catena aurea matthew 25
1. Then shall the kingdom of heaven be likened to ten virgins, which took their lamps, and went forth to meet the bridegroom.
2. And five of them were wise, and five were foolish.
3. They that were foolish took their lamps, and took no oil with them:
4. But the wise took oil in their vessels with their lamps.
5. While the bridegroom tarried, they all slumbered and slept.
6. And at midnight there was a cry made, Behold, the bridegroom comes; go you out to meet him.
7. Then all those virgins arose, and trimmed their lamps.
8. And the foolish said unto the wise, Give us of your oil; for our lamps are gone out.
9. But the wise answered saying, Not so, lest there be not enough for
us and you: but go you rather to them that sell, and buy for yourselves.
10. And while they went to buy, the bridegroom came; and they that were
ready went in with him to the marriage: and the door was shut.
11. Afterward came also the other virgins, saying, Lord, Lord, open to us.
12. But he answered and said, Verily I say to you, I know you not.
13. Watch therefore, for you know neither the day nor the hour wherein the Son of man comes.
CHRYS. In the foregoing parable the Lord set forth the punishment of
the man who boat. and was drunk, and wasted his Lord's goods; in this
He declares his punishment who profits not, and does not prepare for
himself abundantly the things of which he has need; for the foolish
virgins had oil, but not enough.
HILARY; Then, because all this discourse is concerning the great day of the Lord, concerning which He had been speaking before.
GREG. By the kingdom of heaven is meant the present Church, as in that,
The Son of Man shall send forth his angels, and they shall gather out
of his kingdom all things that offend.
JEROME; This parable of the ten foolish and the ten wise virgins, some
interpret literally of virgins, of whom there are according to the
Apostle some who are virgins both in body and in thought, others who
have preserved indeed their bodies virgin, but have not the other deeds
of virgins, or have only been preserved by the guardianship of parents,
but have wedded in their hearts. But from what has gone before, I think
the meaning to be different, and that the parable has reference not to
virgins only, but to the whole human race.
GREG. For in each of the five senses of the body there is a double
instrument, and the number five doubled makes ten. And because the
company of the faithful is gathered out of both sexes, the Holy Church
is described as being like to ten virgins, where as bad are mixed with
good, and reprobate with elect, it is like a mixture of wise and
foolish virgins.
CHRYS. And He employs the character virgins in this parable to show,
that though virginity be a great thing, yet if it be not accompanied by
works of mercy, it shall be cast out with the adulterers.
ORIGEN; Or, The understandings of all who have received the word of God
are virgins. For such is the word of God, that of its purity it imparts
to all, who by its teaching have departed from the worship of idols,
and have through rough Christ drawn near to the worship of God; and
have took their lamps, and went forth to meet the bridegroom and the
bride. They take their lamps, i.e. their natural faculties and go forth
out of the world and its errors, and go faculties, meet the Savior, who
is ever ready to come to enter with them that are worthy to His blessed
bride the Church.
HILARY. Or, The bridegroom and the bride represent Church and Lord.
HILARY; in the body, for the flesh is the 'bride of the spirit. The
lamps are the light of bright souls which shine forth in the sacrament
of baptism.
AUG. Or, The lamps which they carry in their hands are their works, of
which it was said above, Let your works shine before men.
ORIGEN; They that believe rightly, and live righteously, are likened to
the five wise; they that profess the faith of Jesus, but prepare
themselves not by good works to salvation, are likened to the five
foolish.
JEROME; For there are five senses which hasten towards heavenly things,
and seek after things above. Of sight, healing, and touch, it is
specially said, That which we have heard, which we have seen with our
eyes, and our hands have handled. Of taste, Taste and see that the Lord
is good. Of smell Because of the savor of your good ointments. There
are also other five senses which gape after earthly husks.
AUG. Or, by the five virgins, is denoted a five-fold continence from
the allurements of the flesh; for our appetite must be held from
gratification of the eyes, ears, smell, taste, and touch. And as this
continence may be done before God, to please Him in inward joy of the
conscience, or before men only to gain applause of men, five are called
wise, and five foolish. Both are virgins, because both these men
exercise continence, though from different motives.
ORIGEN; And because the virtues are so linked together, that he who has
one has all, so all the senses so follow one another, that all must be
wise, or all foolish.
HILARY; Or, The five wise and five foolish are an absolute distinction between believers and unbelievers.
GREG. It is to be observed, that all have lamps, but all have not oil.
HILARY; The oil is the fruit of good works, the vessels are the human
bodies in whose inward parts the treasure of a good conscience is to be
laid up.
JEROME; The virgins that have oil are they, that besides their faith,
have the ornament of good works; they that have not oil, are they that
seem to confess with like faith, but neglect the works of virtue.
AUG. Or, The oil denotes joy, according to that, God has anointed you
with the oil of gladness. He then whose Joy springs not from this that
he is inwardly pleasing to God, has no oil with him; for they have no
gladness in their continent lives, save in the praises of men. But the
wise took oil with their lamps, that is, the gladness of good works,
i.e. their vessels, that is, they stored it in their heart and
conscience, as the Apostle speaks, Let every man prove himself, and
then shall he have rejoicing in himself, and not in another.
CHRYS. Or, The oil denotes charity, alms, and every aid rendered to the
needy; the lamps denote the gifts of virginity; and He calls them
foolish, because after having gone through the greater toil, they lost
all for the sake of a less; for it is greater labor to overcome the
desires of the flesh than of money.
ORIGEN; Or, The oil is the word of teaching, with which the vessels of
souls are filled; for what gives so great content as moral discourse,
which is called the oil of light. The wise took with them of this oil,
as much as would suffice, though the Word should tarry long, and be
slack to come to their consummation. The foolish took lamps, alight
indeed at the first, but not supplied with so much oil as should
suffice even to the end, being careless respecting the provision of
doctrine which comforts faith, and enlightens the lamp of good deeds.
AUG. For there die of both kinds of men in this interval of time before
the resurrection of the dead, and the Lord's coming shall be.
GREG. To sleep its to die, to slumber before sleep is to faint from
salvation before death, because, by the burden of sickness we come to
the sleep of death.
JEROME; Or, They slumbered, i.e. they were dead. And then follows, And
slept, because they were to be afterwards wakened. While the bridegroom
tarried, shows that no little time intervened between the Lord's first
and second coming.
ORIGEN; Or, Whilst the bridegroom tarried, and the Word comes not
speedily to the consummation of this life, the senses suffer,
slumbering and moving in the night of the world; and sleep, as
energizing feebly, and with no quick sense. Yet did those wise virgins
not quit their lamps, nor despair of hoarding their oil.
