catena aurea matthew 22
1. And Jesus answered and spoke to them again by parables, and said,
2. The kingdom of heaven is like to a certain king, which made a marriage for his son,
3. And sent forth his servants to call them that were bidden to the wedding: and they would not come.
4. Again, he sent forth other servants, saying, Tell them which are
bidden, Behold, I have prepared my dinner: my oxen and my fatlings are
killed, and all things are ready: come to the marriage.
5. But they made light of it, and went their ways, one to his farm, another to his merchandise:
6. And the remnant took his servants, treated them spitefully, and slew them.
7. But when the king heard thereof, he was wroth: and he sent forth his
armies, and destroyed those murderers, and burned up their city.
8. Then said he to his servants, The wedding is ready, but they which were bidden were not worthy.
9. Go you therefore into the highways, and as many as you shall find, bid to the marriage.
10. So those servants went out into the highways, and gathered together
all as many as they found, both bad and good: and the wedding was
furnished with guests.
11. And when the king came in to see the guests, he saw there a man which had not on a wedding garment:
12. And he said to him, Friend, how came you in here not having a wedding garment? And he was speechless.
13. Then said the king to the servants, Bind him hand and foot, and
take him away, and cast him into outer darkness; there shall be weeping
and gnashing of teeth.
14. For many are called, but few are chosen.
CHRYS. Forasmuch as He had said, And it shall be given to a nation
bringing forth the fruits thereof, He now proceeds to show what nation
that is.
GLOSS. Answered, that is, meeting their evil thoughts of putting Him to death.
AUG. This parable is related only by Matthew. Luke gives one like it, but it is not the same, as the order shows.
GREG. Here, by the wedding-feast is denoted the present Church; there,
by the supper, the last and eternal feast. For into this enter some who
shall perish; into that whosoever has once entered in shall never be
put forth. But if any should maintain that these are the same lessons,
we may perhaps explain that that part concerning the guest who had come
in without a wedding garment, which Luke has not mentioned, Matthew has
related. That the one calls it supper, the other dinner, makes no
difference; for with the ancients the dinner w as at the ninth hour,
and was therefore often called supper.
ORIGEN; The kingdom of heaven, in respect of Him who reigns there, is
like a king; in respect of Him who shares the kingdom, it is like a
king's son; in respect of those things which are in the kingdom, it is
like servants and guests, and among them the king's armies. It is
specified, A man that is a king, that what is spoken may be as by a man
to men, and that a man may regulate men unwilling to be regulated by
God. But the kingdom of heaven will then cease to be like a man, when
zeal and contention and all other passions and sins having ceased, we
shall cease to walk after men, and shall see Him as He is. For now we
see Him not as He is, but as He has been made for us in our
dispensation.
GREG. God the Father made a marriage feast for God the Son, when He
joined Him to human nature in the womb of the Virgin. But far be it
from us to conclude, that because marriage takes place between two
separate persons, that therefore the person of our Redeemer was made up
of two separate persons. We say indeed that He exists of two natures,
and in two natures, but we hold it unlawful to believe that He was
compounded of two persons. It is safer therefore to say, that the
marriage feast was made by the King the Father for the King the Son
when He joined to Him the Holy Church in the mystery of His
incarnation. The womb of the Virgin Mother was the bride chamber of
this Bridegroom.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Otherwise; When the resurrection of the saints shall be,
then the life, which is Christ, shall revive man, swallowing up his
mortality in its own immortality. For now we receive the Holy Spirit as
a pledge of the future union, but then we shall have Christ Himself
more fully in us.
ORIGEN; Or, by the marriage of Bridegroom with Bride, that is, of
Christ with the soul, understand the Assumption of the Word, the
produce whereof is good works.
HILARY; Rightly has the Father already made this wedding, because this
eternal union and espousal} of the new body is already perfect in
Christ.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. When the servants were sent to call them, they must have
been invited before. Men have been invited from the time of Abraham, to
whom was promised Christ's incarnation.
JEROME; He sent his servant, without doubt Moses, by whom He gave the
Law, to those who had been invited. But if you read servants as most
copies have, it must be referred to the Prophets, by whom they were
invited, but neglected to come. By the servants who were sent the
second time, we may better understand the Prophets than the Apostles;
that is to say, if servant is read in the first place; but if
'servants,' then by the second servants are to be understood the
Apostles;
PSEUDO-CHRYS. whom He sent when He said to them, Go not into the way of
the Gentiles, but rather go to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.
ORIGEN; Or; The servants who were first sent to call them that were
bidden to the wedding, are to be taken as the Prophets converting the
people by their prophecy to the festival of the restoration of the
Church to Christ. They who would not come at the first message are they
who refused to hear the words of the Prophets. The others who were sent
a second time were another assembly of Prophets.
HILARY; Or; The servants who were first sent to call them that were
bidden, are the Apostles; they who, being before bidden, are now
invited to come in, are the people of Israel, who had before been
bidden through the Law to the glories of eternity. To the Apostles
therefore it belonged to remind those whom the Prophets had invited.
Those sent with the second injunction are the Apostolic men their successors.
GREG. But because these who were first invited would not come to the
feast, the second summons says, Behold, I have prepared my dinner.
JEROME; The dinner that is prepared, the oxen and the fatlings that are
killed, is either a description of regal magnificence by the way of
metaphor, that by carnal things spiritual may be understood; or the
greatness of the doctrines, and the manifold teaching of God in His
law, may be understood.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. When therefore the Lord bade the Apostles, Go you and
preach, saying, The kingdom of heaven is at hand, it was the same
message as is here given, I have prepared my dinner; i.e. I have set
out the table of Scripture out of the Law and the Prophets.
GREG. By the oxen are signified the Fathers of the Old Testament; who
by sufferance of the Law gored their enemies with the horn of bodily
strength. By fatlings are meant fatted animals, for from 'alere', comes
'altilia,' as it were 'alitilia' or 'alita.' By the fatlings are
intended the Fathers of the New Testament; who while they receive sweet
grace of inward fattening, are raised by the wing of contemplation from
earthly desires to things above. He says therefore, My oxen and my
fatlings are killed; as much as to say, Look to the deaths of the
Fathers who have been before you, and desire some amendment of your
lives.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Otherwise; He says oxen and fatlings, not as though the
oxen were not fatted, but because all the oxen were not fat. Therefore
the fatlings denote the Prophets who were filled with the Holy Spirit;
the oxen those who were both Priests and Prophets, as Jeremiah and
Ezekiel; for as the oxen are the leaders of the herd, so also the
Priests are leaders of the people.
