catena aurea matthew 17
1. And after six days Jesus took Peter, James, and John his brother, and brought them up to a high mountain apart,
2. And was transfigured before them: and his face did shine as the sun, and his raiment was white as the light.
3. And, behold, there appeared to them Moses and Elias talking with him.
4. Then answered Peter, and said to Jesus, Lord, it is good for us to
be here: if you will, let us make here three tabernacles; one for you,
and one for Moses, and one for Elias.
REMIG; In this Transfiguration undergone on the mount, the Lord
fulfilled within six days the promise made to His disciples, that they
should have a sight of His glory; as it is said, And after six days he
took Peter, and James, and John his brother.
JEROME; It is made a question how it could be after six days that He
took them, when Luke says eight. The answer is easy, that here one
reckoned only the intervening days, there the first and the last are
also added.
CHRYS; He does not take them up immediately upon the promise being
made, but six days after, for this reason, that the other disciples
might not be touched with any human passion, as a feeling of jealousy;
or else that during these days' space, those disciples who were to be
taken up might become kindled with a more eager desire.
RABAN; Justly was it after six days that He showed His glory, because after six ages is to be the resurrection.
ORIGEN; Or because in six days this whole visible world was made; so he
who is above all the things of this world, may ascend into the high
mountain, and there see the glory of the Word of God.
CHRYS; He took these three because He set them before others. But
observe how Matthew does not conceal who were preferred to himself; the
like does John also when he records the preeminent praise given to
Peter. For the company of Apostles was free from jealousy and vain
glory.
HILARY; In the three thus taken up with Him, the election of people out of the three stocks of Sem, Cam, and Japhet is figured.
RABAN; Or; He took only three disciples with Him, because many are
called but few chosen. Or because they who now hold in incorrupt mind
the faith of the Holy Trinity, shall then joy in the everlasting
beholding of it.
REMIG; When the Lord was about to show His disciples the glory of His
brightness, He led them into the mountain, as it follows, And he took
them up into the high mountain apart. Herein teaching, that it is
necessary for all who seek to contemplate God, that they should not
grovel in weak pleasures, but by love of things above should be ever
raising themselves towards heavenly things; and to show His disciples
that they should not look for the glory of the divine brightness in the
gulf of the present world, but in the kingdom of the heavenly
blessedness. He leads them apart because the saints are separated from
the wicked by their whole soul and devotion of their faith, and shall
be utterly separated in the future; or because many are called but few
chosen. It follows, And he was transfigured before them.
JEROME; Such as He is to be in the time of the Judgment, such was He
now seen of the Apostles. Let none suppose that He lost His former form
and lineaments, or laid aside His bodily reality, taking upon Him a
spiritual or ethereal Body. How His transfiguration was accomplished,
the Evangelist shows, saying, And his face did shine as the sun, and
his raiment became white as snow. For that His face is said to shine,
and His raiment described to become white, does not take away
substance, but confer glory. In truth, the Lord was transformed into
that glory in which He shall hereafter come in His Kingdom. The
transformation enhanced the brightness, but did not destroy the
countenance, although the body were spiritual; whence also His raiment
was changed and became white to such a degree, as in the expression of
another Evangelist, no fuller on earth can whiten them. But all this is
the property of matter, and is the subject of the touch, not of spirit
and ethereal, an illusion upon the sight only beheld in phantasm..
REMIG; If then the face of the Lord shone as the sun, and the saints
shall shine as the sun, are then the brightness of the Lord and the
brightness of His servants to be equal? By no means. But forasmuch as
nothing is known more bright than the sun, therefore to give some
illustration of the future resurrection, it is expressed to us that the
brightness of the Lord's countenance, and the brightness of the
righteous, shall be as the sun.
ORIGEN; Mystically; When any one has passed the six days according as
we have said, he beholds Jesus transfigured before the eyes of his
heart. For the Word of God has various forms, appearing to each man
according as He knows that it will be expedient for him; and He shows
Himself to none in a manner beyond his capacity; whence he says not
simply, He was transfigured but, before them. For Jesus, in the
Gospels, is merely understood by those who do not mount by means of
exalting works and words upon the high mountain of wisdom; but to them
that do mount up thus, He is no longer known according to the flesh,
but is understood to be God the Word. Before these then Jesus is
transfigured, and not before those who live sunk in worldly
conversation.
But these, before whom He is transfigured, have been made sons of God,
and He is shown to them as the Sun of righteousness. His raiment is
made white as the light, that is, the words and sayings of the Gospels
with which Jesus is clothed according to those things which were spoken
of Him by the Apostles. Gross. Or; the raiment of Christ shadows out
the saints, of whom Esaias says, With all these shall you clothe you as
with a garment; and they are likened to snow because they shall be
white with virtues, and all the heat of vices shall be put far away
from them.
It follows, And there appeared to them Moses and Elias talking with them.
