catena aurea matthew 3
1. In those days came John the Baptist, preaching in the wilderness of Judea,
2. And saying, Repent; for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.
3. For this is he that was spoken of by the Prophet Esaias, saying, The
voice of one crying in the wilderness, Prepare you the way of the Lord,
make His paths straight.
PSEUDO-CHRYS.The Sun as he approaches the horizon, and before he is yet
visible, sends out his rays and makes the eastern sky to glow with
light, that Aurora going before may herald the coming day. Thus the
Lord at His birth in this earth, and before He shows Himself,
enlightens John by the rays of His Spirit's teaching, that he might go
before and announce the Savior that was to come. Therefore after having
related the birth of Christ, before proceeding to His teaching and
baptism (wherein he received such testimony) he first premises somewhat
of the Baptist and forerunner of the Lord. In those days, &c.
REMIG. In these words we have not only time, place, and person,
respecting St. John, but also his office and employment. First the
time, generally: In those days.
AUG. Luke describes the time by the reigning sovereigns. But Matthew
must be understood to speak of a wider space of time by the phrase
'those days,' than the fifteenth year of Tiberius. Having related
Christ's return from Egypt, which must be placed in early boyhood or
even infancy, to make it agree with what Luke has told of His being in
the temple at twelve years old, he adds directly, In those days, not
intending thereby only the days of His childhood, but all the days from
His birth to the preaching of John.
REMIG. The man is mentioned in the words came John, that is, showed himself having abode so long in obscurity.
CHRYS. But why must John thus go before Christ with a witness of deeds
preaching Him? First, that we might hence learn Christ's dignity, that
he also, as the Father has, has prophets, in the words of Zacharias And
you, Child, shall be called the Prophet of the Highest (Luke 1:76).
Secondly, that the Jews might have no cause for offense; as he
declared, John came neither eating nor drinking, and they say, He has a
devil. The Son of Man came eating and drinking, and they say, Behold a
gluttonous man (Luke 7:33). It needs moreover that the things
concerning Christ should be told by some other first, and not by
Himself; or what would the Jews have said, who after the witness of
John made complaint, You bear witness of yourself; your witness is not
true (John 8:13).
REMIG. His office: the Baptist; in this he prepared the way of the
Lord, for had not men been used to being baptized, they would have
shunned Christ's baptism. His employment: Preaching;
RABAN. For because Christ was to preach, as soon as it seemed the fit
time, that is, about thirty years of age, he began by his preaching to
make ready the way for the Lord.
REM. The place: the desert of Judea.
MAXIMUS; Where neither a noisy mob would interrupt his preaching, and
where no unbelieving hearer would retire; but those only would hear,
who sought to his preaching from motives of divine worship.
JEROME; Consider how the salvation of God, and the glory of the Lord,
is preached not in Jerusalem, but in the solitude of the Church, in the
wilderness to multitudes.
HILARY; Or, he came to Judea, desert by the absence of God, not of
population, that the place of preaching might witness the few to whom
the preaching was sent.
GLOSS. The desert typically means a life removed from the temptations of the world, such as befits the penitent.
AUG. Unless one repent him of his former life, he cannot begin a new life.
HILARY; He therefore preaches repentance when the Kingdom of Heaven
approaches, by which we return from error, we escape from sin, and
after shame for our faults, we make profession of forsaking them.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. In the very commencement he shows himself the messenger
of a merciful Prince; he comes not with threats to the offender, but
with offers of mercy. It is a custom with kings to proclaim a general
pardon on the birth of a son, but first they send throughout their
kingdom officers to exact severe fines. But God willing at the birth of
His Son to give pardon of sins, first sends His officer proclaiming,
Repent you. O exaction which leaves none poor, but makes many rich! For
even when we pay our just debt of righteousness we do God no service,
but only gain our own salvation. Repentance cleanses the heart,
enlightens the sense, and prepares the human soul for the reception of
Christ, as he immediately adds, For the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand.
JEROME; John Baptist is the first to preach the Kingdom of Heaven, that
the forerunner of the Lord may have this honorable privilege.
CHRYS. And he preaches what the Jews had never heard, not even
from the Prophets: Heaven, namely, and the Kingdom that is there, and
of the kingdoms of the earth he says nothing. Thus by the novelty of
those things of which he speaks, he gains their attention to Him whom
he preaches.
REMIG. The Kingdom of Heaven has a fourfold meaning. It is said, of
Christ, as The Kingdom of God is within you (Luke 17:21). Of Holy
Scripture, as, The Kingdom of God shall be taken from you, and shall he
given to a nation bringing forth the fruits thereof (Mat 21:43). Of the
Holy Church, as, The Kingdom of Heaven is like to ten virgins (Mat 25).
Of the abode above, as, Many shall come from the East and the West, and
shall sit down in the Kingdom of Heaven (Mat 8:11). And all these
significations may be here understood.
GLOSS.The Kingdom of Heaven shall come nigh you; for if it approached
not, none would be able to gain it; for weak and blind they had not the
way, which was Christ.
AUG. The other Evangelists omit these words of John. What follows, This
is He, &c. it is not clear whether the Evangelist speaks them in
his own person, or whether they are part of John's preaching, and the
whole from Repent, to Esaias the Prophet, is to be assigned to John. It
is of no importance that he says, This is he, and not, I am he; for
Matthew speaking of himself says, He found a man sitting at the
toll-office (Mat 9:9); not He found me. Though when asked what he said
of himself, he answered, as is related by John the Evangelist, I am the
voice of one crying in the wilderness.
