__________________________________________________________________
Title: NPNF1-08. St. Augustin: Exposition on the Book of Psalms
Creator(s): Augustine, St.
Schaff, Philip (1819-1893) (Editor)
Print Basis: New York: Christian Literature Publishing Co., 1886
Rights: Public Domain
CCEL Subjects: All; Proofed; Early Church;
LC Call no: BR60
LC Subjects:
Christianity
Early Christian Literature. Fathers of the Church, etc.
__________________________________________________________________
A SELECT LIBRARY
OF THE
NICENE AND
POST-NICENE FATHERS
OF
THE CHRISTIAN CHURCH.
EDITED BY
PHILIP SCHAFF, D.D., LL.D.,
PROFESSOR IN THE UNION THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY, NEW YORK.
IN CONNECTION WITH A NUMBER OF PATRISTIC SCHOLARS OF EUROPE AND
AMERICA.
VOLUME VIII
ST. AUGUSTIN:
EXPOSITIONS ON THE BOOK OF PSALMS
TRANSLATED, WITH NOTES AND INDICES
T&T CLARK
EDINBURGH
__________________________________________________
WM. B. EERDMANS PUBLISHING COMPANY
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
__________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
expositions on the book of psalms.
by
saint AUGUSTIN,
bishop of hippo.
edited, with brief annotations, and condensed from the six volumes
of the oxford translation,
by
A. Cleveland coxe, d.d.,
editor of the ante-nicene fathers, etc.
__________________________________________________________________
Editor's Preface.
The delightful task of editing these Enarrations, which was what I
undertook, became, indeed, a very painful one when the general editor
informed me that the whole work must be comprised in a single volume of
the series. This allowed but one hundred pages to each one of the six
volumes of the Oxford translation. But I felt that my learned friend
was right (1) in deciding that St. Augustin's treatment of the Psalms
must not be wanting to the series, and (2) that the exposition is so
diffuse and digressive, that it readily admits of abridgement, if these
exceptional features supply the material for retrenchments. In working
out the result, I have "done what I could." I have preserved the
African Psalter entire, with as much of the comment as was possible;
even so overrunning, at the publishers' cost, the six hundred pages
which were all subscribers might expect. The only means of avoiding
this was to omit entirely the CXIXth Psalm, an expedient to which I
could not consent.
To the primitive believers came the Psalter, like an aftermath, wet
with the dews of a new birth as from the womb of the morning. The
Spirit had descended upon it anew, as showers upon the mown grass; and
it had sprung up afresh, sweeter than before, for the pasture of
flocks. The Church received it as full of Christ, as the inheritance of
a nobler and truer Israel, for which His coming had illuminated it with
a genuine interpretation, painting even its darker and clouded surfaces
with the bow of promise, now made the symbol of an everlasting covenant
and of all promises fulfilled in Him. Hence the local and temporary
meanings of the Psalms were regarded as insignificant. Their Sinaitic
comminations and their conformities to the Law were but prophecies
which the Jews had voluntarily appropriated by rejecting the Son of
David. They were types of what had been fulfilled in their rejected
Messiah. The Church received the Psalter from the temple and the
synagogue, [1] and adopted it into liturgic use, "with hymns and
spiritual songs," all magnifying the crucified and glorified Christ.
With the fulfillment of prophecy by the destruction of the Temple and
the dispersion of the Jews, everything pertaining to the law was
sloughed from its ripened stalk; and the Psalter blossomed with the
consummate flowers and fruitage which were its deeper intent, and which
had waited so long to be disclosed. The true David had come, and little
thought of the typical David was to be entertained: the true Israel was
to be seen everywhere, and the dead images of legal rites and symbols
were to be interpreted only by the Gospel. To bring out its hidden
meanings, the reading and chanting of the Psalter received the
accentuation of antiphons and doxologies, and constantly elevated the
worshippers into the newness of the spirit out of the oldness of the
letter. Thus the whole book breathed a sweetness unknown to the
Hebrews, but for which kings and prophets had patiently waited. The
name of Jesus disclosed itself in every reference to salvation, and
perfumed these sacred odes with a flavour that could come only from
"the Root and the Offspring of David." Such was the Psalter to the
primitive faithful: the walk of Emmaus had opened their eyes to behold
the Lord. To the true interpretation of the Psalms St. Paul had
supplied the key, and from the beginning of the Church's institutions
we find evidences of the enthusiasm with which the Psalter was
appropriated in all of the richness of its evangelic import. The
earliest Fathers are full of what the genius of Augustin has embodied
in his Enarrations, which nobody must confound with works of scientific
exegesis. The author's one idea was widely different from that of
modern critics. His "accommodations" of Scripture, as they would now be
called, are part of the system which the Church had received, of which
Christ was the Alpha and the Omega, and in which the foreshadowing
David was nowhere. [2] He who comes to this volume with any other
conception of its uses will be sadly disappointed. In the critical
study of the Psalms, with all of the modern helps, such as Delitzsch
and others have so richly supplied, let us not fail to exercise
ourselves day and night; but if, as Christians, we wish to catch the
living Spirit that animates the "wheels" or mechanical structure of the
Psalms, let us learn from Augustin that indeed in every sense a greater
than David, a "greater than Solomon, is here." The fanciful ingenuity
with which our author interweaves the New Testament with the Psalms
will at first provoke a smile. His ideas seem often overstrained and
unnatural. But let us reflect that he is animating the Church of Christ
with the true "spirit of prophecy," which is the "testimony of Jesus;"
that his object is to hang Gospel associations upon every stem and twig
that come from the root of Jesse, and to wean even the Hebrew
Christians from their instinctive references to the Law. Let us adopt
these joint conceptions of the work, and we shall find in it a glorious
illustration of the Apostle's assurance, "Ye are not come unto the
mount that burned with fire, ...but unto Mount Sion, and unto the city
of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, ...and to Jesus the mediator
of the new covenant."
In every way the divine and the student will find this work, even as
here presented, a noble introduction to patristic studies. Let us
observe also what it proves. It gives us the old African psalter in all
its rude and uncouth conceptions of the Septuagint, and teaches us how
much we owe to the erudition and labours of St. Jerome. First of all,
the dignity of the Holy Scriptures, and their importance to all
Christians, are assumed. Its historical values are very great: it shows
the absolute freedom of the early Church from the corruptions of
mediaevalism. The Pentecostal unity of Christendom, the Catholic and
Apostolic system as defined in the constitutions of Nicaea and
Constantinople, the autonomy of national Churches, the independence of
the African Church (illustrated by the personal history of Augustin,
who rejected communion with the Bishop of Rome when he stretched his
claims beyond seas), and the dogmatic primacy of the patriarchate of
Carthage in Latin Christendom as the mother of its theology, are
assumed in every reflection upon the Donatists, and in the tone and
voice of the great preacher himself, to whom the Western Churches owe
all that survives their schism and corruptions, even to our own day.
But the ethical and doctrinal teacher will find the charm of these
pages, (1) in their correspondence with the evangelical precepts of the
Sermon on the Mount, and their freedom from the tainted distinctions
and dilutions of modern casuists; (2) in their perpetual enforcement of
the Pauline ideas of justification, harmonized successfully with those
of St. James; (3) in the faithful exhibition of the doctrines of grace;
(4) and in the loyalty to Jesus Christ of every word; abasing human
merit, and presenting Him as "the end of the law for righteousness,"
with an uncompromising tenacity, and a persevering reiteration of this
fundamental verity which seems to foresee the gross departure of
Western Churches from their original purity, and to "lay an anchor to
windward" for their restoration to orthodoxy.
The readers of this volume will need little reference to the
innumerable commentaries which have been devoted to the Psalter; but I
must mention the exceptional work of the late erudite J. Mason Neale,
D.D., because it throws light on the liturgical history of the Psalter
in the Western Churches. The learned commentary of the late Bishop of
Lincoln, Dr. Wordsworth, will be found to combine in a remarkable
degree, with critical exposition, the Augustinian spirit of devout
evangelical associations and elevations.
The editor of this volume blesses God for much spiritual help and
comfort afforded by the review of these "songs of our pilgrimage," with
which his task has enriched the latest years of that period of our
mortality beyond which all is but labour and sorrow.
A. C. C.
May 10, 1888.
Note.
It remains to note that I have had the Benedictine edition in the types
of Louvain and of Migne constantly at hand, and have referred to them
not only in all cases of doubt, but for general refreshment of mind;
the epigrammatic beauty and consonance of Augustin's Latin being
untranslatable. From the Oxford translations I have rarely departed,
and in all important instances have noted the wherefore in the margin.
It was not the design of this series to give the reader any other than
the masterly work of the scholars to whom we owe its appearance. Other
instances have been such inconsiderable adaptations as are demanded in
the suture of parts dislocated by abridgment. My brief annotations are
always bracketed and marked by an initial of my name.
__________________________________________________________________
[1] See Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. vii. p. 530 et seq.
[2] Compare 2 Chron. vi. 42, Isa. lv. 3, and Acts xiii. 34.
__________________________________________________________________
Advertisement.
It seems necessary to give the following outline of the history of this
Oxford translation. It was undertaken as part of the great series of
original translations which appeared "under the patronage of William,
Archbishop of Canterbury, from its commencement, a.d. 1836, until his
Grace's departure in peace, a.d. 1848." It proposed to include all the
"Fathers of the Holy Catholic Church before the division of the East
and West," and this exposition was dedicated as a memorial of
Archbishop Howley in the following words:--
"To the memory of the most reverend father in God, William, Lord
Archbishop of Canterbury, Primate of all England, formerly Regius
Professor of Divinity in the University of Oxford, this Library of
ancient bishops, fathers, doctors, martyrs, confessors, of Christ's
Holy Catholic Church, undertaken amid his encouragement, and carried on
for twelve years under his sanction, until his departure hence in
peace, is gratefully and reverently inscribed."
The preface to the first volume was by the saintly Charles Marriott of
Oriel College, with whom I enjoyed some acquaintance. It is well worth
preserving here, [3] and is as follows:--
In any commentary on a portion of the Old Testament by a writer
unacquainted with Hebrew, exact criticism, and freedom from mistake,
must not be expected. But the Psalms have been so in the mouth and in
the heart of God's people in all languages, that it has been necessary
often to find an explanation suitable to imperfect translations. And no
doubt it is intended that we should use such explanations for the
purpose of edification, when we are unable to be more accurate, though
in proving doctrine it is necessary always to remember and allow for
any want of acquaintance with the original, or uncertainty with respect
to its actual meaning. However, the main scope and bearing of the text
is rarely affected by such points as vary in different translations,
and the analogy of the faith is sufficient to prevent a Catholic [4]
mind from adopting any error in consequence of a text seeming to bear a
heterodox meaning. Perhaps the errors of translation in the existing
versions may have led the Fathers to adopt rules of interpretation
ranging too far from the simple and literal; but having such
translations, they could hardly use them otherwise. Meanwhile St.
Augustin will be found to excel in the intense apprehension of those
great truths which pervade the whole of Sacred Writ, and in the vivid
and powerful exposition of what bears upon them. It is hardly possible
to read his practical and forcible applications of Holy Scripture,
without feeling those truths by the faith of which we ought to live
brought home to the heart in a wonderful manner. His was a mind that
strove earnestly to solve the great problems of human life, and after
exhausting the resources, and discovering the emptiness, of erroneous
systems, found truth and rest at last in Catholic Christianity, in the
religion of the Bible as expounded by St. Ambrose. And though we must
look to his Confessions for the full view of all his cravings after
real good, and their ultimate satisfaction, yet throughout his works we
have the benefit of the earnestness with which he sought to feed on the
"sincere milk of the word."
His mystical and allegorical interpretation, in spite of occasional
mistakes, which belong rather to the translation than to himself, will
be found in general of great value. It is to a considerable extent
systematic, and the same interpretation of the same symbols is repeated
throughout the work, and is indeed often common to him with other
Fathers. The "feet" taken for the affections, "clouds" for the
Apostles, and many other instances, are of very frequent occurrence.
And it is evident that a few such general interpretations must be a
great help to those who wish to make an allegorical use of those
portions of Holy Scripture which are adapted for it. Nor are they
adhered to with such strictness as to deprive the reader of the benefit
of other explanations, where it appears that some other metaphor or
allegory was intended. Both St. Augustin and St. Gregory acknowledge,
and at times impress on their readers, that metaphorical language is
used in Holy Scripture with various meanings under the same symbol.
The discourses on the Psalms are not carried throughout on the same
plan, but still are tolerably complete as a commentary, since the
longer expositions furnish the means of filling out the shorter
notices, in thought at least, to the attentive reader of the whole.
They were not delivered continuously, nor all at the same place.
Occasionally the author is led by the circumstances of the time into
long discussions of a controversial character, especially with respect
to the Donatists, against whose narrow and exclusive views he urges
strongly the prophecies relating to the universality of the Church.
Occasionally a Psalm is first reviewed briefly, so as to give a general
clew to its interpretation, and then enlarged upon in several
discourses.
For the present translation, as far as the first thirty Psalms, the
editors are indebted to a friend who conceals his name; for the
remainder of the volume, with part of the next which is to appear, to
the Rev. J. E. Tweed, M.A., chaplain of Christ Church, Oxford.
C. M.
Oxford, 1847.
After the first two volumes edited by Mr. Tweed of Christ Church, the
third volume (carrying the work down to the end of Psalm lxxv.)
appeared with this announcement signed by Mr. Marriott: "The whole of
it, as well as a few Psalms at the end of the former and the beginning
of the following volume, is translated by T. Scratton, Esq., M.A., of
Christ Church, Oxford." The fifth volume appeared in April, 1853, with
the name of the Rev. H. M. Wilkins, M.A., of Merton College, as
translator. In December, 1857, came forth the last volume, with the
following advertisement from the pen of Dr. Pusey:--
The first hundred pages of this volume were printed, when it pleased
God to withdraw from all further toil our friend, the Rev. C. Marriott,
upon whose editorial labours the Library of the Fathers had for some
years wholly depended. Full of activity in the cause of truth and
religious knowledge, full of practical benevolence, expanding himself,
his strength, his paternal inheritance, in works of piety and charity,
in one night his labour was closed, and he was removed from active duty
to wait in stillness for his Lord's last call. His friends may perhaps
rather thankfully wonder that God allowed one, threatened in many ways
with severe disease, to labour for Him so long and so variously, than
think it strange that He suddenly, and for them prematurely, allowed
him thus far to enter into his rest. To those who knew him best, it has
been a marvel how, with heath so frail, he was enabled in such various
ways, and for so many years, to do active good in his generation. Early
called, and ever obeying the call, he has been allowed both active duty
and an early rest.
This volume, long delayed, has been completed by the Rev. H. Walford,
Vice-Principal of St. Edmund's Hall. The principal of St. Edmund Hall,
Dr. Barrow, has, with great kindness, allowed himself to be referred to
in obscure passages.
St. Augustin's Commentary on the Psalms, then, is now, by the blessing
of God, completed for the first time in an English garb. Although, as a
commentary, it from time to time fails us, because it explains minutely
and verbally a translation of Holy Scripture different from and
inferior to our own, yet, on this very ground, it is the more valuable
when the translations agree. For St. Augustin was so impressed with the
sense of the depth of Holy Scripture, that when it seems to him, on the
surface, plainest, then he is the more assured of its hidden depth. [5]
True to this belief, St. Augustin pressed out word by word of Holy
Scripture, and that, always in dependence on the inward teaching of God
the Holy Ghost who wrote it, until he had extracted some fullness of
meaning from it. More also, perhaps, than any other work of St.
Augustin, this commentary abounds in those condensed statements of
doctrinal and practical truth which are so instructive, because at once
so comprehensive and so accurate.
May He under whose gracious influence this great work was written, be
with its readers also, and make it now, as heretofore, a treasure to
this portion of His Church.
E. B. P.
Advent, 1857.
__________________________________________________________________
[3] Dated Oxford, Feast of St. Augustin of Canterbury, 1847.
[4] i.e. Nicene.--C.
[5] Here Dr. Pusey quotes the saint's preface to Ps. cxix. See p.
560.--C.
__________________________________________________________________
St. Augustin on the Psalms.
------------------------
Psalm I.
1. "Blessed is the man that hath not gone away in the counsel of the
ungodly" (ver. 1). This is to be understood of our Lord Jesus Christ,
the Lord Man. [6] "Blessed is the man that hath not gone away in the
counsel of the ungodly," as "the man of earth did," [7] who consented
to his wife deceived by the serpent, to the transgressing the
commandment of God. "Nor stood in the way of sinners." For He came
indeed in the way of sinners, by being born as sinners are; but He
"stood" not therein, for that the enticements of the world held Him
not. "And hath not sat in the seat of pestilence." He willed not an
earthly kingdom, with pride, which is well taken for "the seat of
pestilence;" for that there is hardly any one who is free from the love
of rule, and craves not human glory. For a "pestilence" is disease
widely spread, and involving all or nearly all. Yet "the seat of
pestilence" may be more appropriately understood of hurtful doctrine;
"whose word spreadeth as a canker." [8] The order too of the words must
be considered: "went away, stood, sat." For he "went away," when he
drew back from God. He "stood," when he took pleasure in sin. He "sat,"
when, confirmed in his pride, he could not go back, unless set free by
Him, who neither "hath gone away in the counsel of the ungodly, nor
stood in the way of sinners, nor sat in the seat of pestilence."
2. "But his delight is in the law of the Lord, and in His law will he
meditate by day and by night (ver. 2). The law is not made for a
righteous man," [9] says the Apostle. But it is one thing to be in the
law, another under the law. Whoso is in the law, acteth according to
the law; whoso is under the law, is acted upon according to the law:
the one therefore is free, the other a slave. Again, the law, which is
written and imposed upon the servant, is one thing; the law, which is
mentally discerned by him who needeth not its "letter," is another
thing. "He will meditate by day and by night," is to be understood
either as without ceasing; or "by day" in joy, "by night" in
tribulations. For it is said, "Abraham saw my day, and was glad:" [10]
and of tribulation it is said, "my reins also have instructed me, even
unto the night." [11]
3. "And he shall be like a tree planted hard by the running streams of
waters" (ver. 3); that is either Very "Wisdom," [12] which vouchsafed
to assume man's nature for our salvation; that as man He might be "the
tree planted hard by the running streams of waters;" for in this sense
can that too be taken which is said in another Psalm, "the river of God
is full of water." [13] Or by the Holy Ghost, of whom it is said, "He
shall baptize you in the Holy Ghost;" [14] and again, "If any man
thirst, let him come unto Me, and drink;" [15] and again, "If thou
knewest the gift of God, and who it is that asketh water of thee, thou
wouldest have asked of Him, and He would have given thee living water,
of which whoso drinketh shall never thirst, but it shall be made in him
a well of water springing up into everlasting life." [16] Or, "by the
running streams of waters" may be by the sins of the people, because
first the waters are called "peoples" in the Apocalypse; [17] and
again, by "running stream" is not unreasonably understood "fall," which
hath relation to sin. That "tree" then, that is, our Lord, from the
running streams of water, that is, from the sinful people's drawing
them by the way into the roots of His discipline, will "bring forth
fruit," that is, will establish Churches; "in His season," that is,
after He hath been glorified by His Resurrection and Ascension into
heaven. For then, by the sending of the Holy Ghost to the Apostles, and
by the confirming of their faith in Him, and their mission to the
world, He made the Churches to "bring forth fruit." "His leaf also
shall not fall," that is, His Word shall not be in vain. For, "all
flesh is grass, and the glory of man as the flower of grass; the grass
withereth, and the flower falleth, but the word of the Lord abideth for
ever. [18] And whatsoever He doeth shall prosper" that is, whatsoever
that tree shall bear; which all must be taken of fruit and leaves, that
is, deeds and words.
4. "The ungodly are not so," they are not so, "but are like the dust
which the wind casteth forth from the face of the earth" (ver. 4). "The
earth" is here to be taken as that stedfastness in God, with a view to
which it is said, "The Lord is the portion of mine inheritance, yea, I
have a goodly heritage." [19] With a view to this it is said, "Wait on
the Lord and keep His ways, and He shall exalt thee to inherit the
earth." [20] With a view to this it is said, "Blessed are the meek, for
they shall inherit the earth." [21] A comparison too is derived hence,
for as this visible earth supports and contains the outer man, so that
earth invisible the inner man. "From the face of" which "earth the wind
casteth forth the ungodly," that is, pride, in that it puffeth him up.
On his guard against which he, who was inebriated by the richness of
the house of the Lord, and drunken of the torrent stream of its
pleasures, saith, "Let not the foot of pride come against me." [22]
From this earth pride cast forth him who said, "I will place my seat in
the north, and I will be like the Most High." [23] From the face of the
earth it cast forth him also who, after that he had consented and
tasted of the forbidden tree that he might be as God, hid himself from
the Face of God. [24] That his earth has reference to the inner man,
and that man [25] is cast forth thence by pride, may be particularly
seen in that which is written, "Why is earth and ashes proud? Because,
in his life, he cast forth his bowels." [26] For, whence he hath been
cast forth, he is not unreasonably said to have cast forth himself.
5. "Therefore the ungodly rise not in the judgment" (ver. 5):
"therefore," namely, because "as dust they are cast forth from the face
of the earth." And well did he say that this should be taken away from
them, which in their pride they court, namely, that they may judge; so
that this same idea is more clearly expressed in the following
sentence, "nor sinners in the counsel of the righteous." For it is
usual for what goes before, [27] to be thus repeated more clearly. So
that by "sinners" should be understood the "ungodly;" what is before
"in the judgment," should be here "in the counsel of the righteous." Or
if indeed the ungodly are one thing, and sinners another, so that
although every ungodly man is a sinner, yet every sinner is not
ungodly; "The ungodly rise not in the judgment," that is, they shall
rise indeed, but not that they should be judged, for they are already
appointed to most certain punishment. But "sinners" do not rise "in
counsel of the just," that is, that they may judge, but peradventure
that they may be judged; so as of these it were said, "The fire shall
try every man's work of what sort it is. If any man's work abide, he
shall receive a reward. If any man's work shall be burned, he shall
then suffer loss: but he himself shall be saved; yet so as by fire."
6. "For the Lord knoweth the way of the righteous" (ver. 6). As it is
said, medicine knows health, but knows not disease, and yet disease is
recognised by the art of medicine. In like manner can it be said that
"the Lord knoweth the way of the righteous," but the way of the ungodly
He knoweth not. Not that the Lord is ignorant of anything, and yet He
says to sinners, "I never knew you." [28] "But the way of the ungodly
shall perish;" is the same as if it were said, the way of the ungodly
the Lord knoweth not. But it is expressed more plainly that this should
be not to be known of the Lord, namely, to "perish;" and this to be
known of the Lord, namely, to "abide;" so as that to be should
appertain to the knowledge of God, but to His not knowing not to be.
For the Lord saith, "I Am that I Am," and, "I Am hath sent me." [29]
__________________________________________________________________
[6] Homine Dominico. This term as applied to our Lord, St. Augustin
disallows in his Retractat. i. 19. [He would not have objected to the
expression of our translator, "the Lord Man," as above. It is the
adjective Dominicus to which he objects, because it is ambiguous, quasi
Man of the Lord.--C.]
[7] 1 Cor. xv. 47.
[8] 2 Tim. ii. 17.
[9] 1 Tim. i. 9.
[10] John viii. 5, 6.
[11] Ps. xvi. 7.
[12] Prov. viii.
[13] Ps. lxv. 9.
[14] Matt. iii. 11.
[15] John vii. 37.
[16] John iv. 10, 14.
[17] Rev. xvii. 15.
[18] Isa. xl. 6-8.
[19] Ps. xvi. 5, 6.
[20] Ps. xxxvii. 34.
[21] Matt. v. 5.
[22] Ps. xxxvi. 11.
[23] Isa. xiv. 13, 14.
[24] Gen. iii. 8.
[25] Oxford mss. "the inner man."
[26] Ecclus. x. 9.
[27] Oxford mss. "what is darkly said."
[28] Matt. vii. 23.
[29] Exod. iii. 14. [Irenaeus, p. 419, vol. i. A.N.F.; also Tertull. p.
682, vol. iii. A.N.F.; same series elsewhere.--C.]
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm II.
1. "Why do the heathen rage, and the people meditate vain things?"
(ver. 1). "The kings of the earth have stood up, and the rulers taken
counsel together, against the Lord, and against His Christ" (ver. 2).
It is said, "why?" as if it were said, in vain. For what they wished,
namely, Christ's destruction, they accomplished not; for this is spoken
of our Lord's persecutors, of whom also mention is made in the Acts of
the Apostles. [30]
2. "Let us break their bonds asunder, and cast away their yoke from us"
(ver. 3). Although it admits of another acceptation, yet is it more
fitly understood as in the person of those who are said to "meditate
vain things." So that "let us break their bonds asunder, and cast away
their yoke from us," may be, let us do our endeavour, that the
Christian religion do not bind us, nor be imposed upon us.
3. "He that dwelleth in the heavens shall laugh them to scorn, and the
Lord shall have them in derision" (ver. 4). The sentence is repeated;
for "He who dwelleth in the heavens," is afterwards put, "the Lord;"
and for "shall laugh them to scorn," is afterwards put, "shall have
them in derision." Nothing of this however must be taken in a carnal
sort, as if God either laugheth with cheek, or derideth with nostril;
but it is to be understood of that power which He giveth to His saints,
that they seeing things to come, namely, that the Name and rule of
Christ is to pervade posterity and possess all nations, should
understand that those men "meditate a vain thing." For this power
whereby these things are foreknown is God's "laughter" and "derision."
"He that dwelleth in the heavens shall laugh them to scorn." If by
"heavens" we understand holy souls, by these God, as foreknowing what
is to come, will "laugh them to scorn, and have them in derision."
4. "Then He shall speak unto them in His wrath, and vex them in His
sore displeasure" (ver. 5). For showing more clearly how He will "speak
unto them," he added, He will "vex them;" so that "in His wrath," is,
"in His sore displeasure." But by the "wrath and sore displeasure" of
the Lord God must not be understood any mental perturbation; but the
might whereby He most justly avengeth, by the subjection of all
creation to His service. For that is to be observed and remembered
which is written in the Wisdom of Solomon, "But Thou, Lord of power,
judgest with tranquillity, and with great favour orderest us." [31] The
"wrath" of God then is an emotion which is produced in the soul which
knoweth the law of God, when it sees this same law transgressed by the
sinner. For by this emotion of righteous souls many things are avenged.
Although the "wrath" of God can be well understood of that darkening of
the mind, which overtakes those who transgress the law of God.
5. "Yet am I set by Him as King upon Sion, His holy hill, preaching His
decree" (ver. 6). This is clearly spoken in the Person of the very Lord
our Saviour Christ. But if Sion signify, as some interpret, beholding,
we must not understand it of anything rather than of the Church, where
daily is the desire raised of beholding the bright glory of God,
according to that of the Apostle, "but we with open face beholding the
glory of the Lord." [32] Therefore the meaning of this is, Yet I am set
by Him as King over His holy Church; which for its eminence and
stability He calleth a mountain. "Yet I am set by Him as King." I, that
is, whose "bands" they were meditating "to break asunder," and whose
"yoke" to "cast away." "Preaching His decree." Who doth not see the
meaning of this, seeing it is daily practised?
6. "The Lord hath said unto me, Thou art My Son, to-day have I begotten
Thee" (ver. 7). Although that day may also seem to be prophetically
spoken of, on which Jesus Christ was born according to the flesh; and
in eternity there is nothing past as if it had ceased to be, nor future
as if it were not yet, but present only, since whatever is eternal,
always is; yet as "today" intimates presentiality, a divine
interpretation is given to that expression, "To-day have I begotten
Thee," whereby the uncorrupt and Catholic faith proclaims the eternal
generation of the power and Wisdom of God, who is the Only-begotten
Son.
7. "Ask of Me, and I shall give Thee the nations for Thine inheritance"
(ver. 8). This has at once a temporal sense with reference to the
Manhood which He took on Himself, who offered up Himself as a Sacrifice
in the stead of all sacrifices, who also maketh intercession for us; so
that the words, "ask of Me," may be referred to all this temporal
dispensation, which has been instituted for mankind, namely, that the
"nations" should be joined to the Name of Christ, and so be redeemed
from death, and possessed by God. "I shall give Thee the nations for
Thine inheritance," which so possess them for their salvation, and to
bear unto Thee spiritual fruit. "And the uttermost parts of the earth
for Thy possession." The same repeated, "The uttermost parts of the
earth," is put for "the nations;" but more clearly, that we might
understand all the nations. And "Thy possession" stands for "Thine
inheritance."
8. "Thou shalt rule them with a rod of iron," with inflexible justice,
and "Thou shalt break them like a potter's vessel" (ver. 9); that is,
"Thou shalt break" in them earthly lusts, and the filthy doings of the
old man, and whatsoever hath been derived and inured from the sinful
clay. "And now understand, ye kings" (ver. 10). "And now;" that is,
being now renewed, your covering of clay worn out, that is, the carnal
vessels of error which belong to your past life, "now understand," ye
who now are "kings;" that is, able now to govern all that is servile
and brutish in you, able now too to fight, not as "they who beat the
air, but chastening your bodies, and bringing them into subjection."
[33] "Be instructed, all ye who judge the earth." This again is a
repetition; "Be instructed" is instead of "understand;" and "ye who
judge the earth" instead of "ye kings." For He signifies the spiritual
by "those who judge the earth." For whatsoever we judge, is below us;
and whatsoever is below the spiritual man, is with good reason called
"the earth;" because it is defiled with earthly corruption.
9. "Serve the Lord with fear;" lest what is said, "Ye kings and judges
of the earth," turn into pride: "And rejoice with trembling" (ver. 11).
Very excellently is "rejoice" added, lest "serve the Lord with fear"
should seem to tend to misery. But again, lest this same rejoicing
should run on to unrestrained inconsiderateness, there is added "with
trembling," that it might avail for a warning, and for the careful
guarding of holiness. It can also be taken thus, "And now ye kings
understand;" that is, And now that I am set as King, be ye not sad,
kings of the earth, as if your excellency were taken from you, but
rather "understand and be instructed." For it is expedient for you,
that ye should be under Him, by whom understanding and instruction are
given you. And this is expedient for you, that ye lord it not with
rashness, but that ye "serve the Lord" of all "with fear," and
"rejoice" in bliss most sure and most pure, with all caution and
carefulness, lest ye fall therefrom into pride.
10. "Lay hold of discipline, [34] lest at any time the Lord be angry,
and ye perish from the righteous way" (ver. 12). This is the same as,
"understand," and, "be instructed." For to understand and be
instructed, this is to lay hold of discipline. Still in that it is
said, "lay hold of," it is plainly enough intimated that there is some
protection and defence against all things which might do hurt unless
with so great carefulness it be laid hold of. "Lest at any time the
Lord be angry," is expressed with a doubt, not as regards the vision of
the prophet to whom it is certain, but as regards those who are warned;
for they, to whom it is not openly revealed, are wont to think with
doubt of the anger of God. This then they ought to say to themselves,
let us "lay hold of discipline, lest at any time the Lord be angry, and
we perish from the righteous way." Now, how "the Lord be angry" is to
be taken, has been said above. And "ye perish from the righteous way."
This is a great punishment, and dreaded by those who have had any
perception of the sweetness of righteousness; for he who perisheth from
the way of righteousness, in much misery will wander through the ways
of unrighteousness.