JEROME; The Jews have a tradition that Christ will come at midnight, in
like manner as in that visitation of Egypt, when the Paschal feast is
celebrated, and the destroyer comes, and the Lord passes over our
dwellings, and the door posts of each man's countenance are hallowed by
the blood of the Lamb. Hence, I suppose, has continued among us that
apostolic tradition, that on the vigil of Easter the people should not
be dismissed before midnight, in expectation of Christ's coming; but
when that hour has past over, they may celebrate the feast in security;
whence also the Psalmist says, At midnight did I rise to praise you.
AUG. Or, At midnight, that is, when none knew or looked for it.
JEROME; Suddenly thus, as on a stormy night, and when all think
themselves secure, at the hour when sleep is the deepest, the coming of
Christ shall be proclaimed by the shout of Angels, and the trumpets of
the Powers that go before Him. This is meant when it says, Lo, the
bridegroom comes, go you out to meet him.
HILARY; At the trumpet signal they go forth to meet the bridegroom
alone, for then shall the two be one, that is, the flesh and God, when
the lowliness of the flesh shall be transformed into spiritual glory.
AUG. Or, that the virgins go forth to meet the bridegroom alone, I
think is to be understood stood that the virgins themselves constitute
her who is called the bride; as we speak of the Christians flocking to
the Church as children running to their mother, and yet this same
mother consists only of the children who are gathered together. For now
the Church is betrothed, and is to be led forth as a virgin to the
marriage, which takes place then when all her mortal part having past
away, she may be held in an eternal union.
ORIGEN; Or, At midnight, that is, at the time of their most abandoned
carelessness, there was a great cry, of the Angels, I suppose, desiring
to arouse all men, those ministering spirits crying within in the
senses of all that sleep, Behold, the bridegroom comes, go you out to
meet him. All heard this summons, and arose, but all were not able to
trim their lamps fitly. The lamps of the senses are trimmed by
evangelical and right use of them; and they that use their senses amiss
have their lamps untrimmed.
GREG. Or, All the virgins arose, that is, both elect and reprobate are
roused from the sleep of death; they trimmed their lamps, that is, they
reckon up to themselves their works for which they look to receive
eternal blessedness.
AUG. They trimmed their lamps, that is, prepared to give an account of their deeds.
HILARY; Or, the trimming their lamps is the return of their souls into
their bodies, and their light is the consciousness of good works that
shines forth, which is contained in the vessels of the body.
GREG. The lamps of the foolish virgins go out, because the works which
appeared outwardly to men to be blight, are dimmed within at the coming
of the Judge. That they then beg oil of the wise virgins, what is it
but that at the coming of the Judge, when they find themselves empty
within, they seek for witness from without? As though deceived by their
own self-confidence, they say to their neighbors, Whereas you e see us
rejected as living without works, do you witness to our works that you
have seen.
AUG. From habit, the mind seeks that which uses to give it pleasure.
And these now seek from men, who see not the heart, witness to God, who
sees the heart. But their lamps go out, because those, whose good works
rest upon the testimony of others, when that is withdrawn, sink into
nothing.
JEROME; Or, These virgins who complain that their lamps are gone out,
show that they are partially alight, yet have they not an unfailing
light, nor enduring works. Whoever then has a virgin soul, and is a
lover of chastity, ought not to rest content with such virtues as
quickly fade, and are withered away when the heat comes upon them, but
should follow after perfect virtues, that he may have an enduring
light.
CHRYS. Or otherwise; These virgins were foolish, not only because they
departed hence, lacking store of mercy, but because they deemed to
receive it from those of whom they importunately begged it. For though
nothing could be more merciful than those wise virgins, who for this
very mercifulness were approved, yet would they not grant the prayer of
the foolish virgins. But the wise answered, saying, Not so, lest there
be not enough for us and you; hence we learn that none of us shall be
able in that day to stand forth as patron of those who are betrayed by
their own works, not because he will not, but because he cannot.
JEROME; For these wise virgins do not answer thus out of covetousness,
but out of fear. Wherefore, each man shall receive the recompense of
his own works, and the virtues of one cannot atone for the vices of
another in the day of judgment. The wise admonish them not to go to
meet the bridegroom without oil, Go you rather to them that sell, and
buy for yourselves.
HILARY; They that sell are the poor, who needing the alms of the
faithful, made them that recompense which they desire, selling in
return for the relief afforded to their wants, a consciousness of good
works. This is the abundant fuel of an undying light which may be
bought and stored up for the fruits of mercy.
CHRYS. You see then how great merchants the poor are to us; but the
poor are not there, but here, and therefore we must store up oil here,
that we may have it to use there when occasion shall require.
JEROME; And this oil is sold, and at a high cost, nor is it to be got
without much toil; so that we understand it not of alms only, but of
all virtues and counsels of the teachers.
ORIGEN; Otherwise; Notwithstanding they were foolish, they yet
understood that they must have light to go and meet the bridegroom,
that all the lights of their senses might be burning. This also they
discerned, that because they had little of the spiritual oil, their
lamps would burn dim as darkness drew on. But the wise send the foolish
to those that sell, seeing that they had not stored up so much oil,
that is, word of doctrine, as would suffice both for themselves to live
by, and to teach others, Go you rather to them that sell, i.e. to the
doctors, and buy, i.e. take of them; the price is perseverance, the
love of learning, industry, and toil of all who are willing to learn.
AUG. Or we may suppose it; Dot meant as advice what they should do, but
as an indirect allusion to their fault. For flatterers sell oil, who by
praising things false, and things unknown, lead souls astray,
recommending to them, as foolish, empty joys, and receiving, in return
some temporal benefit. Go you rather to them that sell, and buy for
yourselves, yes, i.e. Let us now see what they can profit you who have
used to sell you their praise. Lest there be not enough for us and you,
because no man is profited in God's sight by the testimony of others,
because God sees the heart, and each man is scarce able to give
testimony concerning his own conscience. Jerome; But because the season
for buying was now past, and the day of judgment was coming on, so that
there was no room for penitence, they must not now lay up new works,
but give an account of the old.
HILARY; The marriage is the putting on of immortality, and the joining together corruption and incorruption in a new union.
CHRYS. That, While they went to buy, shows that even, if we should
become merciful after death, it will avail us nothing to escape
punishment, as it was no profit to the rich man, that he became
merciful and careful about those who belonged to him.
ORIGEN; Or, He says, While they went to buy, because there are men to
be found who have neglected to learn any thing useful, till when, in
the very end of their life, when they set themselves to learn, they are
overtaken by death.
AUG. Or otherwise; While they went to buy, that is, while they turned
themselves to things without, and sought to find pleasure in things
they had been accustomed to, because they knew not inward joys, came He
that judges; and they that were ready, i.e. they whose conscience bore
witness to them before God, went in with him to the wedding, i.e. to
where the pure soul is united prolific to the pure and perfect word of
God.