GREG. It is well known that the Only-begotten Son is called the Word of the Father; as in John, in the beginning was the Word
(John 1:1). But it is by our own speech that we are known; the voice
sounds that the words may be heard. Thus John the forerunner of the
Lord's coming is called, The voice, because by his ministry the voice
of the Father is heard by men.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. The voice is a confused sound, discovering no secret of
the heart, only signifying that he who utters it desires to say
somewhat; it is the word that is the speech that opens the mystery of
the heart. Voice is common to men and other animals, word peculiar to
man. John then is called the voice and not the word, because God did
not discover His counsels through him, but only signified that he was
about to do something among men; but afterwards by His Son He fully
opened the mystery of His will.
RABANUS. He is rightly called, The voice of one crying, on account of
the loud sound of his preaching. Three things cause a man to speak
loud: when the person he speaks to is at a distance, or is deaf, or if
the speaker be angry; and all these three were then found in the human
race.
GLOSS. John then is, as it were, the voice of the word crying. The word is heard by the voice, that is, Christ by John.
BEDE. In like manner has He cried from the beginning through the voice
of all who have spoken by inspiration. And yet is John only called, The
voice; because that Word which others showed afar off, he declares as
nigh.
GREG. Crying in the desert, because he shows to deserted and forlorn Judea the approaching consolation of her Redeemer.
REMIG. Though as far as historical fact is concerned, he chose the
desert, to be removed from the crowds of people. What the purport of
his cry was is insinuated when he adds, Make ready the way of the Lord.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. As a great King going on a progress is preceded by
couriers to cleanse what is foul, repair what is broken down, so John
preceded the Lord to cleanse the human heart from the filth of sin, by
the bosom of repentance, and to gather by an ordinance of spiritual
precepts those things which had been scattered abroad.
GREG. Everyone who preaches right faith and good works, prepares the
Lord's way to the hearts of the hearers, and makes His paths straight,
in cleansing the thoughts by the word of good preaching.
GLOSS. Or, faith is the way by which the word reaches the heart; when the life is amended the paths are made straight.
4. And the same John had his raiment of camel's hair, and a
leather girdle about his loins; and his meat was locusts and wild honey.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Having said that he is the voice of one crying in the
desert, the Evangelist well adds, John had his clothing of camel's
hair; thus showing what his life was; for he indeed testified of
Christ, but his life testified of himself. No one is fit to be
another's witness till he has first been his own.
HILARY.For the preaching of John no place more suitable, no clothing more useful, no food more fitted.
JEROME; His raiment of camel's hair, not of wool - the one the mark of austerity in dress, the other of a delicate luxury.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. It becomes the servants of God to use a dress not for
elegant appearance, or for cherishing of the body, but for a covering
of the nakedness. Thus John wears a garment not soft and delicate, but
hairy, heavy, rough, rather wounding the skin than cherishing it, that
even the very clothing of his body told of the virtue of his mind. It
was the custom of the Jews to wear girdles of wool; so he desiring
something less indulgent wore one of skin.
JEROME; Food moreover suited to a dweller in the desert, no choice viands, but such as satisfied the necessities of the body.
RABANUS.Content with poor fare: to wit, small insects and honey
gathered from the trunks of trees. In the sayings of Arnulphus, Bishop
of Gaul, we find that there was a very small kind of locust in the
deserts of Judea, with bodies about the thickness of a finger and
short; they are easily taken among the grass, and when cooked in oil
form a poor kind of food. He also relates that in the same desert there
is a kind of tree, with a large round leaf, of the color of milk and
taste of honey, so friable as to rub to powder in the hand, and this is
what is intended by wild honey.
REMIG. In this clothing and this poor food, he shows that he sorrows for the sins of the whole human race.
RABANUS.His dress and diet express the quality of his inward
conversation. His garment was of an austere quality, because he rebuked
the sinner's life.
JEROME; His girdle of skin, which Elias also bare, is the mark of mortification.
RABAN. He ate locusts and honey, because his preaching was sweet to the
multitude, but was of short continuance; and honey has sweetness,
locusts a swift fight but soon fall to the ground.
REMIG. In John (which name is interpreted 'the grace of God') is
figured Christ who brought grace into the world - in his clothing, the
Gentile Church.
HILARY; The preacher of Christ is clad in the skins of unclean beasts,
to which the Gentiles are compared, and so by the Prophets' dress is
sanctified whatever in them was useless or unclean. The girdle is a
thing of much efficacy to every good work, that we may he girt for
every ministry of Christ. For his food are chosen locusts, which fly
the face of man, and escape from every approach, signifying ourselves
who were borne away from every word or speech of good by a spontaneous
motion of the body, weak in will, barren in works, fretful in speech,
foreign in abode, are now become the food of the Saints, chosen to fill
the Prophets' desire, furnishing our most sweet food not from the hives
of the law, but from the trunks of wild trees.
5. Then went out to him Jerusalem, and all Judea, and all the region round about Jordan,
6. And were baptized of him in Jordan, confessing their sins.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Having described the preaching of John, he goes on to
say, There went out to him, for his severe life preached yet more
loudly in the desert than the voice of his crying.
CHRYS. For it was wonderful to see such fortitude in a human body; this
it was that chiefly attracted the Jews, seeing in him the great Elias.
It also contributed to fill them with wonder that the grace of Prophecy
had long failed among them, and now seemed to have at length revived.
Also the manner of his preaching being other than that of the old
prophets had much effect; for now they heard not such things as they
were wont to hear, such as wars, and conquests of the king of Babylon,
or of Persia; but of Heaven and the Kingdom there, and the punishment
of hell.
GLOSS. This baptism was only a fore-running of that to come, and did not forgive sins.
REMIG. The baptism of John bare a figure of the catechumens. As
children are only catechized that they may become meet for the
sacrament of Baptism; so John baptized that they who were thus baptized
might afterwards by a holy life become worthy of coming to Christ's
baptism. He baptized in Jordan, that the door of the Kingdom of Heaven
might be there opened, where an entrance had been given to time
children of Israel into the earthly kingdom of promise.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Compared with the holiness of John, who is there that can
think himself righteous? As a white garment if placed near snow would
seem foul by the contrast; so compared with John every man would seem
impure; therefore they confessed their sins. Confession of sin is the
testimony of a conscience fearing God. And perfect fear takes away all
shame. But there is seen the shame of confession where there is no fear
of the judgment to come. But as shame itself is a heavy punishment, God
therefore bids us confess our sins that we may suffer this shame as
punishment; for that itself is a part of the judgment.
