catena aurea matthew 9
1. And he entered into a ship, and passed over, and came into his own city.
2. And, behold, they brought to him a man sick of the palsy, lying on a
bed: and Jesus seeing their faith said to the sick of the palsy, Son,
be of good cheer; your sins are forgiven you.
3. And, behold, certain of the Scribes said within themselves, This man blasphemes.
4. And Jesus knowing their thoughts said, Why do you think evil in your hearts?
5. For whether is easier, to say, Your sins are forgiven you; or to say, Arise, and walk?
6. But that you may know that the Son of man has power on earth to
forgive sins, (then he said to the sick of the palsy,) Arise, take up
your bed, and go to your house.
7. And he arose, and departed to his house.
8. But when the multitude saw it, they marveled, and glorified God, which had given such power to men.
CHRYS; Christ had above shown His excellent power by teaching, when he
taught them as one having authority; in the leper, when He said, I
will, be clean; by the centurion, who said to Him, Speak the word, and
my servant shall be healed; by the sea which He calmed by a word; by
the demons who confessed Him; now again, in another and greater way, He
compels His enemies to confess the equality of His honor with the
Father; to this end it proceeds, And Jesus entered into a shop and
passed over and came into his own city. He entered a boat to cross
over, who could have crossed the sea on foot; for He would not be
always working miracles, that He might not take away the reality of His
incarnation.
CHRYSOLOGUS; The Creator of all things, the Lord of the world, when He
had for our sakes straitened Himself in the bonds of our flesh, began
to have His own country as a man, began to be a citizen of Judea, and
to have parents, though Himself the parent of all, that affection might
attach those whom fear had separated.
CHRYS; By his own city is here meant Capernaum. For one town, to wit,
Bethlehem, had received Him to be born there; another had brought Him
up, to wit, Nazareth; and a third received Him to dwell there
continually namely Capernaum.
AUG; That Matthew here speaks of his own city, and Mark calls it
Capernaum, would be more difficult to be reconciled if Matthew had
expressed it Nazareth. But as it is, all Galilee might be called
Christ's city, because Nazareth was in Galilee; just as all the Roman
empire, divided into many states, was still called the Roman city. Who
can doubt then that the Lord in coming to Galilee is rightly said to
come into his own city, whatever was the town in which He abode,
especially since Capernaum was exalted into the metropolis of Galilee?
JEROME; Or This city may be no other than Nazareth, whence He was called a Nazarene;
AUG; And if we adopt this supposition, We must say that Matthew has
omitted all that was done from the time that Jesus entered into His own
city till he came into Capernaum, and has proceeded on at once to the
healing of the paralytic; as in many other places they pass over things
that intervened, and carry on the thread of the narrative, without
noticing any interval of time, to something else; so here, And, lo,
they bring to him a paralytic laying on a bed.
CHRYS; This paralytic is not the same as the one in John. For he lay by
the pool, this in Capliarnanun; he had none to assist him, this one was
borne on a bed.
JEROME; On a bed, because he could not walk.
CHRYS; He does not universally demand faith of the sick, as, for
example, when they are mad or from any other sore sickness are in
possession of their minds; as it is here, seeing their faith.
JEROME; not time sick man's, but theirs that bore him.
CHRYS; Seeing then that they showed so great faith He also shows His
excellent power; with full power forgiving sin, as it follows, He said
to the paralytic, Be of courage, son, your sins are forgiven you.
CHRYSOLOGUS; Of how great power with God must a man's own faith be,
when that of others here availed to heal a man both within and without.
The paralytic hears his pardon pronounced, in silence uttering no
thanks, for he was more anxious for the cure of his body than his soul.
Christ therefore with good reason accepts the faith of those that bore
him rather than his own hardness of heart.
CHRYS. Or, we may suppose even the sick man to have had faith;
otherwise he would not have suffered himself to be let down through the
roof as other Evangelist relates.
JEROME; O wonderful humility! This man feeble and despised, crippled in
every limb, addresses as son. The Jewish Priests did not deign to touch
him. Even therefore His son, because his sins were forgiven him. Hence
we may learn that diseases are often the punishment of sin; and
therefore perhaps his sins are forgiven him, that when the cause of his
disease has been removed, health may be restored.
CHRYS; The Scribes in their desire to spread an ill report of Him,
against their will made that which was done be more widely known;
Christ using their envy to make known the miracle. For this is of His
surpassing wisdom to manifest His deeds through His enemies; whence it
follows, Behold, some of the Scribes said among themselves, This man
blasphemes.
JEROME; We read in prophecy, I am he that blots out your
transgressions; so the Scribes regarding Him as a man, and not
understanding the words of God, charged Him with blasphemy. But He
seeing their thoughts thus showed Himself to be God, Who alone knows
the heart; and thus, as it were, said, By the same power and
prerogative by which I see your thoughts, I can forgive them their
sins. Learn from your own experience what the paralytic has obtained.
When Jesus perceived their thoughts, he said, Why do you think evil in
your hearts?
CHRYS; He did not indeed contradict their suspicions so far as they had
supposed Him to have spoken as God. For had He not been equal to God
the Father, it would have been necessary Him to say, I am far from this
power, that of forgiving sin. But He confirms the contrary of this, by
His words and His miracle; Whether is it easier to say, Your sins are
forgiven you, or to say, Arise, and walk? By how much the soul is
better than the body, by so much is it a greater thing to forgive sin
than to heal the body. But forasmuch as the one may be scene with the
eyes, but the other is not sensibly perceived, He does the lesser
miracle which is the more evident, to be a proof of the greater miracle
which is imperceptible.
JEROME; Whether or no his sins were forgiven He alone could know who
forgave; but whether he could rise and walk, not Only himself but they
that looked on could judge of; but the power that heals, whether soul
or body, is the same. And as there is a great difference between saying
and doing, the outward Sign is given that the Spiritual effect may be
proved; But that you may know that the Son of Man has power on earth to
forgive sins.
CHRYS; Above, He said to the paralytic, Your sins are forgiven you,
not, I forgive you your sins; but now when the Scribes made resistance,
He shows the greatness of His power by saying, The Son of Man has power
on earth to forgive sins. And to show that He was equal to the Father,
He said not that the Son of Man needed any to forgive sins, but that He
has power.
GLOSS; These words That you may know, may be either Christ's words, or
the Evangelist's words. As though the Evangelist had said, they doubted
whether He could remit sins, But that you may know that the Son of Man
has power to remit sins, he said to the paralytic. If they are the
words of Christ, the connection will be as follows; You doubt that I
have power to remit sins, But that you may know that the Son of Man has
power to remit sins - the sentence is imperfect, but the action
supplies time place of the consequent clause, he said to the paralytic,
Rise, take up your bed.
CHRYSOLOGUS; That that which had been proof of his sickness, should now
become proof of his recovered health. And go to your house, that having
been healed by Christian faith, you may not die in the faithlessness of
the Jews.