JEROME; After the day of judgment, there is no more opportunity for
good works, or for righteousness, and therefore it follows, And the
door was shut.
AUG. When they have been taken in who have been changed into angelic
befog, all entrance into the kingdom of heaven is closed; after the
judgment, there is no more place for prayers or merit.
HILARY; Yet though the season of repentance is now past, the foolish virgins come and beg that entrance may be granted to them.
JEROME; Their worthy confession calling Him, Lord, Lord, is a mark of
faith. But what avails it to confess with the mouth Him whom you deny
with your works?
GLOSS. Grief at their exclusion extorts from them a repetition of this
title of Lord; they call not Him Father, whose mercy they despised in
their lifetime.
AUG. It is not said that they bought any oil, and therefore we must
suppose that all their delight in the praise of men being gone, they
return in distress and affliction to implore God. But His severity,
after judgment, is as great as His mercy was unspeakable before. But He
answered and said, Verily I say to you, I know you not; by that rule,
namely, that the art of God, that is, His wisdom, does not admit that
those should enter into His joy who have sought to do in any thing
according to His commandments, not as before God, but that they may
please men.
JEROME; For the Lord knows them that are his, and he that knows not
shall not be known, and though they be virgins in purity of body, or in
confession of the true faith, yet forasmuch as they have no oil, they
are unknown by the bridegroom. When He adds, Watch therefore, because
you know not the day nor the hour, He means that all that has been said
points to this, namely, that seeing we know not the day of judgment, we
should be careful in providing the light of good works.
AUG. For indeed we know the day and the hour neither of that future
time when the Bridegroom will come, nor of our own falling asleep each
of us; if then we be prepared for this latter, we shall also be
prepared when that voice shall sound, which shall arouse us all.
ID. There have not been wanting those who would refer these ten virgins
to that coming of Christ, which takes place now in the Church; but this
is not to be hastily held out, lest any thing should occur
contradictory of it.
14. For the kingdom of heaven is as a man traveling into a far country,
who called his own servants, and delivered to them his goods.
15. And to one he gave five talents, to another two, and to another
one; to every man according to his several ability; and straightway
took his journey.
16. Then he that had received the five talents went and traded with the same, and made them other five talents.
17. And likewise he that had received two, he also gained other two.
18. But he that had received one went and dug in the earth, and hid his lord's money.
19. After a long time the lord of those servants comes, and reckons with them.
20. And so he that had received five talents came and brought other
five talents, saying, Lord, you delivered to me five talents: behold, I
have gained beside them five talents more.
21. His lord said to him, Well done, you good and faithful servant: you
has been faithful over a few things, I will make you ruler over many
things; enter you into the joy of your lord.
22. He also that had received two talents came and said, Lord, you
delivered to me two talents: behold, I have gained two other talents
beside them.
23. His lord said unto him, Well done, good and faithful servant; you
have been faithful over a few things, I will make you ruler over many
things: enter you into the joy of your lord.
24. Then he who had received the one talent came and said, Lord, I knew
that you are a hard man, reaping where you have not sown, and gathering
where you have not strawed:
25. And I was afraid, and went and hid your talent in the earth: lo, there you have that is yours.
26. His lord answered and said to him, you wicked and slothful servant,
you knew that I reap where I sowed not, and gather where I have not
strawed:
27. You ought therefore to have put my money to the exchangers, and then at my coming I should have received my own with usury.
28. Take therefore the talent from him, and give it to him which has ten talents.
29. For to every one that has shall be given, and he shall have
abundance: but from him that has not shall be taken away even that
which he has.
30. And cast you the unprofitable servant into outer darkness: there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth.
GLOSS. In the foregoing parable is set forth the condemnation of such
as have not prepared sufficient oil for themselves, whether by oil is
meant the brightness of good works, or inward joy of conscience, or
alms paid in money.
CHRYS. This parable is delivered against those who will not assist
their neighbors either with money, or words, or in any other way, but
hide all that they have.
GREG. The man traveling into a far country is our Redeemer, who
ascended into heaven in that flesh which He had taken upon Him. For the
proper home of the flesh is the earth, and it, as it were, travels into
a foreign country, when it is placed by the Redeemer in heaven.
ORIGEN; He travels, not according to His divine nature, but according
to the dispensation of the flesh which He took upon Him. For He who
says to His disciples, Lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the
world; is the Only-Begotten God, who is not circumscribed by bodily
form. By saying this, we do not disunite Jesus, but attribute its
proper qualities to each constituent substance. We may also explain
thus, that the Lord travels in a far country with all those who walk by
faith and not by sight. And when we are absent from the body with the
Lord, then will He also be with us. Observe that the turn of expression
is not thus, I am like, or The Son of Man is like, a man traveling into
a far country, because He is represented in the parable as traveling,
not as the Son of God, but as man.
JEROME; Calling together the Apostles, He gave them the Gospel
doctrine, to one more, to another less, not as of His own bounty or
scanting, but as meeting the capacity of the receivers, as the Apostle
says, that he fed with milk those that were unable to take solid food.
In the five, two, and one talent, we recognize the diversity of gifts
wherewith we have been entrusted.
ORIGEN; Whenever you see of those who have received from Christ a
dispensation of the oracles of God that some have more and some less;
that some have not in comparison of the better sort half an
understanding of things; that others have still less; you will perceive
the different of those who have all of them received from Christ
oracles of God. They to whom five talents were given, and they to whom
two, and they to whom one, have divers degrees of capacity, and one
could not hold the measure of another; he who received but one having
received no mean endowment, for one talent of such a master is a great
thing. His proper servants are three, as there are three sorts of those
that bear fruit. He that received five talents, is he that is able to
raise all the meaning of the Scriptures to their more divine
significations; he that has two is he that has been taught carnal
doctrine, (for two seems to be a carnal number,) and to the less strong
the Master of the household has given one talent.
GREG. Otherwise; The five talents denote the gift of the five senses,
that is, the knowledge of things without; the two signify understanding
and action, the one talent understanding only.
GLOSS. And straightway took his journey, not changing his place, but leaving them to their own freewill and choice of action.
JEROME; He that had received five talents, that is, having received his
bodily senses, he doubled his knowledge of heavenly things, from the
creature understanding the Creator, from earthly unearthly, from
temporal the eternal.
GREG. There are also some who though they cannot pierce to things
inward and mystical, yet for their measure of view of their heavenly
country, they teach rightly such things as they can, what they have
gathered from things without, and while they keep themselves from
wantonness of the flesh, and from ambition of earthly things, and from
the delights of the things that are seen, they restrain others also
from the same by their admonitions.