HILARY; Or otherwise; The oxen are the glorious army of Martyrs,
offered, like choice victims, for the confession of God; the fatlings
are spiritual men, as birds fed for flight upon heavenly food, that
they may fill others with the abundance of the food they have eaten.
GREG. It is to be observed, that in the first invitation nothing was
said of the oxen or fatlings, but in the second it is announced that
they are already killed, because Almighty God when we will not hear His
words gives examples, that what we suppose impossible may become easy
to us to surmount, when we hear that others have passed through it
before us.
ORIGEN; Or; The dinner which is prepared is the oracle of God; and so
the more mighty of the oracles of God are the oxen; the sweet and
pleasant are the fatlings. For if any one bring forward feeble words,
without power, and not having strong force of reason, these are the
lean things; the fatlings are when to the establishment of each
proposition many examples are brought forward backed by reasonable
proofs. For example, supposing one holding discourse of chastity, it
might well be represented by the turtle-dove; but should he bring
forward the same holy discourse full of reasonable proof out of
Scripture, so as to delight and strengthen the mind of his hearer, then
he brings the dove fatted.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. That He says, And all things are now ready, means, that
all that is required to salvation is already filled up in the
Scriptures; there the ignorant may find instruction; the self-willed
may read of terrors; he who is in difficulty may there find promises to
rouse him to activity.
GLOSS. Or, All things are now ready, i.e. The entrance into the
kingdom, which had been hitherto closed, is now ready through faith in
My incarnation.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Or He says, All things are now ready which belong to the
mystery of the Lord's Passion and our redemption. He says, Come to the
marriage, not with your feet, but with faith, and good conduct. But
they made light of it; why they did so He shows when He adds, And they
went their way, one to his farm, another to his merchandise.
CHRYS. These occupations seem to be entirely reasonable; but we learn
hence, that however necessary the things that take up our time, we
ought to prefer spiritual things to every thing beside. But it seems to
me that they only pretended these engagements as a cloak for their
disregard of the invitation.
HILARY; For men are taken up with worldly ambition as with a farm; and
many through covetousness are engrossed with trafficking.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Or otherwise; When we work with the labor of our hands,
for example, cultivating our field or our vineyard, or any manufacture
of wood or iron, we seem to be occupied with our farm; any other mode
of getting money unattended with manual labor is here called
merchandise. O most miserable world! and miserable you that follow it!
The pursuits of this world have ever shut men out of life.
GREG. Whosoever then intent upon earthly business, or devoted to the
actions of this world, feigns to be meditating upon the mystery of the
Lord's Passion, and to be living accordingly, is he that refuses to
come to the King's wedding on pretext of going to his farm or his
merchandise. Nay often, which is worse, some who are called not only
reject the grace, but become persecutors, And the remnant took his
servants, treated them spitefully, and slew them.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Or, by the business of a farm, He denotes the Jewish
populace, whom the delights of this world separated from Christ; by the
excuse of merchandise, the Priests and other ministers of the Temple,
who, coming to the service of the Law and the Temple through greediness
of gain, have been shut out of the faith by covetousness. Of these He
said not, 'They were filled with envy,' but They made light of it. For
they who through hate and spite crucified Christ, are they who were
filled with envy; but they who being entangled in business did not
believe on Him, are not said to have been filled with envy, but to have
made light of it. The Lord is silent respecting His own death, because
He had spoken of it in the foregoing parable, but He shows forth the
death of His disciples, whom after His ascension the Jews put to death,
stoning Stephen and executing James the son of Alphaeus, for which
things Jerusalem was destroyed by the Romans. And it is to be observed,
that anger is attributed to God figuratively and not properly; He is
then said to be angry when He punishes.
JEROME; When He was doing works of mercy, and bidding to His
marriage-feast, He was called a man; now when He comes to vengeance,
the man is dropped, and He is called only a King.
ORIGEN; Let those who sin against the God of the Law, and the Prophets,
and the whole creation, declare whether He who is here called man, and
is said to be angry, is indeed the Father Himself. If they allow this,
they will be forced to own that many things are said of Him applicable
to the passable nature of man; not for that He has passions, but
because He is represented to us after the manner of passable human
nature. In this way we take God's anger, repentance, and the other
things of the like sort in the Prophets.
JEROME; By His armies we understand the Romans under Vespasian and
Titus, who having slaughtered the inhabitants of Judea, laid in ashes
the faithless city.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. The Roman army is called God's army; because The earth is
the Lord's, and the fullness thereof; nor would the Romans have come to
Jerusalem, had not the Lord stirred them thither.
GREG. Or, The armies of our King are the legions of His Angels He is
said therefore to have sent His armies, and to have destroyed those
murderers, because all judgment is executed upon men by the Angels. He
destroys those murderers, when He cuts off persecutors; and burns up
their city, because not only their souls, but the body of flesh they
had tenanted, is tormented in the everlasting fire of hell.
ORIGEN; Or, the city of those wicked men is in each doctrine the
assembly of those who meet in the wisdom of the rulers of this world;
which the King sets fire to and destroys, as consisting of evil
buildings.
GREG. But when He sees that His invitation is spurned at, He will not
have His Son's marriage-feast empty; the word of God will find where it
may stay itself.
ORIGEN; He said to His servants, that is, to the Apostles; or to the
Angels, who were set over the calling of the Gentiles, The wedding is
ready.
REMIG. That is, the whole sacrament of the human dispensation is
completed and closed. But they which were bidden, that is, the Jews,
were not worthy, because, ignorant of the righteousness of God, and
going about to establish their own righteousness, they have not
submitted themselves to the righteousness of God. The Jewish nation
then being rejected, the Gentile people were taken in to the
marriage-feast; whence it follows, Go you out into the crossings of the
streets, and as many as you shall find, bid to the wedding.
JEROME; For the Gentile nation was not in the streets, but in the crossings of the streets.
REMIG. These are the errors of the Gentiles.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Or; The streets are all the professions of this world, as
philosophy, soldiery, and the like. And therefore He says, Go out into
the crossings of the streets, that they may call to the faith men of
every condition. Moreover, as chastity is the way that leads to God, so
fornication is the way that leads to the Devil; and so it is in the
other virtues and vices. Thus He bids them invite to the faith men of
every profession or condition.
HILARY; By the street also is to be understood the time of this world,
and they are therefore bid to go to the crossings of the streets,
because the past is remitted to all.
