catena aurea matthew 24
1. And Jesus went out, and departed from the temple: and his disciples came to him for to show him the buildings of the temple.
2. And Jesus said to them, See you not all these things? I say to you,
There shall not be left here one stone upon another, that shall not be
thrown down.
ORIGEN; Christ, when He had foretold all that should come upon
Jerusalem, went forth out of the temple, He, who while He was in it,
had upheld the temple that it should not fall. And so each man, being
the temple of God by reason of the Spirit of God dwelling in him, is
himself the cause of his being deserted, that Christ should depart from
him. It is worthy of note how they show Him the buildings of the
temple, as though He had never seen them. We reply, that when Christ
had foretold the destruction that should come upon the temple, His
disciples were amazed at the thought that so magnificent buildings
should be utterly ruined, and therefore they show them to Him to move
Him to pity, that He would not do what He had threatened. And because
the constitution of human nature is wonderful, being made the temple of
God, the disciples and the rest of the saints confessing the wonderful
working of God in respect of the forming of men, intercede before the
face of Christ, that He would not forsake the human race for their
sins.
RABAN. The historical sense is clear, that in the forty-second year
after the Lord's passion, the city and temple were overthrown under the
Roman Emperors Vespasian and Titus.
REMIG. So it was ordained of God, that as soon as the light of grace
was revealed, the temple with its ceremonies should be taken out of the
way, lest any weakling in the faith, beholding all the things
instituted of the Lord and hallowed by the Prophets your abiding, might
be gradually drawn away from the purity of the faith to a carnal
Judaism.
CHRYS. How means He this, that one stone shall not be left upon
another? Either as conveying the notion of its utter overthrow; or with
respect to the place in which it stood, for its parts were broken up to
its very foundations. But I would add, that, after the fate it
underwent, the most captious might be satisfied that its very fragments
have perished.
JEROME; Figuratively; When the Lord departed from the temple, all the
buildings of the Law and the structure of the Commandments were so
overthrown, that none of them could be fulfilled by the Jews, but, the
Head being taken away, all the parts were at war among themselves.
ORIGEN; Every man also, who, by taking into him the word of God, is
become a temple, if after sinning he yet retains in part the traces of
faith and religion, his temple is in part destroyed, and in part
standing. But he who after sin has no regard for himself is gradually
alienated, until he has altogether forsaken the living God, and so one
stone is not left upon another of God's commandments, which he has not
thrown down.
3. And as he sat upon the mount of Olives, the disciples came to
him privately, saying, Tell us, when shall these things be? and what
shall be the sign of your coming, and of the end of the world?
4. And Jesus answered and said unto them, Take heed that no man deceive you.
5. For many shall come in my name, saying, I am Christ; and shall deceive many.
REMIG. The Lord continuing His walk arrives at Mount Olivet, having by
the way foretold the destruction of the temple to those disciples who
had shown and commended the buildings. When they had reached the Mount
they came to Him, asking Him further of this.
CHRYS. They asked Him in private, because they were great things about
which they were going to ask Him. They wished to know the day of His
coming, for the vehement desire they had to see His glory.
JEROME; They ask Him three things. First, The time of the destruction
of Jerusalem, saying, Tell us when shall these things be? Secondly, The
time of Christ's coming, saying, And what shall be the sign of your
coming? Thirdly, The time of the consummation of this world, saying,
And of the end of the world?
CHRYS. Luke speaks of one inquiry, that concerning Jerusalem, as though
the disciples supposed that Christ's coming should be then, and the end
of the world should be when Jerusalem should be destroyed. Whereas Mark
does not state them all to have asked concerning the destruction of
Jerusalem, but Peter, James, John, and Andrew, as having more bold and
free speech with Christ.
ORIGEN; I think Mount Olivet to be a mystery of the Church out of the Gentiles.
REMIG. For Mount Olivet has no unfruitful trees, but olives, which
supply light to dispel darkness, which give rest to the weary, health
to the sick. And sitting on Mount Olivet over against the temple, the
Lord discourses of its destruction, and the destruction of the Jewish
nation, that even by His choice of a situation He might show, that
abiding still in the Church He condemns the pride of the wicked.
ORIGEN; For the husbandman dwelling on Mount Olivet is the word of God
confirmed in the Church, that is, Christ, who ever grafts the branches
of the wild olive on the good olive tree of the Fathers. They who have
confidence before Christ, seek to learn the sign of the coming of
Christ, and of the consummation of this world. And the coming of the
Word into the soul is of two sorts. The first is that foolish preaching
concerning Christ, when we preach that Christ was born and crucified;
the second its coming in perfect men, concerning which it is said, We
speak wisdom among them that are perfect; and to this second coming is
added the end of the world in the perfect man to whom the world is
crucified.
HILARY; And because the questions of the disciples are threefold, they
are separated by different times and meanings. That concerning the
destruction of the city is first answered, and is then confirmed by
truth of doctrine, that no seducer might prevail with the ignorant.
CHRYS. His first answer is neither concerning the destruction of
Jerusalem, nor concerning His second coming, but concerning the evils
which were to be immediately encountered.
JEROME; One of them of whom He speaks was Simon of Samaria, of whom we
read in the Acts of the Apostles, that he gave himself out to be the
great Power, leaving these things written in his works among others, I
am the Word of God, I am the Almighty, I am all things of God. The
Apostle John also in his Epistle, You have heard that Antichrist shall
come; even now there are many Antichrists. I suppose all heresiarchs to
be Antichrists, and under the name of Christ to teach those things
which are contrary to Christ. No wonder if we see some led away by such
teachers, when the Lord has said, And shall deceive many.
ORIGEN; They that are deceived are many, because wide is the gate that
leads to destruction, and many there be which go in there. This one
thing is enough to detect the Antichrists and seducers that they shall
say, I am Christ, which Christ Himself is no where read to have said:
for the works of God, and the word which He taught, and His power, were
enough to produce belief that He is Christ. For every discourse which
professes to expound Scripture faithfully, and has not the truth, is
Antichrist. For the truth is Christ, that which feigns itself to be the
truth is Antichrist. So also all virtues are Christ, all that feigns
itself to be virtue is Antichrist; for Christ has in Himself in truth
all manner of good for the edification of men, but the devil has forged
resemblances of the same for the deceiving of the saints. We have need
therefore of God to help us, that none deceive us, neither word nor
power. It is a bad thing to find any one erring in his course of life;
but I esteem it much worse not to think according to the most true rule
of Scripture.
6. And you shall hear of wars and rumors of wars: see that you be
not troubled: for all these things must come to pass, but the end is
not yet.
7. For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom:
and there shall be famines, and pestilences, and earthquakes, in divers
places.
8. All these are the beginning of sorrows.
AUG. To this inquiry of the disciples the Lord makes answer, declaring
all things which were to come to pass from that time forwards, whether
relating to the destruction of Jerusalem, which had given occasion to
their inquiry; or to His coming through the Church, in which He ceases
not to come to the end of time; for He is acknowledged as coming among
His own, while new members are daily born to Him; or relating to the
end itself when He shall appear to judge the quick and the dead. When
then He describes the signs which shall attend these three events, we
must carefully consider which signs belong to which events, lest
perchance we refer to one that which belongs to another.
CHRYS. Here He speaks of the battles which should be fought at
Jerusalem; when He says, You shall hear wars, and rumors of wars.
ORIGEN; To hear the shouts raised in the battles, is to hear wars; to
hear rumors of wars, is to hear accounts of wars waged afar off.
CHRYS. And because this might alarm the disciples, He continues, See
that you be not troubled. And because they supposed that the end of the
world would follow immediately after the war in which Jerusalem should
be destroyed, He corrects their suspicions concerning this, These
things must come to pass, but the end is not yet.
JEROME; That is, Think not that the day of judgment is at hand, but
that it is reserved against another time; the sign of which is plainly
put in what follows, For nation shall rise against nation, and kingdom
against kingdom.
RABAN. Or, this is a warning to the Apostles not to flee from Jerusalem
and Judea in terror of these things, when they should begin to come
upon them; because the end was not immediately, but the desolation of
the province, and the destruction of the city and temple should not
come till the fortieth year. And we know that most grievous woes, which
spread over the whole province, fell out to the very letter.
CHRYS. And to show that He also should fight against the Jews, He tells
them not only of wars, but of calamities inflicted by Providence, And
there shall be pestilences, and famines, and earthquakes in divers
places.
RABAN. Nation shall rise against nation, shows the disquietude of men's
minds; pestilences, the affliction of their bodies; famines, the
barrenness of the soil; earthquakes in divers places, wrath from heaven
above.
CHRYS. And these things shall not happen according to the order of
nature before established among men, but shall come of wrath from
heaven, and therefore He said not that they should come only, or come
suddenly, but adds significantly, These all are the beginnings of
troubles, that is, of the Jewish troubles.
ORIGEN; Or otherwise; As the body sickens before the death of the man,
so it must needs be that before the consummation of this world the
earth should be shaken, as though it were palsied, with frequent
earthquakes, the air should gather a deadly quality and become
pestilential, and that the vital energy of the soil should fail, and
its fruits wither. And by consequence of this scarcity, men are stirred
up to robbery and war. But because war and strife arise sometimes from
covetousness, and sometimes from desire of power and empty glory, of
these which shall happen before the end of the world a yet deeper cause
shall be assignable.