CHRYS; This command He added, that it might be seen there was no
delusion in the miracle; so it follows to establish the reality of the
cure, And he arose, and went away to his own house. But they that stood
by yet grovel in the earth whence it follows, But the multitude seeing
it were afraid and glorified God who had bestowed such power among men.
For had they rightly considered among themselves they would have
acknowledged Him to be the Son of God. Meanwhile it was no little
matter to esteem Him as one greater than men and to have come from God.
HILARY; Mystically; when driven out of Judea He returns to His own
city; the city of God is the people of the faithful, into this He
entered by a boat, that is, the Church.
CHRYSOLOGUS; Christ has no need of the vessel but the vessel of Christ
for without the pilotage the bark of the Church cannot pass over the
sea of the world to the heavenly harbor.
HILARY; In this paralytic the whole Gentile world is offered for
healing, he is therefore brought by the ministration of Angels, he is
called Son, because he is God's work; the sins of his soul which the
Law could not remit go remitted him; for faith only justifies. Lastly
he shows the power of the resurrection, by taking up his bed teaching
that all sickness shall then be no more found in the body.
JEROME; Figuratively; the soul sick in the body, its powers palsied, is
brought by the perfect doctor to the Lord to be healed. For every one
when sick, ought to engage some to pray for his recovery, through whom
the halting footsteps of our acts may be reformed by time healing power
of the heavenly word. These are mental monitors, who raise the soul of
the hearer to higher things, although sick and weak in the outward
body.
CHRYSOLOGUS; The Lord requires not in this world the will of those who
are without understanding, but looks to the faith of others; as the
physician does not consult the wishes of the patient, when his malady
requires other things.
RABAN; His rising up is the drawing of the soul from carnal lusts; his
taking up his bed is the raising the flesh from earthly desires to
spiritual pleasures; his going to his house is his returning to
Paradise, or to internal watchfulness of himself against sin.
GREG; Or by the bed is denoted the pleasure of the body. He is
commanded now he is made whole to bear that on which he had lain when
sick, because every man who still takes pleasure in vice is laid as
sick in carnal delights; but when made whole he bears this because he
now endures the wantonness of that flesh in whose desires he had before
reposed.
HILARY; It is a very fearful thing to be seized by death while the sins
are yet unforgiven by Christ; for there is no way to the heavenly house
for him whose sins have not been forgiven. But when this fear is
removed, honor is rendered to God, who by His word has in this way
given power to men, of forgiveness of Sins, of resurrection of the
body, and of return to Heaven.
9. And as Jesus passed forth from thence, he saw a man, named
Matthew, sitting at the receipt of custom: and he said to him, Follow
me. And he arose, and followed him.
10. And it came to pass, as Jesus sat at meat in the house, behold,
many Publicans and sinners came and sat down with him and his disciples.
11. And when the Pharisees saw it, they said to his disciples, Why does your Master eat with Publicans and sinners?
12. But when Jesus heard that, he said to them, They that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick.
13. But go and learn what that means, I will have mercy, and not
sacrifice: for I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners to
repentance.
CHRYS; Having wrought this miracle, Christ would not abide in the same
place, lest He should rouse the envy of the Jews. Let us also do thus,
not obstinately opposing those who lay in wait for us. And as Jesus
departed thence, (namely from the place in which He had done this
miracle,) he saw a man sitting at the receipt of custom, Matthew by
name.
JEROME; The other Evangelists from respect to Matthew have not called
him by his common name, but say here, Levi, for he had both names.
Matthew himself, according to that Solomon says, The righteous man
accuses himself, calls himself both Matthew and Publican, to show the
readers that none need despair of salvation who turn to better things,
seeing He from a Publican became an Apostle.
GLOSS; He says, sitting at the receipt of custom, that is, in the place
where the tolls were collected. He was named Telonarius, from a Greek
word signifying taxes.
CHRYS; Herein he shows the excellent power of Him that called him;
while engaged in this dangerous office He rescued him from the midst of
evil, as also Paul while he was yet mad against the Church. He said to
him, Follow me. As you have seen the power of Him that calls, so learn
the obedience of him that is called; He neither refuses, nor requests
to go home and inform his friends.
REMIG; He esteems lightly human dangers which might accrue to him from
his masters for leaving his accounts in disorder, but, he arose, and
followed him. And because he relinquished earthly gain, therefore of
right was he made the dispenser of the Lord's talents.
JEROME; Porphyry and the Emperor Julian insist from this account, that
either the historian is to be charged with falsehood, or those who so
readily followed the Savior with haste and temerity, as if He called
any without reason. They forget also the signs and wonders which had
preceded, and which no doubt the Apostles had seen before they
believed. Yea the brightness of effulgence or the hidden Godhead which
beamed from His human countenance might attract them at first view. For
if the loadstone can, as it is said, attract iron, how much more can
the Lord of all creation draw to Himself whom He will!
CHRYS; But why did He not call him at the same time with Peter and John
and the others? Because he was then still in a hardened state, but
after many miracles, and great fame of Christ, when He who knows the
inmost secrets of the heart, perceived him more disposed to obedience,
then He called him.
AUG; Or, perhaps it is more probable that Matthew here turns back to
relate something that he had omitted; and we may suppose Matthew to
have been called before the sermon on the mount; for on the mount, as
Luke relates, the twelve, whom He also named Apostles, were chosen.
GLOSS; Matthew places his calling among the miracles; for a great miracle it was, a Publican becoming an Apostle.
CHRYS; Why is it then that nothing is said of the rest of the Apostles
how or when they were called, but only of Peter, Andrew, James, John,
and Matthew? Because these were in the most alien and lowly stations,
for nothing can he more disreputable than the office of Publican,
nothing more abject than that of fisherman.
GLOSS; As a meet return for the heavenly mercy, Matthew prepared a
great feast for Christ in His house, bestowing his temporal goods on
Him of whom he looked to receive everlasting goods. It follows, And it
came to pass as he sat at meat in the house.
AUG; Matthew has not said in whose house Jesus sat at meat (on this
occasion), from which we might suppose, that this was not told in its
proper order, but that what took place at some other time is inserted
here as it happened to come into His mind; did not Mark and Luke who
relate the same show that it was in Levi's that is, in Matthew's house.
CHRYS; Matthew being honored by the entrance of Jesus into his house,
called together all that followed the same calling with himself; Behold
many Publicans and sinners came and sat down with Jesus, and with his
disciples.
GLOSS; The Publicans were they who were engaged in public business,
which seldom or never can be carried on without sin. And a beautiful
omen of the future, that he that was to be an Apostle and doctor of the
Gentiles, at his first conversion draws after him a great multitude of
sinners to salvation, already performing by his example what He was
shortly to perform by word.
GLOSS; Tertullian says that these must have been Gentiles, because
Scripture says, There shall be no payer of tribute in Israel, as if
Matthew were not a Jew. But the Lord did not sit down to meat with
Gentiles, being more especially careful not to break the Law, as also
He gave commandment to His disciples below, Go not into the way of the
Gentiles.
