catena aurea matthew 19
1. At the same time came the disciples to Jesus, saying, Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven?
2. And Jesus called a little child to him, and set him in the midst of them,
3. And said, I say to you, Except you be converted, and become as
little children, you shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven.
4. Whoever therefore shall humble himself as this little child, the same is greatest in the kingdom of heaven.
5. And who shall receive one such little child in my name receive me.
6. But who shall offend one of these little ones which believe in me,
it were better for him that a millstone were hanged about his neck, and
that he were drowned in the depth of the sea.
JEROME; The disciples seeing one piece of money paid both for Peter and
the Lord, conceived from this equality of ransom that Peter was
preferred before all the rest of the Apostles.
CHRYS; Thus they suffered a human passion, which the Evangelist denotes
by saying, At the same time came the disciples to Jesus, saying, Who,
we pray you, is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven? Ashamed to show
the feeling which was working within, they do not say openly, Why have
you honored Peter above us? but they ask in general, Who is the
greatest; When in the transfiguration they saw three distinguished,
namely, Peter, James, and John, they had no such feeling, but now that
one is singled out for especial honor, then they are grieved. But do
you remember, first, that it was nothing in this world that they
sought; and, secondly, that they afterwards laid aside this feeling?
Even their failings are above us, whose inquiry is not, Who is the
greatest in the kingdom of heaven? but, Who is greatest in the kingdom
of the world.
ORIGEN; Herein we ought to be imitators of the disciples, that when any
question of doubt arises among us, and we find not how to settle it, we
should with one consent go to Jesus, Who is able to enlighten the
hearts of men to the explication of every perplexity. We shall also
consult some of the doctors, who are thought most eminent in the
Churches. But in that they asked this question, the disciples knew that
there was not an equality among the saints in the kingdom of heaven;
what they yet sought to learn was, how they were so, and lived as
greater and less. Or, from what the Lord had said above, they knew who
was the best and who was great; but out of many great, who was the
greatest, this was not clear to them.
JEROME; Jesus seeing their thoughts would heal their ambitious
strivings, by arousing an emulation in lowliness; whence it follows,
And Jesus calling a little child, set him in the midst of them.
CHRYS; He chose, I suppose, quite an infant, devoid of any of the passions.
JEROME; One whose tender age should express to them the innocence which
they should have. But truly He set Himself in the midst of them, a
little one who had come not to be ministered to, but to minister, that
He might be a pattern of holiness Others interpret the little one of
the Holy Spirit, whom He set in the hearts of His disciples, to change
their pride into humility. And he said, I say to you, Except you be
converted, and become as little children, you shall not enter into the
kingdom of heaven. He does not enjoin on the Apostles the age, but the
innocence of infants, which they have by virtue of their years, but to
which these might attain by striving; that they should be children in
malice, not in understanding. As though He had said, As this child,
whom I set before you as a pattern, is not obstinate in anger, when
injured does not bear it in mind, has no emotion at the sight of a fair
woman, does not think one thing while he speaks another; so you, unless
you have the like innocence and purity of mind, shall not be able to
enter into the kingdom of heaven.
HILARY; He calls infants all who believe through the hearing of faith;
for such follow their father, love their mother, know not to will that
which is evil, do not bear hate, or speak lies, trust what is told
them, and believe what they hear to be true. But the letter is thus
interpreted.
GLOSS; Except you be converted from this ambition and jealousy in which
you are at present, and become all of you as innocent and humble in
disposition as you are weak in your years, you shall not enter into the
kingdom of heaven; and since there is none other road to enter in, who
shall humble himself as this little child, the same is greatest in the
kingdom of heaven; for by how much a man is humble now, by so much
shall he be exalted in the kingdom of heaven.
REMIG; In the understanding of grace, or in ecclesiastical dignity, or at least in everlasting blessedness.
JEROME; Or otherwise; Who shall humble himself as this little child,
that is, who shall humble himself after My example, he shall enter into
the kingdom of heaven.
It follows, And who receive one such little one in my name, receive me.
CHRYS; Not only if you become such yourselves, but also if for My sake
you shall pay honor to other such, you receive reward; and as the
return for the honor you pay them, I entail upon you the kingdom. He
puts indeed what is far greater, Receive me.
JEROME; For whoever is such that he imitates Christ's humility and
innocence, Christ is received by him; and by way of caution, that the
Apostles should not think, when such are come to them, that it is to
themselves that the honor is paid, He adds, that they are to be
received not for their own desert, but in honor of their Master.
CHRYS; And to make this word the rather received, He subjoins a penalty
in what follows, Who offend one of these little ones, &c. as though
He had said, As those who for My sake honor one of these, have their
reward, so they who dishonor shall undergo the extreme punishment. And
marvel not that He calls an evil word an offense, for many of feeble
spirit are offended by only being despised.
JEROME; Observe that he who is offended is a little one, for the
greater hearts do not take offenses. And though it may be a general
declaration against all who scandalize any, yet from the connection of
the discourse it may be said specially to the Apostles; for in asking
who should be greatest in the kingdom of heaven, they seemed to be
contending for preeminence among themselves; and if they had persisted
in this fault, they might have scandalized those whom they called to
the faith, seeing the Apostles contending among themselves for the
preference.
ORIGEN; But how can he who has been converted, and become as a little
child, be yet liable to be scandalized? This may be thus explained.
Every one who believes in the Son of God, and walks after evangelic
acts, is converted and walks as a little child; but he who is not
converted that he may become as a child, it is impossible that he
should enter into the kingdom of heaven. But in every congregation of
believers, there are some only newly converted that they may become as
little children, but not yet made such; these are the little ones in
Christ, and these are they that receive offense.
JEROME; When it is said, It is better for him that a mill-stone be
hanged, about his neck, He speaks according to the custom of the
province ; for among the Jews this was the punishment of the greater
criminals, to drown them by a stone tied to them. It is better for him,
because it is far better to receive a brief punishment for a fault,
than to be reserved for eternal torments.
