catena aurea matthew 20
1. For the kingdom of heaven is like to a man that is a householder,
which went out early in the morning to hire laborers into his vineyard.
2. And when he had agreed with the laborers for a penny a day, he sent them into his vineyard.
3. And he went out about the third hour, and saw others standing idle in the market-place,
4. And said to them; Go you also into the vineyard, and whatsoever is right I will give you. And they went their way.
5. Again he went out about the sixth and ninth hour, and did likewise.
6. And about the eleventh hour he went out, and found others standing
idle, and said to them, Why stand you here all the day idle?
7. They say to him, Because no man has hired us. He said to them, Go
you also into the vineyard; and whatsoever is right, that shall you
receive.
8. So when even was come, the lord of the vineyard said to his steward,
Call the laborers, and give them their hire, beginning from the last to
the first.
9. And when they came that were hired about the eleventh hour, they received every man a penny.
10. But when the first came, they supposed that they should have received more; and they likewise received every man a penny.
11. And when they had received it, they murmured against the good man of the house,
12. Saying, These last have wrought but one hour, and you has made them
equal to us, which have borne the burden and heat of the day.
13. But he answered one of them, and said, Friend, I do you no wrong: did not you agree with me for a penny?
14. Take what is yours, and go your way: I will give to this last, even as to you.
15. Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with my own? Is your eye evil, because I am good?
16. So the last shall be first, and the first last: for many be called, but few chosen.
REMIG; To establish the truth of this saying, There are many, first
that shall be last, and last first, the Lord subjoins a similitude.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; The Master of the household is Christ, whose house are
the heavens and the earth; and the creatures of the heavens, and the
earth, and beneath the earth, his family. His vineyard is
righteousness, in which are set divers sorts of righteousness as vines,
as meekness, chastity, patience, and the other virtues; all of which
are called by one common name righteousness. Men are the cultivators of
this vineyard, whence it is said, Who went out early in the morning to
hire laborers into his vineyard. For God placed His righteousness in
our senses, not for His own but for our benefit. Know then that we are
the hired laborers.
But as no man gives wages to a laborer, to the end he should do nothing
save only to eat, so likewise we were not thereto called by Christ,
that we should labor such things only as pertain to our own good, but
to the glory of God. And like as the hired laborer looks first to his
task, and after to his daily food, so ought we to mind first those
things which concern the glory of God, then those which concern our own
profit. Also as the hired laborer occupies the whole day in his Lord's
work, and takes but a single hour for his own meal; so ought we to
occupy our whole life in the glory of God, taking but a very small
portion of it for the uses of this world. And as the hired laborer when
he has done no work is ashamed that day to enter the house, and ask his
food; how should not you be ashamed to enter the church, and stand
before the face of God, when you have done nothing good in the sight of
God?
GREG; Or; The Master of the household, that is, our Maker, has a
vineyard, that is, the Church universal, which has borne so many
stocks, as many saints as it has put forth from righteous Abel to the
very last saint who shall be born in the end of the world. To instruct
this His people as for the dressing of a vineyard, the Lord has never
ceased to send out His laborers; first by the Patriarchs, next by the
teachers of the Law, then by the Prophets, and at the last by the
Apostles, He has toiled ill the cultivation of His vineyard; though
every man, in whatsoever measure or degree he has joined good action
with right faith, has been a laborer in the vineyard.
ORIGEN; For the whole of this present life may be called one day, long to us, short compared to the existence of God.
GREG; The morning is that age of the world which was from Adam and
Noah, and therefore it is said, Who went out early in the morning to
hire laborers into his vineyard. The terms of their hiring He adds, And
when he had agreed with the laborers for a denarius a day.
ORIGEN; The denarius I suppose here to mean salvation.
REMIG; A denarius was a coin anciently equal to ten sesterces, and
bearing the king's image. Well therefore does the denarius represent
the reward of the keeping of the decalogue. And that, Having agreed
with them for a denarius a day, is well said, to show that every man
labors in the field of the holy Church in hope of the future reward.
GREG. The third hour is the period from Noah to Abraham; of which it is
said, And he went out about the third hour, and saw others standing in
the market-place idle.
ORIGEN; The market-place is all that is without the vineyard, that is, without the Church of Christ.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; For in this world men live by buying and selling, and gain their support by defrauding each other.
GREG; He that lives to himself, and feeds on the delights of the flesh,
is lightly accused as idle, forasmuch as he does not seek the fruit of
godly labor.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; Or; The idle are not sinners, for they are called dead.
But he is idle who w works not the work of God. Do you desire to be not
idle? Take not that which is another's; and give of that which is your
own, and you have labored in the Lord's vineyard, cultivating the vine
of mercy. It follows, And he said to them, Go you also into my
vineyard. Observe that it is with the first alone that He agrees upon
the sum to be given, a denarius; the others are hired on no express
stipulation, but What is right I will give you. For the Lord knowing
that Adam would fall, and that all should hereafter perish in the
deluge, made conditions for him, that he should never say that he
therefore neglected righteousness, because he knew not what reward he
should have. But with the rest He made no contract, seeing He was
prepared to give more than the laborers could hope.
ORIGEN; Or, He did not call upon the laborers of the third hour for a
complete task, but left to their own choice, how much they should work.
For they might perform in the vineyard work equal to that of those who
had wrought since the morning, if they chose to put forth upon their
task an operative energy, such as had not yet been exerted.