For as Christ's coming brought through His divine power peace to divers
nations, so it shall be on the other hand, that when iniquity shall
abound, the love of many shall wax cold, and God and His Christ shall
desert them; wars shall be again when actions which beget wars are not
hindered by holiness; and hostile powers when they are not restrained
by the Saints and by Christ shall work unchecked in the hearts of men,
stirring up nation against nation, and kingdom against kingdom. But if,
as some will have it, famine and pestilence are from the Angels of
Satan, these shall then gather might from opposite powers, when the
salt of the earth, and the lights of the world, Christ's disciples,
shall be no longer, destroying those things which the malice of demons
hatches.
Oftimes in Israel famines and pestilences were caused by sin, and
removed by the prayers of the Saints. Well is that said, In diverse
places, for God will not destroy the whole race of men at once, but
judging them in portions, He gives opportunity of repentance. But if
some stop be not put to these evils in their commencement, they will
progress to worse, as it follows, These all are the beginnings of
sorrows, that is, sorrows common to the whole world, and those which
are to come upon the wicked who shall be tormented in most sharp pains.
JEROME; Figuratively; Kingdom rising against kingdom and pestilence of
that discourse which spreads as a plague-spot, and hunger of hearing
the word of God, and commotion throughout the earth, and separation
from the true faith, may be rather understood of the heretics, who
fighting among themselves give the victory to the Church.
ORIGEN; This must come to pass before we can see the perfection of that
wisdom which is in Christ; but not yet shall be that end which we seek,
for a peaceful end is far from those men.
JEROME; These all are the beginnings of sorrows, is better understood
of pains of labor, as it were the conception of the coming of
Antichrist, and not of the birth.
9. Then shall they deliver you up to be afflicted, and shall kill you: and you shall be hated of all nations for my name's sake.
10. And then shall many be offended, and shall betray one another, and shall hate one another.
11. And many false prophets shall rise, and shall deceive many.
12. And because iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall wax cold.
13. But he that shall endure to the end, the same shall be saved.
14. And this Gospel of the kingdom shall be preached in all the world for a witness to all nations; and then shall the end come.
RABAN. For what desert so many evils are to be brought upon Jerusalem,
and the whole Jewish province the Lord shows, when He adds, Then shall
they deliver you up, &c.
CHRYS. Or otherwise; The disciples when they heard these things which
were spoken of Jerusalem might suppose that they should be beyond reach
of harm, as though what they now heard was the sufferings of others,
while they themselves should meet with nothing but prosperous times, He
therefore announces the grievous things which should befall them,
putting them in fear for themselves. First He had bid them be on their
guard against the arts of false teachers, He now foretell to them the
violence of tyrants. In good season He thus introduces their own woes,
as here they will receive consolation from the common calamities; and
He held out to them not this comfort only, but also that of the cause
for which they should suffer, showing that it was for His name's sake,
And you shall be hated of all men for my name's sake.
ORIGEN; But how should the people of Christ be hated by the nations who
dwelt in the uttermost parts of the earth? But one may perhaps say,
that in this place all is put hyperbolically for many. But this that He
says, Then shall they deliver you, presents some difficulty; for before
these things the Christians were delivered to tribulation. To this it
may be answered, that at that time the Christians shall be more
delivered to tribulation than ever. And persons in any misfortune love
to examine into the origin of them, and to talk about them. Hence when
the worship of the Gods shall be almost deserted by reason of the
multitude of Christians, it will be said that that is the cause of the
wars, and famines, and pestilences; and of the earthquakes also they
will say that the Christians are the cause, whence the persecution of
the Churches.
CHRYS. Having named two sources of opposition, that from seducers, and
that from enemies, He adds a third, that from false brethren; And then
shall many be offended, and shall betray one another, and shall hate
one another. See Paul bewailing these same things, Without were
fightings, within were fears; and in another place; In perils among
false brethren, of whom he says, Such are false Apostles, deceitful
workers.
REMIG. As the capture of Jerusalem approached, many rose up calling
themselves Christians, and deceived many; such Paul calls false
brethren, John Antichrists.
HILARY; Such was Nicolaus, one of the seven deacons, who led astray
many by his presences. And Simon Magus who, armed with diabolic works
and words, perverted many by false miracles.
CHRYS. And He adds, what is still more cruel, that such false Prophets
shall have no alleviation in charity; Because iniquity shall abound,
the love of many shall wax cold.
REMIG. That is, true love towards God and our neighbor, in proportion
as each surrenders himself to iniquity, in that proportion will the
flame of charity in his heart be extinguished.
JEROME; Observe, He says, the love of many, not 'of all,' for in the
Apostles, and those like them, love would continue, as Paul speaks, Who
shall separate us from the love of Christ?
REMIG. Whoever shall endure to the end, i.e. to the end of his life;
for whoever to the end of his life shall persevere in the confession of
the name of Christ, and in love, he shall be saved.
CHRYS. Then that they should not say, How then shall we live among so
many evils? He promises not only that they should live, but that they
should teach every where. And this Gospel of the kingdom shall be
preached in all the world.
REMIG. For the Lord knew that the hearts of the disciples would be made
sad by the destruction of Jerusalem, and overthrow of their nation, and
He therefore comforts them with a promise that more of the Gentiles
should believe than of the Jews should perish.
CHRYS. That before the taking of Jerusalem the Gospel was preached
every where, hear what Paul says, Their sound is gone out into all the
earth; and see himself traveling from Jerusalem into Spain. And if one
had so large a province, think how much all must have done. Whence
writing to certain, he says of the Gospel, It bears fruit, and
increases in every creature under heaven. And this is the strongest
proof of Christ's power, that in thirty years or a little more, the
word of the Gospel filled the ends of the world.
Though the Gospel was preached every where, yet all did not believe,
whence He adds, For a witness to all nations, in accusation, that is,
of such as believe not, they who have believed bearing witness against
them that believed not, and condemning them. And in fit season did
Jerusalem fall, namely, after the Gospel had been preached throughout
the world; as it follows, And then shall the consummation come, i.e.
the end of Jerusalem. For they who have seen Christ's power shining
forth every where, and in brief space spread over the whole world, what
mercy did they deserve when they continued still in ingratitude.
REMIG. But the whole passage might be referred to the end of the world.
For then shall many be offended, and depart from the faith, when they
see the numbers and wealth of the wicked, and the miracles of
Antichrist, and they shall persecute their brethren; and Antichrist
shall send false Prophets, who shall deceive many; iniquity shall
abound, because the number of the wicked shall be increased; and love
shall wax cold, because the number of the good shall diminish.
JEROME; And the sign of the Lord's second coming is, that the Gospel
shall be preached in all the world, so that all may be without excuse.
ORIGEN; And that, You shall be hated of all men for my name's sake,
might be then applied thus; That indeed at this time all nations are
conspired together against the Christians, but that when the things
foretold by Christ shall have come to pass, then there shall be
persecutions, not as before in places, but every where against the
people of God.
AUG. But that this preaching the Gospel of the kingdom in all the world
was accomplished by the Apostles, we have not any certain evidence, to
prove. There are numberless barbarous nations in Africa, among whom the
Gospel is not even yet preached, as it is easy to learn from the
prisoners who are brought from thence. But it cannot be said that these
have no part in the promise of God. For God promised with an oath not
the Romans only, but all nations to the seed of Abraham.
But in whatever nation there is yet no Church established, it must
needs be that there should be one, not that all the people should
believe; for how then should that be fulfilled, You shall be hated of
all nations for my name's sake, unless there be in all nations those
who hate and those who are hated? That preaching therefore was not
accomplished by the Apostles, while as yet there were nations among
whom it had not begun to be fulfilled. The words of the Apostle also,
Their sound has gone out into all the world, though expressed as of
time past, are meant to apply to something future, not yet completed;
as the Prophet, whose words he quotes, said that the Gospel bore fruit
and grew in the whole world, to show thereby to what extent its growth
should come. If then we know not when it shall be that the whole world
shall be filled with the Gospel, undoubtedly we know not when the end
shall be; but it shall not be before such time.
ORIGEN; When every nation shall have heard the preaching of the Gospel,
then shall come the end of the world. For at this time there are many
nations, not of barbarians only, but of our own, who have not yet heard
the word of Christianity.
GLOSS. But it is possible to maintain both applications of the passage,
if only we will take this diffusion of Gospel preaching in a double
sense. If we understand it of fruit produced by the preaching, and the
foundation in every nation of a Church of believers in Christ, as
Augustine (in the passage above quoted) expounds it, then it is a sign
which ought to precede the end of the world, and which did not precede
the destruction of Jerusalem. But if we understand it of the fame of
their preaching, then it was accomplished before the destruction of
Jerusalem, when Christ's disciples had been dispersed over the four
quarters of the earth. Whence Jerome says, I do not suppose that there
remained any nation which knew not the name of Christ; for where
preacher had never been, some notion of the faith must have been
communicated by neighboring nations.
ORIGEN; Morally; He who shall see that glorious second coming of the
word of God into his soul, must needs suffer in proportion to the
measure of his proficiency assaults of opposing influences, and Christ
in him must be hated by all, not only by the nations literally
understood, but by the nations of spiritual vices. And in such
inquiries there will be few who shall reach the truth with any
fullness, the more part shall be offended and fall therefrom, betraying
and accusing one another because of their disagreement respecting
doctrines, which shall give rise to a mutual hatred. Also there shall
be many setting forth unsound words concerning things to come, and
interpreting the Prophets in a manner in which they ought not; these
are the false Prophets who shall deceive many, and who shall cause to
wax cold that fervor of love which was before in the simplicity of the
faith. But he who can abide firmly in the Apostolic tradition, he shall
be saved; and the Gospel being preached to the minds of all shall be
for a testimony to all nations, that is, to all the unbelieving
thoughts of the soul.