JEROME; But they had seen the Publican turning from sins to better
things, and finding place of repentance, and on this account they do
not despair of salvation.
CHRYS. This they came near to our Redeemer, and that not only to
converse with Him, but to sit at meat with Him; for so not only by
disputing, or healing, or convincing His enemies, but by eating with
them, He often times healed such as were ill-disposed, by this teaching
us, that all times, and all actions, may be made means to our
advantage. When the Pharisees saw this they were indignant; And the
Pharisees beholding said to his disciples, Why does your Master eat
with Publicans and sinners? It should be observed, that when the
disciples seemed to be doing what was sinful, these same addressed
Christ, Behold your disciples are doing what it is not allowed to do on
the Sabbath. Here they speak against Christ to His disciples, both
being the part of malicious persons, seeking to detach the hearts of
the disciple from the Master.
RABAN; They are in a twofold error; first, they esteemed themselves
righteous, though in their pride they had departed far from
righteousness; secondly, they charged with unrighteousness those who by
recovering themselves from sin were drawing near to righteousness.
AUG; Luke seems to have related this a little differently; according to
him the Pharisees say to the disciples, Why do you eat and drink with
Publicans and sinners? not unwilling that their Master should be
understood to be involved in the same charge; insinuating it at once
against Himself and His disciples. Therefore Matthew and Mark have
related it as said to the disciples, because go it was as much an
objection against their Master whom they followed and imitated. The
sense therefore is one in all, and so much the better conveyed, as the
words are changed while the substance continues the same.
JEROME; For they do not come to Jesus while they remain in their
original condition of sin, as the Pharisees and Scribes complain, but
in penitence, as what follows proves; But Jesus hearing said, They that
be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick.
RABAN; He calls Himself a physician, because by a wonderful kind of
medicine He was wounded for our iniquities that He might heal the wound
of our sin. By the whole, He means those who seeking to establish their
own righteousness have not submitted to the true righteousness of God.
By the sick, He means those who, tied by the consciousness of their
frailty, and seeing that they are not justified by the Law, submit
themselves in penitence to the grace of God.
CHRYS; Having first spoken in accordance with common opinion, He now
addresses them out of Scripture, saying, Go and learn what that means,
I will have mercy and not sacrifice.
JEROME; This text from Osee is directed against the Scribes and
Pharisees, who, deeming themselves righteous, refused to keep company
with Publicans and Sinners.
CHRYS; As much as to say; How do you accuse me for reforming sinners?
Therefore in this you accuse God the Father also. For as He wills the
amendment of sinners, even so also do I. And He shows that this that
they blamed was not only not forbidden, but was even by the Law set
above sacrifice; for He said not, I will have mercy as well as
sacrifice, but chooses the one and rejects the other.
GLOSS; Yet does not God condemn sacrifice, but sacrifice without mercy.
But the Pharisees often offered Sacrifices in the temple that they
might seem to men to be righteous, but did not practice the deeds of
mercy by which true righteousness is proved.
RABAN; He therefore warns them, that by deeds of mercy they should seek
for themselves the rewards of time mercy that is above, and, not
overlooking the necessities of the poor, trust to please God by
offering sacrifice. Wherefore, He says, Go; that is, from the rashness
of foolish fault-finding to a more careful meditation of Holy
Scripture, which highly commends mercy, and proposes to them as a guide
His own example of mercy, saying, I came not to call the righteous but
sinners.
AUG; Luke adds to repentance, which explains the sense; that none
should suppose that sinners are loved by Christ because they are
sinners; and this comparison of the sick shows what God means by
calling sinners, as a physician does the sick to be saved from their
iniquity as from a sickness: which is done by penitence.
HILARY; Christ came for all; how is it then that He says He came not
for the righteous? Were there those for whom it needed not that He
should come? But no man is righteous by the law. He shows how empty
their boast of justification, sacrifices being inadequate to salvation,
mercy was necessary for all who were set under the Law.
CHRYS; Whence we may suppose that He is speaking ironically, as when it
is said, Behold now Adam is become as one of us. For that there is none
righteous on earth Paul shows, All have sinned, and need glory of God.
By this saying He also consoled those who were called; as though He had
said, So far am I from abhorring sinners, that for their sakes only did
I come.
GLOSS; Or; Those who were righteous, as Nathanael and John the Baptist,
were not to be invited to repentance. Or, I came not to call the
righteous, that is, the feignedly righteous, those who boasted of their
righteousness as the Pharisees, but those that owned themselves
sinners.
RABAN; In the call of Matthew and the Publicans is figured the faith of
the Gentiles who first gaped after the gain of the world, and are now
spiritually refreshed by the Lord; in the pride of the Pharisees, the
jealousy of the Jews at the salvation of the Gentiles. Or, Matthew
signifies the man intent on temporal gain; Jesus sees him, when He
looks on him with the eyes of mercy. For Matthew is interpreted '
given,' Levi 'taken,' the penitent is taken out of the mass of the
perishing, and by God's grace given to the Church. And Jesus said to
him, Follow Me, either by preaching, or by the admonition of Scripture,
or by internal illumination.
14. Then came to him the disciples of John, saying, Why do we and the Pharisees fast often, but your disciples do not?
15. And Jesus said to them, Can the children of the bridechamber mourn,
as long as the bridegroom is with them? but the days will come, when
the bridegroom shall be taken from them, and then shall they fast.
16. No man puts a piece of new cloth into an old garment, for that
which is put in to fill it up takes from the garment, and the rent is
made worse.
17. Neither do men put new wine into old bottles: else the bottles
break, and the wine runs out, and the bottles perish: but they put new
wine into new bottles, and both are preserved.
GLOSS; When He had replied to them respecting eating and conversing
with sinners they next assailed him on the matter of food, Then came to
him the disciples of John, saying, Why do we and the Pharisees fast
often, but you disciples do not?
JEROME; O boastful inquiry and ostentation of fasting much to be
blamed, nor can John's disciples be excused for their taking part with
the Pharisees who they knew had been condemned by John, and for
bringing a false accusation against Him whom they knew their master had
preached.
CHRYS; What they say comes to this, Be it that you do this as Physician
of souls, but why do your disciples neglect fasting and approach such
tables? And to augment the weight of their charge by comparison, they
put themselves first, and then the Pharisees. They fasted as they
learnt out of the Law, as the Pharisee spoke, I fast twice in the week;
the others learnt it of John.
RABAN; For John drank neither wine, nor strong drink, increasing his
merit by abstinence, because he had no power over nature. But the Lord
who has power to forgive sins, why should He shun sinners that eat,
since He has power to make them more righteous than those that eat not?
Yet does Christ fast, that you should not avoid the command; but He
eats with sinners that you may know His grace and power.
