catena aurea matthew 19
1. And it came to pass, that when Jesus had finished these sayings, he
departed from Galilee, and came into the coasts of Judea beyond Jordan;
2. And great multitudes followed him; and he healed them there.
3. The Pharisees also came to him, tempting him, and saying to him, Is it lawful for a man to put away his wife for every cause?
4. And he answered and said to them, Have you not read, that he which made them at the beginning made them male and female,
5. And said, For this cause shall a man leave father and mother, and shall cleave to his wife: and they two shall be one flesh?
6. Wherefore they are no more two, but one flesh. What therefore God has joined together, let not man put asunder.
7. They say to him, Why did Moses then command to give a writing of divorce, and to put her away?
8. He said to them, Moses because of the hardness of your hearts
suffered you to put away your wives: but from the beginning it was not
so.
CHRYS; The Lord had before left Judea because of their jealousy, but
now He keeps Himself more to it, because His passion was near at hand.
Yet does He not go up to Judea itself, but into the borders of Judea;
whence it is said, And it came to pass when Jesus had ended all these
sayings, he departed from Galilee.
RABAN; Here then He begins to relate what He did, taught, or suffered
in Judea. At first beyond Jordan eastward, afterwards on this side
Jordan when He came to Jericho, Bethphage, and Jerusalem; whence it
follows, And He came into the coasts of Judea beyond Jordan.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; As the righteous Lord of all, who loves these servants so as not to despise those.
RABAN; It should be known, that the whole territory of the Israelites
was called Judea, to distinguish it from other nations. But its
southern portion, inhabited by the tribes of Judah and Benjamin, was
called Judea proper, to distinguish it from other districts in the same
province as Samaria, Galilee, Decapolis, and the rest. It follows, And
great multitudes followed him.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; They were conducting Him forth, as the young children of
a father going on a far journey. And He setting forth as a father, left
them as pledges of His love the healing of their diseases, as it is
said, And he healed them.
CHRYS; It should be also observed, that the Lord is not either ever
delivering doctrine, or ever working miracles, but one while does this,
and again turns to that; that by His miracles faith might be given to
what He said, and by His teaching might be showed the profit of those
things which He wrought.
ORIGEN; The Lord healed the multitudes beyond Jordan, where baptism was
given. For all are truly healed from spiritual sickness in baptism; and
many follow Christ as did these multitudes, but not rising up as
Matthew, who arose and followed the Lord.
HILARY; Also He cures the Galileans on the borders of Judea, that He
might admit the sins of the Gentiles to that pardon which was prepared
for the Jews.
CHRYS; For indeed Christ so healed men, as to do good both to
themselves, and through them to many other. For these men's healing was
to others the occasion of their knowledge of God; but not to the
Pharisees, who were only hardened by the miracles; whence it follows;
And the Pharisees came to him, tempting him, and saying, Is it lawful
for a man to put away his wife for every cause?
JEROME; That they might have Him as it were between the horns of a
syllogism, so that, whatever answer He should make, it would lie open
to cavil. Should He allow a wife to be put away for any cause, and the
marriage of another, he would seem to contradict Himself as a preacher
of chastity. Should He answer that she may not be put away for any
cause whatsoever, He will be judged to have spoken impiously, and to
make against the teaching of Moses and of God.
CHRYS; Observe their wickedness even in the way of putting their
question. The Lord had above disputed concerning this law, but they now
ask Him as though He had spoken nothing thereof; supposing He had
forgot what He had before delivered in this matter.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; But, as when you see one much pursuing the acquaintance
of physicians, you know that he is sick, so, when you see either man or
woman inquiring concerning divorce, know that that man is lustful and
that woman unchaste. For chastity has pleasure in wedlock, but desire
is tormented as though under a slavish bondage therein. And knowing
that they had no sufficient cause to allege for their putting away
their wives, save their own lewdness, they feigned many divers causes.
They feared to ask Him for what cause, lest they should be tied down
within the limits of fixed and certain causes; and therefore they asked
if it were lawful for every cause; for they knew that appetite knows no
limits, and cannot hold itself within the bounds of one marriage, but
the more it is indulged the more it is kindled.
ORIGEN; Seeing the Lord thus tempted, let none of His disciples who is
set to teach think it hard if he also be by some tempted. However, He
replies to His tempters with the doctrines of piety.
JEROME; But He so frames His answer as to evade their snare. He brings
in the testimony of Holy Writ, and the law of nature, and opposing
God's first sentence to this second, He answered and said to them, Have
you not read, that he which made them at the beginning made them male
and female? This is written in the beginning of Genesis This teaches
that second marriages are to be avoided, for He said not male and
females, which was what was sought by the putting away of the first,
but, male and female, implying only one tie of wedlock.
RABAN; For by the whole some design of God it was ordained that a man
should have in the w omen a part of his own body, and should not look
upon as separate from himself that which he knew was formed out of
himself.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; If then God created the male and female out of one, to
this end that they should be one, why then henceforth were not they
born man and wife at one birth, as it is with certain insects? Because
God created male and female for the continuance of the species, yet is
He ever a lover of chastity, and promoter of continence. Therefore did
He not follow this pattern in all kinds, to the end that, if any man
choose to marry, he may know what is, according to the first
disposition of the creation, the condition of man and wife; but if he
choose not to marry, he shall not be under necessity to marry by the
circumstances of his birth, lest he should by his continence be the
destruction of the other who was not willing to be continent; for which
same cause God forbids that after being joined in wedlock one should
separate if the other be unwilling.
CHRYS. But not by the law of creation only, but also by the practice of
the law, He shows that they ought to be joined one and one, and never
put asunder; And he said, For this cause shall a man leave his father
and his mother, and shall cleave to his wife.
JEROME; In like manner He says his wife, and not wives, and adds
expressly, and they two shall be one flesh For it is the reward of
marriage that one flesh, namely in the offspring, is made of two.
GLOSS; Or, one flesh, that is in carnal connection.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; If then because the wife is made of the man, and both one
of one flesh, a man shall leave his father and his mother, then there
should be yet greater affection between brothers and sisters, for these
come of the same parents, but man and wife of different. But this is
saying too much, because the ordinance of God is of more force than the
law of nature. For God's precepts are not subject to the law of nature,
but nature bends to the precepts of God. Also brethren are born of one,
that they should seek out different roads; but the man and the wife are
born of different persons, that they should coalesce in one. The order
of nature also follows the appointment of God. For as is the sap in
trees, so is affection in man. The sap ascends from the roots into the
leaves, and passes forth into the seed. Therefore parents love their
children, but are not so loved of them, for the desire of a man is not
towards his parents, but towards the sons whom he has begot; and this
is what is said, Therefore shall a man lease his father and his mother,
and shall cleave to his wife.