15. When you therefore shall see the abomination of desolation, spoken
of by Daniel the prophet, stand in the holy place, (whoever reads, let
him understand:)
16. Then let them which be in Judea flee into the mountains:
17. Let him which is on the housetop not come down to take any thing out of his house.
18. Neither let him which is in the field return back to take his clothes.
19. And woe to them that are with child, and to them that give suck in those days!
20. But pray you that your flight be not in the winter, neither on the sabbath day:
21. For then shall be great tribulation, such as was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor ever shall be.
22. And except those days should be shortened, there should no flesh be
saved: but for the elect's sake those days shall be shortened.
CHRYS. As above He had obscurely intimated the end of Jerusalem; He now
proceeds to a more plain announcement of it, citing a prophecy which
should make them believe it.
JEROME; That, Let him that reads understand, is said to call us to the
mystic understanding of the place. What we read in Daniel is this; And
in the midst of the week the sacrifice and the oblation shall be taken
away, and in the temple shall be the abomination of desolations until
the consummation of the time, and consummation shall be given upon the
desolate.
AUG. Luke, in order to show that the abomination of desolation foretold
by Daniel had reference to the time of the siege of Jerusalem, repeats
these words of our Lord, When you shall see Jerusalem encompassed by
armies, then know you that its desolation draws near.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Whence I think that by the abomination of desolation, He
means the army by which the city of the holy Jerusalem was desolated.
JEROME; Or it may be understood of the statue of Caesar, which Pilate
set up in the temple; or of the equestrian statue of Adrian, which
stood to the present time in the very Holy of Holies. For, according to
the Old Scripture, an idol is called 'abomination;' of desolation is
added, because the idol was set up in the desolated and deserted
temple.
CHRYS. Or because he who desolated the city and the temple placed his
statue there. He says, When you shall see, because these things were to
happen while some of them were yet alive. Wherein admire Christ's
power, and the courage of the disciples' who preached through those
times in which all things Jewish were the object of attack. The
Apostles, being Jews, introduced new laws in opposition to the Roman
authority. The Romans conquered countless thousands of Jews, but could
not overcome twelve unarmed unprotected men. But because it had often
happened to the Jews to be recovered in very desperate circumstances,
as in the times of Sennacherib and Antiochus, that no man might look
for any such event now, He gave command to His disciples to fly,
saying, Then let them which are in Judea flee to the mountains.
REMIG. And this we know was so done when the fall of Jerusalem drew
near; for on the approach of the Roman army, all the Christians in the
province, warned, as ecclesiastical history tells us, miraculously from
heaven, withdrew, and passing the Jordan, took refuge in the city of
Pella; and under the protection of that King Agrippa, of whom we read
in the Acts of the Apostles, they continued some time; but Agrippa
himself, with the Jews whom he governed, was subjected to the dominion
of the Romans.
CHRYS. Then to show how inevitable the evils that should come upon the
Jews, and how infinite their calamity, He adds, And let him which is on
the housetop, not come down to take any thing out of his house,
for it was better to be saved, and to lose his clothes, than to put on
a garment and perish; and of him who is in the field He says the same.
For if those who are in the city fly from it, little need is there for
those who are abroad to return to the city. But it is easy to despise
money, and not hard to provide other raiment; but how can one avoid
natural circumstances? How can a woman with child be made active for
flight, or how can she that gives suck desert the child she has brought
forth?
Woe, therefore, to them that are with child, and to them that give suck
in those days; to the one, because they are encumbered, and cannot
easily fly, bearing about the burden of the womb; to the other, because
they are held by compassion for their children, and cannot save with
them those whom they are suckling.
ORIGEN; Or because that will not be a time of showing pity, neither
upon them who are with child, nor upon them who are suckling, nor upon
their infants. And as speaking to Jews who thought they might travel no
more upon the sabbath than a sabbath-day's journey, He adds, But pray
you that your flight be not in the winter, neither on the sabbath.
JEROME; Because in the one the severity of the cold prevents your
flight to the deserts, and your lurking in mountains and wilds; in the
other, you must either transgress the Law, if you will fly, or
encounter instant death if you will stay.
CHRYS. Note how this speech is directed against the Jews; for when
these things were done by Vespasian, the Apostles could neither observe
the Sabbath nor fly, seeing most of them were already dead, and those
who survived were living in distant countries. And why they should pray
for this He adds a reason, For then shall be great tribulation, such as
was not since the beginning of the world to this time, no, nor shall
be.
AUG. In Luke it is thus read, There shall be great distress upon the
earth, and wrath upon this people, and they shall fall by the edge of
the sword, and shall be led away captive into all nations. And so
Josephus, who wrote the Jewish History, relates evils so great
happening to this people as to seem hardly credible. Whence it was not
unreasonably said, that such tribulation had never been from the
beginning of creation, nor should be; for though in the time of
Antichrist shall be such, or perhaps greater; yet to the Jews, of whom
we must understand this, such shall never more befall. For if they
shall be the first and the chief to receive Antichrist, they will then
rather inflict than suffer tribulation.
CHRYS. I ask the Jews, whence came upon them so grievous wrath from
heaven more woeful than all that had come upon them before? Plainly it
was because of the desperate crime and the denial of the Cross. But He
shows that they deserved still heavier punishment than they received,
when He adds, And except those days should be shortened, there should
no flesh be saved; that is, If the siege by the Romans should be
continued longer, all the Jews would perish; for by all flesh, He means
all the Jewish nation, those within and those without; for the Romans
were at war not only with those in Judea, but with the whole race
wherever dispersed.
AUG. Indeed some persons seem to me not unfitly to understand by these
days the evils themselves, as in other places of divine Scripture evil
days are spoken of; not that the days themselves are evil, but the
things that are done on them. And they are said to be shortened,
because they are less felt, God giving us endurance; so that even
though grievous, they are felt as short.
CHRYS. But that the Jews should not say that these evils came because
of the preaching and the disciples of Christ, He shows them that had it
not been for His disciples, they would have totally perished, but for
the elect's sake those days shall be shortened.
AUG. For we ought not to doubt that when Jerusalem was overthrown,
there were among that people elect of God who had believed out of the
circumcision, or would have believed, elect before the foundation of
the world, for whose sake those days should be shortened, and their
evils made endurable. Some there are who suppose that the days will be
shortened by a more rapid motion of the sun, as the day was made longer
on the prayer of Jesus Naue.
JEROME; Not remembering that which is written. The day continues
according to your ordinances. We must understand it of their being
shortened not in measure, but in number, lest the faith of believers
should be shaken by lengthened affliction.
AUG. For let us not suppose that the computation of Daniel's weeks was
interfered with by this shortening of those days, or that they were not
already at that time complete, but had to be completed afterwards in
the end of all things, for Luke most plainly testifies that the
prophecy of Daniel was accomplished at the time when Jerusalem was
overthrown.
CHRYS. Observe this economy of the Holy Spirit in this, that John wrote
nothing of all this, that he might not seem to be writing a history
after the event; for he survived sometime the taking of Jerusalem. But
these who died before it, and saw nothing of it, these write it, that
the power of prophecy may shine manifestly forth.
HILARY; Or otherwise; It is a sign of His future coming that the Lord
gives, when He says, When you shall see the abomination. For the
Prophet spoke this of the times of Antichrist; and he calls abomination
that which coming against God claims to itself the honor of God. It is
the abomination of desolation, because it will desolate the earth with
wars and slaughter; and it is admitted by the Jews, and set up in the
holy place, that where God had been invoked by the prayers of the
saints, into that same place admitted by the unbelievers it might be
adored with the worship of God. And because this error will be peculiar
to the Jews, that having rejected the truth they should adopt a lie, He
warns them to leave Judea, and flee to the mountains, that no pollution
or infection might be gathered by admixture with a people who should
believe on Antichrist.
That He says, Let him, which is on the housetop not come down to take
anything out of his house, is thus understood. The roof is the highest
part of the house, the summit and perfection of the whole building. He
then who stands on the top of his house, i.e. in the perfection of his
heart, aloft in the regeneration of a new spirit, ought not to come
down to the lower desire of things of the world. Neither let him which
is in the field return back to take his coat, i.e. He that has attained
to obedience to the command, let him not return back to his former
cares, to take on him again the coat of his former sins in which he
once was clothed.
AUG. For in tribulations we must beware of coming down from the
spiritual heights, and yielding ourselves to the carnal life; or of
failing and looking behind us, after having made some progress
forwards.
HILARY; That which is said, Woe to them that are with child, and to
them that give suck, is not to be taken literally as an admonition to
women pregnant, but as a description of souls burdened with the w eight
of sin that neither in the house, nor in the field, may escape the
storm of the wrath that is in store for them. Woe also to those that
are being suckled; the weak souls, that is, who are being brought to
the knowledge of God as by milk, to whom it shall be woe, because they
are too laden to fly, and too inexperienced to resist Antichrist,
having neither escaped sin, nor partaken of the food of true bread.
PSEUDO-AUG. Or, They that are with child, are they who covet what
belongs to others; they that give suck, are they who have already
forcibly taken that which they coveted; to them shall be woe in the day
of judgment. Pray you that your flight be not in the winter, or on the
sabbath day; that is,
AUG. That no one be found in that day in either joy or sorrow for temporal things.
HILARY; Or; That we be not taken in the frost of sins, or in
discontinuance of good works, because of the soreness of the
affliction; notwithstanding that for the sake of God's elect, those
days shall be shortened, that the abridgment of the time may disarm the
force of the calamities.