AUG; Though Matthew mentions only the disciples of John as having made
this inquiry, the words of Mark rather seem to imply that some other
persons spoke of others, that is, the guests spoke concerning the
disciples of John and the Pharisees - this is still more evident from
Luke; why then does Matthew here say, Then came to him the disciples of
John, unless that they were there among other guests, all of whom with
one consent put this objection to Him?
CHRYS; Or; Luke relates that the Pharisees, but Matthew that the
disciples of John, said thus, because the Pharisees had taken them with
them to ask the question , as they afterwards did the Herodians.
Observe how when strangers, as before the Publicans, were to be
defended, He accuses heavily those that blamed them; but when they
brought a charge against His disciples, He makes answer with mildness.
And Jesus said to them, Can the children of the bridegroom mourn as
long as the bridegroom is with them? Before He had styled Himself
Physician, now Bridegroom, calling to mind the words of John which he
had said, He that has the bride is the bridegroom.
JEROME; Christ is the Bridegroom and the Church the Bride of this
spiritual union the Apostles were born; they cannot mourn so long as
they see the Bridegroom in the chamber with the Bride. But when the
nuptials are past, and the time of the passion and resurrection is
come, then shall the children of the Bridegroom fast. The days shall
come when the bridegroom shall be taken from them and then shall they
fast.
CHRYS; He means this; The present is a time of joy and rejoicing;
sorrow is there fore not to be now brought forward and fasting is
naturally grievous and to all those that are yet weak; for to those
that seek to contemplate wisdom, it is pleasant; He therefore speaks
here according to the former opinion. He also shows that this they did
was not of gluttony but of a certain dispensation.
JEROME; Hence some thing that a fast ought to follow the forty days of
Passion althought the say of Pentecost and the coming of the Holy
Spirit immediately bring back our joy and festival. From this text
accordingly, Montanus, Prisca, and Maximilla enjoin a forty days'
abstinence after Pentecost, but it is the use of the Church too come to
the Lord's passion and resurrection through humiliation of the flesh,
that by carnal abstinence we may better be prepared for spiritual
fullness.
CHRYS; Here again He confirms what He has said by examples of common
things; No man puts a patch of undressed cloth into an old garment; for
it takes away its wholeness from the garment and the rent is made
worse; which is to say, My disciples are not yet become strong, but
have need of much consideration; they are not yet renewed by the
Spirit. On men in such a state it is not ideal to lay a burden of
precepts. Herein He establishes a rule for His disciples, that they
should receive with leniency disciples from out of the whole world.
REMIG; By the old garment He means His disciples, whom had not yet been
renewed in all things. The patch of undressed, that is, of new cloth
means the new grace, that is, time Gospel doctrine, of which fasting is
a portion; and it was not meant that the stricter ordinances of fasting
should be entrusted to them, lest they should be broken down by their
severity, and forfeit that faith which they had; as He adds, It takes
its wholeness from the garment, and the rent is made worse.
GLOSS; As much as to say, an undressed patch, that is, a new one, ought
not to be put into an old garment, because it often takes away from the
garment its wholeness, that is, its perfection, and then the rent is
made worse. For a heavy burden laid on one that is untrained often
destroys that good which was in him before.
REMIG; After two comparisons made, that of the wedding, and that of the
undressed cloth, He adds a third concerning wine skins; Neither do men
put new wine into old skins. By the old skins He means His disciples,
who were not yet perfectly renewed. The new wine is the fullness of the
Holy Spirit, and the depths of the heavenly mysteries, which His
disciples could not then bear; but after the resurrection they became
as new skins, and were filled with new wine when they received the Holy
Spirit into their hearts. Whence also some said, These men are full of
new wine.
CHRYS; Herein He also shows us the cause of those condescending words
which He often addressed to them because of their weakness.
JEROME; Otherwise; By the old garment, and old skins, we must
understand the Scribes and Pharisees; and by the piece of new cloth,
and new wine, the Gospel precepts, which the Jews were not able to
bear; so the rent was made worse. Something such the Galatians sought
to do, to mix the precepts of the Law with the Gospel, and to put new
wine into old skins. The word of the Gospel is therefore to be poured
into the Apostles, rather than into the Scribes and Pharisees, who,
corrupted by the traditions of the elders, were unable to preserve the
purity of Christ's precepts.
GLOSS; This shows that the Apostles being hereafter to be replenished
with newness of grace, ought not now to be bound to the old
observances.
AUG; Otherwise; Every one who rightly fasts, either humbles his soul in
the groaning of prayer, and bodily chastisement, or suspends the motion
of carnal desire by the joys of spiritual meditation. And the Lord here
makes answer respecting both kinds of fasting; concerning the first,
which is in humiliation of soul, He says, The children of the
bridegroom cannot mourn. Of the other which has a feast of the Spirit,
He next speaks, where He says, No man puts a patch of undressed cloth.
Then we must mourn because the Bridegroom is taken away from us. And we
rightly mourn if we burn with desire of Him. Blessed they to whom it
was granted before His passion to have Him present with them, to
inquire of Him what they would, to hear what they ought to hear. Those
days the fathers before His coming sought to gee, and saw them not,
because they were placed in another dispensation, one in which He was
proclaimed as coming, not one in which He was heard as present. For in
us was fulfilled that He speaks of; The days shall come when you shall
desire to see one of these days, and shall not be able. Who then will
not mourn this? Who will not say, My tears have been my meat day and
night, while they daily say to me , Where is now your God? With reason
then did the Apostle seek to die and to be with Christ.
AUG; That Matthew writes here mourn; where Mark and Luke write fast,
shows that the Lord spoke of that kind of fasting which pertains to
humbling one's self in chastisement; as in the following comparisons
lie may be supposed to have spoken of the other kind which pertains to
the joy of a mind wrapped in spiritual thoughts, and therefore averted
from the food of the body; showing that those who are occupied about
the body, and owing to this retain their former desires, are not fit
for this kind of fasting.
HILARY; Figuratively; this His answer, that while the Bridegroom was
present with them, His disciples needed not to fast, teaches us the joy
of His presence, and the sacrament of the holy food, which none shall
lack, while He is present, that is, while one keeps Christ in the eye
of the mind. He says, they shall fast when He is taken away from them,
because all who do not believe that Christ is risen, shall not have the
food of life. For in the faith of the resurrection the sacrament of the
heavenly bread is received.
JEROME; Or; When He has departed from us for our sins, then is a fast to be proclaimed, then is mourning to be put on.
HILARY; By these examples He shows that neither our souls nor bodies,
being so weakened by inveteracy of sin, are capable of the sacraments
of the new grace.
RABAN; The different comparisons all refer to the same thing, and yet
are they different; the garment by which we are covered abroad
signifies our good works, which we perform when we are abroad; the wine
with which we are refreshed with is the fervor of faith and charity,
which creates us anew within.
18. While he spoke these things to them, behold, there came a
certain ruler; and worshipped him, saying, My daughter is even now
dead: but come and lay your hand upon her, and she shall live.
