but said to him, Go home to your
friends, and tell them how great things the Lord has done for you, and
has had compassion on you.
20. And he departed, and began to publish in Decapolis how great things Jesus had done for him: and all men did marvel.
THEOPHYL. Those who were in the ship inquired among themselves, What
manner of man is this? and how it is made known Who He is by the
testimony of His enemies. For the demoniac came up confessing that He
was the Son of God. Proceeding to which circumstance the Evangelist
says, And they came over to the other side, &c.
BEDE; Geraza is a noted town of Arabia, across the Jordan, near mount
Galaad, which the tribe of Manasseh held, not far from the lake of
Tiberias, into which the swine were precipitated.
PSEUD-CHRYS. Nevertheless the exact reading contains neither Gadarenes,
nor Gerasines, but Gergesenes. For Gadara is a city of Judea, which has
no sea at all about it; and Geraza is a city of Arabia, having neither
lake nor sea near it. And that the Evangelists may not be thought to
have spoken so manifest a falsehood, well acquainted as they were with
the parts around Judea, Gergese, from which come the Gergesenes was an
ancient city, now called Tiberias, around which is situated a
considerable lake. It continues, And when he was come out of the ship,
immediately there met him, &c.
AUG. Though Matthew says that there were two, Mark and Luke mention
one, that you may understand that one of them was a more illustrious
person, concerning whose state that country was much afflicted.
CHRYS. Or else, Mark and Luke relate what was most worthy of
compassion, and for this reason they put down more at length what had
happened to this man; for there follows, no man could bind him, no, not
with chains. They therefore simply said, a man possessed of a devil,
without taking heed to the number; or else, that he might show the
greater virtue in the Worker; for He who had cured one such, might cure
many others. Nor is there any discrepancy shown here, for they did not
say that there was one alone, for then they would have contradicted
Matthew. Now devils dwelt in tombs, wishing to convey a false opinion
to many, that the souls of the dead were changed to devils.
GREG. NYSS. Now the assembly of the devils had prepared itself to
resist time divine power. But when He was approaching Who had power
over all things, they proclaim aloud His eminent virtue.
Wherefore there follows, But when he saw Jesus afar off, he ran and worshipped him, saying, &c.
CYRIL; See how the devil is divided between two passions, fear amid
audacity; he hangs back and prays, as if meditating a question; he
wishes to know what he had to do with Jesus, as though be would say, Do
you cast me out from men, who are mine?
BEDE; And how great is the impiety of the Jews, to say that He cast out
devils by the prince of the devils, when the very devils confess that
they have nothing in common with Him.
CHRYS. Then praying to Him, he subjoins, I adjure you by God, that you
torment me not. For he considered being cast out to be a torment, or
else he was also invisibly tortured. For however bad the devils are,
they know that there awaits them at last a punishment for their sins;
but that the time of their last punishment was not yet come, they full
well knew, especially as they were permitted to mix among men. But
because Christ had come upon them as they were doing such dreadful
deeds, they thought that, such was the heinousness of their crimes, He
would not wait for the last times, to punish them; for this reason they
beg that they may not be tormented.
BEDE; For it is a great torment for a devil to cease to hurt a man, and
the more severely he possesses him, the more reluctantly he lets him
go. For it goes on, For he said to him, Come out of the man, you
unclean spirit.
CYRIL; Consider the unconquerable power of Christ; He makes Satan
shake, for to him the words of Christ are fire and flame; as the
Psalmist says, The mountains melted at the presence of the Lord, that
is, great and proud powers.
There fellows, And he asked him, What is your name?
THEOPHYL. The Lord indeed asks, not that He Himself required to know,
but that the rest might know that there was a multitude of devils
dwelling in him.
PSEUD-CHRYS. Lest he should not be believed, if He affirmed there were
many, He wishes that they themselves should confess it; wherefore there
follows, And he said to him, Legion, for we are many. He gives not a
fixed number, but a multitude, for such accuracy in the number would
not help us to understand it.
BEDE; But by the public declaration of the scourge which the madman
suffered, the virtue of the Healer appears more gracious. And even the
priests of our time, who know how to cast out devils by the grace of
exorcism, are wont to say that the sufferers cannot be cured at all,
unless they in confession openly declare, as far as they are able to
know, what they have suffered from the unclean spirits in sight, in
hearing, in taste, in touch, or any other sense of body or soul,
whether awake or asleep. It goes on, And he besought him much that he
would not send them away out of the country.