CHRYS; There are many reasons why these should appear. The first is
this; because the multitudes said He was Elias, or Jeremiah, or one of
the Prophets, He here brings with Him the chief of the Prophets, that
hence at least may be seen the difference between the servants and
their Lord. Another reason is this, because the Jews were ever charging
Jesus with being a transgressor of the Law and blasphemer, and usurping
to Himself the glory of the Father, that He might prove Himself
guiltless of both charges, He brings forward those who were eminent in
both particulars; Moses, who gave the Law, and Elias, who was jealous
for the glory of God. Another reason is, that they might learn that He
has the power of life and death; by producing Moses, who was dead, and
Elias, who had not yet experienced death.
A further reason also the Evangelist discovers, that He might show the
glory of His cross, and thus soothe Peter, and the other disciples, who
were fearing His death; for they talked, as another Evangelist
declares, of His decease which He should accomplish at Jerusalem.
Wherefore He brings forward those who had exposed themselves to death
for God's pleasure, and for the people that believed; for both had
willingly stood before tyrants, Moses before Pharaoh, Elias before
Ahab. Lastly, also, He brings them forward, that the disciples should
emulate their privileges, and be meek as Moses, and zealous as Elias.
HILARY; Also that Moses and Elias only out of the whole number of the
saints stood with Christ, means, that Christ, in His kingdom, is
between the Law and the Prophets; for He shall judge Israel in the
presence of the same by whom He was preached to them.
ORIGEN; However, if any man discerns a spiritual sense in the Law
agreeing with the teaching of Jesus, and in the Prophets finds the
hidden wisdom of Christ, he beholds Moses and Elias in the same glory
with Jesus.
JEROME; It is to be remembered also, that when the Scribes and
Pharisees asked signs from heaven, He would not give any; but now, to
increase the Apostles' faith, He gives a sign; Elias descends from
heaven, whither he was gone up, and Moses arises from hell; as Ahaz is
bidden by Esaias to ask him a sign in the heaven above, or in the depth
beneath.
CHRYS; Hereupon follows what the warm Peter spoke, Peter answered and
said to Jesus, Lord, it is good for us to be here. Because he had heard
that He must go up to Jerusalem, he yet fears for Christ; but after his
rebuke he dares not again say, Be propitious to yourself, Lord, but
suggests the same covertly under other guise. For seeing in this place
great quietness and solitude, he thought that this would be a fit place
to take up their abode in, saying, Lord, it is good for us to be here.
And he sought to remain here ever, therefore he proposes the
tabernacles, If you will, let us make here three tabernacles. For he
concluded if he should do this, Christ would not go up to Jerusalem,
and if He should not go up to Jerusalem, He should not die, for he knew
that there the Scribes laid wait for Him.
REMIG; Otherwise; at this view of the majesty of the Lord, and His two
servants, Peter was so delighted, that, forgetting every thing else in
the world, he would abide here for ever. But if Peter was then so fired
with admiration, what ravishment will it not be to behold the King in
His proper beauty, and to mingle in the choir of the Angels, and of all
the saints? In that Peter says, Lord, if you will, he shows the
submission of a dutiful and obedient servant.
JEROME; Yet art you wrong, Peter, and as another Evangelist says, knows
not what you say. Think not of three tabernacles, when there is but one
tabernacle of the Gospel in which both Law and Prophets are to be
repeated. But if you wilt have three tabernacles, set not the servants
equal with their Lord, but make three tabernacles, yea make one for the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, that They whose divinity is one, may have
but one tabernacle, in your bosom.
REMIG; He was wrong moreover, in desiring that the kingdom of the elect
should be set up on earth, when the Lord had promised to give it in
heaven. He was wrong also in forgetting that himself and his fellows
were mortal, and in desiring to come to eternal felicity without taste
of death.
RABAN; Also in supposing that tabernacles were to be built for
conversation in heaven, in which houses are not needed, as it is
written in the Apocalypse, I saw not any temple therein.
5. While he yet spoke, behold, a bright cloud overshadowed them: and
behold a voice out of the cloud, which said, This is my beloved Son, in
whom I am well pleased; hear you him.
6. And when the disciples heard it, they fell on their face, and were sore afraid.
7. And Jesus came and touched them, and said, Arise, and be not afraid.
8. And when they had lifted up their eyes, they saw no man, save Jesus only.
9. And as they came down from the mountain, Jesus charged them, saying,
Tell the vision to no man, until the Son of man be risen again from the
dead.
JEROME; While they thought only of an earthly tabernacle of boughs or
tents, they are overshadowed by the covering of a bright cloud; While
he yet spoke, there came a bright cloud and overshadowed them.
CHRYS; When the Lord threatens, He shows a dark cloud, as on Sinai; but
here where He sought not to terrify but to teach, there appeared a
bright cloud.
ORIGEN; The bright cloud overshadowing the Saints is the Power of the
Father, or perhaps the Holy Spirit; or I may also venture to call the
Savior that bright cloud which overshadows the Gospel, the Law, and the
Prophets, as they understand who can behold His light in all these
three.
JEROME; Forasmuch as Peter had asked unwisely, he deserves not any
answer; but the Father makes answer for the Son, that the Lord's word
might be fulfilled, He that sent me, he bears witness of me.