GREG. Or otherwise; In holy Scripture, way is taken to mean actions; so
that, the crossings of the ways we understand as failure in action, for
they usually come to God readily, who have had little prosperity in
worldly actions.
ORIGEN; Or otherwise; I suppose this first bidding to the wedding to
have been a bidding of some of the more noble minds. For God would have
those before all come to the feast of the divine oracles who are of the
more ready wit to understand them; and forasmuch as they who are such
are slow to come to that kind of summons, other servants are sent to
move them to come, and to promise that they shall find the dinner
prepared. For as in the things of the body, one is the bride, others
the inviters to the feast, and they that are bidden are others again;
so God knows the various ranks of souls, and their powers, and the
reasons why these are taken into the condition of the Bride, others in
the rank of the servants that call, and others among the number of
those that are bidden as guests.
But they who had been thus especially invited contemned the first
inviters as poor in understanding, and went their way, following their
own devices, as more delighting in them than in those things which the
King by his servants promised. Yet are these more venial than they who
ill-treat and put to death the servants sent to them; those, that is,
who daringly assail with weapons of contentious words the servants
sent, who are unequal to solve their subtle difficulties, and those are
ill-treated or put to death by them.
The servants going forth are either Christ's Apostles going from Judea
and Jerusalem, or the Holy Angels from the inner worlds, and going to
the various ways of various manners, gathered together whomsoever they
found, not caring whether before their calling they had been good or
bad. By the good here we may understand simply the more humble end
upright of those who come to the worship of God, to whom agreed what
the Apostle says, When the Gentiles which have not the Law do by nature
the things contained in the Law, they are a law to themselves.
JEROME; For there is an infinite difference among the Gentiles
themselves; some are more prone to vice, others are endowed with more
incorrupt and virtuous manners.
GREG. Or; He means that in this present Church there cannot be bad
without good, nor good without bad. He is not good who refuses to
endure the bad.
ORIGEN; The marriage-feast of Christ and the Church is filled, when
they who were found by the Apostles, being restored to God, sat down to
the feast. But since it was necessary that both bad and good should be
called, not that the bad should continue bad, but that they should put
off the garments unsuitable for the wedding, and should put on the
marriage garments, to wit, bowels of mercy and kindness, for this cause
the King goes out, that He may see them set down before the supper is
set before them, that they may be detained who have the wedding garment
in which He is delighted, and that he may condemn the opposite.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. The King came in to see the guests; not as though there
was any place where He is not; but where He will look to give judgment,
there He is said to be present; where He will not, there He seems to be
absent. The day of His coming to behold is the day of judgment, when He
will visit Christians seated at the board of the Scriptures.
ORIGEN; But when He was come in, He found there one who had not put off
his old behavior; He saw there a man which had not on a wedding
garment. He speaks of one only, because all, who after faith continue
to serve that wickedness which they had before the faith, are but of
one kind.
GREG. What ought we to understand by the wedding garment, but charity?
For this the Lord had upon Him, when He came to espouse the Church to
Himself. He then enters in to the wedding feast, but without the
wedding garment, who has faith in the Church, but not charity.
AUG. Or, he goes to the feast without a garment, who goes seeking his own, and not the Bridegroom's honor.
HILARY; Or; The wedding garment is the grace of the Holy Spirit, and
the purity of that heavenly temper, which taken up on the confession of
a good inquiry is to be preserved pure and unspotted for the company of
the Kingdom of heaven.
JEROME; Or; the marriage garment is the commandments of the Lord, and
the works which are done under the Law and the Gospel, and form the
clothing of the new man. Whoever among the Christian body shall be
found in the day of judgment not to have these, is straightway
condemned. He said to him, Friend, how came you in here, not having a
wedding garment? He calls him friend, because he was invited to the
wedding as being a friend by faith; but He charges him with want of
manners in polluting by his filthy dress the elegance of the wedding
entertainment.
ORIGEN; And forasmuch as he who is in sin, and puts not on the Lord
Jesus Christ, has no excuse, it follows, But he was speechless.
JEROME; For in that day there will be no room for blustering manner,
nor power of denial, when all the Angels and the world itself are
witnesses against the sinner.
ORIGEN; He who has thus insulted the marriage feast is not only cast
out therefrom, but besides by the King's officers, who are set over his
prisons, is chained up from that power of walking which he employed not
to walk to any good thing, and that power of reaching forth his hand,
wherewith he had fulfilled no work for any good; and is sentenced to a
place whence all light is banished, which is called outer darkness.
GREG. The hands and feet are then bound by a severe sentence of
judgment, which before refused to be bound from wicked actions by
amendment of life. Or punishment binds them, whom sin had before bound
from good works.
AUG. The bonds of wicked and depraved desires are the chains which bind him who deserves to be cast out into outer darkness.
GREG. By inward darkness we express blindness, of heart; outer darkness signifies the everlasting night of damnation.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Or, it points to the difference of punishment inflicted
on sinners. Outer darkness being the deepest, inward darkness the
lesser, as it were the outskirts of the place.
JEROME; By a metaphor taken from the body, there shall be weeping and
gnashing of teeth, is shown the greatness of the torments. The binding
of the hands and feet also, and the weeping of eyes, and the gnashing
of teeth, understand as proving the truth of the resurrection of the
body.
GREG. There shall gnash those teeth which here delighted in gluttony;
there shall weep those eyes which here roamed in illicit desire; every
member shall there have its peculiar punishment, which here was a slave
to its peculiar vice.
JEROME; And because in the marriage and supper the chief thing is the
end and not the beginning, therefore He adds, For many are called, but
few chosen.
HILARY; For to invite all without exception is a courtesy of public
benevolence; but out of the invited or called, the election will be of
worth, by distinction of merit.
GREG. For some never begin a good course, and some never continue in
that good course which they have begun. Let each one's care about
himself be in proportion to his ignorance of what is yet to come.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Or otherwise; Whenever God will try His Church, He enters
into it that He may see the guests; and if He finds any one not having
on the wedding garment, He inquires of him, How then were you made a
Christian, if you neglect these works? Such a one Christ gives over to
His ministers, that is, to seducing leaders, who bind his hands, that
is, his works, and his feet, that is, the motions of his mind, and cast
him into darkness, that is, into the errors of the Gentiles or the
Jews, or into heresy. The inner darkness is that of the Gentiles, for
they have never heard the truth which they despise; the outer darkness
is that of the Jews, who have heard but do not believe; the outermost
is that of the heretics, who have heard and have learned.
