catena aurea matthew 27
1. When the morning was come, all the Chief Priests and elders of the people took counsel against Jesus to put him to death:
2. And when they had bound him, they led him away, and delivered him to Pontius Pilate the governor.
3. Then Judas, which had betrayed him, when he saw that he was
condemned, repented himself, and brought again the thirty pieces of
silver to the Chief Priests and elders,
4. Saying, I have sinned in that I have betrayed the innocent blood. And they said, What is that to us? See you to that.
5. And he cast down the pieces of silver in the temple, and departed, and went and hanged himself.
AUG. The Evangelist had above brought down his history, of what was
done to the Lord as far as early morning; he then turned back to relate
Peter's denial, after which he returned to the morning to continue the
course of events, When the morning was come, &c.
ORIGEN; They supposed that by His death they should crush His doctrine,
and the belief in Him of those who believed Him to be the Son of God.
With such purpose against Him they bound Jesus, Who looses them that
are bound.
JEROME; Observe the evil zeal of the Chief Priests; they watched the
whole night with a view to this murder. And they gave Him up to Pilate
bound, for such was their practice to send bound to the judge any whom
they had sentenced to death.
RABAN. Though it should be observed that they did not now first bind
Him, but before, when they first laid hands upon Him in the garden, as
John relates.
CHRYS. They did not put Him to death in secret, because they sought to
destroy His reputation, and the wonder with which He was regarded by
many. For this reason they were minded to put Him to death openly
before all, and therefore they led Him to the governor.
JEROME; Judas, when he saw that the Lord was condemned to death,
returned the money to the Priests, as though it had been in his power
to change the minds of His persecutors.
ORIGEN. Let the propounders of those fables concerning intrinsically
evil natures a answer me here, whence Judas came to the acknowledgment
of his sin, I have sinned in that I have betrayed righteous blood,
except through the good mind originally implanted in him, and that seed
of virtue which is sown in every rational soul? But Judas did not
cherish this, and so fell into this sin. But if ever any man was made
of a nature that was to perish, Judas was yet more of such a nature. If
indeed he had done this after Christ's resurrection, it might have been
said, that the power of the resurrection brought him to repentance. But
he repented when he saw Christ delivered up to Pilate, perhaps
remembering the things Jesus had so often spoken of His resurrection.
Or, perhaps Satan who had entered into him continued with him till
Jesus was given up to Pilate, and then, having accomplished his
purpose, departed from him; whereupon he repented. But how could Judas
know that He was condemned, for He had not yet been examined by Pilate?
One may perhaps say, that he foreboded the event in his own mind from
the very first, when he saw Him delivered up. Another may explain the
words, when he saw that he was condemned, of Judas himself, that he
then perceived his evil case, and saw that he himself was condemned.
LEO; When he says, I have sinned, in that I have betrayed innocent
blood, he persists in his wicked treachery, seeing that amid the last
struggles of death he believed not Jesus to be the Son of God, but
merely man of our rank; for had he not thus denied His omnipotence, he
would have obtained His mercy.
CHRYS. Observe that he repents only when his sin is finished and
complete; for so the Devil suffers not those who are not watchful to
see the evil before they bring it to an end.
REMIG. But they said, What is that to us? that is to say, What is it to
us that He is righteous? See you to if, i.e. to your own deed what will
come of it. Though some would read these in one, What must we think of
you, when you confess that the man whom yourself have betrayed is
innocent?
ORIGEN; But when the Devil leaves any one, he watches his time for
return, and having taken it, he leads him into a second sin, and then
watches for opportunity for a third deceit. So the man who had married
his father's wife afterwards repented him of this sin, but again the
Devil resolved so to augment this very sorrow of repentance, that his
sorrow being made too abundant might swallow up the sorrower. Something
like this took place in Judas, who after his repentance did not
preserve his own heart, but received that more abundant sorrow supplied
to him by the Devil, who sought to swallow him up, as it follows, And
he went out, and hanged himself.
But had he desired and looked for place and time for repentance, he
would perhaps have found Him who has said, I have no pleasure in the
death of the wicked. Or, perhaps, he desired to die before his Master
on His way to death, and to meet Him with a disembodied spirit, that by
confession and deprecation he might obtain mercy; and did not see that
it is not fitting that a servant of God should dismiss himself from
life, but should wait God's sentence.
RABAN. He hung himself, to show that he was hateful to both heaven and earth.
PSEUDO-AUG. Since thee Chief Priests were employed about the murder of
the Lord from the morning to the ninth hour, how is this proved that
before the crucifixion Judas returned them the money he had received,
and said to them in the temple, I have sinned, in that I have betrayed
innocent blood? Whereas it is manifest that the Chief Priests and
Elders were never in the temple before the Lord's crucifixion, seeing
that when He was hanging on the Cross they were there to insult Him.
Nor indeed can this be proved hence, because it is related before the
Lord's Passion, for many things which were manifestly done before, are
related after, that, and the reverse.
It might have been done after the ninth hour, when Judas, seeing the
Savior dead and the veil of the temple rent, the earthquake, the
bursting of the rocks, and the elements terrified, was seized with fear
and sorrow thereupon. But after the ninth hour the Chief Priests and
Elders were occupied, as I suppose, in the celebration of the Passover;
and on the Sabbath, the Law would not have allowed him to bring money.
Therefore it is to me as yet unproved on what day or at what time Judas
ended his life by hanging.
6. And the Chief Priests took the silver pieces, and said, It is
not lawful for to put them into the treasury, because it is the price
of blood.
7. And they took counsel, and bought with them the potter's field, to bury strangers in.
8. Wherefore that field was called, The field of blood, to this day.
9. Then was fulfilled that which was spoken by Jeremy the prophet,
saying, And they took the thirty pieces of silver, the price of him
that was valued, whom they of the children of Israel did value;
10. And gave them for the potter's field, as the Lord appointed me.
CHRYS. The Chief Priests knowing that they had purchased a murder were
condemned by their own conscience, they said, It is the price of blood.
JEROME; Truly straining out the gnat, and swallowing the camel; for if
they would not put the money into the treasury, because it was the
price of blood, wily did they sued the blood at all?
ORIGEN; They thought it meet to spend upon the dead that money which
was the price of blood. But as there are differences even in burial
places, they used the price of Jesus' blood in the purchase of some
potter's field, where foreigners might be buried, not as they desired
in the sepulchers of their fathers.
AUG. It was brought about, I conceive, by God's providence that the
Savior's price should not minister means of excess to sinners, but
repose to foreigners, that thence Christ might both redeem the living
by the shedding of His blood, and harbor the dead by the price of His
passion. Therefore with the price of the Lord's blood the potter's
field is purchased. We read in Scripture that the salvation of the
whole human race has been purchased by the Savior's blood. This field
then is the whole world. The potter who is the Lord of the soil, is He
who has formed of clay the vessels of our bodies. This potter's field
then was purchased by Christ's blood, and to strangers who without
country or home wander over the whole world, repose is provided by
Christ's blood. These foreigners are the more devout Christians, who
have renounced the world, and have no possession in it, and so repose
in Christ's blood; for the burial of Christ is nothing but the repose
of a Christian; for as the Apostle says, We are buried with him by
baptism into death. We are in this life then as foreigners.
JEROME; Also we, who were strangers to the Law and the Prophets, have
profited by the perverse temper of the Jews to obtain salvation for
ourselves.
ORIGEN; Or, the foreigners are they who to the end are aliens from God,
for the righteous are buried with Christ in a new tomb hewn out in the
rock. But they who are aliens from God, even to the end, are buried in
the field of a potter, a worker in clay, which being bought by the
price of blood, is called the field of blood.
GLOSS. To this day means to the time when the Evangelist was then
writing. He then confirms the event by the testimony of the Prophet;
Then was fulfilled that which was spoken by Jeremy the Prophet, &c.
JEROME; This is not found at all in Hieremias; but in Zacharias, who is
the last but one of the twelve Prophets, something like it is told, and
though the sense is not very different, yet the arrangement and the
words are different.
AUG. But if any one thinks this lowers the historian's credit, first
let him know that not all the copies of the Gospels have the name
Hieremias, but some simply by the Prophet. But I do not like this
defense, because the more, and the more ancient, copies have Hieremias,
and there could be no reason for adding the name, and thus making an
error. But its erasure is well accounted for by the hardihood of
ignorance having heard the foregoing objection urged. It might be then,
that the name Hieremias occurred to the mind of Matthew as he wrote,
instead of the name Zacharias, as so often happens; and that he would
have straightway corrected it, when pointed out to him by such as read
this while he yet lived in the flesh, had he not thought that his
memory, being guided by the Holy Spirit, would not thus have called up
to him one name instead of another, had not the Lord determined that it
should thus be written.
And why He should have so determined, the first reason is, that it
would convey the wonderful consent of the Prophets, who all spoke by
one Spirit, which is much greater than if all the words of all the
Prophets had been uttered through the mouth of one man; so that we
receive without doubt whatever the Holy Spirit spoke through them, each
word belongs to all in common, and the whole is the utterance of each.
Suppose it to happen at this day, that in repeating another's words one
should mention not the speaker's name, but that of some other person,
who however ever was the other's greater friend, and then immediately
recollecting himself should correct himself, he might yet add, Yet am I
right, if you only think of the close unanimity that exists between the
two. How much more is this to be observed of the holy Prophets! There
is a second reason why the name Hieremias should be suffered to remain
in this quotation from Zacharias, or rather why it should have been
suggested by the Holy Spirit.