CHRYS; To correspond with the foregoing, He should have said here,
Receive not Me, which were bitterer than any punishment; but because
they were dull, and the before - named punishment did not move them, by
a familiar instance He shows that punishment awaited them; for He
therefore says, it were better for him, because another more grievous
punishment awaits him.
HILARY; Mystically; The work of the mill is a toil of blindness, for
the beasts having their eyes closed are driven round in a circle, and
under the type of an ass we often find the Gentiles figured, who are
held in the ignorance of blind labor;; while the Jews have the path of
knowledge set before them in the Law, who if they offend Christ's
Apostles it were better for them, that having their necks made fast to
a mill-stone, they should be drowned in the sea, that is, kept under
labor and in the depths of ignorance, as the Gentiles; for it were
better for them that they should have never known Christ, than not to
have received the Lord of the Prophets.
GREGORY; Otherwise; What is denoted by the sea, but the world, and what
by the mill-stone, but earthly action? which, when it binds the neck in
the yoke of vain desires, sends it to a dull round of toil. There are
some who leave earthly action, and bend themselves to aims of
contemplation beyond the reach of intellect, laying aside humility, and
so not only throw themselves into error, but also cast many weak ones
out of the bosom of truth. Who then offends one of the least of mine,
it were better for him that a mill-stone be tied about his neck, and he
be cast into the sea; that is, it were better for a perverted heart to
be entirely occupied with worldly business, than to be at leisure for
contemplative studies to the hurt of many.
AUG; Otherwise; Who offend one of these little ones, that is so humble
as He would have his disciples to be, by not obeying, or by opposing,
(as the Apostle says of Alexander,) it were better for him that a
mill-stone should be hanged about his neck, and he be drowned in the
depths of the sea, that is, it were better for him that desire of the
things of the world, to which the blind and foolish are tied down,
should sink him by, its load to destruction.
7. Woe to the world because of offenses! for it must needs be
that offenses come; but woe to that man by whom the offense come.
8. Wherefore if your hand or your foot offend you, cut them off, and
cast them from you: it is better for you to enter into life halt or
maimed, rather than having two hands or two feet to be cast into
everlasting fire.
9. And if your eye offends you, pluck it out, and cast it from you: it
is better for you to enter into life with one eye, rather than having
two eyes to be cast into hell fire.
GLOSS; The Lord had said, that it is better for him who gives offense,
that a mill-stone be hanged about his neck, of which He now subjoins
the reason, Woe to the world from offenses! i.e. because of offenses.
ORIGEN; This we may understand not of the material elements of the
world; but here the men who are in the world, are called the world. But
Christ's disciples are not of this world, whence there cannot be woe to
them from offenses; for though there be many offenses, they do not
touch him who is not of this world. But if he be yet of this world in
loving the world, and the things in it, as many offenses will seize him
as those by which he was encompassed in the world. It follows, For it
must needs be that offenses come.
CHRYS; This does not subvert the liberty of the will, or impose a
necessity of any act, but shows what must come to pass. Offenses are
hindrances in the right way. But Christ's prophecy does not bring in
the offenses, for it is not done because He foretold it, but He
foretold it because it was certainly to come to pass. But some one will
say, If all men are recovered, and if there be none to bring the
offenses, will not His speech be convicted of falsehood? By no means;
for seeing that men were incurable, He therefore said, It must needs be
that of offenses come; that is, they surely will come; which He never
would have said, if all men might be amended.
GLOSS; Or they must needs come because they are necessary, that is,
useful, that by this mean they that are approved may be made manifest.
CHRYS; For offenses rouse men, and make them more attentive; and he who
falls by them speedily rises again, and is more careful.
HILARY; Or; The lowliness of His passion is the scandal of the world,
which refused to receive the Lord of eternal glory under the disgrace
of the Cross. And what more dangerous for the world than to have
rejected Christ? And He says that offenses must needs come, forasmuch
as in the sacrament of restoring to us eternal life, all lowliness of
suffering was to be fulfilled in Him.
ORIGEN; Or; The scandals that are to come are the Angels of Satan. But
do not look that these offenses should show themselves in a substantial
or natural shape, for in some the freedom of the will has been the
origin of offense, not liking to undergo toil for virtue's sake. But
there cannot be real good, without the opposition of evil. It must
needs be then that offenses come, as it must needs be that we encounter
the evil assaults of spiritual porters; whose hatred is the more
stirred up, as Christ's word invading men drives out the evil
influences from them. And they seek instruments by w whom the offenses
may the rather work; and to such instruments is more woe; for him who
gives, it shall be worse than for him who takes, the offense, as it
follows, But woe to that man by whom the offense come.
JEROME, As much as to say, Woe to that man through whose fault it comes
to pass, that offenses must heeds be in the world.. And finder this
general declaration, Judas is particularly condemned, who had made
ready his soul for the act of betrayal.
HILARY; Or; By the man is denoted the Jewish people, as the introducers
of all this offense that is about Christ's passion; for they brought
upon the world all the danger of denying Christ in His passion, of whom
the Law and the Prophets had preached that He should suffer.
CHRYS; But that you may learn that there is no absolute necessity for
offenses, hear what follows, If your hand or your foot offend you,
&c. This is not said of the limbs of the body, but of friends whom
we esteem as limbs necessary to us; for nothing is so hurtful as evil
communications.
RABAN; Scandal (offense) is a Greek word, which we may call a
stumbling-block, or a fall, or hitting of the foot. He then scandalizes
his brother, who by word or deed amiss gives him occasion of falling.
JEROME; So all affection, our whole kindred, are severed from us; lest
under cover of duty any believer should be exposed to offense. If, He
says, he be united to you as close as is your hand, or foot, or eye,
and is useful to you, anxious and quick to discern, and yet causes you
offense, and is by the unmeetness of his behavior drawing you into
hell; it is better for you that you lack his kindled, and his
profitableness to you, than that whilst you seek to gain your kindled
or friends, you should have cause of failings. For every believer knows
what is doing him harm, what troubles and tempts him, for it is better
to lead a solitary life, than to lose eternal life, in order to have
the things necessary for this present life.