15. Then went the Pharisees, and took counsel how they might entangle him in his talk.
16. And they sent out to him their disciples with the Herodians,
saying, Master, we know that you are true, and teaches the way of God
in truth, neither care you for any man: for you regard not the person
of men.
17. Tell us therefore, What think you? Is it lawful to give tribute to Caesar, or not?
18. But Jesus perceived their wickedness, and said, Why tempt me, you hypocrites?
19. Show me the tribute money. And they brought to him a penny.
20. And he said to them, Whose is this image and superscription?
21. They say to him, Caesar's. Then said he to them, Render therefore
to Caesar the things which are Caesar's; and to God the things that are
God's.
22. When they had heard these words, they marveled, and left him, and went their way.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. As when one seeks to dam a stream of running water, as
soon as one outlet is stopped up it makes another channel for itself;
so the malevolence of the Jews, foiled on one hand, seeks itself out
another course. Then went the Pharisees; to the Herodians. Such as the
plan was, such were the planners; They send to Him their disciples with
the Herodians.
GLOSS. Who as unknown to Him, were more likely to ensnare Him, and so
through them they might take Him, which they feared to do of themselves
because of the populace.
JEROME; Lately under Caesar Augustus, Judea, which was subject to the
Romans, had been made tributary when the census was held of the whole
world; and there was a great division among the people, some saying
that tribute ought to be paid to the Romans in return for the security
and quiet which their arms maintained for all. The Pharisees on the
other hand, self-satisfied in their own righteousness, contended that
the people of God who paid tithes and gave first-fruits, and did all
the other things which are written in the Law, ought not to be subject
to human laws. But Augustus had given the Jews as king, Herod, son of
Antipater, a foreigner and proselyte; he was to exact the tribute, yet
to be subject to the Roman dominion. The Pharisees therefore send their
disciples with the Herodians, that is, with Herod's soldiers, or those
whom the Pharisees in mockery called Herodians, because they paid
tribute to the Romans, and were not devoted to the worship of God.
CHRYS. They send their disciples and Herod's soldiers together, that
whatever opinion He might give might be found fault with. Yet would
they rather have had Him say somewhat against the Herodians; for being
themselves afraid to lay hands on Him because of the populace, they
sought to bring Him into danger through His liability to pay tribute.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. This is the commonest act of hypocrites, to commend those
they would ruin. Thus, these break out into praises of Him, saying,
Master, we know that You are true. They call Him Master, that, deceived
by this show of honor and respect, He might in simplicity open all His
heart to them, as seeking to gain them for disciples.
GLOSS. There are three ways in which it is possible for one not to
teach the truth. First, on the side of the teacher, who may either not
know, or not love the truth; guarding against this, they say, We know
that You are true. Secondly, on the side of God, there are some who,
putting aside all fear of Him, do not utter honestly the truth which
they know respecting Him; to exclude this they say, And teaches the way
of God in truth. Thirdly, on the side of our neighbor, when through
fear or affection any one withholds the truth; to exclude this they
say, And cares for no man, for You regard not the person of man.
CHRYS. This was a covert allusion to Herod and Caesar.
JEROME. This smooth and treacherous inquiry was as a kind of challenge
to the answerer to fear God rather than Caesar, and immediately they
say, Tell us therefore, what You think? Is it lawful to give tribute to
Caesar or not? Should He say tribute should not be paid, the Herodians
would immediately accuse Him as a person disaffected to the Emperor.
CHRYS. They knew that certain had before suffered death for this very
thing, as plotting a rebellion against the Romans, therefore they
sought by such discourse to bring Him into the same suspicion.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. He makes an answer not corresponding to the smooth tone
of their address, but harsh, suitable to their cruel thoughts; for God
answers men's hearts, and not their words.
JEROME; This is the first excellence of the answerer, that He discerns
the thoughts of His examiners, and calls them not disciples but
tempters. A hypocrite is he who is one thing, and feigns himself
another.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. He therefore calls them hypocrites, that seeing Him to be
a discerner of human hearts, they might not be hardy enough to carry
through their design. Observe thus how the Pharisees spoke fair that
they might destroy Him, but Jesus put them to shame that He might save
them; for God's wrath is more profitable to man, than man's favor.
JEROME; Wisdom does ever wisely, and so the tempters are best confuted
out of their own words; therefore it follows, Show me the tribute
money; and they brought to Him a denarius.
This was a coin reckoned equivalent to ten sesterces, and bore the
image of Caesar. Let those who think that the Savior asks because He is
ignorant, learn from the present place that it is not so, for at all
events Jesus must have known whose image was on the coin.
They say to Him, Caesar's; not Augustus, but Tiberius, under whom also
the Lord suffered. All the Roman Emperors were called Caesar, from
Caius Caesar who first seized the chief power. Render therefore to
Caesar the things which are Caesar's; i.e. the coin, tribute, or money.
HILARY; For if there remain with us nothing that is Caesar's, we shall
not be bound by the condition of rendering to him the things that are
his; but if we lean upon what is his, if we avail ourselves of the
lawful protection of his power, we cannot complain of it as any wrong
if we are required to render to Caesar the things of Caesar.
CHRYS. But when you hear this command to render to Caesar the things of
Caesar, know that such things only are intended which in nothing are
opposed to religion; if such there be, it is no longer Caesar's but the
Devil's tribute. And moreover, that they might not say that He was
subjecting them to man, He adds, And to God the things that are God's.
JEROME; That is, tithes, first-fruits, oblation, and victims; as the
Lord Himself rendered to Caesar tribute, both for Himself and for
Peter; and also rendered to God the things that are God's in doing the
will of His Father.
HILARY; It is necessary for us also to render to God the things that
are His, namely, body, soul, and will. For Caesar's coin is in the
gold, in which His image was portrayed, that is, God's coin, on which
the Divine image is stamped; give therefore your money to Caesar, but
preserve a conscience void of offense for God.
ORIGEN; From this place we learn by the Savior's example not to be
allured by those things which have many voices for them, and thence
seem famous, but to incline rather to those things which are spoken
according to some method of reason. But we may also understand this
place morally, that we ought to give some things to the body as a
tribute to Caesar, that is to say, necessaries. And such things as are
congenial to our souls' nature, that is, such things as lead to virtue,
those we ought to offer to God.