GREG; The sixth hour is that from Abraham to Moses, the ninth that from Moses to the coming of the Lord.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; These two hours are coupled together, because in the
sixth and ninth it was that He called the generation of the Jews, and
multiplied to publish His testaments among men, whereas the appointed
time of salvation now drew nigh.
GREG; The eleventh hour is that from the coming of the Lord to the end
of the world. The laborer in the morning, at the third, sixth, and
ninth hours, denotes the ancient Hebrew people, which in its elect from
the very beginning of the world, while it zealously and with right
faith served the Lord, ceased not to labor in the husbandry of the
vineyard. But at the eleventh the Gentiles are called. For they who
through so many ages of the world had neglected to labor for their
living, were they who had stood the whole day idle.
But consider their answer; They say to him, Because no man has hired
us; for neither Patriarch nor Prophet had come to them. And what is it
to say, No man has hired us, but to say, None has preached to us the
way of life.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; For what is our hiring, and the wages of that hiring? The
promise of eternal life; for the Gentiles knew neither God, nor God's
promises.
HILARY; These then are sent into the vineyard, Go you also into my vineyard.
RABAN; But when they had rendered their day's task, at the fitting time
for payment, When even was come, that is, when the day of this world
was drawing to its close.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; Consider, He gives the reward not the next morning, but
in the evening. Thus the judgment shall take place while this world is
still standing, and each man shall receive that which is due to him.
This is on two accounts. First, because the happiness of the world to
come is to be itself the reward of righteousness; so the award is made
before, and not in that world. Secondly, that sinners may not behold
the blessedness of that day, The Lord said to his steward, that is, the
Son to the Holy Spirit.
GLOSS; Or, if you choose, the Father said to the Son; for the Father
wrought by the Son, and the Son by the Holy Spirit, not that there is
any difference of substance, or majesty.
ORIGEN; Or; The Lord said to his steward, that is, to one of the Angels
who was set over the payment of the laborers; or to one of those many
guardians, according to what is written, that The heir as long as he is
a child is under tutors and governors.
REMIG; Or, the Lord Jesus Christ Himself is the master of the
household, and also the steward, like as He is the door, and also the
keeper of the door. For He Himself will come to judgment, to render to
each man according to that he has done. He therefore calls His
laborers, and renders to them their wages, so that when they shall be
gathered together in the judgment, each man shall receive according to
his works.
ORIGEN; But the first laborers having the witness through faith have
not received the promise of God, the lord of the household providing
some better thing for us, that they without us should not be made
perfect. And because we have obtained mercy, we hope to receive the
reward first, we, that is, who are Christ's, and after us they that
wrought before us; wherefore it is said, Call the labors, and give them
their hire, beginning from the last to the first.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; For we always give more willingly, where we give without
return, seeing it is for our own honor that we give. Therefore God in
giving reward to all the saints shows himself just; in giving to us,
merciful; as the Apostle speaks, That the Gentiles might glorify for
his mercy; and thence it is said, Beginning from the last even to the
first. Or surely that God may show His inestimable mercy, He first
rewards the last and more unworthy, and afterwards the first; for of
His great mercy He regarded not order of merit.
AUG; Or; The lesser are therefore taken as first, because the lesser are to be made rich.
GREG; They get alike a denarius who have wrought since the eleventh
hour, (for they sought it with their whole soul,) and who have wrought
since the first. They, that is, who were called from the beginning of
the world have alike received the reward of eternal happiness, with
those who come to the Lord in the end of the world.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; And this not with injustice. For he who was born in the
first period of the world, lived no longer than the determined time of
his life, and what harm was it to him, though the world continued after
his leaving it? And they that shall be born towards its close will not
live less than the days that are numbered to them. And how does it cut
their labor shorter, that the world is speedily ended, when they have
accomplished their thread of life before? Moreover it is not of man to
be born sooner or later, but of the power of God. Therefore he that is
born first cannot claim to himself a higher place, nor ought he to be
held in contempt that was born later.
And when they had received it, they murmured against the good man of
the house, saying. But if this we have said be true, that both first
and last have lived their own time, and neither more nor less; and that
each man's death is his consummation,
what means this that they say, We have born the burden and heat of the
day? Because to know that the end of the world is at hand is of great
force to make us do righteousness. Wherefore Christ in His love to us
said, The kingdom of heaven shall draw nigh. Whereas it was a weakening
of them to know that the duration of the world was to be yet long. So
that though they did not indeed live through the whole of time, they
seem in a manner to have borne its weight. Or, by the burden of the day
is meant the burdensome precepts of the Law; and the heat may be that
consuming temptation to error which evil spirits contrived for them,
stirring them to imitate the Gentiles; from all which things the
Gentiles were exempt, believing on Christ, and by grace being saved
completely.
GREG; Or; To bear the burden and heat of the day, is to be wearied
through a life of long duration with the heats of the flesh. But it may
be asked, How can they be said to murmur, when they are called to the
kingdom of heaven? For none who murmurs shall receive the kingdom, and
none who receives that can murmur.
CHRYS; But we ought not to pursue through every particular the
circumstances of a parable; but enter into its general scope, and seek
nothing further. This then is not introduced in order to represent some
as moved with envy, but to exhibit the honor that shall be given us as
so great as that it might stir the jealousy of others.
GREG; Or because the old fathers down to the Lord's coming,
notwithstanding their righteous lives, were not brought to the kingdom,
this murmur is theirs. But we who have come at the eleventh hour, do
not murmur after our labors, forasmuch as having come into this world
after the coming of the Mediator, we are brought to the kingdom as soon
as ever we depart out of the body.