PSEUD-CHRYS Luke however says, into the abyss. For the abyss is the
separation of this world, for devils observe to be sent into outer
darkness, prepared for the devil and his angels. This Christ might have
done, but He allows them to remain in this world, lest the absence of a
tempter should deprive men of the crown of victory.
THEOPHYL. Also that by fighting with us, they may make us more expert.
It goes on, Now there was there about the mountain a great herd of
swine feeding.
AUG. What Mark here says, that the herd was about the mountain, and
what Luke calls on the mountain, are by no means inconsistent. For the
herd of swine was so large, that some part were on the mountain, the
rest around it. It goes on: And the devils besought him, saying, send
us into the swine, that we may enter in to them.
REMIG. The devils entered not into the swine of their own will, but
their asking for this concession, was, that it might be shown that they
cannot hurt men without Divine permission. They did not ask to be sent
into man, because they saw that He, by whose power they were tortured,
bore a human form. Nor did they desire to be sent into the flocks, for
they are clean animals offered up in the temple of God. But they
desired to be sent into the swine, because no animal is more unclean
than a hog, and devils always delight in filthiness. It goes on: And
forthwith Jesus gave them leave.
BEDE; And He gave them leave, that by the killing of the swine, the salvation of men might be furthered.
PSEUD-CHRYS. He wished to show publicly the fury which devils entertain
against men, and that they would inflict much worse things upon men, if
they were not hindered by Divine power because, again, His compassion
would not allow this to his shown on men, He permitted them to enter
into the swine that on them the fury and power of the devils might be
made known. There follows: And the unclean spirits went out.
TITUS; But the herdsmen also took to flight, lest they should perish
with the swine, and spread the same fear amongst the inhabitants of the
town. Wherefore there follows: And they that fed them, &c. The
necessity of their loss, however, brought these men to the Savior; for
frequently when God makes men suffer loss in their possessions, he
confers a benefit on their souls.
Wherefore it goes on: And they came to Jesus, and see him that was
tormented by the devil, &c. that is, at the feet of Him from whom
he had obtained health; a man, whom before, not even chains could bind,
clothed and in his right mind, though he used to be continually naked;
and they were amazed; wherefore it says, And they were afraid. This
miracle then they find omit partly by sight, partly by words; wherefore
there follows: And they that saw it told them.
THEOPHYL. But amazed at the miracle, which they had heard, they were
afraid, and for this reason they beseech Him to depart out of their
borders; which is expressed in what follows: And they began to pray him
to depart out of their coasts; for they feared lest some time or other
they should suffer a like thing: for, saddened at the loss of their
swine, they reject the presence of the Savior.
BEDE; Or else, conscious of their own frailty, they judged themselves
unworthy of the presence of the Lord. It goes on: And when he was going
to the ship, he that had been tormented, &c.
THEOPHYL. For he feared lest sometime or other the devils should find
him, and enter into him a second time. But the Lord sends him back to
his house, intimating to him, that though He himself was not present,
yet His power would keep him; at the same time also that he might be of
use in the healing of others; where fore it goes on: And he did not
suffer him, and said to him, Go home to your friends, &c. See the
humility of the Savior. He said not, Proclaim all things which I have
done to you, but, all that the Lord has done; do you also, when you
have done any good thing, take it not to yourself, but refer it to God.
CHRYS. But although He bade others, whom he healed, to tell it to no
one, he nevertheless fitly bids this one proclaim it, since all that
region, being possessed by devils, remained without God.
THEOPHYL. He therefore began to proclaim it, and all wonder, which is that which follows: And he began to publish.
BEDE; Mystically, however, Gerasa or Gergese, as some read it, is
interpreted casting out a dweller or a stranger approaching, because
the people of the Gentiles both expelled the enemy from the heart, and
he who was afar off is made near.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Here again the demoniac is the people of the Gentiles,
in a most hopeless case, bound neither by the law of nature, nor of
God, nor by human fear.
BEDE; Who dwelt in the tombs, because they delighted in dead works,
that is, in sins; who were ever raging night and day, because whether
in prosperity or in adversity, they were never free from the service of
malignant spirits: again, by time foulness of their works, they lay as
it were in the tombs, in their lofty pride, they wandered over the
mountains, by words of most hardened infidelity, they as it were cut
themselves with stones. But he said, My name is Legion, because the
Gentile people were enslaved to divers idolatrous forms of worship.