RABANUS; Rightly are they who are to be baptized said to go out to the
Prophet; for unless one depart from sin, and renounce the pomp of the
Devil, and the temptations of the world, he cannot receive a healing
baptism. Rightly also in Jordan, which means their descent, because
they descended from the pride of life to the humility of an honest
confession. Thus early was an example given to them that are to be
baptized of confessing their sins and professing amendment.
7. But when he saw many of the Pharisees and Sadducees come to
his baptism, he said to them, O generation of vipers, who has warned
you to flee from the wrath to come?
8. Bring forth therefore fruits meet for repentance;
9. And think not to say within yourselves, We have Abraham to our
father; for I say to you, that God is able of these stones to raise up
children to Abraham.
10. And now also the ax is laid to the root of the trees; therefore
every tree which brings not forth good fruit is hewn down, and cast
into the fire.
GREG. The words of the teachers should be fitted to the quality of the
hearers, that in each particular it should agree, with itself and yet
never depart from the fortress of general edification.
GLOSS. It was necessary that after the teaching which he used to the
common people, the Evangelist should give an example of the doctrine he
delivered to the more advanced; therefore he says, Seeing many of the
Pharisees, &c.
ISID. The Pharisees and Sadducees opposed to one another; Pharisee in
the Hebrew signifies 'divided,' because choosing the justification of
traditions and observances they were 'divided' or 'separated' from the
people by this righteousness. Sadducee in the Hebrew means 'just'; for
these laid clam to be what they were not, denied the resurrection of
the body, and taught that the soul perished with the body; they only
received the Pentateuch, and rejected the Prophets.
GLOSS. When John saw those who seemed to be of great consideration
among the Jews come to his baptism, he said to them, O generation of
vipers, &c.
REMIG. The manner of Scripture is to give names from the imitation of
deeds, according to that of Ezekiel, Your father was an Amorite
(Ezek 16:3); so these from following vipers are called generation of vipers.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. As a skillful physician from the color of the skin infers
the sick man's disease, so John understood the evil thoughts of the
Pharisees who came to him. They thought perhaps, We go, and confess our
sins; he imposes no burden on us, we will be baptized, and get
indulgence for sin. Fools! if you have eaten of impurity, must you not
needs take physic? So after confession and baptism, a man needs much
diligence to heal the wound of sin; therefore he Says, Generation of
vipers. It is the nature of the viper as soon as it has bitten a man to
fly to the water, which, if it cannot find, it straightway dies; so
this progeny of vipers, after having committed deadly sin, ran to
baptism, that, like vipers, they might escape death by means of water.
Moreover it is the nature of vipers to burst the insides of their
mothers, and so to be born. The Jews then are therefore called progeny
of vipers, because by continual persecution of the prophets they had
corrupted their mother the Synagogue. Also vipers have a beautiful and
speckled outside, but are filled with poison within. So these men's
countenances wore a holy appearance.
REMIG. When then he asks, who will show you to flee from the wrath to come, - 'except God' must be understood.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Or who has shown you? Was it Esaias? Surely no; had he
taught you, you would not put your trust in water only, but also in
good works; he thus speaks, Wash you, and be clean; put your wickedness
away from in your souls, learn to do well. Was it then David? who says,
You shall wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow; surely not, for he
adds immediately, The sacrifice of God is a broken spirit. If then you
had been the disciples of David, you would have come to baptism with
mournings.
REMIG. But if we read, shall show, in the future, this is the meaning,
'What teacher, what preacher, shall be able to give you such counsel,
as that you may escape the wrath of everlasting damnation?'
AUG. God is described in Scripture, from some likeness of effects, not
from being subject to such weakness, not as being angry, and yet is He
never moved by any passion. The word 'wrath' is applied to the effects
of his vengeance, not that God suffers any disturbing affection.
GLOSS. If then you would escape this wrath, Bring forth fruits meet for repentance.
GREG. Observe, he says not merely fruits of repentance, but fruits meet
for repentance. For he who has never fallen into things unlawful, is of
right allowed the use of all things lawful; but if any have fallen into
sin, he ought so far to put away from him even things lawful, as far as
he is conscious of having used unlawful things. It is left then to such
man's conscience to seek so much the greater gains of good works by
repentance, the greater loss he has brought on himself by sin. The Jews
who gloried in their race, would not own themselves sinners because
they were Abraham's seed. Say not among yourselves we are Abraham's
seed.
CHRYS. He does not forbid them to say they are his, but to trust in that, neglecting virtues of the soul.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. What avails noble birth to him whose life is disgraceful?
Or, on the other hand, what hurt is a low origin to him who has the
luster of virtue? It is fitter that the parents of such a son should
rejoice over him, than he over his parents. So do not you pride
yourselves on having Abraham for your father, rather blush that you
inherit his blood, but not his holiness. He who has no resemblance to
his father is possibly the offspring of adultery. These words then only
exclude boasting on account of birth.
RABANUS. Because as a preacher of truth he wished to stir them up, to
bring forth fruit meet for repentance, he invites them to humility,
without which no one can repent.
REMIG. There is a tradition, that John preached at that place of the
Jordan, where the twelve stones taken from the bed of the river had
been set up by command of God. He might then be pointing to these, when
he said, Of these stones.
JEROME. He intimates God's great power, who, as He made all things out of nothing, can make men out of the hardest stone.
GLOSS. It is faith's first lesson to believe that God is able to do whatever He will.