CHRYS; See the wisdom of the Teacher. Being asked, Is it lawful, He
said not straight, It is not lawful, lest they should be troubled, but
establishes it through a proof. For God made them from the beginning
male and female, and not merely joined them together, but bade them
quit father and mother; and not bade the husband merely approach his
wife, but be joined to her, showing by this manner of speaking the
inseparable bond. He even added a still closer union, saying, And they
two shall be one flesh.
AUG; Whereas Scripture witnesses that these words were said by the
first man, and the Lord here declares that God spoke them, hence we
should understand that by reason of the ecstasy which had passed upon
Adam, he was enabled to speak this as a prophecy.
REMIG; The Apostle says that this is a mystery in Christ and the
Church; for the Lord Jesus Christ left His Father when He came down
from heaven to earth; and He left His mother, that is, the synagogue,
because of its unbelief, and crave to His wife, that is, the Holy
Church, and they two are one flesh, that is, Christ and the Church are
one body.
CHRYS; When He had brought forward the words and facts of the old law,
He then interprets it with authority, and lays down a law, saying,
Therefore they are no more two, but one flesh. For as those who love
one another spiritually are said to be one soul, And all they that
believed had one heart and one soul, so husband and wife who love each
other after the flesh, are said to be one flesh. And as it is a
wretched thing to cut the flesh, so is it an unjust thing to put away a
wife.
AUG; For they are called one, either from their union, or from the
derivation of the woman, who was taken out of the side of the man.
CHRYS; He brings in God yet again, saying, What God has joined, let no
man put asunder, showing that it is against both nature and God's law
to put away a wife; against nature, because one flesh is therein
divided; against law, because God has joined and forbidden to sunder
them.
JEROME; God has joined by making man and woman one flesh; this then man
may not put asunder, but God only. Man puts asunder, when from desire
of a second wife the first is put away; God puts asunder, who also had
joined, when by consent for the service of God we so have our wives as
though we had them not.
AUG; Behold now out of the books of Moses it is proved to the Jews that
a wife may not be put away. For they thought that they were doing
according to the purport of Moses' law when they did put them away.
This also we learn hence by the testimony of Christ Himself, that it
was God who made it thus, and joined them male and female; which when
the Manicheans deny, they are condemned, resisting the Gospel of
Christ.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; This sentence of chastity seemed hard to these
adulterers; but they could not make answer to the argument. However,
they will not submit to the truth, but betake themselves for shelter to
Moses, as men having a bad cause fly to some powerful personage, that
where justice is not, his countenance may prevail; They say to him, Why
did Moses then command to give a writing of divorcement, and to put her
away?
JEROME; Here they reveal the cavil which they had prepared; but the
Lord had not given sentence of Himself, but had recalled to their minds
ancient history, and the commands of God.
CHRYS; Had the Lord been opposed to the Old Testament, He would not
thus have contended in Moses' behalf, nor have gone about to show that
what was his, was in agreement with the things of old. But the
unspeakable wisdom of Christ made answer and excuse for these in this
manner, He said to them, Moses for the hardness of your hearts suffered
you to put away your wives. By this He clears Moses from their charge,
and retorts it all upon their own head.
AUG; For how great was that hardness! When not even the intervention of
a bill of divorce, which gave room for just and prudent men to endeavor
to dissuade, could move them to renew the conjugal affection. And with
what wit do the Manicheans blame Moses, as severing wedlock by a bill
of divorce, and commend Christ as, on the contrary, confirming its
force? Whereas according to their impious science they should have
praised Moses for putting asunder what the devil had joined, and found
fault with Christ who riveted the bonds of the devil.
CHRYS; At last, because what He had said was severe, He goes back to the old law, saying, From the beginning it was not so.
JEROME; What He says is to this purpose. Is it possible that God should
so contradict Himself, as to command one thing at first, and after
defeat His own ordinance by a new statute? Think not so; but, whereas
Moses saw that through desire of second wives who should be richer,
younger, or fairer, that the first were put to death, or treated ill,
he chose rather to suffer separation, than the continuance of hatred
and assassination. Observe moreover that He said not God suffered you,
but, Moses; showing that it was, as the Apostle speaks, a counsel of
man, not a command of God.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; Therefore said He well, Moses suffered, not commanded.
For what we command, that we ever wish; but when we suffer, we yield
against our will, because we have not the power to put full restraint
upon the evil wills of men. He therefore suffered you to do evil that
you might not do worse; thus in suffering this he was not enforcing the
righteousness of God, but taking away its sinfulness from a sin; that
while you did it according to His law, your sin should not appear sin.
9. And I say to you, Whosoever shall put away his wife, except it be
for fornication, and shall marry another, commit adultery: and who
marries her which is put away, does commit adultery.
CHRYS; Having stopped their mouths, He now set forth the Law with
authority, saying, But I say to you, that whosoever shall put away his
wife, except for fornication, and marries another, commits adultery.
ORIGEN; Perhaps some one will say, that Jesus in thus speaking,
suffered wives to be put away for the same cause that Moses suffered
them, which He says was for the hardness of the hearts of the Jews. Put
to this it is to be answered, that if by the Law an adulteress is
stoned, that sin is not to be understood as the shameful thing for
which Moses suffers a writing of divorce; for in a cause of adultery it
was not lawful to give a writing of divorce. But Moses perhaps calls
every sin in a woman a shameful thing, which if it be found in her, a
bill of divorce is written against her. But we should inquire, If it is
lawful to put away a wife for the cause of fornication only, what is it
if a woman be not an adulteress, but have done any other heinous crime;
have been found a poisoner, or to have murdered her children? The Lord
has explained this matter in another place, saying, who puts her away,
except for the cause of fornication, makes her to commit adultery,
giving her an opportunity of a second marriage.