Again, that the unclean spirits going out from man enter into swine,
which they east headlong into the sea, implies that now that time
people of the Gentiles are freed from the empire of demons, they who
have not chosen to believe in Christ, work sacrilegious rites in hidden
places.
THEOPHYL. Or by this it is signified that devils enter into those men,
who live like swine, rolling themselves in the slough of pleasure; they
drive them headlong into the sea down the precipice of perdition, into
the sea of an evil life where they are choked.
PSEUDO-JEROME; Or they are choked in hell without any touch of mercy by
the rushing on of an early death; which evils many persons thus avoid,
for by the scourging of the fool, the wise is made more prudent.
BEDE; But that the Lord did not admit him, though He wished to be
without Him, signifies, that every one after the remission of his sins
should remember that he must work to obtain a good conscience, and
serve the Gospel for the salvation of others, that at last he may rest
in Christ.
GREG. For when we have perceived ever so little of the Divine
knowledge, we are at once unwilling to return to human affairs, and
seek for the quiet of contemplation; but the Lord commands that the
mind should first toil hard at its work, and afterwards should refresh
itself with contemplation.
PSEUDO-JEROME; But the man who is healed preached in Decapolis, where
the Jews, who hang on the letter of the Decalogue, are being turned
away from the Roman rule.
21. And when Jesus was passed over again by ship to the other
side, much people gathered to him: and He was nigh to the sea.
22. And, behold, there comes one of the rulers of the synagogue, Jairus by name; and when he saw him, he fell at his feet,
23. And besought him greatly, Saying, My little daughter lies at the
point of death: I pray you, come and lay your hands on her, that she
may be healed; and she shall live.
24. And Jesus went with him; and much people followed him, and thronged him.
25. And a certain woman, which had an issue of blood twelve years,
26. And had suffered many things of many physicians, and had spent all
that she had, and was nothing bettered, but rather grew worse,
27. When she had heard of Jesus, came in the press behind, and touched his garment.
28. For she said, If I may touch but his clothes, I shall be whole.
29. And straightway the fountain of her blood was dried up; and she felt in her body that she was healed of that plague.
30. And Jesus, immediately knowing in himself that virtue had gone out
of him, turned him about in the press, and said, Who touched my clothes?
31. And his disciples said to him, You see the multitude thronging you, and say you, Who touched me?
32. And he looked round about to see her that had done this thing.
33. But the woman fearing and trembling, knowing what was done in her,
came and fell down before him, and told him all the truth.
34. And he said to her, Daughter, your faith has made you whole; go in peace, and be whole of your plague.
THEOPHYL. After the miracle of the demoniac, the Lord works another
miracle, namely, in raising up the daughter of the ruler of the
synagogue; the Evangelist, before narrating this miracle, says, And
when Jesus was passed over again by ship to the other side, much people
gathered to him.
AUG. But we must understand, that what is added of the daughter of the
ruler of the synagogue, took place when Jesus had again crossed the sea
in a ship, though how long after does not appear; for if there were not
an interval, there could be no time for the taking place of that which
Matthew relates, concerning the feast at his own house; after which
event, nothing follows immediately, except this concerning the daughter
of the chief of the synagogue. For he has so put it together, that the
transition itself shows that the narrative follows the order of time.
It goes on, There comes one of the rulers of the synagogue, &c.
PSEUD-CHRYS. He has recorded the name on account of the Jews of that
time, that it might mark the miracle. It goes on, And when he saw him,
he fell at his feet, and besought him greatly, &c. Matthew indeed
relates that the chief of the synagogue reported that his daughter was
dead, but Mark says that she was very sick, and that afterwards it was
told to the ruler of the synagogue, when our Lord was about to go with
him, that she was dead. The fact then, which Matthew implies, is the
same, namely, that He raised her from the dead; and it is for the sake
of brevity, that he says that she was dead, which was evident from her
being raised.
AUG. For he attaches himself not to the words of the father, but to
what is of most importance, his wishes; for he was in such despair,
that his wish was that she should return to life, not thinking that she
could be found alive, whom he had left dying.