JEROME; Or, all that were called of old envy the Gentiles, and are pained at the grace of the Gospel.
HILARY; And this murmur of the laborers corresponds with the
forwardness of this nation, which even in the time of Moses were
stiff-necked.
REMIG; By this one to whom his answer is given, may be understood all
the believing Jews, whom he calls friends because of their faith.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; Their complaint was not that they were defrauded of their
rightful recompense, but that the others had received more than they
deserved. For the envious have as much pain at others' success as at
their own loss. From which it is clear, that envy flows from vain
glory. A man is grieved to be second, because he wishes to be first. He
removes this feeling of envy by saying, Did you not agree with me for a
denarius?
JEROME; A denarius bears the figure of the king. You have therefore
received the reward which I promised you, that is, my image and
likeness; what desires you more? And yet it is not that thou should
have more, but that another should have less that you seek. Take that
is yours, and go your way.
REMIG; That is, take your reward, and enter into glory. I will give to
this last, that is, to the gentile people, according to their deserts,
as to you.
ORIGEN; Perhaps it is to Adam He says, Friend, I do you no wrong; did
you not agree with me for a denarius? Take what is yours, and go your
way. Salvation is yours, that is, the denarius. I will give to this
last also as to you. A person might not improbably suppose, that this
last was the Apostle Paul, who wrought but one hour, and was made equal
with all who had been before him.
AUG. Because that life eternal shall be equal to all the saints, a
denarius is given to all; but forasmuch as in that life eternal the
light of merits shall shine diversely, there are with the Father many
mansions; so that under this same denarius bestowed unequally one shall
not live longer than another, but in the many mansions one shall shine
with more splendor than another.
GREG; And because the attainment of this kingdom is of the goodness of
His will, it is added, Is it not lawful, for me to do what I will with
my own? For it is a foolish complaint of man to murmur against the
goodness of God. For complaint is not when a man gives not what he is
not bound to give, but if he gives not what he is bound to give; whence
it is added, Is your eye evil because I am good?
REMIG; By the eye is understood his purpose. The Jews had an evil eye,
that is, an evil purpose, seeing they were grieved at the salvation of
the Gentiles. Whereto this parable pointed, He shows by adding, So the
first shall be last, and the last first; and so the Jews of the head
are become the tail, and we of the tail are become the head.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; Or; He says the first shall be last, and the last first,
not that the last are to be exalted before the first, but that they
should be put on an equality, so that the difference of time should
make no difference in their station. That He says, For many are called,
but few chosen, is not to be taken of the elder saints, but of the
Gentiles; for of the Gentiles who were called being many, but few were
chosen.
GREG; There be very many come to the faith, yet but few arrive at the
heavenly kingdom; many follow God in words, but shun Him in their
lives. Whereof spring two things to be thought upon. The first, that
none should presume ought concerning himself; for though he be called
to the faith, he knows not whether he shall be chosen to the kingdom.
Secondly, that none should despair of his neighbor, even though he see
him lying in vices; because he knows not the riches of the Divine mercy.
Or otherwise. The morning is our childhood; the third hour may be
understood as our youth, the sun as it were mounting to his height is
the advance of the heat of age; the sixth hour is manhood, when the sun
is steady in his meridian height, representing as it were the maturity
of strength; by the ninth is understood old age, in which the sun
descends from his vertical height, as our age falls away from the
fervor of youth; the eleventh hour is that age which is called
decrepit, and doting.
CHRYS; That He called not all of them at once, but some in the morning,
some at the third hour, and so forth, proceeded from the difference of
their minds. He then called them when they would obey; as He also
called the thief when he would obey. Whereas they say, Because no man
has hired us, we ought not to force a sense out of every particular in
a parable. Further, it is the laborers and not the Lord who speak thus;
for that He, as far as it pertains to Him, calls all men from their
earliest years, is shown in this, He went out early in the morning to
hire
labors.
GREG; They then who have neglected till extreme old age to live to God,
have stood idle to the eleventh hour, yet even these the master of the
household calls, and oftentimes gives them their reward before other,
inasmuch as they depart out of the body into the kingdom before those
that seemed to be called in their childhood.
ORIGEN; But this, Why stand you here all the day idle? is not said to
such as having begun in the spirit, have been made perfect by the
flesh, as inviting them to return again, and to live in the Spirit.
This we speak not to dissuade prodigal sons, who have consumed their
substance of evangelic doctrine in riotous living, from returning to
their father's house; but because they are not like those who sinned in
their youth, before they had learnt the things of the faith.
CHRYS; When He says, The first shall be last, and the last first, He
alludes secretly to such as were at the first eminent, and afterwards
set at nought virtue; and to others who have been reclaimed from
wickedness, and have surpassed many. So that this parable was made to
quicken the zeal of those who are converted in extreme old age, that
they should not suppose that they shall have less than others.
17. And Jesus going up to Jerusalem took the twelve disciples apart in the way, and said to them,
18. Behold, we go up to Jerusalem; and the Son of man shall be betrayed
to the Chief Priests and to the Scribes, and they shall condemn him to
death,
19. And shall deliver him to the Gentiles to mock, and to scourge, and to crucify him: and the third day he shall rise again.
CHRYS; The Lord leaving Galilee, did not go up straightway to
Jerusalem, but first wrought miracles, refuted the Pharisees, and
taught the disciples concerning perfection of life, and its reward; now
when about to go up to Jerusalem, He again speaks to them of His
passion.