ORIGEN; Or, The priests may with good reason be called the eyes of the
Church, since they are considered her watchmen ; but the deacons and
the rest her hands, for by them spiritual deeds are wrought; the people
are the feet of the body, the Church; and all these it is necessary not
to spare, if they become an offense to the Church. Or, by the offending
hand is understood an act of the mind; a motion of the mind is the
offending foot, and a vision of the mind is the sinning eye, which we
ought to cut off if they give offense, for thus the acts of the limbs
are often put in Scripture for the limbs themselves.
10. Take heed that you despise not one of these little ones; for
I say to you, That in heaven their angels do always behold the face of
my Father which is in heaven.
11. For the Son of man is come to save that which was lost.
12. How think you? if a man have an hundred sheep, and one of them be
gone astray, does he not leave the ninety and nine, and go into the
mountains, and seek that which is gone astray?
13 And if so be that he find it, I say to you, he rejoices more of that
sheep, than of the ninety and nine which went not astray.
14. Even so it is not the will of your Father which is in heaven, that one of these little ones should perish.
JEROME; The Lord had said, under the type of hand, foot, and eye, that
all kin and connection which could afford scandal must be cut off. The
harshness of this declaration He accordingly tempers with the following
precept, saying, Take heed that you despise not one of these little
ones; i.e. As far as you may avoid despising them, but next to your own
salvation seek also to heal them. But if you see that they hold to
their sins, it is better that you be saved, than that you perish in
much company.
CHRYS; Or otherwise, As to shun the evil, so to honor the good, has
great recompense. Above then He had bid them to cut off the friendships
of those that gave offense, here He teaches them to show honor and
service to the saints.
GLOSS; Or otherwise; Because so great evils come of brethren being
scandalized, Take heed that you despise not one of these little ones.
ORIGEN; The little ones are those that are but lately born in Christ,
or those who abide without advance, as though lately born. But Christ
judged it needless to give command concerning not despising the more
perfect believers, but concerning the little ones, as He had said
above, If any man shall offend one of these little ones. A man may
perhaps say that a little one here means a perfect Christian, according
to that He says elsewhere, Who is least among you, you shall be great.
CHRYS; Or because the perfect are esteemed of many as little ones, as poor, namely, and despicable.
ORIGEN; But this exposition does not seem to agree with that which was
said, If any one scandalizes one of these little ones; for the perfect
man is not scandalized, nor does he perish. But he who thinks this the
true exposition, says, that the mind of a righteous man is variable,
and is sometimes offended, but not easily.
GLOSS; Therefore are they not to be despised for that they are so dear
to God, that Angels are deputed to be their guardians; For I say to
you, that in heaven their Angels do always behold the face of my Father
which is in heaven.
ORIGEN; Some will have it that an Angel is given as an attendant
minister from the time when in the layer of regeneration the infant is
born in Christ ; for, say they, it is incredible that a holy Angel
watches over those who are unbelieving and in error, but in his time of
unbelief and sin man is under the Angels of Satan. Others will have it,
that those who are known of God, have straightway from their very birth
a guardian Angel.
JEROME; High dignity of souls, that each from its birth has an Angel set in charge over it!
CHRYS; Here He is speaking not of any Angels, but of the higher sort;
for when He says, Behold the face of my Father, He shows that their
presence before God is free and open, and their honor great.
GREG; But Dionysus says, that it is from the ranks of the lesser Angels
that these are sent to perform this ministry, either visibly or
invisibly, for that those higher ranks have not the employment of an
outward ministry.
ID; And therefore the Angels always behold the face of the Father, and
yet they come to us; for by a spiritual presence they come forth to us,
and yet by internal contemplation keep themselves there whence they
come forth; for they come not so forth from the divine vision, as to
hinder the joys of inward contemplation.
HILARY; The Angels offer daily to God the prayers of those that are to
be saved by Christ; it is therefore perilous to despise him whose
desires and requests are conveyed to the eternal and invisible God, by
the service and ministry of Angels.
AUG; Or; They are 'called our Angels who are indeed the Angels of God;
they are Gods because they have not forsaken Him; they are ours because
they have begun to have us for their fellow-citizens. As they now
behold God, so shall we also behold, Him face to face, of which vision
John speaks, We shall see him as he is. For by the face of God is to be
understood the manifestation of Himself, not a member or feature of the
body, such as we call by that name.
CHRYS; He gives yet another reason weightier than the forgoing, why the
little ones are not to be despised, For the Son of Man is come to save
that which was lost.
REMIG; As much as to say, Despise not little ones, for I also for men
condescended to become man. By that which was lost, understand the
human race; for all the elements have kept their place, but man was
lost, because he has broken his ordained place.
CHRYS; And to this reasoning He adds a parable, in which He sets forth
the Father as seeking the salvation of men, and saying, What think you,
if a man have a hundred sheep.
GREG; This refers to the Creator of man Himself; for a hundred is a
perfect number, and He had a hundred sheep when He created the
substance of Angels and men.
HILARY; But by the one sheep is to be understood one man, and under
this one man is comprehended the whole human race. He that seeks man is
Christ, and the ninety and nine are the host of the heavenly glory
which He left.
GREG; The Evangelist says they were left on the mountains, to signify that the sheep which were not lost abode on high.
BEDE; The Lord found the sheep when He restored man, and over that
sheep that is found there is more joy in heaven than over the ninety
and nine, because there is a greater matter for thanksgiving to God in
the restoration of man than in the creation of the Angels. Wonderfully
are the Angels made, but more wonderfully man restored.
RABAN; Note, that nine wants only one to make it ten, and ninety and
nine the same to be a hundred. Thus members which want one only to be
perfect, may be larger or smaller, but yet the unit remaining
invariable, when it is added makes the rest perfect. And that the
number of sheep might be made up perfect in heaven, lost man was sought
on earth.
JEROME; Others think that by the ninety and nine sheep are understood
the number of the righteous, and by the one sheep the sinners,
according to that said in another place, I am not come to call the
righteous but sinners to repentance.