JEROME; It is fornication alone which destroys the relationship of the
wife; for when she has divided one flesh into two, and has separated
herself by fornication from her husband, she is not to be retained,
lest she should bring her husband also under the curse, which Scripture
has spoken, He that keep an adulteress is a fool and wicked.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; For as he is cruel and unjust that puts away a chaste
wife, so is he a fool and unjust that retains an unchaste; for in that
he hides the guilt of his wife, he is an encourager of foulness.
AUG; For a reunion of the wedlock, even after actual commission of
adultery, is neither shameful nor difficult, where there is an
undoubted remission of sin through the keys of the kingdom of heaven;
not that after being divorced from her husband an adulteress should be
called back again, but that after her union with Christ she should no
longer be called an adulteress.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; For every thing by whatever causes it is created, by the
same is it destroyed. It is not matrimony but the will that makes the
union; and therefore it is not a separation of bodies but a separation
of wills that dissolves it. He then who puts away his wife and does not
take another is still her husband; for though their bodies be not
united, their wills are united. But when he takes another, then he
manifestly puts his wife away; wherefore the Lord says not, Who puts
away his wife, but, Who marries another, commits adultery.
RABAN; There is then but one carnal cause why a wife should be put
away, that is, fornication; and but one spiritual, that is, the fear of
God. But there is no cause why while she who has been put away is
alive, another should be married.
JEROME; For it might be that a man might falsely charge an innocent
wife, and for the sake of another woman might fasten an accusation upon
her. Therefore it is commanded so to put away the first, that a second
be not married while the first is yet alive. Also because it might
happen that by the same law a wife would divorce her husband, it is
also provided that she take not another husband; and because one who
had become an adulteress would have no further fear of disgrace, it is
commanded that she marry not another husband. But if she do marry
another, she is in the guilt of adultery; wherefore it follows, And who
marries her that is put away, commits adultery.
GLOSS; He says this to the terror of him that would take her to wife, for the adulteress would have no fear of disgrace.
10. His disciples say to him, If the case of the man be so with his wife, it is not good to marry.
11. But he said to them, All men cannot receive this saying, save they to whom it is given.
12. For there are some eunuchs, which were so born from their mother's
womb: and there are some eunuchs, which were made eunuchs of men: and
there be eunuchs, which have made themselves eunuchs for the kingdom of
heaven's sake. He that is able to receive it, let him receive it.
JEROME; A wife is a grievous burden, if it is not permitted to put her
away except for the cause of fornication. For what if she be a
drunkard, an evil temper, or of evil habits, is she to be kept. The
Apostles, perceiving this burden, express what they feel; His disciples
say to him, If the case of the man be so with his wife, it is not good
to marry.
CHRYS; For it is a lighter thing to contend with himself, and his own lust, than with an evil woman.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; And the Lord said not, It is good, but rather assented
that it is not good. However, He considered the weakness of the flesh;
But he said to them, All cannot receive this saying; that is, All are
not able to do this.
JEROME; But let none think, that wherein He adds, save they to whom it
its given, that either fate or fortune is implied, as though they were
virgins only whom chance has led to such a fortune. For that is given
to those who have sought it of God, who have longed for it, who have
striven that they might obtain it.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; But all cannot obtain it because all do not desire to
obtain it. The prize is before them; he who desires the honor will not
consider the toil. None would ever vanquish, if all shunned the
struggle. Because then some have fallen from their purpose of
continence, we ought not therefore to faint from that virtue; for they
that fall in the battle do not slay the rest. That He says therefore,
Save they to whom it is given, shows that unless we receive the aid of
grace, we have not strength. But this aid of grace is not denied to
such as seek it, for the Lord says above, Ask, and you shall receive.
CHRYS; Then to show that this is possible, He says, For there are some
eunuchs, which were made eunuchs of men; as much as to say, Consider,
had you been so made of others, you would have lost the pleasure
without gaining the reward.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; For as the deed without the will does not constitute a
sin; so a righteous act is not in the deed unless the will go with it.
That therefore is honorable continence, not which mutilation of body of
necessity enforces, but which the will of holy purpose embraces.
JEROME; He speaks of three kinds of eunuchs, of whom two are carnal,
and one spiritual. One, those who are so born of their mother's womb;
another, those whom enemies or courtly luxury has made so; a third,
those who have made themselves so for the kingdom of heaven, and who he
might have been men, but become eunuchs for Christ. To them the reward
is promised, for to the others whose continence was involuntary,
nothing is due.
HILARY; The cause in one item he assigns nature; in the next violence,
and in the last his own choice, in him, namely, that determined to be
so from hope of the kingdom of heaven.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; For they are born such, just as others are born having
six or four fingers. For if God according as He formed our bodies in
the beginning, had continued the same order unchangeably, the working
of God would have been brought into oblivion among men. The order of
nature is therefore changed at times from its nature, that God the
framer of nature may be had in remembrance.
JEROME; Or we may say otherwise. The eunuchs from their mothers' wombs
are they whose nature is colder, and not prone to lust. And they that
are made so of men are they whom physicians made so, or they whom
worship of idols has made effeminate, or who from the influence of
heretical teaching pretend to chastity, that they may thereupon claim
truth for their tenets. But none of them obtain the kingdom of heaven,
save he only who has become a eunuch for Christ's sake. Whence it
follows, He that is able to receive it, let him receive it; let each
calculate his own strength, whether he is able to fulfill the rules of
virginity and abstinence. For in itself continence is sweet and
alluring, but each man must consider his strength, that he only that is
able may receive it. This is the voice of the Lord exhorting and
encouraging on His soldiers to the reward of chastity, that he who can
fight might fight and conquer and triumph.
CHRYS; When he says, Who have made themselves eunuchs. He does not mean
cutting off of members, but a putting away of evil thoughts. For he
that cuts off a limb is under a curse, for such an one undertakes the
deeds of murderers, and opens a door to Manicheans who depreciate the
creature, and cut off the same members as do the Gentiles. For to cut
off members is of the temptation of demons. But by the means of which
we have spoken desire is not diminished but made more urgent; for it
has its source elsewhere, and chiefly in a weak purpose and an
unguarded heart. For if the heart be well governed, there is no danger
from the natural motions; nor does the amputation of a member bring
such peacefulness and immunity from temptation as does a bridle upon
the thoughts.
13. Then were there brought to him little children, that he
should put his hands on them, and pray: and the disciples rebuked them.