CHRYSOST. That men should be made out of stones, is like Isaac coming
from Sarah's womb; Look into the rock, says Isaiah, whence you were
hewn. Reminding them thus of this prophecy, he shows that it is
possible that the like might even now happen.
RABANUS;Otherwise, the Gentiles may be meant who worshipped stones.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Stone is hard to work, but when wrought to some shape, it
loses it not; so the Gentiles were hardly brought to the faith, but
once brought they abide in it forever.
JEROME. These stones signify the Gentiles because of their hardness of
heart. See Ezekiel, I will take away from you the heart of stone, and
give you the heart of flesh. Stone is emblematic of hardness, flesh of
softness.
RABAN. Of stones there were sons raised up to Abraham; forasmuch as the
Gentiles by believing in Christ, who is Abraham's seed, became his sons
to whose seed they were united.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. The ax is that most sharp fury of the consummation of all
things, that is to hew down the whole world. But if it be already laid,
how has it not yet cut down? Because these trees have reason and free
power to do good, or leave undone; so that when they see the ax laid to
their root, they may fear and bring forth fruit. This denunciation of
wrath then, which is meant by the having of the ax to the root, though
it have no effect on the bad, yet will sever the good from the bad.
JEROME. Or, the preaching of the Gospel is meant, as the Prophet
Jeremiah also compares the Word of the Lord to an ax cleaving the rock.
GREG. Or, the ax signifies the Redeemer, who as an ax of haft and
blade, so consisting of the Divine and human nature, is held by His
human, but cuts by His Divine nature. And though this ax be laid at the
root of the tree waiting in patience, it is yet seen what it will do;
for each obstinate sinner who here neglects the fruit of good works,
finds the fire of hell ready for him. Observe, the ax is laid to the
root, not to the branches; for that when the children of wickedness are
removed, the branches only of the unfruitful tree are cut away. But
when the whole offspring with their parent is carried off, the
unfruitful tree is cut down by the root, that there remain not whence
the evil shoots should spring up again.
CHRYS. By saying Every, he cuts off all privilege of nobility, as much
as to say, Though you be the son of Abraham, if you abide fruitless you
shall suffer the punishment.
RABANUS. There are four sorts of trees: the first totally withered, to
which the Pagans may be likened; the second green but unfruitful, as
the hypocrites; the third, green and fruitful, but poisonous, such are
heretics; the fourth, green and bringing forth good fruit, to which are
like the good Catholics.
GREG. Therefore every tree that brings not forth good fruit shall be
cut down and cast into the fire, because he who here neglects to bring
forth the fruit of good works finds a fire in hell prepared for him.
11. I indeed baptize you with water to repentance; but He that
comes after me is mightier than I, Whose shoes I am not worthy to bear;
He shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost, and with fire;
12. Whose fan is in His hand, and He will thoroughly purge His floor,
and gather His wheat into the garner; but He will burn up the chaff
with unquenchable fire.
GLOSS. As in the preceding words John had explained more at length what
he had shortly preached in the words, Repent you, so now fellows a more
full enlargement of the words, The kingdom of heaven is at hand.
GREG. John baptizes not with the Spirit but with water, because he had
no power to forgive sins; he washes the body with water, but not at
time same time the soul with pardon of sin.
CHRYSOST. For while as yet the sacrifice had not been offered, nor
remission of sin sent, nor the Spirit had descended on the water, how
could sin be forgiven? But since the Jews never perceived their own
sin, and this was the cause of all their evils, John came to bring them
to a sense of them by calling them to repentance.
GREG. Why then does he baptize who could not remit sin, but that he may
preserve in all things the office of forerunner? As his birth had
preceded Christ's birth, so his baptism should precede the Lord's
baptism.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Or, John was sent to baptize, that to such as came to his
baptism he might announce the presence among them of the Lord in the
flesh, as he testifies in another place, That He might be manifested to
Israel, therefore am I come to baptize with water (John 1:31).
AUG. Or, he baptizes, because it was fitting Christ to be baptized. But
if indeed John was sent only to baptize Christ, why was not He alone
baptized by John? Because had the Lord alone been baptized by John,
there would not have lacked who should insist that John's baptism was
greater than Christ's, inasmuch as Christ alone had the merit to be
baptized by it.
RABANUS;Or, by this sign of baptism he separates the penitent from the impenitent, and directs them to the baptism of Christ.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Because then he baptized on account of Christ, therefore
to them who came to him for baptism he preached that Christ should
come, signifying the eminence of His power in the words, He who comes
after me is mightier than I.
REMIG. There are five points in which Christ comes after John: His
birth, preaching, baptism, death, and descent into hell. A beautiful
expression is that, mightier than I, because he is mere man, the other
is God and man.
RABAN. As though he had said, I indeed am mighty to invite to
repentance, He to forgive sins; I to preach the kingdom of heaven, He
to bestow it; I to baptize with water, He with the Spirit.
CHRYS.When you hear for He is mightier than I, do not Suppose this to
be said by way of comparison, for I am not worthy to be numbered among
his servants, that I might undertake the lowest office.
HILARY. Leaving to the Apostles the glory of bearing about the Gospel,
to whose beautiful feet was due the carrying the tidings of God's peace.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Or, by the feet of Christ we may understand Christians,
especially the Apostles, and other preachers, among whom was John
Baptist; and the shoes are the infirmities with which he loads the
preachers. These shoes all Christ's preachers wear; and John also wore
them, but declares himself unworthy, that he might show the grace of
Christ, and be greater than his deserts.
JEROME; In the other Gospels it is, whose shoe latchet I am not worthy
to loose. Here his humility, there his ministry is intended; Christ is
the Bridegroom, and John is not worthy to loose the Bridegroom's shoe,
that his house be not called according to the Law of Moses and the
example of Ruth, The house of him that has his shoe loosed (Deut
25:10).