It is said in Hieremias, that he bought a field of his brother's son,
and gave him silver for it, though not indeed the sum stated in
Zacharias, thirty pieces of silver. That the Evangelist has here
adapted the thirty pieces of silver in Zacharias to this transaction in
the Lord's history, is plain; but he may also wish to convey that what
Hieremas speaks of the held is mystically alluded to here, and
therefore he puts not the name of Zacharias who spoke of the thirty
pieces of silver, but of Hieremas who spoke of the purchase of the
field. So that in reading the Gospel and finding the name of Hieremas,
but not finding there the passage respecting the thirty pieces of
silver, but the account of the purchase of the field, the reader might
be induced to compare the two together, and so extract from them the
sense of the prophecy, flow far it refers to what was now accomplished
ill the Lord.
For what Matthew adds to the prophecy, Whom they of the children of
Israel did value, and gave them for the potter's field, as the Lord
appointed me this, as the Lord appointed me, is found neither in
Zacharias nor Hieremias. It must then be taken in the person of the
Evangelist as inserted with a mystic meaning, that he had learned by
revelation that the prophecy referred to this matter of the price for
which Christ was betrayed.
JEROME; Far be it then from a follower of Christ to suppose him guilty
of falsehood, whereas his business was not to pry into words and
syllables, but to lay down there staple of doctrine.
ID. I have lately read in a Hebrew book given me by a Hebrew of the
Nazarene sect, an apocryphal Hieremias, in which I find the very words
here quoted. After all, I am rather inclined to think that the passage
was taken by Matthew out of Zacharias, in the usual manner of the
Apostles and Evangelists when they quote from the Old Testament,
neglecting the words, and attending only to the sense.
11. And Jesus stood before the governor: and the governor asked him,
saying, Are you the King of the Jews? And Jesus said to him, you say it.
12. And when he was accused by the Chief Priests and elders, he answered nothing.
13. Then said Pilate to him, Hear you not how many things they witness against you?
14. And he answered him to never a word; insomuch that the governor marveled greatly.
AUG. Matthew, having finished his digression concerning the traitor
Judas, returns to the course of his narrative, saying, Jesus stood
before the governor.
ORIGEN; Mark how He that is ordained by His Father to be the Judge of
the whole creation, humbled Himself, and was content to stand before
the judge of the land of Judea, and to be asked by Pilate either in
mockery or doubt, Are you the King of the Jesus?
CHRYS. Pilate asked Christ that which His enemies were continually
casting in His teeth, for because they knew that Pilate cared not for
matters of their Law, they had recourse to a public charge.
ORIGEN; Or, Pilate spoke this affirmatively, as he afterwards wrote in
the inscription, The King of the Jews. By answering to the Chief
Priest, you have said, He indirectly reproved his doubts, but now He
turns Pilate's speech into an affirmative, Jesus said to him, you say
it.
CHRYS. He acknowledges Himself to be a King, but a heavenly one, as it
is more expressly said in another Gospel. My kingdom is not of this
world, so that neither the Jews nor Pilate were excusable for insisting
on this accusation.
HILARY; Or, when asked by the High Priest whether He were Jesus the
Christ, He answered, you have said, because He had ever maintained out
of the Law that Christ should come, but to Pilate who was ignorant of
the Law, and asks if He were the King of the Jews, He answers, you say
it, because the salvation of the Gentiles is through faith of that
present confession.
JEROME; But observe, that to Pilate who asked the question unwillingly
He did answer somewhat; but to the Chief Priests and Priests He refused
to answer, judging them unworthy of a word; And when he was accused by
the Chief Priests and Elders, he answered nothing.
AUG. Luke explains what were the accusations alleged against Him, And
they began to accuse him, saying, We found this fellow perverting the
nation, and forbidding to give tribute to Caesar, saying, that he
himself is Christ a King. But it is of no consequence to the truth in
what order they relate the history, or that one omits what another
inserts.
ORIGEN; Neither then nor now did Jesus make any reply to their
accusations, for the word of God was not sent to them, as it was
formerly to the Prophets. Neither was Pilate worthy of an answer, as he
had no fixed or abiding opinion of Christ, but veered about to
contradictory suppositions. Hear you not how many things they witness
against you?
JEROME; Thus though it is a Gentile who sentences Jesus, he lays the cause of His condemnation upon the Jews.
CHRYS. He said this out of a wish to release Him, if He should justify
Himself in His answer. But the Jews, though they had so many practical
proofs of His power, His meekness and humbleness, were yet enraged
against Him, and urged on by a perverted judgment. Wherefore He answers
nothing, or if He makes any answer He says little, that total silence
might not be construed into obstinacy.
JEROME; Or, Jesus would not make any answer, lest if He cleared Himself
the governor should have let Him go, and the benefit of His cross
should have been deferred.
ORIGEN; The governor marveled at His endurance, as knowing that he had
power to condemn Him, He yet continued in a peaceful, placid, and
immovable prudence and gravity. He marveled greatly, for it seemed to
him a great miracle that Christ, produced before a criminal tribunal,
stood thus fearless of death, which all men think so terrible.
15. Now at that feast the governor was wont to release to the people a prisoner, whom they would.
16. And they had then a notable prisoner, called Barabbas.
17. Therefore when they were gathered together, Pilate said to them,
Whom will you that I release to you? Barabbas, or Jesus which is called
Christ?
18. For he knew that for envy they had delivered him.
19. When he was set down on the judgment seat, his wife sent to him,
saying, Have you nothing to do with that just man: for I have suffered
many things this day in a dream because of him.
20. But the Chief Priests and elders persuaded the multitude that they should ask Barabbas, and destroy Jesus.
21. The governor answered and said to them, Whether of the two will you that I release to you? They said, Barabbas.
22. Pilate said to them, What shall I do then with Jesus which is called Christ? They all say to him, Let him be crucified.
23. And the governor said, Why, what evil has he done? But they cried out the more, saying, Let him be crucified.
24. When Pilate saw that he could prevail nothing but that rather a
tumult was made, he took water, and washed his hands before the
multitude, saying, I am innocent of the blood of this just person; see
you to it.
25. Then answered all the people, and said, His blood be on us, and on our children.
26. Then released he Barabbas to them: and when he had scourged Jesus, he delivered him to be crucified.
CHRYS. Because Christ had answered nothing to the accusations of the
Jews, by which Pilate could acquit Him of what was alleged against Him,
he contrives other means of saving Him. Now on the feast day the
governor was wont to release to the people a prisoner whom they would.
ORIGEN; Thus do the Gentiles show favors to those whom they subject to
themselves, until their yoke is riveted. Yet did this practice obtain
also among the Jews, Saul did not put Jonathan to death, because all
the people sought his life.
CHRYS. And he sought to rescue Christ by means of this practice, that
the Jews might not have the shadow of an excuse left them. A convicted
murderer is put in comparison with Christ, Barabbas, whom he calls not
merely a robber, but a notable one, that is, renowned for crime.
JEROME; In the Gospel entitled 'according to the Hebrews', Barabbas is
interpreted, 'The son of their master', who had been condemned for
sedition and murder. Pilate gives them the choice between Jesus and the
robber, not doubting but that Jesus would be the rather chosen.
CHRYS. Whom will you that I release to you? &c. As much as to say,
If you will not let Him go as innocent, at least, yield Him, as
convicted, to this holy day. For if you would have released one of
whose guilt there was no doubt, much more should you do so in doubtful
cases. Observe how circumstances are reversed. It is the populace who
arc wont to petition for the condemned, and the prince to grant, but
here it is the reverse, the prince asks of the people, and renders them
thereby more violent.
GLOSS. The Evangelist adds the reason why Pilate sought to deliver Christ, For he knew that for envy they had delivered him.
REMIG. John explains what their envy was, when he says; Behold, the
world is gone after him; and, If we let him thus alone, all men will
believe in him. Observe also that in place of what Matthew says, Jesus,
who is called Christ, Mark says, Will you that I release to you the
King of the Jews? For the kings of the Jews alone were anointed, and
from that anointing were called Christs.
CHRYS. Then is added something else which alone was enough to deter all
from putting Him to death; When he was set on the judgment seat, his
wife sent to him, saying, Have you nothing to do with that just man.
For joined with the proof afforded by the events themselves, a dream
was no light confirmation.
RABAN. It is to be noted, that the bench (tribunal) is the seat of the
judge, the throne (sodium) of the king, the chair (cathedra) of the
master. In visions and dreams the wife of a Gentile understood what the
Jews when awake would neither believe nor understand
JEROME; Observe also that visions are often vouchsafed by God to the
Gentiles, and that the confession of Pilate and his v if e that the
Lord was innocent is a testimony of the Gentile people.
CHRYS. But why did Pilate himself not see this Vision? Because his wife
was more worthy; or because if Pilate had seen it, he would not have
had equal credit, or perhaps would not have told it; wherefore it is
provided by God that his wife should see it, and thus it be made
manifest to all. And she not merely sees it, but suffers many things
because of him, so that sympathy with his wife would make the husband
more slack to put Him to death. And the time agreed well, for it was
the same night that she saw it.
ID. Thus then the judge is terrified through his wife, and that he
might not consent in the judgment to the accusation of the Jews,
himself endured judgment in the affliction of his wife; the judge is
judged, and tortured before he tortures.