They then who without any moderation inculcate the law of God, and
command us to have no care for the things required by the body, are the
Pharisees, who forbade to give tribute to Caesar, forbidding to marry,
and commanding to abstain from meats, which God has created. They, on
the other hand, who allow too much indulgence to the body are the
Herodians. But our Savior would neither that virtue should be enfeebled
by immoderate devotedness to the flesh; nor that our fleshly nature
should be oppressed by our unremitting efforts after virtue.
Or the prince of this world, that is, the Devil, is called Caesar; and
we cannot render to God the things that are God's, unless we have first
rendered to this prince all that is his, that is, have cast off all
wickedness. This moreover let us learn from this place, that to those
who tempt us we should neither be totally silent, nor yet answer
openly, but with caution, to cut off all occasion from those who seek
occasion in us, and teach without blame the things which may save those
who are willing to be saved.
JEROME; They who ought to have believed did but wonder at His great
wisdom, that their craft had found no means for ensnaring Him: whence
it follows, When they had heard these words, they marveled, and left
Him, and went their way, carrying away their unbelief and wonder
together.
23. The same day came to him the Sadducees, which say that there is no resurrection, and asked him,
24. Saying, Master, Moses said, If a man die, having no children, his
brother shall marry his wife, and raise up seed to his brother.
25. Now there were with us seven brethren: and the first, when he had
married a wife, deceased, and, having no issue, left his wife to his
brother:
26. Likewise the second also, and the third, to the seventh.
27. And last of all the woman died also.
28. Therefore in the resurrection whose wife shall she be of the seven? for they all had her.
29. Jesus answered and said to them, you do err, not knowing the Scriptures, nor the power of God.
30. For in the resurrection they neither marry, nor are given in marriage, but are as the angels of God in heaven.
31. But as touching the resurrection of the dead, have you not read that which was spoken to you by God, saying,
32. I am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob? God is not the God of the dead, but of the living.
33. And when the multitude heard this, they were astonished at his doctrine.
CHRYS. The disciples of the Pharisees with the Herodians being thus
confuted, the Sadducees next offer themselves, whereas the overthrow of
those before them ought to have kept them back. But presumption is
shameless, stubborn, and ready to attempt things impossible. So the
Evangelist, wondering at their folly, expresses this, saying, The same
day came to him the Sadducees.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. As soon as the Pharisees were gone, came the Sadducees;
perhaps with like intent, for there was a strife among them who should
be the first to seize Him. Or if by argument they should not be able to
overcome Him, they might at least by perseverance wear out His
understanding.
JEROME; There were two sects among the Jews, the Pharisees and the
Sadducees; the Pharisees pretended to the righteousness of traditions
and observances, whence they were called by the people 'separate'. The
Sadducees (the word is interpreted 'righteous') also passed themselves
for what they were not; and whereas the first believed the resurrection
of body and soul, and confessed both Angel and spirit, these, according
to the Acts of the Apostles, denied them all, as it is here also said,
Who say that there is no resurrection.
ORIGEN; They not only denied the resurrection of the body, but took away the immortality of the soul.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. For the Devil finding himself unable to crush utterly the
religion of God, brought in the sect of the Sadducees denying the
resurrection of the dead, thus breaking down all purpose of a righteous
life, for who is there would endure a daily struggle against himself,
unless he looked to the hope of the resurrection?
GREG. But there are who observing that the spirit is loosed from the
body, that the flesh is turned to corruption, that the corruption is
reduced to dust, and that the dust again is resolved into the elements,
so as to be unseen by human eyes, despair of the possibility of a
resurrection, and while they look upon the dry bones, doubt that they
can be clothed with flesh, and be quickened anew to life.
AUG. But that earthy matter of which the flesh of men is made perishes
not before God; but into whatever cast or ashes reduced, into
whatsoever gases or vapors dispersed, into whatsoever other bodies
incorporated, though resolved into the elements, though become the food
or part of the flesh of animals or men, yet is it in a moment of time
restored to that human soul, which at the first quickened it that it
became man, lived and grew.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. But the Sadducees thought they had now discovered a most convincing argument in favor of their error.
CHRYS. For because death to the Jews, who did all things for the
present life, seemed an unmixed evil, Moses ordered that the wife of
one who died without sons should be given to his brother, that a son
might be born to the dead man by his brother, and his name should not
perish, which was some alleviation of death. And none other but a
brother or relation was commanded to take the wife of the dead;
otherwise the child born would not have been considered the son of the
dead; and also because a stranger could have no concern in establishing
the house of him that was dead, as a brother whose kindred obliged him
thereto.
JEROME; As they disbelieved the resurrection of the body, and supposed
that the soul perished with the body, they accordingly invent a fable
to display the fondness of the belief of a resurrection.
Thus they put forward a base fiction to overthrow the verity of the
resurrection, and conclude with asking, in the resurrection whose shall
she be? Though it might be that such an instance might really occur in
their nation.
AUG. Mystically; by these seven brethren are understood the wicked, who
could not bring forth the fruit of righteousness in the earth through
all the seven ages of the world, during which this earth has being, for
afterwards this earth also shall pass away, through which all those
seven passed away unfruitful.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Wisely does He first convict them of folly, in that they
did not read; and afterwards of ignorance, in that they did not know
God. For of diligence in reading springs knowledge of God, but
ignorance is the offspring of neglect.
JEROME; They therefore err because they know not the Scriptures; and because they know not the power of God.
ORIGEN; Two things there are which He says they know not, the
Scriptures and the power of God, by which is brought to pass the
resurrection, and the new life in it. Or by the power of God, which the
Lord here convicts the Sadducees that they knew not, He intends
Himself, who was the power of God; and Him they knew not, as knowing
the Scriptures which spoke of Him; and thence also they believed not
the resurrection, which He should effect. But it is asked when the
Savior says, you do err not knowing the Scriptures, if He means that
this text, They neither marry, nor are given in marriage, is in some
Scripture, though it is not read in the Old Testament? We say that
these very words are indeed not found, but that the truth is in a
mystery implied in the moral sense of Scripture; the Law, which is a
shadow of good things to come, whenever It speaks of husbands and
wives, speaks chiefly of spiritual wedlock. But neither this do I find
any where spoken in Scripture that the Saints shall be after their
departure as the Angels of God, unless one will understand this also to
be inferred morally; as where it is said, And you shall go to your
fathers, and He was gathered to his people. Or one may say; He blamed
them that they read not the other Scriptures which are besides the Law,
and therefore they erred. Another says, That they knew not the
Scriptures of the Mosaic Law, for this reason, that they did not sift
their divine sense.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Or, when He says, In the resurrection they neither marry
nor are given in marriage. He referred to what He had said, you know
not the power of God; but when He proceeded, I am the God of Abraham,
&c. to that You know not the Scriptures. And thus ought we to do;
to cavilers first to set forth Scripture authority on any question, and
then to show the grounds of reason; but to those who ask out of
ignorance to show first the reason, and then the authority. For
cavilers ought to be refuted, inquirers taught. To these then who put
their question in ignorance, He first shows the reason, saying, In the
resurrection they neither marry nor are given in marriage.