THEOPHYL. Now this man was faithful in part, inasmuch as he fell at the
feet of Jesus, but in that he begged of Him to come, he did not show as
much faith as lie ought. For he ought to have said, Speak the word
only, and my daughter shall be healed. There follows, And he went away
with him, and much people followed him, and thronged him;
and a woman, which had an issue of blood twelve years, &c.
CHRYS. This woman, who was celebrated and known to all, did not dare to
approach the Savior openly, nor to come to Him, because, according to
the law, she was unclean; for this reason she touched Him behind, and
not in front, for that she dare not do, but only ventured to touch the
hem of His garment. It was not however the hem of the garment, but her
frame of mind that made her whole.
There follows, For she said, If I may but touch his clothes, I shall be whole.
THEOPHYL. Most faithful indeed is this woman, who hoped for healing
from His garments. For which reason she obtains health; wherefore it
goes on, And straightway the fountain of her blood was dried up, and
she felt in her body that she was healed.
PSEUD-CHRYS. Now the virtues of Christ are by His own will imparted to
those men, who touch Him by faith. Wherefore there follows, And Jesus,
immediately knowing in himself that virtue had gone out of him, turned
him about in the press, and said, who touched my clothes? The virtues
indeed of the Savior do not go out of Him locally or corporally, nor in
any respect pass away from Him. For being incorporeal, they go forth to
others and are given to others; they are not however separated from
Him, from whom they are said to go forth, in the same way as sciences
are given by the teacher to his pupils. Therefore it says, Jesus,
knowing in himself the virtue which had gone out of him, to show that
with His knowledge, and not without His being aware of it, the woman
was healed.
But He asked, Who touched me? although He knew her who touched Him,
that He might bring to light the woman, by her coming forward, and
proclaim her faith, and lest the virtue of His miraculous work should
he consigned to oblivion. It goes on, And his disciples said to him,
You see the multitude thronging you, and say you, Who touched me? But
the Lord asked, Who touched me, that is in thought and faith, for the
crowds who throng Me cannot be said to touch Me, for they do not come
near to Me in thought and in faith.
There follows, And he looked round about to see her that had done this thing.
THEOPHYL. For the Lord wished to declare the woman, first to give His
approbation to her faith, secondly to urge the chief of the synagogue
to a confident hope that He could thus cure his child, and also to free
the woman from fear. For the woman feared because she had stolen
health; wherefore there follows, But the woman fearing and trembling,
&c.
BEDE; Observe that the object of His question was that the woman should
confess the truth of her long want of faith, of her sudden belief and
healing, and so herself be confirmed in faith, and afford an example to
others. But he said to her, Daughter, your faith has made you whole; go
in peace, and be whole of your plague. He said not, Your faith is about
to make you whole, but has made you whole, that is, in that you have
believed, you have already been made whole.
CHRYS. He calls her daughter because she was saved by her faith; for faith in Christ makes us His children.
THEOPHYL. But He said to her, Go in peace, that is, in rest, which
means, go and have rest, for up to this time you have been in pains and
torture
PSEUD-CHRYS. Or else He says, Go in peace, sending her away into that
which is the final good, for God dwells in peace, that you may know,
that she was not only healed in body but also from the causes of bodily
pain, that is, from her sins
PSEUDO-JEROME. Mystically, however, Jairus comes after the healing of
the woman, because when the fullness of the Gentiles has come in, then
shall Israel be saved. Jairus means either illuminating, or
illuminated, that is, the Jewish people having cast off the shadow of
the letter, enlightened by the Spirit and enlightening others, falling
at the feet of the Word that is humbling itself before the Incarnation
of Christ, prays for her daughter, for when a man lives himself, he
makes others live also. Thus Abraham, and Moses, and Samuel, intercede
for the people who are dead, and Jesus comes upon their prayers.
BEDE; Again, the Lord going to the child, who is to be healed, is
thronged by the crowd, because though He gave healthful advice to the
Jewish nation, he is oppressed by the wicked habits of that carnal
people; but the woman with an issue of blood, cured by the Lord, is the
Church gathered together from the nations, for the issue of blood may
be either understood of the pollution of idolatry, or of those deeds,
which are accompanied by pleasure to flesh and blood. But whilst the
word of the Lord decreed salvation to Judea, the people of the Gentiles
by an assured hope seized upon the health, promised and prepared for
others.