RABAN. Or otherwise; The devil now at last understanding that he should
lose his trophies through Christ, as he had at the first brought in
death by a woman, so by a woman he would deliver Christ out of the
hands of His enemies, lest through His death he should lose the
sovereignty of death.
CHRYS. But none of the foregoing things moved Christ's enemies, because
envy had altogether blinded them, and of their own wickedness they
corrupt the people, for they persuaded the people that they should ask
Barabbas, and destroy Jesus.
ORIGEN; Thus it is plainly seen how the Jewish people is moved by its
elders and the doctors of the Jewish system, and stirred up against
Jesus to destroy Him.
GLOSS. Pilate is said to make this answer, Whether of the two will you
that I release to you? either to the message of his wife, or the
petition of the people, with whom it was a custom to ask such release
on the feast-day.
ORIGEN; But the populace, like wild beasts that rage the open plains,
would have Barabbas released to them. For this people had seditions,
murders, robberies, practiced by some of their own nation in act, and
nourished by all of them who believe not in Jesus, inwardly in their
mind. Where Jesus is not, there are strifes and fightings; where He is,
there is peace and all good things. All those who are like the Jews
either in doctrine or life desire Barabbas to be loosed to them; for
whoever does evil, Barabbas is loosed in his body, and Jesus bound; but
he that does good has Christ loosed, and Barabbas bound. Pilate sought
to strike them with shame for so great injustice, What shall I do then
with Jesus that is called Christ? And not that only, but desiring to
fill up the measure of their guilt. But neither do they blush that
Pilate confessed Jesus to be the Christ, nor set any bounds to their
impiety, They all say to him, let him be crucified. Thus they
multiplied the sum of their wickedness, not only asking the life of a
murderer, but the death of a righteous man, and that the shameful death
of the cross.
RABAN. Those who were crucified being suspended on a cross, by nails
driven into the wood through their hands and feet, perished by a
lingering death, and lived long on the cross, not that they sought
longer life, but that death was deferred to prolong their sufferings.
The Jews indeed contrived this as the worst of deaths, but it had been
chosen by the Lord without their privity, thereafter to place upon the
foreheads of the faithful the same cross as a trophy of His victory
over the Devil.
JEROME; Yet even after this answer of theirs, Pilate did not at once
assent, but in accordance with his wife's suggestion, Have you nothing
to do with that just man, he answered, Why, what evil has he done? This
speech of Pilate's acquits Jesus. But they cried out the more, saying,
Let him be crucified; that it might be fulfilled which is said in the
Psalm, Many dogs have compassed me, the congregation of the wicked has
enclosed me; and also that of Hieremias, My heritage is to me as a lion
in the forest, they have given forth their voice against me.
AUG. Pilate many times pleaded with Jews, desiring that Jesus might be
released, which Matthew witnesses in very few words, when he says,
Pilate seeing that he could prevail nothing, but that rather a tumult
was made. He would not have spoken thus, if Pilate had not striven
much, though how many efforts he made to release Jesus he does not
mention.
REMIG. It was customary among the ancients, when one would refuse to
participate in any crime, to take water and wash his hands before the
people.
JEROME; Pilate took water in accordance with that, I will wash my hands
in innocency, in a manner testifying and saying, I indeed have sought
to deliver this innocent man, but since a tumult is rising, and the
charge of treason to Caesar is urged against me, I am innocent of the
blood of this just man. The judge then who is thus compelled to give
sentence against the Lord, does not convict the accused, but the
accusers, pronouncing innocent Him who is to be crucified. See you to
it, as though he had said, I am the law's minister, it is your voice
that has shed this blood. Then answered all the people and said, His
blood be on us and on our children. This imprecation rests at the
present day upon the Jews, the Lord's blood is not removed from them.
CHRYS. Observe here the infatuation of the Jews; their headlong haste,
and destructive passions will not let them see what they ought to see,
and they curse themselves, saying, His blood be upon us, and even
entail the curse upon their children. Yet a merciful God did not ratify
this sentence, but accepted such of them and of their children as
repented; for Paul was of them, and many thousands of those who in
Jerusalem believed.
LEO; The impiety of the Jews then exceeded the fault of Pilate; but he
was not guiltless, seeing he resigned his own jurisdiction, and
acquiesced in the injustice of others.
JEROME; It should be known that Pilate administered the Roman law,
which enacted that every one who was crucified should first be
scourged. Jesus then is given up to the soldiers to be beaten, and they
tore with whips that most holy body and capacious bosom of God.
CHRYS. See the Lord is made ready for the scourge, see now it descends
upon Him! That sacred skin is torn by the fury of the rods; the cruel
might of repeated blows lacerates His shoulders. Ah me! God is
stretched out before man, and He, in whom not one trace of sin can be
discerned, suffers punishment as a malefactor.
JEROME; This was done that we might be delivered from those stripes of
which it is said, Many stripes shall be to the wicked. Also in the
washing of Pilate's hands all the works of the Gentiles are cleansed,
and we are acquitted of all share in the impiety of the Jews.
HILARY; At the desire of the Priests the populace chose Barabbas, which
is interpreted 'the son of a Father,' thus shadowing forth the unbelief
to come when Antichrist the son of sin should be preferred to Christ.
RABAN. Barabbas also, who headed a sedition among the people, is
released to the Jews, that is the Devil, who to this day reigns among
them, so that they cannot have peace.
27. Then the soldiers of the governor took Jesus into the common hall, and gathered to him the whole band of soldiers.
28. And they stripped him, and put on him a scarlet robe.
29. And when they had platted a crown of thorns, they put it upon his
head, and a reed in his right hand: and they bowed the knee before him,
and mocked him, saying, Hail, king of the Jews!
30. And they spit upon him, and took the reed, and smote him on the head.
AUG. After the Lord's trial comes His Passion, which Matthew thus
begins, Then the soldiers of the governor took Jesus into the common
hall, &c.
JEROME; He had been styled King of the Jews, and the Scribes and
Priests had brought this charge against Him, that He claimed
sovereignty over the Jewish nation; hence this mockery of the soldiers,
taking away His own garments, they put on Him a scarlet cloak to
represent that purple fringe which kings of old used to wear, for the
diadem they put on Him a crown of thorns, and for the regal scepter
give Him a reed, and perform adoration to Him as to a king.
AUG. Hence we understand what Mark means by clothed him with purple;
instead of the royal purple, this scarlet cloak was used in mockery;
and there is a shade of purple which is very like scarlet. Or it may
be, that Mark spoke of the purple which the cloak contained, though its
color was scarlet.
CHRYS. What should we henceforth care if any one insults us, after
Christ has thus suffered? The utmost that cruel outrage could do was
put in practice against Christ; and not one member only, but His whole
body suffered injuries; His head from the crown, the reed, and the
buffetings; His face which was spit upon; His cheeks which they smote
with the palms of their hands; His whole body from the scourging, the
stripping to put on the cloak, and the mockery of homage; His hands
from the reed which they put into them in mimicry of a scepter; as
though they were afraid of omitting aught of indignity.
AUG. But Matthew seems to introduce this here as recollected from
above, not that it was done at the time Pilate gave Him up for
crucifixion. For John puts it before He is given up by Pilate.
JEROME; All these things we may understand mystically. For as Caiaphas
said that it is expedient that one man should die for the people, not
knowing what he said, so these, in all they did, furnished sacraments
to us who believe, though they did them with other intention. In the
scarlet robe He bears the bloody works of the Gentiles; by the crown of
thorns He takes away the ancient curse; with the reed He destroys
poisonous animals; or He held the reed in His hand wherewith to write
down the sacrilege of the Jews.
HILARY; Or otherwise; The Lord having taken upon Him all the
infirmities of our body, is then covered with the scarlet colored blood
of all the martyrs, to whom is due the kingdom with Him; He is crowned
with thorns, that is, with the sins of the Gentiles who once pierced
Him, for there is a prick in thorns of which is woven the crown of
victory for Christ. In the reed, He takes into His hand and supports
the weakness and frailty of the Gentiles; and His head is smitten
therewith that the weakness of the Gentiles sustained by Christ's hand
may rest on God the Father, who is His head.
ORIGEN; Or, The reed was a mystery signifying that before we believed
we trusted in that reed of Egypt, or Babylon, or of some other kingdom
opposed to God, which He took that He might triumph over it with the
wood of the cross. With this reed they smite the head of Christ,
because this kingdom ever beats against God the Father, who is the head
of the Savior.
REMIG. Or otherwise, By the scarlet robe is denoted the Lord's flesh,
which is spoken of as red by reason of shedding of His blood; by the
crown of thorns His taking upon Him our sins, because He appeared in
the likeness of sinful flesh.
RABAN. They smite the head of Christ with a reed, who speak against His
divinity, and endeavor to maintain their error by the authority of Holy
Scripture, which is written by a reed. They spit upon His face who
reject in abominable words the presence of His grace, and deny that
Jesus is come in the flesh. And they mock Him with adoration who
believe on Him, but despise Him with perverse works.
AUG. That they took from off the Lord in His passion His own garment,
and put on Him a colored robe, denotes those heretics who said that He
had a shadowy, and not a real body.
31. And after that they had mocked him, they took the robe off from
him, and put his own raiment on him, and led him away to crucify him.