JEROME; In these words the Latin language cannot follow the Greek
idiom. For the Latin word 'nubere' is correctly said only of the woman.
But we must take it so as to understand marry of men, to be given in
marriage of women.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. In this life that we may die, therefore are we born; and
we marry to the end that that which death consumes, birth may
replenish; therefore where the law of death is taken away, the cause of
birth is taken away likewise.
HILARY; It had been enough to have cut off this opinion of the
Sadducees of sensual enjoyment, that where the function ceased, the
empty pleasure of the body accompanying it ceased also; but He adds,
But are as the Angels of God in heaven.
CHRYS. Which is an apt reply to their question. For their reason for
judging that there would be no resurrection, was that they supposed
that their condition when risen would be the same; this reason then He
removes by showing that their condition would be altered.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. It should be noted, that when He spoke of fasting, alms,
and other spiritual virtues, He did not bring in the comparison of
Angels, but only here where He speaks of the ceasing of marriage. For
as all acts of the flesh are animal acts, but this of lust especially
so; so all the virtues are angelic acts, but especially chastity, by
which our nature is bound to the other virtues.
JEROME; This that is added, But are as the Angels of God in heaven, is
an assurance that our conversation in heaven shall be spiritual.
DIONYS. For then when we shall be incorruptible and immortal, by the
visible presence of God Himself we shall be filled with most chaste
contemplations, and shall share the gift of light to the understanding
in our impassible and immaterial soul after the fashion of the exalted
souls in heaven; on which account it is said that we shall be equal to
the Angels.
HILARY; The same cavil that the Sadducees here offer respecting
marriage is renewed by many who ask in what form the female sex shall
rise again. But what the authority of Scripture leads us to think
concerning the Angels, so must we suppose that it will be with women in
the resurrection of our species.
AUG. To me they seem to think most justly, who doubt not that both
sexes shall rise again. For there shall be no desire which is the cause
of confusion, for before they had sinned they were naked; and that
nature which they then had shall be preserved, which was quit both of
conception and of child-birth. Also the members of the woman shall not
be adapted to their former use, but framed for a new beauty, one by
which the beholder is not allured to lust, which shall not then be, but
God's wisdom and mercy shall be praised, which made that to be which
was not, and delivered from corruption that which was made.
JEROME; For none could say of a stone and a tree or inanimate things,
that they shall not marry nor be given in marriage, but of such things
only as having capacity for marriage, shall yet in a sort not marry.
RABAN. These things which are spoken concerning the conditions of the
resurrection He spoke in answer to their inquiry, but of the
resurrection itself He replies aptly against their unbelief.
CHRYS. And because they had put forward Moses in their question, He
confutes them by Moses, adding, But concerning the resurrection of the
dead, have you not read.
JEROME; In proof of the resurrection there were many plainer passages
which He might have cited; among others that of Isaiah, The dead shall
be raised; they that are in the tombs shall rise again: and in another
place, Many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake. It
is inquired therefore why the Lord should have chosen this testimony
which seems ambiguous, and not sufficiently belonging to the truth of
the resurrection; and as if by this He had proved the point adds, He is
not the God of the dead, but of the living. We have said above that the
Sadducees confessed neither Angel, nor spirit, nor resurrection of the
body, and taught also the death of the soul. But they also received
only the five books of Moses, rejecting the Prophets. It would have
been foolish therefore to have brought forward testimonies whose
authority they did not admit. To prove the immortality of souls
therefore, He brings forward an instance out of Moses, I am the God of
Abraham, &c. and then straight subjoins, He is not the God of the
dead, but of the living; so that having established that souls abide
after death, (forasmuch as God could not be the God of those who had no
existence any where,) there might fitly come in the resurrection of
bodies which had together with their souls done good or evil.
CHRYS. How then is it said in another place, Whether we live or die, we
are the Lord's. This which is said here differs from that. The dead are
the Lord's, those, that is, who are to live again, not those who have
disappeared for ever, and shall not rise again.
HILARY; It should be further considered, that this was said to Moses at
a time when those holy Patriarchs had gone to their rest. They
therefore of whom He was the God were in being; for they could have had
nothing, if they had not been in being; for in the nature of things
that, of which somewhat else is, must have itself a being; so they who
have a God must themselves be alive, since God is eternal, and it is
not possible that that which is dead should have that which is eternal.
How then shall it be affirmed that those do not, and shall not
hereafter, exist, of whom Eternity itself has as said that at He is?
ORIGEN; God moreover is He who says, I am that I am; so that it is
impossible that He should be called the God of those who are not. And
see that He said not, I am the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, but
The God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob. But in
another place He said thus, The God of the Hebrews has sent me to you.
For they who in comparison of other men are most perfect before God,
have God entirely in them, wherefore He is not said to be their God in
common, but of each in particular. As when we say, That farm is theirs,
we show that each of them does not own the whole of it; but when we
say, That farm is his, we mean that he is owner of the whole of it.
When then it is said, The God of the Hebrews, this shows their
imperfection, that each of them has some small portion in God. But it
is said, The God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob,
because each one of these possessed God entirely. And it is to the no
small honor of the Patriarchs that they lived to God.
AUG. Seasonably may we confute the Manicheans by this same passage by
which the Sadducees were then confuted, for they too though in another
manner deny the resurrection.
ID. God is therefore called in particular, The God of Abraham, the God
of Isaac, and the God, of Jacob, because in these three are expressed
all the modes of begetting the sons of God. For God begets most times
of a good preacher a good son, and of a bad preacher a bad son This is
signified in Abraham, who of a free woman had a believing son, and of a
bond slave an unbelieving son. Sometimes indeed of a good preacher He
begets both good and bad sons, which is signified in Isaac, who of the
same free woman begot one good and the other bad. And sometimes He
begets good sons both of good and bad preachers; which is signified in
Jacob, who begot good sons both of free women and of bond maids.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. And see how the assault of the Jews against Christ
becomes more faint. The first challenge was in a threatening tone, By
what authority do you these things, to oppose which firmness of spirit
was needed. Their second was with guile, to meet which was needed
wisdom. This last was with ignorant presumption which is easier to cope
with than the others. For he that thinks he knows somewhat, when he
knows nothing, is an easy Conquest for one who has understanding. Thus
the attacks of an enemy are vehement at first, but if one endure them
with a courageous spirit, he will find them more feeble. And when the
multitudes heard this, they were astonished at his doctrine.