GREG; We must consider whence it is that the Lord declares that' He has
joy rather over the converted sinners, than over the righteous that
stand. Because these last are often slothful and slack to practice the
greater good works, as being very secure within themselves, for that
they have committed none of the heavier sins. While on the other hand
those who have their wicked deeds to remember, do often through the
compunction of sorrow glow with the more heat in their love of God, and
when they think how they have strayed from Him, they replace their
former losses by gains following.
So the general in a battle loves best that soldier who turns in his
flight and courageously presses the enemy, than him who never turned
his back, yet et never did any valorous deed. Yet there be some
righteous over whom is joy so great, that no penitent can be preferred
before them, those, who though not conscious to themselves of sins, yet
reject things lawful, end humble themselves in all things. How great is
the joy when the righteous mourns, and humbles himself, if there be joy
when the unrighteous condemns himself wherein he has done amiss?
BEDE; Or; By the ninety-nine sheep, which He left on the mountains, are
signified the proud to whom a unit is still wanting for perfection.
When then He has found the sinner, He rejoices over him, that is, He
makes his own to rejoice over him, rather than over the false
righteous.
JEROME; What follows, Even so it is not the will &c. is to be
referred to what was said above, Take heed that you despise not one of
these little ones; and so He shows that this parable was set forth to
enforce that same saying. Also in saying, It is not the will of my
Father which is in heaven that one of these little ones should perish,
He shows that so oft as one of these little ones does perish, it is not
by the Father's will that it perishes.
15. Moreover if your brother shall trespass against you, go and tell
him his fault between you and him alone: if he shall hear you, you have
gained your brother.
16. But if he will not hear you, then take with you one or two more,
that in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word may be
established.
17. And if he shall neglect to hear them, tell it to the Church: but if
he neglect to hear the Church, let him be to you as an heathen man and
a Publican.
CHRYS; Having above given a severe sentence against those who were the
cause of offense, making them to fear on all sides; so now that they to
whom the offense is offered should not fall into the opposite fault of
supineness and indifference, seeking to spare themselves in all things,
and so be puffed up; the Lord here checks such a tendency, commanding
that they be reproved, saying, If your brother shall trespass against
you, go, tell him his fault between you and him alone.
AUG; Our Lord admonishes us not to overlook one another's faults, yet
not so as seeking formatter of blame, but watching what you may amend.
For our rebuke should be in love, not eager to wound, but anxious to
amend. If you pass it by, you are become worse shall he. He by doing
you a wrong has done himself a great hurt; you slight your brother's
wound, and are more to blame for your silence than he for his ill w
words to you.
ID; For often we wrongly shun to teach and admonish, or to rebuke and
check the wicked, either because the task is irksome, or because we
would escape their enmity, lest they should harm or obstruct us in
temporal things, whether in gaining objects we desire, or in holding
what our frailty fears to love. But if any one spares reproof of evil
doers, because he seeks fitter occasion, or fears to make them worse,
or that they may be an impediment to the good and pious living of other
weak ones, or may grieve them, or turn them from the faith; herein
there is seen no considerations of covetousness, but the prudence of
charity. And much weightier reason have they who are set over the
churches, to the end they should not spare to rebuke sin; though not
even he is free from this blame, who, though not in authority, wots of
many things in them to whom he is bound by the ties of this life, which
should be touched by admonition or correction, but neglects to do so;
shunning their displeasure on account of things which he does not
unduly use in this life, but wherewith he is unduly delighted.
CHRYS; It is to be noted, that one while the Lord brings the offender
to him whom he has offended; as when He says, If you remember that your
brother has something against you, go, be reconciled to your brother:
meanwhile He bids him that has suffered the wrong to forgive his
neighbor; as where he says, Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive
our debtors. Here He has devised yet another method, for He brings him
who has been grieved to him that grieved him, and therefore says, If
your brother sin against you; for because he that did the wrong would
not readily come to make amends, because of his shame, He draws to him
that has suffered the wrong; and not only draws him there, but with the
very purpose of correcting what was done amiss; whence He says, Go and
tell him his fault.
RABAN; He does not command us to forgive indiscriminately, but him only
that will hearken and be obedient, and do penitence; that neither
should forgiveness be unattainable, nor sufferance be too far relaxed.
CHRYS; And He says not, Accuse him, nor, Chide with him, nor, Demand
redress, - but, Tell him of his fault; that is, remind him of his sin,
tell him what things you have suffered from him. For he is held down by
anger or by shame, stupefied as one in a deep slumber. Wherefore it is
necessary that you who are in your right senses to go to him who is in
a disease.
JEROME; If shall your brother have sinned against you, or hurt you in
any matter, you have power, indeed must needs forgive him, for we are
charged to forgive our debtors their debts. But if a man sin against
God, it is no longer in our decision. But we do all the contrary of
this; where God is wronged we are merciful, where the affront is to
ourselves we prosecute the quarrel.
CHRYS; We are to tell his fault to the man himself who did it, and not
to another, because the party takes it with the more patience from him,
and above all when they are together alone. For when be who had a light
to demand reparation, shows rather a carefulness to heal the sore, this
has great power to propitiate.
AUG; When any one therefore offends against us, let us be very careful,
not for ourselves, for it is glorious to forget an injury, forget
therefore your own wrong, but not the wound your brother has sustained;
and tell him of his fault between him and you alone, seeking his
amendment and sparing his shame For it may be that out of shame he will
seek to defend his fault, and thus you will only harden, while you
sought to do him good.
JEROME; your brother is to be reproved in private if once he has lost a sense of shame, he should continue in sin.
AUG; But the Apostle says, They that sin rebuke before all, that others
may fear to do the like. Some times therefore your brother is to be
spoken to between you and him alone, sometimes to be rebuked before
all. What you must do first, attend and learn; If your brother, says
He, sin against you, tell him of his fault between you and him alone.
Why? Because he has sinned against you. What is it that he has sinned
against you? You know that he has sinned, and therefore since his sin
was in private, let your rebuke be in private too. For if you alone
know of his trespass, and proceed to rebuke him before all, you do not
correct but betray him. Your brother has sinned against you; if you
alone know thereof, then he has sinned against you only but if he did
you a wrong in the presence of many, then he has sinned against those
also who were witnesses of his fault. Those faults then are to be
rebuked before all, that are committed before all; those which are done
in private, are to be rebuked in private. Discern times, and the
Scriptures are consistent. But why do you correct your neighbor?