32. And as they came out, they found a man of Cyrene, Simon by name: him they compelled to bear his cross.
33. And when they were come to a place called Golgotha, that is to say, a place of a skull,
34. They gave him vinegar to drink mingled with gall: and when he had tasted thereof, he would not drink.
GLOSS. After the Evangelist had narrated what concerned the mocking of Christ, he proceeds to His crucifixion.
AUG. This is to be understood to have been done at the end of all, when
He was led off to crucifixion after Pilate had delivered Him up to the
Jews.
JEROME; It is to be noted, that when Jesus is scourged and spit upon,
He has not on His own garments, but those which He took for our sins;
but when He is crucified, and the show of His mockery is completed,
then He takes again His former garments, and His own dress, and
immediately the elements are shaken, and the creature gives testimony
to the Creator.
ORIGEN; Of the cloak it is mentioned that they took it off Him, but of
the crown of thorns the Evangelists have not spoken, so that there are
now no longer those ancient thorns of ours, since Jesus has taken them
from us upon His revered head.
CHRYS. The Lord would not suffer under a roof, or in the Jewish Temple,
that you should not suppose that He was offered for that people alone;
but without the city, without the walls, that you might know that the
sacrifice was common, that it was the offering of the whole earth, that
the purification was general.
JEROME, Let none think that John's narrative contradicts this place of
the Evangelist. John says that the Lord went forth from the praetorium
bearing His cross; Matthew tells, that they found a man of Cyrene upon
whom they laid Jesus' cross. We must suppose that as Jesus went out of
the praetorium, He was bearing His cross, and that afterwards they met
Simon, whom they compelled to bear it.
ORIGEN; Or, as they went out, they laid hold of Simon, but when they
drew near to the place in which they would crucify Him, they laid the
cross upon Him that He might bear it. Simon obtained not this office by
chance, but was brought to the spot by God's providence, that he might
be found worthy of mention in the Scriptures of the Gospel, and of the
ministry of the cross of Christ. And it was not only meet that the
Savior should carry His cross, but meet also that w e should take part
therein, filling a carriage so beneficial to us. Yet would it not have
so profited us to take it on us, as we have profited by His faking it
upon Himself.
JEROME; Figuratively, the nations take up the cross, and the foreigner by obedience hears the ignominy of the Savior.
HILARY; For a Jew was not worthy to bear Christ's cross, but it was
reserved for the faith of the Gentiles both to take the cross, and to
suffer with Him.
REMIG. For this Simon was not a man of Jerusalem, but a foreigner, and
denizen, being a Cyrenean; Cyrene is a town of Lybia. Simon is
interpreted 'obedient', and a Cyrenean 'an heir'; whence he well
denotes the people of the Gentiles, which was strange to the testaments
of God, but by believing became a fellow-citizen of the saints, of the
household, and an heir of God.
GREG. Or otherwise; By Simon who bears the burden of the Lord's cross
are denoted those who are abstinent and proud; these by their
abstinence afflict their flesh, but seek not within the fruit of
abstinence. Thus Simon bears the cross, but does not die thereon, as
these afflict the body, but in desire of vain-glory live to the world.
RABAN. Golgotha is a Syriac word, and is interpreted Calvary.
JEROME; I have heard Calvary expounded as the spot in which Adam was
buried, as though it had been so called from the head of the old man
being buried there. A plausible interpretation, and agreeable to the
ears of the people, yet not a true one. Without the city outside the
gate are the places where criminals are executed, and these have got
the name of Calvary, that is, of the beheaded. And Jesus was crucified
there, that where the plot of criminals had been, there might be set up
the flag of martyrdom. But Adam was buried near Ebron and Arbee, as we
read in the volume of Jesus the son of Nave.
HILARY; Such is the place of the cross, set up in the center of the
earth, that it might be equally free to all nations to attain the
knowledge of God.
AUG. And they gave him to drink wine mingled with gall. Mark says,
mingled with myrrh. Matthew put gall to express bitterness, but wine
mingled with myrrh is very bitter; though indeed it might be, that gall
together with myrrh would make the most bitter.
JEROME; The bitter vine makes bitter wine; this they gave the Lord
Jesus to drink, that that might be fulfilled which was written, They
gave me also gall for my meat. And God addresses Jerusalem, I had
planted there a true vine, how are you turned into the bitterness of a
strange vine?
AUG. And when he had tasted thereof, be would not drink. That Mark
says, But he received it not, we understand to mean that He would not
receive it to drink thereof. For that He tasted it Matthew bears
witness; so that Matthew's, He could not drink thereof, means exactly
the same as Mark's, He received it not; only Mark does not mention His
tasting it.
That He tasted but would not drink of it, signifies that He
tasted the bitterness of death for us, but rose again the third day.
HILARY; Or, He therefore refused the wine mingled with gall, because
the bitterness of sin is not mingled with the incorruption of eternal
glory.
35. And they crucified him, and parted his garments, casting lots: that
it might be fulfilled which was spoken by the prophet, They parted my
garments among them, and upon my vesture did they cast lots.
36. And sitting down they watched him there;
37. And set up over his head his accusation written, THIS IS JESUS THE KING OF THE JEWS.
38. Then were there two thieves crucified with him, one on the right hand, and another on the left.
GLOSS. Having described how Christ was led to the scene of His Passion,
the Evangelist proceeds to the Passion itself, describing the kind of
death; And they crucified him.
AUG. The Wisdom of God took upon Him man, to give us an, example how we
might live rightly. It pertains to right life not to fear things that
are not to be feared. But some men who do not fear death in itself, yet
dread some kinds of death. That no sort of death is to be feared by the
man who lives aright, was to be shown by this Man's cross. For of all
the modes of death none was more horrible and fearful than this.
AUG. Let your holiness consider of what might is the power of the
cross. Adam set at nought the commandment, taking the apple from the
tree; but all that Adam lost, Christ found upon the cross. The ark of
wood saved the human race from the deluge of waters; when God's people
came out of Egypt, Moses divided the sea with his rod, overwhelmed
Pharaoh, and redeemed God's people. The same Moses changed the bitter
water into sweet by casting wood into it. By the rod the refreshing
stream was drawn out of the rock; that Amalech might be overcome,
Moses' outstretched hands were supported upon his rod; the Law of God
is entrusted to the wooden ark of the covenant, that thus, by these
steps we may come at last to the wood of the cross.
CHRYS. He suffered on a lofty cross, and not under a roof, to the end
that the nature of the air might be purified; the earth also partook a
like benefit, being cleansed by the blood that dropped from His side.
GLOSS. The shape of the cross seems also to signify the Church spread through the four quarters of the earth.
RABAN. Or, according to the practical exposition, the cross in respect
of its broad transverse piece signifies the joy of him that works, for
sorrow produces straitness; for the broad part of the cross is in the
transverse beam to which the hands are fastened, and by the hands we
understand works. By the upper part to which the head is fastened is
denoted our looking for retribution from the supreme righteousness of
God. The perpendicular part on which the body is stretched denotes
endurance, whence the patient are called 'long-suffering'. The point
that is fixed into the ground shadows forth the invisible part of a
sacrament.
HILARY; Thus on the tree of life the salvation and life of all is suspended.
AUG. Matthew shortly says, They parted his garments casting lots; but
John explains more fully how it was done. The soldiers, when they had
crucified him, took his garments, and made four parts, to every soldier
a part; and also his coat; now the coat was without seam.
CHRYS. It is to be noted, that this is no small degradation of Christ.
For they did this as to one utterly abject and worthless, yet for the
thieves they did not the same. For they share the garments only in the
case of condemned persons so mean and poor as to possess nothing more.
JEROME; This which was now done to Christ had been prophesied in the
Psalm, They parted my garments among them, and cast lots upon my
vesture. It proceeds, And sitting down, they watched him there. This
watchfulness of the soldiers and of the Priests has proved of use to us
in making the power of His resurrection greater and more notorious.
And they set up over his head his accusation written, This is Jesus,
the King of the Jews. I cannot sufficiently wonder at the enormity of
the thing, that having purchased false witnesses, and having stirred up
the unhappy people to riot and uproar, they found no other plea for
putting Him to death, than that He was King of the Jews; and this
perhaps they set up in mockery.
REMIG. It was divinely provided that this title should be set up over
His head, that the Jews might learn that not even by putting Him to
death could they avoid having Him for their King; for in the very
instrument of His death He not only did not lose, but rather confirmed
His sovereignty.
ORIGEN; The High Priest also in obedience to the letter of the Law wore
on his head the writing, 'Holiness to the Lord,' but the true High
Priest and King, Jesus, bears on His cross the title, This is the King
of the Jews; when ascending to His Father, instead of His own name with
its proper letters, He has the Father Himself.
RABAN. For because He is at once King and Priest, when He would offer
the sacrifice of His flesh on the altar of the cross, His title set
forth His regal dignity. And it is set over and not beneath the cross,
because though He suffered for us on the cross with the weakness of
man, the majesty of the King was conspicuous above the cross; and this
He did not lose, but rather confirmed, by the cross.
JEROME; As Christ was made for us a curse of the cross, so for the salvation of all He is crucified as guilty among the guilty.
LEO; Two thieves were crucified with him, one on the right hand and one
on the left, that in the figure of His cross might be represented that
separation of all mankind which shall be made in His judgment. The
Passion then of Christ contains a sacrament of our salvation, and of
that instrument which the wickedness of the Jews provided for His
punishment, the power of the Redeemer made a step to glory.