ORIGEN; Or, They that have their senses exercised by healthy
conversation, both raising themselves to higher knowledge and zealous
in teaching others, these have gained other five; because no one can
easily have increase of any virtues that are not his own, and without
he teaches others what he himself knows, and no more.
HILARY; Or, That servant who received five talents is the people of
believers under the Law, who beginning with that, doubled their merit
by the right obedience of an evangelic faith.
GREG. Again, there are some who by their understanding and their
actions preach to others, and thence gain as it were a twofold profit
in such merchandise. This their preaching bestowed upon both sexes is
thus a talent doubled.
ORIGEN; Or, gained other two, that is, carnal instruction, and another yet a little higher.
HILARY; Or, the servant to whom two talents were committed is the
people of the Gentiles justified by the faith and confession of the Son
and of the E ether, confessing our Lord Jesus Christ, to be both God
and Man, both Spirit and Flesh. These are the two talents committed to
this servant. But as the Jewish people doubled by its belief in the
Gospel every Sacrament which it had learned in the Law, (i.e. its five
talents,) so this people by its use of its two talents merited
understanding and working.
GREG. To hide one's talent in the earth is to devote the ability we have received to worldly business.
ORIGEN; Or otherwise; When you see one who has the power of teaching,
and of benefiting souls, hiding this power, though he may have a
certain religiousness of life, doubt not of such an one that he has
received one talent and hides it in the earth.
HILARY; Or, This servant who has received one talent and hid it in the
earth is the people that continue in the Law, who through jealousy of
the salvation of the Gentiles hide the talent they have received in the
earth. For to hide a talent in the earth is to hide the glory of the
new preaching through offense at the Passion of His Body. His coming to
reckon with them is the assize of the day of judgment.
ORIGEN; And note here that the servants do not come to the Lord to be
judged, but the Lord shall come to them when the time shall be
accomplished. After a long time, that is, when He has sent forth such
as are fitted to bring about the salvation of souls, and perhaps for
this reason it is not easy to find one who is quite fit to pass
forthwith out of this life, as is manifest from this, that even the
Apostles lived to old age; for example, it was said to Peter, When you
shall be old, you shall stretch forth your hand; and Paul says to
Philemon, Now as Paul the aged.
CHRYS. Observe also that the Lord does not require the reckoning
immediately, that you may learn His long suffering. To me He seems to
say this covertly, alluding to the resurrection.
JEROME; After a long time, because there is a long interval between the Savior's ascension and His second coming.
GREG. This lesson from this Gospel warns us to consider whether those
who seem to have received more in this world than others, shall not be
more severely judged by the Author of the world; the greater the gifts,
the greater the reckoning for them. Therefore should every one be
humble concerning his talents in proportion as he sees himself tied up
with a greater responsibility.
ORIGEN; He who had received five talents comes first with boldness before his Lord.
GREG. And bringing his talents doubled, he is commended by his Lord, and is sent into eternal happiness.
RABAN. Well done is an interjection of joy; the Lord showing us therein
the joy with which He invites the servant who labors well to eternal
bliss; of which the Prophet speaks, In your presence is fullness of
joy.
CHRYS. You good servant, this he means of that goodness which is shown towards our neighbor.
GLOSS. Faithful because he appropriated to himself none of those things which were his lord's.
JEROME; He says, you were faithful in a few things, because all that we
have at present though they seem great and many, yet in comparison of
the things to come are little and few.
GREG. The faithful servant is set over many things, when having
overcome the afflictions of corruption, he joys with eternal joy in
that heavenly seat. He is then fully admitted to the joy of his Lord,
when taken in to that abiding country, and numbered among the companies
of Angels, he has such inward joy for this gift, that there is no room
for outward sorrow at his corruption.
JEROME; What greater thing can be given to a faithful servant than to be with his Lord, and to see his Lord's joy?
CHRYS. By this word joy He expresses complete blessedness.
AUG. This will be our perfect joy, than which is none greater, to have
fruition of that Divine Trinity in whose image we were made.
JEROME; The servant who of five talents had made ten, and he who of two
had made four, are received with equal favor by the Master of the
household, who looks not to the largeness of their profit, but to the
disposition of their will.
ORIGEN; That He says of both these servants that they came, we must
understand of their passing out of this world to Him. And observe that
the same was said to them both; he that had less capacity, but that
which he had, he exercised after such manner as he ought, shall have no
whit less with God than he who has a greater capacity; for all that is
required is that whatever a man has from God, he should use it all to
the glory of God.
GREG. The servant who would not trade with his talent returns to his Lord with words of excuse.
JEROME; For truly that which is written, To offer excuses excusing sins
happened to this servant, so that to slothfulness and idleness was
added also the sin of pride. For he who ought to have honestly
acknowledged his fault, and to have entreated the Master of the
household, on the contrary cavils against him, and avers that he did it
with provident design, lest while he sought to make profit he should
hazard the capital.
ORIGEN; This servant seems to me to have been one of those who believe,
but do not act honestly, concealing their faith, and doing every thing
that they may not be known to be Christians. They who are such seem to
me to have a fear of God, and to regard Him as austere and implacable.
We indeed understand how the Lord reaps where He sowed not, because the
righteous man sows in the Spirit, whereof he shall reap life eternal.
Also He reaps where He sowed not, and gathers where he scattered not,
because He counts as bestowed upon Himself all that is sown among the
poor.
JEROME; Also, by this which this servant dared to say, you reap where
you sow not, we understand that the Lord accepts the good life of the
Gentiles and of the Philosophers.
GREG. But there are many within the Church of whom this servant is a
type, who fear to set out on the path of a better life, and yet are not
afraid to continue in carnal indolence; they esteem themselves sinners,
and therefore tremble to take up the paths of holiness, but fearlessly
remain in their own iniquities.
HILARY; Or, By this servant is understood the Jewish people which
continues in the Law, and says, I was afraid of you, as through fear of
the old commandments abstaining from the exercise of evangelical
liberty; and it says, Lo, there is that is yours, as though it had
continued in those things which the Lord commanded, when yet it knew
that the fruits of righteousness should be reaped there, where the Law
bad not been sown, and that there should be gathered from among the
Gentiles some who were not scattered of the seed of Abraham.
JEROME; But what he thought would be his excuse is turned into his
condemnation. He calls him wicked servant, because he caviled against
his Lord; and slothful, because he would not double his talent;
condemning his pride in the one, and his idleness in the other.