PSEUDO-CHRYS. But since no one can give a benefit more worthy than he
himself is, nor to make another what himself is not, he adds, He shall
baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with fire. John who is carnal
cannot give spiritual baptism; he baptizes with water, which is matter;
so that he baptizes matter with matter. Christ is Spirit, because He is
God; the Holy Ghost is Spirit, the soul is spirit; so that Spirit with
Spirit baptizes our spirit. The baptism of the Spirit profits as the
Spirit enters and embraces the mind, and surrounds it as it were with
an impregnable wall, not suffering fleshly lusts to prevail against it.
It does not indeed prevail that the flesh should not lust, but holds
the will that it should not consent with it. And as Christ is Judge, He
baptizes in fire, i.e. temptation; mere man cannot baptize in fire; he
alone is free to tempt, who is strong to reward. This baptism of
tribulation burns up the flesh that it does not generate lust, for the
flesh does not fear spiritual punishment, but only such as is carnal.
The Lord therefore sends carnal tribulation on his servants, that the
flesh fearing its own pains, may not lust after evil. See then how the
Spirit drives away lust, and suffers it not to prevail, and the fire
burns up its very roots.
JEROME; Either the Holy Ghost Himself is a fire, as we learn from the
Acts, when there sat as it were fire on the tongues of the believers;
and thus the word of the Lord was fulfilled who said, I am come to send
fire on the earth, I will that it burn (Luke 12:49). Or, we are
baptized now with the Spirit, hereafter with fire; as the Apostle
speaks, Fire shall try every man's work, of what sort it is.
CHRYS. He does not say, shall give you the Holy Ghost, but shall
baptize you in the Holy Ghost, showing in metaphor the abundance of the
grace. This further shows, that even under the faith there is need of
the will alone for justification, not of labors and toilings; and even
as easy a thing as it is to be baptized, even so easy a thing it is to
be changed and made better. By fire he signifies the strength of grace
which cannot be overcome, and that it may be understood that he makes
His own people at once like to the great and old prophets, most of the
prophetic visions were by fire.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. It is plain then that the baptisms of Christ does not
undo the baptism of John, but includes it in itself; he who is baptized
in Christ's name has both baptisms, that of water and that of the
Spirit. For Christ is Spirit, and has taken to Him the body that He
might give both bodily and spiritual baptism. John's baptism does not
include in it the baptism of Christ, because the less cannot include
the greater. Thus the Apostle having found certain Ephesians baptized
with John's baptism, baptized them again in the name of Christ, because
they had not been baptized in the Spirit; thus Christ baptized a second
time those who bad been baptized by John, as John himself declared he
should, I baptize you with water; but He shall baptize you with the
Spirit. And yet they were not baptized twice but once; for as the
baptism of Christ was more than that of John, it was a new one given,
not the same repeated.
HILARY; He marks the time of our salvation and judgment in the Lord;
those who are baptized in the Holy Ghost it remains that they be
consummated by the fire of judgment.
RABANUS; By the fan is signified the separation of a just trial; that
it is in the Lord's hand means, 'in His power,' as it is written, the
Father has committed all judgment to the Son.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. The floor is the Church; the barn, is the kingdom of
heaven, the field, is the world. The Lord sends forth His Apostles and
other teachers, as reapers to reap all nations of the earth, and gather
them into the floor of the Church. Here we must be threshed and
winnowed, for all men are delighted in carnal things as grain delights
in the husk. But whoever is faithful and has the marrow of a good
heart, as soon as he has a light tribulation, neglecting carnal things
runs to the Lord; but if his faith be feeble, hardly with heavy sorrow;
and he who is altogether void of faith, however he may be troubled,
passes not over to God. The wheat when first thrashed lies in one heap
with chaff and straw, and is after winnowed to separate it; so the
faithful are mixed up in one Church with the unfaithful; butt
persecution comes as a wind, that, tossed by Christ's fan, they whose
hearts were separate before, may be also now separated in place. He
shall not merely cleanse, but thoroughly cleanse; therefore the Church
must needs be tried in many ways till this be accomplished. And first
the Jews winnowed it, then the Gentiles, now the heretics, and after a
time shall Antichrist thoroughly winnow it. For as when the blast is
gentle, only the lighter chaff is carried off; but the heavier remains;
so a slight wind of temptation carries off the worst characters only;
but should a greater storm arise, even those who seem steadfast will
depart. There is need then of heavier persecution that the Church
should be cleansed.
REMIG. This His floor, to wit, the Church, the Lord cleanses in this
life, both when by the sentence of the Priests the bad are put out of
the Church, and when they are cut off by death.
RABAN. The cleansing of the floor will then be finally accomplished,
when the Son of Man shall send His Angels, and shall gather all
offenses out of His kingdom.
GREG. After the threshing is finished in this life, in which the grain
now groans under the burden of the chaff, the fan of the last judgment
shall so separate between them, that neither shall any chaff pass into
the granary, nor shall the grain fall into the fire which consumes the
chaff.
HILARY; The wheat, i.e the full and perfect fruit of the believer, he
declares, shall be laid up in heavenly barns; by the chaff he means the
emptiness of the unfruitful.
RABAN. There is this difference between the chaff and the tares, that
the chaff is produced of the same seed as the wheat, but the tares from
one of another kind. The chaff therefore are those who enjoy the
sacraments of the faith, but are not solid; the tares are those who in
profession as well as in works are separated from the lot of the good.
REMIG. The unquenchable fire is the punishment of eternal damnation,
either because it never totally destroys or consumes those it has once
seized on, but torments them eternally, or to distinguish it from
purgatorial fire which is kindled for a time and again extinguished.