Because his trespass has hurt yourself? Far be it from you. If you do
it from self love, you do nothing; if you do it from love of him, you
do most rightly. Lastly, in what you shall say to him, keep in view for
whose sake it is that you ought to do it, for your own or for his, for
it follows, If he hear you, you has gained your brother, do it
therefore for his sake, that you may gain him. And do you confess that
by your sin against man you were lost; for if you were not lost, how
has he gained you? Let none then make light of it when he sins against
his brother.
CHRYS; In this it is made plain that enmities are a loss to both sides;
for he said not, he has gained himself, but, you have gained him; which
shows that both of you had suffered loss by your disagreement.
JEROME; For in saving another, salvation is gained for ourselves also.
CHRYS; What you should do if he does not yield is added, If he will not
bear you, take with you one or two. For the more shameless and stubborn
he shows himself, the more studious should we be of applying the
medicine, and not turn to wrath and hate. As the physician, if he see
that the disease does not abate, he does not slack, but redoubles his
efforts to head. And observe how this reproof is not for revenge, but
for correction, seeing his command is not to take two with him at
first, but when he would not amend; and even then he does not send a
multitude to him, but one or two, alleging the law, That in the mouth
of two or three witnesses every word may stand. This is that you may
have witnesses that you have done all your part.
JEROME; Or it is to be understood in this way; If he will not hear you,
take with you one brother only; if he yet will not hear, take a third,
either from your zeal for his amendment, that shame or admonition may
move him; or for the purpose of meeting before witnesses.
GLOSS; Or, that if he affirm that it is no trespass, that they may prove to him that it is a trespass.
JEROME; If yet he will not hear them, then it must be told to many,
that he may be held in abhorrence; so that he who could not be saved by
his own sense of shame, may be saved by public disgrace; whence it
follows, If he will not hear them, tell it to the Church.
CHRYS; That is, to those that are over the Church.
GLOSS; Or, tell it to the whole Church, that his infamy may be the
greater. After all these things follows excommunication, which ought to
be inflicted by the mouth of the Church, that is, by the Priest, and
when he excommunicates, the whole Church works with him; as it follows,
And if he will not hear the Church, let him be to you as a heathen, and
a publican.
AUG; That is, regard him no longer in the number of your brethren.
Though even thus we are not to neglect his salvation; for the heathens
themselves, that is, the gentiles and pagans, we do not indeed regard
in the number of our brethren, yet we ever seek their salvation.
CHRYS; Yet the Lord enjoins nothing of this sort to be observed towards
those w ho are without the Church, such as He does in reproving a
brother. Of those that are without He says, If any smite you on the one
cheek, offer to him the other also. as Paul speaks, What have I to do
to judge them that are without? But brethren he bids us reprove, and
turn away from.
JEROME; That He says, As a heathen and a publican, shows that he is to
be more abhorred, who under the name of a believer does the deeds of an
unbeliever, than those that are openly gentiles. Those He calls
publicans, who pursue worldly gain, and levy contributions by trading,
cheating, and villainous frauds, and perjuries.
ORIGEN; Let us look well whether this precept extends to all sin; for
what if any one sin any of those sins which are to death, such as
unnatural crimes, adultery, homicide, or effeminacy, it cannot be meant
that such as these are to be admonished privately, and if he hear you,
forthwith to say that you have gained him. And not rather first put him
out of the Church, or only when remaining obstinate after monition
before witnesses, and by the Church? One man, looking at the infinite
mercy of Christ, will say, that since the words of Christ make no
distinction of sins, it is to go against Christ's mercy to limit His
words only to little sins. Another, on the other hand, considering the
words carefully, will aver, that they are not spoken of every sin; for
that he that is guilty of those great sins is not a brother, but is
called a brother, with whom, according to the Apostle, we ought not so
much as to eat.
But as they who expound this as referring to every sin give
encouragement to the careless to sin; so, on the other hand, he, now
teaches that one having sinned in little sins and such as are not
deadly, is, when he has spurned the admonition of the witnesses and the
Church, to be held as a heathen and a publican, seems to introduce too
great severity. For whether he finally perishes, we are not able to
decide. First, because he who has been thrice told of his fault and not
hearkened, may hearken the fourth time; secondly, because sometimes a
man does not receive according to his creeds, but beyond his trespass,
which is good for him in this world; lastly, because He said not alone,
Let him be as a heathen, but Let him be to you. Whoever then when
reproved three times in a light trespass, does not amend, him we ought
to hold for a heathen and a publican, avoiding him, that he may be
brought to confusion. But whether he is esteemed of God also as a
heathen and a publican, is not ours to decide, but is in the judgment
of God.
18. I say to you, Whatsoever you shall bind on earth shall be bound in
heaven: and whatsoever you shall loose on earth shall be loosed in
heaven.
19. Again I say to you, That if two of you shall agree on earth as
touching any thing that they shall ask, it shall be done for them of my
Father which is in heaven.
20. For where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in the midst of them.
JEROME; Because He had said, If he will not hear the Church, let him be
to you as a heathen, and a publican, whereupon the brother so contemned
might answer, or think within himself, If you despise me, I also will
despise you; if you condemn me, you shall be condemned by my sentence.
He therefore confers powers upon the Apostles, that they may be assured
that when any are condemned after this manner, the sentence of man is
ratified by the sentence of God. Verily I say to you, Whatsoever you
shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven; and whatsoever you shall
loose upon the earth shall be loosed in heaven.
ORIGEN; He said not in the heavens (in caelis), as when He spoke to
Peter, but in heaven (in caelis), for they are not yet attained to the
like perfection with Peter.
HILARY; To hold out a great and terrible fear, by which all men should
be reached in this present life, He pronounces that the judgment of the
Apostles should be ratified, so that whoever they bound on earth, i.e.
left entangled in the noose of sin, and whoever they loosed, i.e.
accorded the pardon of God's mercy to their salvation, that these
should be bound and loosed in heaven.