CHRYS; Neither Moses, nor Elias speak, but the Father greater than all
sends a voice out of the cloud, that the disciples might believe that
this voice was from God. For God has ordinarily shown Himself in a
cloud, as it is written, Clouds and darkness are round about Him; and
this is what is said, Behold, a voice out of the cloud.
JEROME; The voice of the Father is heard speaking from heaven, giving
testimony to the Son, and teaching Peter the truth, taking away his
error, and through Peter the other disciples also; whence he proceeds,
This is my beloved Son. For Him make the tabernacle, Him obey; this is
the Son, they are but servants; and they also ought as you to make
ready a tabernacle for the Lord in the inmost parts of their heart.
CHRYS. Fear not then, Peter; for if God is mighty, it is manifest that
the Son is also mighty; wherefore if He is loved, fear not you; for
none forsakes Him whom He loves; nor cost you love Him equally with the
Father. Neither does He love Him merely because He begot Him, but
because He is of one will with Himself; as it follows, In whom I am
well pleased; which is to say, in whom I rest content, whom I accept,
for all things of the Father He performs with care, and His will is one
with the Father; so if He will to be crucified, do not then speak
against it.
HILARY; This is the Son, this the Beloved, this the Accepted; and He it
is who is to be heard, as the voice out of the cloud signifies, saying,
Hear you Him. For He is a fit teacher of doing the things He has done,
who has given the weight of His own example to the loss of the world,
the joy of the cross, the death of the body, and after that the glory
of the heavenly kingdom.
REMIG; He says therefore, Hear you Him, as much as to say, Let the
shadow of the Law be past, and the types of the Prophets, and follow
you the one shining light of the Gospel. Or He says, Hear you Him, to
show that it was He whom Moses had foretold, The Lord your God shall
raise up a Prophet to you of your brethren like to me, Him shall you
hear. Thus the Lord had witnesses on all sides; from heaven the voice
of the Father, Elias out of Paradise, Moses out of Hades, the Apostles
from among men, that at the name of Jesus every thing should bow the
knee, of things in heaven, things on earth, and things beneath.
ORIGEN; The voice out of the cloud speaks either to Moses or Elias, who
desired to see the Son of God, and to hear Him; or it is for the
teaching of the Apostles.
GLOSS; It is to be observed, that the mystery of the second
regeneration, that, to wit, which shall be in the resurrection, when
the flesh shall be raised again, agrees well with the mystery of the
first which is in baptism, when the soul is raised again. For in the
baptism of Christ is shown the working of the whole Trinity; there was
the Son incarnate, the Holy Ghost appearing in the figure of a dove,
and the Father made known by the voice. In like manner in the
transfiguration, which is the sacrament of the second regeneration, the
whole Trinity appeared; the Father in the voice, the Son in the man,
and the Holy Spirit in the cloud. It is made a question how the Holy
Spirit was shown there in the dove, here in the cloud. Because it is
His manner to mark His gifts by specific outward forms. And the gift of
baptism is innocence, which is denoted by the bird of purity. But as in
the resurrection, He is to give splendor and refreshment, therefore in
the cloud are denoted both the refreshment and the brightness of the
rising bodies. It follows, And when the disciples heard it, they fell
on their faces, and feared greatly.
JEROME; Their cause of terror is threefold. Because they knew that they
had done amiss; or because the bright cloud had covered them; or
because they had heard the voice of God the Father speaking; for human
frailty cannot endure to look upon so great glory, and falls to the
earth trembling through both soul and body. And by how much higher any
one has aimed, by so much lower will be his fall, if he shall be
ignorant of his own measure.
REMIG; Whereas the holy Apostles fell upon their faces, that was a
proof of their sanctity, for the saints are always described to fall
upon their faces, but the wicked to fall backwards.
CHRYS; But when before in Christ's baptism, such a voice came from
heaven, yet none of the multitude then present suffered any thing of
this kind, how is it that the disciples on the mount fell prostrate?
Because in truth their solicitude was much, the height and loneliness
of the spot great, and the transfiguration itself attended with
terrors, the clear light and the spreading cloud; all these things
together wrought to terrify them.
JEROME; And whereas they were laid down, and could not raise themselves
again, He approaches them, touches them gently, that by His touch their
fear might be banished, and their unnerved limbs gain strength; And
Jesus drew near, and touched them. But He further added His word to His
hand, And said to them, Arise, fear not. He first banishes their fear,
that He may after impart teaching.
It follows, And when they lifted up their eyes, they saw no man, save
Jesus on/y; which was done with good reason; for had Moses and Elias
continued with the Lord, it might have seemed uncertain to which in
particular the witness of the Father was borne. Also they see Jesus
standing after the cloud has been removed, and Moses and Elias
disappeared, because after the shadow of the Law and Prophets has
departed, both are found in the Gospel.
It follows; And as they came down from the mount, Jesus charged them,
saying, Tell no man this vision, until the Son of Man shall rise from
the dead. He will not be preached among the people, lest the marvel of
the thing should seem incredible, and lest the cross following after so
great glory should cause offense.