AUG. If any asks which were the actual words spoken by John, whether
those reported by Matthew, or by Luke, or by Mark, it may be shown,
that there is no difficulty here to him who rightly understands that
the sense is essential to our knowledge of the truth, but the words
indifferent. And it is clear we ought not to deem any testimony false,
because the same fact is related by several persons who were present in
different words and different ways. Whoever thinks that the Evangelists
might have been so inspired by the Holy Ghost that they should have
differed among themselves neither in the choice, nor the number, nor
the order of their words, he does not see that by how much the
authority of the Evangelists is preeminent, so much the more is to be
by them established the veracity of other men in the same
circumstances. But the discrepancy may seem to be in the thing, and not
only in words, between, I am not worthy to bear His shoes, and, to
loose His shoe-latchet. Which of these two expressions did John use? He
who has reported the very words will seem to have spoken truth; he who
has given other words, though he has not hid, or been forgetful, yet
has he said one thing for another. But the Evangelists should be clear
of every kind of falseness, not only that of lying, but also that of
forgetfulness. If then this discrepancy be important, we may suppose
John to have used both expressions, either at different times, or both
at the same time. But if he only meant to express the Lord's greatness
and his own humility, whether he used one or the other the sense is
preserved, though any one should in his own words repeat the same
profession of humility using the figure of the shoes; their will and
intention does not differ. This then is a useful rule and one to be
remembered, that it is no lie, when one fairly represents his meaning
whose speech one is recounting, though one uses other words; if only
one shows our meaning to be the same with his. Thus understood it is a
wholesome direction, that we are to inquire only after the meaning of
the speaker.
13. Then comes Jesus from Galilee to Jordan to John, to be baptized of him.
14. But John forbade Him, saying, I have need to be baptized of You, and You come to me?
15. And Jesus answering said to him, Suffer it to he so now, for thus
it becomes us to fulfill all righteousness. Then he suffered Him.
GLOSS. Christ having been proclaimed to the world by time preaching of
His forerunner, now after long obscurity will manifest Himself to men.
REMIG. In this verse is contained person, place, time, and office. Time, in the word, Then.
RABAN. That is, when He was thirty years old, showing that none should
be ordained priest, or even to preach till He be of full age. Joseph at
thirty years was made governor of Egypt; David began to reign, and
Ezekiel his prophesying at the same age.
CHRYS. Because after His baptism Christ was to put an end to the Law,
tie therefore came to be baptized at this age, that having so kept the
Law, it might not be said that He canceled it, because He could not
observe it.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Then, that is when John preached, that He might confirm
his preaching, and Himself receive his witness. But as when the
morning-star has risen, the sun does not wait for that star to set, but
rising as it goes forward, gradually obscures its brightness, so Christ
waited not for John to finish his course, but appeared while he yet
taught.
REMIG. The Persons are described in the words, came Jesus to John; that
is, God to man, the Lord to His servant, the King to His soldier, the
Light to the lamp. The Place, from Galilee to Jordan. Galilee means
'transmigration.' Whoso then will be baptized, must pass from vice to
virtue, and humble himself in coming to baptism, for Jordan means
'descent.'
AMBROSE; Scripture tells of many wonders wrought at various times in
this river; as that, among others, in the Psalms, Jordan was driven
backwards (Psalms 114:3); before the water was driven back, now sins
are turned back in its current; as Elijah divided the waters of old, so
Christ the Lord wrought in the same Jordan the separation of sin.
REMIG. The office to be performed: that He might be baptized of him;
not baptism to the remission of sins, but to leave the water sanctified
for those after to be baptized.
AUG. The Savior willed to be baptized not that He might Himself be
cleansed, but to cleanse the water for us. From the time that Himself
was dipped in time water, from that time has He washed away all our
sins in water. And let none wonder that water, itself corporeal
substance, is said to be effectual to the purification of the soul; it
is so effectual, reaching to and searching out the hidden recesses of
the conscience. Subtle and penetrating in its own nature, made yet more
so by Christ's blessing, it touches the hidden springs of life, the
secret places of the soul, by virtue of its all-pervading dew. The
course of blessing is even yet more penetrating than the flow of
waters. Thus the blessing which like a spiritual river flows on from
the Savior's baptism, has filled the basins of all pools, and the
courses of all fountains.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. He comes to baptism, that He who has taken upon Him human
nature, may be found to have fulfilled the whole mystery of that
nature; not that He is Himself a sinner, but He has taken on Himself a
nature that is sinful. And therefore though He needed not baptism
Himself, yet the carnal nature in others needed it.
AMBROSE; Also like a wise master inculcating His doctrines as much by
His own practice as by word of mouth, He did that which He commanded
all His disciples to do.
AUG. He deigned to be baptized of John that the servants might see with
what readiness they ought to run to the baptism of the Lord, when He
did not refuse to be baptized of His servant.
JEROME; Also that by being Himself baptized, He might sanction the baptism of John.
CHRYS. But since John's baptism was to repentance, and therefore showed
the presence of sin, that none might suppose Christ's coming to the
Jordan to have been on this account, John cried to Him, I have need to
be baptized of You, and come You to me? As if he had said,
PSEUDO-CHRYS. That You should baptize me there is good cause, that I
may be made righteous and worthy of heaven; but that I should baptize
You, what cause is there? Every good gift comes down from heaven upon
earth, not ascends from earth to heaven.
HILARY; John rejects Him from baptism as God; He teaches him, that it ought to be performed on Him as man.
JEROME; Beautifully said is that now, to show that as Christ was
baptized with water by John, so John must be baptized by Christ with
the Spirit. Or, suffer now that I who have taken the form of a servant
should fulfill all that low estate; otherwise know that in the day of
judgment you must be baptized with my baptism. Or, the Lord says,
'Suffer this now; I have also another baptism wherewithal I must be
baptized; you baptize Me with water, that I may baptize you for Me with
my own blood.'