11. "When His anger shall be shortly kindled, blessed are all they who
put their trust in Him;" that is, when the vengeance shall come which
is prepared for the ungodly and for sinners, not only will it not light
on those "who put their trust in" the Lord, but it will even avail for
the foundation and exaltation of a kingdom for them. For he said not,
"When His anger shall be shortly kindled," safe "are all they who put
their trust in Him," as though they should have this only thereby, to
be exempt from punishment; but he said, "blessed;" in which there is
the sum and accumulation of all good things. Now the meaning of
"shortly" I suppose to be this, that it will be something sudden,
whilst sinners will deem it far off and long to come.
__________________________________________________________________
[30] Acts iv. 26.
[31] Wisd. xii. 18.
[32] 2 Cor. iii. 18.
[33] 1 Cor. ix. 26, 27.
[34] [This reading is corrected by St. Jerome in his Hebraic Psalter,
and our Authorized Version "Kiss the Son" is sustained by the best
authorities. See a forcible elucidation in Bishop Wordsworth's
Commentary on Psalms. Ps. ii.--C.]
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm III. [35]
A psalm of David, when he fled from the face of Abessalon his son.
1. The words, "I slept, and took rest; and rose, for the Lord will take
me up," lead us to believe that this Psalm is to be understood as in
the Person of Christ; for they sound more applicable to the Passion and
Resurrection of our Lord, than to that history in which David's flight
is described from the face of his rebellious son. And, since it is
written of Christ's disciples, "The sons of the bridegroom fast not as
long as the bridegroom is with them;" [36] it is no wonder if by his
undutiful [37] son be here meant that undutiful [38] disciple who
betrayed Him. From whose face although it may be understood
historically that He fled, when on his departure He withdrew with the
rest to the mountain; yet in a spiritual sense, when the Son of God,
that is the Power and Wisdom of God, abandoned the mind of Judas; when
the Devil wholly occupied him; as it is written, "The Devil entered
into his heart," [39] may it be well understood that Christ fled from
his face; not that Christ gave place to the Devil, but that on Christ's
departure the Devil took possession. Which departure, I suppose, is
called a flight in this Psalm, because of its quickness; which is
indicated also by the word of our Lord, saying, "That thou doest, do
quickly." [40] So even in common conversation we say of anything that
does not come to mind, it has fled from me; and of a man of much
learning we say, nothing flies from him. Wherefore truth fled from the
mind of Judas, when it ceased to enlighten him. But Absalom, as some
interpret, in the Latin tongue signifies, Patris pax, a father's peace.
And it may seem strange, whether in the history of the kings, when
Absalom carried on war against his father; or in the history of the New
Testament, when Judas was the betrayer of our Lord; how "father's
peace" can be understood. But both in the former place they who read
carefully, see that David in that war was at peace with his son, who
even with sore grief lamented his death, saying, "O Absalom, my son,
would God I had died for thee!" [41] And in the history of the New
Testament by that so great and so wonderful forbearance of our Lord; in
that He bore so long with him as if good, when He was not ignorant of
his thoughts; in that He admitted him to the Supper in which He
committed and delivered to His disciples the figure of His Body and
Blood; finally, in that He received the kiss of peace at the very time
of His betrayal; it is easily understood how Christ showed peace to His
betrayer, although he was laid waste by the intestine war of so
abominable a device. And therefore is Absalom called "father's peace,"
because his father had the peace, which he had not.
2. "O Lord, how are they multiplied that trouble me!" (ver. 1). So
multiplied indeed were they, that one even from the number of His
disciples was not wanting, who was added to the number of His
persecutors. "Many rise up against me; many say unto my soul, There is
no salvation for him in his God" (ver. 2). It is clear that if they had
had any idea that He would rise again, assuredly they would not have
slain Him. To this end are those speeches, "Let Him come down from the
cross, if He be the Son of God;" and again, "He saved others, Himself
He cannot save." [42] Therefore, neither would Judas have betrayed Him,
if he had not been of the number of those who despised Christ, saying,
"There is no salvation for Him in His God."
3. "But Thou, O Lord, art my taker." [43] It is said to God in the
nature of man, for the taking of man is, the Word made Flesh. "My
glory." Even He calls God his glory, whom the Word of God so took, that
God became one with Him. Let the proud learn, who unwillingly hear,
when it is said to them, "For what hast thou that thou didst not
receive? Now if thou didst receive it, why dost thou glory as if thou
hadst not received it?" [44] "And the lifter up of my head" (ver. 3). I
think that this should be here taken of the human mind, which is not
unreasonably called the head of the soul; [45] which so inhered in, and
in a sort coalesced with, the supereminent excellency of the Word
taking man, that it was not laid aside by so great humiliation of the
Passion.
4. "With my voice have I cried unto the Lord" (ver. 4); that is, not
with the voice of the body, which is drawn out with the sound of the
reverberation of the air; but with the voice of the heart, which to men
speaks not, but with God sounds as a cry. By this voice Susanna was
heard; [46] and with this voice the Lord Himself commanded that prayer
should be made in closets, [47] that is, in the recesses of the heart
noiselessly. Nor would one easily say that prayer is not made with this
voice, if no sound of words is uttered from the body; since even when
in silence we pray within the heart, if thoughts interpose alien from
the mind of one praying, it cannot yet be said, "With my voice have I
cried unto the Lord." Nor is this rightly said, save when the soul
alone, taking to itself nothing of the flesh, and nothing of the aims
of the flesh, in prayer, speaks to God, where He only hears. But even
this is called a cry by reason of the strength of its intention. "And
He heard me out of His holy mountain." We have the Lord Himself called
a mountain by the Prophet, as it is written, "The stone that was cut
out without hands grew to the size of a mountain." [48] But this cannot
be taken of His Person, unless peradventure He would speak thus, out of
myself, as of His holy mountain He heard me, when He dwelt in me, that
is, in this very mountain. But it is more plain and unembarrassed, if
we understand that God out of His justice heard. For it was just that
He should raise again from the dead the Innocent who was slain, and to
whom evil had been recompensed for good, and that He should render to
the persecutor a meet reward, who repaid Him evil for good. For we
read, "Thy justice is as the mountains of God." [49]
5. "I slept, and took rest" [50] (ver. 5). It may be not unsuitably
remarked, that it is expressly said, "I," to signify that of His own
Will He underwent death, according to that, "Therefore doth My Father
love Me, because I lay down My life, that I might take it again. No man
taketh it from Me; I have power to lay it down, and I have power to
take it again." [51] Therefore, saith He, you have not taken Me as
though against My will, and slain Me; but "I slept, and took rest; and
rose, for the Lord will take me up." Scripture contains numberless
instances of sleep being put for death; as the Apostle says, "I would
not have you to be ignorant, brethren, concerning them which are
asleep." [52] Nor need we make any question why it is added, "took
rest," seeing that it has already been said, "I slept." Repetitions of
this kind are usual in Scripture, as we have pointed out many in the
second Psalm. But some copies have, "I slept, and was cast into a deep
sleep." [53] And different copies express it differently, according to
the possible renderings of the Greek words, ego ds ekoimethen kai
hupnosa. Unless perhaps sleeping [54] may be taken of one dying, but
sleep [55] of one dead: so that sleeping may be the transition into
sleep, as awakening is the transition into wakefulness. Let us not deem
these repetitions in the sacred writings empty ornaments of speech. "I
slept, and took rest," is therefore well understood as "I gave Myself
up to My Passion, and death ensued." "And I rose, for the Lord will
take Me up." [56] This is the more to be remarked, how that in one
sentence the Psalmist has used a verb of past and future time. For he
has said, both "I rose," which is the past, and "will take Me up,"
which is the future; seeing that assuredly the rising again could not
be without that taking up. But in prophecy the future is well joined to
the past, whereby both are signified. Since things which are prophesied
of as yet to come in reference to time are future; but in reference to
the knowledge of those who prophesy they are already to be viewed as
done. Verbs of the present tense are also mixed in, which shall be
treated of in their proper place when they occur.
6. "I will not fear the thousands of people that surround me" (ver. 6).
It is written in the Gospels how great a multitude stood around Him as
He was suffering, and on the cross. "Arise, O Lord, save me, O my God"
(ver. 7). It is not said to God, "Arise," as if asleep or lying down,
but it is usual in holy Scripture to attribute to God what He doeth in
us; not indeed universally, but where it can be done suitably; as when
He is said to speak, when by His gift Prophets speak, and Apostles, or
whatsoever messengers of the truth. Hence that text, "Would you have
proof of Christ, who speaketh in me?" [57] For he doth not say, of
Christ, by whose enlightening or order I speak; but he attributes at
once the speaking itself to Him, by whose gift he spake.
7. "Since Thou hast smitten all who oppose me without a cause." It is
not to be pointed as if it were one sentence, "Arise, O Lord, save me,
O my God; since Thou hast smitten all who oppose me without a cause."
For He did not therefore save Him, because He smote His enemies; but
rather He being saved, He smote them. Therefore it belongs to what
follows, so that the sense is this; "Since Thou hast smitten all who
oppose me without a cause, Thou hast broken the teeth of the sinners;"
that is, thereby hast Thou broken the teeth of the sinners, since Thou
hast smitten all who oppose me. It is forsooth the punishment of the
opposers, whereby their teeth have been broken, that is, the words of
sinners rending with their cursing the Son of God, brought to nought,
as it were to dust; so that we may understand "teeth" thus, as words of
cursing. Of [58] which teeth the Apostle speaks, "If ye bite one
another, take heed that ye be not consumed one of another." [59] The
teeth of sinners can also be taken as the chiefs of sinners; by whose
authority each one is cut off from the fellowship of godly livers, and
as it were incorporated with evil livers. To these teeth are opposed
the Church's teeth, by whose authority believers are cut off from the
error of the Gentiles and divers opinions, and are translated into that
fellowship which is the body of Christ. With these teeth Peter was told
to eat the animals when they had been killed, that is, by killing in
the Gentiles what they were, and changing them into what he was
himself. Of these teeth too of the Church it is said, "Thy teeth are as
a flock of shorn sheep, coming up from the bath, whereof every one
beareth twins, and there is not one barren among them." [60] These are
they who prescribe rightly, and as they prescribe, live; who do what is
written, "Let your works shine before men, that they may bless your
Father which is in heaven." [61] For moved by their authority, they
believe God who speaketh and worketh through these men; and separated
from the world, to which they were once conformed, they pass over into
the members of the Church. And rightly therefore are they, through whom
such things are done, called teeth like to shorn sheep; for they have
laid aside the burdens of earthly cares, and coming up from the bath,
from the washing away of the filth of the world by the Sacrament of
Baptism, every one beareth twins. For they fulfil the two commandments,
of which it is said, "On these two commandments hang all the Law and
the Prophets;" [62] loving God with all their heart, and with all their
soul, and with all their mind, and their neighbour as themselves.
"There is not one barren among them," for much fruit they render unto
God. According to this sense then it is to be thus understood, "Thou
hast broken the teeth of the sinners," that is, Thou hast brought the
chiefs of the sinners to nought, by smiting all who oppose Me without a
cause. For the chiefs according to the Gospel history persecuted Him,
whilst the lower people honoured Him.
8. "Salvation is of the Lord; and upon Thy people be Thy blessing"
(ver. 8). In one sentence the Psalmist has enjoined men what to
believe, and has prayed for believers. For when it is said, "Salvation
is of the Lord," the words are addressed to men. Nor does it follow,
"And upon Thy people" be "Thy blessing," in such wise as that the whole
is spoken to men, but there is a change into prayer addressed to God
Himself, for the very people to whom it was said, "Salvation is of the
Lord." What else then doth he say but this? Let no man presume on
himself, seeing that it is of the Lord to save from the death of sin;
for, "Wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me from the body of
this death? The grace of God through Jesus Christ our Lord." [63] But
do Thou, O Lord, bless Thy people, who look for salvation from Thee.
9. This Psalm can be taken as in the Person of Christ another way;
which is that whole Christ should speak. [64] I mean by whole, with His
body, of which He is the Head, according to the Apostle, who says, "Ye
are the body of Christ, and the members." [65] He therefore is the Head
of this body; wherefore in another place he saith, "But doing the truth
in love, we may increase in Him in all things, who is the Head, Christ,
from whom the whole body is joined together and compacted." [66] In the
Prophet then at once, the Church, and her Head (the Church founded
amidst the storms of persecution throughout the whole world, which we
know already to have come to pass), speaks, "O Lord, how are they
multiplied that trouble me! many rise up against me;" wishing to
exterminate the Christian name. "Many say unto my soul, There is no
salvation for him in his God." For they would not otherwise hope that
they could destroy the Church, branching out so very far and wide,
unless they believed that God had no care thereof. "But Thou, O Lord,
art my taker;" in Christ of course. For into that flesh [67] the Church
too hath been taken by the Word, "who was made flesh, and dwelt in us;"
[68] for that "In heavenly places hath He made us to sit together with
Him." [69] When the Head goes before, the other members will follow;
for, "Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?" [70] Justly then
does the Church say, "Thou art my taker. My glory;" for she doth not
attribute her excellency to herself, seeing that she knoweth by whose
grace and mercy she is what she is. "And the lifter up of my head," of
Him, namely, who, "the First-born from the dead," [71] ascended up into
heaven. "With my voice have I cried unto the Lord, and He heard me out
of His holy mountain." This is the prayer of all the Saints, the odour
of sweetness, which ascends up in the sight of the Lord. For now the
Church is heard out of this mountain, which is also her head; or, out
of that justice of God, by which both His elect are set free, and their
persecutors punished. Let the people of God also say, "I slept, and
took rest; and rose, for the Lord will take me up;" that they may be
joined, and cleave to their Head. [72] For to this people is it said,
"Awake thou that sleepest, and arise from the dead, and Christ shall
lay hold on thee." [73] Since they are taken out of sinners, of whom it
is said generally, "But they that sleep, sleep in the night." [74] Let
them say moreover, "I will not fear the thousands of people that
surround me;" of the heathen verily that compass me about to extinguish
everywhere, if they could, the Christian name. But how should they be
feared, when by the blood of the martyrs in Christ, as by oil, the
ardour of love is inflamed? "Arise, O Lord, save me, O my God." The
body can address this to its own Head. For at His rising the body was
saved; who "ascended up on high, led captivity captive, gave gifts unto
men." [75] For this is said by the Prophet, in the secret purpose of
God, [76] until that ripe harvest [77] which is spoken of in the
Gospel, whose salvation is in His Resurrection, who vouchsafed to die
for us, shed out our Lord to the earth. "Since Thou hast smitten all
who oppose me without a cause, Thou hast broken the teeth of the
sinners." Now while the Church hath rule, the enemies of the Christian
name are smitten with confusion; and, whether their curses or their
chiefs, brought to nought. Believe then, O man, that "salvation is of
the Lord: and," Thou, O Lord, may "Thy blessing" be "upon Thy people."
10. Each one too of us may say, when a multitude of vices and lusts
leads the resisting mind in the law of sin, "O Lord, how are they
multiplied that trouble me! many rise up against me." And, since
despair of recovery generally creeps in through the accumulation of
vices, as though these same vices were mocking the soul, or even as
though the Devil and his angels through their poisonous suggestions
were at work to make us despair, it is said with great truth, "Many say
unto my soul, There is no salvation for him in his God. But Thou, O
Lord, art my taker." For this is our hope, that He hath vouchsafed to
take the nature of man in Christ. "My glory;" according to that rule,
that no one should ascribe ought to himself. "And the lifter up of my
head;" either of Him, who is the Head of us all, or of the spirit of
each several one of us, which is the head of the soul and body. For
"the head of the woman is the man, and the head of the man is Christ."
[78] But the mind is lifted up, when it can be said already, "With the
mind I serve the law of God;" [79] that the rest of man may be reduced
to peaceable submission, when in the resurrection of the flesh "death
is swallowed up in victory." [80] "With my voice I have cried unto the
Lord;" with that most inward and intensive voice. "And He heard me out
of His holy mountain;" [81] Him, through whom He hath succoured us,
through whose mediation He heareth us. "I slept, and took rest; and
rose, for the Lord will take me up." Who of the faithful is not able to
say this, when he calls to mind the death of his sins, and the gift of
regeneration? "I will not fear the thousands of people that surround
me." Besides those which the Church universally hath borne and beareth,
each one also hath temptations, by which, when compassed about, he may
speak these words, "Arise, O Lord; save me, O my God:" that is, make me
to arise. "Since Thou hast smitten all who oppose me without a cause:"
it is well in God's determinate [82] purpose said of the Devil and his
angels; who rage not only against the whole body of Christ, but also
against each one in particular. "Thou hast broken the teeth of the
sinners." Each man hath those that revile him, he hath too the prime
authors of vice, who strive to cut him off from the body of Christ. But
"salvation is of the Lord." Pride is to be guarded against, and we must
say, "My soul cleaved after Thee." [83] "And upon Thy people" be "Thy
blessing:" that is, upon each one of us.
__________________________________________________________________
[35] [On the place of this Psalm in the Ordo Psalmorum, see the
important principle laid down by Bishop Wordsworth, in his Introduction
to the Psalms, p. v.--C.]
[36] Matt. ix. 15.
[37] Impius.
[38] Impius.
[39] John xiii. 27.
[40] John xiii. 27.
[41] 2 Sam. xviii. 33.
[42] Matt. xxvii. 42.
[43] Susceptor.
[44] 1 Cor. iv. 7.
[45] [1 Thess. v. 23. See Tertull. vol. iii. p. 450, A.N.F.; also
Irenaeus, vol. i. p. 386, ibid.--C.]
[46] Sus. 44.
[47] Matt. vi. 6.
[48] Dan. ii. 34, 35.
[49] Ps. xxxvi. 6. [See Tertullian, p. 364, A.N.F. vol. iii.--C.]
[50] Ego dormivi, et somnum cepi. In the Hebrew, also, I is emphatic.
[51] John x. 17, 18.
[52] 1 Thess. iv. 13.
[53] Dormivi, et soporatus sum.
[54] Dormitio.
[55] Somnus.
[56] [Justin Martyr understands this of Christ and His resurrection.
A.N.F. vol. i. p. 175.--C.]
[57] 2 Cor. xiii. 3.
[58] Oxford mss. "De."
[59] Gal. v. 15.
[60] Sol. Song iv. 2, vi. 6.
[61] Matt. v. 16.
[62] Matt. xxii. 40.
[63] Rom. vii. 24, 25.
[64] [On this principle, which rules throughout this commentary, see
the author's remark on Ps. xcvi., infra.--C.]
[65] 1 Cor. xii. 27.
[66] Eph. iv. 15, 16.
[67] Homine.
[68] John i. 14.
[69] Eph. ii. 6.
[70] Rom. viii. 35.
[71] Col. i. 18.
[72] [An Easter antiphon in the Western liturgies. Wordsworth, apud
loc. Commentary on Psalms, p. 5.--C.]
[73] Eph. v. 14.
[74] 1 Thess. v. 7.
[75] Eph. iv. 8; Ps. lxviii. 18.
[76] Praedestinatione.
[77] Matt. ix. 37.
[78] 1 Cor. xi. 3.
[79] Rom. vii. 25.
[80] 1 Cor. xv. 54.
[81] [Here, for the first time, comes in the word Selah, the Sursum
Corda of the Hebrews. Bishop Wordsworth notes the three upliftings
which here precede.--C.]
[82] Praedestinatione.
[83] Ps. lxiii. 8. ekollethe, Sept.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm IV.
To the end, a psalm song to [84] David.
1. "Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to every one that
believeth." [85] For this "end" signifies perfection, not consumption.
Now it may be a question, whether every Song be a Psalm, or rather
every Psalm a Song; whether there are some Songs which cannot be called
Psalms, and some Psalms which cannot be called Songs. But the Scripture
must be attended to, if haply "Song" do not denote a joyful theme. But
those are called Psalms which are sung to the Psaltery; which the
history as a high mystery declares the Prophet David to have used. [86]
Of which matter this is not the place to discourse; for it requires
prolonged inquiry, and much discussion. Now meanwhile we must look
either for the words of the Lord Man [87] after the Resurrection, or of
man in the Church believing and hoping on Him.
2. "When I called, the God of my righteousness heard me" (ver. 1). When
I called, God heard me, the Psalmist says, of whom is my righteousness.
"In tribulation Thou hast enlarged me." Thou hast led me from the
straits of sadness into the broad ways of joy. For, "tribulation and
straitness is on every soul of man that doeth evil." [88] But he who
says, "We rejoice in tribulations, knowing that tribulation worketh
patience;" up to that where he says, "Because the love of God is shed
abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost, which is given unto us;" [89]
he hath no straits of heart, they be heaped on him outwardly by them
that persecute him. Now the change of person, for that from the third
person, where he says, "He heard," he passes at once to the second,
where he says, "Thou hast enlarged me;" if it be not done for the sake
of variety and grace, it is strange why the Psalmist should first wish
to declare to men that he had been heard, and afterwards address Him
who heard him. Unless perchance, when he had declared how he was heard,
in this very enlargement of heart he preferred to speak with God; that
he might even in this way show what it is to be enlarged in heart, that
is, to have God already shed abroad in the heart, with whom he might
hold converse interiorly. Which is rightly understood as spoken in the
person of him who, believing on Christ, has been enlightened; but in
that of the very Lord Man, whom the Wisdom of God took, I do not see
how this can be suitable. For He was never deserted by It. But as His
very prayer against trouble is a sign rather of our infirmity, so also
of that sudden enlargement of heart the same Lord may speak for His
faithful ones, whom He has personated also when He said, "I was an
hungered, and ye gave Me no meat; I was thirsty, and ye gave Me no
drink," [90] and so forth. Wherefore here also He can say, "Thou hast
enlarged me," for one of the least of His, holding converse with God,
whose "love" he has "shed abroad in his heart by the Holy Ghost, which
is given unto us." [91] "Have mercy upon me and hear my prayer." Why
does he again ask, when already he declared that he had been heard and
enlarged? It is for our sakes, of whom it is said, "But if we hope for
that we see not, we wait in patience;" [92] or is it, that in him who
has believed that which is begun may be perfected?
3. "O ye sons of men, how long heavy in heart" (ver. 2). Let your [93]
error, says he, have lasted at least up to the coming of the Son of
God; why then any longer are ye heavy in heart? When will ye make an
end of crafty wiles, if now when the truth is present ye make it not?
"Why do ye love vanity, and seek a lie?" Why would ye be blessed by the
lowest things? Truth alone, from which all things are true, maketh
blessed. For, "vanity is of deceivers, and all is vanity." [94] "What
profit hath a man of all his labour, wherewith he laboureth under the
sun?" Why then are ye held back by the love of things temporal? Why
follow ye after the last things, as though the first, which is vanity
and a lie? For you would have them abide with you, which all pass away,
as doth a shadow.
4. "And know ye that the Lord hath magnified his Holy One" (ver. 3).
Whom but Him, whom He raised up from below, and placed in heaven at His
right hand? Therefore doth he chide mankind, that they would turn at
length from the love of this world to Him. But if the addition of the
conjunction (for he says, "and know ye") is to any a difficulty, he may
easily observe in Scripture that this manner of speech is usual in that
language, in which the Prophets spoke. For you often find this
beginning, "And" the Lord said unto him, "And" the word of the Lord
came to him. Which joining by a conjunction, when no sentence has gone
before, to which the following one may be annexed, peradventure
admirably conveys to us, that the utterance of the truth in words is
connected with that vision which goes on in the heart. Although in this
place it may be said, that the former sentence, "Why do ye love vanity,
and seek a lie?" is as if it were written, Do not love vanity, and seek
a lie. And being thus read, it follows in the most direct construction,
"and know ye that the Lord hath magnified His Holy One." But the
interposition of the Diapsalma forbids our joining this sentence with
the preceding one. For whether this be a Hebrew word, as some would
have it, which means, so be it; or a Greek word, which marks a pause in
the psalmody (so as that Psalma should be what is sung in psalmody, but
Diapsalma an interval of silence in the psalmody; that as the coupling
of voices in singing is called Sympsalma, so their separation
Diapsalma, where a certain pause of interrupted continuity is marked):
whether I say it be the former, or the latter, or something else, this
at least is probable, that the sense cannot rightly be continued and
joined, where the Diapsalma intervenes. [95]
5. "The Lord will hear me, when I cry unto Him." I believe that we are
here warned, that with great earnestness of heart, that is, with an
inward and incorporeal cry, we should implore help of God. For as we
must give thanks for enlightenment in this life, so must we pray for
rest after this life. Wherefore in the person, either of the faithful
preacher of the Gospel, or of our Lord Himself, it may be taken, as if
it were written, the Lord will hear you, when you cry unto Him.
6. "Be ye angry, and sin not" (ver. 4). For the thought occurred, Who
is worthy to be heard? or how shall the sinner not cry in vain unto the
Lord? Therefore, "Be ye angry," saith he, "and sin not." Which may be
taken two ways: either, even if ye be angry, do not sin; that is, even
if there arise an emotion in the soul, which now by reason of the
punishment of sin is not in our power, at least let not the reason and
the mind, which is after God regenerated within, that with the mind we
should serve the law of God, although with the flesh we as yet serve
the law of sin, [96] consent thereunto; or, repent ye, that is, be ye
angry with yourselves for your past sins, and henceforth cease to sin.
"What you say in your hearts:" there is understood, "say ye:" so that
the complete sentence is, "What ye say in your hearts, that say ye;"
that is, be ye not the people of whom it is said, "with their lips they
honour Me, but their heart is far from Me. [97] In your chambers be ye
pricked." This is what has been expressed already "in heart." For this
is the chamber, of which our Lord warns us, that we should pray within,
with closed doors. [98] But, "be ye pricked," refers either to the pain
of repentance, that the soul in punishment should prick itself, that it
be not condemned and tormented in God's judgment; or, to arousing, that
we should awake to behold the light of Christ, as if pricks were made
use of. But some say that not, "be ye pricked," but, "be ye opened," is
the better reading; because in the Greek Psalter it is katanugete,
which refers to that enlargement of the heart, in order that the
shedding abroad of love by the Holy Ghost may be received.
7. "Offer the sacrifice of righteousness, and hope in the Lord" (ver.
5). He says the same in another Psalm, "the sacrifice for God is a
troubled spirit." [99] Wherefore that this is the sacrifice of
righteousness which is offered through repentance it is not
unreasonably here understood. For what more righteous, than that each
one should be angry with his own sins, rather than those of others, and
that in self-punishment he should sacrifice himself unto God? Or are
righteous works after repentance the sacrifice of righteousness? For
the interposition of Diapsalma [100] not unreasonably perhaps intimates
even a transition from the old life to the new life: that on the old
man being destroyed or weakened by repentance, the sacrifice of
righteousness, according to the regeneration of the new man, may be
offered to God; when the soul now cleansed offers and places itself on
the altar of faith, to be encompassed by heavenly fire, that is, by the
Holy Ghost. So that this may be the meaning, "Offer the sacrifice of
righteousness, and hope in the Lord;" that is, live uprightly, and hope
for the gift of the Holy Ghost, that the truth, in which you have
believed, may shine upon you.
8. But yet, "hope in the Lord," is as yet expressed without [101]
explanation. Now what is hoped for, but good things? But since each one
would obtain from God that good, which he loves; and they are not easy
to be found who love interior goods, that is, which belong to the
inward man, which alone should be loved, but the rest are to be used
for necessity, not to be enjoyed for pleasure; excellently did he
subjoin, when he had said, "hope in the Lord" (ver. 6), "Many say, Who
showeth us good things?" This is the speech, and this the daily inquiry
of all the foolish and unrighteous; whether of those who long for the
peace and quiet of a worldly life, and from the frowardness of mankind
find it not; who even in their blindness dare to find fault with the
order of events, when involved in their own deservings they deem the
times worse than these which are past: or, of those who doubt and
despair of that future life, which is promised us; who are often
saying, Who knows if it's true? or, who ever came from below, to tell
us this? Very exquisitely then, and briefly, he shows (to those, that
is, who have interior sight), what good things are to be sought;
answering their question, who say, "Who showeth us good things?" "The
light of Thy countenance," saith he, "is stamped on us, O Lord." This
light is the whole and true good of man, which is seen not with the
eye, but with the mind. But he says, "stamped on us," as a penny is
stamped with the king's image. For man was made after the image and
likeness of God, [102] which he defaced by sin: therefore it is his
true and eternal good, if by a new birth he be stamped. And I believe
this to be the bearing of that which some understand skilfully; I mean,
what the Lord said on seeing Caesar's tribute money, "Render to Caesar
the things that are Caesar's; and to God the things that are God's."
[103] As if He had said, In like manner as Caesar exacts from you the
impression of his image, so also does God: that as the tribute money is
rendered to him, so should the soul to God, illumined and stamped with
the light of His countenance. (Ver. 7.) "Thou hast put gladness into my
heart." Gladness then is not to be sought without by them, who, being
still heavy in heart, "love vanity, and seek a lie;" but within, where
the light of God's countenance is stamped. For Christ dwelleth in the
inner man, [104] as the Apostle says; for to Him doth it appertain to
see truth, since He hath said, "I am the truth." [105] And again, when
He spake in the Apostle, saying, "Would you receive a proof of Christ,
who speaketh in me?" [106] He spake not of course from without to him,
but in his very heart, that is, in that chamber where we are to pray.
9. But men (who doubtless are many) who follow after things temporal,
know not to say aught else, than, "Who showeth us good things?" when
the true and certain good within their very selves they cannot see. Of
these accordingly is most justly said, what he adds next: "From the
time of His corn, of wine, and oil, they have been multiplied." For the
addition of His, is not superfluous. For the corn is God's: inasmuch as
He is "the living bread which came down from heaven." [107] The wine
too is God's: for, "they shall be inebriated," he says, "with the
fatness of thine house." [108] The oil too is God's: of which it is
said, "Thou hast fattened my head with oil." [109] But those many, who
say, "Who showeth us good things?" and who see not that the kingdom of
heaven is within them: these, "from the time of His corn, of wine, and
oil, are multiplied." For multiplication does not always betoken
plentifulness, and not, generally, scantiness: when the soul, given up
to temporal pleasures, burns ever with desire, and cannot be satisfied;
and, distracted with manifold and anxious thought, is not permitted to
see the simple good. Such is the soul of which it is said, "For the
corruptible body presseth down the soul, and the earthly tabernacle
weigheth down the mind that museth on many things." [110] A soul like
this, by the departure and succession of temporal goods, that is, "from
the time of His corn, wine, and oil," filled with numberless idle
fancies, is so multiplied, that it cannot do that which is commanded,
"Think on the Lord in goodness, and in simplicity of heart seek Him."
[111] For this multiplicity is strongly opposed to that simplicity. And
therefore leaving these, who are many, multiplied, that is, by the
desire of things temporal, and who say, "Who showeth us good things?"
which are to be sought not with the eyes without, but with simplicity
of heart within, the faithful man rejoices and says, "In peace,
together, I will sleep, and take rest" (ver. 8). For such men justly
hope for all manner of estrangement of mind from things mortal, and
forgetfulness of this world's miseries; which is beautifully and
prophetically signified under the name of sleep and rest, where the
most perfect peace cannot be interrupted by any tumult. But this is not
had now in this life, but is to be hoped for after this life. This even
the words themselves, which are in the future tense, show us. For it is
not said, either, I have slept, and taken rest; or, I do sleep, and
take rest; but, "I will sleep, and take rest." Then shall "this
corruptible put on incorruption, and this mortal shall put on
immortality; then shall death be swallowed up in victory." [112] Hence
it is said, "But if we hope for that we see not, we wait in patience."