HILARY; Or otherwise; Two thieves are set up on His right and left
hand, to signify that the entire human race is called to the Sacrament
of the Lord's Passion; but because there shall be a division of
believers to the right, and unbelievers to the left, one of the two who
is set on His right hand is saved by the justification of faith.
REMIG. Or, by the two thieves are denoted all those who strive after
the continence of a strict life. They who do this with a single
intention of pleasing God, are denoted by him who was crucified on the
right hand; they who do it out of desire of human praise or any less
worthy motive, are signified by him who was crucified on the left.
39. And they that passed by reviled him, wagging their heads,
40. And saying, you that destroy the temple, and build it in three
days, save yourself. If you be the Son of God, come down from the cross.
41. Likewise also the Chief Priests mocking him, with the Scribes and elders, said,
42. He saved others; himself he cannot save. If he be the King of
Israel, let him now come down from the cross, and we will believe him.
43. He trusted in God; let him deliver him now, if he will have him: for he said, I am the Son of God.
44. The thieves also, which were crucified with him, cast the same in his teeth.
CHRYS. Having stripped and crucified Christ, they go yet further, and seeing Him on the cross revile Him.
JEROME; They revile him because they passed by that way, and would not
walk in the true way of the Scriptures. They wagged their heads,
because they had just before shifted their feet, and stood not upon a
rock. The foolish rabble cast the same taunt against Him that the false
witnesses had invented, Aha! you that destroy the temple of God and
rebuild it in three days.
REMIG. Aha! is an interjection of taunt and mockery.
HILARY; What forgiveness then for them, when by the resurrection of His
body they shall see the temple of God rebuilt within three days?
CHRYS. And as beginning to extenuate His former miracles, they add,
Save yourself; if you be the Son of God, come down from the cross.
ID. But He, on the contrary, does not come down from the cross, because
He is the Son of God; for He therefore came that He might be crucified
for us.
JEROME; Even the Scribes and Pharisees reluctantly confess that He
saved others. Your own judgment then condemns you, for in that He saved
others, He could if He would have saved Himself.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. But attend to this speech of these children of the Devil,
how they imitate their father's speech. The Devil said, If you be the
Son of God, cast yourself down; and they say now, If you be the Son of
God, come down from the cross.
LEO; From what source of error, O Jews, have you sucked in the poison
of such blasphemies; What teacher delivered it to you? What learning
moved you to think that the true King of Israel, that the veritable Son
of God, would be He who would not suffer Himself to be crucified, and
would set free His body from the fastenings of the nails? Not the
hidden meaning of the Law, not the mouths of the Prophets. Had you
indeed ever read, I hid not my face from the shame of spitting; or that
again, They pierced my hands and my feet, they told all my bones. Where
have you ever read that the Lord came down from the cross? But you have
read, The Lord has reigned from the tree.
RABAN. Had He then been prevailed on by their taunts to leave the
cross, He would not have proved to us the power of endurance; but He
waited enduring their mockery; and He who would not come down from the
cross, rose again from the tomb.
JEROME; But unworthy of credit is that promise, And we will believe
him. For which is greater, to come down while yet alive from the cross,
or to rise from the tomb when dead? Yet this He did, and you believed
not; therefore neither would you have believed if He had come down from
the cross. It seems to me that this was a suggestion of the demons. For
immediately when the Lord was crucified they felt the power of the
cross, and perceived that their strength was broken, and therefore
contrive this to move Him to come down from the cross. But the Lord,
aware of the designs of His foes, remains on the cross that He may
destroy the Devil.
CHRYS. He trusted in God, let him now deliver him, if he will. O most
foul! Were they therefore not Prophets or righteous men, because God
did not deliver them out of their perils? But if He would not oppose
their glory, which accrued to them out of the perils which you brought
upon them, much more in this man ought you not to be offended because
of what He suffers; what He has ever said ought to remove any such
suspicion. When they add, Because he said, I am the Son of God, they
desire to intimate that He suffered as an impostor and seducer, and as
making high and false pretenses. And not only the Jews and the soldiers
from below, but from above likewise. The thieves, which were crucified
with him, cast the same in his teeth.
AUG. It may seem that Luke contradicts this, when he describes one of
the robbers as reviling Him, and as therefore rebuked by the other. But
we may suppose that Matthew, shortly alluding to the circumstance, has
used the plural for the singular, as in the Epistle to the Hebrews we
have, Have stopped the mouths of lions, when Daniel only is spoken of.
And what more common way of speaking than for one to say, See the
country people insult me, when it is one only who has done so. If
indeed Matthew had said that both the thieves had reviled the Lord,
there would be some discrepancy; but when he says merely, The thieves,
without adding 'both', we must consider it as that common form of
speech in which the singular is signified by the plural.
JEROME; Or it may be said that at first both reviled Him; but when the
sun had withdrawn, the earth was shaken, the rocks were rent, and the
darkness increased, one believed in Jesus, and repaired his former
denial by a subsequent confession.
CHRYS. At first both reviled Him, but afterwards not so. For that you
should not suppose that the thing was arranged by any collusion, and
that the thief was not a thief, he shows you by his wanton reproaches,
that even after he was crucified he was a thief and a foe, but was
afterwards totally changed.
HILARY; That both the thieves cast in His teeth the manner of His
Passion, shows that the cross should be an offense to all mankind, even
to the faithful.
JEROME; Or, in the two thieves both nations, Jews and Gentiles, at
first blasphemed the Lord; afterwards the latter terrified by the
multitude of signs did penitence, and thus rebukes the Jews, who
blaspheme to this day.
ORIGEN; The thief who was saved may be a sign of those who after many sins have believed on Christ.
45. Now from the sixth hour there was darkness over all the land to the ninth hour.
46. And about the ninth hour Jesus cried with a loud voice, saying,
Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani? that is to say, My God, my God, why have
you forsaken me?
47. Some of them that stood there, when they heard that, said, This man calls for Elias.
48. And straightway one of them ran, and took a spurge, and filled it with vinegar, and put it on a reed, and gave him to drink.
49. The rest said, Let be, let us see whether Elias will come to save him.
50. Jesus, when he had cried again with a loud voice, yielded up the ghost.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Creation could not bear the outrage offered to the
Creator; whence the sun withdrew his beams, that he might not look upon
the crime of these impious men.
ORIGEN; Some take occasion from this text to cavil against the truth of
the Gospel. For indeed from the beginning eclipses of the sun have
happened in their proper seasons; but such an eclipse as would be
brought about by the ordinary course of the seasons could only be at
such time as the sun and moon come together, when the moon passing
beneath intercepts the sun's rays. But at the time of Christ's passion
it is clear that this was not the case, because it was the paschal
feast, which it was customary to celebrate when the moon was full. Some
believers, desiring to produce some answer to this objection, have
said, that this eclipse in accordance with the other prodigies was an
exception to the established laws of nature.
DIONYS. When we were together at Heliopolis, we both observed such an
interference of the moon with the sun quite unexpectedly, for it was
not the season of their conjunction; and then from the ninth hour until
evening, beyond the power of nature, continuing in a direct line
between us and the sun. And this obscuration we saw begin from the
east, and so pass to the extreme of the sun's orb, and again return
back the same way, being thus the very reverse of an ordinary eclipse.
CHRYS. This darkness lasted three hours, whereas an eclipse is
transient, and not enduring, as they know who have studied the matter.
ORIGEN; Against this the children of this world urge, How is it that of
the Greeks and Barbarians, who have made observations of these things,
not one has recorded so remarkable a phenomenon as this? Phlegon indeed
has recorded such an event as happening in the time of Tiberius Caesar,
but he has not mentioned that it was at the full moon. I think
therefore that, like the other miracles which took place at the
Passion, the rending of the veil, and the earthquake, this also was
confined to Jerusalem. Or, if any one chooses, it may be extended to
the whole of Judea; as in the book of Kings, Abdias said to Elias, As
the Lord your God lives, there is no nation or kingdom where my Lord
has not sent to seek you, meaning that he had been sought in the
countries round about Judea.
Accordingly we might suppose many and dense clouds to have been brought
together over Jerusalem and Judea, enough to produce thick darkness
from the sixth to the ninth hour. For we understand that there were two
creatures created on the sixth day the beasts before the sixth hour,
man on the sixth; and therefore it was fitting that He who died for the
salvation of man should be crucified at the sixth hour, and for this
cause that darkness should be over the whole earth from the sixth to
the ninth hour. And as by Moses stretching out his hands towards heaven
darkness was brought upon the Egyptians who held the servants of God in
bondage, so likewise when at the sixth hour Christ stretched out his
hands on the cross to heaven, darkness came over all the people who had
cried out, Crucify him, and they were deprived of all light as a sign
of the darkness that should come, and that should envelop the whole
people of the Jews.
Further, under Moses there was darkness over the land of Egypt three
days, but all the children of Israel had light; so under Christ there
was darkness over all Judea for three hours, because for their sins
they were deprived of the light of God the Father, the splendor of
Christ, and the illumination of the Holy Spirit. But over the rest of
the earth there is light, which every where illumines the Church of God
in Christ. And if to the ninth hour there was darkness over Judea, it
is manifest that light returned to them again after that; so, when the
fullness of, the Gentiles shall have entered in, then all Israel shall
be saved.