PSEUDO-CHRYS. In this he shows that Christ after this baptized John,
which is expressly told in some apocryphal books . Suffer now that I
fulfill the righteousness of baptism in deed, and not only in word;
first submitting to it, and then preaching it; for so it becomes us to
fulfill all righteousness. Not that by being baptized He fulfills all
righteousness, but so, in time same manner, that is, as He first
fulfilled the righteousness of baptism by His deeds, and after preached
it, so He might all other righteousness, according to that of the Acts,
All things that Jesus began both to do and to teach. Or thus, all
righteousness, according to the ordinance of human nature; as He had
before fulfilled the righteousness of birth, growth, and the like.
HILARY; For by Him must all righteousness have been fulfilled, by whom alone the Law could be fulfilled.
JEROME. Righteousness; but he adds neither 'of the Law,' nor 'of nature,' that we may understand it of both.
REMIG. Or thus, it becomes us to fulfill all righteousness, that is, to
give an example of perfect justification in baptism, without which the
gate of the kingdom of heaven is not opened. Hence let the proud take
an example of humility, and not scorn to be baptized by My humble
members when they see Me baptized by John My servant. That is true
humility which obedience accompanies; as it continues, then he suffered
Him, that is, at last consented to baptize Him.
16. And Jesus, when He was baptized, went up straightway out of
the water; and, lo, the heavens were opened to Him, and He saw the
Spirit of God descending like a dove, and lighting upon Him.
AMBROSE;For, as we have said, when the Savior was washed, then the
water was cleansed for our baptism, that a laver might be ministered to
time people who were to come. Moreover, it is necessary that in
Christ's baptism should be signified those things which the faithful
obtain by baptism.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. This action of Christ's has a figurative meaning
pertaining to all who were after Him to be baptized; and therefore he
says, straightway He ascended, and not simply He ascended, for all who
are worthily baptized in Christ, straightway ascend from the water;
that is, make progress in virtues, and are carried on towards a
heavenly dignity. They who had gone down to the water carnal and sinful
sons of Adam, straightway ascend from the water spiritual sons of God.
But if some by their own faults make no progress after baptism, what is
that to the baptism?
RABANUS;As by the immersion of His body He dedicated the laver of
baptism, He has shown that to us also after baptism received the
entrance to heaven is open, and the Holy Spirit is given, as it
follows, and the heavens were opened.
JEROME. Not by an actual cleaving of the visible element, but to the
spiritual eye, as Ezekiel also in the beginning of his book relates
that he saw them.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. For had the actual creation of the heavens been opened,
he would not have said were opened to Him, for a physical opening would
have been open to all. But some one will say, What, are the heavens
then closed to the eye of the Son of God, who even when on earth is
present in heaven? But it must be known, that as He was baptized
according to the ordinance of humanity that He had taken on Him, so the
heavens were opened to His sight as to His human nature, though as to
His divine He was in heaven.
REMIG. But was this then the first time that the heavens were opened to
Him according to His human nature? The faith of the Church both
believes and holds that the heavens were no less open to Him before
than after. It is therefore said here, that the heavens were opened
because to all them who are born again the door of the kingdom of
heaven is opened.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. Perhaps there were before some unseen obstacles which
hindered the souls of the dead from entering the skies. I suppose that
since Adam's sin no soul had mounted the skies, but the heavens were
continually closed. When, lo, on Christ's baptism they were again
opened; after He had overcome by the Cross the great tyrant death,
henceforward the heaven, never more to be closed, needed not gates, so
that the Angels say not, 'Open the gates,' for they were open, but take
away the gates. Or the heavens are opened to the baptized, and they see
those things which are in heaven, not by seeing them with the bodily
eye, but by believing with the spiritual eye of faith. Or thus; The
heavens are the divine Scriptures, which all read but all do not
understand, except they who have been so baptized as to receive the
Holy Spirit. Thus the Scriptures of the Prophets were at the first
sealed to the Apostles, but after they had received the Holy Spirit,
all Scripture was opened to them. However, in whatever way we
interpret, the heavens were opened to Him, that is to all, on His
account; as if the Emperor were to say to anyone preferring a petition
for another, This favor I grant not to him but to you; that is, to him,
for your sake.
GLOSS. Or, so bright a glory shone round about Christ, that the blue concave seemed to he actually cloven.
CHRYS. But though you see it not, be not therefore unbelieving, for in
the beginnings of spiritual matters sensible visions are always
offered, for their sakes who can form no idea of things that have no
body; which if they occur not in later times, yet faith may be
established by those wonders once wrought.
REMIG. As to all those who by baptism are born again, the door of the
kingdom of heaven is opened, so all in baptism receive the gifts of the
Holy Spirit.
AUG. Christ after He had been once born among men, is born a second
time in the sacraments, that as we adore Him then born of a pure
mother, so we may now receive Him immersed in pure water. His mother
brought forth her Son, and is yet virgin; the wave washed Christ, and
is holy. Lastly, that Holy Spirit which was present to Him in the womb,
now shone round Him in the water, He who then made Mary pure, now
sanctifies the waters.
PSEUDO-CHRYS. The Holy Ghost took the likeness of a dove, as being more
than other animals susceptible of love. All other forms of
righteousness which the servants of God have in truth and verity, the
servants of the Devil have in spurious imitation; the love of the Holy
Spirit alone an unclean spirit cannot imitate. And the Holy Ghost has
therefore reserved to Himself this special manifestation of love,
because by no testimony is it so clearly seen where He dwells as by the
grace of love.