REMIG; Or, because if His majesty should be published among the people,
they should hinder the dispensation of His passion, by resistance to
the chief Priests; and thus the redemption of the human race should
suffer impediment.
HILARY; He enjoins silence respecting what they had seen, for this
reason, that when they should be filled with the Holy Spirit, they
should then become witnesses of these spiritual deeds.
10. And his disciples asked him, saying, Why then say the Scribes that Elias must first come?
11. And Jesus answered and said to them, Elias truly shall first come, and restore all things.
12. But I say to you, That Elias is come already, and they knew him
not, but have done to him whatsoever they would. Likewise shall also
the Son of man suffer of them.
13. Then the disciples understood that he spoke to them of John the Baptist.
JEROME; It was a tradition of the Pharisees following the Prophet
Malachi, that Elias should come before the coming of the Savior, and
bring back the heart of the fathers to the children, and the children
to the fathers, and restore all things to their ancient state. The
disciples then consider that this transformation which they had seen in
the mount was His coming in glory, and therefore it is said, And his
disciples asked, him, saying, How then say the Scribes that Elias must
first come? As though they had said, If you have already come in glory,
how is it that your forerunner appears not yet? And this they say
chiefly because they see that Elias is departed again.
CHRYS; The disciples knew not of the coming of Elias out of the
Scriptures; but the Scribes made it known to them; and this report was
current among the ignorant multitude, as was that concerning Christ.
Yet the Scribes did not explain the coming of Christ and of Elias, as
they ought to have done. For the Scriptures speak of two comings of
Christ; that which has taken place, and that which is yet to be. But
the Scribes, blinding the people, spoke to them only of His second
coming, and said, If this be the Christ, then should Elias have come
before Him. Christ thus resolves the difficulty, He answered and said,
Elias truly shall come, and restore all things; but I say to you, that
Elias has already come. Think not that here is a contradiction in His
speech, if He first say that Elias shall come, and then that he is
come. For when He says that Elias shall come and restore all things, He
speaks of Elias himself in his own proper person, who indeed shall
restore all things, in that he shall correct the unbelief of the Jews,
who shall then be to be found; and that is the turning the hearts of
the fathers to the children, that is, the hearts of the Jews to the
Apostles.
AUG; Or; He shall restore all things, that is those whom the
persecution of Antichrist shall have overthrown; as He Himself should
restore by His death those whom He ought.
CHRYS; But if there shall so much good arise out of the presence of
Elias, why did He not send him at that time? We shall say, Because they
then held Christ to be Elias, and yet believed not on Him. But they
shall hereafter believe Elias, because when he shall come after so
great expectation announcing Jesus, they will more readily receive what
shall be taught by Him. But when He says that Elias is come already, He
calls John the Baptist Elias from the resemblance of their ministry;
for as Elias shall be the forerunner of His second coming, so was John
the forerunner of His first. And He calls John Elias, to show that His
first coming was agreeable to the Old Testament, and to prophecy.
JEROME; He then who at the Savior's second coming should come in the
truth of His body, come now in John in power and spirit. It follows,
And they knew him not, but did to him whatsoever they would, that is,
despised and beheaded him.
HILARY; As he announced the Lord's coming, so he was also to foreshow
His passion by the example of his own suffering and wrong; whence it
follows, So also shall the Son of Man suffer of them.
CHRYS; He takes the opportunity from the passion of John to refer to His own passion, thus giving them much comfort.
JEROME; It is inquire how, seeing that Herod and Herodias were they
that killed John, it can be said that Jesus also was crucified by them,
when we read that He was put to death by the Scribes and Pharisees? It
must be answered briefly, that the party of the Pharisees consented to
the death of John, and that in the Lord's crucifixion Herod united his
approval, when having mocked and set Him at nothing, he sent Him back
to Pilate, that he should crucify Him.
RABAN; From the mention of His own passion which the Lord had often
foretold to them, and from that of His forerunner, which they beheld
already accomplished, the disciples perceived that John was set forth
to them under the name of Elias; whence it follows; Then understood the
disciples that he spoke to them of John the Baptist.
ORIGEN; That He says of John, Elias is already come, is not to be
understood of the soul of Elias, that we fall not into the doctrine of
metempsychosis, which is foreign to the truth of Church doctrine, but,
as the Angel had foretold, he came in the spirit and power of Elias.
14. And when they were come to the multitude, there came to him a certain man, kneeling down to him, and saying,
15. Lord, have mercy on my son: for he is lunatic, and sore vexed: for often he falls into the fire, and often into the water.
16. And I brought him to your disciples, and they could not cure him.
17. Then Jesus answered and said, O faithless and perverse generation,
how long shall I be with you? how long shall I suffer you? bring him
hither to me.
18. And Jesus rebuked the devil; and he departed out of him: and the child was cured from that very hour.
ORIGEN; Peter, anxious for such desirable life, and preferring his own
benefit to that of many, had said, It is good for us to be here. But
since charity seeks not her own, Jesus did not this which seemed good
to Peter, but descended to the multitude, as it were from the high
mount of His divinity, that He might be of use to such as could not
ascend because of the weakness of their souls; whence it is said, And
when he was come to the multitude; for if He had not gone to the
multitude with His elect disciples, there would not have come near to
Him the man of whom it is added, There came to him a man kneeling down,
and, saying, Lord, have mercy on my son.