CHRYS; And be it noted, that He said not to the Primate of the Church,
Bind such a man; but, If you shall bind him, the bonds shall be
indissoluble, leaving the other to his discretion. And see how He has
set the incorrigible person under the yoke of a twofold necessity; to
wit, the punishment that is here, namely, the casting forth out of the
Church, when He said, Let him be to you as a heathen; and the future
punishment, saying, that he shall be bound in heaven; thus by the
weight of his penalties lessening his brother's wrath against him.
AUG; Otherwise; When you begin to hold your brother as a publican you
bind him on earth, but take heed that you bind him with just cause; for
an unjust cause breaks rightful bonds. But when you have corrected him,
and agreed with him, you have loosed him upon earth, and when you have
loosed him upon earth, he shall be loosed also in heaven. You confer a
great boon not on yourself, but on him, as he had done the hurt not to
you but to himself.
GLOSS; But He holds out a ratification not only of sentences of
excommunication, but of every petition which is offered by men holding
together in the unity of the Church; for He adds, Again I say to you,
that if two of you shall agree upon earth, whether in admitting a
penitent, or casting out a forward person, touching any thing which
they shall ask, any thing, that is, that is not against the unity of
the Church, it shall be done for them by my Father which is in heaven.
By saying, which is in heaven, He points Him out as above all, and
therefore able to fulfill all that shall be asked of Him. Or, He is in
the heavens, that is, with saints, proof enough that whatever worthy
thing they shall ask shall be done to them, because they have with them
Him of w whom they ask.
For this cause is the sentence of those that agree together ratified,
because God dwells in them, For where two or three are gathered
together in my name, there am I in the midst of them.
CHRYS; Or, because He had said, It shall be done to them by My Father;
therefore, to show that He is the Giver together with His Father, He
adds this, where two or three, &c.
ORIGEN; And He said not, I will be, but I am in the midst of them;
because straightway, as soon as they have agreed together, Christ is
found among them.
HILARY; For He who is peace and charity, will set His place and habitation in good and peaceable dispositions.
JEROME; Or otherwise; All His foregoing discourse had invited us to
union; now to make us embrace peace more anxiously, He holds out a
reward, promising to be in the midst of two or three.
CHRYS; Yet He said not barely, Where they are gathered together, but
added, in my name, as much as to say, If any man look upon Me as the
chief motive of his love to his neighbor, I will be with him, though
his virtue be shown towards other men. How is it then that those who
thus agree together do not obtain what they ask for? First, because
they ask things not expedient, and because they do not bring on their
parts that which they ought to contribute; wherefore He says, If two of
you, that is, who show an evangelic conversation. Thirdly, because they
pray seeking vengeance against those who have grieved them. And
fourthly, because they seek mercy for sinners who ho have not repented.
ORIGEN; And this also is the reason why our prayers are not granted,
because we do not agree together in all things upon earth, neither in
doctrine, nor in conversation. For as in music, unless the voices are
in time there is no pleasure to the hearer, so in the Church, unless
they are united God is not pleased therein, nor does He hear their
words.
JEROME; We may also understand this spiritually; where our spirit,
soul, and body are in agreement, and have not, within them conflicting
wills, they shall obtain from My Father every thing they shall ask; for
none can doubt that that demand is good, where the body wills the same
thing as the spirit.
ORIGEN; Or, In whatever the two testaments are in agreement, for this every prayer is found acceptable to God.
21. Then came Peter to him, and said, Lord, how often shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? till seven times?
22. Jesus said to him, I say not to you, Until seven times: but, Until seventy times seven.
JEROME; The Lord had said above, See that you despise not one of these
little ones, and had added, If your brother sin against you, &c.
making also a promise, If two of you, &c. by which the Apostle
Peter was led to ask, Lord, how oft shall my brother sin against me,
and I forgive him? And to his question he adds an opinion, Until seven
times?
CHRYS; Peter thought that he had made a large allowance; but what
answers Christ the Lover of men? it follows, Jesus said to him, I say
not to you, Until seven times, but, Until seventy times seven.
AUG; I am bold to say, that if he shall sin seventy-eight times, you
should forgive him; yea, and if a hundred; and how often so if ever he
sin against you, forgive him. For if Christ found a thousand sins, yet
forgave them all, do not you withdraw your forgiveness. For the Apostle
says, Forgiving one another, if any man have quarrel against any, even
as God in Christ forgave you.
CHRYS; When He says, Until seventy times seven, He does not limit a
definite number within which forgiveness must be kept; but He signifies
thereby something endless and ever enduring.
AUG; Yet not without reason did the Lord say, Seventy times seven; for
the Law is set forth in ten precepts; and the Law is signified by the
number ten, sin by eleven, because it is passing the denary line. Seven
is used to be put for a whole, because time goes round in seven days.
Take eleven seven times, and you have seventy. He would therefore have
all trespasses forgiven, for this is what He signifies by the number
seventy-seven.
ORIGEN; Or, because the number six seems to denote toil and labor, and
the number seven repose, He says that forgiveness should be given to
all brethren who live in this world, and sin in the things of this
world. But if any commit transgressions beyond these things, he shall
then have no further forgiveness.
JEROME; Or understand it of four hundred and ninety times, that He bids us forgive our brother so oft.
RABAN; It is one thing to give pardon to a brother when he seeks it,
that he may live with us in social charity, as Joseph to his brethren;
and another to a hostile foe, that we may wish him good, and if we can
do him good, as David mourning for Saul.
23. Therefore is the kingdom of heaven likened to a certain king, which would take account of his servants.
24. And when he had begun to reckon, one was brought to him, which owed him ten thousand talents.
25. But forasmuch as he had not to pay, his lord commanded him to be
sold, and his wife, and children, and all that he had, and payment to
be made.
26. The servant therefore fell down, and worshipped him, saying, Lord, have patience with me, and I will pay you all.
27. Then the lord of that servant was moved with compassion, and loosed him, and forgave him the debt.
28. But the same servant went out, and found one of his
fellow-servants, which owed him an hundred pence: and he laid hands on
him, and took him by the throat, saying, Pay me that you owe.