[113]
10. Wherefore, consistently with this, he adds the last words, and
says, "Since Thou, O Lord, in singleness hast made me dwell in hope."
Here he does not say, wilt make; but, "hast made." In whom then this
hope now is, there will be assuredly that which is hoped for. And well
does he say, "in singleness." For this may refer in opposition to those
many, who being multiplied from the time of His corn, of wine, and oil,
say, "Who showeth us good things?" For this multiplicity perishes, and
singleness is observed among the saints: of whom it is said in the Acts
of the Apostles, "and of the multitude of them that believed, there was
one soul, and one heart." [114] In singleness, then, and simplicity,
removed, that is, from the multitude and crowd of things, that are born
and die, we ought to be lovers of eternity, and unity, if we desire to
cleave to the one God and our Lord.
__________________________________________________________________
[84] eis to t(TM)los, en psalmois hode to Dauid, Sept.
[85] Rom. x. 4.
[86] 1 Chron. xiii. 8 and xvi. 5.
[87] [Here again, and in all cases (verba Dominici hominis), this
phrase must be regarded as retracted. "Ubicunque hoc dixi, dixisse me
nollem," says the great bishop, ed. Migne, vol. i. p. 617. But, as here
rendered, it is correct.--C.]
[88] Rom. ii. 9.
[89] Rom. v. 3, 5.
[90] Matt. xxv. 42.
[91] Rom. v. 5.
[92] Rom. viii. 25.
[93] Oxford mss. "If your."
[94] Eccles. i. 2.
[95] [See p. 18, supra. Also A.N.F. vol. v. p. 201. St. Augustin seems
to have been acquainted with Hippolytus.--C.]
[96] Rom. vii. 25.
[97] Isa. xxix. 13.
[98] Matt. vi. 6.
[99] Ps. li. 17.
[100] [After verse 4.--C.]
[101] Clause.
[102] Gen. i. 26.
[103] Matt. xxii. 21.
[104] Eph. iii. 16, 17.
[105] John xiv. 6.
[106] 2 Cor. xiii. 3.
[107] John vi. 51.
[108] Ps. xxxvi. 8.
[109] Ps. xxiii. 5.
[110] Wisd. ix. 15.
[111] Wisd. i. 1.
[112] 1 Cor. xv. 54.
[113] Rom. viii. 25.
[114] Acts iv. 32.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm V.
1. The title of the Psalm is, "For her who receiveth the inheritance."
The Church then is signified, who receiveth for her inheritance eternal
life through our Lord Jesus Christ; that she may possess God Himself,
in cleaving to whom she may be blessed, according to that, "Blessed are
the meek, for they shall possess the earth." [115] What earth, but that
of which it is said, "Thou art my hope, my portion in the land of the
living"? [116] And again more clearly, "The Lord is the portion of mine
inheritance and of my cup." [117] And conversely the word Church is
said to be God's inheritance according to that, "Ask of Me, and I shall
give thee the heathen for thine inheritance." [118] Therefore is God
said to be our inheritance, because He feedeth and sustaineth [119] us:
and we are said to be God's inheritance, because He ordereth and ruleth
us. Wherefore it is the voice of the Church in this Psalm called to her
inheritance, that she too may herself become the inheritance of the
Lord.
2. "Hear my words, O Lord" (ver. 1). Being called she calleth upon the
Lord; that the same Lord being her helper, she may pass through the
wickedness of this world, and attain unto Him. "Understand my cry." The
Psalmist well shows what this cry is; how from within, from the chamber
of the heart, without the body's utterance, [120] it reaches unto God:
for the bodily voice is heard, but the spiritual is understood.
Although this too may be God's hearing, not with carnal ear, but in the
omnipresence of His Majesty.
3. "Attend Thou to the voice of my supplication;" that is, to that
voice, which he maketh request that God would understand: of which what
the nature is, he hath already intimated, when he said, "Understand my
cry. Attend Thou to the voice of my supplication, my King, and my God"
(ver. 2). Although both the Son is God, and the Father God, and the
Father and the Son together One God; and if asked of the Holy Ghost, we
must give no other answer than that He is God; and when the Father, and
the Son, and the Holy Ghost are mentioned together, we must understand
nothing else, than One God; nevertheless Scripture is wont to give the
appellation of King to the Son. According then to that which is said,
"By Me man cometh to the Father," [121] rightly is it first, "my King;"
and then, "my God." And yet has not the Psalmist said, Attend Ye; but,
"Attend Thou." For the Catholic faith preaches not two or three Gods,
but the Very Trinity, One God. Not that the same Trinity can be
together, now the Father, now the Son, now the Holy Ghost, as Sabellius
believed: but that the Father must be none but the Father, and the Son
none but the Son, and the Holy Ghost none but the Holy Ghost, and this
Trinity but One God. Hence when the Apostle had said, "Of whom are all
things, by whom are all things, in whom are all things," [122] he is
believed to have conveyed an intimation of the Very Trinity; and yet he
did not add, to Them be glory; but, "to Him be glory."
4. "Because I will pray unto Thee (ver. 3). O Lord, in the morning Thou
wilt hear my voice." What does that, which he said above, "Hear Thou,"
mean, as if he desired to be heard immediately? But now he saith, "in
the morning Thou wilt hear;" not, hear Thou: and, "I will pray unto
Thee;" not, I do pray unto Thee: and, as follows, "in the morning I
will stand by Thee, and will see;" not, I do stand by Thee, and do see.
Unless perhaps his former prayer marks the invocation itself: but being
in darkness amidst the storms of this world, he perceives that he does
not see what he desires, and yet does not cease to hope, "For hope that
is seen, is not hope." [123] Nevertheless, he understands why he does
not see, because the night is not yet past, that is, the darkness which
our sins have merited. He says therefore, "Because I will pray unto
Thee, O Lord;" that is, because Thou art so mighty to whom I shall make
my prayer, "in the morning Thou wilt hear my voice." Thou art not He,
he says, that can be seen by those, from whose eyes the night of sins
is not yet withdrawn: when the night then of my error is past, and the
darkness gone, which by my sins I have brought upon myself, then "Thou
wilt hear my voice." Why then did he say above not, "Thou wilt hear,"
but "hear Thou"? Is it that after the Church cried out, "hear Thou,"
and was not heard, she perceived what must needs pass away to enable
her to be heard? Or is it that she was heard above, but doth not yet
understand that she was heard, because she doth not yet see by whom she
hath been heard; and what she now says, "In the morning Thou wilt
hear," she would have thus taken, In the morning I shall understand
that I have been heard? Such is that expression, "Arise, O Lord," [124]
that is, make me arise. But this latter is taken of Christ's
resurrection: but at all events that Scripture, "The Lord your God
proveth you, that He may know whether ye love Him," [125] cannot be
taken in any other sense, than, that ye by Him may know, and that it
may be made evident to yourselves, what progress ye have made in His
love.
5. "In the morning I will stand by Thee, and will see" (ver. 3). What
is, "I will stand," but "I will not lie down"? Now what else is, to lie
down, but to take rest on the earth, which is a seeking happiness in
earthly pleasures? "I will stand by," he says, "and will see." We must
not then cleave to things earthly, if we would see God, who is beheld
by a clean heart. "For Thou art not a God who hast pleasure in
iniquity. The malignant man shall not dwell near Thee, nor shall the
unrighteous abide before Thine eyes. Thou hast hated all that work
iniquity, Thou wilt destroy all that speak a lie. The man of blood, and
the crafty man, the Lord will abominate" (vers. 4-6). Iniquity,
malignity, lying, homicide, craft, and all the like, are the night of
which we speak: on the passing away of which, the morning dawns, that
God may be seen. He has unfolded the reason, then, why he will stand by
in the morning, and see: "For," he says, "Thou art not a God who hast
pleasure in iniquity." For if He were a God who had pleasure in
iniquity, He could be seen even by the iniquitous, so that He would not
be seen in the morning, that is, when the night of iniquity is over.
6. "The malignant man shall not dwell near Thee:" that is, he shall not
so see, as to cleave to Thee. Hence follows, "Nor shall the unrighteous
abide before Thine eyes." For their eyes, that is, their mind is beaten
back by the light of truth, because of the darkness of their sins; by
the habitual practice of which they are not able to sustain the
brightness of right understanding. Therefore even they who see
sometimes, that is, who understand the truth, are yet still
unrighteous, they abide not therein through love of those things, which
turn away from the truth. For they carry about with them their night,
that is, not only the habit, but even the love, of sinning. But if this
night shall pass away, that is, if they shall cease to sin, and this
love and habit thereof be put to flight, the morning dawns, so that
they not only understand, but also cleave to the truth.
7. "Thou hast hated all that work iniquity." God's hatred may be
understood from that form of expression, by which every sinner hates
the truth. For it seems that she too hates those, whom she suffers not
to abide in her. Now they do not abide, who cannot bear the truth.
"Thou wilt destroy all that speak a lie." For this is the opposite to
truth. But lest any one should suppose that any substance or nature is
opposite to truth, let him understand that "a lie" has relation to that
which is not, not to that which is. For if that which is be spoken,
truth is spoken: but if that which is not be spoken, it is a lie. [126]
Therefore saith he, "Thou wilt destroy all that speak a lie;" because
drawing back from that which is, they turn aside to that which is not.
Many lies indeed seem to be for some one's safety or advantage, spoken
not in malice, but in kindness: such was that of those midwives in
Exodus, [127] who gave a false report to Pharaoh, to the end that the
infants of the children of Israel might not be slain. [128] But even
these are praised not for the fact, but for the disposition shown;
since those who only lie in this way, will attain in time to a freedom
from all lying. For in those that are perfect, not even these lies are
found. For to these it is said, "Let there be in your mouth, yea, yea;
nay, nay; whatsoever is more, is of evil." [129] Nor is it without
reason written in another place, "The mouth that lieth slayeth the
soul:" [130] lest any should imagine that the perfect and spiritual man
ought to lie for this temporal life, in the death of which no soul is
slain, neither his own, nor another's. But since it is one thing to
lie, another to conceal the truth (if indeed it be one thing to say
what is false, another not to say what is true), if haply one does not
wish to give a man up even to this visible death, he should be prepared
to conceal what is true, not to say what is false; so that he may
neither give him up, nor yet lie, lest he slay his own soul for
another's body. But if he cannot yet do this, let him at all events
admit only lies of such necessity, that he may attain to be freed even
from these, if they alone remain, and receive the strength of the Holy
Ghost, whereby he may despise all that must be suffered for the truth's
sake. In fine, there are two kinds of lies, in which there is no great
fault, [131] and yet they are not without fault, either when we are in
jest, or when we lie that we may do good. That first kind, in jest, is
for this reason not very hurtful, because there is no deception. For he
to whom it is said knows that it is said for the sake of the jest. But
the second kind is for this reason the more inoffensive, because it
carries with it some kindly intention. And to say truth, that which has
no duplicity, cannot even be called a lie. As if, for example, a sword
be intrusted to any one, and he promises to return it, when he who
intrusted it to him shall demand it: if he chance to require his sword
when in a fit of madness, it is clear it must not be returned then,
lest he kill either himself or others, until soundness of mind be
restored to him. Here then is no duplicity, because he, to whom the
sword was intrusted, when he promised that he would return it at the
other's demand, did not imagine that he could require it when in a fit
of madness. But even the Lord concealed the truth, when He said to the
disciples, not yet strong enough, "I have many things to say unto you,
but ye cannot bear them now:" [132] and the Apostle Paul when he said,
"I could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto carnal."
[133] Whence it is clear that it is not blamable, sometimes not to
speak what is true. But to say what is false is not found to have been
allowed to the perfect.
8. "The man of blood, and the crafty man, the Lord will abominate."
What he said above, "Thou hast hated all that work iniquity, Thou wilt
destroy all that speak a lie," may well seem to be repeated here: so
that one may refer "the man of blood" to "the worker of iniquity," and
"the crafty man" to the "lie." For it is craft, when one thing is done,
another pretended. He used an apt word too, when he said, "will
abominate." For the disinherited are usually called abominated. Now
this Psalm is, "for her who receiveth the inheritance;" and she adds
the exulting joy of her hope, in saying, "But I, in the multitude of
Thy mercy, will enter into Thine house" (ver. 7). "In the multitude of
mercy:" perhaps he means in the multitude of perfected and blessed men,
of whom that city shall consist, of which the Church is now in travail,
and is bearing few by few. Now that many men regenerated and perfected,
are rightly called the multitude of God's mercy, who can deny; when it
is most truly said, "What is man that Thou art mindful of him, or the
son of man that Thou visitest him? [134] I will enter into Thine
house:" as a stone into a building, I suppose, is the meaning. For what
else is the house of God than the Temple of God, of which it is said,
"for the temple of God is holy, [135] which temple ye are"? Of which
building He is the cornerstone, [136] whom the Power and Wisdom of God
coeternal with the Father assumed.
9. "I will worship at Thy holy temple, in Thy fear." "At the temple,"
we understand as, "near" the temple. For he does not say, I will
worship "in" Thy holy temple; but, "I will worship at Thy holy temple."
It must be understood too to be spoken not of perfection, but of
progress toward perfection: so that the words, "I will enter into Thine
house," should signify perfection. But that this may come to a happy
issue, "I will" first, he says, "worship at Thy holy temple." And
perhaps on this account he added, "in Thy fear;" which is a great
defence to those that are advancing toward salvation. But when any one
shall have arrived there, in him comes to pass that which is written,
"perfect love casteth out fear." [137] For they do not fear Him who is
now their friend, to whom it is said, "henceforth I will not call you
servants, but friends," [138] when they have been brought through to
that which was promised.
10. "O Lord, lead me forth in Thy justice because of mine enemies"
(ver. 8). He has here sufficiently plainly declared that he is on his
onward road, that is, in progress toward perfection, not yet in
perfection itself, when he desires eagerly that he may be led forth.
But, "in Thy justice," not in that which seems so to men. For to return
evil for evil seems justice: but it is not His justice of whom it is
said, "He maketh His sun to rise on the good and on the evil:" for even
when God punishes sinners, He does not inflict His evil on them, but
leaves them to their own evil. "Behold," the Psalmist says, "he
travailed with injustice, he hath conceived toil, and brought forth
iniquity: he hath opened a ditch, and digged it, and hath fallen into
the pit which he wrought: his pains shall be turned on his own head,
and his iniquity shall descend on his own pate." [139] When then God
punishes, He punishes as a judge those that transgress the law, not by
bringing evil upon them from Himself, but driving them on to that which
they have chosen, to fill up the sum of their misery. But man, when he
returns evil for evil, does it with an evil will: and on this account
is himself first evil, when he would punish evil.
11. "Direct in Thy sight my way." Nothing is clearer, than that he here
sets forth that time, in which he is journeying onward. For this is a
way which is traversed not in any regions of the earth, but in the
affections of the heart. "In Thy sight," he says, "direct my way:" that
is, where no man sees; who are not to be trusted in their praise or
blame. For they can in no wise judge of another man's conscience,
wherein the way toward God is traversed. Hence it is added, "for truth
is not in their mouth" (ver. 9). To whose judgment of course then there
is no trusting, and therefore must we fly within to conscience, and the
sight of God. "Their heart is vain." How then can truth be in their
mouth, whose heart is deceived by sin, and the punishment of sin?
Whence men are called back by that voice, "Wherefore do ye love vanity,
and seek a lie?"
12. "Their throat is an open sepulchre." It may be referred to signify
gluttony, for the sake of which men very often lie by flattery. And
admirably has he said, "an open sepulchre:" for this gluttony is ever
gaping with open mouth, not as sepulchres, which, on the reception of
corpses, are closed up. This also may be understood hereby, that with
lying and blind flattery men draw to themselves those whom they entice
to sin; and as it were devour them, when they turn them to their own
way of living. And when this happens to them, since by sin they die,
those by whom they are led along, are rightly called open sepulchres:
for themselves too are in a manner lifeless, being destitute of the
life of truth; and they take in to themselves dead men, whom having
slain by lying words and a vain heart, they turn unto themselves. "With
their own tongues they dealt craftily:" that is, with evil tongues. For
this seems to be signified, when he says "their own." For the evil have
evil tongues, that is, they speak evil, when they speak craftily. To
whom the Lord saith, "How can ye, being evil, speak good things?" [140]
13. "Judge them, O God: let them fall from their own thoughts" (ver.
10). It is a prophecy, not a curse. For he does not wish that it should
come to pass; but he perceives what will come to pass. For this happens
to them, not because he appears to have wished for it, but because they
are such as to deserve that it should happen. For so also what he says
afterwards, "Let all that hope in Thee rejoice," he says by way of
prophecy; since he perceives that they will rejoice. Likewise is it
said prophetically, "Stir up Thy strength, and come:" [141] for he saw
that He would come. Although the words, "Let them fall from their own
thoughts," may be taken thus also, that it may rather be believed to be
a wish for their good by the Psalmist, whilst they fall from their evil
thoughts, that is, that they may no more think evil. But what follows,
"drive them out," forbids this interpretation. For it can in no wise be
taken in a favourable sense, that one is driven out by God. Wherefore
it is understood to be said prophetically, and not of ill will; when
this is said, which must necessarily happen to such as chose to
persevere in those sins, which have been mentioned. "Let them,"
therefore, "fall from their own thoughts," is, let them fall by their
self-accusing thoughts, "their own conscience also bearing witness," as
the Apostle says, "and their thoughts accusing or excusing, in the
revelation of the just judgment of God." [142]
14. "According to the multitude of their ungodlinesses drive them out:"
that is, drive them out far away. For this is "according to the
multitude of their ungodlinesses," [143] that they should be driven out
far away. The ungodly then are driven out from that inheritance, which
is possessed by knowing and seeing God: as diseased eyes are driven out
from the shining of the light, when what is gladness to others is pain
to them. Therefore these shall not stand in the morning, [144] and see.
And that expression is as great a punishment, as that which is said,
"But for me it is good to cleave to the Lord," [145] is a great reward.
To this punishment is opposed, "Enter thou into the joy of Thy Lord;"
[146] for similar to this expulsion is, "Cast him into outer darkness."
[147]
15. "Since they have embittered Thee, O Lord: I am," saith He, "the
Bread which came down from heaven;" [148] again, "Labour for the meat
which wasteth not;" [149] again, "Taste and see that the Lord is
sweet." [150] But to sinners the bread of truth is bitter. Whence they
hate the mouth of him that speaketh the truth. These then have
embittered God, who by sin have fallen into such a state of sickliness,
that the food of truth, in which healthy souls delight, as if it were
bitter as gall, they cannot bear.
16. "And let all rejoice that hope in Thee;" those of course to whose
taste the Lord is sweet. "They will exult for evermore, and Thou wilt
dwell in them" (ver. 11). This will be the exultation for evermore,
when the just become the Temple of God, and He, their Indweller, will
be their joy. "And all that love Thy name shall glory in Thee:" as when
what they love is present for them to enjoy. And well is it said, "in
Thee," as if in possession of the inheritance, of which the title of
the Psalm speaks: when they too are His inheritance, which is intimated
by, "Thou wilt dwell in them." From which good they are kept back, whom
God, according to the multitude of their ungodlinesses, driveth out.
17. "For Thou wilt bless the just man" (ver. 12). This is blessing, to
glory in God, and to be inhabited by God. Such sanctification is given
to the just. But that they may be justified, a calling goes before:
which is not of merit, but of the grace of God. "For all have sinned,
and want the glory of God." [151] "For whom He called, them He also
justified; and whom He justified, them He also glorified." [152] Since
then calling is not of our merit, but of the goodness and mercy of God,
he went on to say, "O Lord, as with the shield of Thy good will Thou
hast crowned us." For God's good will goes before our good will, to
call sinners to repentance. And these are the arms whereby the enemy is
overcome, against whom it is said, "Who will bring accusation against
God's elect?" Again, "if God be for us, who can be against us? Who
spared not His Only Son, but delivered Him up for us all." [153] "For
if, when we were enemies, Christ died for us; much more being
reconciled shall we be saved from wrath through Him." [154] This is
that unconquerable shield, whereby the enemy is driven back, when he
suggests despair of our salvation through the multitude of tribulations
and temptations.
18. The whole contents of the Psalm, then, are a prayer that she may be
heard, from the words, "hear my words, O Lord," unto, "my King, and my
God." Then follows a view of those things which hinder the sight of
God, that is, a knowledge that she [155] is heard, from the words,
"because I shall pray unto Thee, O Lord, in the morning Thou wilt hear
my voice," unto, "the man of blood and the crafty man the Lord will
abominate." Thirdly, she hopes that she, who is to be the house of God,
even now begins to draw near to Him in fear, before that perfection
which casteth out fear, from the words, "but I in the multitude of Thy
mercy," unto, "I will worship at Thy holy temple in Thy fear."
Fourthly, as she is progressing and advancing amongst those very things
which she feels to hinder her, she prays that she may be assisted
within, where no man seeth, lest she be turned aside by evil tongues,
for the words, "O Lord, lead me forth in Thy justice because of my
enemies," unto, "with their tongues they dealt craftily." Fifthly, is a
prophecy of what punishment awaits the ungodly, when the just man shall
scarcely be saved; and of what reward the just shall obtain, who, when
they were called, came, and bore all things manfully, till they were
brought to the end, from the words, "judge them, O God," unto the end
of the Psalm.
__________________________________________________________________
[115] Matt. v. 5.
[116] Ps. cxlii. 5.
[117] Ps. xvi. 5.
[118] Ps. ii. 8.
[119] Continet.
[120] Strepitu.
[121] John xiv. 6.
[122] Rom. xi. 36.
[123] Rom. viii. 24.
[124] Ps. iii. 7.
[125] Deut. xiii. 3.
[126] [Yet on this apparently harmless principle has been built up the
art of lying, in the Liguorian casuistry: He who lays his hand on a box
or table, and swears "The man is not here," speaks a material truth,
and hence is judged innocent. See Theologia Moralis S. Alphons. de
Ligorio, tom. ii. p. 35 et seqq., Paris, ed. 1852.--C.]
[127] Exod. i. 19.
[128] See his treatises on lying and against lying.
[129] Matt. v. 37.
[130] Wisd. i. 11.
[131] [Lax language, which has greatly hindered strict
conscientiousness in moral teachers. See Meyrick's Moral and Devotional
Theology of Rome, pp. 68-71, London, 1857. Compare our author, De
Mendacio, and Retractations, ed. Migne, i. pp. 630, 659.--C.]
[132] John xvi. 12.
[133] 1 Cor. iii. 1.
[134] Ps. viii. 4.
[135] 1 Cor. iii. 17.
[136] Eph. ii. 20.
[137] 1 John iv. 18.
[138] John xv. 15.
[139] Ps. vii. 14, 15, 16.
[140] Matt. xii. 34.
[141] Ps. lxxx. 2.
[142] Rom. ii. 15, 16.
[143] It is not possible to preserve in the translation the cognate
words, multitudinem and multum: "hoc est enim secundum multitudinem
impietatum eorum, ut multum expellantur."
[144] Ps. v. 3.
[145] Ps. lxxiii. 28.
[146] Matt. xxv. 21.
[147] Matt. xxv. 30.
[148] John vi. 51.
[149] John vi. 27.
[150] Ps. xxxiv. 8.
[151] Rom. iii. 23.
[152] Rom. viii. 30.
[153] Rom. viii. 33, 31, 32.
[154] Rom. v. 10.
[155] i.e., the Church.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm VI.
To the end, in the hymns of the eighth, [156] a psalm to David. [157]
1. "Of the eighth," seems here obscure. For the rest of this title is
more clear. Now it has seemed to some to intimate the day of judgment,
that is, the time of the coming of our Lord, when He will come to judge
the quick and dead. Which coming, it is believed, is to be, after
reckoning the years from Adam, seven thousand years: so as that seven
thousand years should pass as seven days, and afterwards that time
arrive as it were the eighth day. But since it has been said by the
Lord, "It is not yours to know the times, which the Father hath put in
His own power:" [158] and, "But of the day and that hour knoweth no
man, no, neither angel, nor Power, neither the Son, but the Father
alone:" [159] and again, that which is written, "that the day of the
Lord cometh as a thief," [160] shows clearly enough that no man should
arrogate to himself the knowledge of that time, by any computation of
years. For if that day is to come after seven thousand years, every man
could learn its advent by reckoning the years. What comes then of the
Son's even not knowing this? Which of course is said with this meaning,
that men do not learn this by the Son, not that He by Himself doth not
know it: according to that form of speech, "the Lord your God trieth
you that He may know;" [161] that is, that He may make you know: and,
"arise, O Lord;" [162] that is, make us arise. When therefore the Son
is thus said not to know this day; not because He knoweth it not, but
because He causeth those to know it not, for whom it is not expedient
to know it, that is, He doth not show it to them; what does that
strange presumption mean, which, by a reckoning up of years, expects
the day of the Lord as most certain after seven thousand years? [163]
2. Be we then willingly ignorant of that which the Lord would not have
us know: and let us inquire what this title, "of the eighth," means.
The day of judgment may indeed, even without any rash computation of
years, be understood by the eighth, for that immediately after the end
of this world, life eternal being attained, the souls of the righteous
will not then be subject unto times: and, since all times have their
revolution in a repetition of those seven days, that peradventure is
called the eighth day, which will not have this variety. There is
another reason, which may be here not unreasonably accepted, why the
judgment should be called the eighth, because it will take place after
two generations, one relating to the body, the other to the soul. For
from Adam unto Moses the human race lived of the body, that is,
according to the flesh: which is called the outward and the old man,
[164] and to which the Old Testament was given, that it might prefigure
the spiritual things to come by operations, albeit religious, yet
carnal. Through this entire season, when men lived according to the
body, "death reigned," as the Apostle saith, "even over those that had
not sinned." Now it reigned "after the similitude of Adam's
transgression," [165] as the same Apostle saith; for it must be taken
of the period up to Moses, up to which time the works of the law, that
is, those sacraments of carnal observance, held even those bound, for
the sake of a certain mystery, who were subject to the One God. But
from the coming of the Lord, from whom there was a transition from the
circumcision of the flesh to the circumcision of the heart, the call
was made, that man should live according to the soul, that is,
according to the inner man, who is also called the "new man" [166] by
reason of the new birth and the renewing of spiritual conversation. Now
it is plain that the number four has relation to the body, from the
four well known elements of which it consists, and the four qualities
of dry, humid, warm, cold. Hence too it is administered by four
seasons, spring, summer, autumn, winter. All this is very well known.
For of the number four relating to the body we have treated elsewhere
somewhat subtilly, but obscurely: which must be avoided in this
discourse, which we would have accommodated to the unlearned. But that
the number three has relation to the mind may be understood from this,
that we are commanded to love God after a threefold manner, [167] with
the whole heart, with the whole soul, with the whole mind: [168] of
each of which severally we must treat, not in the Psalms, but in the
Gospels: for the present, for proof of the relation of the number three
to the mind, I think what has been said enough. Those numbers then of
the body which have relation to the old man and the Old Testament,
being past and gone, the numbers too of the soul, which have relation
to the new man and the New Testament, being past and gone, a septenary
so to say being passed; because everything is done in time, four having
been distributed to the body, three to the mind; the eighth will come,
the day of judgment: which assigning to deserts their due, will
transfer at once the saint, not to temporal works, but to eternal life;
but will condemn the ungodly to eternal punishment.
3. In fear of which condemnation the Church prays in this Psalm, and
says, "Reprove me not, O Lord, in Thine anger" (ver. 1). The Apostle
too mentions the anger of the judgment; "Thou treasurest up unto
thyself," he says, "anger against the day of the anger of the just
judgment of God." [169] In which he would not be reproved, whosoever
longs to be healed in this life. "Nor in Thy rage chasten me."
"Chasten," seems rather too mild a word; for it availeth toward
amendment. For for him who is reproved, that is, accused, it is to be
feared lest his end be condemnation. But since "rage" seems to be more
than "anger," it may be a difficulty, why that which is milder, namely,
chastening, is joined to that which is more severe, namely, rage. But I
suppose that one and the same thing is signified by the two words. For
in the Greek thumos, which is in the first verse, means the same as
orge, which is in the second verse. [170] But when the Latins
themselves too wished to use two distinct words, they looked out for
what was akin to "anger," and "rage" [171] was used. Hence copies vary.
For in some "anger" is found first, and then "rage:" in others, for
"rage," "indignation" or "choler" is used. But whatever the reading, it
is an emotion of the soul urging to the infliction of punishment. Yet
this emotion must not be attributed to God, as if to a soul, of whom it
is said, "but Thou, O Lord of power, judgest with tranquillity." [172]
Now that which is tranquil, is not disturbed. Disturbance then does not
attach to God as judge: but what is done by His ministers, in that it
is done by His laws, is called His anger. In which anger, the soul,
which now prays, would not only not be reproved, but not even
chastened, that is, amended or instructed. For in the Greek it is,
paideuses, that is, instruct. Now in the day of judgment all are
"reproved" that hold not the foundation, which is Christ. But they are
amended, that is, purged, who "upon this foundation build wood, hay,
stubble. For they shall suffer loss, but shall be saved, as by fire."
[173] What then does he pray, who would not be either reproved or
amended in the anger of the Lord? what else but that he may be healed?
For where sound health is, neither death is to be dreaded, nor the
physician's hand with caustics or the knife.
4. He proceeds accordingly to say, "Pity me, O Lord, for I am weak:
heal me, O Lord, for my bones are troubled" (ver. 2), that is, the
support of my soul, or strength: for this is the meaning of "bones."
The soul therefore says, that her strength is troubled, when she speaks
of bones. For it is not to be supposed, that the soul has bones, such
as we see in the body. Wherefore, what follows tends to explain it,
"and my soul is troubled exceedingly" (ver. 3), lest because he
mentioned bones, they should be understood as of the body. "And Thou, O
Lord, how long?" Who does not see represented here a soul struggling
with her diseases; but long kept back by the physician, that she may be
convinced what evils she has plunged herself into through sin? For what
is easily healed, is not much avoided: but from the difficulty of the
healing, there will be the more careful keeping of recovered health.