ORIGEN; Judas was yet among the twelve; for he was perhaps still worthy
to hear in private along with the rest the things which his Master
should suffer.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; For the salvation of men entirely rests upon Christ's
death; nor is there any thing for which w e are more bound to render
thanks to God, than for His death. He imparted the mystery of His death
to His disciples for this reason, namely, because the more precious
treasure is ever committed to the more worthy vessels. Had the rest
heard of the passion of Christ, the men might have been troubled
because of the weakness of their faith, and the women because of the
tenderness of their nature, which such matters do commonly move to
tears.
CHRYS; He had indeed told it, and to many, but obscurely, as in that,
Destroy this temple; and again, There shall no sign be given it but the
sign of Jonas the Prophet. But now He imparted it clearly to His
disciples.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; That word Behold, is a word of stress, to bid them lay up
in their hearts the memory of this present. He says, We go up; as much
as to say, you see that I go of My free-will to death. When then you
shall see Me hang upon the cross, deem not that I am no more than man;
for though to be able to die is human; yet to be willing to die is more
than human.
ORIGEN; Meditating then of this, we ought to know that often even when
there is certain trial to be undergone, we ought to offer ourselves to
it. But forasmuch as it was said above, When they persecute you in one
city, flee you to another it belongs to the wise in Christ to judge
when the season requires that he shun, and when that he go to meet
dangers.
JEROME; He had often told His disciples of His passion, but because it
might have slipped out of their recollection by reason of the many
things they had heard in the mean while, now when He is going to
Jerusalem, and going to take His disciples with Him, He fortifies them
against the trial, that they should not be scandalized when the
persecution and shame of the Cross should come.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; For when sorrow comes at a time we are looking for it, it
is found lighter than it would have been, had it taken us by surprise.
CHRYS; He forewarns them also in order that they should learn that He
comes to His passion w wittingly, and willingly. And at the first he
had foretold only His death, but now that they are more disciplined, He
brings forth yet more, as, They shall deliver him to the Gentiles.
RABAN; For Judas delivered the Lord to the Jews, and they delivered Him
to the Gentiles, that is to Pilate, and the Roman power. To this end
the Lord refused to be prosperous in this world, but rather chose to
suffer affliction, that He might show us, who have yielded to delights,
through how great bitterness we must needs return; whence it follows,
To mock, and to scourge, and to crucify.
AUG; In His Passion we see what we ought to suffer for the truth, and
in His resurrection what we ought to hope in eternity; whence it is
said, And shall rise again the third day.
CHRYS; This was added, that when they should see the sufferings, they should look for the resurrection.
AUG; For one death, that namely of the Savior according to the body,
was to us a salvation from two deaths, both of soul and body, and His
one resurrection gained for us two resurrections. This ratio of two to
one springs out of the number three; for one and two are three.
ORIGEN; There is no mention that the disciples either said or did any
thing upon hearing of these sufferings that should thus come upon
Christ; remembering what the Lord had said to Peter, they were afraid
they should have had the like or worse addressed to themselves. And yet
there be scribes who suppose that they know the divine writings, who
condemn Jesus to death, scourge Him with their tongues, and crucify Him
herein, that they seek to take away His doctrine; but He, vanishing for
a season, again rises to appeal to those who received His word that it
could be so.
20. Then came to him the mother of Zebedee's children with her sons, worshipping him, and desiring a certain thing of him.
21. And he said to her, What is your will? She said to him, Grant that
these my two sons may sit, the one on your right hand, and the other on
the left, in your kingdom.
22. But Jesus answered and said, you know not what you ask. Are you
able to drink of the cup that I shall drink of, and to be baptized with
the baptism that I am baptized with? They say to him, We are able.
23. And he said to them, you shall drink indeed of my cup, and be
baptized With the baptism that I am baptized with: but to sit on my
right hand, and on my left, is not mine to give, but it shall be given
to them for whom it is prepared of my Father.
JEROME; The Lord having concluded by saying, And shall rise again the
third day; the woman thought that after His resurrection He should
forthwith reign, and with womanish eagerness grasps at what is present,
forgetful of the future.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; This mother of the sons of Zebedee is Salome, as her name
is given by another Evangelist, herself truly peaceful, and the mother
of sons of peace. From this place we learn the eminent merit of this
woman; not only had her sons left their father, but she had left her
husband, and had followed Christ; for He could live without her, but
she could not be saved without Christ. Except any will say that between
the time of the Apostle's calling, and the suffering of Christ, Zebedee
was dead, and that thus her sex helpless, her age advanced, she was
following Christ's steps; for faith never grows old, and religion feels
never weary. Her maternal affection made her bold to ask, whence it is
said, She worshipped Him, and desired a certain thing of Him; i.e. she
did Him reverence, requesting that what she should ask, should be
granted her. It follows, He said to her, What would you? He asks not
because He knows not, but that by its very statement, the
unreasonableness of her petition might be shown; She said to him, Grant
that these my two sons may sit.
AUG; What Matthew has here represented as being said by the mother,
Mark relates that the two sons of Zebedee spoke themselves, when she
had presented their wish before the Lord; so that from Mark's brief
notice it should rather seem, that they, and not she, had said that
which was said.
CHRYS; They saw the disciples honored before others, and had heard that
you shall sit upon twelve thrones, whereupon they sought to have the
primacy of that seat. And that others were in greater honor with Christ
they knew, and they feared that Peter was preferred before them;
wherefore (as is mentioned by another Evangelist) because they were now
near to Jerusalem, they thought that the kingdom of God was at the
door, that is, was something to be perceived by sense. Whence it is
clear that they sought nothing spiritual, and had no conception of a
kingdom above.