ORIGEN; Mystically; In the holy place of the Scriptures, both Old and
New Testament, Antichrist, that is, false word, has often stood; let
those who see this flee from the Judea of the letter to the high
mountains of truth. And whoever has been found to have gone up to the
house-top of the word, and to be standing upon its summit, let him not
come down thence as though he would fetch any thing out of his house.
And if he be in the field in which the treasure is hid, and return
thence to his house, he will run into the temptation of a false word;
but especially if he have stripped off his old garment, that is, the
old man, and should have returned again to take it up.
Then the soul, as it were with child by the word, not having yet
brought forth, is liable to a woe; for it casts that which it had
conceived, and loses that hope which is in the acts of truth; and the
same also if the word has been brought forth perfect and entire, but
not having yet attained sufficient growth. Let them that flee to the
mountains pray that their flight be not in the winter or on the
sabbath-day, because in the serenity of a settled spirit they may reach
the way of salvation, but if the winter overtake them they fall amongst
those whom they would fly from
And there be some who rest from evil works, but do not good works; be
your flight then not on such sabbath when a man rests from good works,
for no man is easily overcome in times of peril from false doctrines,
except he is not provided with good works. But what sorer affliction is
there than to see our brethren deceived, and to feel one's self shaken
and terrified? Those days mean the precepts and dogmas of truth; and
all interpretations coming of science falsely so called are so many
additions to those days, which God shortens by those whom He wills.
23. Then if any man shall say to you, Lo, here is Christ, or there; believe it not.
24. For there shall arise false Christs, and false prophets, and shall
show great signs and wonders; insomuch that, if it were possible, they
shall deceive the very elect.
25. Behold, I have told you before.
26. Wherefore if they shall say to you, Behold, he is in the desert; go
not forth: behold, he is in the secret chambers; believe it not.
27. For as the lightning comes out of the east, and shines even unto the west; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.
28. For wherever the carcass is, there will the eagles be gathered together.
CHRYS. When the Lord had finished all that related to Jerusalem, He
came in the rest to His own coming, and gives them signs thereof,
useful not for them only, but for us and for all w ho shall be after
us. As above, the Evangelist said, In those days came John the Baptist,
not implying immediately after what had gone before, but thirty years
after; so here, when He says Then, He passes over the whole interval of
time between the taking of Jerusalem and the beginnings of the
consummation of the world. Among the signs which He gives of His second
coming He certifies them concerning the place, and the deceivers. For
it shall not be then as at His former coming, when He appeared in
Bethlehem, in a corner of the world, unknown of any; but He shall come
openly so as not to need any to announce His approach, wherefore, If
any man shall say to you, Lo, here is Christ, or there, believe not.
JEROME; Wherein He shows that His second coming shall be not in
lowliness as His first, but in glory; and therefore it is folly to seek
in places little and obscure for Him who is the Light of the whole
world.
HILARY; Notwithstanding, by reason of the great tribulation in which
men shall be cast, false prophets promising to show aid present from
Christ, will falsely affirm that Christ is present in divers places,
that they may draw into the service of Antichrist men discouraged and
distracted.
CHRYS. He speaks here of Antichrist, and of certain his ministers, whom
He calls false Christs and false prophets, such as were many in the
time of the Apostles; but before Christ's second coming there shall
come others more bitter than the former, And they shall show great
signs and wonders.
AUG. Here the, Lord forewarns us that even wicked men shall do some
miracles which the saints cannot do, yet are they not therefore to be
thought to have a higher place in the sight of God. For the Egyptian
magi were not more acceptable to God than the people of Israel, because
they could do what the Israelites could not; yet did Moses, by the
power of God, work greater things. This gift is not bestowed on all the
saints, lest the weak should be led astray by a most destructive error,
supposing such powers to be higher gifts than those works of
righteousness by which eternal life is secured.
And though magi do the same miracles that the saints do, yet are they
done with a different end, and through a different authority; for the
one do them seeking the glory of God, the others seeking their own
glory; these do them by some special compact or privilege granted to
the Powers, within their sphere, those by the public dispensation and
the command of Him to whom all creation is subject.
For it is one thing for the owner of a horse to be compelled to give it
up to a soldier, another for him to hand it over to a purchaser, or to
give or lend it to a friend; and as those evil soldiers, who are
condemned by the imperial discipline, employ the imperial ensigns to
terrify the owners of any property, and to extort from them what is not
required by the public service, so some evil Christians, by means of
the name of Christ, or by words or sacraments Christian, compel
somewhat from the Powers; yet these, when thus at the bidding of evil
men, they depart from their purpose, they depart in order to deceive
men in whose wanderings they rejoice. It is one way then in which magi,
another in which good Christians, another in which bad Christians, work
miracles; the magi by a private compact, good Christians by the public
righteousness, evil Christians by the signs of public righteousness.
And we ought not to wonder at this when we believe not unreasonably
that all that we see happen is wrought by the agency of the inferior
powers of this air.
AUG. Yet are we not therefore to think that this visible material world
attends the nod of the disobedient angels, but rather the power is
given them of God. Nor are we to suppose that such evil angels have
creative power, but by their spirituality they know the seeds of things
which are hidden from us, and these they secretly scatter by suitable
adaptations of the elements, and so they give occasion both to the
whole being, and the more rapid increase of substances. For so there
are many men who know what sort of creatures use to be generated out of
certain herbs, meats, juices and humors, bruised and mingled together
in a certain fashion; save only that it is harder for men to do these
things, inasmuch as they lack that subtlety of sense, and
penetrativeness of body in their limbs dull and of earthly mold.
GREG. When then Antichrist shall have wrought wonderful prodigies
before the eyes of the carnal, he shall draw men after him, all such as
delight in present goods, surrendering themselves irrevocably to his
sway, Insomuch that if it were possible the very elect should be led
astray.
ORIG. That, If it were possible, is spoken hyperbolically; not that the
elect can be led astray, but He wishes to show that the discourse of
heretics is often so persuasive, as to have force to prevail even with
those who act wisely.
GREG. Or, because the heart of the elect is assailed with fearful
thoughts, yet their faithfulness is not shaken, the Lord comprehends
both under the same sentence, for to waver in thought is to err. He
adds, If it were possible, because it is not possible that the elect
should be taken in error.
RABAN. He says not this because it is possible for the divine election
to be defeated, but because they, who to men's judgment seemed elect,
shall be led into error.
GREG. And as darts, when foreseen, are less likely to hit, He adds, Lo,
I have told you. Our Lord announces the woes which are to precede the
destruction of the world, that when they come they may alarm the less
from having been foreknown.
HILARY; The false prophets, of whom He had spoken above, shall say of
Christ one while, Lo, He is in the desert, in order that they may cause
men to wander astray; another while, Lo, He is in the secret chambers,
that they may enthrall men under the dominion of Antichrist.
But the Lord declares Himself to be neither lurking in a remote corner,
nor shut up to be visited singly, but that He shall be exhibited to the
view of all, and in every place, As the lightning comes out of the
east, and shines even to the west, so shall the coming of the Son of
Man be.
CHRYS. As He had above described in what guise Antichrist should come,
so here He describes how He Himself shall come. For as the lightning
needs none to herald or announce it, but is in an instant of time
visible throughout the whole world, even to those that are silting in
their chambers, so the coming of Christ shall be seen every where at
once, because of the brightness of His glory. Another sign He adds of
His coming, Wherever the body is, there will the eagles be gathered
together. The eagles denote the company of the Angels, Martyrs, and
Saints.
JEROME; By an instance from nature, which we daily see, we are
instructed in a sacrament of Christ. Eagles and vultures are said to
scent dead bodies even beyond sea, and to flock; to feed upon them. If
then birds, not having the gift of reason, by instinct alone find out
where lays a dead body, separated by so great space of country, how
much more ought the whole multitude of believers to hasten to Christ,
whose lightning goes forth out of the east, and shines even to the
west? We may understand by the carcass here, or corpse, which in the
Latin is more expressively 'cadaver,' an allusion to the passion of
Christ's death.
HILARY; That we might not be ignorant of the place in which He should
come, He adds this, Wherever the carcass, &c. He calls the Saints
eagles, from the spiritual flight of their bodies, and shows that their
gathering shall be to the place of His passion, the Angels guiding them
thither; and rightly should we look for His coming in glory there,
where He wrought for us eternal glory by the suffering of His bodily
humiliation.
ORIGEN; And observe, He says not vultures or crows, but eagles, showing
the lordliness and royalty of all who have believed in the Lord's
passion.
JEROME; They are called eagles whose youth is rescued as the eagle's,
and who take to themselves wings that they may come to Christ's
passion.
GREG. We may understand this, Wherever the carcass is, as meaning, I
who incarnate sit on the throne of heaven, as soon as I shall have
loosed the souls of the elect from the flesh, will exalt them to
heavenly places.
JEROME; Or otherwise This may be understood of the false prophets. At
the time of the Jewish captivity, there were many leaders who declared
themselves to be Christs, so that while the Romans were actually
besieging them, there were three factions within. But it is better
taken as we expounded it above, of the end of the world. Thirdly, it
may be understood of the warfare of the heretics against the Church,
and of those Antichrists, who under pretext of false science, fight
against Christ.
ORIGEN; The genus of Antichrist is one, the species many, just as all
lies are of one sort. As all the holy Prophets were Prophets of the
true Christ, so understand that each false Christ shall have his own
false Prophets, who shall preach as true the false teachings of some
Antichrist. When then one shall say, Lo, here is Christ, or lo, there,
we need not look abroad out of the Scriptures, for out of the Law, the
Prophets, and the Apostles, they bring the things which seem to favor
their lie. Or by this, Lo, here is Christ, or lo, there, they show that
it was not Christ, but some impostor under the same title, such for
example as Marcion, or Valentinus, or Basilides taught.