Consider here, that sometimes those that are themselves the sufferers
believe and entreat for their own healing, sometimes others for them,
as he who kneels before Him praying for his son, and sometimes the
Savior heals of Himself unasked by any. First, let us see what this
means that follows, For he is lunatic, and sorely vexed. Let the
physicians talk as they wish; for they think it no unclean spirit, but
some bodily disorder, and say, that the humors in the head are governed
in their motions by sympathy with the phases of the moon, whose light
is of the nature of humors. But we who believe the Gospel say that it
is an unclean spirit that works such disorders in men. The spirit
observes the moon's changes, that it may cheat men into the belief that
the moon is the cause of their sufferings, and so prove God's creation
to be evil; as other demons lay wait for men following the times and
courses of the stars, that they may speak wickedness in high places,
calling some stars malignant, others benign; whereas no star was made
by God that it should produce evil. In this that is added, For often he
falls into the fire, and often into the water,
CHRYS; is to be noted, that were not man fortified here by Providence,
he would long since have perished; for the demon who cast him into the
fire, and into the water, would have killed him outright, had God not
restrained him.
JEROME; In saying, And I brought him to your disciples, and they could
not heal him, he covertly accuses the Apostles, whereas that a cure is
impossible is sometimes the effect not of want of power in those that
undertake it, but of want of faith in those that are to be healed.
CHRYS; See herein also his folly, in that before the multitude he
appeals to Jesus against His disciples. But He clears them from shame,
imputing their failure to the patient himself; for many things show
that he was weak in faith. But He addresses His reproof not to the man
singly, that He may not trouble him, but to the Jews in general. For
many of those present, it is likely, had improper thoughts concerning
the disciples, and therefore it follows, Jesus answered and said, O
faithless and perverse generation, how long shall I be with you, how
long shall I suffer you? His How long shall I be with you? shows that
death was desired by Him, and that He longed for His withdrawal.
REMIG; It may be known also, that not now for the first time, but of a
long time, the Lord had borne the Jews' stubbornness, whence He says,
How long shall I suffer you? because I have now a long while endured
your iniquities, and you are unworthy of My presence.
ORIGEN; Or; Because the disciples could not heal him as being weak in
faith, He said to them, O faithless generation, adding perverse, to
show that their perverseness had introduced evil beyond their nature.
But I suppose, that because of the perverseness of the whole human
race, as it were oppressed with their evil nature, He said, How long
shall I be with you?
JEROME; Not that we must think that He was overcome by weariness of
them, and that The meek and gentle broke out into words of wrath, but
as a physician who might see the sick man acting against his
injunctions, would say, How long shall I frequent your chamber? How
long throw away the exercise of my skill, while I prescribe one thing,
and you do another? That it is the sin, and not the man with whom He is
angry, and that in the person of this one man He convicts the Jews of
unbelief, is clear from what He adds, Bring him to me.
CHRYS; When He had vindicated His disciples, He leads the boy's father
to a cheering hope of believing that he shall be delivered out of this
evil; and that the father might be led to believe the miracle that was
coming, seeing the demon was disturbed even when the child was only
called;
JEROME; He rebuked him, that is, not the sufferer, but the demon.
REMIG; In which deed He left an example to preachers to attack sins, but to assist men.
JEROME; Or, His reproof was to the child, because for his sins he had been seized on by the demon.
RABAN; The lunatic is figuratively one who is hurried into fresh vices
every hour, one while is cast into the fire, with which the hearts of
the adulterers burn; or again into the waters of pleasures or lusts,
which yet have not strength to quench love.
AUG. Or the fire pertains to anger, which aims upwards, water to the lusts of the flesh.
ORIGEN; Of the changefulness of the sinner it is said, The fool changes
as the moon. We may see sometimes that an impulse towards good works
comes over such, when, lo! again as by a sudden seizure of a spirit
they are laid hold of by their passions, and fall from that good state
in which they were supposed to stand. Perhaps his father stands for the
Angel to whom was allotted the care of this lunatic, praying the
Physician of souls, that He would set free his son, who could not be
delivered from his suffering by the simple word of Christ's disciples,
because as a deaf person he cannot receive their instruction, and
therefore he needs Christ's word, that henceforth he may not act
without reason.
19. Then came the disciples to Jesus apart, and said, Why could not we cast him out?
20. And Jesus said to them, Because of your unbelief: for I say to you,
If you have faith as a grain of mustard seed, you shall say to this
mountain, Remove hence to yonder place; and it shall remove; and
nothing shall be impossible to you.
21. This kind goes not out except by prayer and fasting.
CHRYS; The disciples had received from the Lord the power over unclean
spirits, and when they could not heal the demoniac thus brought to
them, they seem to have had misgivings lest they had forfeited the
grace once given to them; hence their question. And they ask it apart,
not out of shame, but because of the unspeakable matter of which they
were to ask.