29. And his fellow servant fell down at his feet, and besought him, saying, Have patience with me, and I will pay you all.
30. And he would not: but went and cast him into prison, till he should pay the debt.
31. So when his fellow servants saw what was done, they were very sorry, and came and told to their lord all that was done.
32. Then his lord, after that he had called him, said to him, O you
wicked servant, I forgave you all that debt, because you begged me:
33. Should not you also have had compassion on your fellow servant, even as I had pity on you?
34. And his lord was wroth, and delivered him to the tormentors, till he should pay all that was due to him.
35. So likewise shall my heavenly Father do also to you, if you from
your hearts forgive not every one his brother their trespasses.
CHRYS; That none should think that the Lord had enjoined something
great and burdensome in saying that we must forgive till seventy times
seven, He adds a parable.
JEROME; For it is customary with the Syrians, especially they of
Palestine, to add a parable to what they speak, that what their hearers
might not retain simply, and in itself, the instance and similitude may
be the means of retaining.
ORIGEN; The Son of God, as He is wisdom, righteousness, and truth, so
is He a kingdom; not indeed any of those which are beneath, but all
those which are above, reigning over those in whose senses reigns
justice and the other virtues; these are made of heaven because they
bear the image of the heavenly. This kingdom of heaven then, i.e. the
Son of God, when He was made in the likeness of sinful flesh, was then
like to a king, in uniting man to himself.
REMIG; Or, by the kingdom of heaven is reasonably understood the holy
Church, in which the Lord works what He speaks of in this parable. By
the man is sometimes represented the Father, as in that, The kingdom of
heaven is like to a king who made a marriage for his son; and sometimes
the Son; but here we may take it for both, the Father and the Son, who
are one God. God is called a King, inasmuch as He created and governs
all things.
ORIGEN; The servants, in these parables, are only they who are employed
in dispensing the word, and to whom this business is committed.
REMIG; Or, by the servants of this King are signified all mankind whom
He has created for His own praise, and to whom He gave the law of
nature; He takes account with them, when He would look into each man's
manners, life, and deeds, that He may render to each according to that
He has done; as it follows, And when He had begun to reckon, one was
brought to Him which owed Him ten thousand talents.
ORIGEN; The King takes account of our whole life then, when we must all
be presented before the judgment-seat of Christ We mean not this so as
that any should think that the business itself must needs require a
long time. For God, when He will scrutinize the minds of all, will by
some indescribable power cause every thing that every man has done to
pass speedily before the mind of each. He says, And when he began to
take account, because the beginning of the judgment is that it begin
from the house of God. At His beginning to take account there is
brought to Him one who owes Him many talents; one, that is, who had
wrought great evils; one on whom much had been enjoined' and had yet et
brought no gain; who perhaps had destroyed as many men as he owed
talents; one who was therefore become a debtor of many talents, because
he had followed the woman sitting upon a talent of lead, whose name is
Iniquity.
JEROME; I know that some interpret the man who he owed the ten thousand
talents to be the devil, and by his wife and children who were to be
sold when he persevered in his wickedness, understand foolishness, and
hurtful thoughts. For as wisdom is called the wife of the righteous
man, so the wife of the unrighteous and the sinner is called
foolishness. But how the Lord remits to the devil ten thousand talents,
and how he would not remit ten denarii to us his fellow-servants, of
this is there its no ecclesiastical interpretation, nor is it to be
admitted by thoughtful men.
AUG; Therefore let us say, that because the Law is set forth in ten
precepts, the ten thousand talents which he owed denote all sins which
can be done under the Law.
REMIG; Man who sinned of his own will and choice, has no power to rise
again by his own endeavor, and has not wherewith to pay, because he
finds nothing in himself by which he may loose himself from his sins;
whence it follows, And when he had not to pay, his lord commanded him
to be sold, and his wife and children, and all that he had, and payment
to be made. The fool's wife is folly, and the pleasure or lust of the
flesh.
AUG; This signifies that the transgressor of the decalogue deserves
punishment for his rusts and evil deeds; and that is his price; for the
price for which they sell is the punishment of him that is damned.
CHRYS; This command issued not of cruelty, but of unspeakable
tenderness. For he seeks by these terrors to bring him to plead that he
be not sold, which fell out, as he shows when he adds, The servant
therefore fell down and besought him, saying, Have patience with me,
and I will pay you all.
REMIG; That he says, falling down, shows how the sinner humbled
himself, and offered amends. Have patience with me, expresses the
sinner's prayer, begging respite, and space to correct his error.
Abundant is the bounty of God, and His clemency to sinners converted,
seeing He is ever ready to forgive sins by baptism or penitence, as it
follows, But the lord of that servant had mercy upon him, and loosed
him, and forgave him the debt.
CHRYS; See the exuberance of heavenly love! The servant asked only a
brief respite, but he gives him more than he had asked, a full
remittance and canceling of the w hole debt. He was minded to have
forgiven him from the very first, but he would not have it to be of his
own mere motion, but also of the other's suit, that he might not depart
without a gift. But he did not remit the debt till he had taken
account, because he would have him know how great debts he set him free
of, that by this he should at the least be made more merciful to his
fellow servants. And indeed as far as what has gone he was worthy to be
accepted; for he made confession, and promised that he would pay the
debt, and fell down and begged, and confessed the greatness of his
debt. But his after deeds were unworthy of the former, for it follows,
But the same servant went out, and found one of his fellow-servants
which owed him a hundred denarii.
AUG; That He says he owed him a hundred denarii is taken from the same
number, ten, the number of the Law. For a hundred times a hundred are
ten thousand, and ten times ten are a hundred; and those ten thousand
talents and these hundred denarii are still keeping to the number of
the Law; in both of them you find sins. Both are debtors, both are
suitors for remission; so every man is himself a debtor to God, and has
his brother his debtor.
CHRYS; But there is as great difference between sins committed against
men, and sins committed against God, as between ten thousand talents
and a hundred denarii; yes rather there is still greater difference.