JEROME; If then any one assert to you that Christ tarries in the desert
of the Gentiles, or in the teaching of the Philosophers, or in the
secret chambers of the heretics, who promise the hidden things of God,
believe Him not, but believe that the Catholic Faith shines from east
to west in the Churches.
AUG. By the east and west, He signifies the whole world, throughout
which the Church should be. In the same way as He said below, Hereafter
shall you see the Son of Man coming in the clouds of heaven, so now He
likens His coming to lightning, which uses to flash out of the clouds.
When then the authority of the Church is set up clear and manifest
throughout the whole world, He suitably warns His disciples that they
should not believe schismatics and heretics. Each schism and heresy
holds its own place, either occupying some important position in the
earth, or ensnaring men's curiosity in obscure and remote conventicles.
Lo, here is Christ, or lo, there, refers to some district or province
of the earth; the secret chambers, or the desert, signify the obscure
and lurking conventicles of heretics.
JEROME; Or by this, in the desert, or in the secret chambers, He means
that in times of persecution and distress, the false Prophets always
find place for deceiving.
ORIGEN; Or, when they allege secret and before unpublished Scriptures,
in proof of their lie, they seem to say, Lo, the word of truth is in
the desert. But when they produce canonical Scripture in which all
Christians agree, they seem to say, Lo, the word of truth is in the
chambers. Or wishing to point out such discourses as are altogether
without Scripture, He said, If they shall say to you, Lo, he is in the
secret chambers, believe it not. Truth is like the lightning that comes
out of the east, and shines even unto the west. Or this may mean, that
truth can be supported out of' every passage of Scripture. The
lightning of truth comes out of the east, that is, from the first
beginnings of Christ, and shines throughout even to His passion, which
is His setting; or from the very beginning of creation, to the last
Scripture of the Apostles. Or, the east is the Law, the west is the end
of the Law, and of John's prophecy. The Church alone neither takes away
word or meaning from this lightning, nor adds anything to its prophecy.
Or He means that we should give no heed to those who say, Lo, here is
Christ, but show Him not in the Church, in which alone is the coming or
the Son of Man, who said, Lo, I am with you always, even to the end of
the world.
JEROME; We are invited to flock to Christ's passion wherever in
Scripture it is read of, that through it we may be able to come to
God's word.
29. Immediately after the tribulation of those days shall the sun be
darkened, and the moon shall not give her light, and the stars shall
fall from heaven, and the powers of the heavens shall be shaken:
30. And then shall appear the sign of the Son of man in heaven: and then shall all the tribes of the earth mourn.
GLOSS. As soon as the Lord has fortified the believers against the arts
of Antichrist and his ministers, by showing that His coming would be
public, He proceeds to show the order and method of His coming.
CHRYS. By the tribulation, He means the times of Antichrist and the
false Prophets; for when there are so many deceivers, the tribulation
will be great. But it shall not extend through any great length of
time. For if for the elect's sake the Jewish war is shortened, much
more shall this tribulation be shortened for their sakes; for which
reason He said not After, but Immediately after, for He shall come
immediately after.
HILARY; The darkening of the sun, the failing of the moon, and the fall of the stars, indicate the glories of His coming.
ORIGEN; One will say, As at the breaking out of great conflagrations,
great darkness is at the first caused by the smoke, so when the world
shall be consumed by fire, which shall be kindled, even the great
luminaries shall be darkened; and when the light of the stars is
decayed, the rest of their substance, incapable of exaltation, shall
fall from heaven into what it was, when it was first raised aloft by
the light. When this shall have taken place, it follows that the
rational heavenly powers shall suffer dismay and derangement, and shall
be suspended from their functions. And then shall appear the sign of
the Son of Man in heaven, that sign by which the heavenly things were
made, that is, the power which the Son wrought when He hung upon the
cross. And the sign shall appear in heaven, that men of all tribes who
before had not believed Christianity when preached, then by that sign,
acknowledging it as made plain, shall grieve and mourn for their
ignorance and sins. Others will think otherwise, that as the light of a
lamp dies away by degrees, so when the supply of the heavenly
luminaries shall fail, the sun shall be darkened, and the moon and the
light of the stars shall grow dim, and that which in their composition
is earthy shall fall from heaven. But how can it be said of the sun
that its light shall be darkened, when Esaias the Prophet declares,
that in the end of the world, there shall be light proceeding forth
from the sun? And of the moon he declares that it shall be as the sun.
But concerning the stars, there are some that endeavor to convince us
that all, or many of them, are larger than the whole earth. How then
shall they fall from heaven, when this earth would not be large enough
to contain them?
JEROME; These things, therefore, shall not come to pass by any
diminution of light, for in another place we read that the light of the
sun shall be sevenfold; but by comparison with real light, all things
shall seem dim.
RABAN. But nothing hinders our supposing that the sun and moon with the
other stars shall for a time lose their light, as we know the sun did
at the time of the Lord's passion; as Joel also says, The sun shall be
turned into darkness, and the moon into blood, before the great and
manifest day of the Lord come. But when the day of judgment is passed,
and the life of future glory shall dawn, and there shall be a new
heaven and a new earth, then shall that come to pass of which Isaiah
speaks, The light of the moon shall be as the light of the site, and
the light of the sun shall be sevenfold. The stars shall fall from
heaven, is expressed in Mark; There shall be stars falling from heaven,
that is, lacking their proper light.
JEROME; By the powers of heaven, we understand the bands of the Angels.
CHRYS. Very fitly shall they be shaken and dismayed, seeing so mighty a
change being wrought, their fellow-servants punished, and the universe
standing before a terrible tribunal.
ORIGEN; But as, at the dispensation of the Cross, the sun was eclipsed,
and darkness was spread over the earth; so when the sign of the Son of
Man appears in heaven, the light of the sun, moon, and stars, shall
fail, as though waning before the might of that sign. This we
understand to be the sign of the cross, that oh. the Jews may see, as
Zacharias and John speak, Him whom they have pierced, and the sign of
victory
CHRYS. But because the sun will be darkened, the cross would not be
seen, if it were not far brighter than the rays of the sun. That the
disciples might not be ashamed, and grieve over the cross, He speaks of
it as a sign, with a kind of distinction. The sign of the cross will
appear to overthrow the shamelessness of the Jews, when Christ shall
appear in the judgment, showing not only His wounds, but His most
ignominious death, And then all the tribes of the earth shall mourn.
For when they shall see the cross, they shall bethink them how they
have gained nothing by His death, and that they have crucified Him whom
they ought to have worshipped.
JEROME; Rightly does He say, the tribes of the earth, for they shall
mourn who have no citizenship in heaven, but are written in earth.
ORIGEN; Morally, one may say that the sun, which shall be darkened, is
the Devil, who shall be convicted in the end of the world, that whereas
he is darkness, he has feigned himself to be the sun; the moon, which
seems to receive its light from this sun, is the Church of the wicked,
which professes to have and to give light, but then convicted with its
sinful dogmas, shall lose its brightness; and all those who, either by
false teaching, or false virtues, promised truth to men, but led them
astray by lies, these are fitly called stars falling from, so to say,
their own heaven, where they were raised on high, exalting themselves
against the knowledge of God. For illustration of this discourse, we
may apply that place in Proverbs, which says, The light of the just is
unquenchable but the light of the wicked shall be quenched. Then the
brightness of God shall appear in every one who has borne the image of
the heavenly; and they of heaven shall rejoice, but they of earth shall
lament.
AUG. Or, the Church is the sun, moon, and stars, to which it is said,
Fair as the moon, bright as the sun. Then shall the sun be darkened,
and the moon shall not give her light, because in that ungoverned fury
of wicked persecutors, the Church shall not be seen. Then shall the
stars fade from heaven, and the powers of heaven shall be shaken,
because many, who seemed to be shining in God's grace, shall give way
to their persecutors, and shall fall, and even the stoutest believers
shall be shaken. And these things shall be after the tribulation of
those days, not because they shall happen when the whole persecution is
overpass, but because the tribulation shall be first, that the falling
away may come after. And because it shall be so throughout all those
days, it shall be after the tribulation of those days, yet on those
very days.
30. And they shall see the Son of man coming in the clouds of heaven with power and great glory.
CHRYS. He adds this, that having heard of the cross, they should not now imagine a similar degradation.
AUG. The first and most apparent meaning of this is of that time when;
He shall come to judge the quick and the dead in His body - that body
in which He sits at the right hand of the Father, in which He died and
rose again and ascended into heaven. As we read in the Acts of the
Apostles; He was taken up, and a cloud received Him out of their sight,
upon which it was said by the Angels, He shall so come as you have seen
Him go into heaven, we may reasonably believe that He Will come again,
not only in the same body, but also in a cloud.
ORIGEN; Therefore shall they see with the bodily eyes the Son of Man,
coming in human shape, in the clouds of heaven, that is, on high. As at
the transfiguration, a voice came out of the cloud, so when He shall
come again transformed into His glorious appearance, it shall be not on
one cloud, but upon many, which shall be His charms. And if when the
Son of God went up to Jerusalem, they who loved Him spread their
garments in the way, not willing that even the ass that carried Him
should tread upon the earth; what wonder, if the Father and God of all
should spread the clouds of heaven under the body of the Son, when He
comes to the work of the consummation? And one may say, that as in the
creation of man, God took clay from the earth and made man; so to
manifest the glory of Christ, the Lord taking of the heaven, and of its
substance, gave it a body of a bright cloud in the Transfiguration, and
of bright clouds at the Consummation; wherefore it is here said, in the
clouds of heaven, as it was there said, of the clay of the ground. And
it is fitting that the Father to give all such admirable gifts to the
Son, because He humbled Himself; and He has also exalted Him, not only
spiritually, but bodily, that He should come upon such clouds; and
perhaps upon rational clouds, that even the chariot of the glorified
Son of Man should not be irrational. At the first, Jesus came with that
power with which He wrought signs and wonders in the people; yet was
that power little in comparison of that great power with which He shall
come in the end; for that was the power of one emptying Himself of
power. And also, it is fitting that He should be transformed into
greater glory than at the transfiguration on the mount; for then He was
transfigured for the sake of three only, but in the consummation of the
whole world, He shall appear in great glory, that all may see Him in
glory.