If you knew me to be hard and austere, and to seek after other men's
goods, you should also have known that I exact with the more rigor that
is mine own, and should have given my money to the bankers; for the
Greek word here means money. The words of the Lord are pure words,
silver tried in the fire. The money, or silver, then are the preaching
of the Gospel and the heavenly word; which ought to be given to the
bankers, that is, either to the other doctors, which the Apostles did
when they ordained Priests and Bishops throughout the cities; or to all
the believers, who can double the sum and restore it with usury by
fulfilling in act what they have learned in word.
GREG. So then we I see as well the peril of the teachers if they
withhold the Lord's money, as that of the hearers from whom is exacted
with usury that they have e heard, namely, that from what they have
heard they should strive to understand that they have not heard.
ORIGEN; The Lord did not allow that He was a hard man as the servant
supposed, but He assented to all his other words. But He is indeed hard
to those who abuse the mercy of God to suffer themselves to become
remiss, and use it not to be converted.
GREG. Let us hear now the sentence by which the Lord condemns the
slothful servant, Take away from him the talent, and give it to him
that has ten talents.
ORIGEN; The Lord is able by the might of His divinity to take away his
ability from the man who is slack to use it, and to give it to him who
has improved his own.
GREG. It might seem more seasonable to have given it rather to him who
had two, than to him who had five. But as the five talents denote the
knowledge of things without, the two understanding and action, he who
had the two had more than he who had the five talents; this man with
his five talents merited the administration of things without, but was
yet without any understanding of things eternal. The one talent
therefore, which we say signifies the intellect, ought to be given to
him who had administered well the things without which he had received;
the same we see happen every day in the Holy Church, that they who
administer faithfully things without, are also mighty in the inward
understanding.
JEROME; Or, it is given to him who had gained five talents, that we may
understand that though the Lord's joy over the labor of each be equal,
of him who doubled the five as of him who doubled the two, yet is a
greater reward due to him who labored more in the Lord's money.
GREG. Then follows a general sentence, For to every one that has shall
be given, and he shall have abundance, but from him that has not, even
that which he seems to have shall be taken away. For whoever has
charity receives the other gifts also; but whosoever has not charity
loses even the gifts which he seemed to have had.
CHRYS. Also he who has the graces of eloquence and of teaching to
profit withal, and uses it not, loses that grace; but he who does his
endeavor in putting it to use acquires a larger share.
JEROME; Many also who are naturally clever and have sharp wit, if they
become neglectful, and by disuse spoil that good they have by nature,
these do, in comparison of him who being somewhat dull by nature
compensates by industry and painstaking his backwardness, lose their
natural gift, and see the reward promised them pass away to others. But
it may also be understood thus; To him who has faith, and a right will
in the Lord, even if he come in aught short in deed as being man, shall
be given by the merciful Judge; but he who has not faith, shall lose
even the other virtues which he seems to have naturally. And He says
carefully, From Him that has not, shall be taken away even that which
he seems to have, for whatever is without faith in Christ ought not to
be imputed to him who uses it amiss, but to Him who gives the goods of
nature even to a wicked servant.
GREG. Or, Whoever has not charity, loses even those things which he seems to have received.
HILARY; And on those who have the privilege of the Gospels, the honor
of the Law is also conferred, but from him who has not the faith of
Christ is taken away even that honor which seemed to be his through the
Law.
CHRYS. The wicked servant is punished not only by loss of his talent,
but by intolerable infliction, and a denunciation in accusation joined
therewith.
ORIGEN; Into outer darkness, where is no light, perhaps not even
physical light; and where God is not seen, but those who are condemned
thereto are condemned as unworthy the contemplation of God. We have
also read some one before us expounding this of the darkness of that
abyss which is outside the world, as though unworthy of the world, they
were cast out into that abyss, where is darkness with none to lighten
it.
GREG. And thus for punishment he shall be cast into outer darkness who has of his own free will, fallen into inward darkness.
JEROME; What is weeping and gnashing of teeth we have said above.
CHRYS. Observe that not only he who robs others, or who works evil, is
punished with extreme punishment, but he also who does not good works.
GREG. Let him then who has understanding look in that he hold not his
peace; let him who has affluence not be dead to mercy; let him who has
the art of guiding life communicate its use with his neighbor; and him
who has the faculty of eloquence intercede with the rich for the poor.
For the very least endowment will be reckoned as a talent entrusted for
use.
ORIGEN; If you are offended at this we have said, namely that a man
shall be judged if he does not teach others, call to mind the Apostle's
words, Woe is to me if I preach not the Gospel.
31. When the Son of man shall come in his glory, and all the holy
angels with him, then shall he sit upon the throne of his glory:
32. And before him shall be gathered all nations: and he shall separate
them one from another, as a shepherd divides his sheep from the goats:
33. And he shall set the sheep on his right hand, but the goats on the left.
34. Then shall the King say to them on his right hand, Come, you
blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the
foundation of the world:
35. For I was an hungry, and you gave me meat: I was thirsty, and you gave me drink: I was a stranger, and you took me in:
36. Naked, and you clothed me: I was sick, and you visited me: I was in prison, and you came to me.
37. Then shall the righteous answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we you hungry, and fed you? Or thirsty, and gave you drink?
38. When saw we you a stranger, and took you in? or naked, and clothed you?
39. Or when saw we you sick, or in prison, and came to you?
40. And the King shall answer and say to them, Verily I say to you,
Inasmuch as you have done it to one of the least of these my brethren,
you have done it to me.
41. Then shall he say also to them on the left hand, Depart from me,
you cursed, into everlasting fire, prepared for the devil and his
angels:
42. For I was an hungry, and you gave me no meat: I was thirsty, and you gave me no drink:
43. I was a stranger, and you took me not in: naked, and you clothed me not: sick, and in prison, and you visited me not.
44. Then shall they also answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we you
hungered, or athirst, or a stranger, or naked, or sick, or in prison,
and did not minister to you?
45. Then shall he answer then, saying, Verily I say to you, Inasmuch as
you did it not to one of the least of these, you did it not to me.
RABAN. After the parables concerning the end of the world the Lord proceeds to describe the manner of the judgment to come.
CHRYS. To this most sweet section of Scripture which we cease not
continually to ponder, let us now listen with all attention and
compunction of spirit, for Christ does indeed clothe this discourse
with more terrors and vividness. He does not accordingly say of this as
of the others, The kingdom of heaven is like, but shows of Himself by
direct revelation, saying, When the Son of man shall come in his
majesty.
JEROME; He who was within two days to celebrate the Passover, to be
delivered to the cross, and mocked by men, fitly now holds out the
glory of His triumph, that He may overbalance the offenses that were to
follow by the promise of reward. And it is to be noted, that He who
shall be seen in majesty is the Son of Man.
AUG. The wicked and they also who shall be set on His light hand shall
see Him in human shape, for He shall appear in the judgment in that
form which He took on Him from us; but it shall be afterwards that He
shall be seen in the form of God, for which all the believers long.