God then, to whom it is said, "And Thou, O Lord, how long?" must not be
deemed as if cruel: but as a kind convincer of the soul, what evil she
hath procured for herself. For this soul does not yet pray so
perfectly, as that it can be said to her, "Whilst thou art yet speaking
I will say, Behold, here I am." [174] That she may at the same time
also come to know, if they who do turn meet with so great difficulty,
how great punishment is prepared for the ungodly, who will not turn to
God: as it is written in another place, "If the righteous scarcely be
saved, where shall the sinner and ungodly appear?" [175]
5. "Turn, O Lord, and deliver my soul" (ver. 4). Turning herself she
prays that God too would turn to her: as it is said, "Turn ye unto Me,
and I will turn unto you, saith the Lord." [176] Or is it to be
understood according to that way of speaking, "Turn, O Lord," that is
make me turn, since the soul in this her turning feels difficulty and
toil? For our perfected turning findeth God ready, as says the Prophet,
"We shall find Him ready as the dawn." [177] Since it was not His
absence who is everywhere present, but our turning away that made us
lose Him; "He was in this world," it is said, "and the world was made
by Him, and the world knew Him not." [178] If, then, He was in this
world, and the world knew Him not, our impurity doth not endure the
sight of Him. But whilst we are turning ourselves, that is, by changing
our old life are fashioning our spirit; we feel it hard and toilsome to
be wrested back from the darkness of earthly lusts, to the serene and
quiet and tranquillity of the divine light. And in such difficulty we
say, "Turn, O Lord," that is, help us, that that turning may be
perfected in us, which findeth Thee ready, and offering Thyself for the
fruition of them that love Thee. And hence after he said, "Turn, O
Lord," he added, "and deliver my soul:" cleaving as it were to the
entanglements of this world, and suffering, in the very act of turning,
from the thorns, as it were, of rending and tearing desires. "Make me
whole," he says, "for Thy pity's sake." He knows that it is not of his
own merits that he is healed: for to him sinning, and transgressing a
given command, was just condemnation due. Heal me therefore, he says,
not for my merit's sake, but for Thy pity's sake.
6. "For in death there is no one that is mindful of Thee" (ver. 5). He
knows too that now is the time for turning unto God: for when this life
shall have passed away, there remaineth but a retribution of our
deserts. [179] "But in hell who shall confess to Thee?" [180] That rich
man, of whom the Lord speaks, who saw Lazarus in rest, but bewailed
himself in torments, confessed in hell, yea so as to wish even to have
his brethren warned, that they might keep themselves from sin, because
of the punishment which is not believed to be in hell. Although
therefore to no purpose, yet he confessed that those torments had
deservedly lighted upon him; since he even wished his brethren to be
instructed, lest they should fall into the same. What then is, "But in
hell who will confess to Thee?" Is hell to be understood as that place,
whither the ungodly will be cast down after the judgment, when by
reason of that deeper darkness they will no more see any light of God,
to whom they may confess aught? For as yet that rich man by raising his
eyes, although a vast gulf lay between, could still see Lazarus
established in rest: by comparing himself with whom, he was driven to a
confession of his own deserts. It may be understood also, as if the
Psalmist calls sin, that is committed in contempt of God's law, death:
so as that we should give the name of death to the sting of death,
because it procures death. "For the sting of death is sin." [181] In
which death this is to be unmindful of God, to despise His law and
commandments: so that by hell the Psalmist would mean that blindness of
soul which overtakes and enwraps the sinner, that is, the dying. "As
they did not think good," the Apostle says, "to retain God in" their
"knowledge, God gave them over to a reprobate mind." [182] From this
death, and this hell, the soul earnestly prays that she may be kept
safe, whilst she strives to turn to God, and feels her difficulties.
7. Wherefore he goes on to say, "I have laboured in my groaning." And
as if this availed but little, he adds, "I will wash each night my
couch" (ver. 6). That is here called a couch, where the sick and weak
soul rests, that is, in bodily gratification and in every worldly
pleasure. Which pleasure, whoso endeavours to withdraw himself from it,
washes with tears. For he sees that he already condemns carnal lusts;
and yet his weakness is held by the pleasure, and willingly lies down
therein, from whence none but the soul that is made whole can rise. As
for what he says, "each night," he would perhaps have it taken thus:
that he who, ready in spirit, perceives some light of truth, and yet,
through weakness of the flesh, rests sometime in the pleasure of this
world, is compelled to suffer as it were days and nights in an
alternation of feeling: as when he says, "With the mind I serve the law
of God," he feels as it were day; again when he says, "but with the
flesh the law of sin," [183] he declines into night: until all night
passeth away, and that one day comes, of which it is said, "In the
morning I will stand by Thee, and will see." [184] For then he will
stand, but now he lies down, when he is on his couch; which he will
wash each night, that with so great abundance of tears he may obtain
the most assured remedy from the mercy of God. "I will drench my bed
with tears." It is a repetition. [185] For when he says, "with tears,"
he shows with what meaning he said above, "I will wash." For we take
"bed" here to be the same as "couch" above. Although, "I will drench,"
is something more than, "I will wash:" since anything may be washed
superficially, but drenching penetrates to the more inward parts; which
here signifies weeping to the very bottom of the heart. Now the variety
of tenses which he uses; the past, when he said, "I have laboured in my
groaning;" and the future, when he said, "I will wash each night my
couch;" the future again, "I will drench my bed with tears;" this shows
what every man ought to say to himself, when he labours in groaning to
no purpose. As if he should say, It hath not profited when I have done
this, therefore I will do the other.
8. "Mine eye is disordered by anger" (ver. 7): is it by his own, or
God's anger, in which he maketh petition that he might not be reproved,
or chastened? But if anger in that place intimate the day of judgment,
how can it be understood now? Is it a beginning of it, that men here
suffer pains and torments, and above all the loss of the understanding
of the truth; as I have already quoted that which is said, "God gave
them over to a reprobate mind"? [186] For such is the blindness of the
mind. Whosoever is given over thereunto, is shut out from the interior
light of God: but not wholly as yet, whilst he is in this life. For
there is "outer darkness," [187] which is understood to belong rather
to the day of judgment; that he should rather be wholly without God,
whosoever whilst there is time refuses correction. Now to be wholly
without God, what else is it, but to be in extreme blindness? If indeed
God "dwell in inaccessible light," [188] whereinto they enter, to whom
it is said, "Enter thou into the joy of thy Lord." [189] It is then the
beginning of this anger, which in this life every sinner suffers. In
fear therefore of the day of judgment, he is in trial and grief; lest
he be brought to that, the disastrous commencement of which he
experiences now. And therefore he did not say, mine eye is
extinguished, but, "mine eye is disordered by anger." But if he mean
that his eye is disordered by his own anger, there is no wonder either
in this. For hence perhaps it is said, "Let not the sun go down upon
your wrath;" [190] because the mind, which, from her own disorder, is
not permitted to see God, supposes that the inner sun, that is, the
wisdom of God, suffers as it were a setting in her.
9. "I have grown old in all mine enemies." He had only spoken of anger
(if it were yet of his own anger that he spoke): but thinking on his
other vices, he found that he was entrenched by them all. Which vices,
as they belong to the old life and the old man, which we must put off,
that we may put on the new man, [191] it is well said, "I have grown
old." But "in all mine enemies," he means, either amidst these vices,
or amidst men who will not be converted to God. For these, even if they
know them not, even if they bear with them, even if they use the same
tables and houses and cities, with no strife arising between them, and
in frequent converse together with seeming concord: notwithstanding, by
the contrariety of their aims, they are enemies to those who turn unto
God. For seeing that the one love and desire this world, the others
wish to be freed from this world, who sees not that the first are
enemies to the last? For if they can, they draw the others into
punishment with them. And it is a great grace, to be conversant daily
with their words, and not to depart from the way of God's commandments.
For often the mind which is striving to go on to God-ward, being rudely
handled in the very road, is alarmed; and generally fulfils not its
good intent, lest it should offend those with whom it lives, who love
and follow after other perishable and transient goods. From such every
one that is whole is separated, not in space, but in soul. For the body
is contained in space, but the soul's space is her affection.
10. Wherefore after the labour, and groaning, and very frequent showers
of tears, since that cannot be ineffectual, which is asked so earnestly
of Him, who is the Fountain of all mercies, and it is most truly said,
"the Lord is nigh unto them that are of a broken heart:" [192] after
difficulties so great, the pious soul, by which we may also understand
the Church, intimating that she has been heard, see what she adds:
"Depart from me, all ye that work iniquity; for the Lord hath heard the
voice of my weeping" (ver. 8). It is either spoken prophetically, since
they will depart, that is, the ungodly will be separated from the
righteous, when the day of judgment arrives, or, for this time present.
For although both are equally found in the same assemblies, yet on the
open floor the wheat is already separated from the chaff, though it be
hid among the chaff. They can therefore be associated together, but
cannot be carried away by the wind together.
11. "For the Lord hath heard the voice of my weeping; The Lord hath
heard my supplication; the Lord hath received my prayer" (ver. 9). The
frequent repetition of the same sentiments shows not, so to say, the
necessities of the narrator, but the warm feeling of his joy. For they
that rejoice are wont so to speak, as that it is not enough for them to
declare once for all the object of their joy. This is the fruit of that
groaning in which there is labour, and those tears with which the couch
is washed, and bed drenched: for, "he that sows in tears, shall reap in
joy:" [193] and, "blessed are they that mourn, for they shall be
comforted."
12. "Let all mine enemies be ashamed and vexed" (ver. 10). He said
above, "depart from me all ye:" which can take place, as it has been
explained, even in this life: but as to what he says, "let them be
ashamed and vexed," I do not see how it can happen, save on that day
when the rewards of the righteous and the punishments of the sinners
shall be made manifest. For at present so far are the ungodly from
being ashamed, that they do not cease to insult us. And for the most
part their mockings are of such avail, that they make the weak to be
ashamed of the name of Christ. Hence it is said, "Whosoever shall be
ashamed of Me before men, of him will I be ashamed before My Father."
[194] But now whosoever would fulfil those sublime commands, to
disperse, to give to the poor, that his righteousness may endure for
ever; [195] and selling all his earthly goods, and spending them on the
needy, would follow Christ, saying, "We brought nothing into this
world, and truly we can carry nothing out; having food and raiment, let
us be therewith content;" [196] incurs the profane raillery of those
men, and by those who will not be made whole, is called mad; and often
to avoid being so called by desperate men, he fears to do, and puts off
that, which the most faithful and powerful of all physicians hath
ordered. It is not then at present that these can be ashamed, by whom
we have to wish that we be not made ashamed, and so be either called
back from our proposed journey, or hindered, or delayed. But the time
will come when they shall be ashamed, saying as it is written, "These
are they whom we had sometimes in derision, and a parable of reproach:
we fools counted their life madness, and their end to be without
honour: how are they numbered among the children of God, and their lot
is among the saints? Therefore have we erred from the way of truth, and
the light of righteousness hath not shined into us, nor the sun risen
upon us: we have been filled with the way of wickedness and
destruction, and have walked through rugged deserts, but the way of the
Lord we have not known. What hath pride profited us, or what hath the
vaunting of riches brought us? All those things are passed away like a
shadow." [197]
13. But as to what he says, "Let them be turned and confounded," who
would not judge it to be a most righteous punishment, that they should
have a turning unto confusion, who would not have one unto salvation?
After this he added, "exceeding quickly." For when the day of judgment
shall have begun to be no longer looked for, when they shall have said,
"Peace, then shall sudden destruction come upon them." [198] Now
whensoever it come, that comes very quickly, of whose coming we give up
all expectation; and nothing makes the length of this life be felt but
the hope of living. For nothing seems more quick, than all that has
already passed in it. When then the day of judgment shall come, then
will sinners feel how that all the life which passeth away is not long.
Nor will that any way possibly seem to them to have come tardily, which
shall have come without their desiring, or rather without their
believing. Although it can too be taken in this place thus, that
inasmuch as God has heard, so to say, her groans, and her long and
frequent tears, she may be understood to be freed from her sins, and to
have tamed every disordered impulse of carnal affection: as she saith,
"Depart from me, all ye that work iniquity, for the Lord hath heard the
voice of my weeping:" and when she has had this happy issue, it is no
marvel if she be already so perfect as to pray for her enemies. The
words then, "Let all mine enemies be ashamed, and vexed," may have this
meaning; that they should repent of their sins, which cannot be
effected without confusion and vexation. There is then nothing to
hinder us from taking what follows too in this sense, "let them be
turned and ashamed," that is, let them be turned to God, and be ashamed
that they sometime gloried in the former darkness of their sins; as the
Apostle says, "For what glory had ye sometime in those things of which
ye are now ashamed?" [199] But as to what he added, "exceeding
quickly," it must be referred either to the warm affection of her wish,
or to the power of Christ; who converteth to the faith of the Gospel in
such quick time the nations, which in their idols' cause did persecute
the Church.
__________________________________________________________________
[156] LXX, hupsr tes ogdoes. [See Hippolytus, A.N.F. vol. v. p.
200.--C.]
[157] [The first of the Seven Penitential Psalms, which are Psalms vi.,
xxxii., xxxviii., li., cii., cxxx., cxliii.--C.]
[158] Acts i. 7.
[159] Mark xiii. 32.
[160] 1 Thess. v. 2.
[161] Deut. xiii. 3.
[162] Ps. iii. 7.
[163] [See City of God, this series, vol. ii. p. 426 et seqq.--C.]
[164] Rom. vi. 6; Eph. iv. 22.
[165] Rom. v. 14.
[166] Col. iii. 10.
[167] [On the tripartite nature of man, see Tertull. A.N.F. vol. iii.
pp. 463, 474.--C.]
[168] Deut. vi. 5; Matt. xxii. 37.
[169] Rom. ii. 5.
[170] [Compare Trench on Synonyms of the New Testament, p. 178, ed. New
York, 1854.--C.]
[171] Furor.
[172] Wisd. xii. 18.
[173] 1 Cor. iii. 11, 12, 13, 15.
[174] Isa. lxv. 24.
[175] 1 Pet. iv. 18.
[176] Zech. i. 3.
[177] Hos. vi. 3, LXX.
[178] John i. 10.
[179] [St. Augustin, whatever he may have imagined of the fire that is
to purify at the last day (1 Cor. iii. 13-15), knew nothing of an
intermediate purgatory. Compare A.N.F. vol. viii. pp. 239, 390, for
apocryphal opinions and a misleading note. Consult (same series) vol.
iii. p. 428, and v. p. 222, notes 1 and 7, with p. 223, note 1.--C.]
[180] Luke xvi.
[181] 1 Cor. xv. 56.
[182] Rom. i. 28.
[183] Rom. vii. 25.
[184] Ps. v. 3.
[185] [St. Augustin was the inventor of what is now called "The Silent
Comforter," for the invalid. This Psalm, with the six other Penitential
Psalms, he caused to be set up before his dying eyes. See Vita S. Aug.
auctore Possidio, ed. Migne, vol. i. p. 63.--C.]
[186] Rom. i. 28.
[187] Matt. xxv. 30.
[188] 1 Tim. vi. 16.
[189] Matt. xxv. 21, 23.
[190] Eph. iv. 26.
[191] Col. iii. 9, 10.
[192] Ps. xxxiv. 18.
[193] Ps. cxxvi. 5.
[194] Matt. x. 33; Luke ix. 26.
[195] Ps. cxii. 9.
[196] 1 Tim. vi. 7, 8.
[197] Wisd. v. 3-9.
[198] 1 Thess. v. 3.
[199] Rom. vi. 21.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm VII.
A psalm to David himself, which he sung to the Lord, for the words of
Chusi, son of Jemini. [200]
1. Now the story which gave occasion to this prophecy may be easily
recognised in the second book of Kings. [201] For there Chusi, the
friend of king David, went over to the side of Abessalon, his son, who
was carrying on war against his father, for the purpose of discovering
and reporting the designs which he was taking against his father, at
the instigation of Achitophel, who had revolted from David's
friendship, and was instructing by his counsel, to the best of his
power, the son against the father. But since it is not the story itself
which is to be the subject of consideration in this Psalm, from which
the prophet hath taken a veil of mysteries, if we have passed over to
Christ, let the veil be taken away. [202] And first let us inquire into
the signification of the very names, what it means. For there have not
been wanting interpreters, who investigating these same words, not
carnally according to the letter, but spiritually, declare to us that
Chusi should be interpreted silence; and Gemini, right-handed;
Achitophel, brother's ruin. Among which interpretations, Judas, that
traitor, again meets us, that Abessalon should bear his image,
according to that interpretation of it as a father's peace; in that his
father was full of thoughts of peace toward him: although he in his
guile had war in his heart, as was treated of in the third Psalm. Now
as we find in the Gospels that the disciples of our Lord Jesus Christ
are called sons, [203] so in the same Gospels we find they are called
brethren also. For the Lord on the resurrection saith, "Go and say to
My brethren." [204] And the Apostle calls Him "the first begotten among
many brethren." The ruin then of that disciple, who betrayed Him, is
rightly understood to be a brother's ruin, which we said is the
interpretation of Achitophel. Now as to Chusi, from the interpretation
of silence, it is rightly understood that our Lord contended against
that guile in silence, that is, in that most deep secret, whereby
"blindness happened in part to Israel," [205] when they were
persecuting the Lord, that the fulness of the Gentiles might enter in,
and "so all Israel might be saved." When the Apostle came to this
profound secret and deep silence, he exclaimed, as if struck with a
kind of awe of its very depth, "O the depth of the riches of the wisdom
and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are His judgments, and His ways
past finding out! For who hath known the wind of the Lord, or who hath
been His counsellor?" [206] Thus that great silence he does not so much
discover by explanation, as he sets forth its greatness in admiration.
In this silence the Lord, hiding the sacrament of His adorable passion,
turns the brother's voluntary ruin, that is, His betrayer's impious
wickedness, into the order of His mercy and providence: that what he
with perverse mind wrought for one Man's destruction, He might by
providential overruling dispose for all men's salvation. The perfect
soul then, which is already worthy to know the secret of God, sings a
Psalm unto the Lord, she sings "for the words of Chusi," because she
has attained to know the words of that silence: for among unbelievers
and persecutors there is that silence and secret. But among His own, to
whom it is said, "Now I call you no more servants; for the servant
knoweth not what his lord doeth; but I have called you friends, for all
things that I have heard of My Father I have made known unto you: [207]
among His friends, I say, there is not the silence, but the words of
the silence, that is, the meaning of that silence set forth and
manifested. Which silence, that is, Chusi, is called the son of Gemini,
that is, righthanded. For what was done for the Saints was not to be
hidden from them. And yet He saith, "Let not the left hand know what
the right hand doeth." [208] The perfect soul then, to which that
secret has been made known, sings in prophecy "for the words of Chusi,"
that is, for the knowledge of that same secret. Which secret God at her
right hand, that is, favourable [209] and propitious unto her, has
wrought. Wherefore this silence is called the Son of the right hand,
which is, "Chusi, the son of Gemini."
2. "O Lord my God, in Thee have I hoped: save me from all them that
persecute me, and deliver me" (ver. 1). As one to whom, already
perfected, all the war and enmity of vice being overcome, there
remaineth no enemy but the envious devil, he says, "Save me from all
them that persecute me, and deliver me (ver. 2): lest at any time he
tear my soul as a lion." The Apostle says, "Your adversary the devil,
as a roaring lion, walketh about, seeking whom he may devour." [210]
Therefore when the Psalmist said in the plural number, "Save me from
all them that persecute me:" he afterwards introduced the singular,
saying, "lest at any time he tear my soul as a lion." For he does not
say, lest at any time they tear: he knew what enemy and violent
adversary of the perfect soul remained. "Whilst there be none to
redeem, nor to save:" that is, lest he tear me, whilst Thou redeemest
not, nor savest. For, if God redeem not, nor save, he tears. [211]
3. And that it might be clear that the already perfect soul, which is
to be on her guard against the most insidious snares of the devil only,
says this, see what follows. "O Lord my God, if I have done this" (ver.
3). What is it that he calls "this"? Since he does not mention the sin
by name, are we to understand sin generally? If this sense displease
us, we may take that to be meant which follows: as if we had asked,
what is this that you say, "this"? He answers, "If there be iniquity in
my hands." Now then it is clear that it is said of all sin, "If I have
repaid them that recompense me evil" (ver. 4). Which none can say with
truth, but the perfect. For so the Lord says, "Be ye perfect, as your
Father which is in heaven; who maketh His sun to rise upon the good and
the evil, and raineth on the just and the unjust." [212] He then who
repayeth not them that recompense evil, is perfect. When therefore the
perfect soul prays "for the words of Chusi, the son of Jemini," that
is, for the knowledge of that secret and silence, which the Lord,
favourable to us and merciful, wrought for our salvation, so as to
endure, and with all patience bear, the guiles of this betrayer: as if
He should say to this perfect soul, explaining the design of this
secret, For thee ungodly and a sinner, that thine iniquities might be
washed away by My blood-shedding, in great silence and great patience I
bore with My betrayer; wilt not thou imitate me, that thou too mayest
not repay evil for evil? Considering then, and understanding what the
Lord has done for him, and by His example going on to perfection, the
Psalmist says, "If I have repaid them that recompense me evil:" that
is, if I have not done what Thou hast taught me by Thy example: "may I
therefore fall by mine enemies empty." And he says well, not, If I have
repaid them that do me evil; but, who "recompense." For who so
recompenseth, had received somewhat already. Now it is an instance of
greater patience, not even to repay him evil, who after receiving
benefits returns evil for good, than if without receiving any previous
benefit he had had a mind to injure. If therefore he says, "I have
repaid them that recompense me evil:" that is, If I have not imitated
Thee in that silence, that is, in Thy patience, which Thou hast wrought
for me, "may I fall by mine enemies empty." For he is an empty boaster,
who, being himself a man, desires to avenge himself on a man; and
whilst he openly seeks to overcome a man, is secretly himself overcome
by the devil, rendered empty by vain and proud joy, because he could
not, as it were, be conquered. The Psalmist knows then where a greater
victory may be obtained, and where "the Father which seeth in secret
will reward." [213] Lest then he repay them that recompense evil, he
overcomes his anger rather than another man, being instructed too by
those writings, wherein it is written, "Better is he that overcometh
his anger, than he that taketh a city." [214] "If I have repaid them
that recompense me evil, may I therefore fall by my enemies empty." He
seems to swear by way of execration, which is the heaviest kind of
oath, as when one says, If I have done so and so, may I suffer so and
so. But swearing in a swearer's mouth is one thing, in a prophet's
meaning another. For here he mentions what will really befall men who
repay them that recompense evil; not what, as by an oath, he would
imprecate on himself or any other.
4. "Let the enemy" therefore "persecute my soul and take it" (ver. 5).
By again naming the enemy in the singular number, he more and more
clearly points out him whom he spoke of above as a lion. For he
persecutes the soul, and if he has deceived it, will take it. For the
limit of men's rage is the destruction of the body; but the soul, after
this visible death, they cannot keep in their power: whereas whatever
souls the devil shall have taken by his persecutions, he will keep.
"And let him tread my life upon the earth:" that is, by treading let
him make my life earth, that is to say, his food. For he is not only
called a lion, but a serpent too, to whom it was said, "Earth shalt
thou eat." [215] And to the sinner was it said, "Earth thou art, and
into earth shalt thou go." [216] "And let him bring down my glory to
the dust." This is that dust which "the wind casteth forth from the
face of the earth," [217] to wit, vain and silly boasting of the proud,
puffed up, not of solid weight, as a cloud of dust carried away by the
wind. Justly then has he here spoken of the glory, which he would not
have brought down to dust. For he would have it solidly established in
conscience before God, where there is no boasting. "He that glorieth,"
saith the Apostle, "let him glory in the Lord." [218] This solidity is
brought down to the dust if one through pride despising the secrecy of
conscience, where God only proves a man, desires to glory before men.
Hence comes what the Psalmist elsewhere says, "God shall bruise the
bones of them that please men." [219] Now he that has well learnt or
experienced the steps in overcoming vices, knows that this vice of
empty glory is either alone, or more than all, to be shunned by the
perfect. For that by which the soul first fell, she overcomes the last.
"For the beginning of all sin is pride:" and again, "The beginning of
man's pride is to depart from God." [220]
5. "Arise, O Lord, in Thine anger" (ver. 6). Why yet does he, who we
say is perfect, incite God to anger? Must we not see, whether he rather
be not perfect, who, when he was being stoned, said, "O Lord, lay not
this sin to their charge"? [221] Or does the Psalmist pray thus not
against men, but against the devil and his angels, whose possession
sinners and the ungodly are? He then does not pray against him in
wrath, but in mercy, whosoever prays that that possession may be taken
from him by that Lord "who justifieth the ungodly." [222] For when the
ungodly is justified, from ungodly he is made just, and from being the
possession of the devil he passes into the temple of God. And since it
is a punishment that a possession, in which one longs to have rule,
should be taken away from him: this punishment, that he should cease to
possess those whom he now possesses, the Psalmist calls the anger of
God against the devil. "Arise, O Lord; in Thine anger." "Arise" (he has
used it as "appear"), in words, that is, human and obscure; as though
God sleeps, when He is unrecognised and hidden in His secret workings.
"Be exalted in the borders of mine enemies." He means by borders the
possession itself, in which he wishes that God should be exalted, that
is, be honoured and glorified, rather than the devil, while the ungodly
are justified and praise God. "And arise, O Lord my God, in the
commandment that Thou hast given:" that is, since Thou hast enjoined
humility, appear in humility; and first fulfil what Thou hast enjoined;
that men by Thy example overcoming pride may not be possessed of the
devil, who against Thy commandments advised to pride, saying, "Eat, and
your eyes shall be opened, and ye shall be as gods." [223]
6. "And the congregation of the people shall surround Thee." This may
be understood two ways. For the congregation of the people can be
taken, either of them that believe, or of them that persecute, both of
which took place in the same humiliation of our Lord: in contempt of
which the multitude of them that persecute surrounded Him; concerning
which it is said, "Why have the heathen raged, and the people meditated
vain things?" [224] But of them that believe through His humiliation
the multitude so surrounded Him, that it could be said with the
greatest truth, "blindness in part is happened unto Israel, that the
fulness of the Gentiles might come in:" [225] and again, "Ask of me,
and I will give Thee the Gentiles for Thine inheritance, and the
boundaries of the earth for Thy possession." [226] "And for their sakes
return Thou on high:" that is, for the sake of this congregation return
Thou on high: which He is understood to have done by His resurrection
and ascension into heaven. For being thus glorified He gave the Holy
Ghost, which before His exaltation could not be given, as it is written
in the Gospel, "for the Holy Ghost was not yet given, because that
Jesus was not yet glorified." [227] Having then returned on high for
the sake of the congregation of the people, He sent the Holy Ghost: by
whom the preachers of the Gospel being filled, filled the whole world
with Churches.
7. It can be taken also in this sense: "Arise, O Lord, in Thine anger,
and be exalted in the borders of mine enemies:" that is, arise in Thine
anger, and let not mine enemies understand Thee; so that to "be
exalted," should be this, become high, [228] that Thou mayest not be
understood; which has reference to the silence spoken of above. For it
is of this exaltation thus said in another Psalm, "And He ascended upon
Cherubim, and flew:" and, "He made darkness His secret place." [229] In
which exaltation, or concealment, when for their sins' desert they
shall not understand Thee, who shall crucify Thee, "the congregation"
of believers "shall surround Thee." For in His very humiliation He was
exalted, that is, was not understood. So that, "And arise, O Lord my
God, in the commandment that Thou hast given:" may have reference to
this, that is, when Thou showest Thyself, be high or deep that mine
enemies may not understand Thee. Now sinners are the enemies of the
just man, and the ungodly of the godly man. "And the congregation of
the people shall surround Thee:" that is, by this very circumstance,
that those who crucify Thee understand Thee not, the Gentiles shall
believe on Thee, and so "shall the congregation of the people surround
Thee." But what follows, if this be the true meaning, has in it more
pain, that it begins already to be perceived, than joy that it is
understood. For it follows, "and for their sakes return Thou on high,"
that is, and for the sake of this congregation of the human race,
wherewith the Churches are crowded, return Thou on high, that is, again
cease to be understood. What then is, "and for their sakes," but that
this congregation too will offend Thee, so that Thou mayest most truly
foretell and say, "Thinkest Thou when the Son of man shall come, He
will find faith on the earth?" [230] Again, of the false prophets, who
are understood to be heretics, He says, "Because of their iniquity the
love of many shall wax cold." [231] Since then even in the Churches,
that is, in that congregation of peoples and nations, where the
Christian name has most widely spread, there shall be so great
abundance of sinners, which is already, in great measure, perceived; is
not that famine of the word [232] here predicted, which has been
threatened by another prophet also? Is it not too for this
congregation's sake, who, by their sins, are estranging from themselves
that light of truth, that God returns on high, that is, so that faith,
pure and cleansed from the corruption of all perverse opinions, is held
and received, either not at all, or by the very few of whom it was
said, "Blessed is he that shall endure to the end, the same shall be
saved"? [233] Not without cause then is it said, "and for the sake of
this" congregation "return Thou on high:" that is, again withdraw into
the depth of Thy secrecy, even for the sake of this congregation of the
peoples, that hath Thy name, and doeth not Thy deeds.
8. But whether the former exposition of this place, or this last be the
more suitable, without prejudice to any one better, or equal, or as
good, it follows very consistently, "the Lord judgeth the people." For
whether He returned on high, when, after the resurrection, He ascended
into heaven, well does it follow, "The Lord judgeth the people:" for
that He will come from thence to judge the quick and the dead. Or
whether He return on high, when the understanding of the truth leaves
sinful Christians, for that of His coming it has been said, "Thinkest
thou the Son of Man on His coming will find faith on the earth?" [234]
"The Lord" then "judgeth the people." What Lord, but Jesus Christ? "For
the Father judgeth no man, but hath committed all judgment unto the
Son." [235] Wherefore this soul which prayeth perfectly, see how she
fears not the day of judgment, and with a truly secure longing says in
her prayer, "Thy kingdom come: judge me," she says, "O Lord, according
to my righteousness." In the former Psalm a weak one was entreating,
imploring rather the mercy of God, than mentioning any desert of his
own: since the Son of God came "to call sinners to repentance." [236]
Therefore he had there said, "Save me, O Lord, for Thy mercy's sake;"
[237] that is, not for my desert's sake. But now, since being called he
hath held and kept the commandments which he received, he is bold to
say, "Judge me, O Lord, according to my righteousness, and according to
my harmlessness, that is upon me." This is true harmlessness, which
harms not even an enemy. Accordingly, well does he require to be judged
according to his harmlessness, who could say with truth, "If I have
repaid them that recompense me evil." As for what he added, "that is
upon me," it can refer not only to harmlessness, but can be understood
also with reference to righteousness; that the sense should be this,
Judge me, O Lord, according to my righteousness, and according to my
harmlessness, which righteousness and harmlessness is upon me. By which
addition he shows that this very thing, that the soul is righteous and
harmless, she has not by herself, but by God who giveth brightness and
light. For of this he says in another Psalm, "Thou, O Lord, wilt light
my candle." [238] And of John it is said, that "he was not the light,
but bore witness of the light." [239] "He was a burning and shining
candle." [240] That light then, whence souls, as candles, are kindled,
shines forth not with borrowed, but with original, brightness, which
light is truth itself. It is then so said, "According to my
righteousness, and according to my harmlessness, that is upon me," as
if a burning and shining candle should say, Judge me according to the
flame which is upon me, that is, not that wherewith [241] I am myself,
but that whereby I shine enkindled of thee.
9. "But let the wickedness of sinners be consummated" (ver. 9). He
says, "be consummated," be completed, according to that in the
Apocalypse, "Let the righteous become more righteous, and let the
filthy be filthy still." [242] For the wickedness of those men appears
consummate, who crucified the Son of God; but greater is theirs who
will not live uprightly, and hate the precepts of truth, for whom the
Son of God was crucified. "Let the wickedness of sinners," then he
says, "be consummated," that is, arrive at the height of wickedness,
that just judgment may be able to come at once. But since it is not
only said, "Let the filthy be filthy still;" but it is said also, "Let
the righteous become more righteous;" he joins on the words, "And Thou
shalt direct the righteous, O God, who searcheth the hearts and reins."