19. And Jesus arose, and followed him, and so did his disciples.
20. And, behold, a woman, which was diseased with an issue of blood
twelve years, came behind him, and touched the hem of his garment:
21. For she said within herself, If I may but touch his garment, I shall be whole.
22. But Jesus turned him about, and when He saw her, he said, Daughter,
be of good comfort; your faith has made you whole. And the woman was
made whole from that hour.
CHRYS; After His instructions He adds a miracle, which should mightily
discomfit the Pharisees, because He who came to beg this miracle, was a
ruler of the synagogue, and the mourning was great, for she was his
only child, and of the age of twelve years, that is, when the flower of
youth begins; While he spoke these things to them, behold there came
one of their chief men to him.
AUG; This narrative is given both by Mark and Luke, but in a quite
different order; namely, when after the casting out of time demons and
their entrance into the swine, he had returned across the lake from the
country of the Gerasenes. Now Mark does indeed tell us that this
happened after He had crossed the lake, but how long after He does not
determine. Unless there had been some interval of time, that could not
have taken place that Matthew relates concerning the feast in his
house. After this, immediately follows that concerning the ruler of the
synagogue's daughter. If the ruler came to Him while He was yet
speaking that of the new patch, and the new wine, then no other act of
speech of his intervened. And in Mark's account, the place where these
things might come in, is evident. In like manner, Luke does not
contradict Matthew; for what he adds, And behold a man, whose name was
Jairus, is not to be taken as though it followed instantly what had
been related before, but after that feast with the Publicans, as
Matthew relates. While he spoke these things to them, behold, one of
their chief men, namely, Jairus, the ruler of the synagogue, came to
him, and worshipped him, saying, Lord, my daughter is even now dead. It
should be observed, lest there should seem to be some discrepancy, that
the other two Evangelists represent her as at the point of death, but
yet not dead, but so as afterwards to say that there came afterwards
some saying, She is dead, trouble not the Master, for Matthew for the
sake of shortness represents the Lord as having been asked at first to
do that which it is manifest He did do, namely, raise the dead. He
looks not at the words of the father respecting his daughter, but
rather his mind. For he had so far despaired of her life, that he made
his request rather for her to be called to life again, thinking it
impossible that she, whom he had left dying, should be found yet alive.
The other two then have given Jairus' words; Matthew has put what he
wished and thought. Indeed had either of them related that it was the
father himself that said that Jesus should not be troubled for she was
now dead, in that case the words that Matthew has given would not have
corresponded with the thoughts of the ruler. But we do not read that he
agreed with the messengers. Hence we learn a thing of the highest
necessity, that we should look at nothing in any man's words, but his
meaning to which his words ought to be subservient; and no man gives a
false account when he repeats a man's meaning in words other than those
actually used.
CHRYS; Or; The ruler says, she is dead, exaggerating his calamity. As
it is time manner of those that prefer a petition to magnify their
distresses, and to represent them as something more than they really
are, in order to gain the compassion of those to whom they make
supplication; whence he adds, But come and lay your hand upon her, and
she shall live. See his dullness. He begs two things of Christ, to
come, and to lay His hand upon her. This was what Naaman the Syrian
required of the Prophet. For they who are constituted thus hard of
heart have need of sight and things sensible.
REMIG; We ought to admire and at the same time to imitate the humility
and mercifulness of the Lord; as soon as ever He was asked, He rose to
follow him that asked; And Jesus rose, and followed him. Here is
instruction both for such as are in command, and such as are in
subjection. To these He has left an example of obedience; to those who
are set over others He shows how earnest and watchful they should be in
teaching; whenever they hear of any being dead in spirit, they should
hasten to Him; And his disciples went with him.
CHRYS; Mark and Luke say that He took with Him three disciples only,
namely, Peter, James, and John; He took not Matthew, to quicken his
desires, and because he was yet not perfectly minded; and for this
reason He honors these three, that others may become like-minded. It
was enough meanwhile for Matthew to see the things that were done
respecting her that had the issue of blood, concerning whom it follows;
And, behold, a woman who had suffered an issue of blood twelve years,
came behind and touched the hem of his garment.
JEROME; This woman that had the flux came to the Lord not in the house,
nor in the town, for she was excluded from them by the Law, but by the
way as He walked; thus as He goes to heal one woman, another is cured.
CHRYS; She came not to Christ with an open address through shame
concerning this her disease, believing herself unclean; for in the Law
this disease was esteemed highly unclean. For this reason she hides
herself.
REMIG; in which her humility must be praised, that she came not before
His face, but behind, and judged herself unworthy to touch the Lord's
feet, yea, she touched not His whole garment, but the hem only; for the
Lord wore a hem according to the command of the Law . So the Pharisees
also wore hems which they made large, and in some they inserted thorns.
But the Lord's hem was not made to wound, but to heal, and therefore it
follows, For she said within herself, If I can but touch his garment, I
shall be made whole. How wonderful her faith, that though she despaired
of healing from the physicians, on whom notwithstanding she had
exhausted her living, she received that a heavenly Physician was at
hand, and therefore bent her whole soul on Him; whence she deserved to
be healed; But Jesus turning and seeing her, said, Be of good cheer,
daughter, your faith has made you whole.
RABAN; What is this that He bids her, Be of good cheer, seeing if she
had not had faith, she would not have sought healing of Him? He
requires of her strength and perseverance, that she may come to a sure
and certain salvation.
CHRYS; Or because the woman was fearful, therefore He said, Be of good
cheer. He calls her daughter, for her faith had made her such.
JEROME; He said not, Your faith shall make you whole, but, has made you
whole; for in that you have believed, thou art already made whole.
CHRYS; She had not yet a perfect mind respecting Christ, or she would
not have supposed that she could be hid from Him; but Christ would not
suffer her to go away unobserved, not that He sought fame, but for many
reasons. First, He relieves the woman's fear, that she should not be
pricked in her conscience as though she had stolen this boon; secondly,
He corrects her error in supposing she could be hid from Him; thirdly,
He displays her faith to all for their imitation; and fourthly, He did
a miracle, in that He showed He knew all things, no less than in drying
the fountain of her blood. It follows, And the woman was made whole
from that hour.
GLOSS; This must be understood as the time in which she touched the hem
of His garment, not in which Jesus turned to her; for she was already
healed, as the other Evangelists testify, and as may be inferred from
the Lord's words.
HILARY; Herein is to be observed the marvelous virtue of the Lord, that
the power that dwelt in His body should give healing to things
perishable, and the heavenly energy extended even through the hems of
His garments; for God is not comprehensible that He should be shut in
by a body, for His taking a body to Him did not confine His power, but
His power took upon it a frail body for our redemption. Figuratively,
this ruler is to be understood as the Law, which prays the Lord that He
would restore life to the dead multitude which it had brought up for
Christ, preaching that His coming was to be looked for.