Jesus said to them, Because of your unbelief.
HILARY; The Apostles had believed, yet their faith was imperfect; while
the Lord tarried in the mount, and they abode below with the multitude,
their faith had become stagnant.
CHRYS; Whence it is plain that the disciples' faith was grown weak, yet
not all, for those pillars were there, Peter, and James, and John.
JEROME; This is what the Lord says in another place, Whatever you shall
ask in my name believing, you shall receive. Therefore when we receive
not, it is not the weakness of Him that gives, but the fault of them
that ask.
CHRYS; But it is to be known, that, as often the faith of him that
draws near to receive supplies the miraculous virtue, so often the
power of those that work the miracle is sufficient even without the
faith of those who sought to receive. Cornelius and his house hold, by
their faith, attracted to them the grace of the Holy Spirit; but the
dead man who was cast into the sepulcher of Elisha, was revived solely
by virtue of the holy body. It happened that the disciples were then
weak in faith; for indeed they were but in an imperfect condition
before the cross; wherefore He here tells them, that faith is the mean
of miracles, I say to you, if you shall have faith as a grain of
mustard-seed, you shall say to this mountain, Remove hence, and it
shall remove.
JEROME; Some think that the faith that is compared to a grain of
mustard-seed is a little faith, whereas the Apostle says, If I shall
have such faith that I could remove mountains. The faith therefore
which is compared to a grain of mustard-seed is a great faith.
GREG; The mustard-seed, unless it be bruised, does not give out its
qualities, so if persecution fall upon a holy man, straightway what had
seemed weak and contemptible in him is roused into the heat and fervor
of virtue.
ORIGEN; Or, all faith is likened to a grain of mustard-seed, because
faith is looked on with contempt by men, and shows as something poor
and mean; but when a seed of this kind lights upon a good heart as its
soil, it becomes a great tree. The weakness of this lunatic's faith is
yet so great, and Christ is so strong to head him amidst all his evils,
that He likens it to a mountain which cannot be cast out but by the
whole faith of him who desires to heal afflictions of this sort.
CHRYS; So He not only promises the removal of mountains, but goes beyond, saying, And nothing shall be impossible to you.
RABAN; For faith gives our minds such a capacity for the heavenly
gifts, that whatsoever we will we may easily obtain from a faithful
Master.
CHRYS; If you shall ask, Where did the Apostles remove mountains? I
answer, that they did greater things, bringing many dead to life. It is
told also of some saints, who came after the Apostles, that they have
in urgent necessity removed mountains . But if mountains were not
removed in the Apostles' time, this was not because they could not, but
because they would not, there being no pressing occasion. And the Lord
said not that they should do this thing, but that they should have
power to do it. Yet it is likely that they did do this, but that it is
not written, for indeed not all the miracles that they wrought are
written.
JEROME; Or; the mountain is not said of that which we see with the eyes
of the body, but signified that spirit which was removed by the Lord
out of the lunatic, who is said by the Prophet to be the corrupter of
the whole earth.
GLOSS; So that the sense then is, you shall say to this mountain, that
is to the proud devil, Remove hence, that is from the possessed body
into the sea, that is into the depths of hell, and it shall remove, and
nothing shall be impossible to you, that is, no sickness shall be
incurable.
AUG; Otherwise; That the disciples in working their miracles should not
be lifted up with pride, they are warned rather by the humbleness of
their faith, as by a grain of mustard-seed, to take care that they
remove all pride of earth, which is signified by the mountain in this
place.
RABAN; But while He teaches the Apostles flow the demon ought to be
cast out, He instructs all in regulation of life; that we may all know
that all the heavier infliction, whether of unclean spirits, or
temptations of men, may be removed by fasts and prayers; and that the
wrath also of the Lord may be appeased by this remedy alone; whence he
adds, This kind is not cast out except by prayer and fasting.
CHRYS; And this He says not of lunatics in particular, but of the whole
class of demons. For fast endues with great wisdom, makes a man as an
Angel from heaven, and beats down the unseen powers of evil. But there
is need of prayer as even still more important. And who prays as he
ought, and fasts, had need of little more, and so is not covetous, but
ready to almsgiving. For he who fasts, is light and active, and prays
wakefully, and quenches his evil lusts, makes God propitious, and
humbles his proud stomach. And he who prays with his fasting, has two
wings, lighter than the winds themselves. For he is not heavy and
wandering in his prayers, (as is the case with many,) but his zeal is
as the warmth of fire, and his constancy as the firmness of the earth.
Such an one is most able to contend with demons, for there is nothing
more powerful than a man who prays properly. But if your health be too
weak for strict fast, yet is it not for prayer, and if you cannot fast,
you can abstain from indulgences. And this is not a little, and not
very different from fast.
ORIGEN; If then we shall ever be required to be employed in the healing
of those who are suffering any thing of this sort, we shall not adjure
them, nor ask them questions, nor even speak, as though the unclean
spirit could hear us, but by our fasting and our prayers drive away the
evil spirits.