How then can the righteous be directed but in secret? when even by
means of those things which, in the commencement of the Christian ages,
when as yet the saints were oppressed by the persecution of the men of
this world, appeared marvellous to men, now that the Christian name has
begun to be in such high dignity, hypocrisy, that is pretence, has
increased; of those, I mean, who by the Christian profession had rather
please men than God. How then is the righteous man directed in so great
confusion of pretence, save whilst God searcheth the hearts and reins;
seeing all men's thoughts, which are meant by the word heart; and their
delights, which are understood by the word reins? For the delight in
things temporal and earthly is rightly ascribed to the reins; for that
it is both the lower part of man, and that region where the pleasure of
carnal generation dwells, through which man's nature is transferred
into this life of care, and deceiving joy, by the succession of the
race. God then, searching our heart, and perceiving that it is there
where our treasure is, that is, in heaven; searching also the reins,
and perceiving that we do not assent to flesh and blood, but delight
ourselves in the Lord, directs the righteous man in his inward
conscience before Him, where no man seeth, but He alone who perceiveth
what each man thinketh, and what delighteth each. For delight is the
end of care; because to this end does each man strive by care and
thought, that he may attain to his delight. He therefore seeth our
cares, who searcheth the heart. He seeth too the ends of cares, that is
delights, who narrowly searcheth the reins; that when He shall find
that our cares incline neither to the lust of the flesh, nor to the
lust of the eyes, nor to the pride of life, [243] all which pass away
as a shadow, but that they are raised upward to the joys of things
eternal, which are spoilt by no change, He may direct the righteous,
even He, the God who searcheth the hearts and reins. For our works,
which we do in deeds and words, may be known unto men; but with what
mind they are done, and to what end we would attain by means of them,
He alone knoweth, the God who searcheth the hearts and reins.
10. "My righteous help is from the Lord, who maketh whole the upright
in heart" (ver. 10). The offices of medicine are twofold, on the curing
infirmity, the other the preserving health. According to the first it
was said in the preceding Psalm, "Have mercy on me, O Lord, for I am
weak;" [244] according to the second it is said in this Psalm, "If
there be iniquity in my hands, if I have repaid them that recompense me
evil, may I therefore [245] fall by my enemies empty." For there the
weak prays that he may be delivered, here one already whole that he may
not change for the worse. According to the one it is there said, "Make
me whole for Thy mercy's sake;" according to this other it is here
said, "Judge me, O Lord, according to my righteousness." For there he
asks for a remedy to escape from disease; but here for protection from
falling into disease. According to the former it is said, "Make me
whole, O Lord, according to Thy mercy:" according to the latter it is
said, "My righteous help is from the Lord, who maketh whole the upright
in heart." Both the one and the other maketh men whole; but the former
removes them from sickness into health, the latter preserves them in
this health. Therefore there the help is merciful, because the sinner
hath no desert, who as yet longeth to be justified, "believing on Him
who justifieth the ungodly;" [246] but here the help is righteous,
because it is given to one already righteous. Let the sinner then who
said, "I am weak," say in the first place, "Make me whole, O Lord, for
Thy mercy's sake;" and here let the righteous man, who said, "If I have
repaid them that recompense me evil," say, "My righteous help is from
the Lord, who maketh whole the upright in heart." For if he sets forth
the medicine, by which we may be healed when weak, how much more that
by which we may be kept in health. For if "while we were yet sinners,
Christ died for us, how much more being now justified shall we be kept
whole from wrath through Him." [247]
11. "My righteous help is from the Lord, who maketh whole the upright
in heart." God, who searcheth the hearts and reins, directeth the
righteous; but with righteous help maketh He whole the upright in
heart. He doth not as He searcheth the hearts and reins, so make whole
the upright in heart and reins; for the thoughts are both bad in a
depraved heart, and good in an upright heart; but delights which are
not good belong to the reins, for they are more low and earthly; but
those that are good not to the reins, but to the heart itself.
Wherefore men cannot be so called upright in reins, as they are called
upright in heart, since where the thought is, there at once the delight
is too; which cannot be, unless when things divine and eternal are
thought of. "Thou hast given," he says, "joy in my heart," when he had
said, "The light of Thy countenance has been stamped on us, O Lord."
[248] For although the phantoms of things temporal, which the mind
falsely pictures to itself, when tossed by vain and mortal hope, to
vain imagination oftentimes bring a delirious and maddened joy; yet
this delight must be attributed not to the heart, but to the reins; for
all these imaginations have been drawn from lower, that is, earthly and
carnal things. Hence it comes, that God, who searcheth the hearts and
reins, and perceiveth in the heart upright thoughts, in the reins no
delights, affordeth righteous help to the upright in heart, where
heavenly [249] delights are coupled with clean thoughts. And therefore
when in another Psalm he had said, "Moreover even to-night my reins
have chided me;" he went on to say as touching help, "I foresaw the
Lord alway in my sight, for He is on my right hand, that I should not
be moved." [250] Where he shows that he suffered suggestions only from
the reins, not delights as well; for he had suffered these, then he
would of course be moved. But he said, "The Lord is on my right hand,
that I should not be moved;" and then he adds, "Wherefore was my heart
delighted;" that the reins should have been able to chide, not delight
him. The delight accordingly was produced not in the reins, but there,
where against the chiding of the reins God was foreseen to be on the
right hand, that is, in the heart.
12. "God the righteous judge, strong [251] (in endurance) and
long-suffering" (ver. 11). What God is judge, but the Lord, who judgeth
the people? He is righteous; who "shall render to every man according
to his works." [252] He is strong (in endurance); who, being most
powerful, for our salvation bore even with ungodly persecutors. He is
long-suffering; who did not immediately, after His resurrection, hurry
away to punishment, even those that persecuted Him, but bore with them,
that they might at length turn from that ungodliness to salvation: and
still He beareth with them, reserving the last penalty for the last
judgment, and up to this present time inviting sinners to repentance.
"Not bringing in anger every day." Perhaps "bringing in anger" is a
more significant expression than being angry (and so we find it in the
Greek [253] copies); that the anger, whereby He punisheth, should not
be in Him, but in the minds of those ministers who obey the
commandments of truth through whom orders are given even to the lower
ministries, who are called angels of wrath, to punish sin: whom even
now the punishment of men delights not for justice' sake, in which they
have no pleasure, but for malice' sake. God then doth not "bring in
anger every day," that is, He doth not collect His ministers for
vengeance every day. For now the patience of God inviteth to
repentance: but in the last time, when men "through their hardness and
impenitent heart shall have treasured up for themselves anger in the
day of anger, and revelation of the righteous judgment of God, [254]
then He will brandish His sword."
13. "Unless ye be converted," He says, "He will brandish His sword"
(ver. 12). The Lord Man Himself may be taken to be God's double-edged
sword, that is, His spear, which at His first coming He will not
brandish, but hideth as it were in the sheath of humiliation: but He
will brandish it, when at the second coming to judge the quick and
dead, in the manifest splendour of His glory, He shall flash light on
His righteous ones, and terror on the ungodly. For in other copies,
instead of, "He shall brandish His sword," it has been written, "He
shall make bright His spear:" by which word I think the last coming of
the Lord's glory most appropriately signified: seeing that is
understood of His person, which another Psalm has, "Deliver, O Lord, my
soul from the ungodly, [255] Thy spear from the enemies of Thine hand.
He hath bent His bow, and made it ready." The tenses of the words must
not be altogether overlooked, how he has spoken of "the sword" in the
future, "He will brandish;" of "the bow" in the past, "He hath bent:"
and these words of the past tense follow after. [256]
14. "And in it He hath prepared the instruments of death: He hath
wrought His arrows for the burning" (ver. 13). That bow then I would
readily take to be the Holy Scripture, in which by the strength of the
New Testament, as by a sort of string, the hardness of the Old has been
bent and subdued. From thence the Apostles are sent forth like arrows,
or divine preachings are shot. Which arrows "He has wrought for the
burning," arrows, that is, whereby being stricken they might be
inflamed with heavenly love. For by what other arrows was she stricken,
who saith, "Bring me into the house of wine, place me among perfumes,
crowd me among honey, for I have been wounded with love"? [257] By what
other arrows is he kindled, who, desirous of returning to God, and
coming back from wandering, asketh for help against crafty tongues, and
to whom it is said, "What shall be given thee, or what added to thee
against the crafty tongue? Sharp arrows of the mighty, with devastating
coals:" [258] that is, coals, whereby, when thou art stricken and set
on fire, thou mayest burn with so great love of the kingdom of heaven,
as to despise the tongues of all that resist thee, and would recall
thee from thy purpose, and to deride their persecutions, saying, "Who
shall separate me from the love of Christ? shall tribulation, or
distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword?
For I am persuaded," he says, "that neither death, nor life, nor angel,
nor principality, nor things present, not things to come, nor power,
nor height, nor depth, nor other creature, shall be able to separate me
from the love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord." [259] Thus
for the burning hath He wrought His arrows. For in the Greek copies it
is found thus, "He hath wrought His arrows for the burning." But most
of the Latin copies [260] have "burning arrows." But whether the arrows
themselves burn, or make others burn, which of course they cannot do
unless they burn themselves, the sense is complete.
15. But since he has said that the Lord has prepared not arrows only,
but "instruments of death" too, in the bow, it may be asked, what are
"instruments of death"? Are they, per-adventure, heretics? For they
too, out of the same bow, that is, out of the same Scriptures, light
upon souls not to be inflamed with love but destroyed with poison:
which does not happen but after their deserts: wherefore even this
dispensation is to be assigned to the Divine Providence, not that it
makes men sinners, but that it orders them after they have sinned. For
through sin reaching them with an ill purpose, they are forced to
understand them ill, that this should be itself the punishment of sin:
by whose death, nevertheless, the sons of the Catholic Church are, as
it were by certain thorns, so to say, aroused from slumber, and make
progress toward the understanding of the holy Scriptures. "For there
must be also heresies, that they which are approved," he says, "may be
made manifest among you:" [261] that is, among men, seeing they are
manifest to God. Or has He haply ordained the same arrows to be at once
instruments of death for the destruction of unbelievers, and wrought
them burning, or for the burning, for the exercising of the faithful?
For that is not false that the Apostle says, "To the one we are the
savour of life unto life, to the other the savour of death unto death;
and who is sufficient for these things?" [262] It is no wonder then if
the same Apostles be both instruments of death in those from whom they
suffered persecution, and fiery arrows to inflame the hearts of
believers.
16. Now after this dispensation righteous judgment will come: of which
the Psalmist so speaks, as that we may understand that each man's
punishment is wrought out of his own sin, and his iniquity turned into
vengeance: that we may not suppose that that tranquillity and ineffable
light of God brings forth from Itself the means of punishing sin; but
that it so ordereth sins, that what have been delights to man in
sinning, should be instruments to the Lord avenging. "Behold," he says,
"he hath travailed with injustice." Now what had he conceived, that he
should travail with injustice? "He hath conceived," he says, "toil."
Hence then comes that, "In toil shall thou eat thy bread." [263] Hence
too that, "Come unto Me all ye that toil and are heavy laden; for My
yoke is easy, and My burden light." [264] For toil will never cease,
except one love that which cannot be taken away against his will. For
when those things are loved which we can lose against our will, we must
needs toil for them most miserably; and to obtain them, amid the
straitnesses of earthly cares, whilst each desires to snatch them for
himself, and to be beforehand with another, or to wrest it from him,
must scheme injustice. Duly then, and quite in order, hath he travailed
with injustice, who has conceived toil. Now he bringeth forth what,
save that with which he hath travailed, although he has not travailed
with that which he conceived? For that is not born, which is not
conceived; but seed is conceived, that which is formed from the seed is
born. Toil is then the seed of iniquity, but sin the conception of
toil, that is, that first sin, to "depart from God." [265] He then hath
travailed with injustice, who hath conceived toil. "And he hath brought
forth iniquity." "Iniquity" is the same as "injustice:" he hath brought
forth then that with which he travailed. What follows next?
17. "He hath opened a ditch, and digged it" (ver. 15). To open a ditch
is, in earthly matters, that is, as it were in the earth, to prepare
deceit, that another fall therein, whom the unrighteous man wishes to
deceive. Now this ditch is opened when consent is given to the evil
suggestion of earthly lusts: but it is digged when after consent we
press on to actual work of deceit. But how can it be, that iniquity
should rather hurt the righteous man against whom it proceeds, than the
unrighteous heart whence it proceeds? Accordingly, the stealer of
money, for instance, while he desires to inflict painful harm upon
another, is himself maimed by the wound of avarice. Now who, even out
of his right mind, sees not how great is the difference between these
men, when one suffers the loss of money, the other of innocence? "He
will fall" then "into the pit which he hath made." As it is said in
another Psalm, "The Lord is known in executing judgments; the sinner is
caught in the works of his own hands." [266]
18. "His toil shall be turned on his head, and his iniquity shall
descend on his pate" (ver. 16). For he had no mind to escape sin: but
was brought under sin as a slave, so to say, as the Lord saith,
"Whosoever sinneth is a slave." [267] His iniquity then will be upon
him, when he is subject to his iniquity; for he could not say to the
Lord, what the innocent and upright say, "My glory, and the lifter up
of my head." [268] He then will be in such wise below, as that his
iniquity may be above, and descend on him; for that it weigheth him
down and burdens him, and suffers him not to fly back to the rest of
the saints. This occurs, when in an ill regulated man reason is a
slave, and lust hath dominion.
19. "I will confess to the Lord according to His justice" (ver. 17).
This is not the sinner's confession: for he says this, who said above
most truly, "If there be iniquity in my hands:" but it is a confession
of God's justice, in which we speak thus, Verily, O Lord, Thou art
just, in that Thou both so protectest the just, that Thou enlightenest
them by Thyself; and so orderest sinners, that they be punished not by
Thine, but by their own malice. This confession so praises the Lord,
that the blasphemies of the ungodly can avail nothing, who, willing to
excuse their evil deeds, are unwilling to attribute to their own fault
that they sin, that is, are unwilling to attribute their fault to their
fault. Accordingly they find either fortune or fate to accuse, or the
devil, to whom He who made us hath willed that it should be in our
power to refuse consent: or they bring in another nature, which is not
of God: wretched waverers, and erring, rather than confessing to God,
that He should pardon them. For it is not fit that any be pardoned,
except he says, I have sinned. He, then, that sees the deserts of souls
so ordered by God, that while each has his own given him, the fair
beauty of the universe is in no part violated, in all things praises
God: and this is not the confession of sinners, but of the righteous.
For it is not the sinner's confession when the Lord says, "I confess to
Thee, O Lord of heaven and earth, because Thou hast hid these things
from the wise, and revealed them to babes." [269] Likewise in
Ecclesiasticus it is said, "Confess to the Lord in all His works: and
in confession ye shall say this, All the works of the Lord are
exceeding good." [270] Which can be seen in this Psalm, if any one with
a pious mind, by the Lord's help, distinguish between the rewards of
the righteous and the penalties of the sinners, how that in these two
the whole creation, which God made and rules, is adorned with a beauty
wondrous and known to few. Thus then he says, "I will confess to the
Lord according to His justice," as one who saw that darkness was not
made by God, but ordered nevertheless. For God said, "Let light be
made, and light was made." [271] He did not say, Let darkness be made,
and darkness was made: and yet He ordered it. And therefore it is said,
"God divided between the light, and the darkness: and God called the
light day, and the darkness He called night." [272] This is the
distinction, He made the one and ordered it: but the other He made not,
but yet He ordered this too. But now that sins are signified by
darkness, so is it seen in the Prophet, who says, "And thy darkness
shall be as the noon day:" [273] and in the Apostle, who says, "He that
hateth his brother is in darkness:" [274] and above all that text, "Let
us cast off the works of darkness, and let us put on the armour of
light." [275] Not that there is any nature of darkness. For all nature,
in so far as it is nature, is compelled to be. Now being belongs to
light: not being to darkness. He then that leaves Him by whom he was
made, and inclines to that whence he was made, that is, to nothing, is
in this sin endarkened: and yet he does not utterly perish, but he is
ordered among the lowest things. Therefore after the Psalmist said, "I
will confess unto the Lord:" that we might not understand it of
confession of sins, he adds lastly, "And I will sing to the name of the
Lord most high." Now singing has relation to joy, but repentance of
sins to sadness.
20. This Psalm can also be taken in the person of the Lord Man: if only
that which is there spoken in humiliation be referred to our weakness,
which He bore. [276]
__________________________________________________________________
[200] [See Neale's note on this title. Commentary on the Psalms, vol.
i. p. 131.--C.]
[201] 2 Sam. xv. 34-37.
[202] 2 Cor. iii. 16.
[203] Matt. ix. 15.
[204] John xx. 17.
[205] Rom. xi. 25.
[206] Rom. xi. 33, 34.
[207] John xv. 15.
[208] Matt. vi. 3.
[209] It is difficult to preserve in translation the double meaning of
dexter as "righthanded" and "favourable." [We find a corresponding
ambiguity, however, in "sinister," as an English word.--C.]
[210] 1 Pet. v. 8.
[211] [This Psalm is the first of those which our author calls
fugitivi. They are seven, as follows: Psalms xxxiv., lii., liv., lvi.,
lvii., lix., cxlii.--C.]
[212] Matt. v. 43, 45.
[213] Matt. vi. 6.
[214] Prov. xvi. 32.
[215] Gen. iii. 14.
[216] Gen. iii. 19.
[217] Ps. i. 4.
[218] 1 Cor. i. 31.
[219] Ps. liii. 5.
[220] Ecclus. x. 13, 12.
[221] Acts vii. 60.
[222] Rom. iv. 5.
[223] Gen. iii. 5.
[224] Ps. ii. 1.
[225] Rom. xi. 25.
[226] Ps. ii. 8.
[227] John vii. 39.
[228] Altus. Its twofold meaning of "high" and "deep" is not capable of
being preserved in translation.
[229] Ps. xviii. 10, 11.
[230] Luke xviii. 8.
[231] Matt. xxiv. 12.
[232] Amos viii. 11.
[233] Mark xiii. 13.
[234] Luke xviii. 8.
[235] John v. 22.
[236] Matt. ix. 13.
[237] Ps. vi. 4.
[238] Ps. xviii. 28.
[239] John i. 8.
[240] John v. 35.
[241] Al. that which.
[242] Rev. xxii. 11.
[243] 1 John ii. 16.
[244] Ps. vi. 2.
[245] Al. deservedly.
[246] Rom. iv. 5.
[247] Rom. v. 8, 9.
[248] Ps. iv. 7, 6.
[249] Supremae.
[250] Ps. xvi. 7, 8.
[251] Fortis.
[252] Matt. xvi. 27.
[253] me orgen epEURgon, LXX.
[254] Rom. ii. 5.
[255] Ps. xvii. 13.
[256] [So St. Jerome also understood the Hebrew in his strict
version.--C.]
[257] . Song ii. 4, 5
[258] Ps. cxx. 3, 4.
[259] Rom. viii. 35, 38, 39.
[260] [Not so the Vulgate nor St. Jerome, which follow the Greek. He
refers to the African (old Italic) Psalters. But see Scrivener, p. 307,
2d ed.--C.]
[261] 1 Cor. xi. 19.
[262] 2 Cor. ii. 16.
[263] Gen. iii. 17.
[264] Matt. xi. 28, 30.
[265] Ecclus. x. 12.
[266] Ps. ix. 16.
[267] John viii. 34.
[268] Ps. iii. 3.
[269] Matt. xi. 25.
[270] Ecclus. xxxix. 14, 15, 16.
[271] Gen. i. 3.
[272] Gen. i. 4, 5.
[273] Isa. lviii. 10.
[274] 1 John ii. 11.
[275] Rom. xiii. 12.
[276] [On the continuity of the first seven Psalms, see Bishop
Wordsworth's Commentary, p. 10, ed. London, 1867.--C.]
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm VIII.
To the end, for the wine-presses, a psalm of David himself. [277]
1. He seems to say nothing of wine-presses in the text of the Psalm of
which this is the title. By which it appears, that one and the same
thing is often signified in Scripture by many and various similitudes.
We may then take wine-presses to be Churches, on the same principle by
which we understand also by a threshing-floor the Church. For whether
in the threshing-floor, or in the wine-press, there is nothing else
done but the clearing the produce of its covering; which is necessary,
both for its first growth and increase, and arrival at the maturity
either of the harvest or the vintage. Of these coverings or supporters
then; that is, of chaff, on the threshing-floor, the corn; and of
husks, in the presses, the wine is stripped: as in the Churches, from
the multitude of worldly men, which is collected together with the
good, for whose birth and adaptating to the divine word that multitude
was necessary, this is effected, that by spiritual love they be
separated through the operation of God's ministers. For now so it is
that the good are, for a time, separated from the bad, not in space,
but in affection: although they have converse together in the Churches,
as far as respects bodily presence. But another time will come, the
corn will be stored up apart in the granaries, and the wine in the
cellars. "The wheat," saith he, "He will lay up in garners; but the
chaff He will burn with fire unquenchable." [278] The same thing may be
thus understood in another similitude: the wine He will lay up in
cellars, but the husks He will cast forth to cattle: so that by the
bellies of the cattle we may be allowed by way of similitude to
understand the pains of hell.
2. There is another interpretation concerning the wine-presses, yet
still keeping to the meaning of Churches. For even the Divine Word may
be understood by the grape: for the Lord even has been called a Cluster
of grapes; which they that were sent before by the people of Israel
brought from the land of promise hanging on a staff, crucified as it
were. [279] Accordingly, when the Divine Word maketh use of, by the
necessity of declaring Himself, the sound of the voice, whereby to
convey Himself to the ears of the hearers; in the same sound of the
voice, as it were in husks, knowledge, like the wine, is enclosed: and
so this grape comes into the ears, as into the pressing machines of the
wine-pressers. For there the separation is made, that the sound may
reach as far as the ear; but knowledge be received in the memory of
those that hear, as it were in a sort of vat; whence it passes into
discipline of the conversation and habit of mind, as from the vat into
the cellar: where if it do not through negligence grow sour, it will
acquire soundness by age. For it grew sour among the Jews, and this
sour vinegar they gave the Lord to drink. [280] For that wine, which
from the produce of the vine of the New Testament the Lord is to drink
with His saints in the kingdom of His Father, [281] must needs be most
sweet and most sound.
3. "Wine-presses" are also usually taken for martyrdoms, as if when
they who have confessed the name of Christ have been trodden down by
the blows of persecution, their mortal remains as husks remained on
earth, but their souls flowed forth into the rest of a heavenly
habitation. Nor yet by this interpretation do we depart from the
fruitfulness of the Churches. It is sung then, "for the wine-presses,"
for the Church's establishment; when our Lord after His resurrection
ascended into heaven. For then He sent the Holy Ghost: by whom the
disciples being fulfilled preached with confidence the Word of God,
that Churches might be collected.
4. Accordingly it is said, "O Lord, our Lord, how admirable is Thy Name
in all the earth!" (ver. 1). I ask, how is His Name wonderful in all
the earth? The answer is, "For Thy glory has been raised above the
heavens." So that the meaning is this, O Lord, who art our Lord, how do
all that inhabit the earth admire Thee! for Thy glory hath been raised
from earthly humiliation above the heavens. For hence it appeared who
Thou wast that descendedst, when it was by some seen, and by the rest
believed, whither it was that Thou ascendedst.
5. "Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings Thou hast made perfect
praise, because of Thine enemies" (ver. 2). I cannot take babes and
sucklings to be any other than those to whom the Apostle says, "As unto
babes in Christ I have given you milk to drink, not meat." [282] Who
were meant by those who went before the Lord praising Him, of whom the
Lord Himself used this testimony, when He answered the Jews who bade
Him rebuke them, "Have ye not read, out of the mouth of babes and
sucklings Thou hast made perfect praise?" [283] Now with good reason He
says not, Thou hast made, but, "Thou hast made perfect praise." For
there are in the Churches also those who now no more drink milk, but
eat meat: whom the same Apostle points out, saying, "We speak wisdom
among them that are perfect;" [284] but not by those only are the
Churches perfected; for if there were only these, little consideration
would be had of the human race. But consideration is had, when they
too, who are not as yet capable of the knowledge of things spiritual
and eternal, are nourished by the faith of the temporal history, which
for our salvation after the Patriarchs and Prophets was administered by
the most excellent Power and Wisdom of God, even in the Sacrament of
the assumed Manhood, in which there is salvation for every one that
believeth; to the end that moved by Its authority each one may obey Its
precepts, whereby being purified and "rooted and grounded in love," he
may be able to run with Saints, no more now a child in milk, but a
young man in meat, "to comprehend the breadth, the length, the height,
and depth, to know also the surpassing knowledge of the love of
Christ." [285]
6. "Out of the mouth of babes and sucklings Thou hast made perfect
praise, because of Thine enemies." By enemies to this dispensation,
which has been wrought through Jesus Christ and Him crucified, we ought
generally to understand all who forbid belief in things unknown, [286]
and promise certain knowledge: [287] as all heretics do, and they who
in the superstition of the Gentiles are called philosophers. Not that
the promise of knowledge is to be blamed; but because they deem the
most healthful and necessary step of faith is to be neglected, by which
we must needs ascend to something certain, which nothing but that which
is eternal can be. Hence it appears that they do not possess even this
knowledge, which in contempt of faith they promise; seeing that they
know not so useful and necessary a step thereof. "Out of the mouth,"
then "of babes and sucklings Thou hast made perfect praise," Thou, our
Lord, declaring first by the Apostle, "Except ye believe, ye shall not
understand;" [288] and saying by His own mouth, "Blessed are they that
have not seen, and shall believe." [289] "Because of the enemies:"
against whom too that is said, "I confess to Thee, O Lord of heaven and
earth, because Thou hast hid these things from the wise, and revealed
them unto babes." [290] "From the wise," he saith, not the really wise,
but those who deem themselves such. "That Thou mayest destroy the enemy
and the defender." Whom but the heretic? [291] For he is both an enemy
and a defender, who when he would assault the Christian faith, seems to
defend it. Although the philosophers too of this world may be well
taken as the enemies and defenders: forasmuch as the Son of God is the
Power and Wisdom of God by which every one is enlightened who is made
wise by the truth: of which they profess themselves to be lovers,
whence too their name of philosophers; and therefore they seem to
defend it, while they are its enemies, since they cease not to
recommend noxious superstitions, that the elements of this world should
be worshipped and revered.
7. "For I shall see Thy heavens, the works of Thy fingers" (ver. 3). We
read that the law was written with the finger of God, and given through
Moses, His holy servant: by which finger of God many understand the
Holy Ghost. [292] Wherefore if, by the fingers of God, we are right in
understanding these same ministers filled with the Holy Ghost, by
reason of this same Spirit which worketh in them, since by them all
holy Scripture has been completed for us; we understand consistently
with this, that, in this place, the books of both Testaments are called
"the heavens." Now it is said too of Moses himself, by the magicians of
king Pharaoh, when they were conquered by him, "This is the finger of
God." [293] And what is written, "The heavens shall be rolled up as a
book." [294] Although it be said of this aethereal heaven, yet
naturally, according to the same image, the heavens of books are named
by allegory. "For I shall see," he says, "the heavens, the works of Thy
fingers:" that is, I shall discern and understand the Scriptures, which
Thou, by the operation of the Holy Ghost, hast written by Thy
ministers.
8. Accordingly the heavens named above also may be interpreted as the
same books, where he says, "For Thy glory hath been raised above the
heavens:" so that the complete meaning should be this, "For Thy glory
hath been raised above the heavens;" for Thy glory hath exceeded the
declarations of all the Scriptures: "Out of the mouth of babes and
sucklings Thou hast made perfect praise," that they should begin by
belief in the Scriptures, who would arrive at the knowledge of Thy
glory: which hath been raised above the Scriptures, in that it passeth
by and transcends the announcements of all words and languages.
Therefore hath God lowered the Scriptures even to the capacity of babes
and sucklings, as it is sung in another Psalm, "And He lowered the
heaven, and came down:" [295] and this did He because of the enemies,
who through pride of talkativeness, being enemies of the cross of
Christ, even when they do speak some truth, still cannot profit babes
and sucklings. So is the enemy and defender destroyed, who, whether he
seem to defend wisdom, or even the name of Christ, still, from the step
of this faith, [296] assaults that truth, which he so readily makes
promise of. Whereby too he is convicted of not possessing it; since by
assaulting the step thereof, namely faith, he knows not how one should
mount up thereto. Hence then is the rash and blind promiser of truth,
who is the enemy and defender, destroyed, when the heavens, the works
of God's fingers, are seen, that is, when the Scriptures, brought down
even to the slowness of babes, are understood; and by means of the
lowness of the faith of the history, which was transacted in time, they
raise them, well nurtured and strengthened, unto the grand height of
the understanding of things eternal, up to those things which they
establish. [297] For these heavens, that is, these books, are the works
of God's fingers; for by the operation of the Holy Ghost in the Saints
they were completed. For they that have regarded their own glory rather
than man's salvation, have spoken without the Holy Ghost, in whom are
the bowels of the mercy of God.
9. "For I shall see the heavens, the works of Thy fingers, the moon and
the stars, which Thou hast ordained." The moon and stars are ordained
in the heavens; since both the Church universal, to signify which the
moon is often put, and Churches in the several places particularly,
which I imagine to be intimated by the name of stars, are established
in the same Scriptures, which we believe to be expressed by the word
heavens. [298] But why the moon justly signifies the Church, will be
more seasonably considered in another Psalm, where it is said, "The
sinners have bent their bow, that they may shoot in the obscure moon
the upright in heart." [299]
10. "What is man, that Thou art mindful of him? or the son of man, that
Thou visitest him?" (ver. 4). It may be asked, what distinction there
is between man and son of man. For if there were none, it would not be
expressed thus, "man, or son of man," disjunctively. For if it were
written thus, "What is man, that Thou art mindful of him, and son of
man, that Thou visitest him?" it might appear to be a repetition of the
word "man." But now when the expression is, "man or son of-man," a
distinction is more clearly intimated. This is certainly to be
remembered, that every son of man is a man; although every man cannot
be taken to be a son of man. Adam, for instance, was a man, but not a
son of man. Wherefore we may from hence consider and distinguish what
is the difference in this place between man and son of man; namely,
that they who bear the image of the earthy man, who is not a son of
man, should be signified by the name of men; but that they who bear the
image of the heavenly Man, [300] should be rather called sons of men;
for the former again is called the old man [301] and the latter the
new; but the new is born of the old, since spiritual regeneration is
begun by a change of an earthy, and worldly life; [302] and therefore
the latter is called son of man. "Man" then in this place is earthy,
but "son of man" heavenly; and the former is far removed from God, but
the latter present with God; and therefore is He mindful of the former,
as in far distance from Him; but the latter He visiteth, with whom
being present He enlighteneth him with His countenance. For "salvation
is far from sinners;" [303] and, "The light of Thy countenance hath
been stamped upon us, O Lord." [304] So in another Psalm he saith, that
men in conjunction with beasts are made whole together with these
beasts, not by any present inward illumination, but by the
multiplication of the mercy of God, whereby His goodness reacheth even
to the lowest things; for the wholeness of carnal men is carnal, as of
the beasts; but separating the sons of men from those whom being men he
joined with cattle, he proclaims that they are made blessed, after a
far more exalted method, by the enlightening of the truth itself, and
by a certain inundation of the fountain of life. For he speaketh thus:
"Men and beasts Thou wilt make whole, O Lord, as Thy mercy hath been
multiplied, O God. But the sons of men shall put their trust in the
covering of Thy wings. They shall be inebriated with the richness of
Thine house, and of the torrent of Thy pleasures Thou shalt make them
drink. For with Thee is the fountain of life, and in Thy light shall we
see light. Extend Thy mercy to them that know Thee." [305] Through the
multiplication of mercy then He is mindful of man, as of beasts; for
that multiplied mercy reacheth even to them that are afar off; but He
visiteth the son of man, over whom, placed under the covering of His
wings, He extendeth mercy, and in His light giveth light, and maketh
him drink of His pleasures, and inebriateth him with the richness of
His house, to forget the sorrows and the wanderings of his former
conversation. This son of man, that is, the new man, the repentance of
the old man begets with pain and tears. He, though new, is nevertheless
called yet carnal, whilst he is fed with milk; "I would not speak unto
you as unto spiritual, but as unto carnal," says the Apostle. And to
show that they were already regenerate, he says, "As unto babes in
Christ, I have given you milk to drink, not meat." And when he
relapses, as often happens, to the old life, he hears in reproof that
he is a man; "Are ye not men," he says, "and walk as men?" [306]
11. Therefore was the son of man first visited in the person of the
very Lord Man, born of the Virgin Mary. Of whom, by reason of the very
weakness of the flesh, which the Wisdom of God vouchsafed to bear, and
the humiliation of the Passion, it is justly said, "Thou hast lowered
Him a little lower than the Angels" (ver. 5). But that glorifying is
added, in which He rose and ascended up into heaven; "With glory," he
says, "and with honour hast Thou crowned Him; and hast set Him over the
works of Thine hands" (ver. 6). Since even Angels are the works of
God's hands, even over Angels we understand the Only-begotten Son to
have been set; whom we hear and believe, by the humiliation of the
carnal generation and passion, to have been lowered a little lower than
the Angels.