REMIG. Not the Sadducees but the multitudes were astonished. This is
daily done in the Church; when by Divine inspiration the adversaries of
the Church are over come, the multitude of the faithful rejoice.
34. But when the Pharisees had heard that he had put the Sadducees to silence, they were gathered together.
35. Then one of them, which was a Lawyer, asked him a question, tempting him, and saying,
36. Master, which is the greatest commandment in the Law?
37. Jesus said to him, You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.
38. This is the first and greatest commandment.
39. And the second is like to it, You shall love your neighbor as yourself.
40. On these two commandments hang all the Law and the Prophets.
JEROME. The Pharisees having been themselves already confuted (in the
matter of the denarius), and now seeing their adversaries also
overthrown, should have taken warning to attempt no further deceit
against Him; but hate and jealousy are the parents of impudence.
ORIGEN; Jesus had put the Sadducees to silence, to show that the tongue
of falsehood is silenced by the brightness of truth. For as it belongs
to the righteous man to be silent when it is good to be silent, and to
speak when it is good to speak, and not to hold his peace so it belongs
to every teacher of a lie not indeed to be silent, but to be silent as
far as any good purpose is concerned.
JEROME; The Pharisees and Sadducees, thus foes to one another, unite in one common purpose to tempt Jesus.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Or the Pharisees meet together, that their numbers may
silence Him whom their reasonings could not confute; thus, while they
array numbers against Him, showing that truth failed them; they said
among themselves, Let one speak for all, and all speak, through one, so
if He prevail, the victory may seem to belong to all; if He be
overthrown, the defeat may rest with Him alone; so it follows, Then one
of them, a teacher of the Law, asked him a question, tempting him.
ORIGEN; All who thus ask questions of any teacher to try him, and not
to learn of him, we must regard as brethren of this Pharisee, according
to what is said below, Inasmuch as you have done it to one of the least
of mine, you have done it to me.
AUG. Let no one find a difficulty in this, that Matthew speaks of this
man as putting his question to tempt the Lord, whereas Mark does not
mention this, but concludes with what the Lord said to him upon his
answering wisely, You are not far from the kingdom of God. For it is
possible that, though he came to tempt, yet the Lord's answer may have
wrought correction within him. Or, the tempting here meant need not be
that of one designing to deceive an enemy, but rather the cautious
approach of one making proof of a stranger. And that is not written in
vain, Who believes lightly, he is of a vain heart.
ORIGEN; He said Master tempting Him, for none but a disciple would thus
address Christ. Whoever then does not learn of the Word, nor yields
himself wholly up to it, yet calls it Master, he is brother to this
Pharisee thus tempting Christ. Perhaps while they read the Law before
the Savior's coming, it was as a question among them which was the
great commandment in it; nor w would the Pharisee have asked this, if
it had not been long time inquired among themselves, but never found
till Jesus came and declared it.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. He who now inquires for the greatest commandment had not
observed the least. He only ought to seek for a higher righteousness
who has fulfilled the lower.
JEROME; Or he inquires not for the sake of the commands, but which is
the first and great commandment, that seeing all that God commands is
great, he may have occasion to cavil w whatever the answer be.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. But the Lord so answers him, as at once to lay bare the
dissimulation of his inquiry, Jesus said to him, You shall love the
Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all
your mind. You shall love, not 'fear,' for to love is more than to
fear; to fear belongs to slaves, to love to sons; fear is in
compulsion, love in freedom. Whoever serves God in fear escapes
punishment, but has not the reward of righteousness because he did well
unwillingly through fear. God does not desire to be served servilely by
men as a master, but to be loved as a father, for that He has given the
spirit of adoption to men.
But to love God with the whole heart, is to have the heart inclined to
the love of no one thing more than of God. To love God again with the
whole soul is to have the mind stayed upon the truth, and to be firm in
the faith. For the love of the heart and the love of the soul are
different. The first is in a sort carnal, that we should love God even
with our flesh, which we cannot do unless we first depart from the love
of the things of this world. The love of the heart is felt in the
heart, but the love of the soul is not felt, but is perceived because
it consists in a judgment of the soul. For he who believes that all
good is in God, and that without Him is no good, he loves God with his
whole soul. But to love God with the whole mind, is to have all the
faculties open and unoccupied for Him. He only loves God with his whole
mind, whose intellect ministers to God, whose wisdom is employed about
God, whose thoughts travail in the things of God, and whose memory
holds the things which are good.
AUG. Or otherwise; You are commanded to love God with all your heart,
that your whole thoughts - with all your soul, that your whole life -
with all your mind, that your whole understanding - may be given to Him
from whom you have that you give. Thus He has left no part of our life
which may justly be unfilled of Him, or give place to the desire after
any other final good; but if aught else present itself for the soul's
love, it should be absorbed into that channel in which the whole
current of love runs. For man is then the most perfect when his whole
life tends towards the life unchangeable, and clings to it with the
whole purpose of his soul.
GLOSS. Or, with all your heart, understanding; with all your soul, i.e.
your will; with all your mind, i.e. memory; so you shall think, will,
remember nothing contrary to Him.
ORIGEN; Or otherwise; With all your heart, that is, in all
recollection, act, thought; with all your soul, to be ready, that is,
to lay it down for God's religion; with all your mind, bringing forth
nothing but what is of God. And consider whether you cannot thus take
the heart of the understanding, by which we contemplate things
intellectual, and the mind of that by which we utter thoughts, walking
as it were with the mind through each expression, and uttering it. If
the Lord had given no to the Pharisee who thus tempted Him, we should
have judged that there was no commandment greater than the rest.
But when the Lord adds, This is the first and greatest commandment, we
learn how we ought to think of the commandments, that there is a great
one, and that there are less down to the least. And the Lord says not
only that it is a great, but that it is the first commandment, not in
order of Scripture, but in supremacy of value. They only take upon them
the greatness and supremacy of this precept, who not only love the Lord
their God, but add these three conditions.
Nor did He only teach the first and great commandment, but added that
there was a second like to the first, You shall love your neighbor as
yourself. But if Whoever loves iniquity has hated his own soul, it is
manifest that he does not love his neighbor as himself, when he does
not love himself.