THEOPHYL. Or else, by the woman, who had a bloody flux, understand
human nature; for sin rushed in upon it, which since it killed the
soul, might be said to spill its blood. It could not be cured by many
physicians, that is, by the wise men of this world, and of the Law and
the Prophets; but the moment that it touched the hem of Christ's
garment, that is, His flesh, it was healed, for whoever believes the
Son of man to be Incarnate is he who touches the hem of His garment.
BEDE; Wherefore one believing woman touches the Lord, whilst the crowd
throngs Him, because He, who is grieved by divers heresies, or by
wicked habits, is worshipped faithfully with the heart of the Catholic
Church alone. But the Church of the Gentiles came behind Him; because
though it did not see the Lord present in time flesh, for the mysteries
of His Incarnation had been gone through, yet it attained to the grace
of His faith, and so when by partaking of His sacraments, it merited
salvation from its sins, as it were the fountain of its blood was dried
up by the touch of His garments. And the Lord looked round about to see
her who had done this, because He judges that all who deserve to be
saved are worthy of His look and of His pity.
35. While he yet spoke, there came from the ruler of the synagogue's
house certain which said, Your daughter is dead: why trouble you the
Master any further?
36. As soon as Jesus heard the word that was spoken, he said to the ruler of the synagogue, Be not afraid, only believe.
37. And he suffered no man to follow him, save Peter, and James, and John the brother of James.
38. And he comes to the house of the ruler of the synagogue, and sees the tumult, and them that wept and wailed greatly.
39. And when he was come in, he said to them, Why make you this ado, and weep? the damsel is not dead, but sleeps.
40. And they laughed him to scorn. But when he had put them all out, he
takes the father and the mother of the damsel, and them that were with
him, and enter in where the damsel was lying.
41. And he took the damsel by the by and, and said unto her, Talitha
cumi; which is, being interpreted, Damsel, I say to you, arise.
42. And straightway the damsel arose, and walked; for she was of the
age of twelve years. And they were astonished with a great astonishment.
43. And he charged them straitly that no man should know it; and commanded that something should be given her to eat.
THEOPHYL. Those who were about the ruler of the synagogue, thought that
Christ was one of the prophets, and for this reason they thought that
they should beg of Him to come and pray over the damsel. But because
she had already expired, they thought that He ought not to be asked to
do so. Therefore it is said, While he yet spoke, there came messengers
to the ruler of the synagogue, which said, Your daughter is dead; why
trouble you the Master any further?
But the Lord Himself persuades the father to have confidence. For it
goes on, As soon as Jesus heard the word which was spoken, he said to
the ruler of the synagogue, Be not afraid; only believe.
AUG. It is not said that he assented to his friends who brought the
tidings and wished to prevent the Master from coming, so that our
Lord's saying, Fear not, only believe, is not a rebuke for his want of
faith, but was intended to strengthen the belief which he had already.
But if the Evangelist had related, that the ruler of the synagogue
joined the friends who came from his house, in saying that Jesus should
not be troubled, the words which Matthew relates him to have said,
namely, that the damsel was dead, would then have been contrary to what
was in his mind.
It goes on, And he suffered no man to follow him, save Peter, and James, and John the brother of James.
THEOPHYL. For Christ in His lowliness would not do any thing for
display. It goes on, And he comes to the house of the ruler of the
synagogue, and sees the tumult, and them that wept and wailed greatly.
PSEUD-CHRYS. But He Himself commands them not to wail, as if the damsel
was not dead, but sleeping; wherefore it says, And when he was come in,
he said to them, Why make you this ado, and weep? the damsel is not
dead, but sleeps.
PSEUDO-JEROME; It was told the ruler of the synagogue, Your daughter is
dead. But Jesus said to him, She is not dead, but sleeps. Both are
true, for the meaning is, She is dead to you, but to Me she is asleep.
BEDE; For to men she was dead, who were unable to raise her up; but to
God she was asleep, in whose purpose both the soul was living, and the
flesh was resting, to raise again. Whence it became a custom amongst
Christians, that the dead, who, they doubt not, will rise again, should
be said to sleep. It goes on, And they laughed him to scorn.
THEOPHYL. But they laugh at Him, as if unable to do anything farther;
and in this He convicts them of bearing witness involuntarily, that she
was really dead whom He raised up, and therefore, that it would be a
miracle if He raised her.