RABAN; Or; The ruler of the synagogue signifies Moses; he is named
Jairus, ' illuminating,' or, ' that shall illuminate,' because he
received the words of life to give to us, and by them enlightens all,
being himself enlightened by the Holy Spirit. The daughter of the
ruler, that is, the synagogue itself, being as it were in the twelfth
year of its age, that is, in the season of puberty, when it should have
borne spiritual progeny to God, fell into the sickness of error. While
then the Word of God is hastening to this ruler's daughter to make
whole the sons of Israel, a holy Church is gathered from among the
Gentiles, which while it was perishing by inward corruption, received
by faith that healing that was prepared for others. It should be noted,
that the ruler's daughter was twelve years old, and this woman had been
twelve years afflicted; thus she had begun to be diseased at the very
time the other was born, so in one and the same age the synagogue had
its birth among the Patriarchs, and the nations without began to be
polluted with the pest of idolatry. For the issue of blood may be taken
in two ways, either for the pollution of idolatry, or for obedience to
the pleasures of flesh and blood. Thus as long as the synagogue
flourished, the Church languished; the falling away of the first was
made the salvation of the Gentiles. Also the Church draws nigh and
touches the Lord, when it approaches Him in faith. She believed, spoke
her belief; and touched, for by these three things, faith, word, and
deed, all salvation is gained. She came behind Him, as He spoke, If any
one serve me, let him follow me; or because, not having seen the Lord
present in the flesh, when the sacraments of His incarnation were
fulfilled, she came at length to the grace of the knowledge of Him.
Thus also she touched the hem of His garment, because the Gentiles,
though they had not seen Christ in the flesh, received the tidings of
His incarnation. The garment of Christ is put for the mystery of His
incarnation, wherewith His Deity is clothed; the hem of His garment are
the words that hang upon His incarnation. She touches not the garment,
but the hem thereof; because she saw not the Lord in the flesh but
received the word of the incarnation through the Apostles. Blessed is
he that touches but the uttermost part of the word by faith. She is
healed while the Lord is not in the city, but while the Lord is yet on
the way; as the Apostles cried, Because you judge yourselves unworthy
of eternal life, lo, we turn to the Gentiles. And from the time of the
Lord's coming the Gentiles began to be healed.
23. And when Jesus came into the ruler's house, and saw the minstrels and the people making a noise,
24. He said to them, Give place: for the maid is not dead, but sleeps. And they laughed him to scorn.
25. But when the people were put forth, he went in, and took her by the hand, and the maid arose.
26. And the fame hereof went abroad into all that land.
GLOSS; After the healing of the woman with the issue of blood, follows
the raising of the dead; And when Jesus was come into the ruler's
house.
CHRYS; We may suppose that He proceeded slowly, and spoke longer to the
woman whom He had healed, that He might suffer the maid to die and thus
an evident miracle of restoring to life might be wrought. In the case
of Lazarus also He waited till the third day And when he saw the
minstrels and the people making a noise; this was proof of her death.
AMBROSE; For by the ancient custom minstrels were engaged to make lamentation for the dead.
CHRYS; But Christ put forth all the pipers, but took in the parents,
that it might not be said that He had healed her by any other means;
and before the restoring to life He excites their expectations by His
words. And he said, Give place: for the maid is not dead, but sleeps.
BEDE; As though He had said To you she is dead, but to God who has power to give life, she sleeps only both in soul and body.
CHRYS; By this saying, He soothes the minds of those that. were
present, and shows that it is easy to Him to raise the dead; the like
He did in the case of Lazarus, Our friend Lazarus sleeps. This was also
a lesson to them not to be afraid of death; forasmuch as He Himself
also should die, He made His disciples learn in the persons of others
confidence and patient endurance of death. For when He was near, death
was but as sleep. When He had said this, They mocked him. And he did
not rebuke their mocking; that this mocking, and the pipes and all
other things, might be a proof of her death. For often times at His
miracles when men would not believe, He convicted them by their own
answers; as in the case of Lazarus when He said, Where have you laid
him? so that they that answered, Come and see, and, He stinks, for he
has now been dead four days, could no longer disbelieve that He had
raised a dead man.
JEROME; They that had mocked the Reviver were not worthy to behold the
mystery of the revival; and therefore it follows, And when the
multitude was put forth, he entered, and took her by the hand, and the
maid arose.
CHRYS; He restored her to life not by bringing in another soul, but by
recalling that which had departed, and as it were raising it from
sleep, and through this sight preparing the way for belief of the
resurrection. And He not only restores her to life, but commands food
to be given her, as the other Evangelists relate, that that which was
done might be seen to be no delusion. And the fame of it went abroad
into all that
country.
GLOSS. The fame, namely, of the greatness and novelty of the miracle,
and its established truth; so that it could not be supposed to be a
forgery.
HILARY; Mystically; The Lord enters the ruler's house, that is, the
synagogue, throughout which there resounded in the songs of the Law a
strain of wailing.
JEROME; To this day the damsel lays dead in the ruler's house; and they
that seem to be teachers are but minstrels singing funeral dirges. The
Jews also are not the crowd of believers, but of people making a noise.
But when the fullness of the Gentiles shall come in, then all Israel
shall be saved.
HILARY; But that the number of the elect. might be known to be but few
out of the whole body of believers, the multitude is put forth; the
Lord indeed would that they should be saved, but they mocked at His
sayings and actions, and so were not worthy to be made partakers of His
resurrection.
JEROME; He took her by the hand, and the maid arose; because if the
hands the Jews which are detailed with blood be not first cleansed,
their synagogue which is dead shall not revive.
HILARY; His fame went about into all that country; that is the
salvation of the elect, the gift and works of Christ are preached.
RABAN; Morally; The damsel dead in the house is the soul dead in
thought. He says that she is asleep, because they that are now asleep
in sin may yet be roused by penitence. The minstrels are flatterers who
cherish the dead.
GREG; The multitude are put forth that the damsel may be raised; for
unless the multitude of worldly cares is first banished from the
secrets of the heart, the soul which is laid dead within, cannot rise
again.
RABAN; The maiden is raised in the house with few to witness, the young
man without the gate, and Lazarus in the presence of many; for a public
scandal requires a public expiation; a less notorious, a lesser remedy;
and secret sins may be done away by penitence.
27. And when Jesus departed, two blind men followed him, crying, and saying, Son of David, have mercy on us.
28. And when he was come into the house, the blind men came to him: and
Jesus said to them, Do you believe that I am able to do this? They said
to him, Yea, Lord.
29. Then He touched their eyes, saying, According to your faith be it to you.
30. And their eyes were opened: and Jesus straightly charged them, saying, See that no man know it.
31. But they, when they were departed, spread abroad his fame in all that country.
JEROME; The miracles that had gone before of the ruler's daughter, and
the woman with the issue of flood, are now followed by that of two
blind men, that what death and disease had there witnessed, that
blindness might now witness. And as Jesus passed thence, that is, from
the ruler's house, there followed Him two blind men, crying, and
saying, Have mercy on us, You Son of David.