REMIG. These words overthrow the error of those who said that the Lord
should not continue in the same form of a servant. By his majesty, He
means His divinity, in which He is equal to the Father and the Holy
Spirit.
ORIGEN; Or, He shall come again with glory, that His body may be such
as when He was transfigured on the mount. His throne is either certain
of the more perfect of the Saints, of whom it is written, For there are
set thrones in judgment; or certain Angelic Powers of whom it is said,
Thrones or dominions.
AUG. He shall come down with the Angels whom He shall call from heavenly places to hold judgment.
CHRYS. For all his Angels shall be with him to bear witness to the
things wherein they have administered to men's salvation at His
bidding.
AUG. Or, by Angels here He means men who shall judge with Christ; for
Angels are messengers, and such we rightly understand all who have
brought tidings of heavenly salvation to men.
REMIG. And all nations shall be gathered before Him. These words prove that the resurrection of men shall be real.
AUG. This gathering shall be executed by the ministry of Angels, as it is said in the Psalm, Gather to him his saints.
ORIGEN; Or, we need not understand this of a local gathering together,
but that the nations shall be no more dispersed in divers and false
dogmas concerning Him. For Christ's divinity shall be manifested so
that not even sinners shall any longer be ignorant of Him. He shall not
then show Himself as Son of God in one place and not in another; as He
sought to express to us by the comparison of the lightning. So as long
as the wicked know neither themselves nor Christ, or the righteous see
through a glass darkly, so long the good are not severed from the evil,
but when by the manifestation of the Son of God all shall come to the
knowledge of Him, then shall the Savior sever the good from the evil;
for then shall sinners see their sins, and the righteous shall see
clearly to what end the seeds of righteousness in them have led. They
that are saved are called sheep by reason of that mildness which they
have learnt of Him who said, Learn of me, for I am meek and lowly, and
because they are ready to go even to death in imitation of Christ, who
was led as a sheep to the slaughter. The wicked, are called goats,
because they climb rough and rugged rocks, and walk in dangerous
places.
CHRYS. Or, He calls the one sheep and the other goats, to denote the
unprofitableness of the one, and the fruitfulness of the other, for
sheep are greatly productive in fleece, milk, and lambs.
GLOSS. Under the figure of a sheep in Scripture is signified simplicity
and innocence. Beautifully then in this place are the elect denoted by
sheep.
JEROME; Also the goat is a salacious animal, and was the offering for
sins in the Law, and He says not 'she goats' which can produce young,
and come up shorn from the washing.
CHRYS. Then He separates them in place.
ORIGEN; For the Saints who have wrought right works , shall receive in
recompense of their right works the King's right hand, at which is rest
and glory; but the wicked for their evil and sinister deeds have fallen
to the left hand, that is, into the misery of torments. Then shall the
King say to those who are on his right hand, Come, that in whatever
they are behind they may make it up when they are more perfectly united
to Christ. He adds, you blessed of my Father, to show how eminently
blessed they were, being of old blessed of the Lord, which made heaven
and earth.
RABAN. Or, they are called blessed, to whom an eternal blessing is due
for their good deserts. He calls it the kingdom of His Father,
ascribing the dominion of the kingdom to Him by whom Himself the King
was begotten. For by His royal power, with which He shall be exalted
alone in that day, He shall pronounce the sentence of judgment, Then
shall the King say.
CHRYS. Observe that He says not 'Receive', but possess, or inherit, as due to you from of old.
JEROME; This prepared for you from the foundation of the world, is to
be understood as of the foreknowledge of God, with whom things to come
are as already done.
AUG. Besides that kingdom of which He will say in the end, Inherit the
kingdom prepared for you, though in a very inferior manner, the present
Church is also called His kingdom, in the which we are yet in conflict
with the enemy until we come to that kingdom of peace, where we shall
reign without an enemy.
ID. But one will say, I desire not to reign, it is enough for me that I
he saved. Wherein they are deceived, first, because there is no
salvation for those whose iniquity abounds; and, secondly, because if
there be any difference between those that reign, and those that do not
reign, yet must all be within the same kingdom, lest they be esteemed
for foes or aliens, and perish while the others reign. Thus all the
Romans inherit the kingdom of Rome, though all do not reign in it.
CHRYS. For what the Saints obtain the boon of this heavenly kingdom He
shows when He adds, I was hungered, and you gave me to eat.
REMIG. And it is to be noted, that the Lord here enumerates six works
of mercy which who shall study to accomplish shall be entitled to the
kingdom prepared for the chosen from the foundation of the world.
RABAN. Mystically, He who with the bread of the word and the drink of
wisdom refreshes the soul hungering and thirsting after righteousness,
or admits into the home of our mother the Church him who is wandering
in heresy or sin, or who strengthens the weak in faith, such an one
discharges the obligations of true love.
GREG. These, to whom as they stand on His right hand the Judge at His
coming shall say, I was hungered &c. are they who are judged on the
side of the elect, and who reign; who wash away the stains of their
life with tears; who redeem former sins by good deeds following; who,
whatever unlawful thing they have at any time done, have covered it
from the Judge's eyes by a cloak of alms. Others indeed there are who
are not judged, yet reign, who have gone even beyond the precepts of
the Law in the perfection of their virtue.
ORIGEN; It is from humility that they declare themselves unworthy of
any praise for their good deeds, not that they are forgetful of what
they have done. But He shows them His close sympathy with His own.
RABAN. Lord, when saw we you &c. This they say not because they
distrust the Lord's words, but they are in amaze at so great
exaltation, and at the greatness of their own glory; or because the
good which they have done will seem to them to be so small according to
that of the Apostle, For the sufferings of this present time are not
worthy to be compared to the glory that shall be revealed in us.
JEROME; It were indeed free to us to understand that it is Christ in
every poor man whom we feed when he is hungry, or give drink to when he
is thirsty, and so of other things;
but when He says, In that you have done it to one of the least of these
my brethren, He seems to me not to speak of the poor generally, but of
the poor in spirit, those to whom He pointed and said, Whoever shall do
the will of my Father which is in heaven, the same is my brother.
CHRYS. But if they are His brethren, why does He call them the least?
Because they are lowly, poor, and outcast. By these He means not only
the monks who have retired to the mountains, but every believer though
he should be secular, though hungered, or the like, yet He would have
him obtain merciful succors, for baptism and communication of the
Divine mysteries makes him a brother.