GLOSS; Or; This class of demons, that is the variety of carnal
pleasures, is not overcome unless the spirit be strengthened by prayer,
and the flesh enfeebled by fast.
REMIG; Or, fasting is here understood generally as abstinence not from
food only, but from all carnal allurements, and sinful passions. In
like manner prayer is to be understood in general as consisting in
pious and good acts, concerning which the Apostle speaks, Pray without
ceasing.
22. And while they abode in Galilee, Jesus said to them, The Son of man shall be betrayed into the hands of men.
23. And they shall kill him, and the third day he shall be raised again. And they were exceeding sorry.
REMIG; The Lord often foretold to His disciples the mysteries of His
passion, in order that when they come to pass, they might be the
lighter to them from having been known beforehand.
ORIGEN; This seems to be so like a warning He had given above, that a
man might easily say that the Lord now repeated what He had said
before; yet is it not so; He had not before said that He must be
betrayed, but we hear now not only that He must be betrayed, but that
He must be betrayed into the hands of men. The Son of Man indeed was
delivered up by God the Father according to the Apostle, but different
powers gave him up into the hands of men.
JEROME; Thus does He ever mix the joyful and the grievous; if it
grieves them that He is to be put to death, they ought to be gladdened
when they hear, And shall rise again the third day.
CHRYS; For this is no long time that He speaks of continuing in death, when He says that He shall rise again on the third day.
ORIGEN; By this announcement of the Lord the disciples were made very
sorrowful, not attending to that He said, And shall rise again the
third day, nor considering what He must be to whom the space of three
days was enough to destroy death.
JEROME; That they were thus made exceeding sorrowful, came not of their
lack of faith; but out of their love of their Master they could not
endure to hear of any hurt or indignity for Him.
24. And when they were come to Capernaum, they that received tribute
money came to Peter, and said, Does not your master pay tribute?
25. He said, Yes. And when he was come into the house, Jesus prevented
him, saying, What think you, Simon? of whom do the kings of the earth
take custom or tribute? of their own children, or of strangers?
26. Peter said to him, Of strangers. Jesus said to him, Then are the children free.
27. Notwithstanding, lest we should offend them, go you to the sea, and
cast an hook, and take up the fish that first comes up; and when you
have opened his mouth, you shall find a piece of money: that take, and
give to them for me and you.
GLOSS; The disciples were exceeding sorrowful when they heard of the
Lord's passion, and therefore that none might ascribe His suffering to
compulsion, and not to a voluntary submission, he adds an incident
which instances Christ's power, and His submission; And when they were
come to Capernaum, there came to Peter those who received the
didrachma, and said to him, Does not your Master pay the didrachma?
HILARY; The Lord is called upon to pay the didrachma, (that is, two
denarii,) for this the Law had enjoined upon all Israel for the
redemption of their body and soul, and the use of those that served in
the temple.
CHRYS; For when God slew the firstborn of Egypt, He then accepted the
tribe of Levi for them. But because the numbers of this tribe were less
than the number of firstborn among the Jews, it was ordained that
redemption money should be paid for the number that came short; and
thence sprang the custom of paying this tax. Because then Christ was a
firstborn son, and Peter seemed to be the first among the disciples,
they came to him. And as it seems to me this was not demanded in every
district, they come to Christ in Capernaum, because that was considered
His native place.
JEROME; Or otherwise; From the time of Augustus Caesar, Judea was made
tributary, and all the inhabitants were registered, as Joseph with Mary
his kinswoman gave in His name at Bethlehem. Again, because the Lord
was brought up at Nazareth, which is a town of Galilee subject to
Capernaum, it is there that the tribute is asked of Him; but for that
His miracles were so great, those who collected it did not dare to ask
Himself, but make up to the disciple.
CHRYS; And him they address not with boldness, but courteously; for
they do not arraign, but ask a question, Does not your Master pay the
didrachma?
JEROME; Or, They inquire with malicious purpose whether He pays tribute, or resists Caesar's will.
CHRYS; What then does Peter say? He said, Yes. To these then he said
that He did pay, but to Christ he said not so, blushing perhaps to
speak of such matters.
GLOSS; Otherwise; Peter answered, Yea; meaning, yea, He does not pay.
And Peter sought to acquaint the Lord that the Herodians had demanded
tribute, but the Lord prevented him; as it follows, And when he had
entered into the house, Jesus prevented him, saying, Of whom do the
kings of the earth receive custom or tribute, (i.e. headmoney,) of
their children, or of strangers?
JEROME; Before any hint from Peter, the Lord puts the question to him,
that His disciples might not be offended at the demand of tribute, when
they see that He knows even those things that are done in His absence.
It follows, But he said, From strangers; Jesus said to him, Then are
the children free.
ORIGEN; This speech has a twofold meaning. First, that the children of
the kings of the earth are free with the kings of the earth; but
strangers, foreigners in the land, are not free, because of those that
oppress them, as the Egyptians did the children of Israel. The second
sense is; forasmuch as there be some who are strangers to the sons of
the kings of the earth, and are yet sons of God, therefore it is they
that abide in the words of Jesus; these are free, for they have known
the truth, and the truth has set them free from the service of sin: but
the sons of the kings of the earth are not free; for whoever does sin,
he is the servant of sin.