CHRYS; Here is no small charge against the Jews, that these men, having
lost their sight, yet believe by means of their hearing only; while
they who had sight, would not believe the miracles that were done.
Observe their eagerness; they do not simply Come to Him, but with
crying, and asking for nothing but mercy; they call Him Son of David,
because that seemed to be a name of honor.
REMIG; Rightly they call Him Son of David, because the Virgin Mary was of the line of David.
JEROME; Let Marcion and Manichaeus, and the other heretics who mangle
the Old Testament, hear this, and learn that the Savior is called the
Son of David; for if He was not born in the flesh, how is He the Son of
David?
CHRYS; Observe that the Lord often times desired to be asked to heal,
that none should think that He was eager to seize an occasion of
display.
JEROME; Yet were they not healed by the way-side and in passing as they
had thought to be; but when He was entered into the house, they come to
Him; and first their faith is made proof of, that so they may receive
the light of the true faith. And when he was come into the house, the
blind men came to him; and Jesus said to them, Do you believe that I am
able to do this?
CHRYS; Here again He teaches us to exclude the desire of fame; because
there was a house nearby, He takes them there to heal them apart.
REMIG; He who was able to give sight to the blind, was not ignorant
whether they believed; but He asked them, in order that the faith which
they bore in their hearts, being confessed by their mouth might be made
deserving of a higher reward, according to that of the Apostle, By the
mouth confession is made into salvation.
CHRYS; And not for this reason only, but that He might make manifest
that they were worthy of healing, and that none might object, that if
mercy alone saved, then ought all to be saved. Therefore also He
requires faith of them, that He may thereby raise their thoughts
higher; they had called Him the Son of David, therefore He instructs
them that they should think higher things of Him. Thus He does not say
to them, Do you believe that I can ask the Father? But do you believe
that I am able to do this? They say to him, Yea Lord. They call Him no
more Son of David, but exalt Him higher, and confess His dominion. Then
He lays His hand upon them; as it fellows, Then he touched their eyes,
saying, According to your faith be it to you. This He says confirming
their faith, and testifying that what they had said were not words of
flattery. Then follows the cure and their eyes were opened. And after
this, His injunction that they should tell it to no man; and this is
not a simple command, but with much earnestness, And Jesus straightly
charged them, saying, See that no man know it but they went forth, and
spread abroad the fame of hum through the whole country.
JEROME; The Lord from humility shunning the fame of His glorious works,
gave them this charge, and they from gratitude cannot be silent
respecting so great a benefit.
CHRYS; That He said to another man, Go, and proclaim the glory of God,
is not contrary to this for what He would teach is, that we should
hinder those that would commend us for ourselves. But when it is the
Lord's glory that is to be praised, we ought not to forbid, but to
promote it ourselves.
HILARY; Or He enjoins silence on the blind men, because to preach was the Apostles' office.
GREG; We must inquire how this is that the Almighty, whose will and
power are coextensive, should have here willed that His excellent works
should be hid in silence, and is yet preached against His will, as it
were, by these men who have received their sight. It is only that He
herein has left an example to His servants who follow Him, that they
should desire their own good deeds to be hid, and that notwithstanding
they should be made known against their will, that others may profit by
their example. They should then be hid by design, and published of
compulsion; their concealment is by our own watchfulness, their
betrayal is for others' profit.
REMIG; Allegorically; By these two blind men are denoted the two
nations of Jews and Gentiles, or the two nations of the Jewish race;
for in the time of Roboam his kingdom was split into two parts. Out of
both nations such as believed on Him Christ gave sight to in the house,
by which is understood the Church; for without the unity of the Church
no man can be saved. And they of the Jews who had believed the Lord's
coming spread the knowledge thereof throughout the whole earth.
RABAN; The house of the ruler is the Synagogue which was ruled by
Moses; the house of Jesus is the heavenly Jerusalem. As the Lord passed
through this world and was returning to His own house, two blind men
followed Him; that is, when the Gospel was preached by the Apostles,
many of the Jews and Gentiles began to follow Him. But when He ascended
into Heaven, then He entered His house, that is, into the confession of
one faith which is in the Catholic Church, and in that they were
enlightened.
32. As they went out, behold, they brought to him a dumb man possessed with a devil.
33. And when the devil was cast out, the dumb spoke: and the multitudes marveled, saying, It was never so seen in Israel.
34. But the Pharisees said He casts out devils through the prince of the devils.
35. And Jesus went about all the cities and villages , teaching in
their synagogues, and preaching the Gospel of the kingdom, and healing
every sickness and every disease among the people.
REMIG; Observe the beautiful order of His miracles; how after He has
given sight to the blind, He restored speech to the dumb and healed the
possessed of the demon; by which He shows Himself the Lord of power,
and the author of the heavenly medicine. For it was said by Isaiah,
Then shall the eyes of the blind be opened, the ears of the deaf shall
be unstopped, and the tongue of the dumb loosed. Whence it is said,
When they were gone forth, they brought to him a man dumb, and
possessed with a demon.
JEROME; The Greek word here is more frequent in common speech in the
sense of deaf; but it is the manner of Scripture to use it
indifferently as either.
CHRYS; This was not a mere natural defect; but was from the malignity
of the demon; and therefore he needed to be brought of others, for he
could not ask any thing of others as living without voice, and the
demon chaining his spirit together with his tongue. Therefore Christ
does not require faith of him, but immediately healed his disorder; as
it follows, And when the demon was cast out, then the dumb spoke.
HILARY; The natural order of things is here preserved; the demon is
first cast out, and there the functions of the members proceed. And the
multitude marveled saying, It was never so seen in Israel.
CHRYS; They set Him thus above others, because He not only healed, but
with such ease, and quickness; and cured diseases both infinite in
number, and in quality cured incurable. This most grieved the
Pharisees, that they set Him before all others, not only those that
then lived, but all who had lived before, on which account it follows,
But the Pharisees said, He casts out demons through the Prince of
demons.
REMIG; Thus the Scribes and Pharisees denied such of the Lord's
miracles as they could deny; and such as they could not they explained
by an evil interpretation, according to that, In the multitude of your
excellency your enemies shall lie to you.
CHRYS; What can be more foolish than this speech of theirs? For it
cannot be pretended that one demon would cast out another; for they are
wont to consent to one another's deeds, and not to be at variance among
themselves. But Christ not only cast out demons, but healed the lepers,
raised the dead, forgave sins, preached the kingdom of God, and brought
men to the Father, which a demon neither could nor would do.
RABAN; Figuratively; as in the two blind men were denoted both nations,
Jews and Gentiles, so in the man dumb and afflicted with die demon is
denoted the whole human race.
HILARY; Or; by the dumb and deaf; and demoniac, is signified the
Gentile world, needing health in every part; for sunk in evil of every
kind, they are afflicted with disease of every part of the body.