AUG. But because the Scriptures are to be searched, and we are not to
content ourselves with the surface of them, let us look closely at what
follows, When you see all these things come to pass, know that he is
near even at the door. We know then that He is near, when w e see come
to pass not any of the foregoing things, but all of them, among which
is this that the Son of Mall shall be seen coming. And he shall send
his Angels, who from the four quarters of the world shall gather
together His elect. All these things He does at the last hour coming in
His members as in the clouds, or in the whole Church as in one great
cloud, as now He ceases not to come. And with great power and glory,
because His power and glory will seem greater in the Saints to whom He
will give great power, that they may not be overcome of persecution.
ORIGEN; Or He comes every day with great power to the mind of the
believer in the clouds of prophecy, that is, in the Scriptures of the
Prophets and the Apostles, who utter the word of God with a meaning
above human nature. Also we say that to those who understand He comes
with great glory, and that this is the mole seen in the second coming
of the Word which is to the perfect. And so it may be, that all which
the three Evangelists have said concerning Christ's coming, if
carefully compared together and thoroughly examined would be found to
apply to His continual daily coming in His body, which is the Church,
of which coming He said in another place, Hereafter shall you see the
Son of Man sitting on the right hand of the power of God, and coming in
the clouds of heaven, excepting those places in which He promises that
His last coming in His own person.
31. And he shall send his angels with a great sound of a trumpet, and
they shall gather together his elect from the four winds, from one end
of heaven to the other.
ORIGEN; Because He had spoken of mourning, which shall be only that
they may bear witness against themselves and condemn themselves, that
at none should suppose that that mourning will end their woes, He now
adds, And he shall send his Angels with a trumpet and a loud voice.
REMIG. Here we are not to think of a real trumpet, but of the voice of
the archangel, which shall be so loud that at its sound all the dead
shall rise out of the crust of the earth.
CHRYS. The sound of the trump refers to the resurrection, and the
rejoicing, and to represent the astonishment which shall be then, and
the woe of those that shall be left, and shall not be snatched up into
the clouds.
ORIGEN; It is written in Numbers, that the Priests shall summon by the
sound of the trumpet from the four winds those who are of the camp of
Israel, and it is in allusion to this that Christ speaks here of the
Angels, And they shall gather together the elect from the four winds.
REMIG. That is, from the four quarters of the world, north, south, east, and west.
ORIGEN; Some of little discernment think, that only those who shall
then be found in the body shall be gathered together, but it is better
to say that the Angels of Christ shall then gather together not only
all who from the coming of Christ to the end of the world have been
called and chosen, but all from the foundation of the world, who like
Abraham a have seen the day of Christ and rejoiced therein. And that He
here means not only those that shall be found in the body, but those
also who have quitted the body, the following words show, from one end
of heaven to the other, which cannot be meant of any one upon earth.
Or, the heavens are the divine Scriptures and their authors in which
God dwells. One end of heaven is the beginning of the Scriptures, the
other end is their conclusion. The saints there are gathered together
from one end of heaven, that is, from those that live in the beginning
of the Scriptures to those who live in the ends of them. They shall be
gathered together with a trumpet and a loud voice, that they who hear
and attend may prepare themselves for that way of perfection which
leads to the Son of God.
REMIG. Or otherwise; Lest any one should suppose that they should be
gathered only from the four quarters of the world, and not from the
middle regions, He adds this, And from one end of heaven to the other.
By the heights of heaven meaning the central regions of the earth,
which are under the heights of heaven; and by the ends of heaven,
meaning the extreme parts of the earth, where the land seems to join a
very wide and distant horizon.
CHRYS. That the Lord calls His elect by His Angels pertains to the
honor of the elect; and Paul also says that they shall be caught into
the clouds; that is, the Angels shall gather together those that have
risen, and when they are gathered together, the clouds shall receive
them.
32. Now learn a parable of the fig tree, When his branch is yet tender, and puts forth leaves, you know that summer is nigh:
33. So likewise you, when you shall see all these things, know that it is near, even at the doors.
34. Verily I say to you, This generation shall not pass, till all these things be fulfilled.
35. Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away.
CHRYS. Because He had said that these things should come to pass
immediately after the tribulation of those days, they might ask, How
long time hence? He therefore gives them an instance in the fig.
JEROME; As much as to say, When the tender shoots first show themselves
in the stem of the fig tree, and the bud bursts into flower, and the
bark puts forth leaves, you perceive the approach of summer and the
season of spring and growth; so when you shall see all these things
that are written, do not suppose that the end of the world is
immediate, but that certain monitory signs and precursors are showing
its approach.
CHRYS. He shows that the interval of time shall not be great, but that
the coming of Christ will be presently. By the comparison of the tree
He signifies the spiritual summer and peace that the just shall enjoy
after their winter, while sinners on the other hand shall have a winter
after summer.
ORIGEN; As the fig has its vital powers torpid within it through the
season of winter, but when that is past its branches become tender by
those very powers and put forth leaves; so the world and all those who
are saved had before Christ's coming their vital energies dormant
within them as in a season of winter. Christ's Spirit breathing upon
them makes the branches of their hearts soft and tender, and that which
was dormant within burgeons into leaf, and makes show of fruit. To such
the summer and the coming of the glory of the Word of God is nigh at
hand.
CHRYS. This analogy also adds credit to His foregoing discourse; for
wherever He speaks of what must by all means come to pass, Christ ever
brings forward parallel physical laws.
AUG. That now from the Evangelic and Prophetic signs that we see come
to pass, we ought to look that the Lord's coming should be nigh, who is
there that denies? For daily it draws ever more and more near, but of
the exact time it is said, It is not for you to know the times, or the
seasons. See how long ago the Apostle said, Now is our salvation nearer
than when we believed. What he spoke was not false, and yet how many
years have elapsed, how much more may we not say that the Lord's coming
is at hand now, that so great an accession of time has been made?
HILARY; Mystically; The Synagogue is likened to the fig tree; its
branch is Antichrist, the son of the Devil, the portion of sin, the
maintainer of the law; when this shall begin to swell and to put forth
leaves, then summer is nigh, i.e. the approach of the day of judgment
shall be perceived.
REMIG. Or, when this fig shall again bud, that is, when the synagogue
shall receive the word of holy preaching, as the preaching of Enoch and
Elias, then we ought to understand that the day of the consummation is
at hand.
AUG. Or, by the fig tree understand the human race, by reason of the
temptations of the flesh. When its branch is tender i.e. when the sons
of men through faith in Christ have progressed towards spiritual
fruits, and the honor of their adoption to be the sons of God has shone
forth in them.
HILARY; To give sure credit to the things which should come to pass He
adds, Verily I say to you, this generation shall not pass away until
all these things be fulfilled. By saying Verily, He gives asseveration
to the truth.
ORIGEN; The uninstructed refer the words to the destruction of
Jerusalem, and suppose them to have been said of that generation which
saw Christ's death, that it should not pass away before the city should
be destroyed. But I doubt that they would succeed in thus expounding
every word from that, one stone shall not be left upon another, to
that, it is even at the door; in some perhaps they would succeed, in
others not altogether.
CHRYS. All these things therefore mean what was said of the end of
Jerusalem, of the false prophets, and the false Christs, and all the
rest which shall happen down to the time of Christ's coming. That He
said, This generation, He meant not of the men then living, but of the
generation of the faithful; for so Scripture uses to speak of
generations, not of time only, but of place, life, and conversation; as
it is said, This is the generation of them that seek the Lord. Herein
He teaches that Jerusalem shall perish, and the greater part of the
Jews be destroyed, but that no trial shall overthrow the generation of
the faithful.
ORIGEN; Yet shall the generation of the Church survive the whole of
this world, that it may inherit the world to come, yet it shall not
pass away until all these things have come to pass. But when all these
shall have been fulfilled, then not the earth only but the heavens also
shall pass away; that is, not only the men whose life is earthy, and
who are therefore called the earth, but also they whose conversation is
in heaven, and who are therefore called the heaven; these shall pass
away to things to come, that they may come to better things. But the
words spoken by the Savior shall not pass away, because they effect and
shall ever effect their purpose; but the perfect and they that admit no
further improvement, passing through what they are, come to that which
they are not; and this is that, My words shall not pass away. And
perhaps the words of Moses and the Prophets have passed away, because
all that they prophesied has been fulfilled; but the words of Christ
are always complete, daily fulfilling and to be fulfilled in the
saints. Or perhaps we ought not to say that the words of Moses and the
Prophets are once for all fulfilled; seeing they also are the words of
the Son of God, and are fulfilled continually.
JEROME; Or, by generation here He means the whole human race, and the
Jews in particular. And He adds, Heaven and earth shall pass away, but
my words shall not pass away, to confirm their faith in what has gone
before; as though He had said, it is easier to destroy things solid and
immovable, than that aught should fail of my words.