14. But Jesus said, Suffer little children, and forbid them not to come to me: for of such is the kingdom of heaven.
15. And he laid his hands on them, and departed thence.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; The Lord had been holding discourse of chastity; and some
of His hearers now brought to Him infants, who in respect of chastity
are the purest; for they supposed that it was the pure in body only
whom He had approved; and this is that which is said, Then were brought
to him little children, that he should put his hands on them, and pray.
ORIGEN; For they now understood from His previous mighty works, that by
laying on of His hands and by prayer evils were obviated. They bring
therefore children to Him, judging that it were impossible that after
the Lord had by His touch conveyed divine virtue into them, harm or any
demon should come nigh them.
REMIG; For it was a custom among the ancients that little children
should be brought to aged persons, to receive benediction by their hand
or tongue; and according to this custom little children are now brought
to the Lord.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; The flesh as it delights not in good, if it hear any good
readily forgets it; but the evil that it has it retains ever. But a
little while before Christ took a little child and said, Except you
become as this child, you shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven,
yet His disciples, presently forgetting this innocence of children, now
forbid children, as unworthy to come to Christ.
JEROME; Not because they liked not that they should have benediction of
the Savior's hand and mouth; but forasmuch as their faith was not yet
perfect, they thought that He like other men would be wearied by the
applications of those that brought them.
CHRYS; Or the disciples would have thrust them away, from respect to
Christ's dignity. But the Lord teaching them holy thoughts, and to
subdue the pride of this world, took the children into His arms, and
promised to such the kingdom of heaven; But Jesus said to them, Suffer
little children and forbid them not to come to me, for of such is the
kingdom of heaven.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; For who were worthy to come to Christ, if simple infancy
were thrust away? Therefore he said, Forbid them not. For if they shall
turn out saints, why hinder you the sons from coming to their Father?
And if sinners, why do you pronounce a sentence of condemnation, before
you see any fault in them?
JEROME; And He said distinctly, Of such is the kingdom of heaven, not
of these, to show that it was not years, but disposition that
determined His judgment, and that the reward was promised to such as
had like innocence and simplicity.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; The present passage instructs all parents to bring their
children to the priests, for it is not the priest who lays his hands on
them, but Christ, in whose name hands are laid. For if he that offers
his food in prayer to God eats it sanctified, for it is sanctified by
the word of God, and by prayer, as the Apostle speaks, how much rather
ought children to be offered to God, and sanctified? And this is the
reason of blessing of food, Because the whole world lie in wickedness;
so that all things that have body, which are a great part of the world,
die in wickedness. Consequently infants when born, are as respects
their flesh lying in wickedness.
ORIGEN; Mystically; We call them children who are yet carnal in Christ,
having need of milk. They who bring the babes to the Savior, are they
who profess to have knowledge of the word, but are still simple, and
have for their food children's lessons, being yet novices. They who
seem more perfect, and are therefore the disciples of Jesus, before
they have learnt the way of righteousness which is for children, rebuke
those who by simple doctrine bring to Christ children and babes, that
is, such as are less learned. But the Lord exhorting His disciples now
become men to condescend to the needs of babes, to be babes to babes,
that they may gain babes, says, For of such is the kingdom of heaven.
For He Himself also, when He was in the form of God, was made a babe.
These things we should attend to, lest in esteeming that more excellent
wisdom, and spiritual advancement, as though we were become great we
should despise the little ones of the Church, forbidding children to be
brought to Jesus. But since children cannot follow all things that are
commanded them, Jesus laid His hands upon them, and leaving virtue in
them by His touch, went away from them, seeing they were not able to
follow Him, like the other more perfect disciples.
REMIG; Also laying His hands upon them, He blessed them, to signify that the lowly in spirit are worthy His grace and blessing.
GLOSS; He laid His hands upon them while men held them, to signify that the grace of His aid was necessary.
HILARY; The infants are a type of the Gentiles, to whom salvation is
rendered by faith and hearing. But the disciples, in their first zeal
for the salvation of Israel, forbid them to approach, but the Lord
declares that they are not to be forbidden. For the gift of the Holy
Ghost was to be conferred upon the Gentiles by laying on of hands, as
soon as the Law had ceased.
16. And, behold, one came and said to him, Good Master, what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life?
17. And he said to him, Why do you call me good? there is none good but
one, that is, God: but if you will enter into life, keep the
commandments.
18. He said to him, Which? Jesus said, You shall do no murder, You
shall not commit adultery, You shall not steal, You shall not bear
false witness,
19. Honor your father and your mother: and, You shall love your neighbor as yourself.
20. The young man said to him, All these things have I kept from my youth up: what lack I yet?
21. Jesus said to him, If you will be perfect, go and sell that you
have, and give to the poor, and you shall have treasure in heaven: and
come and follow me.
22. But when the young man heard that saying, he went away sorrowful: for he had great possessions.
RABAN; This man had, it may be, heard of the Lord, that only they who
were like to little children were worthy to enter into the heavenly
kingdom; but desiring to know more certainly, he asks to have it
declared to him not in parables, but expressly, by what merits he might
attain eternal life. Therefore it is said; And, behold, one came and
said to him, Good Master, what good thing shall I do that I may have
eternal life?
JEROME; He that asks this question is both young, rich, and proud, and
he asks not as one that desires to learn, but as tempting Him. This we
can prove by this, that when the Lord had said to him, If you will
enter into life, keep the commandments, he further insidiously asks,
which are the commandments? as if he could not read them for himself,
or as if the Lord could command any thing contrary to them.
CHRYS; But I for my part, though I deny not that he was a lover of
money, because Christ convicts him as such, cannot consider him to have
been a hypocrite, because it is unsafe to decide in uncertain cases,
and especially in making charges against any. Moreover Mark removes all
suspicion of this kind, for he says that he came to Him, and knelt
before Him; and that Jesus when He looked on him, loved him. And if he
had come to tempt Him, the Evangelist would have signified as much, as
he has done in other places. Or if he had said nothing thereof, Christ
would not have suffered him to be hid, but would either have convicted
him openly, or have covertly suggested it. But He does not this; for it
follows, He said to him, Why do you ask me concerning good?
AUG; This may seem a discrepancy, that Matthew here gives it, Why do
you ask me concerning good? whereas Mark and Luke have, Why do you call
me good? For this, Why do you ask me concerning good? may seem rather
to be referred to his question, What good thing shall I do? for in that
he both mentioned good, and asked a question. But this, Good Master, is
not yet a question. Either sentence may be understood thus very
appropriately to the passage.