CHRYS. Or otherwise; The wonder was in this, that the darkness was over
the whole earth, which had never come to pass before, save only in
Egypt what time the Passover was celebrated; for the things done then
were a type of these. And consider the time when this is done; at
mid-day, while over the whole world it was day, that all the dwellers
on the earth might perceive it. This is the sign He promised to them
that asked Him, An evil and adulterous generation seeks a sign, and
there shall no sign be given it save the sign of Jonas the Prophet,
alluding to His cross and resurrection. And it was a much greater
marvel that this should come to pass when He was fastened to the cross,
than when hen He was walking at large on the earth.
Surely here was enough to convert them, not by the greatness of the
miracle alone, but because it was done not till after all these
instances of their frenzy, when their passion was past, when they had
uttered all that they would, and were satiated with taunts and gibes.
But how did they not all marvel and conclude Him to be God? Because the
human race was at that time plunged in exceeding sluggishness and vice,
and this wonder was but one, and quickly past away, and none cared to
search out its cause, or perhaps they attributed it to eclipse, or some
other physical consequence. And on this account He shortly afterwards
lifts up His voice to show that He yet lives, and Himself wrought this
miracle; And about the ninth hour Jesus cried with a loud voice,
&c.
JEROME; He employed the beginning of the twenty-first Psalm. That
clause in the middle of the verse, Look upon me, is superfluous; for
the Hebrew has only 'Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani,' that is, My God, my
God, why have you forsaken me? It is impiety therefore to think that
this Psalm was spoken in the character of David or Esther or
Mardocheus, when passages taken out of it by the Evangelist are
understood of the Savior; as, They parted my garments among them, and,
They pierced my hands.
CHRYS. He uttered this word of prophecy, that He might bear witness to
the very last hour to the Old Testament, and that they might see that
He honors the Father, and is not against God. And therefore too, He
used the Hebrew tongue, that what He said might be intelligible to
them.
ORIGEN; But it must be asked, What means this, that Christ is forsaken
of God? Some, unable to explain how Christ could be forsaken of God,
say that this was spoken out of humility. But you will be able clearly
to comprehend His meaning if you make a comparison of the glory which
He had with the Father with the shame which He despised when He endured
the cross.
HILARY; From these words heretical spirits contend either that God the
Word was entirely absorbed into the soul at the time it discharged the
function of a soul in quickening the body; or that Christ could not
have been born man, because the Divine Word dwelt in Him after the
manner of a prophetical spirit. As though Jesus Christ was a man of
ordinary soul and body, having His beginning then when He began to be
man, and thus now deserted upon the withdrawal of the protection of
God's word cries out, My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?
Or at least that the nature of the Word being transmuted into soul,
Christ, who had depended in all things upon His Father's support, now
deserted and left to death, mourns over this desertion, and pleads with
Him departing. But amidst these impious and feeble opinions, the faith
of the Church imbued with Apostolic teaching does not sever Christ that
He should be considered as Son of God and not as Son of Man. The
complaint of His being deserted is the weakness of the dying man; the
promise of Paradise is the kingdom of the living God. You have Him
complaining that He is left to death, and thus He is Man; you have Him
as He is dying declaring that He reigns in Paradise; and thus He is
God. Wonder not then at the humility of these words, when you know the
form of a servant, and see the offense of the cross.
GLOSS. God is said to have forsaken Him in death because He exposed Him
to the power of His persecutors; He withdrew His protection, but did
not break the union.
ORIGEN; When He saw darkness over the whole land of Judea He said this,
Father, why have you forsaken me? meaning, Why have you given Me over
exhausted to such sufferings? that the people who were honored by Thee
may receive the things that they have dared against Me, and should be
deprived of the light of Your countenance. Also, you have forsaken Me
for the salvation of the Gentiles. But what good have they of the
Gentiles who have believed done, that I should deliver them from the
evil one by shedding My precious blood on the ground for them? Or will
they, for whom I suffer these things, ever do aught worthy of them? Or
foreseeing the sins of those for whom He suffered, He said, Why have
you forsaken me? that I should become as one that gathers stubble in
the harvest, and gleanings in the vintage. But you must not imagine
that the Savior said this after the manner of men by reason of the
misery which encompassed Him on the cross; for if you take it so you
will not hear His loud voice and mighty words which point to something
great hidden.
RABAN. Or, The Savior said this as bearing about with Him our feelings,
who when placed in dangers think ourselves forsaken by God. Human
nature was forsaken by God because of its sins, and the Son of God
becoming our Advocate laments the misery of those whose guilt He took
upon Him; therein showing how they who sin ought to mourn, when He who
never sinned did thus mourn.
JEROME; It follows, Some of them that stood by, &c. some,
not all; whom I suppose to have been Roman soldiers, ignorant of
Hebrew, but from the words Eli, Eli, thought that He called upon Elias.
But if we prefer to suppose them Jews, they do it after their usual
manner, that they may accuse the Lord of weakness in thus invoking
Elias.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Thus the Source of living water is made to drink vinegar,
the Giver of honey is fed with gall; Forgiveness is scourged,
Acquittance is condemned, Majesty is mocked, Virtue ridiculed, the
Bestower of showers is repaid with spitting.
HILARY; Vinegar is wine, which has turned sour either from neglect, or
the fault of the vessel. Wine is the honor of immortality, or virtue.
When this then had been turned sour in Adam, He took and drunk it at
the hands of the Gentiles. It is offered to Him on a reed and a spurge;
that is, He took from the bodies of the Gentiles immortality spoiled
and corrupted, and transfused in Himself into a mixture of immortality
that in us which was spoiled.
REMIG. Or otherwise; The Jews as degenerating from the wine of the
Patriarchs and Prophets were vinegar; they had deceitful hearts, like
to the winding holes and hollows in sponge. By the reed, Sacred
Scripture is denoted, which was fulfilled in this action; for as we
call that which the tongue utters, the Hebrew tongue, or the Greek
tongue, for example; so the writing, or letters which the seed
produces, we may call a reed.
ORIGEN; And perhaps all who know the ecclesiastical doctrine, but live
amiss, have given them to drink wine mingled with gall; but they who
attribute to Christ untrue opinions, these filling a sponge with
vinegar, put it upon the reed of Scripture, and put it to His mouth.
RABAN. The soldiers misunderstanding the sound of the Lord's words
foolishly looked for the coming of Elias. But God, whom the Savior thus
invoked in the Hebrew tongue, He had ever inseparably with Him.
AUG. When now nought of suffering remains to be endured, death still
lingers, knowing that it has nothing there. The ancient foe suspected
somewhat unusual. This man, first and only, he found having no sin,
free from guilt, owing nothing to the laws of his jurisdiction. But
leagued with Jewish madness, Death comes again to the assault, and
desperately invades the Life-giver.
And Jesus, when be had cried again with a loud voice, yielded up the
ghost. Wherefore should we be offended that Christ came from the bosom
of the Father to take upon Him our bondage, that He might confer on us
His freedom; to take upon Him our death, that we might be set free by
His death; by despising death He exalted us mortals into Gods, counted
them of earth worthy of things in heaven? For seeing the Divine power
shines forth so brilliant in the contemplation of its works, it is an
argument of boundless love, that it suffers for its subjects, dies for
its bondsmen.
This then was the first cause of the Lord's Passion, that He would have
it known how great God's love to man, Who desired rather to be loved
than feared. The second was that He might abolish with yet more justice
the sentence of death which He had with justice passed. For as the
first man had by guilt incurred death through God's sentence, and
handed down the same to his posterity, the second Man, who knew no sin,
came from heaven that death might be condemned, which, when
commissioned to seize the guilty, had presumed to touch the Author of
sinlessness. And it is no wonder if for us He laid down what He had
taken of us, His life, namely, when He has done other so great things
for us, and bestowed so much on us.
PSEUDO-AUG. Far be from the faithful any suspicion that Christ
experienced our death in such sort that life (as far as it can) ceased
to live. Had this been so, how could aught have been said to live
during that three days, if the Fountain of Life itself was dried up?
Therefore Christ's Godhead experienced death through its partaking of
humanity or of human feeling, which it had voluntarily taken on it; but
it lost not the properties of its nature by which it gives life to all
things. For when we die, without doubt the loss of life by the body is
not the destruction of the soul, but the soul quitting the body loses
not its own properties, but only lets go w hat it had quickened, and as
far as in it lays produces the death of somewhat else, but itself
defies death. To speak now of the Savior's soul; it might depart
without being itself destroyed from His body for this three days'
space, even by the common laws of death, and without taking into
account the indwelling Godhead, and His singular righteousness. For I
believe that the Son of God died not in punishment of unrighteousness
which He had not at all, but according to the law of that nature which
He took upon Him for the redemption of the human race.
DAMASC. Although He died as man, and His holy soul was separated from
His unstained body, yet His God-head remained inseparate from either
body or soul. Yet was not the one Person divided into two; for as both
body and soul had from the beginning an existence in the Person of the
Word, so also had they in death. For neither soul nor body had ever a
Person of their own, besides the Person of the Word.
JEROME; It was a mark of Divine power in Him thus to dismiss the Spirit
as Himself had said, No man can take my life from me, but I lay it down
and take it again. For by the ghost in this place we understand the
soul; so called either because it is that which makes the body quick or
spiritual, or because the substance of the soul itself is spirit,
according to that which is written, you take away their breath, and
they die.