HILARY; For heaven and earth have in their constitution no necessity of
existence, but Christ's words derived from eternity have in them such
virtue that they must needs abide.
JEROME; The heaven and the earth shall pass away by a change, not by
annihilation; for how should the sun be darkened, and the moon not give
her light, if earth and heaven in which these are should be no more?
RABAN. The heaven which shall pass away is not the starry but the atmospheric heaven which of old was destroyed by the deluge.
CHRYS. He brings forward the elements of the earth to show that the
Church is of more value than either heaven or earth, and that He is
Maker of all things.
36. But of that day and hour knows no man, no, not the angels of heaven, but my Father only.
37. But as the days of Noah were, so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.
38. For as in the days that were before the flood they were eating and
drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noah
entered into the ark,
39. And knew not until the flood came, and took them all away; so shall also the coming of the Son of man be.
40. Then shall two be in the field; the one shall be taken, and the other left.
41. Two women shall be grinding at the mill; the one shall be taken, and the other left.
CHRYS. The Lord having described all the tokens that shall precede His
coming, and brought His discourse to the very doors, yet would not name
the day; Of that day and hour knows no man, no not the Angels of
heaven, but my Father only.
JEROME; In some Latin copies is added here, "neither the Son:" but in
the Greek copies, and particularly those of Adamantius and Pierius, it
is not found. But because it is read in some, it seems to require out
notice.
REMIG. And Mark has the addition.
JEROME; Whereat Arius and Eunomius rejoice greatly; for say they, He
who knows and He who is ignorant cannot be both equal. Against these we
answer shortly; Seeing that Jesus, that is, The Word of God, made all
times, (for By him all things were made, and without him was not
anything made that was made,) and that the day of judgment must be in
all time, by what reasoning can He who knows the whole be shown to be
ignorant of a part? This we will further say; Which is the greater, the
knowledge of the Father, or the knowledge of the judgment. If He knows
the greater, how can He be ignorant of the less?
HILARY; And has indeed God the Father denied the knowledge, of that day
to the Son, when He has declared, All things are committed to me of my
Father? but if any thing has been denied, all things are not committed
to Him.
JEROME; Having then shown that the Son of God cannot be ignorant of the
day of the consummation, we must now show a cause why He should be said
to be ignorant. When after the resurrection He is demanded concerning
this day by the Apostles, He answers more openly; It is not for you to
know the times or the seasons which the Father has put in his own
power. Wherein He shows that Himself knows, but that it was not
expedient for the Apostles to know, that being in uncertainty of the
coming of their Judge, they should live every day as thought they were
to be judged that day.
AUG. When He says here, Knows not, He means, 'makes others not to
know;' i.e. He knew not then, so as to tell His disciples; as it was
said to Abraham, Now I know that you fear God; i.e. 'Now have I caused
that you should know,' because by the temptation he came to know
himself.
ID. That He says that the Father knows implies that in the Father the
Son also knows. For what can there be in time which was not made by the
Word, seeing that time itself was made by the Word!
ID. That the Father alone knows may be well understood in the
above-mentioned manner of knowing, that He makes the Son to know; but
the Son is said not to know, because he does not make men to know.
ORIGEN; Otherwise; So long as the Church which is Christ's body knows
not that day and hour, so long the Son Himself is said not to know that
day and hour. The word know is used according to its proper usual
meaning in Scripture. The Apostle speaks of Christ, as him who knew no
sin, i.e. sinned not. The knowledge of that day and hour the Son
reserves in store for the fellow-heirs of the promise, that all may
know at once, i.e. in the day when it shall come upon them, what things
God has prepared for them that love Him.
RABAN. I have read also in some one's book, that the Son here is not to
be taken of the Only-begotten, but of the adopted, for that He would
not have put the Angels before the Only-begotten Son, saying, Not the
Angels of heaven, neither the Son.
AUG. The Gospel then says, Of that day and hour knows no man; but you
say, That neither the month nor the year of His coming can be known.
This exactness of yours up to this point seems as if you meant that the
year could not be known, but that the week or the decade of years might
be known, as though it was possible to fix or assign it to some seven,
ten, or a hundred, or some number of years more or less. If you allow
that you cannot so limit it, you think with me.
CHRYS. That you may perceive that it is not owing to ignorance that He
is silent of the day and hour of the judgment, He brings forward
another token, As it was in the days of Noah, so shall the coming of
the Son of Man be.
By this He means that He shall come sudden and not looked for, and
while men are taking their pleasure; of which Paul also speaks, When
they shall say, Peace and safety, then sudden destruction comes upon
them.
RABAN. Marriage and meats in themselves are not here condemned, as the
error of Marcion and Manicheus teaches; for in the one the continuation
of the species, in the other that of life, depends; but what is
reproved is an unrestrained use of things lawful.
JEROME; It is asked here, how it was said above, Nation shall rise
against nation, and kingdom against kingdom, &c. when here only
tokens of peace are spoken of as what shall be then? We must suppose,
that after the wars and the other miseries which shall waste the human
race, shall follow a short peace, offering rest and quiet to approve
the faith of the believers.
CHRYS. Or, To such as are thoughtlessly disposed, it shall be a time of
peace and enjoyment; as the Apostle said not, 'When there shall be
peace,' but When they shall say, Peace and safety, showing their
insensibility to be such as was theirs in the days of Noah, when the
wicked, and not the good, indulged themselves, but their end was sorrow
and tribulation. This shows also, that when Antichrist shall come,
those who are wicked, and despair of their salvation, shall run into
illicit pleasures; therefore He chooses an instance suitable. For while
the ark was building, Noah preached among them, foretelling the evils
that should come; but those wicked giving no heed to him, went on as
though no evil should ever come; so now, because many would not believe
things future, He makes credible what He says from what has happened.
Another token He gives to show how unexpectedly that day shall come,
and that He is not ignorant of the day, Then two shall be in the field,
one shall be taken and the other left. These words show that masters
and servants, they that work, and they that w work not, shall be taken
or left alike.
HILARY; Or, the two in the field, are the two people of believers and
unbelievers, whom the day of the Lord shall overtake, as it were in the
labors of this life. And they shall be separated, one being taken and
the other left; this shows the separation that shall be between
believers and unbelievers; when God's wrath is kindled, the saints
shall be gathered into His garner, and the unbelievers shall be left as
fuel for the fire from heaven. The same is the account to be given of
that, Two shall be grinding at the mill. The mill is the work of the
Law, but as some of the Jews believed through the Apostles, so some
shall believe through Elias, and be justified through faith; and one
part shall be taken through this same faith of good works, the other
part shall be left unfruitful in the work of the Law, grinding in vain,
and never to produce the bread of heavenly food.
JEROME; Or, Two men in one field shall be found performing the same
labor, sowing corn together, but not reaping the same fruit of their
labor. The two grinding together we may understand either of the
Synagogue and the Church, which seem to grind together in the Law, and
to make of the same Scriptures meal of the commandments of God; or of
other heresies, which out of both or one Testament, seem to grind meal
of their own doctrines.
HILARY; The two in one bed are those who preach alike the Lord's rest
after His passion, about which heretics and Catholics have the same
confession; but because the Catholic Faith preaches the unity of the
Godhead of the Father and the Son, and the false creed of the heretics
impugns that, therefore shall the Divine judgment decide between the
confession of these two by taking one and leaving the other.
REMIG. Or, these words denote three orders in the Church. The two men
in the field denote the order of preachers, to whom is committed the
field of the Church; by the two grinding at the mill, the order of the
married priests, who while with a divided heart they are called first
to one side, then to the other, do, as it were, ever turn round a mill;
by the two in one bed, the order of the continent, whose repose is
signified by the bed. But in all these orders are good and bad,
righteous and unrighteous, so that some shall be taken, and some left.
ORIGEN; Or otherwise; The body is laid as sick on the bed of carnal
passions, the soul grinds in the mill of this world, and the bodily
senses labor in the field of the world.
42. Watch therefore: for you know not what hour your Lord does come.
43. But know this, that if the good man of the house had known in what
watch the thief would come, he would have watched, and would not have
suffered his house to be broken up.
44. Therefore be you also ready: for in such an hour as you think not the Son of Man comes.
JEROME; Having declared that of that hour knows no man but the Father
only, He shows that it was not expedient for the Apostles to know, that
being ignorant they might live in perpetual expectation of His coming,
and thus concluding the whole, He says, Watch therefore, &c. And He
does not say, 'Because we know not,' but Because you know not, showing
that He Himself is not ignorant of the day of judgment.
CHRYS. He would have them ever ready and therefore He says, Watch.
GREG. To watch is to keep the eyes open, and looking out for the true
light, to do and to observe that which one believes, to cast away the
darkness of sloth and negligence.
ORIGEN; Those of more plain understanding say, that He spoke this of
His second coming; but others would say that it applies to an
intellectual coming of the word into the understanding of the
disciples, for as yet He was not in their understanding as He was to
be.
AUG. He said this Watch, not to those only who heard 'Him speak at the
time, but to those who came after them, and to us, and to all who shall
be after us, until His second coming' for it touches all in a manner.
That day comes to each one of us, when it comes to him to go out of the
world, such as he shall be judged , and therefore ought every Christian
to watch that the Lord's coming may not find him unprepared ; and he
will be unprepared for the day of His coming, whom the last day of his
life shall find unprepared.
AUG. Foolish are all they, who either profess to know the day of the
end of the world, when it is to come, or even the end of their own
life, which no one can know unless he is illuminated by the Holy Spirit.
JEROME; And by the instance of the master of the household, He teaches
more plainly why He keeps secret the day of the consummation.