ORIGEN; For if in an earthly kingdom they are thought to be in honor
who sit with the king, no wonder if a woman with womanish simplicity or
want of experience conceived that she might ask such things, and that
the brethren themselves being not perfect, and having no more lofty
thoughts concerning Christ's kingdom, conceived such things concerning
those who shall sit with Jesus.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; Or otherwise. We affirm not that this woman's request was
a lawful one; but this we affirm, that it was not earthly things, but
heavenly things that she asked for her sons. For she felt not as
ordinary mothers, whose affection is to the bodies of their children,
while they neglect their minds; they desire that they should prosper in
this world, not caring what they shall suffer in the next, thereby
showing themselves to be mothers of their bodies only, but not of their
souls. And I imagine that these brethren, having heard the Lord
prophesying of His passion and resurrection, began to say among
themselves, seeing they believed; Behold, the King of heaven is going
down to the realms of Tartarus, that He may destroy the king of death.
But when the victory shall be completed, what remains but that the
glory of the kingdom shall follow?
ORIGEN; For when sin is destroyed, which reigned in men's mortal
bodies, with the entire dynasty of malignant powers, Christ shall
receive exaltation of His kingdom among men; that is, His sitting on
the throne of His glory. That God disposes all things both on His right
hand and on His left, this is that there shall be then no more evil in
His presence. They that are the more excellent among such as draw near
to Christ, are they on His right hand; they that are inferior, are they
on His left hand. Or by Christ's right hand look if you may understand
the invisible creation; by His left hand the visible and bodily. For of
those who are brought nigh to Christ, some obtain a place on His right
hand, as the intelligent, some on His left hand, as the sentient
creation.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; He that gave Himself to man, how shall He not give them
the fellowship of His kingdom? The supineness of the petitioner is in
fault, where the graciousness of the giver is undoubted. But if we
ourselves ask our master, perchance we wound the hearts of the rest of
our brethren, who though they can no longer be overcome by the flesh,
seeing they are now spiritual, may yet be wounded as carnal. Let us
therefore put forward our mother, that she may make her petition for us
in her own person. For though she be to be blamed therein, yet she will
readily obtain forgiveness, her sex pleading for her. For the Lord
Himself, who has filled the souls of mothers with affection to their
offspring, will more readily listen to their desires. Then the Lord,
who knows secrets, makes answer not to the words of the mother's
petition, but to the design of the sons who suggested it. Their wish
was commendable, but their request inconsiderate; therefore, though it
was not right that it should be granted to them, yet the simplicity of
their petition did not deserve a harsh rebuke, forasmuch as it
proceeded of love of the Lord. Wherefore it is their ignorance that the
Lord finds fault with; Jesus answered and said to them, you know not
what you ask.
JEROME; And no wonder, if she is convicted of inexperience, seeing it is said of Peter, Not knowing what he said.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; For often the Lord suffers His disciples either to do or
to think somewhat amiss, that from their error He may take occasion to
set forth a rule of piety; knowing that their fault harms not when the
Master is present, while His doctrine edifies them not for the present
only, but for the future.
CHRYS; This He says to show either that they sought nothing spiritual,
or that had they known for what they asked, they would not have asked
that which was so far beyond their faculties.
HILARY; They know not what they ask, because there was no doubt of the
future glory of the Apostles; His former discourse had assured them
that they should judge the world.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; Or, you know not what you ask: as much as to say, I have
called you to My right hand away from My left, and now you willfully
desire to be on My left. Hence perhaps they did this through the
mother. For the devil betook him to his well-known tool the woman, that
as he made prey of Adam by his wife, so he should sever these by their
mother. But now that the salvation of all had proceeded from a woman,
destruction could no longer enter in among the saints by a woman. Or He
says, you know not what you ask, seeing we ought not only to consider
the glory to which we may attain, but how we may escape the ruin of
sin. For so in secular war, he who is ever thinking of the plunder,
hardly wins the fight; they should have asked, Give us the aid of your
grace, that we may overcome all evil.
RABAN; They knew not what they asked, for they were asking of the Lord
a seat in glory, which they had not yet merited. The honorable eminence
liked them well, but they had first to practice the laborious path
thereto; Can you drink of the cup that I shall drink of?
JEROME; By the cup in the divine Scriptures we understand suffering as
in the Psalm, I will take the cup of salvation; and straightway He
proceeds to show what is the cup, Precious in the sight of the Lord is
the death of his saints.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; The Lord knew that they were able to follow His passion,
but He puts the question to them that we may all hear, that no man can
reign with Christ, unless he is conformed to Christ in His passion; for
that which is precious is only to be purchased at a costly price. The
Lord's passion we may call not only the persecution of the Gentiles,
but all the hardships we go through in struggling against our sins.
CHRYS; He says therefore, Can you drink it? as much as to say, You ask
me of honors and crowns, but I speak to you of labor and travail, for
this is no time for rewards. He draws their attention by the manner of
His question, for He says not, Are you able to shed your blood? but,
Are you able to drink of the cup? then He adds, which I shall drink of?
REMIG; That by such partaking they may burn with the more zeal towards
Him. But they, already sharing the readiness and constancy of
martyrdom, promise that they would drink of it; whence it follows, They
say to him, We are able.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; Or, they say this not so much out of reliance on their
own fortitude, as out of ignorance, for to the inexperienced the trial
of suffering and death appears slight.