JEROME; But our Lord was the son of the king, both according to the
flesh, and according to the Spirit; whether as sprung of the seed of
David, or as the Word of the Almighty Father; therefore as the king's
son He owed no tribute.
AUG; For, said He, in every kingdom the children are free, that is, not
under tax. Much more therefore should they be free in any earthly
kingdom, who are children of that very kingdom under which are all the
kingdoms of the earth.
CHRYS; But this instance were brought to no purpose if He were not a
son. But some one may say, He is son indeed, but not an own son. But
then He were a stranger; and so this instance would not apply; for He
speaks only of own sons, distinct from whom He calls them strangers who
are actually born of parents. Mark how here also Christ certifies that
relationship which was revealed to Peter from God, you are Christ, the
Son of the living God.
JEROME; Howsoever free then He was, yet seeing He had taken to Him
lowliness of the flesh, He ought to fulfill all righteousness; whence
it follows, But that they should not be offended, go to the sea.
ORIGEN; We may hence gather as a consequence of this, that when any
come with justice demanding our earthly goods, it is the kings of the
earth that send them, to claim of us what is their own; and by His own
example the Lord forbids any offense to be given even to these, whether
that they should sin no more, or that they should be saved. For the Son
of God, who did no servile work, yet as having the form of a slave,
which He took on Him for man's sake, gave custom and tribute.
JEROME; I am at a loss what first to admire in this passage; whether
the foreknowledge, or the mighty power of the Savior. His
foreknowledge, in that He knew that a fish had a coin in its mouth, and
that that fish should be the first taken; His mighty power, if the coin
were created in the fish's mouth at His word, and if by His command
that which was to happen was ordered. Christ then, for His eminent
love, endured the cross, and paid tribute; how wretched we who are
called by the name of Christ, though we do nothing worthy of so great
dignity, yet in respect of His majesty, pay no tribute, but are exempt
from tax as the King's sons. But even in its literal import it edifies
the hearer to learn, that so great was the Lord's poverty, that He had
not whence to pay the tribute for Himself and His Apostle. Should any
object that Judas bore money in a bag, we shall answer, Jesus held it a
fraud to divert that which was the poor's to His own use, and left us
an example therein.
CHRYS; Or He does not direct it to be paid out of that they had at
hand, that He might show that He was Lord also of the sea and the fish.
GLOSS; Or because Jesus had not any image of Caesar, (for the prince of
this world had nothing in Him,) therefore, He furnished an image of
Caesar, not out of their own stock, but out of the sea. But He takes
not the coin into His own possession, that there should never be found
an image of Caesar upon the Image of the invisible God.
CHRYS; Observe also the wisdom of Christ; He neither refuses the
tribute, nor merely commands that it be paid; but first proves that He
is of right exempt, and then bids to give the money; the money was paid
to avoid offense to the collectors; the vindication of His exemption
was to avoid the offense to the disciples. Indeed in another place He
disregards the offense of the Pharisees, in disputing of meats;
teaching us herein to know the seasons in which we must attend to, and
those in which we must slight the thoughts of, those who are like to be
scandalized.
GREG; For we must cast about how, as far as we may without sin, to
avoid giving scandal to our neighbors. But if offense is taken from
truth, it is better that offense should come, though truth be forsaken.
CHRYS; As you wonder at Christ's power, so admire Peter's faith, who
was obedient in no easy matter. In reward of his faith he was joined
with his Lord in the payment. An abundant honor! You shall find a coin,
that take and give to them for you and for me.
GLOSS; For by custom every several man paid a didrachma for himself; now the coin is equal to two didrachmas.
ORIGEN; Mystically; In the field of comfort, (for so is Capernaum
expounded,) He comforts each one of His disciples, and pronounces him
to be a son and free, and gives him the power of taking the first fish,
that after His ascension Peter may have comfort over that which he has
caught.
HILARY; When Peter is instructed to take the first fish, it is shown
therein that he shall catch more than one. The blessed first martyr
Stephen was the first that came up, having in his mouth a coin, which
contained the didrachma of the new preaching, divided as two denarii,
for he preached as he beheld in his passion the glory of God, and
Christ the Lord.
JEROME; Or; That fish which was first taken is the first Adam, who is
set free by the second Adam; and that which is found in his mouth, that
is, in his confession, is given for Peter and for the Lord.
ORIGEN; And when you see any miser rebuked by some Peter who takes the
speech of his money out of his mouth, you may say that he is risen out
of the sea of covetousness to the hook of reason, and is caught and
saved by some Peter, who has taught him the truth, that he should
change his coin for the image of God, that is for the oracles of God.
JEROME; And beautifully is this very coin given for the tribute; but it
is divided; for Peter as for a sinner a ransom is to be paid, but the
Lord had not sin. Yet herein is shown the likeness of their flesh, when
the Lord and His servants are redeemed with the same price.
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