AUG. It is clear that every man is to be regarded as a neighbor,
because evil is to be done to no man. Further, if everyone to whom we
are bound to show service of mercy, or who is bound to show it to us,
be rightly called our neighbor, it is manifest that in this precept are
comprehended the holy Angels who perform for us those services of which
we may read in Scripture. Whence also our Lord Himself would be called
our neighbor; for it was Himself whom He represents as the good
Samaritan, who gave succor to the man who was left half-dead by the
way.
ID. He that loves men ought to love them either because they are
righteous, or that they may be righteous; and so also ought he to love
himself either for that he is, or that he may be righteous. And thus
without peril he may love his neighbor as himself.
ID. But if even yourself you ought not to love for your own sake, but
because of Him in whom is the rightful end of y our love, let not
another man be displeased that you love even him for God's sake.
Whoever then rightly loves his neighbor, ought to endeavor with him
that he also with his whole heart love God.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. But who loves man is as who loves God; for man is God's
image, wherein God is loved, as a King is honored in his statue. For
this cause this commandment is said to be like the first.
HILARY; Or otherwise; That the second command is like the first
signifies that the obligation and merit of both are alike; for no love
of God without Christ, or of Christ without God, can profit to
salvation.
It follows, On these two commandments hang all the Law and the Prophets.
AUG. Hang, that is, refer thither as their end.
RABAN. For to these two commandments belongs the whole decalogue; the
commandments of the first table to the love of God, those of the second
to the love of our neighbor.
ORIGEN; Or, because he that has fulfilled the things that are written
concerning the love of God and our neighbor, is worthy to receive from
God the great reward, that he should be enabled to understand the Law
and the Prophets.
AUG. Since there are two commandments, the love of God and the love of
our neighbor, on which hang the Law and the Prophets, not without
reason does Scripture put one for both; sometimes the love of God; as
in that, We know that all things work together for good to them that
love God; and sometimes the love of our neighbor; as in that, All the
law is fulfilled in one word, even in this, You shall love your
neighbor as yourself. And that because if a man love his neighbor, it
follows therefrom that he loves God also; for it is the selfsame
affection by which we love God, and by which we love our neighbor, save
that we love God for Himself, but ourselves and our neighbor for God's
sake.
ID. But since the Divine substance is more excellent i and higher than
our nature, the command to love God is distinct from that to love our
neighbor. But if by yourself, you understand your whole self, that is
both your soul and your body, and in like manner of your neighbor,
there is no sort of things to be loved omitted in these commands. The
love of God goes first, and the rule thereof is so set out to us as to
make all other loves center in that, so that nothing seems said of
loving yourself. But then follows, You shall love your neighbor as
yourself, so that love of yourself is not omitted.
41. While the Pharisees were gathered together, Jesus asked them,
42. Saying, What think you of Christ? whose son is he? They say to him, The Son of David.
43. He said to them, How then does David in spirit call him Lord, saying,
44. The Lord said to my Lord, Sit you on my right hand, till I make your enemies your footstool?
45. If David then call him Lord, how is he his son?
46. And no man was able to answer him a word, neither did any man from that day forth ask him any more questions.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. The Jews tempted Christ, supposing Him to be mere man;
had they believed Him to be the Son of God, they would not have tempted
Him.
Christ therefore, willing to show that He knew the treachery of their
hearts, and that He was God, yet would not declare this truth to them
plainly, that they might not take occasion thence to charge Him with
blasphemy, and yet would not totally conceal this truth; because to
that end had He come that He should preach the truth; He therefore puts
a question to them, such as should declare to them who He was; What
think you of Christ? whose Son is He?
CHRYS. He first asked His disciples what others said of Christ, and
then what they themselves said; but not so to these. For they would
have said that He was a deceiver, and wicked. They thought that Christ
was to be mere man, and therefore they say to Him, The Son of David. To
reprove this, He brings forward the Prophet, witnessing His dominion,
proper Sonship, and His joint honor with His Father.
JEROME; This passage is out of the 109th Psalm. Christ is therefore
called David's Lord, not in respect of His descent from him, but in
respect of His eternal generation from the Father, wherein He was
before His fleshly Father. And he calls Him Lord, not by a mere chance,
nor of his own thought, but by the Holy Spirit.
REMIG. That He says, Sit you on my right hand, is not to be taken as
though God had a body, and either a right hand or a left hand; but to
sit on the right hand of God is to abide in the honor and equality of
the Father's majesty.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. I suppose that He formed this question, not, only against
the Pharisees, but also against the heretics; for according to the
flesh He was truly David's Son, but his Lord according to His Godhead.
CHRYS. But He rests not with this, but that they may fear, He adds,
Till I make your enemies your footstool; that at least by terror He
might gain them.
ORIGEN; For God puts Christ's enemies as a footstool beneath His feet, for their salvation as well as their destruction.
REMIG. But till is used for indefinite time, that the meaning be, Sit
You for ever, and for ever hold your enemies beneath your feet.
GLOSS. That it is by the Father that the enemies are put under the Son,
denotes not the Son's weakness, but the union of His nature with His
Father. For the Son also puts under Him the Father's enemies, when He
glorifies His name upon earth. He concludes from this authority, If
David then call Him Lord, how is He his son?
JEROME; This question is still available for us against the Jews; for
these who believe that Christ is yet to come, assert that He is a mere
man, though a holy one, of the race of David. Let us then thus taught
by the Lord ask them, If He be mere man, and only the Son of David, how
does David call Him his Lord? To evade the truth of this question, the
Jews invent many frivolous answers. They allege Abraham's steward, he
whose son was Eliezer of Damascus, and say that this Psalm was composed
in his person, when after the overthrow of the five kings, the Lord God
said to his lord Abraham, Sit you on my right hand, till I make your
enemies your footstool. Let us ask how Abraham could say the things
that follow, and compel them to tell us how Abraham was born before
Lucifer, and how he was a Priest after the order of Melchisedech, for
whom Melchisedech brought bread and wine, and of whom he received
tithes of the spoil?
CHRYS. This conclusion He put to their questionings, as final, and sufficient to stop their mouth.
Henceforward accordingly they held their peace, not by their own good-will, but from not having anything to say.
ORIGEN; For had their question sprung of desire to know, He would never
have proposed to them such things as should have deterred them from
asking further.
RABAN. Hence we learn that the poison of jealousy maybe overcome, but can hardly of itself rest at peace.
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