CHRYS; Or they offer this in the eagerness of their desire, expecting
that for their thus speaking they should have what they desired. But He
foretell great blessings for them, to wit, that they should be made
worthy of martyrdom. He said to them, you shall indeed drink of my cup.
ORIGEN; Christ does not say, you are able to drink of My cup, but
looking to their future perfection He said, you shall indeed drink of
my cup.
JEROME; It is made a question how the sons of Zebedee, James, and John,
did drink the cup of martyrdom, seeing Scripture relates that: James
only was beheaded by Herod, while John ended his life by a peaceful
death. But when we read in ecclesiastical history that John himself was
thrown into a cauldron of boiling oil with intent to martyr him, and
that he was banished to the isle of Patmos, we shall see that he lacked
not the will for martyrdom, and that John had drunk the cup of
confession, the which also the Three Children in the fiery furnace did
drink of, although the persecutor did not shed their blood.
HILARY; The Lord therefore commends their faith, in that He says that
they are able to suffer martyrdom together with Him; but, To sit on my
right hand and on my left is not mine to give, but for whom it is
prepared of my Father. Though indeed, as far as we can judge, that
honor is so set apart for others, as that the Apostles shall not be
strangers to it, who shall sit on the throne of the Twelve Patriarchs
to judge Israel; also, as may be collected out of the Gospels
themselves, Moses and Elias shall sit with them in the kingdom of
heaven, seeing that it was in their company that He appeared on the
mount in His apparel of splendor.
JEROME; But to me this seems not so. Rather the names of them that
shall sit in the kingdom of heaven are not named, lest that, if some
few were named, the rest should think themselves shut out; for the
kingdom of heaven is not of him that gives it, but of him that receives
it. Not that there is respect of persons with God, but whosoever shall
show himself such as to be worthy of the kingdom of heaven, she'll
receive it, for it is prepared not for condition, but for conduct.
Therefore if you shall be found to be such as to be fit for that
kingdom of heaven which My Father has made ready for the conquerors,
you she'll receive the same. He said not, you shall not sit there, that
He might not discourage the two brethren; while He said not, you shall
sit there, that He might not stir the others to envy.
CHRYS; Or otherwise. That seat seems to be unapproachable to all, not
only men, but Angels also; for so Paul assigns it peculiarly to the
Only-Begotten, saying, To which of the Angels said he at any time, Sit
you on my right hand? The Lord therefore makes answer, not as though in
verity there were any that should sit there, but as condescending to
the apprehensions of the petitioners. They asked but this one grant, to
be before others near Him; but the Lord answers, you shall die for My
sake, yet is not that sufficient to make you obtain the first rank. For
if there shall come another with martyrdom, and having virtue greater
than yours, I will not, because I love you, put him out, and give you
precedence. But that they should not suppose that he lacked power, He
said not absolutely, It is not Mine to give, but, It is not mine to
give to you, but to those for whom it is prepared; that is, to those
who are made illustrious by their deeds.
REMIG; Or otherwise; It is not mine to give to you, that is, to proud
men such as you are, but to the lowly in heart, for whom it is prepared
of my Father.
AUG; Or otherwise; The Lord makes answer to His disciples in His
character of servant; though whatever is prepared by the Father is also
prepared by the Son, for He and the Father are one.
24. And when the ten heard it, they were moved with indignation against the two brethren.
25. But Jesus called them to him, and said, you know that the princes
of the Gentiles exercise dominion over them, and they that are great
exercise authority upon them.
26. But it shall not be so among you: but whosoever will be great among you, let him be your minister;
27. And whosoever will be chief among you, let him be your servant:
28. Even as the Son of man came not to be ministered to, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many.
CHRYS; So long as the judgment of Christ upon this request was in
suspense, the other disciples were not indignant; but when they heard
Him rebuke them, they were sorrowful; whence it is said, And when the
ten heard it, they had indignation against the two brethren.
JEROME; They do not lay it upon the forwardness of the mother who spoke
the request, but upon her sons, who, not knowing their measure, burned
with so immoderate desires.
CHRYS; For when the Lord rebuked them, then they perceived that this
request was from the disciples. For though they were grieved in their
hearts when they saw them so especially honored in the transfiguration,
they yet dared not so express themselves, out of respect to their
teacher.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; But as the two had asked carnally, so now the ten are
grieved carnally. For as to seek to be above all is blame-worthy, so to
have another above us is mortifying to our vanity.
JEROME; But the meek and lowly Master neither charges the two with
ambition, nor rebukes the ten for their spleen and jealousy; but, Jesus
called them to him.
CHRYS; By thus calling them to Him, and speaking to them face to face,
he soothes them in their discomposure; for the two had been speaking
with the Lord apart by themselves. But not now as before does He it by
bringing forward a child, but He proves it to them by reasoning from
contraries; you know that the princes of the Gentiles exercise dominion
over them.
ORIGEN; That is, not content merely to rule over their subjects, they
are severe and oppressive. But among you who are Mine these things
shall not be so; for as all carnal things are done by compulsion, but
spiritual things by free-will, so those rulers who are spiritual ought
to rest their power in the love of their subjects, not in their fears.