BEDE; Because they chose rather to laugh at than to believe in this
saying concerning her resurrection, they are deservedly excluded from
the place, as unworthy to witness His power in raising her, and the
mystery of her rising; wherefore it goes on, But when he had put them
all out, he takes the father and the mother of the damsel, and them
that were with him, and enters in where the damsel was lying.
CHRYS. Or else, to take away all display, He suffered not all to he
with Him; that, however He might leave behind Him witnesses of His
divine power, He chose His three chief disciples and the father and
mother of the damsel, as being necessary above all. And He restores
life to the damsel both by His hand, and by word of mouth. Wherefore it
says, And he took the damsel by the hand, and said unto her, Talitha
cumi; which is, being interpreted, Damsel, I say unto you, Arise.
For the hand of Jesus, having a quickening power, quickens the dead
body, and His voice raises her as she is lying; wherefore it follows,
And straightway the damsel arose and walked.
JEROME; Some one may accuse the Evangelist of a falsehood in his
explanation, in that he has added, I say to you, when in Hebrew,
Talitha cumi only means, Damsel, arise; but He adds, I say unto thee,
Arise, to express that His meaning was to call and command her. It goes
on, For she was of the age of twelve years.
GLOSS. The Evangelist added this, to show that she was of an age to
walk. By her walking she is shown to have been not only raised up but
also perfectly cured. It continues, And they were astonished with a
great astonishment.
CHRYS. To show that He had raised her really, and not only to the eve of fancy
BEDE; Mystically; the woman was cured of a bloody flux, and immediately
after the daughter of the ruler of the synagogue is reported to be
dead, because as soon as the Church of the Gentiles is washed from the
stain of vice, and called daughter by the merits of her faith, at once
the synagogue is broken up on account of its zealous treachery and
envy; treachery, because it did not choose to believe in Christ; envy,
because it was vexed at the faith of the Church. What the messengers
told the ruler of the synagogue, Why trouble you the Master anymore, is
said by those in this day who, seeing the state of the synagogue,
deserted by God, believe that it cannot be restored, and therefore
think that we are not to pray that it should he restored. But if the
ruler of the synagogue, that is, the assembly of the teachers of the
Law, determine to believe, the synagogue also, which is subjected to
them, will be saved.
Further, because the synagogue lost the joy of having Christ to dwell
in it, as its faithlessness deserved, it lies dead as it were, amongst
persons weeping and wailing. Again, our Lord raised the damsel by
taking hold of her hand, because the hands of the Jews, which are full
of blood, must first be cleansed, else the synagogue, which is dead,
cannot rise again. But in the woman with the bloody flux, and the
raising of the damsel, is shown the salvation of the human race, which
was so ordered by the Lord, that first some from Judea, then the
fullness of the Gentiles, might come in, and so all Israel might be
saved. Again, the damsel was twelve years old, and the woman had
suffered for twelve years, because the sinning of unbelievers was
contemporary with the beginning of the faith of believers; wherefore it
is said, Abraham believed on God, and it was counted to him for
righteousness.
GREG. Morally again, our Redeemer raised the damsel in the house, the
young man without the gate, Lazarus in the tomb; he still lies dead in
the house, whose sin is concealed; he is carried without the gate,
whose sin has broken forth into the madness of an open deed; he lies
crushed under the mound of the tomb, who in the commission of sin, lies
powerless beneath the weight of habit.
BEDE; And we may remark, that lighter and daily errors may he cured by
the remedy of a lighter penance. Wherefore the Lord raises the damsel,
lying in the inner chamber with a very easy cry, saying, Damsel, arise;
but that he who had been four days dead might quit the prison of the
tomb, he groaned in spirit, He was troubled, He shed tears. In
proportion, then, as the death of the soul presses the more heavily, so
much the more ardently must the fervor of the penitent press forward.
But this too must be observed, that a public crime requires a public
reparation; wherefore Lazarus, when called from the sepulcher, was
placed before the eyes of the people: but slight sins require to be
washed out by a secret penance, wherefore the damsel lying in the house
is raised up before few witnesses, and those are desired to tell no
man. The crowd also is cast out before the damsel is raised; for if a
crowd of worldly thoughts be not first cast out from the hidden parts
of the heart, the soul, which lies dead within, cannot rise. Well too
did she arise and walk, for the soul, raised from sin, ought not only
to rise from the filth of its crimes, but also to make advances in good
works, and soon it is necessary that it should be filled with heavenly
bread, that at is, made partaker of the Divine Word, and of the Altar.
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