REMIG; For the Gentiles were dumb; not being able to open their month
in the confession of the true faith, and the praises of the Creator, or
because in paying worship to dumb idols they were made like them. They
were afflicted with a demon, because by dying in unbelief they were
made subject to the power of the Devil.
HILARY; But by the knowledge of God the frenzy of superstition being
chased away, the sight, the hearing and the word of salvation is
brought in to them.
JEROME; As the blind receive light, so the tongue of the dumb is
loosed, that he may confess Him whom before he denied. The wonder of
the multitude is the confession of the nations. The scoff of the
Pharisees is the unbelief of the Jews, which is to this day.
HILARY; The wonder of the multitude is followed up by the confession,
It was never so seen in Israel; because he, for whom there was no help
under the Law, is saved by the power of the Word.
REMIG; They who brought the dumb to be healed by the Lord, signify the
Apostles and preachers, who brought the Gentile people to be saved
before the face of divine mercy.
AUG; This account of the two blind men and the dumb demon is read in
Matthew only. The two blind men of whom the others speak are not the
same as these, though something similar was done with them. So that
even if Matthew had not also recorded their cure, we might have seen
that this present narrative was of a different transaction. And this we
ought diligently to remember, that many actions of our Lord are very
much like one another, but are proved not to be the same action, by
being born related at different times by the same Evangelist. So that
when we find cases in which one is recorded by one Evangelist, and
another by another, and some difference which we cannot reconcile
between their accounts, we should suppose that they are like, but not
the same, events.
36. But when he saw the multitudes, he was moved with compassion on
them, because they fainted, and were scattered abroad, as sheep having
no shepherd.
37. Then he said to his disciples, The harvest truly is plenteous, but the laborers are few;
38. Pray therefore the Lord of the harvest, that he will send forth laborers into his harvest.
CHRYS; The Lord would refute by actions the charge of the Pharisees,
who said, He casts out demons by the prince of demons; for a demon
having suffered rebuke, does not return good but evil to those who have
not shown him honor. But the Lord on the other hand, when He has
suffered blasphemy and contumely, not only does not punish, but does
not utter a hard speech, yea he shows kindness to them that did it, as
it here follows, And Jesus went about all their to towns and villages.
Herein He teaches us not to return accusations to them that accuse us
but kindness. for he that ceases to do good because of accusation,
shows that his good has been done because of men. But if for God's sake
you do good to your fellow-servants, you will not cease from doing good
whatever they do , that your reward may be greater.
JEROME; Observe how equally in villages, cities, and towns, that is to
great as well as small, He preaches the Gospel, not respecting the
might of the noble, but the salvation of those that believe. It
follows, Teaching in their synagogues; this was His meat, going about
to do the will of His Father, and saving by His teaching such as yet
believed not.
GLOSS; He taught in their synagogues the Gospel of the Kingdom, as it follows, Preaching the Gospel of the Kingdom.
REMIG; Understand, 'of God;' for though temporal blessings are also
proclaimed, yet they are not called The Gospel. Hence the Law was not
called a Gospel, because to such as kept. it, it held out not heavenly,
but earthly, goods.
JEROME; He first preached and taught, an d then proceeded to heal
sicknesses, that the works might convince those who would not believe
the words. Hence it follows, Healing every sickness and every disease,
for to him alone nothing is impossible.
GLOSS; By disease we may understand complaints of long standing, by sickness any lesser infirmity.
REMIG. It. should be known that those whom He healed Outwardly in their
bodies, He also healed inwardly in their souls. Others cannot do this
of their own power, but can by God's grace.
CHRYS; Nor does Christ's goodness rest here, but He manifests His care
for them, opening the bowels of His mercy towards them; whence it
follows, And seeing the multitudes, He had compassion upon them.
REMIG; Herein Christ shows in Himself the disposition of the good
shepherd and not that of the hireling. Why He pitied them is added,
Because they were troubled, and sick as sheep that have no shepherd -
troubled either by demons, or by diverse sicknesses and infirmities.
GLOSS; Or, troubled by demons, and sick, that is, benumbed and unable
to rise; and though they had shepherds, yet they were as though they
had them not.
CHRYS; This is an accusation against the rulers of the Jews, that being
shepherds they appeared like wolves; not only not improving the
multitude, but hindering their progress. For When the multitude
marveled and said, It was never so seen in Israel, these opposed
themselves , saying, He casts out demons by the prince of the demons.
REMIG; But when the Son of God ,looked down from heaven upon the earth,
to hear the groans of the captives, straight a great harvest began to
ripen; for the multitude of the human race would never have come near
to the faith, had not the Author of human salvation looked down from
heaven; and it follows, Then said he unto his disciples, the harvest
truly is great, butt the laborers are few.
GLOSS; The harvest are those men who can he reaped by the preachers,
and separated from the number of the damned, as grain is beaten out
from the chaff that it may be laid up in granaries.
JEROME; The great harvest denotes the multitude of the people; the few laborers, the want of instructors.
REMIG; For the number of the Apostles was small in comparison of so
great. crops to be reaped. The Lord exhorts His preachers, that. is,
the Apostles and their followers, that they should daily desire an
increase of their number; Pray therefore the Lord of the harvest, that
he would send forth laborers into his harvest.
CHRYS; He privately insinuates Himself to he the Lord; for it is He
Himself who is Lord of the harvest. For if He sent the Apostles to reap
what they had not sown, it is manifest that He sent them not to reap
the things of others, but what He had sown by the Prophets. But since
the twelve Apostles are the laborers, lie said, Pray the Lord of' the
harvest, that he would send laborers into his harvest; and
notwithstanding lie added none to their number, but rather He
multiplied those twelve many times, not by increasing their numbers,
but by giving them more abundant grace.
REMIG; Or, He then increased their number when He chose the seventy and
two, and then when many preachers were made what time the Holy Spirit
descended upon the believers.
CHRYS; He shows us that it is a great gift that one should have the
power of rightly preaching, in that He tells them that they ought to
pray for it. Also we are here reminded of the words of John concerning
the threshing-floor, amid the fan, the chaff, and the wheat.
HILARY; Figuratively; when salvation was given to the Gentiles, then
all cities and towns were enlightened by the power and entrance of
Christ, and escaped every other sickness and infirmity. The Lord pities
the people troubled with the violence of the unclean Spirit., and sick
under the burden of the Law, and having no shepherd at hand to bestow
on them the guardianship of the Holy Spirit. But of that gift there was
a most abundant fruit., whose plenty far exceeded the multitude of
those that drank thereof; how many ever take of it, yet an
inexhaustible supply remains; and because it is profitable that there
should be many to minister it, He bids us ask the Lord of the harvest,
that God would provide a supply of reapers for the ministration of that
gift of the Holy Spirit which was made ready; for by prayer this gift
is poured out upon us from God.
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