CHRYS; He shows here that it is of the Gentiles to desire preeminence;
and by this comparison of the Gentiles He calms their troubled souls.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; Indeed, to desire a good work is good, for it is within
our will, and ours is the reward; but to desire a primacy of honor is
vanity. For when we attain this we are judged of God, because we know
not whether in our precedence of honor we deserve the reward of
righteousness. For not even an Apostle will have praise with God,
because he is an Apostle, but if he has well fulfilled the duties of
his Apostleship; nor was an Apostle placed in honor as an Apostle, for
any previous merit of his; but was judged meet for that ministry, on
account of the disposition of his mind. For high place courts him who
flies from it, and shuns him who courts it. A better life then, and not
a more worthy degree, should be our object.
The Lord therefore, willing to check the ambition of the two sons of
Zebedee, and the indignation of the others, points out this distinction
between the chief men of the world, and those of the Church, showing
that the primacy in Christ is neither to be sought by him who has it
not, nor envied by him who teas it. For men become masters in this
world that they may exercise domination over their inferiors, and
reduce them to slavery, and rob them, and employ them even to death for
their own profit and glory. But men become governors in the Church,
that they may serve those who are under them, and minister to them
whatever they have received of Christ, that they may postpone their own
convenience, and mind that of others, and not refuse even to die for
the sake of those beneath them.
To seek therefore a command in the Church is neither righteous, nor
profitable. No prudent man will voluntarily subject himself to slavery,
nor to stand in such peril wherein he will have to render account for
the whole Church; unless it be one perchance who fears not God's
judgment, who abuses His ecclesiastical primacy to a secular end, so
that He converts it into a secular primacy.
JEROME; Lastly, He sets before them His own example, that so should
they little weigh His words, His deeds might shame them, whence He
adds, As also the Son of Man comes not to be ministered to, but to
minister.
ORIGEN; For though the Angels and Martha ministered to Him, yet did He
not come to be ministered to, but to minister; yes, His ministry
extended so far, that He fulfilled even in what follows, And to give
his life a ransom for many, they, that is, who believed on Him; and
gave it, i.e. to death. But since He was alone free among the dead, and
mightier than the power of death, He has set free from death all who
were willing to follow Him. The heads of the Church ought therefore to
imitate Christ in being affable, adapting Himself to women, laying His
hands on children, and washing His disciples' feet, that they also
should do the same to their brethren. But we are such, that we seem to
go beyond the pride even of the great ones of this world; as to the
command of Christ, either not understanding it, or setting it at
nothing. Like princes we seek hosts to go before us, we make ourselves
awful and difficult of access, especially to the poor, neither
approaching them, nor suffering them to approach us.
CHRYS; How much may you humble yourself, you cannot descend so far as did your Lord.
29. And as they departed from Jericho, a great multitude followed him.
30. And, behold, two blind men sitting by the way side, when they heard
that Jesus passed by, cried out, saying, Have mercy on us, O Lord, you
Son of David.
31. And the multitude rebuked them, because they should hold their
peace: but they cried the more, saying, Have mercy on us, O Lord, you
Son of David.
32. And Jesus stood still, and called them, and said, What will you that I shall do to you?
33. They say to him, Lord, that our eyes may be opened.
34. So Jesus had compassion on them, and touched their eyes: and immediately their eyes received sight, and they followed him.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; As the proof of the husbandman's industry lies in the
abundance of his crop, so the fullness of the Church is the evidence of
an industrious teacher; so it is here said, And as they departed from
Jericho, a great multitude followed him. No one was deterred by the
toils of the journey, for spiritual love feels no fatigue; no one was
kept away by the thought of sufferings, for they were going into
possession of the kingdom of heaven.
For he who has in very deed tasted the reality of heavenly good, has
nothing to attach him to earth. In good season these blind men come
before Christ, that having their eyes opened, they may go up with Him
to Jerusalem as witnesses to His power. They heard the sound of the
passers by, but saw not their persons, and having nothing free about
them but their voice, because they could not follow Him with their
feet, they pursued Him with their voice; When they heard that Jesus
passed by, they cried out, saying, Have mercy on us, O Lord, you Son of
David.
AUG; Mark relates this miracle, but speaks of only one blind man. This
difficulty is thus explained; of the two blind men whom Matthew has
introduced, one was well known in that city, as appears by Mark's
mentioning both his name, and that of his father. Bartimeus the son of
Timeus was well known as having sunk from great affluence, and now
sitting not only blind, but a beggar. For this reason then it is that
Mark chose to mention him alone, because the restoration of his sight
procured fame to the miracle, in proportion to the notoriety of the
fact of his blindness. Though what Luke relates was done after the same
manner, yet his account is to be taken of another though similar
miracle. That which he gives was done as they drew near to Jericho;
this in the other two as they came out of Jericho. And the multitude
rebuked them that they should hold their peace.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; For they saw how mean their clothes, and considered not
how pure their consciences. See the foolish wisdom of men! They think
great men are hurt when they receive the homage of the poor. What poor
man dare salute a rich man in public?
HILARY; Or, They bid them hold their peace, not from reverence for
Christ, but because they were grieved to hear from the blind what they
denied, namely, that the Lord was the Son of David.
ORIGEN; Or; Those that believed rebuked them that they should not
dishonor Him by styling Him merely Son of David, but should rather say,
Son of God, have mercy on us.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; They were rather encouraged than repelled by this rebuke.
For so faith is quickened by being prohibited; and hence is secure in
dangers, and in security is endangered; whence it follows, But they
cried out the more, saying, Have mercy upon us, Son of David. They
cried out at the first because they were blind, now they rather cried
out because they were forbidden to come to the Light.