RABAN. Seven excellencies in the baptized are figured by the dove. The
dove has her abode near the rivers, that when the hawk is seen, she may
dive under water and escape; she chooses the better grains of corn; she
feeds the young of other birds; she does not tear with her beak; she
lacks a gall; she has her rest in the caverns of the rocks; for her
song she has a plaint. Thus the saints dwell beside the streams of
Divine Scripture, that they may escape the assaults of the Devil; they
choose wholesome doctrine, and not heretical for their food; they
nourish by teaching and example, men who have been the children of the
Devil, i. e the imitators; they do not pervert good doctrine by tearing
it to pieces as the heretics do; they are without hate irreconcilable;
they build their nest in the wounds of Christ's death, which is to them
a firm rock, that is their refuge and hope; as others delight in song,
so do they in groaning for their sin.
CHRYS. It is moreover an allusion to ancient history; for in the deluge
this creature appeared bearing an olive-branch, and tidings of rest to
the world. All which things were a type of things to come. For now also
a dove appears pointing out to us our liberator, and for an
olive-branch bringing the adoption of the human race.
AUG. It is easy to understand how the Holy Ghost should be said to be
sent, when as it were a dove in visible shape descended on the Lord;
that is, there was created a certain appearance for the time in which
the Holy Spirit might be visibly shown. And this operation thus made
visible and offered to mortal view, is called the mission of the Holy
Spirit, not that His invisible substance was seen, but that the hearts
of men might be roused by the external appearance to contemplate the
unseen eternity. Yet this creature in the shape of which the Spirit
appeared, was not taken into unity of person, as was that human shape
taken of the Virgin. For neither did the Spirit bless the dove, nor
unite it with Himself for all eternity, in unity of person. Further,
though that dove is called the Spirit, so far as to show that in this
dove was a manifestation of the Spirit, yet can we not say of the Holy
Spirit that He is God and dove, as we say, of the Son that He is God
and man; and yet it is not as we say of the Son that He is the Lamb of
God, as not only has John Baptist declared, but as John the Evangelist
saw the vision of the Lamb slain in the Apocalypse. For this was a
prophetic vision, not put before the bodily eyes in bodily shape, but
seen in the Spirit in spiritual images. But concerning this dove none
ever doubted that it was seen with the bodily eye; not that we say the
Spirit is a dove as we say Christ is a rock; (for that Rock was
Christ.) For that Rock already existed as a creature, and from the
resemblance of its operation was called by the name of Christ, (whom it
figured;) not so this dove, which was created at the moment for this
single purpose. It seems to me to be more like the flame which appeared
to Moses in the bush, or that which the people followed in the
wilderness, or to the thunderings and lightings which were when the Law
was given from the mount. For all these were visible objects intended
to signify something, and then to pass away. For that such forms have
been from time to time seen, the Holy Spirit is said to have been sent;
but these bodily forms appeared for the time to show what was required,
and then ceased to be.
JEROME; It sat on the head of Jesus, that none might suppose the voice of the Father spoken to John, and not to the Lord.
17. And lo a voice from heaven, Saying, This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.
AUG. Not as before by Moses and the Prophets, neither in type or figure
did the Father teach that the Son should come, but openly showed Him to
be already come, This is my Son.
HILARY; Or, that from these things thus fulfilled upon Christ, we might
learn that after the washing of water the Holy Spirit also descends on
us from the heavenly gates, on us also is shed an unction of heavenly
glory, and an adoption to be the sons of God, pronounced by the
Father's voice.
JEROME; The mystery of the Trinity is shown in this baptism. The Lord
is baptized; the Spirit descends in shape of a dove; the voice of the
Father is heard giving testimony to the Son.
AMBROSE; Amid no wonder that the mystery of the Trinity is not wanting
to the Lord's laver when even our laver contains the sacrament of the
Trinity. The Lord willed to show in His own case what He was after to
ordain for men.
PSEUDO-AUG. Though Father, Son and Holy Ghost are one nature, yet do
you hold most firmly that They be Three Persons; that it is the Father
alone who said, This is my beloved Son; the Son alone over whom that
voice of the Father was heard; and the Holy Ghost alone who in the
likeness of a clove descended on Christ at His baptism.
AUG. Here are deeds of the whole Trinity. In their own substance indeed
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are One without interval of either place
or time; but in my mouth they are three separate words, and cannot be
pronounced at the same time, and in written letters they fill each
their several places. By this comparison maybe understood how the
Trinity in Itself indivisible may be manifested dividedly in the
likeness of a visible creation. That the voice is that of the Father
only is manifest from the words This is my Son.
HILARY; He witnesses that He is His Son not in name merely, but in very
kindred. Sons of God are we many of us; but not as He is a Son, a
proper and true Son, in verity, not in estimation, by birth, not
adoption.
AUG. The Father loves the Son, but as a father should, not as a master
may love a servant; and that as an own Son, not an adopted; therefore
He adds, in whom I am well-pleased.
REMIG. Or if it be referred to the human nature of Christ, the sense
is, I am pleased in Him, whom alone I have found without sin. Or
according to another reading, It has pleased me to appoint Him, by whom
to perform those things I would perform, i.e. the redemption of the
human race.
AUG. These words Mark and Luke give in the same way; in the words of
the voice that came from Heaven, their expression varies though the
sense is the same. For both the words as Matthew gives them, This is my
beloved son, and as the other two, You are my beloved Son, express the
same sense in the speaker; (and the heavenly voice, no doubt, uttered
one of these,) but One shows an intention of addressing the testimony
thus born to the Son to those who stood by; the other of addressing it
to Himself, as if speaking to Christ he had said, This is my Son. Not
that Christ was taught what He knew before, but they who stood by heard
it, for whose sake the voice came. Again, when one says, in whom I am
well-pleased; another, in you it has pleased me, if you ask which of
these was actually pronounced by that voice; take which you will, only
remembering that those who have not related the same words as were
spoken have related the same sense. That God is well-pleased with His
Son is signified in the first; that the Father is by the Son pleased
with men is conveyed in the second form, in you it has well-pleased me.
Or you may understand this to have been the one meaning of all the
Evangelists, In you have I put My good pleasure, i.e. to fulfill all My
purpose.
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