ORIGEN; As He had said to the righteous, Come you, so He says to the
wicked, Depart you, for they who keep God's commandment are near to the
Word, and are called that they may be made more near; but they are far
from it, though they may seem to stand hard by, who do not His commands
; therefore it is said to them, Depart you, that those who seemed to be
living before Him, might be no more seen. It should be remarked, that
though He had said to the Saints, you blessed of my Father, He says not
now, You cursed of my Father, because of all blessing the Father is the
author, but each man is the origin of his own curse when he does the
things that deserve the curse. They who depart from Jesus fall into
eternal fire, which is of a very different kind from that fire which we
use. For no fire which we have is eternal, nor even of any long
continuance. And note, that He does not say, 'the kingdom prepared for
the Angels,' as He does say everlasting fire prepared for the Devil and
his Angels; because He did not, as far as in Him lay, create men to
perdition, but sinners yoke themselves to the Devil, so that as they
that are saved are made equal to the holy Angels, they that perish are
made equal with the Devil's Angels.
AUG. It is hence clear, that the same fire will be appropriated to the
punishment of men and of demons. If then it inflicts pain by corporeal
touch, so as to produce bodily torment, how will there be in it any
punishment for the evil spirits, unless the demons have, as some have
thought, bodies composed of gross and fluid air. But if any man asserts
that the demons have no bodies, we would not pugnaciously contend the
point. For why may we not say, that truly, though wonderfully, even
incorporeal spirit can feel pain of corporeal fire? If the spirits of
men, though themselves incorporeal, can be now enclosed in bodily
limbs, they can then be inseparably attached to the bonds of body. The
demons then will be united to a body of material fire, though
themselves immaterial, drawing punishment from their body, not giving
life to it. And that fire being material will torture such bodies as
ours with their spirits; but the demons are spirits without bodies.
ORIGEN; Or it may be that fire is of such nature that it can burn
invisible substances, being itself invisible, as the Apostle speaks,
The things which are seen are temporal, but the things which are not
seen are eternal? Wonder not when you hear that there is a fire which
though unseen has power to torture, when you see that there is an
internal fever which comes upon men, and pains them grievously. It
follows, I was hungry, and you gave me no meat.
It is written to the believers, You are the body of Christ. As then the
soul dwelling in the body, though it hungers not in respect of its
spiritual substance, yet hungers for the food of the body, because it
is yoked to the body; so the Savior suffers whatever His body the
Church suffers, though He Himself be impassable. And observe how in
speaking to the righteous He reckons up their good deeds under their
several kinds, but to the unrighteous He cuts short the description
under the one head, I was sick and in prison, and you visited me not,
because it was the part of a merciful Judge to enlarge and dwell upon
men's good deeds, but to pass lightly and cursorily over their evil
deeds.
CHRYS. Observe how they had failed in mercifulness, not in one or; two
respects only, but in all; not only did they not feed Him when He was
hungry, but they did not even visit Him when He was sick, which was
easier. And look how light things He enjoins; He said not, I was in
prison, and you did not set me free, but, and you visited me not. Also
His hunger required no costly dainties, but necessary food. Each of
these counts then is enough for their punishment. First, the slightness
of His prayer, viz. for bread; secondly, the destitution of Him who
sought it, for He was poor; thirdly, the natural feelings of
compassion, for He was a man; fourthly, the expectation of His promise,
for He promised a kingdom; fifthly, the greatness of Him who received,
for it is God who receives in the poor man; sixthly, the preeminent
honor, in that He condescended to take of men; and seventhly, the
righteousness of so bestowing it, for what He takes from us is our own.
But avarice blinds men to all these considerations.
GREG. They to whom this is said are the wicked believers, who are
judged and perish; others, being unbelievers, are not judged and
perish; for there is no examination of the condition of such as appear
before the face of an impartial Judge already condemned by their
unbelief; but those who hold the profession of the faith, but have not
the works of their profession, are convicted that they may be
condemned. These at least hear the words of their Judge, because they
have at least kept the words of His faith. The others hear no words of
their Judge pronouncing sentence of condemnation, because they have not
paid Him honor even in word. For a prince who governs an earthly
kingdom punishes after a different manner the rebellion of a subject
and the hostile attempts of an enemy; in the former case, he recurs to
his prerogative; against an enemy he takes arms, and does not ask what
penalty the law attaches to his crime.
CHRYS. Thus convicted by the words of the Judge, they make answer submissively, Lord, when saw we you &c.
ORIGEN; Mark how the righteous dwell upon each word, while the
unrighteous answer summarily, and not going through the particular
instances; for so it becomes the righteous out of humility to disclaim
each individual generous action, when imputed to them publicly; whereas
bad men excuse their sins, and endeavor to prove them few and venial.
And Christ's answer conveys this. And to the righteous He says, In that
you did it to my brethren, to show the greatness of their good deeds;
to the sinners He says only, to one of the least of these, not
aggravating their sin. For they are truly His brethren who are perfect;
and a deed of mercy shown to the more holy is more acceptable to God
than one shown to the less holy; and the sin of overlooking the less
holy is less than of overlooking the more holy.
AUG. He is now treating of the last judgment, when Christ shall come
from heaven to judge the quick and dead. This day of the Divine
judgment we call the Last Day, that is, the end of time; for we cannot
tell through how many days that judgment will be prolonged; but day, as
is the use of holy Scripture, is put for time. And we therefore call it
the last or latest judgment, because He both now judges and has judged
from the beginning of the human race, when He thrust forth the first
man from the tree of life, and spared not the Angels that sinned. But
in that final judgment both men and Angels shall be judged together,
when the Divine power shall bring each man's good and evil deeds in
review before his memory, and one intuitive glance shall present them
to the perception, so that at once we shall be condemned or acquitted
in our consciences.
46. And these shall go away into everlasting punishment: but the righteous into life eternal.
AUG. Some deceive themselves, saying, that the fire indeed is called
everlasting, but not the punishment. This the Lord foreseeing, sums up
His sentence in these words.
ORIGEN; Observe that whereas He put first the invitation, Come, you
blessed, and after that, Depart, you cursed, because it is the property
of a merciful God to record the good deeds of the good, before the bad
deeds of the bad; He now reverses the order, describing first the
punishment of the wicked, and then the life of the good, that the
terrors of the one may deter us from evil, and the honor of the other
incite us to good.
GREG. If he who has not given to others is visited with so heavy a
punishment, what shall he get who is convicted of having robbed others
of their own.
AUG. Eternal life is our chief good, and the end of the city of God, of
which the Apostle speaks, And the end everlasting life. But because
eternal life might be understood by those who are not well versed in
Holy Scripture, to mean also the life of the wicked because of the
immortality of their souls, or because of the endless torments of the
wicked; therefore we must call the end of this City in which the chief
good shall be attained, either peace in life eternal, or life eternal
in peace, that it may be intelligible to all.