12. "Thou hast put," he says, "all things in subjection under His
feet." When he says, "all things," he excepts nothing. And that he
might not be allowed to understand it otherwise, the Apostle enjoins it
to be believed thus, when he says, "He being excepted which put all
things under Him." [307] And to the Hebrews he uses this very testimony
from this Psalm, when he would have it to be understood that all things
are in such sort put under our Lord Jesus Christ, as that nothing
should be excepted. [308] And yet he does not seem, as it were, to
subjoin any great thing, when he says, "All sheep and oxen, yea,
moreover, the beasts of the field, birds of the air, and the fish of
the sea, which walk through the paths of the sea" (ver. 7). For,
leaving the heavenly excellencies and powers, and all the hosts of
Angels, leaving even man himself, he seems to have put under Him the
beasts merely; unless by sheep and oxen we understand holy souls,
either yielding the fruit of innocence, or even working that the earth
may bear fruit, that is, that earthly men may be regenerated unto
spiritual richness. By these holy souls then we ought to understand not
those of men only, but of all Angels too, if we would gather from hence
that all things are put under our Lord Jesus Christ. For there will be
no creature that will not be put under Him, under whom the pre-eminent
[309] spirits, that I may so speak, are put. But whence shall we prove
that sheep can be interpreted even, not of men, but of the blessed
spirits of the angelical creatures on high? May we from the Lord's
saying that He had left ninety and nine sheep in the mountains, that
is, in the higher regions, and had come down for one? [310] For if we
take the one lost sheep to be the human soul in Adam, since Eve even
was made out of his side, [311] for the spiritual handling and
consideration of all which things this is not the time, it remains
that, by the ninety and nine left in the mountains, spirits not human,
but angelical, should be meant. For as regards the oxen, this sentence
is easily despatched; since men themselves are for no other reason
called oxen, but because by preaching the Gospel of the word of God
they imitate Angels, as where it is said, "Thou shalt not muzzle the ox
that treadeth out the corn." [312] How much more easily then do we take
the Angels themselves, the messengers of truth, to be oxen, when
Evangelists by the participation of their title are called oxen? "Thou
hast put under" therefore, he says, "all sheep and oxen," that is, all
the holy spiritual creation; in which we include that of holy men, who
are in the Church, in those wine-presses to wit, which are intimated
under the other similitude of the moon and stars. [313]
13. "Yea moreover," saith he, "the beasts of the field." [314] The
addition of "moreover" is by no means idle. First, because by beasts of
the plain may be understood both sheep and oxen: so that, if goats are
the beasts of rocky and mountainous regions, sheep may be well taken to
be the beasts of the field. Accordingly had it been written even thus,
"all sheep and oxen and beasts of the field;" it might be reasonably
asked what beasts of the plain meant, since even sheep and oxen could
be taken as such. But the addition of "moreover" besides, obliges us,
beyond question, to recognise some difference or another. But under
this word, "moreover," not only "beasts of the field," but also "birds
of the air, and fish of the sea, which walk through the paths of the
sea" (ver. 8), are to be taken in. What is then this distinction? Call
to mind the "wine-presses," holding husks and wine; and the
threshing-floor, containing chaff and corn; and the nets, in which were
enclosed good fish and bad; and the ark of Noah, in which were both
unclean and clean animals: [315] and you will see that the Churches for
a while, now in this time, unto the last time of judgment, contain not
only sheep and oxen, that is, holy laymen and holy ministers, but
"moreover beasts of the field, birds of the air, and birds of the sea,
that walk through the paths of the sea." For the beasts of the field
were very fitly understood, as men rejoicing in the pleasure of the
flesh where they mount up to nothing high, nothing laborious. For the
field is also "the broad way, that leadeth to destruction:" [316] and
in a field is Abel slain. [317] Wherefore there is cause to fear, lest
one coming down from the mountains of God's righteousness ("for thy
righteousness," he says, "is as the mountains of God" [318] ) making
choice of the broad and easy paths of carnal pleasure, be slain by the
devil. See now too "the birds of heaven," the proud, of whom it is
said, "They have set their mouth against the heaven." [319] See how
they are carried on high by the wind, "who say, We will magnify our
tongue, our lips are our own, who is our Lord?" [320] Behold too the
fish of the sea, that is, the curious; who walk through the paths of
the sea, that is, search in the deep after the temporal things of this
world: which, like paths in the sea, vanish and perish, as quickly as
the water comes together again after it has given room, in their
passage, to ships, or to whatsoever walketh or swimmeth. For he said
not merely, who walk the paths of the sea; but "walk through," he said;
showing the very determined earnestness of those who seek after vain
and fleeting things. Now these three kinds of vice, namely, the
pleasure of the flesh, and pride, and curiosity, include all sins. And
they appear to me to be enumerated by the Apostle John, when he says,
"Love not the world; for all that is in the world is the lust of the
flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life." [321] For
through the eyes especially prevails curiosity. To what the rest indeed
belong is clear. And that temptation of the Lord Man was threefold: by
food, that is, by the lust of the flesh, where it is suggested,
"command these stones that they be made bread:" [322] by vain boasting,
where, when stationed on a mountain, all the kingdoms of this earth are
shown Him, and promised if He would worship: [323] by curiosity, where,
from the pinnacle of the temple, He is advised to cast Himself down,
for the sake of trying whether He would be borne up by Angels. [324]
And accordingly after that the enemy could prevail with Him by none of
these temptations, this is said of him, "When the devil had ended all
his temptation." [325] With a reference then to the meaning of the
wine-presses, not only the wine, but the husks too are put under His
feet; to wit, not only sheep and oxen, that is, the holy souls of
believers, either in the laity, or in the ministry; but moreover both
beasts of pleasure, and birds of pride, and fish of curiosity. All
which classes of sinners we see mingled now in the Churches with the
good and holy. May He work then in His Churches, and separate the wine
from the husks: let us give heed, that we be wine, and sheep or oxen;
not husks, or beasts of the field, or birds of heaven, or fish of the
sea, which walk through the paths of the sea. Not that these names can
be understood and explained in this way only, but the explanation of
them must be according to the place where they are found. For elsewhere
they have other meanings. And this rule must be kept to in every
allegory, that what is expressed by the similitude should be considered
agreeably to the meaning of the particular place: for this is the
manner of the Lord's and the Apostles' teaching. Let us repeat then the
last verse, which is also put at the beginning of the Psalm, and let us
praise God, saying, "O Lord our Lord, how wonderful is Thy name in all
the earth!" For fitly, after the matter of the discourse, is the return
made to the heading, whither all that discourse must be referred.
__________________________________________________________________
[277] See on Ps. lxxxiv. [The octave of Ps. i., and understood by the
Fathers of the ascension of Christ. It was probably sung at the Jewish
Feast of Tabernacles.--C.]
[278] Luke iii. 17.
[279] Numb. xiii. 23.
[280] John xix. 29.
[281] Matt. xxvi. 29.
[282] 1 Cor. iii. 1, 2.
[283] Matt. xxi. 16.
[284] 1 Cor. ii. 6.
[285] Eph. iii. 17-19.
[286] 1 Cor. ii. 6-10.
[287] See "On Profit of Believing."
[288] Isa. vi. 9; Acts xiii. 27-41.
[289] John xx. 29.
[290] Matt. xi. 25.
[291] See on Ps. cii., and St. Greg. on Job, Intr. S: 15.
[292] Exod. xxxi. 18, xxxiv. 28; Deut. ix. 10. [The "arm of the Lord"
is understood by the Fathers of the Son; so also the "right hand of the
Lord." The "finger" (proceeding from head and hand) is understood of
the Holy Spirit. So the Latin hymn, "Dextrae Dei tu Digitus."--C.]
[293] Exod. viii. 19.
[294] Isa. xxxiv. 4. See Rev. vi. 14.
[295] Ps. xviii. 9.
[296] Al. step of faith.
[297] Oxford mss. "and establish them in it," for "up," etc.
[298] [Here is intimated Augustin's idea of the Catholic Church, in
which individual national churches hold their own autonomies.--C.]
[299] Ps. xi. 2.
[300] 1 Cor. xv. 49.
[301] Oxford mss. "called man, and the old man."
[302] Eph. iv. 22, 24.
[303] Ps. cxix. 155.
[304] Ps. iv. 6.
[305] Ps. xxxvi. 6-10.
[306] 1 Cor. iii. 1, 2, 3.
[307] 1 Cor. xv. 27.
[308] Heb. ii. 8.
[309] Primates.
[310] Matt. xviii. 12; Luke xv. 4.
[311] Gen. ii. 21, 22.
[312] 1 Cor. ix. 9; 1 Tim. v. 18.
[313] [See p. 27, and p. 30, note 1, supra.--C.]
[314] Campi.
[315] See on title. Matt. iii. 12, xiii. 47; Gen. vii. 8.
[316] Matt. vii. 13.
[317] Gen. iv. 8.
[318] Ps. xxxvi. 6.
[319] Ps. lxxiii. 9.
[320] Ps. xii. 4.
[321] 1 John ii. 15, 16.
[322] Matt. iv. 3.
[323] Matt. iv. 8, 9.
[324] Matt. iv. 6.
[325] Luke iv. 13.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm IX.
1. The inscription of this Psalm is, "To the end for the hidden things
of the Son, a Psalm of David himself." [326] As to the hidden things of
the Son there may be a question: but since he has not added whose, the
very only-begotten Son of God should be understood. For where a Psalm
has been inscribed of the son of David, [327] "When," he says, "he fled
from the face of Absalom his son;" although his name even was
mentioned, and therefore there could be no obscurity as to whom it was
spoken of: yet it is not merely said, from the face of son Absalom; but
"his" is added. But here both because "his" is not added, and much is
said of the Gentiles, it cannot properly be taken of Absalom. [328] For
the war which that abandoned one waged with his father, no way relates
to the Gentiles, since there the people of Israel only were divided
against themselves. This Psalm is then sung for the hidden things of
the only-begotten Son of God. [329] For the Lord Himself too, when,
without addition, He uses the word Son, would have Himself, the
Only-begotten to be understood; as where He says, "If the Son shall
make you free, then shall ye be free indeed." [330] For He said not,
the Son of God; but in saying merely, Son, He gives us to understand
whose Son it is. Which form of expression nothing admits of, save His
excellency of whom we so speak, that, though we name Him not, He can be
understood. For so we say, it rains, clears up, thunders, and such like
expressions; and we do not add who does it all; for that the excellency
of the doer spontaneously presents itself to all men's minds, and does
not want words. What then are the hidden things of the Son? By which
expression we must first understand that there are some things of the
Son manifest, from which those are distinguished which are called
hidden. Wherefore since we believe two advents of the Lord, one past,
which the Jews understood not: the other future, which we both hope
for; and since the one which the Jews understood not, profited the
Gentiles; "For the hidden things of the Son" is not unsuitably
understood to be spoken of this advent, in which "blindness in part is
happened to Israel, that the fulness of the Gentiles might come in."
[331]
For notice of two judgments is conveyed to us throughout the
Scriptures, if any one will give heed to them, one hidden, the other
manifest. The hidden one is passing now, of which the Apostle Peter
says, "The time is come that judgment should begin from the house of
the Lord." [332] The hidden judgment accordingly is the pain, by which
now each man is either exercised to purification, or warned to
conversion, or if he despise the calling and discipline of God, is
blinded unto damnation. But the manifest judgment is that in which the
Lord, at His coming, will judge the quick and the dead, all men
confessing that it is He by whom both rewards shall be assigned to the
good, and punishments to the evil. But then that confession will avail,
not to the remedy of evils, but to the accumulation of damnation. Of
these two judgments, the one hidden, the other manifest, the Lord seems
to me to have spoken, where He says, "Whoso believeth on Me hath passed
from death unto life, and shall not come into judgment;" [333] into the
manifest judgment, that is. For that which passes from death unto life
by means of some affliction, whereby "He scourgeth every son whom He
receiveth," [334] is the hidden judgment. "But whoso believeth not,"
saith He, "hath been judged already:" [335] that is, by this hidden
judgment hath been already prepared for that manifest one. These two
judgments we read of also in Wisdom, whence it is written, "Therefore
unto them, as to children without the use of reason, Thou didst give a
judgment to mock them; But they that have not been corrected by this
judgment have felt a judgment worthy of God." [336] Whoso then are not
corrected by this hidden judgment of God, shall most worthily be
punished by that manifest one....
2. "I will confess unto Thee, O Lord, with my whole heart" (ver. 1). He
doth not, with a whole heart, confess unto God, who doubteth of His
Providence in any particular: but he who sees already the hidden things
of the wisdom of God, how great is His invisible reward, who saith, "We
rejoice in tribulations;" [337] and how all torments, which are
inflicted on the body, are either for the exercising of those that are
converted to God, or for warning that they be converted, or for just
preparation of the obdurate unto their last damnation: and so now all
things are referred to the governance of Divine Providence, which fools
think done as it were by chance and at random, and without any Divine
ordering. "I will tell all Thy marvels." He tells all God's marvels,
who sees them performed not only openly on the body, but invisibly
indeed too in the soul, but far more sublimely and excellently. For men
earthly, and led wholly by the eye, marvel more that the dead Lazarus
rose again in the body, than that Paul the persecutor rose again in
soul. [338] But since the visible miracle calleth the soul to the
light, but the invisible enlighteneth the soul that comes when called,
he tells all God's marvels, who, by believing the visible, passes on to
the understanding of the invisible.
3. "I will be glad and exult in Thee" (ver. 2). Not any more in this
world, not in pleasure of bodily dalliance, not in relish of palate and
tongue, not in sweetness of perfumes, not in joyousness of passing
sounds, not in the variously coloured forms of figure, not in vanities
of men's praise, not in wedlock and perishable offspring, not in
superfluity of temporal wealth, not in this world's getting, whether it
extend over place and space, or be prolonged in time's succession: but,
"I will be glad and exult in Thee," namely, in the hidden things of the
Son, where "the light of Thy countenance hath been stamped on us, O
Lord:" [339] for, "Thou wilt hide them," saith he, "in the hiding place
of Thy countenance." [340] He then will be glad and exult in Thee, who
tells all Thy marvels. And He will tell all Thy marvels (since it is
now spoken of prophetically), "who came not to do His own will, but the
will of Him who sent Him." [341]
4. For now the Person of the Lord begins to appear speaking in this
Psalm. For it follows, "I will sing to Thy Name, O Most High, in
turning mine enemy behind." His enemy then, where was he turned back?
Was it when it was said to him, "Get thee behind, Satan"? [342] For
then he who by tempting desired to put himself before, was turned
behind, by failing in deceiving Him who was tempted, and by availing
nothing against Him. For earthly men are behind: but the heavenly man
is preferred before, although he came after. For "the first man is of
the earth, earthy: the second Man is from heaven, heavenly." [343] But
from this stock he came by whom it was said, "He who cometh after me is
preferred before me." [344] And the Apostle forgets "those things that
are behind, and reaches forth unto those things that are before." [345]
The enemy, therefore, was turned behind, after that he could not
deceive the heavenly Man being tempted; and he turned himself to earthy
men, where he can have dominion....For in truth the devil is turned
behind, even in the persecution of the righteous, and he, much more to
their advantage, is a persecutor, than if he went before as a leader
and a prince. We must sing then to the Name of the Most High in turning
the enemy behind: since we ought to choose rather to fly from him as a
persecutor, than to follow him as a leader. For we have whither we may
fly and hide ourselves in the hidden things of the Son; seeing that
"the Lord hath been made a refuge for us." [346]
5. "They will be weakened, and perish from Thy face" (ver. 3). Who will
be weakened and perish, but the unrighteous and ungodly? "They will be
weakened," while they shall avail nothing; "and they shall perish,"
because the ungodly will not be; "from the face" of God, that is, from
the knowledge of God, as he perished who said, "But now I live not, but
Christ liveth in me." [347] But why will the ungodly "be weakened and
perish from thy face?" "Because," he saith, "Thou hast made my
judgment, and my cause:" that is, the judgment in which I seemed to be
judged, Thou hast made mine; and the cause in which men condemned me
just and innocent, Thou hast made mine. For such things served [348]
Him for our deliverance: as sailors too call the wind theirs, which
they take advantage of for prosperous sailing.
6. "Thou satest on the throne Who judgest equity" (ver. 4). Whether the
Son say this to the Father, who said also, "Thou couldest have no power
against Me, except it were given thee from above," [349] referring this
very thing, that the Judge of men was judged for men's advantage, to
the Father's equity and His own hidden things: or whether man say to
God, "Thou satest on the throne Who judgest equity," giving the name of
God's throne to his soul, so that his body may peradventure be the
earth, which is called God's "footstool:" [350] for "God was in Christ,
reconciling the world unto Himself:" [351] or whether the soul of the
Church, perfect now and without spot and wrinkle, [352] worthy, that
is, of the hidden things of the Son, in that "the King hath brought her
into His chamber," [353] say to her spouse, "Thou satest upon the
throne Who judgest equity," in that Thou hast risen from the dead, and
ascended up into heaven, and sittest at the right hand of the Father:
whichsoever, I say, of those opinions, whereunto this verse may be
referred, is preferred, it transgresses not the rule of faith.
7. "Thou hast rebuked the heathen, and the ungodly hath perished" (ver.
5). We take this to be more suitably said to the Lord Jesus Christ,
than said by Him. For who else hath rebuked the heathen, and the
ungodly perished, save He, who after that He ascended up into heaven,
sent the Holy Ghost, that, filled by Him, the Apostles should preach
the word of God with boldness, and freely reprove men's sins? At which
rebuke the ungodly perished; because the ungodly was justified and was
made godly. "Thou hast effaced their name for the world, [354] and for
the world's world. The name of the ungodly hath been effaced. For they
are not called ungodly who believe in the true God. Now their name is
effaced "for the world," that is, as long as the course of the temporal
world endures. "And for the world's world." What is "the world's
world," but that whose image and shadow, as it were, this world
possesses? For the change of seasons succeeding one another, whilst the
moon is on the wane, and again on the increase, whilst the sun each
year returns to his quarter, whilst spring, or summer, or autumn, or
winter passes away only to return, is in some sort an imitation of
eternity. But this world's world is that which abides in immutable
eternity. As a verse in the mind, and a verse in the voice, the former
is understood, the latter heard; and the former fashions the latter;
and hence the former works in art and abides, the latter sounds in the
air and passes away. So the fashion of this changeable world is defined
by that world unchangeable which is called the world's world. And hence
the one abides in the art, that is, in the Wisdom and Power of God: but
the other is made to pass in the governance of creation. If after all
it be not a repetition, so that after it was said "for the world," lest
it should be understood of this world that passeth away, it were added
"for the world's world." For in the Greek copies it is thus, eis ton
aiona, kai eis ton aiona tou aionos Which the Latins have for the most
rendered, not, "for the world, and for the world's world;" [355] but,
"for ever, and for the world's world," [356] that in the words "for the
world's world," the, words "for ever," should be explained. "The name,"
then, "of the ungodly Thou hast effaced for ever," for from henceforth
the ungodly shall never be. And if their name be not prolonged unto
this world, much less unto the world's world. [357]
8. "The swords of the enemy have failed at the end" (ver. 6). Not
enemies in the plural, but this enemy in the singular. Now what enemy's
swords have failed but the devil's? Now these are understood to be
divers erroneous opinions, whereby as with swords he destroys souls. In
overcoming these swords, and in bringing them to failure, that sword is
employed, of which it is said in the seventh Psalm, "If ye be not
converted, He will brandish His sword." [358] And peradventure this is
the end, against which the swords of the enemy fail; since up to it
they are of some avail. Now it worketh secretly, but in the last
judgment it will be brandished openly. By it the cities are destroyed.
For so it follows, "The swords of the enemy have failed at the end: and
Thou hast destroyed the cities." Cities indeed wherein the devil rules,
where crafty and deceitful counsels hold, as it were, the place of a
court, on which supremacy attend as officers and ministers the services
of all the members, the eyes for curiosity, the ears for
lasciviousness, or for whatsoever else is gladly listened to that bears
on evil, the hands for rapine or any other violence or pollution
soever, and all the other members after this manner serving the
tyrannical supremacy, that is, perverse counsels. Of this city the
commonalty, as it were, are all soft affections and disturbing emotions
of the mind, stirring up daily seditions in a man. So then where a
king, where a court, where ministers, where commonalty are found, there
is a city. Now again would such things be in bad cities, unless they
were first in individual men, who are, as it were, the elements and
seeds of cities. These cities He destroys, when on the prince being
shut out thence, of whom it was said, "The prince of this world" has
been "cast out," [359] these kingdoms are wasted by the word of truth,
evil counsels are laid to sleep, vile affections tamed, the ministries
of the members and senses taken captive, and transferred to the service
of righteousness and good works: that as the Apostle says, "Sin should
no more reign in" our "mortal body," [360] and so forth. Then is the
soul at peace, and the man is disposed to receive rest and blessedness.
"Their memorial has perished with uproar:" with the uproar, that is, of
the ungodly. But it is said, "with uproar," either because when
ungodliness is overturned, there is uproar made: for none passeth to
the highest place, where there is the deepest silence, but he who with
much uproar shall first have warred with his own vices: or "with
uproar," is said, that the memory of the ungodly should perish in the
perishing even of the very uproar, in which ungodliness riots.
9. "And the Lord abideth for ever" (ver. 7). "Wherefore" then "have the
heathen raged, and the people imagined vain things against the Lord,
and against His anointed:" [361] for "the Lord abideth for ever. He
hath prepared His seat in judgment, and He shall judge the world in
equity." He prepared His seat when He was judged. For by that patience
Man purchased heaven, and God in Man profited believers. And this is
the Son's hidden judgment. But seeing He is also to come openly and in
the sight of all to judge the quick and the dead, He hath prepared His
seat in the hidden judgment: and He shall also openly "judge the world
in equity:" that is, He shall distribute gifts proportioned to desert,
setting the sheep on His right hand, and the goats on His left. [362]
"He shall judge the people with justice"(ver. 8). This is the same as
was said above, "He shall judge the world in equity." Not as men judge
who see not the heart, by whom very often worse men are acquitted than
are condemned: but "in equity" and "with justice" shall the Lord judge,
"conscience bearing witness, and thoughts accusing, or else excusing."
[363]
10. "And the Lord hath become a refuge to the poor" (ver. 9).
Whatsoever be the persecutions of that enemy, who hath been turned
behind, what harm shall he do to them whose refuge the Lord hath
become? But this will be, if in this world, in which that one has an
office of power, they shall choose to be poor, by loving nothing which
either here leaves a man while he lives and loves, or is left by him
when he dies. For to such a poor man hath the Lord become a refuge, "an
Helper in due season, in tribulation." Lo, He maketh poor, for "He
scourgeth every son whom He receiveth." [364] For what "an Helper in
due season" is, he explained by adding "in tribulation." For the soul
is not turned to God, save when it is turned away from this world: nor
is it more seasonably turned away from this world, except toils and
pains be mingled with its trifling and hurtful and destructive
pleasures.
11. "And let them who know Thy Name, hope in Thee" (ver. 10), when they
shall have ceased hoping in wealth, and in the other enticements of
this world. For the soul indeed that seeketh where to fix her hope,
when she is torn away from this world, the knowledge of God's Name
seasonably receives. For the mere Name of God hath now been published
everywhere: but the knowledge of the name is, when He is known whose
name it is. For the name is not a name for its own sake, but for that
which it signifies. Now it has been said, "The Lord is His Name." [365]
Wherefore whoso willingly submits himself to God as His servant, hath
known this name. "And let them who know Thy Name hope in Thee" (ver.
10). Again, the Lord saith to Moses, "I am That I am; and Thou shalt
say to the children of Israel, I Am, hath sent me." [366] "Let them"
then "who know Thy Name, hope in Thee;" that they may not hope in those
things which flow by in time's quick revolution, having nothing but
"will be" and "has been." For what in them is future, when it arrives,
straightway becomes the past; it is awaited with eagerness, it is lost
with pain. But in the nature of God nothing will be, as if it were not
yet; or hath been, as if it were no longer: but there is only that
which is, and this is eternity. Let them cease then to hope in and love
things temporal, and let them apply themselves to hope eternal, who
know His name who said, "I am That I am;" and of whom it was said, "I
Am hath sent me." [367] "For Thou hast not forsaken them that seek
Thee, O Lord." Whoso seek Him, seek no more things transient and
perishable; "For no man can serve two masters." [368]
12. "Sing to the Lord, who dwelleth in Sion" (ver. 11), is said to
them, whom the Lord forsakes not as they seek Him. He dwelleth in Sion,
which is interpreted watching, and which beareth the likeness of the
Church that now is; as Jerusalem beareth the likeness of the Church
that is to come, that is, the city of Saints already enjoying life
angelical; for Jerusalem is by interpretation the vision of peace.
[369] Now watching goes before vision, as this Church goes before that
one which is promised, the city immortal and eternal. But in time it
goes before, not in dignity: because more honourable is that whither we
are striving to arrive, than what we practise, that we may attain to
arrive; now we practise watching, that we may arrive at vision. But
again this same Church which now is, unless the Lord inhabit her, the
most earnest watching might run into any sort of error. And to this
Church it was said, "For the temple of God is holy, which temple ye
are:" [370] again, "that Christ may dwell in the inner man in your
hearts by faith." [371] It is enjoined us then, that we sing to the
Lord who dwelleth in Sion, that with one accord we praise the Lord, the
Inhabitant of the Church. "Show forth His wonders among the heathen."
It has both been done, and will not cease to be done.
13. "For requiring their blood He hath remembered" (ver. 12). As if
they, who were sent to preach the Gospel, should make answer to that
injunction which has been mentioned, "Show forth His wonders among the
heathen," and should say, "O Lord, who hath believed our report?" [372]
and again, "For Thy sake we are killed all the day long;" [373] the
Psalmist suitably goes on to say, That Christians not without great
reward of eternity will die in persecution, "for requiring their blood
He hath remembered." But why did he choose to say, "their blood"? Was
it, as if one of imperfect knowledge and less faith should ask, How
will they "show them forth," seeing that the infidelity of the heathen
will rage against them; and he should be answered, "For requiring their
blood He hath remembered," that is, the last judgment will come, in
which both the glory of the slain and the punishment of the slayers
shall be made manifest? But let no one suppose "He hath remembered" to
be so used, as though forgetfulness can attach to God; but since the
judgment will be after a long interval, it is used in accordance with
the feeling of weak men, who think God hath forgotten, because He doth
not act so speedily as they wish. To such is said what follows also,
"He hath not forgotten the cry of the poor:" that is, He hath not, as
you suppose, forgotten. As if they should on hearing, "He hath
remembered," say, Then He had forgotten; No, "He hath not forgotten,"
says the Psalmist, "the cry of the poor."
14. But I ask, what is that cry of the poor, which God forgetteth not?
Is it that cry, the words whereof are these, "Pity me, O Lord, see my
humiliation at the hands of my enemies"? (ver. 13). Why then did he not
say, Pity "us" O Lord, see our humiliation at the hands of "our"
enemies, as if many poor were crying; but as if one, Pity "me," O Lord?
Is it because One intercedeth for the Saints, "who" first "for our
sakes became poor, though He was rich;" [374] and it is He who saith,
"Who exaltest me from the gates of death (ver. 14), that I may declare
all Thy praises in the gates of the daughter of Sion"? For man is
exalted in Him, not that Man only which He beareth, which is the Head
of the Church; but whichsoever one of us also is among the other
members, and is exalted from all depraved desires; which are the gates
of death, for that through them is the road to death. But the joy in
the fruition is at once death itself, when one gains what he hath in
abandoned wilfulness coveted: for "coveting is the root of all evil:"
[375] and therefore is the gate of death, for "the widow that liveth in
pleasures is dead." [376] At which pleasures we arrive through desires
as it were through the gates of death. But all highest purposes are the
gates of the daughter of Sion, through which we come to the vision of
peace in the Holy Church....Or haply are the gates of death the bodily
senses and eyes, which were opened when the man tasted of the forbidden
tree, [377] ... and are the gates of the daughter of Sion the
sacraments and beginnings of faith, which are opened to them that
knock, that they may arrive at the hidden things of the Son?...
15. Then follows, "I will exult for Thy salvation:" that is, with
blessedness shall I be holden by Thy salvation, which is our Lord Jesus
Christ, the Power and Wisdom of God. Therefore says the Church, which
is here in affliction and is saved by hope, as long as the hidden
judgment of the Son is, in hope she says, "I will exult for Thy
salvation:" for now she is worn down either by the roar of violence
around her, or by the errors of the heathen. "The heathen are fixed in
the corruption, which they made" (ver. 15). Consider ye how punishment
is reserved for the sinner, out of his own works; and how they that
have wished to persecute the Church, have been fixed in that
corruption, which they thought to inflict. For they were desiring to
kill the body, whilst they themselves were dying in soul. "In that
snare which they hid, has their foot been taken." The hidden snare is
crafty devising. The foot of the soul is well understood to be its
love: which, when depraved, is called coveting or lust; but when
upright, love or charity....And the Apostle says, "That being rooted
and grounded in love, ye may be able to take in." [378] The foot then
of sinners, that is, their love, is taken in the snare, which they
hide: for when delight shall have followed on to deceitful dealing,
when God shall have delivered them over to the lust of their heart;
that delight at once binds them, that they dare not tear away their
love thence and apply it to profitable objects; for when they shall
make the attempt, they will be pained in heart, as if desiring to free
their foot from a fetter: and giving way under this pain they refuse to
withdraw from pernicious delights. "In the snare" then "which they have
hid," that is, in deceitful counsel, "their foot hath been taken," that
is, their love, which through deceit attains to that vain joy whereby
pain is purchased.