JEROME; But because he had styled Him Good Master, and had not
confessed Him as God, or as the Son of God, He tells him, that in
comparison of God there is no saint to be called good, of whom it is
said, Confess to the Lord, for he is good; and therefore He says, There
is one good, that is, God. But that none should suppose that by this
the Son of God is excluded from being good, we read in another place,
The good Shepherd lays down his life for his sheep.
AUG; Or, because he sought eternal life, (and eternal life consists in
such contemplation in which God is beheld not for punishment, but for
everlasting joy,) and knew not with whom he spoke, but thought Him only
a Son of Man, therefore He says, Why do you ask me concerning good,
calling me in respect of what you see in me, Good Master? This form of
the Son of Man shall appear in the judgment, not to the righteous only,
but to the wicked, and the very sight shall be to them an evil, and
their punishment. But there is a sight of My form, in which I am equal
to God. That one God therefore, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, is alone
good, because none see Him to mourning and sorrow, but only to
salvation and true joy.
JEROME; For Our Savior does not reject this witness to His goodness,
but corrected the error of calling Him Good Master apart from God.
CHRYS; Wherein then was the profit that He answered thus? He leads him
by degrees, and teaches him to lay aside false flattery, and rising
above the things which are upon earth to cleave to God, to seek things
to come, and to know Him that is truly good, the root and source of
every good.
ORIGEN; Christ also answers thus, because of that He said, What good
thing shall I do? For when we depart from evil and do good, that which
we do is called good by comparison with what other men do. But when
compared with absolute good, in the sense in which it is here said,
There is one good, our good is not good. But some one may say, that
because the Lord knew that the purpose of him who thus asked Him was
not even to do such good as man can do, that therefore He said, Why do
you ask me concerning good? as much as to say, Why do you ask me
concerning good, seeing you are not prepared to do what is good. But
after this He says, If you will enter into life, keep the commandments.
Where note, that He speaks to him as yet standing without life; for
that man is in one sense without life, who is without Him who said, I
am the life. Otherwise, every man upon earth may be, not in life
itself, but only in its shadow, while he is clad in a body of death.
But any man shall enter into life, if he keep himself from dead works,
and seek living works. But there are dead words and living words, also
dead thoughts and living thoughts, and therefore He says, If you will
enter into life, keep the commandments.
AUG; And He said not, If you desire life eternal; but, If you will
enter into life, calling that simply life, which shall be everlasting.
Here we should consider how eternal life should be loved, when this
miserable and finite life is so loved.
REMIG; These words prove that the Law gave to such as kept it not only
temporal promises, but also life eternal. And because the hearing these
things made him thoughtful, He said to him, Which?
CHRYS; This he said not to tempt Him, but because he supposed that they
were other than the commandments of the Law, which should be the means
of life to him.
REMIG; And Jesus, condescending as to a weak one, most graciously set
out to him the precepts of the Law; Jesus said, you shall do no murder;
and of all these precepts follows the exposition, And you shall love
your neighbor as yourself. For the Apostle says, Whoever loves his
neighbor has fulfilled the Law? But it should be inquired, why the Lord
has enumerated only the precepts of the Second Table? Perhaps because
this young man was zealous in the love of God, or because love of our
neighbor is the step by which we ascend to the love of God.
ORIGEN; Or perhaps these precepts are enough to introduce one, if I may
say so, to the entrance of life; but neither these, nor any like them,
are enough to conduct one to the more inward parts of life. But whoever
transgresses one of these commandments, shall not even come to the
entrance in to life.
CHRYS; But because all the commandments that the Lord had recounted
were contained in the Law, The young man said to him, All these have I
kept from my youth up. And did not even rest there, but asked further,
What lack I yet? which alone is a mark of his intense desire.
REMIG; But to those who would be perfect in grace, He shows how they
may come to perfection, Jesus said to him, If you will be perfect, go,
and sell all that you have, and give to the poor. Mark the words; He
said not, Go, and consume all you have; but Go, and sell; and not some,
as did Ananias and Sapphira, but All. And well He added, that you have,
for what we have are our lawful possessions. Those therefore that he
justly possessed were to be sold; what had been gained unjustly were to
be restored to those from whom they had been taken. And He said not,
Give to your neighbors, nor to the rich, but to the poor.
AUG; Nor need it be made a scruple in what monasteries, or to the
indigent brethren of what place, any one gives those things that he
has, for there is but one commonwealth of all Christians. Therefore
wherever any Christian has laid out his goods, in all places alike he
shall receive what is necessary for himself, shall receive it of that
which is Christ's.
RABAN; See two kinds of life which we have heard set before men; the
Active, to which pertains, You shall not kill, and the rest of the Law;
and the Contemplative, to which pertains this, If you will be perfect.
The active pertains to the Law, the contemplative to the Gospel; for as
the Old Testament went before the New, so good action goes before
contemplation.
AUG; Nor are such only partakers in the kingdom of heaven, who, to the
end they may be perfect, sell or part with all that they have; but in
these Christian ranks are numbered by reason of a certain communication
of their charity a multitude of hired troops; those to whom it shall be
said in the end, I was hungry, and you gave me to eat; whom be it far
from us to consider excluded from life eternal, as they who obey not
the commands of the Gospel.
JEROME; That Vigilantius asserts that they who retain the use of their
property, and from time to time divide their incomes among the poor, do
better than they who sell their possessions and lavish them in one act
of charity, to him, not I, but God shall make answer, If you will be
perfect, Go and sell. That which you so extol, is but the second or
third grade; which we indeed admit, only remembering that what is first
is to be set before what is third or second.
PSEUDO-AUG; It is good to distribute with discrimination to the poor;
it is better, with resolve of following the Lord, to strip one's self
of all at once, and freed from anxiety to suffer want with Christ.
CHRYS; And because He spoke of riches warning us to strip ourselves of
them, He promises to repay things greater, by how much heaven is
greater than earth, and therefore He says, And you shall have treasure
in heaven. By the word treasure He denotes the abundance and endurance
of the reward.