ID. That which the Lord spoke to His servant Moses, I am that I am,
this we shall contemplate when we shall live in eternity. For thus the
Lord speaks This is life eternal, that they might know thee the only
true God. This contemplation is promised to us as the end of all
action, and the eternal perfection of our joys, of which John speaks,
We shall see him as he is.
JEROME; Let the thoughtful reader observe that punishments are eternal,
and that that continuing life has thenceforward no fear of fall.
GREG. They say that He held out empty terrors to deter them from sin.
We answer, if He threatened falsely to check unrighteousness, then He
promised falsely to promote good conduct. Thus while they go out of the
way to prove God merciful, they are not afraid to charge Him with
fraud. But, they urge, finite sin ought not to be visited with infinite
punishment; we answer, that this argument would be just, if the
righteous Judge considered men's actions, and not their hearts.
Therefore it belongs to the righteousness of an impartial Judge, that
those whose heart would never be without sin in this life, should never
be without punishment.
AUG. And the justice of no law is concerned to provide that the
duration of each man's punishment should be the same with the sin which
drew that punishment upon him. There never was any man, who held that
the torment of him, who committed a murder or adultery, should be
compressed within the same space of time as the commission of the act.
And when for any enormous crime a man is punished with death, does the
law estimate his punishment by the delay that takes place in putting
him to death, and not rather by this, that they remove him for ever
from the society of the living? And fines, disgrace, exile, slavery,
when they are inflicted without any hopes of mercy, do they not seem
like eternal punishments in proportion to the length of this life? They
are only therefore not eternal, because the life which suffers them is
not itself eternal. But they say, flow then is that true which Christ
says, With what measure you mete, it shall be measured to you again, if
temporal sin is punished with eternal pain? They do not observe that
this is said with a view, not to the equality of the period of time,
but of the retribution of evil, i.e. that he that has done evil should
suffer evil. Man was made worthy of everlasting evil, because he
destroyed in himself that good which might have eternal.
GREG. But they say, no just man takes pleasure in cruelties, and the
guilty servant was scourged to correct his fault. But when the wicked
are given over to hell fire, to what purpose shall they burn there for
ever? We reply, that Almighty God, seeing He is good, does not delight
in the torments of the wretched; but forasmuch as He is righteous, He
ceases not from taking vengeance on the wicked; yet do the wicked burn
not without some purpose, namely, that the righteous may acknowledge
how they are debtors for eternity to Divine grace, when they see the
wicked suffering for eternity misery, which themselves have escaped
only by the assistance of that Divine grace.
AUG. But, they assert, nobody can be at once capable of suffering pain,
and incapable of death. It must be that one live in pain, but it need
not be that pain kill him; for not even these mortal bodies die from
every pain; but the reason that some pain causes their death is, that
the connection between the soul and our present body is such that it
gives way to extreme pain. But then the soul shall be united to such a
body, and in such a way, that no pain shall be able to overcome the
connection. There will not then be no death, but an everlasting death,
the soul being unable to live, as being without God, and equally unable
to rid itself of the pains of body by dying. Among these impugners of
the eternity of punishment,
ORIGEN is the most merciful, who believed that the Devil himself and
his Angels, after sufferings proportioned to their deserts, and a long
endurance, should be delivered from those torments, and associated with
the holy Angels. But for these and other things he was not undeservedly
rebuked by the Church, because even his seeming mercy was thrown away,
making for the saints real pains in which their sins were to be
expiated, and fictitious blessedness, if the joys of the good were not
to be secure and endless. In quite another way does the mercy of others
err through their humane sympathies, who think that the sufferings of
those men who are condemned by this sentence will be temporal, but that
the happiness of those who are set free sooner or later will be
eternal. Why does their charity extend to the whole race of man, but
dries up when they come to the angelic race?
GREG. But they say, How can they be called Saints, if they shall not
pray for their enemies whom they see shell burning? They do not indeed
pray for their enemies, so long as there is any possibility of
converting their hearts to a profitable penitence, but how shall they
pray for them when any change from their wickedness is no longer
possible?
AUG. So some there are who hold out liberation from punishment not to
all men, but to those only who have been washed in Christ's Baptism,
and have been partakers of His Body, let them have lived as they will;
because of that which the Lord speaks, If any man eat of this bread, he
shall not die eternally. Again, others promise this not to all who have
Christ's sacrament, but to Catholics only, however in their lives, who
have eaten Christ's Body, not in sacrament only, but in verity,
(inasmuch as they are set in the Church, which is His Body,) even
though they should afterwards have fallen into heresy or idolatry of
the Gentiles. And others again, because of what is written above, He
that shall endure to the end, the same shall be saved, promise this
only to those who persevere in the Catholic Church, that by the
worthiness of their foundation, that is, of their faith, they shall be
saved by fire. All these the Apostle opposes when he says, The works of
the flesh are manifest, which are these, uncleanness, fornication, and
the like; of which I tell you before, that they which do such things
shall not inherit the kingdom of God. Whoever in his heart prefers
temporal things to Christ, Christ is not his foundation, though he seem
to have the faith of Christ. How much more then is he, who has
committed things unlawful, convicted of not preferring Christ, but
preferring other things to Him? I have also met with some who thought
that only those would burn in eternal torments who neglected to give
alms proportioned to their sins; and for this reason they think that
the Judge Himself here mentions nothing else that He shall make inquiry
of, but of the giving or not giving alms. But whoever gives alms
worthily for his sins, first begins with himself; for it were unmeet
that he should not do that to himself which he does to others when he
has heard the words of God, You shall love your neighbor as yourself,
and hears likewise, Be merciful to your soul in pleasing God? He then
who does not to his own soul this alms of pleasing God, how can he be
said to give alms meet for his sins? Why we are to give alms then is
only that when we pray for mercy for sins past, we may be heard; not
that we may purchase thereby license for continuing in sin. And the
Lord forewarns us that He will put alms done on the right hand, and on
the left alms not done, to show us how mighty are alms to do away
former sins, not to give impunity to a continuance in sin.
ORIGEN; Or, It is not one kind of righteousness only that is rewarded,
as many think. In whatsoever matters any one does Christ's commands, he
gives Christ meat and drink, Who feeds ever upon the truth and
righteousness of His faithful people. So do we weave raiment for Christ
when cold, when taking wisdom's web, we inculcate upon others, and put
upon them bowels of mercy. Also when we make ready with divers virtues
our heart for receiving Him, or those who are His, we take Him in a
stranger into the home of our bosom. Also when we visit a brother sick
either in faith or in good works, with doctrine, reproof, or comfort,
we visit Christ Himself. Moreover, all that is here, is the prison of
Christ, and of them that are His, who live in this world, as though
chained in the prison of natural necessity. When we do a good work to
these, we visit them in prison, and Christ in them.
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