16. "The Lord is known executing judgments" (ver. 16). These are God's
judgments. Not from that tranquillity of His blessedness, nor from the
secret places of wisdom, wherein blessed souls are received, is the
sword, or fire, or wild beast, or any such thing brought forth, whereby
sinners may be tormented: but how are they tormented, and how does the
Lord do judgment? "In the works," he says, "of his own hands hath the
sinner been caught."
17. Here is interposed, "The song of the diapsalma" (ver. 16): as it
were the hidden joy, as far as we can imagine, of the separation which
is now made, not in place, but in the affections of the heart, between
sinners and the righteous, as of the corn from the chaff, as yet on the
floor. And then follows, "Let the sinners be turned into hell" (ver.
17): that is, let them be given into their own hands, when they are
spared, and let them be ensnared in deadly delight. "All the nations
that forget God." Because "when they did not think good to retain God
in their knowledge, God gave them over to a reprobate mind." [379]
18. "For there shall not be forgetfulness of the poor man to the end"
(ver. 18); who now seems to be in forgetfulness, when sinners are
thought to flourish in this world's happiness, and the righteous to be
in travail: but "the patience," saith He, "of the poor shall not perish
for ever." Wherefore there is need of patience now to bear with the
evil, who are already separated in will, till they be also separated at
the last judgment.
19. "Arise, O Lord, let not man prevail" (ver. 19). The future judgment
is prayed for: but before it come, "Let the heathen," saith he, "be
judged in Thy sight:" that is, in secret; which is called in God's
sight, with the knowledge of a few holy and righteous ones. "Place a
lawgiver over them, O Lord." (ver. 20). He seems to me to point out
Antichrist: of whom the Apostle says, "When the man of sin shall be
revealed." [380] "Let the heathen know that they are men." That they
who will be set free by the Son of God, and belong to the Son of Man,
and be sons of men, that is, new men, may serve man, that is, the old
man the sinner, "for that they are men."
20. And because it is believed that he is to arrive at so great a pitch
of empty glory, and he will be permitted to do so great things, both
against all men and against the Saints of God, that then some weak ones
shall indeed think that God cares not for human affairs, the Psalmist
interposing a diapsalma, adds as it were the voice of men groaning and
asking why judgment is deferred. [381]
__________________________________________________________________
[326] [This title is only conjecturally elucidated by expositors. Here
arises the confusion of numbering the Psalms; the Septuagint and
Vulgate making the following Psalm all one with this.--C.]
[327] Ps. iii.
[328] 2 Sam. xv.
[329] [It is the first of the alphabetical Psalms, which are: Ps. ix.,
x., xxv., xxxiv., cxi., cxii., cxix., cxlv. Of these, only four are
ascribed to David; viz., ix., xxv., xxxiv., and cxlv.--C.]
[330] John viii. 36.
[331] Rom. xi. 25.
[332] 1 Pet. iv. 17.
[333] John v. 24.
[334] Heb. xii. 6.
[335] John iii. 18.
[336] Wisd. xii. 25, 26.
[337] Rom. v. 3.
[338] John xi.; Acts ix.
[339] Ps. iv. 6.
[340] Ps. xxxi. 20.
[341] John vi. 38.
[342] Matt. xvi. 23.
[343] 1 Cor. xv. 47.
[344] John i. 15.
[345] Phil. iii. 13.
[346] Ps. xc. 1.
[347] Gal. ii. 20.
[348] Militaverunt.
[349] John xix. 11.
[350] Isa. lxvi. 1.
[351] 2 Cor. v. 19.
[352] Eph. v. 27.
[353] Song of Sol. i. 4.
[354] Or "unto the age," saeculum. The meaning of "age," as in our
expression "world without end," is the primary one in Latin.
[355] In saeculum et in saeculum saeculi. [African Psalter,
probably.--C.]
[356] In aeternum et in saeculum saeculi. [So the Vulgate.--C.]
[357] [Jerome reads: In sempiternum et jugiter.--C.]
[358] Ps. vii. 12.
[359] John xii. 31.
[360] Rom. vi. 12.
[361] Ps. ii. 1, 2.
[362] Matt. xxv. 33.
[363] Rom. ii. 15.
[364] Heb. xii. 6.
[365] Jer. xxxiii. 2.
[366] Ex. iii. 14.
[367] Ex. iii. 14.
[368] Matt. vi. 24.
[369] See more fully on Ps. li. 18 (Lat. l. 20).
[370] 1 Cor. iii. 17.
[371] Eph. iii. 17.
[372] Isa. liii. 1.
[373] Ps. xliv. 22.
[374] 2 Cor. viii. 9.
[375] 1 Tim. vi. 10.
[376] 1 Tim. v. 6.
[377] Gen. iii. 7.
[378] Eph. iii. 17, 18.
[379] Rom. i. 28.
[380] 2 Thess. ii. 3.
[381] [For light on this interpretation, see Neale, Commentary, p.
160.--C.]
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm X. [382]
"Why, O Lord," saith he, "hast Thou withdrawn afar off?" (ver. 1). Then
he who thus inquired, as if all on a sudden he understood, or as if he
asked, though he knew, that he might teach, adds, "Thou despisest in
due seasons, in tribulations:" that is, Thou despisest seasonably, and
causest tribulations to inflame men's minds with longing for Thy
coming. For that fountain of life is sweeter to them that have much
thirst. Therefore he hints the reason of the delay, saying, "Whilst the
ungodly vaunteth himself, the poor man is inflamed" (ver. 2). Wondrous
it is and true with what earnestness of good hope the little ones are
inflamed unto an upright living by comparison with sinners. In which
mystery it comes to pass, that even heresies are permitted to exist;
not that heretics themselves wish this, but because Divine Providence
worketh this result from their sins, which both maketh and ordaineth
the light; but ordereth only the darkness, that by comparison therewith
the light may be more pleasant, as by comparison with heretics the
discovery of truth is more sweet. For so, by this comparison, the
approved, who are known to God, are made manifest among men.
1. "They are taken in their thoughts, which they think:" that is, their
evil thoughts become chains to them. But how become they chains? "For
the sinner is praised," saith he, "in the desires of his soul" (ver.
3). The tongues of flatterers bind souls in sin. For there is pleasure
in doing those things, in which not only is no reprover feared, but
even an approver heard. "And he that does unrighteous deeds is
blessed." Hence "are they taken in their thoughts, which they think."
2. "The sinner hath angered the Lord" (ver. 4). Let no one congratulate
the man that prospers in his way, to whose sins no avenger is nigh, and
an approver is by. This is the greater anger of the Lord. For the
sinner hath angered the Lord, that he should suffer these things, that
is, should not suffer the scourging of correction. "The sinner hath
angered the Lord: according to the multitude of His anger He will not
search it out." Great is His anger, when He searcheth not out, when He
as it were forgetteth and marketh not sin, and by fraud and wickedness
man attains to riches and honours: which will especially be the case in
that Antichrist, who will seem to man blessed to that degree, that he
will even be thought God. [383] But how great this anger of God is, we
are taught by what follows.
3. "God is not in his sight, his ways are polluted in all time" (ver.
5). He that knows what in the soul gives joy and gladness, knows how
great an ill it is to be abandoned by the light of truth: since a great
ill do men reckon the blindness of their bodily eyes, whereby this
light is withdrawn. How great then the punishment he endures, who
through the prosperous issue of his sins is brought to that pass, that
God is not in his sight, and that his ways are polluted in all time,
that is, his thoughts and counsels are unclean! "Thy judgments are
taken away from his face." For the mind conscious of evil, whilst it
seems to itself to suffer no punishment, believes that God doth not
judge, and so are God's judgments taken away from its face; while this
very thing is great condemnation. "And he shall have dominion over all
his enemies." For so is it delivered, that he will overcome all kings,
and alone obtain the kingdom; since too according to the Apostle, who
preaches concerning him, "He shall sit in the temple of God, exalting
himself above all that is worshipped and that is called God." [384]
4. And seeing that being delivered over to the lust of his own heart,
and predestinated to extreme [385] condemnation, he is to come, by
wicked arts, to that vain and empty height and rule; therefore it
follows, "For he hath said in his heart, I shall not move from
generation to generation without evil" (ver. 6): that is, my fame and
my name will not pass from this generation to the generation of
posterity, unless by evil arts I acquire so lofty a principality, that
posterity cannot be silent concerning it. For a mind abandoned and void
of good arts, and estranged from the light of righteousness, by bad
arts devises a passage for itself to a fame so lasting, as is
celebrated even in posterity. And they that cannot be known for good,
desire that men should speak of them even for ill, provided that their
name spread far and wide. And this I think is here meant, "I shall not
move from generation to generation without evil." There is too another
interpretation, if a mind vain and full of error supposes that it
cannot come from the mortal generation to the generation of eternity,
but by bad arts: which indeed was also reported of Simon, when he
thought that he would gain heaven by wicked arts, and pass from the
human generation to the generation divine by magic. [386] Where then is
the wonder, if that man of sin too, who is to fill up all the
wickedness and ungodliness, which all false prophets have begun, and to
do such "great signs; that, if it were possible, he should deceive the
very elect," [387] shall say in his heart, "I shall not move from
generation to generation without evil"?
5. "Whose mouth is full of cursing and bitterness and deceit" (ver. 7).
For it is a great curse to seek heaven by such abominable arts, and to
get together such earnings for acquiring the eternal seat. But of this
cursing his mouth is full. For this desire shall not take effect, but
within his mouth only will avail to destroy him, who dared promise
himself such things with bitterness and deceit, that is, with anger and
insidiousness, whereby he is to bring over the multitude to his side.
"Under his tongue is toil and grief." Nothing is more toilsome than
unrighteousness and ungodliness: upon which toil follows grief; for
that the toil is not only without fruit, but even unto destruction.
Which toil and grief refer to that which he hath said in his heart, "I
shall not be moved from generation to generation without evil." And
therefore, "under his tongue," not on his tongue, because he will
devise these things in silence, and to men will speak other things,
that he may appear good and just, and a son of God.
6. "He lieth in ambush with the rich" (ver. 8). What rich, but those
whom he will load with this world's gifts? And he is therefore said to
lie in ambush with them, because he will display their false happiness
to deceive men; who, when with a perverted will they desire to be such
as they, and seek not the good things eternal, will fall into his
snares. "That in the dark he may kill the innocent." "In the dark,"
[388] I suppose, is said, where it is not easily understood what should
be sought, or what avoided. Now to kill the innocent, is of an innocent
to make one guilty.
7. "His eyes look against the poor," for he is chiefly to persecute the
righteous, of whom it is said, "Blessed are the poor in spirit, for
theirs is the kingdom of heaven" [389] (ver. 9). "He lieth in wait in a
secret place, as a lion in his den." By a lion in a den, he means one
in whom both violence and deceit will work. For the first persecution
of the Church was violent, when by proscriptions, by torments, by
murders, the Christians were compelled to sacrifice: another
persecution is crafty, which is now conducted by heretics of any kind
and false brethren: there remains a third, which is to come by
Antichrist, than which there is nothing more perilous; for it will be
at once violent and crafty. Violence he will exert in empire, craft in
miracles. To the violence, the word "lion" refers; to craft, the words
"in his den." And these are again repeated with a change of order. "He
lieth in wait," he says, "that he may catch the poor;" this hath
reference to craft: but what follows, "To catch the poor whilst he
draweth him," is put to the score of violence. For "draweth" means, he
bringeth him to himself by violence, by whatever tortures he can.
8. Again, the two which follow are the same. "In his snare he will
humble him," is craft (ver. 10). "He shall decline and fall, whilst he
shall have domination over the poor," is violence. For a "snare"
naturally points to "lying in wait:" but domination most openly conveys
the idea of terror. And well does he say, "He will humble him in his
snare." For when he shall begin to do those signs, the more wonderful
they shall appear to men, the more those Saints that shall be then will
be despised, and, as it were, set at nought: he, whom they shall resist
by righteousness and innocence, shall seem to overcome by the marvels
that he does. But "he shall decline and fall, whilst he shall have
domination over the poor;" that is, whilst he shall inflict whatsoever
punishments he will upon the servants of God that resist him.
9. But how shall he decline, and fall? "For he hath said in his heart,
God hath forgotten; He turneth away His face, that He see not unto the
end" (ver. 11). This is declining, and the most wretched fall, while
the mind of a man prospers as it were in its iniquities, and thinks
that it is spared; when it is being blinded, and kept for an extreme
and timely vengeance: of which the Psalmist now speaks: "Arise, O Lord
God, let Thine hand be exalted" (ver. 12): that is, let Thy power be
made manifest. Now he had said above, "Arise, O Lord, let not man
prevail, let the heathen be judged in Thy sight:" [390] that is, in
secret, where God alone seeth. This comes to pass when the ungodly have
arrived at what seems great happiness to men: over whom is placed a
lawgiver, such as they had deserved to have, of whom it is said, "Place
a lawgiver over them, O Lord, let the heathen know that they are men."
[391] But now after that hidden punishment and vengeance it is said,
"Arise, O Lord God, let Thine hand be exalted;" not of course in
secret, but now in glory most manifest. "That Thou forget not the poor
unto the end;" that is, as the ungodly think, who say, "God hath
forgotten, He turneth away His face, that He should not see unto the
end." Now they deny that God seeth unto the end, who say that He careth
not for things human and earthly, for the earth is as it were the end
of things; in that it is the last element, in which men labour in most
orderly sort, but they cannot see the order of their labours, which
specially belongs to the hidden things of the Son. The Church then
labouring in such times, like a ship in great waves and tempests,
awaketh the Lord as if He were sleeping, that He should command the
winds, and calm should be restored. [392] He says therefore, "Arise, O
Lord God, let Thine hand be exalted, that Thou forget not the poor unto
the end."
10. Accordingly understanding now the manifest judgment, and in
exultation at it, they say, "Wherefore hath the ungodly angered God?"
(ver. 13); that is, what hath it profited him to do so great evil? "For
he said in his heart, He will not require it." Then follows, "For Thou
seest toil and considerest anger, to deliver them into Thine hands"
(ver. 14). This sentence looks for distinct explanation, wherein if
there shall be error it becomes obscure. For thus has the ungodly said
in his heart, God will not require it, as though God regarded toil and
anger, to deliver them into His hands; that is, as though He feared
toil and anger, and for this reason would spare them, lest their
punishment be too burdensome to Him, or lest He should be disturbed by
the storm of anger: as men generally act, excusing themselves of
vengeance, to avoid toil or anger.
11. "The poor hath been left unto Thee." For therefore is he poor, that
is, hath despised all the temporal goods of this world, that Thou only
mayest be his hope. "Thou wilt be a helper to the orphan," that is, to
him to whom his father this world, by whom he was born after the flesh,
dies, and who can already say, "The world hath been crucified unto me,
and I unto the world." [393] For of such orphans God becomes the
Father. The Lord teaches us in truth that His disciples do become
orphans, to whom He saith, "Call no man father on earth." [394] Of
which He first Himself gave an example in saying, "Who is my mother,
and who my brethren?" [395] Whence some most mischievous heretics [396]
would assert that He had no mother; and they do not see that it follows
from this, if they pay attention to these words, that neither had His
disciples fathers. For as He said, "Who is my mother?" so He taught
them, when He said, "Call no man your father on earth."
12. "Break the arm of the sinner and of the malicious" (ver. 15); of
him, namely, of whom it was said above, "He shall have dominion over
all his enemies." He called his power then, his arm; to which Christ's
power is opposed, of which it is said, "Arise, O Lord God, let Thine
hand be exalted. His fault shall be required, and he shall not be found
because of it;" [397] that is he shall be judged for his sins, and
himself shall perish because of his sin. After this, what wonder if
there follow, "The Lord shall reign for ever and world without end; ye
heathen shall perish out of His earth"? (ver. 16). He uses heathen for
sinners and ungodly.
13. "The Lord hath heard the longing of the poor" (ver. 17): that
longing wherewith they were burning, when in the straits and
tribulations of this world they desired the day of the Lord. "Thine ear
hath heard the preparation of their heart." This is the preparation of
the heart, of which it is sung in another Psalm, "My heart is prepared,
O God, my heart is prepared:" [398] of which the Apostle says, "But if
we hope for what we see not, we do with patience wait for it." [399]
Now, by the ear of God, we ought, according to a general rule of
interpretation, to understand not a bodily member, but the power
whereby He heareth; and so (not to repeat this often) by whatever
members of His are mentioned, which in us are visible and bodily, must
be understood powers of operation. For we must not suppose it anything
bodily, in that [400] the Lord God hears not the sound of the voice,
but the preparation of the heart.
14. "To judge for the orphan and the humble" (ver. 18): that is, not
for him who is conformed to this world, nor for the proud. For it is
one thing to judge the orphan, another to judge for the orphan. He
judges the orphan even, who condemns him; but he judges for the orphan,
who delivers sentence for him. "That man add not further to magnify
himself upon earth." For they are men, of whom it was said, "Place a
lawgiver over them, O Lord: let the heathen know that they are men."
[401] But he too, who in this same passage is understood to be placed
over them, will be man, of whom it is now said, "That man add not
further to magnify himself upon earth:" namely, when the Son of Man
shall come to judge for the orphan, who hath put off from himself the
old man, and thus, as it were, buried his father.
15. After the hidden things then of the Son, of which, in this Psalm,
many things have been said, will come the manifest things of the Son,
of which a little has been now said at the end of the same Psalm. But
the title is given from the former, which here occupy the larger
portion. Indeed, the very day of the Lord's advent may be rightly
numbered among the hidden things of the Son, although the very presence
of the Lord itself will be manifest. For of that day it is said, that
no man knoweth it, neither angels, nor powers, nor the Son of man.
[402] What then so hidden, as that which is said to be hidden even to
the Judge Himself, not as regards knowledge, but disclosure? But
concerning the hidden things of the Son, even if any one would not wish
to understand the Son of God, but of David himself, to whose name the
whole Psalter is attributed, for the Psalms we know are called the
Psalms of David, let him give ear to those words in which it is said to
the Lord, "Have mercy on us, O Son of David:" [403] and so even in this
manner let him understand the same Lord Christ, concerning whose hidden
things is the inscription of this Psalm. For so likewise is it said by
the Angel: "God shall give unto Him the throne of His father David."
[404] Nor to this understanding of it is the sentence opposed in which
the same Lord asks of the Jews, "If Christ be the Son of David, how
then doth he in spirit call Him Lord, saying, The Lord said unto my
Lord, Sit Thou on my right hand, until I put Thine enemies under Thy
feet." [405] For it was said to the unskilled, who although they looked
for Christ's coming, yet expected Him as man, not as the Power and
Wisdom of God. He teacheth then, in that place, the most true and pure
faith, that He is both the Lord of king David, in that He is the Word
in the beginning, God with God, [406] by which all things were made;
and Son, in that He was made to him of the seed of David according to
the flesh. For He doth not say, Christ is not David's Son, but if ye
already hold that He is his Son, learn how He is his Lord: and do not
hold in respect of Christ that He is the Son of Man, for so is He
David's Son; [407] and leave out that He is the Son of God, for so is
He David's Lord. [408]
__________________________________________________________________
[382] The two Psalms are combined in the Vulgate. But here the verses
begin again, treating this as "Ps. x. secundum Hebraeos." [And so our
English version.--C.]
[383] [Compare Hippolytus, A.N.F. vol. v. pp. 205-219.--C.]
[384] 2 Thess. ii. 4.
[385] Ultimae.
[386] Acts viii. 9.
[387] Matt. xxiv. 24.
[388] In occultis.
[389] Matt. v. 3.
[390] Ps. ix. 19.
[391] Ps. ix. 20.
[392] Matt. viii. 24-26.
[393] Gal. vi. 14.
[394] Matt. xxiii. 9.
[395] Matt. xii. 48.
[396] [Manichees. See A.N.F. vol. vi. p. 252.--C.]
[397] LXX. var. lect. di' auten, "because of it." These words should be
marked as part of the text, as some mss. are pointed.
[398] Ps. lvii. 7.
[399] Rom. viii. 25.
[400] Al. wherewith.
[401] Ps. ix. 20.
[402] Mark xiii. 32.
[403] Matt. xx. 30.
[404] Luke i. 32.
[405] Matt. xxii. 43, 44.
[406] John i. 1.
[407] Rom. i. 3.
[408] [On the "hidden things" compare Isa. xlv. 15 with 1 Pet. i.
10-12.--C.]
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XI. [409]
To the end, a psalm of David himself. [410]
1. This title does not require a fresh consideration: for the meaning
of, "to the end," has already been sufficiently handled. [411] Let us
then look to the text itself of the Psalm, which to me appears to be
sung against the heretics, [412] who, by rehearsing and exaggerating
the sins of many in the Church, as if either all or the majority among
themselves were righteous, strive to turn and snatch us away from the
breasts of the one True Mother Church: affirming that Christ is with
them, and warning us as if with piety and earnestness, that by passing
over to them we may go over to Christ, whom they falsely declare they
have. Now it is known that in prophecy Christ, among the many names in
which notice of Him is conveyed in allegory, is also called a mountain.
[413] We must accordingly answer these people, and say, "I trust in the
Lord: how say ye to my soul, Remove into the mountains as a sparrow?"
(ver. 1). I keep to one mountain wherein I trust, how say ye that I
should pass over to you, as if there were many Christs? Or if through
pride you say that you are mountains, I had indeed need to be a sparrow
winged with the powers and commandments of God: but these very things
hinder my flying to these mountains, and placing my trust in proud men.
I have a house where I may rest, in that I trust in the Lord. For even
"the sparrow hath found her a house," [414] and, "The Lord hath become
a refuge to the poor." [415] Let us say then with all confidence, lest
while we seek Christ among heretics we lose Him, "In the Lord I trust:
how say ye to my soul, Remove into the mountains as a sparrow?"
2. "For, lo, sinners have bent the bow, they have prepared their arrows
in the quiver, that they may in the obscure moon shoot at the upright
in heart" (ver. 2). These be the terrors of those who threaten us as
touching sinners, that we may pass over to them as the righteous. "Lo,"
they say, "the sinners have bent the bow:" the Scriptures, I suppose,
by carnal interpretation of which they emit envenomed sentences from
them. "They have prepared their arrows in the quiver:" the same words,
that is, which they will shoot out on the authority of Scripture, they
have prepared in the secret place of the heart. "That they may in the
obscure moon [416] shoot at the upright in heart:" that when they see,
from the Church's light being obscured by the multitude of the
unlearned and the carnal, that they cannot be convicted, they may
corrupt good manners by evil communications. [417] But against all
these terrors we must say, "In the Lord I trust."
3. Now I remember that I promised to consider in this Psalm with what
suitableness the moon signifies the Church. [418] There are two
probable opinions concerning the moon: but of these which is the true,
I suppose it either impossible or very difficult for a man to decide.
For when we ask whence the moon has her light, some say that it is her
own, but that of her globe half is bright, and half dark: and when she
revolves in her own orbit, that part wherein she is bright gradually
turns towards the earth, so as that it may be seen by us; and that
therefore at first her appearance is as if she were horned....According
to this opinion the moon in allegory signifies the Church, because in
its spiritual part the Church is bright, but in its carnal part is
dark: and sometimes the spiritual part is seen by good works, but
sometimes it lies hid in the conscience, and is known to God alone,
since in the body alone is it seen by men....But according to the other
opinion also the moon is understood to be the Church, because she has
no light of her own, but is lighted by the only-begotten Son of God,
who in many places of holy Scripture is allegorically called the Sun.
[419] Whom certain heretics [420] being ignorant of, and not able to
discern Him, endeavour to turn away the minds of the simple to this
corporeal and visible sun, which is the common light of the flesh of
men and flies, and some they do pervert, who as long as they cannot
behold with the mind the inner light of truth, will not be content with
the simple Catholic faith; which is the only safety to babes, and by
which milk alone they can arrive in assured strength at the firm
support of more solid food. Whichever then of these two opinions be the
true, the moon in allegory is fitly understood as the Church. Or if in
such difficulties as these, troublesome rather than edifying, there be
either no satisfaction or no leisure to exercise the mind, or if the
mind itself be not capable of it, it is sufficient to regard the moon
with ordinary [421] eyes, and not to seek out obscure causes, but with
all men to perceive her increasings and fulnesses and wanings; and if
she wanes to the end that she may be renewed, even to this rude
multitude she sets forth the image of the Church, in which the
resurrection of the dead is believed.
4. Next we must enquire, what in this Psalm is meant by "the obscure
moon," in which sinners have prepared to shoot at the upright in heart?
For not in one way only may the moon be said to be obscure: for when
her monthly course is finished, and when her brightness is interrupted
by a cloud, and when she is eclipsed at the full, the moon may be
called obscure. It may then be understood first of the persecutors of
the Martyrs, for that they wished in the obscure moon to shoot at the
upright in heart; whether it be yet in the time of the Church's youth,
because she had not yet shone forth in greatness on the earth, and
conquered the darkness of heathen superstitions; or by the tongues of
blasphemers and such as defame the Christian name, when the earth was
as it were beclouded, the moon, that is, the Church, could not be
clearly seen; or when by the slaughter of the Martyrs themselves and so
great effusion of blood, as by that eclipse and obscuration, wherein
the moon seems to exhibit a bloody face, the weak were deterred from
the Christian name; in which terror sinners shot out words crafty and
sacrilegious to pervert even the upright in heart. And secondly, it can
be understood of these sinners, whom the Church contains, because at
that time, taking the opportunity of this moon's obscurity, they
committed many crimes, which are now tauntingly objected to us by the
heretics, whereas their founders are said to have been guilty of them.
[422] But howsoever that be which was done in the obscure moon, now
that the Catholic name is spread and celebrated throughout the whole
world, what concern of mine is it to be disturbed by things unknown?
For "in the Lord I trust;" nor do I listen to them that say to my soul,
"Remove into the mountains as a sparrow. For, lo, sinners have bent the
bow, that they may in the obscure moon shoot at the upright in heart."
Or if the moon seem even [423] now obscure to them, because they would
make it uncertain which is the Catholic Church, and they strive to
convict her by the sins of those many carnal men whom she contains;
what concern is this to him, who says in truth, "In the Lord I trust"?
By which word every one shows that he is himself wheat, and endures the
chaff with patience unto the time of winnowing.
5. "In the Lord," therefore, "I trust." Let them fear who trust in man,
and cannot deny that they are of man's party, by whose grey hairs they
swear; and when in conversation it is demanded of them, of what
communion they are, unless they say that they are of his party, they
cannot be recognised....Or perhaps you will say that it is written, "Ye
shall know them by their works"? [424] I see indeed marvellous works
the daily violences of the Circumcelliones, [425] with the bishops and
presbyters for their leaders, flying about in every direction, and
calling their terrible clubs "Israels;" which men now living daily see
and feel. But for the times of Macarius, [426] respecting which they
raise an invidious cry, [427] most men have not seen them, and no one
sees them now: and any Catholic who saw them could say, if he wished to
be a servant of God, "In the Lord I trust."...
6. Let the Catholic soul then say, "In the Lord I trust; how say ye to
my soul, Remove into the mountains as a sparrow? For, lo, the sinners
have bent the bow, they have prepared their arrows in the quiver, that
they may in the obscure moon shoot at the upright in heart:" and from
them let her turn her speech to the Lord and say, "For they have
destroyed what Thou hast perfected" [428] (ver. 3). And this let her
say not against these only, but against all heretics. For they have
all, as far as in them lies, destroyed the praise which God hath
perfected out of the mouth of babes and sucklings, [429] when they
disturb the little ones with vain and scrupulous questions, and suffer
them not to be nourished with the milk of faith. As if then it were
said to this soul, why do they say to you, "Remove into the mountains
as a sparrow;" why do they frighten you with sinners, who "have bent
the bow, to shoot in the obscure moon at the upright in heart"? She
answers, Therefore it is they frighten me, "because they have destroyed
what Thou hast perfected." Where but in their conventicles, where they
nourish not with milk, but kill with poison the babes and ignorant of
the interior light. "But what hath the Just done?" [430] If Macarius,
if Caecilianus, offend you, what hath Christ done to you, who said, "My
peace I give unto you, My peace I leave with you;" [431] which ye with
your abominable dissensions have violated? What hath Christ done to
you? who with such exceeding patience endured His betrayer, as to give
to him, as to the other Apostles, the first Eucharist consecrated [432]
with His own hands, and blessed with His own mouth. [433] What hath
Christ done to you? who sent this same betrayer, whom He called a
devil, [434] who before betraying the Lord could not show good faith
even to the Lord's purse, [435] with the other disciples to preach the
kingdom of heaven; [436] that He might show that the gifts of God come
to those that with faith receive them, though he, through whom they
receive them, be such as Judas was.
7. "The Lord is in His holy temple" (ver. 4), yea in such wise as the
Apostle saith, "For the temple of God is holy, which" temple "ye are."
[437] "Now if any man shall violate the temple of God, him shall God
destroy." He violateth the temple of God, who violateth unity: for he
"holdeth not the head, from which the whole body fitly joined together
and compacted by that which every joint supplieth [438] according to
the working after the measure of every part maketh increase of the body
to the edifying of itself in love." [439] The Lord is in this His holy
temple; which consisteth of His many members, fulfilling each his own
separate duties, by love built up into one building. Which temple he
violateth, who for the sake of his own pre-eminence separateth himself
from the Catholic society. "The Lord is in His holy temple; the Lord,
His seat is in heaven." If you take heaven to be the just man, as you
take the earth to be the sinner, to whom it was said, "Earth thou art,
and unto earth shalt thou go;" [440] the words, "The Lord is in His
holy temple" you will understand to be repeated, whilst it is said,
"The Lord, His seat is in heaven."
8. "His eyes look upon the poor." [441] His to Whom the poor man hath
been left, and Who hath been made a refuge to the poor. [442] And
therefore all the seditions and tumults within these nets, [443] until
they be drawn to shore, concerning which heretics upbraid us to their
own ruin and our correction, are caused by those men, who will not be
Christ's poor. But do they turn away God's eyes from such as would be
so? "For His eyes look upon the poor." Is it to be feared lest, in the
crowd of the rich, He may not be able to see the few poor, whom He
brings up in safe keeping in the bosom of the Catholic Church? "His
eyelids question the sons of men." Here by that rule I would wish to
take "the sons of men" [444] of those that from old men have been
regenerated by faith. For these, by certain obscure passages of
Scripture, as it were the closed eyes of God, are exercised that they
may seek: and again, by certain clear passages, as it were the open
eyes of God, are enlightened that they may rejoice. And this frequent
closing and opening in the holy Books are as it were the eyelids of
God; which question, that is, which try the "sons of men;" who are
neither wearied with the obscurity of the matter, but exercised; nor
puffed up by knowledge, but confirmed.
9. "The Lord questioneth the righteous and ungodly" (ver. 5). Why then
do we fear lest the ungodly should be any hurt to us, if so be they do
with insincere heart share the sacraments with us, seeing that He
"questioneth the righteous and the ungodly." "But whoso loveth
iniquity, hateth his own soul:" that is, not him who believeth God, and
putteth not his hope in man, but only his own soul doth the lover of
iniquity hurt.