This appears from the difference of the persons, and from the fewness
of the offenders. For when we are seen of man we withhold and are loath
to sin, but we cease not daily though God see us, but act and speak all
things fearlessly. Not by this only are our sins against God shown to
be more heinous, but also by reason of the benefits which we have
received from Him; He gave us being, and has done all things in our
behalf, has breathed into us a rational soul, has sent His Son, has
opened heaven to us, and made us His sons. If then we should every day
die for Him, could we make Him any worthy return? By no means; it
should rather redound again to our advantage. But, on the contrary, w e
offend against His laws.
REMIG; So by him who owed ten thousand talents are represented those
that commit the greater crimes; by the debtor of a hundred denarii
those who commit the lesser.
JEROME; That this may be made plainer, let us speak it in instances. If
any one of you shall have committed an adultery, a homicide, or a
sacrilege, these greater sins of ten thousand talents shall be remitted
when you beg for it, if you also shall remit lesser offenses to those
that trespass against you.
AUG; But this unworthy, unjust servants would not render that which had
been rendered to him, for it follows, And he laid hands on him, and
held him by the throat, saying, Pay me that you owe.
REMIG; That is, he pressed him hardly, that he might exact vengeance from him.
ORIGEN; He therefore, as I suppose, took him by the throat, because he
had come forth from the king; for he would not have so handled his
fellow servant, if he had not gone forth from the king.
CHRYS; By saying, as he went out, He shows that it was not after long
time, but immediately; while the favor he had received still sounded in
his ears, he abused to wickedness the liberty his lord had accorded
him. What the other did is added; And his fellow-servant fell down, and
besought him, saying, Have patience with me, and I will pay you all.
ORIGEN; Observe the exactness of Scripture; the servant who owed many
talents fell down, and worshipped the king; he who owed the hundred
denarii falling down, did not worship, but besought his fellow servant,
saying, Have patience. But the ungrateful servant did not even respect
the very words which had saved himself, for it follows, but he would
not.
AUG; That is, he nourished such thoughts towards him that he sought his punishment. But he went his way.
REMIG; That is, his wrath was the rather inflamed, to exact vengeance
of him; And he cast him into prison, until he should pay the debt; that
is, he seized his brother, and exacted vengeance of him.
CHRYS; Observe the Lord's tenderness, and the servant's cruelty; the
one for ten thousand talents, the other for ten denarii; the one a
suitor to his fellow, the other to his lord; the one obtained entire
remission,, the other sought only respite, but he got it not They who
owed nothing, grieved with him; his fellow servants seeing what was
done, were very sorry.
AUG; By the fellow-servants is understood the Church, which binds one and looses another.
REMIG; Or perhaps they represent the Angels, or the preachers of the
holy Church, or any of the faithful, who when they see a brother whose
sins are forgiven refusing to forgive his fellow-servant, they are
sorrowful over his perdition. And they came, and told their lord what
was as done. They came not in body, but in spirit. To tell their Lord,
is to show the woe and sorrow of the heart in their carriage. It
follows, Then his lord called him. He called him by the sentence of
death, and bade him pass out of this world, and said to him, you wicked
servant, I forgave you all that debt, because you begged me.
CHRYS; When he owed him ten thousand talents, he did not call him
wicked, nor did he at all chide him, but had mercy on him; but now when
he had been ungenerous to his fellow-servant, then he says to him, you
wicked servant; and this is what is said, Ought you not to have had
mercy upon your fellow-servant.
REMIG; And it is to be known, that we read no answer made by that
servant to his lord; by which it is shown us, that in the day of
judgment, and altogether after this life, all excusing of ourselves
shall be cut off.
CHRYS; Because kindness had not mended him, it remains that he be
corrected by punishment; whence it follows, And the lord of that
servant was as angry, and delivered him to the torturers until he
should pay the whole debt. He said not merely, Delivered him, but was
angry, this he had not said before; when his Lord commanded that he
should be sold; for that was not in wrath, but in love, for his
correction; now this is a sentence of penalty and punishment.
REMIG; For God is said then to be wroth, when he takes vengeance on
sinners. Torturers are intended for the demons, who are always ready to
take up lost souls, and torture them in the pangs of eternal
punishment. Will any who is once sunk into everlasting condemnation
ever come to find season of repentance, and a way to escape? Never;
that until is put for infinity; and the meaning is, He shall be ever
paying, and shall never quit the debt, but shall be ever under
punishment.
CHRYS; By this is shown that his punishment shall be increasing and
eternal, and that he shall never pay. And however irrevocable are the
graces and callings of God, yet wickedness has that force, that it
seems to break even this law.
AUG; For God says, Forgive, and you shall be forgiven; I have first
forgiven, forgive you then after Me; for if you forgive not, I will
call you back, and will require again all that I had remitted to you.
For Christ neither deceives nor is deceived; and He adds here, This
will my heavenly Father do to you, if you from your hearts forgive not
every one his brother their trespasses. It is better that you should
cry out with your mouth, and forgive in your heart, than that you
should speak smoothly, and be unrelenting in your heart. For the Lord
adds, From your hearts, to the end that though, out of affection you
put him to discipline, yet gentleness should not depart out of your
heart. What is more beneficial than the knife of the surgeon? He is
rough with the sore that the man may be healed; should he be tender
with the sore, the man were lost.
JEROME; Also this, from your hearts, is added to take away all feigned
reconciliations. Therefore the Lord's command to Peter under this
similitude of the king and his servant who owed him ten thousand
talents, and was forgiven by his lord upon his entreaty, is, that he
also should forgive his fellow-servants their lesser trespasses.
ORIGEN; He seeks to instruct us, that we should be ready to show
clemency to those who have done us harm, especially if they offer
amends, and plead to have forgiveness.
RABAN; Allegorically; The servant here who owed the ten thousand
talents, is the Jewish people bound to the Ten Commandments in the Law.
These the Lord oft forgave their trespasses, when being in difficulties
they besought His mercy; but when they were set free, they exacted the
utmost with great severity from all their debtors; and of the gentile
people which they hated, they required circumcision and the ceremonies
of the Law; yes, the Prophets and Apostles they barbarously put to
death. For all this the Lord gave them over into the hands of the
Romans as to evil spirits, who should punish them with eternal tortures.
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