ORIGEN; The master of the household is the understanding, the house is
the soul, the thief is the Devil. The thief is also every contrary
doctrine which enters the soul of the unwary by other than the natural
entrance, breaking into the house, and pulling down the soul's natural
fences, that is, the natural powers of understanding, it enters the
breach, and spoils the soul. sometimes one takes the thief in the act
of breaking m, and seizing him, stabs him with a word, and slays him.
And the thief comes not in the day-time, when the soul of the
thoughtful man is illuminated with the Sun of righteousness, but in the
night, that is, in the time of prevailing wickedness; in which when one
is plunged, it is possible, though he have not the power of the sun,
that he may be illuminated by some rays from the Word, as from a lamp
continuing still in evil, yet having a better purpose, and
watchfulness, that this his purpose should not be broken through. Or in
time of temptation, or of any calamities, is the time when the thief is
most found to come, seeking to break through the house of the soul.
GREG. Or, the thief breaks into the house through the neglect of the
master of the house, when the spirit has slept in upon its post of
guard, and death has come in unawares into the dwelling house of our
flesh, and finding the lord of the house sleeping, slays him; that is,
the spirit, little providing for coming evils, is taken off unprepared,
to punishment, by death. But if he had watched he would have been
secure from the thief; that is, looking forward to the coming of the
Judge, who takes our lives unawares, he would meet Him with penitence,
and not perish impenitent. And the Lord would therefore have the last
hour unknown, that it might always be in suspense, and that being
unable to foresee it, we might never be unprepared for it.
CHRYS. In this He rebukes such as have less care for their souls, than
they have of guarding their money against an expected thief.
45. Who then is a faithful and wise servant, whom his lord has
made ruler over his household, to give them meat in due season?
46. Blessed is that servant, whom his lord when he come shall find so doing.
47. Verily I say to you, That he shall make him ruler over all his goods.
48. But and if that evil servant shall say in his heart, My lord delays his coming;
49. And shall begin to smite his fellow-servants, and to eat and drink with the drunken;
50. The lord of that servant shall come in a day when he looks not for him, and in an hour that he is not aware of,
51. And shall cut him asunder, and appoint his portion with the hypocrites: there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth.
HILARY; Though the Lord had given above a general exhortation to all in
common to unwearied vigilance, yet He adds a special charge to the
rulers of the people, that is, the Bishops, of watchfulness in looking
for His coming. Such He calls a faithful servant, and wise master of
the household careful for the needs and interests of the people
entrusted to Him.
CHRYS. That He says, Whom think you is that faithful and wise servant,
does not imply ignorance, for even the Father we find asking a
question, as that, Adam, where are you?
REMIG. Nor yet does it imply the impossibility of attaining perfect virtue, but only the difficulty.
GLOSS. For rare indeed is such faithful servant serving his Master for
his Master s sake, feeding Christ's s sheep not for lucre but for love
of Christ, skilled to discern the abilities, the life, and the manner
of those put under him, whom the Lord sets over that is who is called
of God, and has not thrust himself in.
CHRYS. He requires two things of such servant, fidelity and prudence, e
calls him faithful . because he appropriates to himself none of his
Lord s goods, and wastes nothing idly and unprofitably. He calls him
prudent as knowing on what he ought to lay out the things committed to
him.
ORIGEN, Or, he ought progress in the faith, though he is not yet
perfect in it is ordinarily called faithful, and he who has natural
quickness of intellect is called prudent. And whoever observes will
find many faithful, and zealous in their belief, but not at the same
time prudent; for God has chosen the foolish things of the world.
Others again he will see who are quick and prudent but of weak faith;
for the union of faith and prudence in the same man is most rare. To
give food in due season calls for prudence in a man; not to take away
the food of the needy requires faithfulness.
And this the literal sense obliges us to, that we be faithful in
dispersing the revenues of the Church, that we devour not that which
belongs to the widows, that we remember the poor, and that we do not
take occasion from what is written, The Lord has ordained, that they
which preach the Gospel should live of the Gospel, to seek more than
plain food and necessary clothing, or to keep more for ourselves than
we give to those who suffer want. And that we be prudent, to understand
the cases of them that are in need, whence they come to be so, what has
been the education and what are the necessities of each.
It needs much prudence to distribute fairly the revenues of the Church.
Also let the servant be faithful and prudent, that he lavish not the
intellectual and spiritual food upon those whom he ought not, but
dispense according as each has need; to one is more necessary that word
which shall edify his behavior, and guide his practice, than that which
sheds a ray of science; but to others who can pierce more deeply let
him not fail to expound the deeper things, lest if he set before them
common things only, he e despised by such as have naturally keener
understandings, or have been sharpened by the discipline of worldly
learning.
CHRYS. This parable may be also fitted to the case of secular rulers;
for each ought to employ the things he has to the common benefit, and
not to the hurt of his fellow-servants, nor to his own ruin; whether it
be wisdom or dominion, or whatever else he has.
RABAN. The lord is Christ, the household over which He appoints is the
Church Catholic. It is hard then to find one man who is both faithful
and wise, but not impossible; for He would not pronounce a blessing on
a character that could never be, as when He adds, Blessed is that
servant whom his lord when he comes shall find so doing.
HILARY; That is, obedient to his Lord s command, by the seasonableness
of his teaching dispensing the word of life to a household which is to
be nourished for the food of eternity.
REMIG. It should be observed, that as there is great difference of
desert between good preachers and good hearers, so is there great
difference between their rewards. The good hearers, if He finds them
watching He will make to sit down to meat, as Luke speaks; but the good
preachers He will set over all His goods.
ORIGEN; That he may reign with Christ, to whom the Father has committed
all that is His. And as the son of a good father set over all that is
his, He shall communicate of His dignity and glory to His faithful and
wise stewards, that they also may be above the whole creation.
RABAN. Not that they only, but that they before others, shall be
rewarded as well for their own lives as for their superintendence of
the flock.
HILARY; Or, shall set him over all His goods, that is, shall place him
in the glory of God because beyond this is nothing better.
CHRYS. And He instructs His hearer not only by the honor which awaits
the good, but by the punishment which threatens the wicked adding, If
that evil servant shall say in his heart, &c.
AUG. The temper of this servant is shown in his behavior, which is thus
expressed by his good Master; his tyranny, and shall begin to beat his
fellow servants, his sensuality, and to eat and drink with the drunken.
So that when he said, My Lord delays His coming, he is not to be sup
supposed to speak from desire to see the Lord, such was that of him who
said, My soul is thirsty for the living God; when shall I come? This
shows that he was grieved at the delay, seeing that what was hastening
towards him seemed to his longing desires to be coming slowly.
ORIGEN; And every Bishop who ministers not as a fellow servant, but
rules by might as a master, and often a harsh one, sins against God;
also if he does not cherish the needy, but feasts with the drunken, and
is continually slumbering because his Lord comes not till a after long
time
RABAN. Typically, we may understand his beating his fellow servants, of
offending the consciences of the weak by word, or by evil example.
JEROME; The Lord of that servant shall come in a day when he looks not
for Him, is to rouse the stewards to watchfulness and carefulness.
He shall cut him in sunder, is not to be understood of execution by the
sword, but that he shall sever him from the company of the saints.
ORIGEN; Or, He shall cut him in sunder, when his spirit, that is, his
spiritual gift, shall return to God who gave it; but his soul shall go
with his body into hell. But the righteous man is not cut in sunder,
but his soul, with his spirit, that is, with his gift, spiritual gift
which was from God, but there remains to them that part which was their
own, that is, their soul, which shall be punished with their body.
JEROME; And shall appoint him in the portion and the hypocrites, with
those, namely, that were in the field, and grinding at the mill, and
were nevertheless left. For as we often say that the hypocrite is one
who is one thing, and asses himself for another; so in the field and at
the mill he seemed to be doing the same as others, but the event proved
that his purpose was different.
RABAN. Or, appoints him his portion with the hypocrites, that is, a
twofold share of punishment, that of fire and frost; to the fire
belongs the weeping, to the frost the gnashing of teeth.
ORIGEN; Or, there shall be weeping for such as have laughed amiss in
this world, gnashing of teeth for those who have enjoyed an irrational
peace. For being unwilling to suffer bodily pain, now the torture
forces their teeth to chatter, with which they have eaten the
bitterness of wickedness. From this we may learn that the Lord sets
over His household not the faithful and wise only, but the wicked also;
and that it will not save them to have been set over His household, but
only if they have given them their food in due season, and have
abstained from beating and drunkenness.
AUG. Putting aside this wicked servant, who, there is no doubt, hates
his Master's coming, let us set before our eyes these good servants,
who anxiously expect their Lord's coming. One looks for His coming
sooner, another later, the third confesses his ignorance of the matter.
Let us see which is most agreeable to the Gospel. One says, Let us
watch and pray, because the Lord will quickly come; another, Let us
watch and pray, because this life is short and uncertain, though the
Lord's coming may be distant; and the third, Let us watch, because this
life is short and uncertain, and we know not the time when the Lord
will come.
What else does this man say than what we hear the Gospel say, Watch,
because you know not the hour in which the Lord shall come? All indeed,
through longing for the kingdom, desire that that should be true which
the first thinks, and if it should so come to pass, the second and
third would rejoice with him; but if it should not come to pass, it
were to be feared that the belief of it supporters might be shaken by
the delay, and they might begin to think that the Lord's coming shall
be, not remote, but never. He who believes with the second that the
Lord's coming is distant will not be shaken in faith, but will receive
an unlooked for joy. He who confesses his ignorance which of these is
true, wishes for the one, is resigned to the other, but errs in
neither, because he neither affirms or denies either.
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