ORIGEN; If every commandment is fulfilled in this one word, you shall
love your neighbor as yourself, and if he is perfect who has fulfilled
every command, how is it that the Lord said to the young man, If you
will be perfect, when he had declared, All these have I kept from my
youth up. Perhaps that he says, you shall love your neighbor as
yourself, was not said by the Lord, but added by some one, for neither
Mark nor Luke have given it in this place. Or otherwise; It is written
in the Gospel according to the Hebrews, that, when the Lord said, Go,
and sell all that you have, the rich man began to scratch his head,
being displeased with the saying. Then the Lord said to him, How do you
say, I have kept the Law, and the Prophets, since it is written in the
Law, you shall love your neighbor as yourself? For how many of your
brethren sons of Abraham, clothed in filth, perish for hunger? your
house is full of many good things, and nothing goes out to them. The
Lord then, desiring to convict this rich man, says to him, If you will
be perfect, go and sell all that you have, and give to the poor; for so
it will be seen if you cost indeed love your neighbor as yourself.
But if he is perfect who has all the virtues, how does he become
perfect who sells all that he has and gives to the poor? For suppose
one to have done this, will he thereby become forthwith free from
anger, desire, having every virtue, and abandoning all vice? Perhaps
wisdom may suggest, that he that has given his goods to the poor, is
aided by their prayers, receiving of their spiritual abundance to his
want, and is made in this way perfect, though he may have some human
passions. Or thus; He that thus exchanged his riches for poverty, in
order that he might become perfect, shall have assistance to become
wise in Christ, just, chaste also, and devoid of all passion; but not
so as that in the moment when he gave up all his goods, he should
forthwith become perfect; but only that from that day forward the
contemplation of God will begin to bring him to all virtues.
Or again, it will pass into a moral exposition, and say, that the
possessions of a man are the acts of his mind. Christ then bids a man
to sell all his evil possessions, and as it were to give them over to
the virtues which should work the same, which were poor in all that is
good. For as the peace of the Apostles returns to them again, unless
there be a son of peace, so all sins return upon their actors, when one
will no longer indulge his evil propensities; and thus there can be no
doubt that he will straightway become perfect who in this sense sells
all his possessions. It is manifest that he that does these things, has
treasure in heaven, and is himself become of heaven; and he will have
in heaven treasure of God's glory, and riches in all God's wisdom. Such
an one will be able to follow Christ, for he has no evil possession to
draw him off from so following.
JEROME; For many who leave their riches do not therefore follow the
Lord; and it is not sufficient for perfection that they despise money,
unless they also follow the Savior, that unless having forsaken evil,
they also do what is good. For it is easier to contemn the hoard than
quit the propensity; therefore it follows, And come and follow me; for
he follows the Lord who is his imitator, and who walks in his steps. It
follows, And when the young man had heard these words, he went away
sorrowful. This is the sorrow that leads to death. And the cause of his
sorrow is added, for he had great possessions, thorns, that is, and
briars, which choked the holy leaven.
CHRYS; For they that have little, and they that abound, are not in like
measure encumbered. For the acquisition of riches raises a greater
flame, and desire is more violently kindled.
AUG; I know not how, but in the love of worldly superfluities, it is
what we have already got, rather than what we desire to get, that most
strictly enthrall us. For whence went this young man away sorrowful,
but that he had great possessions? It is one thing to lay aside
thoughts of further acquisition, and another to strip ourselves of what
we have already made our own; one is only rejecting what is not ours,
the other is like parting with one of our own limbs.
ORIGEN; But historically, the young man is to be praised for that he
did not kill, did not commit adultery; but is to be blamed for that he
sorrowed at Christ's words calling him to perfection. He was young
indeed in soul, and therefore leaving Christ, he went his way.
23. Then said Jesus to his disciples, I say to you, That a rich man shall hardly enter into the kingdom of heaven.
24. And again I say to you, It is easier for a camel to go through the
eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God.
25. When his disciples heard it, they were exceedingly amazed, saying, Who then can be saved?
26. But Jesus beheld them, and said to them, With men this is impossible; but with God all things are possible.
GLOSS; The Lord took occasion from this rich man to, hold discourse
concerning the covetous; Then said Jesus, to his disciples, I say to
you, &c.
CHRYS; What He spoke was not condemning riches in themselves, but those
who were enslaved by them; also encouraging His disciples that being
poor they should not be ashamed by reason of their poverty.
HILARY; To have riches is no sin; but moderation is to be observed in
our having. For how shall we communicate to the necessities of the
saints, if we have not out of what we may communicate?
RABAN; But though there be a difference between having and loving riches, yet it is safer neither to have nor to love them.
REMIG; Whence in Mark the Lord expounding the meaning of this saying,
speaks thus, It is hard for them that trust in riches to enter into the
kingdom of heaven. They trust in riches, who build all their hopes on
them.
JEROME; Because riches once gained are hard to be despised, He said not
it is impossible, but it is hard. Difficulty does not imply the
impossibility, but points out the infrequency of the occurrence.
HILARY; It is a dangerous toil to become rich; and lack of guilt
occupied in increasing its wealth has taken upon itself a sore burden;
the servant of God gains not the things of the world, clear of the sins
of the world. Hence is the difficulty of entering the kingdom of
heaven.
CHRYS; Having said that it was hard for a rich man to enter into the
kingdom of heaven, He now proceeds to show that it is impossible, And
again I say to you, It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a
needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of heaven.
JEROME; According to this, no rich man can be saved. But if we read
Isaiah, how the: camels of Midian and Ephah came to Jerusalem with
gifts and presents, and they who once were crooked and bowed down by
the weight of their sins, enter the gates of Jerusalem, we shall see
how these camels, to which the rich are likened when they have laid
aside the heavy load of sins, and the distortion of their whole bodies,
may then enter by that narrow and strait way that leads to life.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; The Gentile souls are likened to the deformed body of the
camel, in which is seen the humpback of idolatry; for the knowledge of
God is the exaltation of the soul. The needle is the Son of God, the
fine point of which is His divinity, and the thicker part what He is
according to His incarnation. But it is altogether straight and without
turning; and through the womb of His passion, the Gentiles have entered
into life eternal. By this needle is sewn the robe of immortality; it
is this needle that has sewn the flesh to the spirit, that has joined
together the Jews and the Gentiles, and coupled man in friendship with
angels. It is easier therefore for the Gentiles to pass through the
needle's eye, than for the rich Jews to enter into the kingdom of
heaven. For if the Gentiles are with such difficulty withdrawn from the
irrational worship of idols, how much more hardly shall the Jews be
withdrawn from the reasonable service of God?