CHRYS. Also for this reason He cried out with a loud voice to show that
this is done by His own power. For by crying out with a loud voice when
dying, He showed incontestably that He was the true God; because a man
in dying can scarcely utter even a feeble sound.
AUG. Luke mentions the words which He thus cries out, Father, into your hands I commend my Spirit.
HILARY; Or, He gave up the ghost with a loud voice, in grief that He was not carrying the sins of all men.
51. And, behold, the veil of the temple was rent in two from the top to the bottom; and the earth did quake, and the rocks rent;
52. And the graves were opened; and many bodies of the saints which slept arose,
53. And came out of the graves after his resurrection, and went into the holy city, and appeared to many.
54. Now when the centurion, and they that were with him, watching
Jesus, saw the earthquake, and those things that were done, they feared
greatly, saying, Truly this was the Son of God.
55. And many women were there beholding afar off, which followed Jesus from Galilee, ministering to him:
56. Among which was Mary Magdalene, and Mary the mother of James and Joses, and the mother of Zebedee's children.
ORIGEN; Great things were done at the moment that Jesus cried with a great voice.
AUG. The wording sufficiently shows that the veil was rent just when He
gave up the ghost. If he had not added, And, lo! but had merely said,
And the veil of the temple was rent, it would have been uncertain
whether Matthew and Mark had not inserted it here out of its place as
they recollected, and Luke had observed the right order, who having
said, And the sun was darkened, adds, And the veil of the temple was
rent in two; or, on the contrary, Luke had returned to what they had
inserted in its place.
ORIGEN; It is understood that there were two veils; one veiling the
Holy of Holies, the other, the outer part of the tabernacle or temple.
In the Passion then of our Lord and Savior, it was the outer veil which
was rent from the top to the bottom, that by the rending of the veil
from the beginning to the end of the world, the mysteries might be
published which had been hid with good reason until the Lord's coming.
But when that which is perfect is come, then the second veil also shall
be taken away, that we may see the things that are hidden within, to
wit, the true Ark of the Testament, and behold the Cherubim and the
rest in their real nature.
HILARY; Or, The veil of the temple is rent, because from this time the
nation was dispersed, and the honor of the veil is taken away with the
guardianship of the protecting Angel.
LEO; The sudden commotion in the elements is a sufficient sign in
witness of His venerable Passion, The earth quaked, and the rocks rent,
and the graves were opened.
JEROME; It is not doubtful to any what these great signs signify
according to the letter, namely, that heaven and earth and all things
should bear witness to their crucified Lord.
HILARY; The earth quaked, because it was unequal to contain such a body
; the rocks rent, for the Word of God that pierces all strong and
mighty things, and the virtue of the eternal Power had penetrated them;
the graves were opened, for the bands of death were loosed. And many
bodies of the saints which slept arose, for illumining the darkness of
death, and shedding light upon the gloom of Hades, He robbed the
spirits of death.
CHRYS. When He remained on the cross they had said tauntingly, He saved
others, himself he cannot save. But what He would not do for Himself,
that He did and more than that for the bodies of the Saints. For if it
was a great thing to raise Lazarus after four days, much more was. it
that they who had long slept should now show themselves alive; this is
indeed a proof of the resurrection to come. But that it might not be
thought that that which was done was an appearance merely, the
Evangelist adds, And came out of the graves after his is resurrection,
and went into the holy city, and appeared to many.
JEROME; As Lazarus rose from the dead, so also did many bodies of the
Saints rise again to show forth the Lord's resurrection; yet
notwithstanding that the graves were opened, they did not rise again
before the Lord rose, that He might be the first-born of the
resurrection from the dead. The holy city in which they were seen after
they had risen may be understood to mean either the heavenly Jerusalem,
or this earthly, which once had been holy. For the city of Jerusalem
was called Holy on account of the Temple and the Holy of Holies, and to
distinguish it from other cities in which idols were worshipped. When
it is said, And appeared to many, it is signified that this was not a
general resurrection which all should see, but special, seen only by
such as were worthy to see it.
REMIG. But some one will ask, what became of those who rose again when
the Lord rose. We must believe that they rose again to be witnesses of
the Lord's resurrection. Some have said that they died again, and were
turned to dust, as Lazarus and the rest whom the Lord raised. But we
must by no means give credit to these men's sayings, since if they were
to die again, it would be greater torment to them, than if they had not
risen again. We ought therefore to believe without hesitation that they
who rose from the dead at the Lord's resurrection, ascended also into
heaven together with Him.
ORIGEN; These same mighty works are still done every day; the veil of
the temple is rent for the Saints, in order to reveal the things that
are contained within. The earth quakes, that is, all flesh because of
the new word and new things of the New Testament. The rocks are rent,
i.e. the mystery of the Prophets, that we may see the spiritual
mysteries hid in their depths. The graves are the bodies of sinful
souls, that is, souls dead to God; but when by God's grace these souls
have been raised, their bodies which before were graves, become bodies
of Saints, and appear to go out of themselves, and follow Him who rose
again, and walk with Him in newness of life; and such as are worthy to
have their conversation in heaven enter into the Holy City at divers
times, and appear to many who see their good works.
AUG. It is no contradiction here that Matthew says, that The centurion
and they that were with him, watching Jesus, feared when they saw the
earthquake, and the things that were done; while Luke says, that he
wondered at the giving up the ghost with a loud voice. For when Matthew
adds, the things that were done, this gives full scope for Luke's
expression, that he wondered at the Lord's death, for this among the
rest was wonderful.
JEROME; Observe, that in the very midst of the offense of His passion
the Centurion acknowledges the Son of God, while Arius in the Church
proclaims Him a creature.
RABAN. Whence with good reason by the Centurion is denoted the faith of
the Church, which, when the veil of heavenly mysteries had been rent by
the Lord's death, immediately asserts Jesus to be both very Man, and
truly Son of God, while the Synagogue held its peace.
LEO; From this example then of the Centurion let the substance of the
earth tremble in the punishment of its Redeemer, let the rocks of
unbelieving minds be rent, and those who were pent up in these
sepulchers of mortality leap forth, bursting the bonds that would
detain them; and let them show themselves in the Holy City, i.e. the
Church of God, as signs of the Resurrection to come; and thus let that
take place in the heart, which we must believe takes place in the body.
JEROME; It was a Jewish custom, and held no disgrace, according to the
manners of the people of old, for women to minister of their substance,
food, and clothing to their teachers. This Paul says, that he refused,
because it might occasion scandal among the Gentiles. They ministered
to the Lord of their substance, that He might reap their carnal things,
of whom they reaped spiritual things. Not that the Lord needed food of
the creature, but that He might set an example for the teacher, that He
should be content to receive food and clothing from His disciples.
But let us see what sort of attendants He had; Among whom was Mary
Magdalene, and Mary the mother of James and Joseph, and the mother of
Zebedee's children.
ORIGEN; In Mark the third is called Salome.
CHRYS. These women thus watching the things that are done are the most
compassionate, the most sorrowful. They had followed Him ministering,
and remained by Him in danger, showing the highest courage, for when
the disciples fled they remained.
JEROME; 'See,' says Helvidius,' Jacob and Joseph are the sons of Mary
the Lord's mother, whom the Jews call the brethren of Christ. He is
also called James the less, to distinguish him from James the greater,
who was the son of Zebedee. And he urges that it were impious to
suppose that His mother Mary would be absent, when the other women were
there; or that we should have to invent some other third unknown person
of the name of Mary, and that too when John's Gospel witnesses that His
mother was present. O blind folly! O mind perverted to its own
destruction!
Hear what the Evangelist John says: There stood by the cross of Jesus,
his mother, and his mother's sister, Mary the wife of Cleophas, and
Mary Magdalene. No one can doubt that there were two Apostles called
James; the son of Zebedee, and the son of Alphaeus. This unknown James
the less, whom Scripture mentions as the son of Mary, if he is an
Apostle, is the son of Alpheus; if he is not an Apostle, but a third
unknown James, how can he be supposed to be the Lord's brother, and why
should he be styled 'The Less,' to distinguish him from 'The Greater'.
For The Greater and The Less are epithets which distinguish two
persons, but not three. And that the James, the Lord's brother, was an
Apostle, is proved by Paul, other of the Apostles saw I none, save
James the Lord's brother. But that you should not suppose this James to
be the son of Zebedee, read the Acts, where he was put to death by
Herod.
The conclusion then remains, that this Mary, who is described as the
mother of James the less, was wife of Alpheus, and sister of Mary the
Lord's mother, called by John, Mary the wife of Cleophas. But should
you incline to think them two different persons, because in one place
she is called Mary the mother of James the less, and in another place
Mary' the wife of Cleophas, you will learn the Scripture custom of
calling the same man by different names; as Raguel Moses' father-in-law
is called Jethro. In like manner then, Mary the wife of Cleophas is
called the wife of Alpheus, and the mother of James the less. For if
she had been the Lord's mother, the Evangelist would here, as in all
other places, have called her so, and not described her as the mother
of James, when he meant to designate the mother of the Lord. But even
if Mary the wife of Cleophas, and Mary the mother of James and Joses,
were different persons, it is still certain, that Mary the mother of
James and Joses was not the Lord's mother.