CHRYS; Christ suffered them to be forbidden, so that their desire might
be the more evidenced. Hence learn that though we be repulsed, yet if
we come to God with earnestness, of ourselves, we shall obtain that we
ask. It follows, And Jesus stood still, and called them, and said, What
will you that I should do to you?
JEROME; Jesus stood still, because they being blind could not see their
way. About Jericho were many pits, crags, and abrupt precipices;
therefore the Lord stands still, that they might come to Him.
ORIGEN; Or; Jesus does not pass on, but stands still, that by His
standing His goodness may not pass by, but as from an abiding fount
mercy may flow forth upon them.
JEROME; He commands that they be called to Him that the multitude may
not withhold them; and He asks them what they would, that by their
answer, their necessity may be made apparent, and His power be shown in
their healing.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; Or; He asks them on account of their faith, that whereas
they who were blind confess Christ to be the Son of God, those who had
their sight might be put to shame for their esteeming Him only man.
They had indeed called Christ Lord, and they had spoken true; but by
calling Him the Son of David, they obliterated this their good
confession. For indeed by a misuse of words men are called Lords, but
none is truly Lord, but God only. When therefore they say, O Lord, you
Son of David, they thus misapply the term to Christ, as esteeming Him
man; had they only called Him Lord, they would have confessed His
Godhead.
When then He asks them, What would you? they no longer style Him Son of
David, but only Lord; They say to Him, Lord, that our eyes may be
opened. For the Son of David cannot open the eyes of the blind, but the
Son of God can. So long then as they cried, O Lord, you Son of David,
their cure was delayed; as soon as they said, Lord, only, healing was
shed upon them;
for it follows, And Jesus had compassion upon them, and touched their
eyes, and straightway they saw. He touched them carnally as man, He
healed them as God.
JEROME; The Creator bestows what nature had not given; or at least mercy accords what weakness had withheld.
CHRYS; But as before this bounty they had been persevering, so after the receiving it they were not ungrateful.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; On being healed they rendered a high service to Christ;
for it follows, And they followed him. For this the Lord requires of
thee, according to the Prophet, that you be careful to walk with the
Lord your God.
JEROME; They then who had sat shut up in Jericho, and knew only to cry
with their voice, afterwards follow Jesus, not so much with their feet
as in their virtues.
RABAN; But Jericho, which is interpreted 'the moon', denotes the infirmity of our changefulness.
ORIGEN; Figuratively, Jericho is taken to be the world, into which
Christ came down. They who are in Jericho, know not how to escape from
the wisdom of the world, unless they see not Jesus only coming out of
Jericho, but also His disciples. This when they saw, great multitudes
followed Him, despising the world and all worldly things, that under
His guidance they may go up to the heavenly Jerusalem. The two blind
men we may call Judah and Israel, who before the coming of Christ were
blind, not seeing the true word which was in the Law and the Prophets,
yet sitting by the wayside of the Law and the Prophets, and
understanding Him only as after the flesh, they cried to Him who was
made of the seed of David according to the flesh.
JEROME; By the two blind men are generally understood the Pharisees and Sadducees.
AUG; Otherwise; The two blind men sitting by the wayside, denote
certain of both nations already by faith coming in to that temporal
dispensation, according to which Christ is the way, and seeking to be
enlightened, that is, to know something concerning the eternity of the
Word. This they desired to obtain from the Lord as He passed by, for
the merit of that faith by which He is believed to be the Son of God,
to have been born man, and to have suffered for us; for in this
dispensation, Jesus, as it were, passes by, for all action is of this
world. Also it was necessary that they should cry out so loud as to
overpower the din of the multitude that withstood them; that is, so to
fortify their minds by perseverance and prayer, and mortifying
continually the usage of fleshly lusts, (which as a crowd ever beset
one that is endeavoring to come to the sight of eternal truth,) and by
the straightest painfulness to get the better of the multitude of
carnal men who hinder spiritual aspirations.
ID; For bad or lukewarm Christians are an hindrance to good Christians
who seek to perform the commandments of God. Notwithstanding these cry
and faint not; for every Christian at his first setting about to live
well and to despise the world, has to endure at the first the censures
of cold Christians; but if he persevere, they will soon comply, who but
now withstood him.
ID; Jesus therefore, the same who said, To him that knocks it shall be
opened, hearing them, stands still, touches them, and gives them light.
Faith in His temporal incarnation prepares us for the understanding of
things eternal. By the passing by of Jesus they are admonished that
they should be enlightened, and when He stands still they are
enlightened; for things temporal pass by, but things eternal stand
still.
PSEUDO-CHRYS; Some interpret that the two blind men are the Gentiles;
one sprung from Cham, the other from Japhet; they sat by the way-side,
that is, they walked hard by the truth, but they could not find it out;
or they were placed in reason, not having yet received knowledge of the
word.
RABAN; But recognizing the rumor of Christ, they desired to be made
partakers of Him. Many spoke against them; first the Jews, as we read
in the Acts; then the Gentiles harassed them by persecution; but yet
they might not deprive those who were preordained to life of salvation.
PSEUDO-CHRYS;. Accordingly Jesus touched the eyes of the Gentile mind,
giving them the grace of the Holy Spirit, and when enlightened they
followed Him with good works.
ORIGEN; We also now sitting by the wayside of the Scriptures, and
understanding wherein we are blind, if we ask with desire, He will
touch the eyes of our souls, and the gloom of ignorance shall depart
from our minds, that in the light of knowledge we may follow Him, who
gave us power to see to no other end than that we should follow Him.
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