GLOSS; It is explained otherwise; That at Jerusalem there was a certain
gate, called, The needle's eye, through which a camel could not pass,
but on its bended knees, and after its burden had been taken off; and
so the rich should not be able to pass along the narrow way that leads
to life, till he had put off the burden of sin, and of riches, that is,
by ceasing to love them.
GREG; Or, by the rich man He intends anyone who is proud, by the camel
he denotes the right humility. The camel passed through the needle's
eye, when our Redeemer through the narrow way of suffering entered in
to the taking upon Him death; for that passion was as a needle which
pricked the body with pain. But the camel enters the needle's eye
easier than the rich man enters the kingdom of heaven; because if He
had not first shown us by His passion the form of His humility, our
proud stiffness would never have bent itself to His lowliness.
CHRYS; The disciples though poor are troubled for the salvation of others, beginning even now to have the bowels of doctors.
AUG; Whereas the rich are few in comparison of the multitude of the
poor, we must suppose that the disciples understood all who wish for
riches, as included in the number of the rich.
CHRYS; This therefore He proceeds to show is the work of God, there
needing much grace to guide a man in the midst of riches; But Jesus
beheld them, and said to them, With men this is impossible, but with
God all things are possible. By the word beheld them, the Evangelist
conveys that He soothed their troubled soul by His merciful eye.
REMIG; This must not be so understood as though it were possible for
God to cause that the rich, the covetous, the avaricious, and the proud
should enter into the kingdom of heaven; but to cause him to be
converted, and so enter.
CHRYS; And this is not said that you should sit supinely, and let alone
what may seem impossibilities; but considering the greatness of
righteousness, you should strive to enter in with entreaty to God.
27. Then answered Peter and said to him, Behold, we have forsaken all, and followed you; what shall we have therefore?
28. And Jesus said to them, Verily I say to you, That you which have
followed me, in the regeneration when the Son of man shall sit in the
throne of his glory, you also shall sit upon twelve thrones, judging
the twelve tribes of Israel.
29. And everyone that has forsaken houses, or brethren, or sisters, or
father, or mother, or wife, or children, or lands, for my name's sake,
shall receive an hundred fold, and shall inherit everlasting life.
30. But many that are first shall be last; and the last shall be first.
ORIGEN; Peter had heard the word of Christ when He said, If you will be
perfect, go and sell all that you have. Then he observer! that the
young man had departed sorrowful, and considered the difficulty of
riches entering into the kingdom of heaven; and thereupon he put this
question confidently as one who had achieved no easy matter. For though
what he with his brother had left behind them were but little things,
yet were they not esteemed as little with God, who considered that out
of the fullness of their love they had so forsaken those least things,
as they would have forsaken the greatest things if they had had them.
So Peter, thinking rather of his will than of the intrinsic value of
the sacrifice, asked Him confidently, Behold, we have left all.
CHRYS; What was this all, O blessed Peter? The reeds, your net, and
boat. But this he says, not to call to mind his own magnanimity, but in
order to propose the case of the multitude of poor. A poor man might
have said, If I have nothing, I cannot become perfect. Peter therefore
puts this question that you, poor man, may learn that you are in
nothing behind. For he had already received the kingdom of heaven, and
therefore secure of what was already there, he now asks for the whole
world. And see how carefully he frames his question after Christ's
requirements: Christ required two things of a rich man, to give what he
had to the poor, and to follow Him; wherefore he adds, and have
followed you.
ORIGEN; It may be said, In all things which the Father revealed to
Peter that the Son was, righteousness, sanctification, and the like, in
all we have followed Thee. Therefore as a victorious athlete, he now
asks what are the prizes of his contest.
JEROME; Because to forsake is not enough, he adds that which makes
perfection, and have followed you. We have done what you commanded us,
what reward will you then give us? What shall we have?
JEROME; He said not only, you who have left all, for this did the
philosopher Crates, and many other who have despised riches, but added,
and have followed me, which is peculiar to the Apostles and believers.
HILARY; The disciples had followed Christ in the regeneration, that is,
in the layer of baptism, in the sanctification of faith, for this is
that regeneration which the Apostles followed, and which the Law could
not bestow.
JEROME; Or it may be constructed thus, you which have followed me,
shall in the regeneration sit, &c.; that is, when the dead shall
rise from corruption, incorrupt, you also shall sit on thrones of
judges, condemning the twelve tribes of Israel, for that they would not
believe when you believed.
AUG; Thus our flesh will be regenerated by incorruption, as our soul also shall be regenerated by faith.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; For it would come to pass, that in the day of judgment
the Jews would allege, Lord, we knew Thee not to be the Son of God when
you west in the flesh. For who can discern a treasure buried in the
ground, or the sun when obscured by a cloud? The disciples therefore
will then answer, We also were men, and peasants, obscure among the
multitude, but you priests and scribes; but in us a right will became
as it were a lamp of our ignorance, but your evil will became to you a
blinding of your science.
CHRYS; He therefore said not the Gentiles and the whole world, but, the
tribes of Israel, because the Apostles and the Jews had been brought up
under the same laws and customs. So that when the Jews should plead
that they could not believe in Christ, because they were hindered by
their Law, the disciples will be brought forward, who had the same Law.
But some one may say, What great thing is this, when both the Ninevites
and the Queen of the South will have the same? He had before and will
again promise them the highest rewards; and even now He tacitly conveys
something of the same. For of those others He had only said, that they
shall sit, and shall condemn this generation; but He now says to the
disciples, When the Son of Man shall sit, you also shall sit.
It is clear then that they shall reign with Him, and shall share in
that glory; for it is such honor and glory unspeakable that He intends
by the thrones. How is this promise fulfilled? Shall Judas sit among
them? By no means. For the law was as thus ordained of the Lord by
Jeremiah the Prophet, I will speak it upon my people, and upon the
kingdom, that I may build, and plant it. But if it do evil in my sight,
then will I repent me of the good which I said I would do to them, as
much as to say, If they make themselves unworthy of the promise, I will
no more perform that I promised. But Judas showed himself unworthy of
the preeminence; wherefore when He gave this promise to His disciples,
He did not promise it absolutely, for He said not, you shall sit, but,
you which have followed me shall sit; at once excluding Judas, and
admitting such as should be in after time; for neither was the promise
confined to them only, nor yet did it include Judas who had already
shown himself undeserving.