AUG. We might have supposed that some of the women stood afar off, as
three Evangelists says, and others near the cross, as John says, had
not Matthew and Mark reckoned Mary Magdalen among those that stood afar
off, while John puts her among those that stood near. This is
reconciled if we understand the distance at which they were to be such
that they might be said to be near, because they were in His sight; but
far off in comparison of the crowd who stood nearer with the centurion
and soldiers. We might also suppose that they who were there together
with the Lord's mother, began to depart after He had commended her to
the disciple, that they might extricate themselves from the crowd, and
looked on from a distance at the other things which were done, so that
the Evangelists, who speak of them after the Lord's death, speak of
them as standing afar off:
57. When the even was come, there came a rich man of Arimathea, named Joseph, who also himself was Jesus' disciple:
58. He went to Pilate, and begged the body of Jesus. Then Pilate commanded the body to be delivered.
59. And when Joseph had taken the body, he wrapped it in a clean linen cloth,
60. And laid it in his own new tomb, which he had hewn out in the rock:
and he rolled a great stone to the door of the sepulcher, and departed.
61. And there was Mary Magdalene, and the other Mary, sitting over against the sepulcher.
GLOSS. When the Evangelist had finished the order of the Lord's Passion and death, he treats of His burial.
REMIG. Arimathea is the same as Ramatha, the city of Helcana and
Samuel, and is situated in the Chananitic country near Diospolis. This
Joseph was a man of great dignity in respect of worldly station, but
has the praise of much higher merit in God's sight, seeing he is
described as righteous. Indeed he that should have the burial of the
Lord's body ought to have been such, that he might be deserving of that
office by righteous merit.
JEROME; He is described as rich, not out of any ambition on the part of
the writer to represent so noble and rich a man as Jesus' disciple, but
to show how he was able to obtain the body of Jesus from Pilate. For
poor and unknown individuals would not have dared to approach Pilate,
the representative of Roman power, and ask the body of a crucified
malefactor. In another Gospel this Joseph is called a counselor; and it
is supposed that the first Psalm has reference to him, Blessed is the
man that walks not in the counsel of the ungodly.
CHRYS. Consider this man's courage; he risked his life, and took upon
him many enmities in order to render this service; and not only dares
to ask for Christ's body, but also to bury it.
JEROME; By this simple burial of the Lord is condemned the ostentation
of the rich, who cannot dispense with lavish expense even their tombs.
But we may also consider in a spiritual sense, that the Lord's body was
wrapped not in gold, jewels, or silk, but in clean linen; and that he
who wrapped it, is he who embraces Jesus with a pure heart.
REMIG. Or, otherwise; The linen is grown out of the ground, and is
bleached to whiteness with great labor, and thus this signifies that
His body which was taken of the earth, that is of a Virgin, through the
toil of passion came to the whiteness of immortality.
RABAN. From this also has prevailed in the Church the custom of
celebrating the sacrifice of the altar not in silk, or in colored
robes, but in linen grown from the earth, as we read, was ordered by
the Holy Pope Silvester.
PSEUDO-AUG. The Savior was laid in a tomb belonging to another man,
because He died for the salvation of others. For or why should He who
in Himself had no death, hare been laid in His own tomb? Or He whose
place was reserved for Him in heaven, have had a monument upon earth?
He who remained but three days space in the tomb, not as dead, but as
resting on His bed? A tomb is the necessary abode of death; Christ
then, who is our life, could not have an abode of death; He that ever
lives had no need of the dwelling of the departed.
JEROME; He is laid in a new tomb, lest after His resurrection it should
be pretended that it was some other who had risen when they saw the
other bodies there remaining. The new tomb may also signify the virgin
womb of Mary. And He was laid in a tomb hewn out of the rock, lest had
it been one raised of many stones, it might have been said that He was
stolen away by undermining the foundations of the pile.
PSEUDO-AUG. Had the tomb been in the earth, it might have been said
they undermined the place, and so carried Him off. Had a small stone
been laid thereon, they might have said, They carried Him off while we
slept.
JEROME; That a great stone was rolled there, shows that the tomb could
not have been reopened without the united strength of many.
HILARY; Mystically, Joseph affords a figure of the Apostles. He wraps
the body in a clean linen cloth, in which same linen shoes were let
down to Peter out of heaven all manner of living creatures; whence we
understand, that under the representation of this linen cloth the
Church is buried together with Christ. The Lord's body moreover is laid
in a chamber hewn out of rock, empty and new; that is, by the teaching
of the Apostles, Christ is conveyed into the hard breast of the
Gentiles hewn out by the toil of teaching, rude and new, hitherto
unpenetrated by any fear of God. And for that besides Him ought nothing
to enter our breasts, a stone is rolled to the mouth, that as before
Him we had received no author of divine knowledge, so after Him we
should admit none.
ORIGEN; This is no casual mention of the circumstances that the body
was wrapped in clean linen, and laid in a new tomb, and a great stone
rolled to the mouth, but that every thing touching the body of Jesus is
clean, and new, and very great.
REMIG. When the Lord's body was buried, and the rest returned to their
own places, the w omen alone, who had loved Him more attachedly adhered
to Him, and with anxious care noted the place where the Lord's body was
laid, that at fit time they might perform the service of their devotion
to him.
ORIGEN; The mother of the sons of Zebedee is not mentioned as having
sat over against the sepulcher. And perhaps she was able to endure as
far as the cross only, but these as stronger in love were not absent
even from the things that afterwards done.
JEROME; Or, when the rest left the Lord, the women continued in their
attendance, looking for what Jesus had promised; and therefore they
deserved to be the first to see the resurrection, because he that
endures to the end shall be saved.
REMIG. And to this day the holy women, that is, the lowly souls of the
saints, do the like in this present world, and with pious assiduity
wait while Christ's passion is being completed.
62. Now the next day, that followed the day of the preparation, the Chief Priests and Pharisees came together to Pilate,
63. Saying, Sir, we remember that that deceiver said, while he was yet alive, After three days I will rise again.
64. Command therefore that the sepulcher be made sure until the third
day, lest his disciples come by night, and steal him away, and say to
the people, He is risen from the dead: so the last error shall be worse
than the first.
65. Pilate said to them, you have a watch: go your way, make it as sure as you can.
66. So they went and made the sepulcher sure, sealing the stone, and setting a watch.
JEROME; It was not enough for the Chief Priests to have crucified the
Lord the Savior, if they did not guard the sepulcher, and do their
utmost to lay hands on Him as He rose from the dead.
RABAN. By the Parasceve is meant 'preparation'; and they gave this name
to the sixth day of the week, on which they made ready the things
needed for the Sabbath, as was commanded respecting the manna, On the
sixth day they gathered twice as much. Because on the sixth day man was
made, and on the seventh God rested; therefore on the sixth day Jesus
died for man, and rested the Sabbath day in the tomb. The Chief Priests
although in putting the Lord to death they had committed a heinous
crime, yet were they not satisfied unless even after His death they
carried on the venom of their malice once begun, traducing His
character, and calling one, whom they new to be guileless, a deceiver.
But as Caiaphas prophesied without knowing it, that it is expedient
that one man should die for the people, so now, Christ was a deceiver,
not from truth into error, but leading men from error to truth, from
vices to virtue, from death to life.
REMIG. They say that He had declared, After three days I will rise
again, in consequence of that He said above, As Jonas was three days
and three nights in the whale's belly &c. But let us see in what
way He can be said to have risen again after three days. Some would
have the three hours of darkness understood as one night, and the light
succeeding the darkness as a day, but these do not know the force of
figurative language. The sixth day of the week on which He suffered
comprehended the foregoing, night; then follows the night of the
Sabbath with its own day, and the night of the Lord's day includes also
its own day; and hence it is true that He rose again after three days.
AUG. He rose again after three days, to signify the consent of the
whole Trinity in the passion of the Son; the three days' space is read
figuratively, because the Trinity which in the beginning made man, the
same in the end restores man by the passion of Christ.
RABAN. Command therefore that the sepulcher be made sure until the
third day. For Christ's disciples were spiritually thieves; stealing
from the unthankful Jews the writings of the New and Old Testament,
they bestowed them to be used by the Church; and while they slept, that
is, while the Jews were sunk in the lethargy of unbelief, they carried
off the promised Savior, and gave Him to be believed in by the
Gentiles.
HILARY; Their fear lest the body should be stolen, the setting a watch
on the tomb, and sealing it, are marks of folly and unbelief, that they
should have sought to seal up the tomb of One at whose bidding they had
seen a dead man raised from the tomb.
RABAN. When they say, And the last error will be worse than the first,
they utter a truth unwittingly, for their contempt of penitence was
worse for the Jews than was their error of ignorance.
CHRYS. Observe how against their will they concert to demonstrate the
truth, for by their precautions irrefragable demonstration of the
resurrection was attained. The sepulcher was watched, and so no fraud
could have been practiced; and if there was no collusion, it is certain
that the Lord rose again.
RABAN. Pilate's answer to their request is as much as to say, Be it
enough for you that you have conspired the death of an innocent man,
henceforth let your error remain with you.
CHRYS. Pilate will not suffer that the soldiers alone should seal. But
as though he had learnt the truth concerning Christ, he was no longer
willing to be partner in their acts, and says, Seal it as you will
yourselves, that you may not be able to accuse others. For had the
soldiers alone sealed, they might have said that the soldiers had
suffered the disciples to steal the body, and so given the disciples a
handle to forge a tale concerning the resurrection; but this could they
not say now, when they themselves had sealed the sepulcher.
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