HILARY; Their following Christ in thus exalting the Apostles to twelve
thrones to judge the twelve tribes of Israel, associated them in the
glory of the twelve Patriarchs.
AUG; From this passage we learn that Jesus will judge with His
disciples; whence He says in another place to the Jews, Therefore shall
they be your judges. And whereas He says they shall sit upon twelve
thrones, we need not think that twelve persons only shall judge with
Him. For by the number twelve is signified the whole number of those
that shall judge; and that because the number seven which generally
represents completeness contains the two numbers four and three, which
multiplied together make twelve. For if it were not so, as Matthias was
elected into the place of the traitor Judas, the Apostle Paul who
labored more than they all should not have place to sit to judge; but
he shows that he with the rest of the saints pertains to the number of
judges, when he says, Know you not that we shall judge Angels?
ID; In the number of judges therefore are included all that have left their all and followed the Lord.
GREG; For whosoever, urged by the spur of divine love, shall forsake
what he possesses here, shall without doubt gain there the eminence of
judicial authority; and shall appear as judge with the Judge, for that
he now in consideration of the judgment chastens himself by a voluntary
poverty.
AUG; The same holds good, by reason of this number twelve, of those
that are to be judged. For when it is said, Judging the twelve tribes,
yet is not the tribe of Levi, which is the thirteenth, to be exempt
from being judged by them; nor shall they judge this nation alone, and
not also other nations.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; Or, by that, In the regeneration, Christ designs the
period of Christianity that should be after His ascension, in which men
were regenerated by baptism; and that is the time in which Christ sate
on the throne of His glory. And hereby you may see that He spoke not of
the time of the judgment to come, but of the calling of the Gentiles,
in that He said not, When the Son of Man shall come sitting upon the
throne of his majesty; but only, In the regeneration when he shall sit,
which was from the time that the Gentiles began to believe on Christ;
according to that, God shall reign over the heathen; God sit upon his
holy throne. From that time also the Apostles have sat upon twelve
thrones, that is, over all Christians; for every Christian who receives
the word of Peter, becomes Peter's throne, and so of the rest of the
Apostles. On these thrones then the Apostles sit, parceled into twelve
divisions, after the variety of minds and hearts, known to God only.
For as the Jewish nation was split into twelve tribes, so is the whole
Christian people divided into twelve, so as that some souls are
numbered with the tribe of Reuben, and so of the rest, according to
their several qualities. For all have not all graces alike, one is
excellent in this, another in that. And so the Apostles will judge the
twelve tribes of Israel, that is, all the Jews, by this, that the
Gentiles received the Apostles' word. The whole body of Christians are
indeed twelve thrones for the Apostles, but one throne for Christ. For
all excellencies are but one throne for Christ, for He alone is equally
perfect in all virtues. But of the Apostles each one is more perfect in
some one particular excellence, as Peter in faith; so Peter tests upon
his faith, John on his innocence, and so of the rest.
And that Christ spoke of reward to be given to the Apostles in this
world, is shown by what follows, And everyone that has forsaken houses,
or brethren, or sisters, &c. For if these shall receive an hundred
fold in this life, without doubt to the Apostles also was promised a
reward in this present life.
CHRYS; Or; He holds out rewards in the future life to the Apostles,
because they were already looking above, and desired nothing of things
present; but to others He promises things present.
ORIGEN; Or otherwise; Whoever shall leave all and follow Christ, he
also shall receive those things that were promised to Peter. But if he
has not left all, but only those things in special here enumerated, he
shall receive manifold, and shall possess eternal life.
JEROME; There are that take occasion from this passage to bring forward
the thousand years after the resurrection, and say that then we shall
have a hundred fold of the things we have given up, and moreover life
eternal. But though the promise be in other things worthy, in the
matter of wives it seems to have somewhat shameful, if he who has
forsaken one wife for the Lord's sake, shall receive a hundred in the
world to come. The meaning is therefore, that he that has forsaken
carnal things for the Savior's sake, shall receive spiritual things,
which in a comparison of value are as a hundred to a small number.
ORIGEN; And in this world, because for his brethren after the flesh he
shall find many brethren in the faith; for parents, all the Bishops and
Presbyters; for sons, all that have the age of sons. The Angels also
are brethren, and all they are sisters that have offered themselves
chaste virgins to Christ, as well they that still continue on earth, as
they that now live in heaven. The houses and lands manifold more
suppose in the repose of Paradise, and the city of God. And besides all
these things they shall possess eternal life.
AUG; That He says, A hundred fold, is explained by the Apostle, when he
says, As having nothing, and yet possessing all things. For a hundred
is sometimes put for the whole universe.
JEROME; And that, And every one that has forsaken brethren, agrees with
that He had said before, I am come to set a man at variance with his
father. For they who for the faith of Christ and the preaching of the
Gospel shall despise all the ties, the riches, and pleasures of this
world, they shall receive an hundred fold, and shall possess eternal
life.
CHRYS; But when He says, He that has forsaken wife, it is not to be
taken of actual severing of the marriage tie, but that we should hold
the ties of tile faith dearer than any other. And here is, I think, a
covert allusion to times of persecution; for because there should be
many who would draw away their sons to heathenism, when that should
happen, they should be held neither as fathers, nor husbands.
RABAN; But because many with what zeal they take up the pursuit of
virtue, do not with the same complete it; but either grow cool, or fall
away rapidly; it follows, But many that are first shall be last, and
the last first.
ORIGEN; By this He exhorts those that come late to the heavenly word,
to have to ascend to perfection before many whom they see to have grown
old in the faith. This sense may also overthrow those that boast to
have been educated in Christianity by Christian parents, especially if
those parents have filled the Episcopal see, or the office of Priests
or Deacons in the Church; and hinder them from desponding who have
entertained the Christian doctrines more newly. It has also another
meaning; the first, are the Israelites, who become last because of
their unbelief; and the Gentiles who were last become first. He is
careful to say, Many; for not all who are first shall be last, nor all
last first. For before this have many of mankind, who by nature are the
last, been made by an angelic life above the Angels; and some Angels
who were first have been made last through their sin.
REMIG; It may also be referred in particular to the rich man, who
seemed to be first, by his fulfillment of the precepts of the Law, but
was made last by his preferring his worldly substance to God. The holy
Apostles seemed to be last, but by leaving all they were made first by
the grace of humility. There are many who having entered upon good
works, fall therefrom, and from having been first, become last.
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