10. "He shall rain snares upon the sinners" (ver. 6). If by clouds are
understood prophets generally, whether good or bad, who are also called
false prophets: false prophets are so ordered by the Lord God, that by
them He may rain snares upon sinners. [445] For no one, but the sinner,
falls into a following of them, whether by way of preparation for the
last punishment, if he shall choose to persevere in sin; or to dissuade
from pride, if in time he shall come to seek God with a more sincere
intent. But if by clouds are understood good and true prophets only; by
these too it is clear that God raineth snares upon sinners, although by
them He watereth also the godly unto fruitfulness. "To some," saith the
Apostle, "we are the savour of life unto life; to some the savour of
death unto death." [446] For not prophets only, but all who with the
word of God water souls, may be called clouds. Who when they are
understood amiss, God raineth snares upon sinners; but when they are
understood aright, He maketh the hearts of the godly and believing
fruitful. As, for instance, the passage, "and they two shall be in one
flesh," [447] if one interpret it with an eye to lust, He raineth a
snare upon the sinner. But if you understand it, as he who says, "But I
speak concerning Christ and the Church," [448] He raineth a shower on
the fertile soil. Now both are effected by the same cloud, that is,
holy Scripture. Again the Lord says, "Not that which goeth into your
mouth defileth you, but that which cometh out." [449] The sinner hears
this, and makes ready his palate for gluttony: the righteous hears it,
and is guarded against the superstitious distinction in meats. Here
then also out of the same cloud of Scripture, according to the several
desert of each, upon the sinner the rain of snares, upon the righteous
the rain of fruitfulness, is poured.
11. "Fire and brimstone and the blast of the tempest is the portion of
their cup." This is their punishment and end, by whom the name of God
is blasphemed; that first they should be wasted by the fire of their
own lusts, then by the ill savour of their evil deeds cast off from the
company of the blessed, at last carried away and overwhelmed suffer
penalties unspeakable. For this is the portion of their cup: as of the
righteous, "Thy cup inebriating how excellent is it! for they shall be
inebriated with the richness of Thine house." [450] Now I suppose a cup
is mentioned for this reason, that we should not suppose that anything
is done by God's providence, even in the very punishments of sinners,
beyond moderation and measure. And therefore as if he were giving a
reason why this should be, he added, "For the Lord is righteous, and
hath loved righteousnesses" (ver. 7). The plural not without meaning,
but only because he speaks of men, is as that righteousnesses be
understood to be used for righteous men. For in many righteous men
there seem, so to say, to be righteousnesses, whereas there is one only
righteousness of God whereof they all participate. Like as when one
face looks upon many mirrors, what in it is one only, is by those many
mirrors reflected manifoldly. Wherefore he recurs to the singular,
saying, "His face hath seen equity." Perhaps, "His face hath seen
equity," is as if it were said, Equity hath been seen in His face, that
is, in knowledge of Him. For God's face is the power by which He is
made known to them that are worthy. Or at least, "His face hath seen
equity," because He doth not allow Himself to be known by the evil, but
by the good; and this is equity.
12. But if any one would understand the moon of the synagogue, let him
refer the Psalm to the Lord's passion, and of the Jews say, "For they
have destroyed what Thou hast perfected;" [451] and of the Lord
Himself, "But what hath the Just done?" whom they accused as the
destroyer of the Law: whose precepts, by their corrupt living, and by
despising them, and by setting up their own, they had destroyed, so
that the Lord Himself may speak as Man, as He is wont, saying, "In the
Lord I trust; how say ye to my soul, Remove into the mountains as a
sparrow?" [452] by reason, that is, of the fear of those who desire to
apprehend and crucify Him. Since the interpretation is not unreasonable
of sinners wishing to "shoot at the upright in heart," [453] that is,
those who believed in Christ, "in the obscure moon," that is, the
Synagogue filled with sinners. To this too the words, "The Lord is in
His holy temple; the Lord, His seat is in heaven," [454] are suitable;
that is, the Word in Man, or the very Son of Man who is in heaven.
[455] "His eyes look upon the poor;" either on to Him whom He assumed
as God, or for whom He suffered as Man. "His eyelids question the sons
of men." The closing and opening of the eyes, which is probably meant
by the word eyelids, we may take to be His death and resurrection,
whereby He tried the sons of men His disciples, terrified at His
passion, and gladdened by the resurrection. "The Lord questioneth the
righteous and ungodly," [456] even now from out of Heaven governing the
Church. "But whoso loveth iniquity, hateth his own soul." Why it is so,
what follows teaches us. For "He shall rain snares upon the sinners:"
[457] which is to be taken according to the exposition above given, and
so on with all the rest to the end of the Psalm.
__________________________________________________________________
[409] Lat. X.
[410] [It has been most aptly supposed that this Psalm is based on
Lot's escape to the mountain. Gen. xix. 20. The imagery of the Psalm
strikingly corresponds with his story.--C.]
[411] See on Ps. iv.
[412] Donatists.
[413] See on Ps. iii. 3.
[414] Ps. lxxxiv. 3.
[415] Ps. ix. 9.
[416] [This appears to be from the African Psalter, following the
Sept.--C.]
[417] 1 Cor. xv. 33.
[418] [See on Ps. viii. p. 30, supra.--C.]
[419] Mal. iv. 2, etc.
[420] Manichees.
[421] Popularibus.
[422] He alludes to the charge of having surrendered the Holy
Scriptures, alleged by the Donatists as the ground of their separation.
See Ep. 76, S: 2, and 105, S: 2. "We would prove to you," he says,
"that those were rather the betrayers who condemned Caecilianus (Bishop
of Carthage) and his companions on a false charge of betrayal;"
referring to the municipal records.--Ben.
[423] So Oxford mss.
[424] Matt. vii. 16.
[425] [i.e., "Circum cellas rusticorum ientes." Concerning these
miscreants, see enough in Smith's popular Student's Ecclesiastical
History, vol. i. p. 250.--C.]
[426] Of the mission of Macarius and Paulus into Africa by Constans,
about A.D. 348, and the complaint of persecution, see S. Optatus, lib.
3, and St. Augustin, Ep. 44, etc.--Ben.
[427] De quibus invidiam faciunt.
[428] [Here Jerome reads: Quia leges dissipatae sunt: justus quid
operatus est?--C.]
[429] Ps. viii. 2.
[430] ["Delivered just Lot." 2 Pet. ii. 7; Acts xxii. 14.--C.]
[431] John xiv. 27.
[432] Confectam.
[433] Luke xxii. 19, 21.
[434] John vi. 70.
[435] John xii. 6.
[436] Matt. x. 5-7.
[437] 1 Cor. iii. 17.
[438] dia pEURses /=phes tes epichoregias. Per omnem tactum
subministrationis.
[439] Col. ii. 19; Eph. iv. 16.
[440] Gen. iii. 19.
[441] [Here, too, is a striking correspondence with Gen. xviii. 21: "I
will go down and see."--C.]
[442] Ps. x. 14, ix. 9.
[443] Matt. xiii. 47.
[444] Cf. S. Aug. Ps. viii. 4, S: 10, on the words, "What is man, that
Thou art mindful of him; or the son of man, that Thou visitest him?"
and Ps. ix. 20, S: 19, on the words, "Let the heathen know that they
are men."
[445] Matt. xxiv. 24.
[446] 2 Cor. ii. 16.
[447] Eph. v. 31.
[448] Eph. v. 32.
[449] Matt. xv. 11.
[450] Ps. xxxvi. 8.
[451] Ps. xi. 3.
[452] Ps. xi. 1.
[453] Ps. xi. 2.
[454] Ps. xi. 4.
[455] John iii. 13.
[456] Ps. xi. 5.
[457] Ps. xi. 6.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XII. [458]
To the end, for the eighth, a psalm of David.
1. It has been said on the sixth Psalm, [459] that "the eighth" may be
taken as the day of judgment. "For the eighth" may also be taken "for
the eternal age;" for that after the time present, which is a cycle of
seven days, it shall be given to the Saints.
2. "Save me, O Lord, for the holy hath failed;" that is, is not found:
as we speak when we say, Corn fails, or, Money fails. "For the truths
have been minished from among the sons of men" (ver. 1). The truth is
one, whereby holy souls are enlightened: but forasmuch as there are
many souls, there may be said in them to be many truths: as in mirrors
there are seen many reflections from one face.
3. "He hath talked vanity each man to his neighbour" (ver. 2). By
neighbour we must understand every man: for that there is no one with
whom we should work evil; "and the love of our neighbour worketh no
evil." [460] "Deceitful lips, with a heart and a heart they have spoken
evil things." [461] The repetition, "with a heart and a heart,"
signifies a double heart.
4. "May the Lord destroy all deceitful lips" (ver. 3). He says "all,"
that no one may suppose himself excepted: as the Apostle says, "Upon
every soul of man that doeth evil, of the Jew first, and of the Greek."
[462] "The tongue speaking great things:" the proud tongue.
5. "Who have said, We will magnify our tongue, our lips are our own,
who is Lord over us?" (ver. 4). Proud hypocrites are meant, putting
confidence in their speech to deceive men, and not submitting
themselves to God.
6. "Because of the wretchedness of the needy and the sighing of the
poor, now I will arise, saith the Lord" [463] (ver. 5). For so the Lord
Himself in the Gospel pitied His people, because they had no ruler,
when they could well obey. Whence too it is said in the Gospel, "The
harvest is plenteous, but the labourers are few." [464] But this must
be taken as spoken in the person of God the Father, who, because of the
needy and the poor, that is, who in need and poverty were lacking
spiritual good things, vouchsafed to send His own Son. From thence
begins His sermon on the mount to Matthew, where He says, "Blessed are
the poor in spirit: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven." [465] "I will
place in salvation." He does not say what He would place: but, "in
salvation," must be understood as, in Christ; according to that, "For
mine eyes have seen Thy salvation." [466] And hence He is understood to
have placed in Him what appertains to the taking away the wretchedness
of the needy, and the comforting the sighing of the poor. "I will deal
confidently in Him:" according to that in the Gospel, "For He taught
them as one having authority, and not as their scribes." [467]
7. "The words of the Lord" are "pure words" (ver. 6). This is in the
person of the Prophet himself, "The words of the Lord" are "pure
words." He says "pure," without the alloy of pretence. For many preach
the truth impurely; [468] for they sell it for the bribe of the
advantages of this life. Of such the Apostle says, that they declared
Christ not purely. "Silver tried by the fire for the earth." [469]
These words of the Lord by means of tribulations approved to sinners.
"Purified seven times:" by the fear of God, by godliness, by knowledge,
by might, by counsel, by understanding, by wisdom. [470] For seven
steps also of beatitude there are, which the Lord goes over, according
to Matthew, in the same sermon which He spake on the Mount, "Blessed"
are "the poor in spirit, blessed the meek, blessed they that mourn,
blessed they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness, blessed
the merciful, blessed the pure in heart, blessed the peacemakers."
[471] Of which seven sentences, it may be observed how all that long
sermon was spoken. For the eighth where it is said, "Blessed" are "they
which suffer persecution for righteousness' sake," [472] denotes the
fire itself, whereby the silver is proved seven times. And at the
termination of this sermon it is said, "For He taught them as one
having authority, and not as their scribes." [473] Which refers to that
which is said in this Psalm, "I deal confidently in Him."
8. "Thou, O Lord, shalt preserve us, and keep us from this generation
to eternity" (ver. 7): here as needy and poor, there as wealthy and
rich.
9. "The ungodly walk in a circle round about" (ver. 8): that is, in the
desire of things temporal, which revolves as a wheel in a repeated
circle of seven days; and therefore they do not arrive at the eighth,
that is, at eternity, for which this Psalm is entitled. [474] So too it
is said by Solomon, "For the wise king is the winnower of the ungodly,
and he bringeth on them the wheel of the wicked.--After Thine height
Thou hast multiplied the sons of men." [475] For there is in temporal
things too a multiplication, which turns away from the unity of God.
Hence "the corruptible body weigheth down the soul, and the earthy
tabernacle presseth down the mind that museth upon many things." [476]
But the righteous are multiplied "after the height of God," when "they
shall go from strength to strength." [477]
__________________________________________________________________
[458] Lat. XI.
[459] [A.N.F., vol. i. p. 63, note 2. The world created in seven days;
and the Fathers take the eighth to mean the new creation, or
"regeneration." Matt. xix. 28, with which compare Acts iii. 21.--C.]
[460] Rom. xiii. 10.
[461] LXX. Al. kakEUR.
[462] Rom. ii. 9.
[463] [Here the Anglican Psalter is inimitable for rhythm and pathos
and for its archaic charm: "Now for the comfortless troubles' sake of
the needy, and because of the deep sighing of the poor, I will up,
saith the Lord."--C.]
[464] Matt. ix. 37.
[465] Matt. v. 3.
[466] Luke ii. 30.
[467] Matt. vii. 29.
[468] Phil. i. 16.
[469] [Or, "from the earth." So St. Jerome. The earthen crucible may be
the figure.--C.]
[470] Isa. xi. 2.
[471] Matt. v. 3-9.
[472] Matt. v. 10.
[473] Matt. vii. 29.
[474] [So the Septuagint and Vulgate, "in a cycle." Contrasted by the
Fathers with the straightforward march of the (Prov. iv. 18) just. This
Psalm was used by the Hebrews on the eighth day, for circumcision.--C.]
[475] Prov. xx. 26. See LXX.
[476] Wisd. ix. 15.
[477] Ps. lxxxiv. 7.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XII. [478]
Unto the end, a psalm of David.
1. "For Christ is the end of the law to every one that believeth."
[479] "How long, O Lord, wilt Thou forget me unto the end?" (ver. 1)
that is, put me off as to spiritually understanding Christ, who is the
Wisdom of God, and the true end of all the aim of the soul. "How long
dost Thou turn away Thy face from me?" As God doth not forget, so
neither doth He turn His face away: but Scripture speaks after our
manner. Now God is said to turn away His face, when He doth not give to
the soul, which as yet hath not the pure eye of the mind, the knowledge
of Himself.
2. "How long shall I place counsel in my soul?" (ver. 2). There is no
need of counsel but in adversity. Therefore "How long shall I place
counsel in my soul?" is as if it were said, How long shall I be in
adversity? Or at least it is an answer, so that the meaning is this, So
long, O Lord, wilt Thou forget me to the end, and so long turn away Thy
face from me, until I shall place counsel in mine own soul: so that
except a man place counsel in his own soul to work mercy perfectly, God
will not direct him to the end, nor give him that full knowledge of
Himself, which is "face to face." "Sorrow in my heart through the day?"
How long shall I have, is understood. And "through the day" signifies
continuance, so that day is taken for time: from which as each one
longs to be free, he has sorrow in his heart, making entreaty to rise
to things eternal, and not endure man's day.
3. "How long shall mine enemy be exalted over me?" either the devil, or
carnal habit.
4. "Look on me, and hear me, O Lord my God" (ver. 3). "Look on me,"
refers to what was said, "How long" dost "Thou turn away Thy face from
me." "Hear," refers to what was said, "How long wilt Thou forget me to
the end? Lighten mine eyes, that I sleep not in death." The eyes of the
heart must be understood, that they be not closed by the pleasurable
eclipse of sin.
5. "Lest at any time mine enemy say, I have prevailed against him"
(ver. 4). The devil's mockery is to be feared. "They that trouble me
will exult, if I be moved;" the devil and his angels; who exulted not
over that righteous man, Job, when they troubled him; because he was
not moved, that is, did not draw back from the stedfastness of his
faith. [480]
6. "But I have hoped in Thy mercy" (ver. 5). Because this very thing,
that a man be not moved, and that he abide fixed in the Lord, he should
not attribute to self: lest when he glories that he hath not been
moved, he be moved by this very pride. "My heart shall exult in Thy
salvation;" in Christ, in the Wisdom of God. "I will sing [481] to the
Lord who hath given me good things;" spiritual good things, not
belonging to man's day. "And I will chant [482] to the name of the Lord
most high" (ver. 6); that is, I give thanks with joy, and in most due
order employ my body, which is the song of the spiritual soul. But if
any distinction is to be marked here, "I will sing" with the heart, "I
will chant" with my works; "to the Lord," that which He alone seeth,
but "to the name of the Lord," that which is known among men, which is
serviceable not for Him, but for us.
__________________________________________________________________
[478] Lat. XII. [Regarded by the critics as a link between Ps. xii. and
xiv.--C.]
[479] Rom. x. 4.
[480] Job ii. 3.
[481] Cantabo.
[482] Psallam.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XIV. [483]
To the end, a psalm of David himself.
1. What "to the end" means, must not be too often repeated. "For Christ
is the end of the law for righteousness to every one that believeth;"
[484] as the Apostle saith. We believe on Him, when we begin to enter
on the good road: we shall see Him, when we shall get to the end. And
therefore is He the end.
2. "The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God" (ver. 1). For not
even have certain sacrilegious and abominable philosophers, who
entertain perverse and false notions of God, dared to say, "There is no
God." Therefore it is, hath said "in his heart;" for that no one dares
to say it, even if he has dared to think it. "They are corrupt, and
become abominable in their affections:" that is, whilst they love this
world and love not God; these are the affections which corrupt the
soul, and so blind it, that the fool can even say, "in his heart, There
is no God. For as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge,
God gave them over to a reprobate mind." [485] "There is none that
doeth goodness, no not up to one." "Up to one," can be understood
either with that one, so that no man be understood: or besides one,
that the Lord Christ may be excepted. As we say, This field is up to
the sea; we do not of course reckon the sea together with the field.
And this is the better interpretation, so that none be understood to
have done goodness up to Christ; for that no man can do goodness,
except He shall have shown it. And that is true; for until a man know
the one God, he cannot do goodness.
3. "The Lord from heaven looked out upon the sons of men, to see if
there be one understanding, or seeking after God" (ver. 2). It may be
interpreted, upon the Jews; as he may have given them the more
honourable name of the sons of men, by reason of their worship of the
One God, in comparison with the Gentiles; of whom I suppose it was said
above, "The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God," etc. Now the
Lord looks out, that He may see, by His holy souls: which is the
meaning of, "from heaven." For by Himself nothing is hid from Him.
4. "All have gone out of the way, they have together become useless:"
that is, the Jews have become as the Gentiles, who were spoken of
above. "There is none that doeth good, no not up to one" (ver. 3), must
be interpreted as above. "Their throat is an open sepulchre." [486]
Either the voracity of the ever open palate is signified: or
allegorically those who slay, and as it were devour those they have
slain, into whom they instil the disorder of their own conversation.
Like to which with the contrary meaning is that which was said to
Peter, "Kill and eat;" [487] that he should convert the Gentiles to his
own faith and good conversation. "With their tongues they have dealt
craftily." Flattery is the companion of the greedy and of all bad men.
"The poison of asps is under their lips." By "poison," he means deceit;
and "of asps," because they will not hear the precepts of the law, as
asps "will not hear the voice of the charmer;" [488] which is said more
clearly in another Psalm. "Whose mouth is full of cursing and
bitterness:" this is, "the poison of asps." "Their feet are swift to
shed blood." He here shows forth the habit of ill doing. "Destruction
and unhappiness" are "in their ways." For all the ways of evil men are
full of toil and misery. Hence the Lord cries out, "Come unto Me, all
ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will refresh you. Take My
yoke upon you, and learn of Me, for I am meek and lowly in heart. For
My yoke is easy and My burden light." [489] "And the way of peace have
they not known:" that way, namely, which the Lord, as I said, mentions,
in the easy yoke and light burden. "There is no fear of God before
their eyes." These do not say, "There is no God;" but yet they do not
fear God.
5. "Shall not all, who work iniquity, know?" (ver. 4). He threatens the
judgment. "Who devour My people as the food of bread:" that is, daily.
For the food of bread is daily food. Now they devour the people, who
serve their own ends out of them, not referring their ministry to the
glory of God, and the salvation of those over whom they are.
6. "They have not called upon the Lord." For he doth not really call
upon Him, who longs for such things as are displeasing to Him. "There
they trembled for fear, where no fear was" (ver. 5): that is, for the
loss of things temporal. For they said, "If we let Him thus alone, all
men will believe on Him; and the Romans will come, and take away both
our place and nation." [490] They feared to lose an earthly kingdom,
where no fear was; and they lost the kingdom of heaven, which they
ought to have feared. And this must be understood of all temporal
goods, the loss of which when men fear, they come not to things
eternal.
7. "For God is in the just generation." It refers to what went before,
so that the sense is, "shall not all they that work iniquity know that
the Lord is in the just generation;" [491] that is, He is not in them
who love the world. For it is unjust to leave the Maker of the worlds,
and "serve the creature more than the Creator." [492] Ye have shamed
the counsel of the poor, for the Lord is his hope" (ver. 6): that is,
ye have despised the humble coming of the Son of God, because ye saw
not in Him the pomp of the world: that they, whom he was calling,
should put their hope in God alone, not in the things that pass away.
8. "Who will give salvation to Israel out of Sion?" (ver. 7). Who but
He whose humiliation ye have despised? is understood. For He will come
in glory to the judgment of the quick and the dead, and the kingdom of
the just: that, forasmuch as in that humble coming "blindness hath
happened in part unto Israel, that the fulness of the Gentiles might
enter in," [493] in that other should happen what follows, "and so all
Israel should be saved." For the Apostle too takes that testimony of
Isaiah, where it is said, "There shall come out of Sion He who shall
turn away ungodliness from Jacob:" [494] for the Jews, as it is here,
"Who shall give salvation to Israel out of Sion?" "When the Lord shall
turn away the captivity of His people, Jacob shall rejoice, and Israel
shall be glad." [495] It is a repetition, as is usual: for I suppose,
"Israel shall be glad," is the same as, "Jacob shall rejoice."
__________________________________________________________________
[483] Lat. XIII.
[484] Rom. x. 4.
[485] Rom. i. 28.
[486] [Here the author quotes the African Psalter, no doubt, from which
the three verses have passed into the Vulgate. They are in the
Septuagint, from which St. Paul quotes them (Rom. iii. 13-18); but St.
Jerome omits them, as not in the Hebrew of his day. They are,
nevertheless, to be found in other parts of the original, and the
passage may be compiled from Ps. v. 10, cxl. 3, x. 7, xxxvi. 1; from
Prov. i. 16 and Isa. lix. 7 come the clauses, "their feet," etc.--C.]
[487] Acts x. 13.
[488] Ps. lviii. 5.
[489] Matt. xi. 28-30.
[490] John xi. 48.
[491] Thus far the sentence is quoted from the Oxford mss.
[492] Rom. i. 25.
[493] Rom. xi. 25.
[494] Isa. lix. 20.
[495] [A prophetic prolepsis of the Captivity; but stretching forward
to the final restoration, in our author's view.--C.]
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XV. [496]
A psalm of David himself.
1. Touching this title there is no question. "O Lord who shall sojourn
in Thy tabernacle?" (ver. 1). Although tabernacle be sometimes used
even for an everlasting habitation: yet when tabernacle is taken in its
proper meaning, it is a thing of war. Hence soldiers are called
tent-fellows, [497] as having their tents together. This sense is
assisted by the words, "Who shall sojourn?" For we war with the devil
for a time, and then we need a tabernacle wherein we may refresh
ourselves. Which specially points out the faith of the temporal
Dispensation, which was wrought for us in time through the Incarnation
of the Lord. "And who shall rest in Thy holy mountain?" Here perhaps he
signifies at once the eternal habitation itself, [498] that we should
understand by "mountain" the supereminence of the love of Christ in
life eternal. [499]
2. "He who walketh without stain, and worketh righteousness" (ver. 2).
Here he has laid down the proposition; in what follows he sets it forth
in detail.
3. "Who speaketh the truth in his heart." For some have truth on their
lips, and not in their heart. As if one should deceitfully point out a
road, knowing that there were robbers there, and should say, If you go
this way, you will be safe from robbers; and it should turn out that in
fact there were no robbers found there: he has spoken the truth, but
not in his heart. For he supposed it to be otherwise, and spoke the
truth in ignorance. Therefore it is not enough to speak the truth,
unless it be so also in heart. "Who hath practised no deceit in his
tongue" (ver. 3). Deceit is practised with the tongue, when one thing
is professed with the mouth, another concealed in the breast. "Nor done
evil to his neighbour." It is well known that by "neighbour," every man
should be understood. "And hath not entertained slander against his
neighbour," that is, hath not readily or rashly given credence to an
accuser.
4. "The malicious one hath been brought to nought in his sight" [500]
(ver. 4). This is perfection, that the malicious one have no force
against a man; and that this be "in his sight;" that is, that he know
most surely that the malicious is not, save when the mind turns itself
away from the eternal and immutable form [501] of her own Creator to
the form of the creature, which was made out of nothing. "But those
that fear the Lord, He glorifieth:" the Lord Himself, that is. Now "the
fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom." [502] As then the things
above belong to the perfect, so what he is now going to say belongs to
beginners.
5. "Who sweareth unto his neighbour, and deceiveth him not." "Who hath
not given his money upon usury, and hath not taken rewards against the
innocent" (ver. 5). These are no great things: but he who is not able
to do even this, much less able is he to speak the truth in his heart,
and to practise no deceit in his tongue, but as the truth is in the
heart, so to profess and have it in his mouth, "yea, yea; nay, nay;"
[503] and to do no evil to his neighbour, that is, to any man; and to
entertain no slander against his neighbour: all which are the virtues
of the perfect, in whose sight the malicious one hath been brought to
nought. Yet he concludes even these lesser things thus, "Whoso doeth
these things shall not be moved for ever:" that is, he shall attain
unto those greater things, wherein is great and unshaken stability. For
even the very tenses are, perhaps not without cause, so varied, as that
in the conclusion above the past tense should be used, but in this the
future. For there it was said, "The malicious one hath been brought to
nought in his sight:" but here, "shall not be moved for ever."
__________________________________________________________________
[496] Lat. XIV.
[497] Contubernales.
[498] 2 Cor. v. 1, 2.
[499] [This Psalm is called by some of the Fathers "the Ladder of
Jacob," by which the righteous ascend to God. It is the octave of Ps.
viii., which is appropriate to the ascension of humanity in
Christ.--C.]
[500] [Malignus in the Vulgate, which the Anglican Psalter does not
follow here.--C.]
[501] Specie.
[502] Ps. cxi. 10; Ecclus. i. 14; Prov. i. 7.
[503] Matt. v. 37.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XVI. [504]
The inscription of the title, of David himself. [505]
1. Our King in this Psalm speaks in the character of the human [506]
nature He assumed, of whom the royal title at the time of His passion
was eminently set forth.
2. Now He saith as follows; "Preserve me, O Lord, for in Thee have I
hoped" (ver. 1): "I have said to the Lord, Thou art my God, for Thou
requirest not my goods" (ver. 2): for with my goods Thou dost not look
to be made blessed.
3. "To the saints who are on His earth" (ver. 3): to the saints who
have placed their hope in the land of the living, the citizens of the
heavenly Jerusalem, whose spiritual conversation is, by the anchor of
hope, fixed in that country, which is rightly called God's earth;
although as yet in this earth too they be conversant in the flesh. "He
hath wonderfully fulfilled all My wishes in them." To those saints then
He hath wonderfully fulfilled all My wishes in their advancement,
whereby they have perceived, how both the humanity of My divinity hath
profited them that I might die, and the divinity of the humanity that I
might rise again.
4. "Their infirmities have been multiplied" [507] (ver. 4): their
infirmities have been multiplied not for their destruction, but that
they might long for the Physician. "Afterwards they made haste."
Accordingly after infirmities multiplied they made haste, that they
might be healed. "I will not gather together their assemblies by
blood." For their assemblies shall not be carnal, nor will I gather
them together as one propitiated by the blood of cattle. [508] "Nor
will I be mindful of their names within My lips." But by a spiritual
change what they have been shall be forgotten; nor by Me shall they be
any more called either sinners, or enemies, or men; but righteous, and
My brethren, and sons of God through My peace.
5. "The Lord is the portion of Mine inheritance, and of My cup" (ver.
5). For together with Me they shall possess the inheritance, the Lord
Himself. Let others choose for themselves portions, earthly and
temporal, to enjoy: the portion of the Saints is the Lord eternal. Let
others drink of deadly pleasures, the portion of My cup is the Lord. In
that I say, "Mine," I include the Church: for where the Head is, there
is the body also. For into the inheritance will I gather together their
assemblies, and by the inebriation of the cup I will forget their old
names. "Thou art He who will restore to Me My inheritance:" that to
these too, whom I free, may be known "the glory wherein I was with Thee
before the world was made." [509] For Thou wilt not restore to Me that
which I never lost, but Thou wilt restore to these, who have lost it,
the knowledge of that glory: in whom because I am, Thou wilt restore to
Me.
6. "The lines have fallen to me in glorious places" (ver. 6). The
boundaries of my possession have fallen in Thy glory as it were by lot,
like as God is the possession of the Priests and Levites. [510] "For
Mine inheritance is glorious to Me." "For Mine inheritance is
glorious," not to all, but to them that see; in whom because I am, "it
is to Me."
7. "I will bless the Lord, who hath given Me understanding" (ver. 7):
whereby this inheritance may be seen and possessed. "Yea moreover too
even unto night my reins have chastened Me." Yea besides understanding,
even unto death, My inferior part, the assumption of flesh, hath
instructed Me, that I might experience the darkness of mortality, which
that understanding hath not.
8. "I foresaw the Lord in My sight always" (ver. 8). But coming into
things that pass away, I removed not Mine eye from Him who abideth
ever, foreseeing this, that to Him I should return after passing
through the things temporal. "For He is on My right hand, that I should
not be moved." For He favoureth Me, that I should abide fixedly in Him.
9. "Wherefore My heart was glad, and My tongue exulted" (ver. 9).
Wherefore both in My thoughts is gladness, and in my words exultation.
"Moreover too My flesh shall rest in hope." Moreover too My flesh shall
not fail unto destruction, but shall sleep in hope of the resurrection.
10. "For Thou wilt not leave My soul in hell" (ver. 10). For Thou wilt
neither give My soul for a possession to those parts below. "Neither
wilt Thou grant Thine Holy One to see corruption." Neither wilt Thou
suffer that sanctified body, whereby others are to be also sanctified,
to see corruption. "Thou hast made known to Me the paths of life" (ver.
11). Thou hast made known through Me the paths of humiliation, that
[511] men might return to life, from whence they fell through pride; in
whom because I am, "Thou hast made known to Me." "Thou wilt fill Me
with joy with Thy countenance." Thou wilt fill them with joy, that they
should seek nothing further, when they shall see Thee "face to face;"
in whom because I am, "Thou wilt fill Me." "Pleasure is at Thy right
hand even to the end." Pleasure is in Thy favour and mercy in this
life's journey, leading on even to the end of the glory of Thy
countenance. [512]
__________________________________________________________________
[504] Lat. XV.
[505] ["Michtam of David," which Bishop Wordsworth derives from Catham,
and illustrates by Job xix. 23.--C.]
[506] Susceptionis humanae.
[507] So Oxford mss.
[508] Isa. i. 11, 12.
[509] John xvii. 5.
[510] Numb. xviii. 20.
[511] Oxford mss. "that by it."
[512] [Compare Acts ii. 25 and xiii. 34.--C.]
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XVII. [513]
A prayer of David himself.
1. This prayer must be assigned to the Person of the Lord, with the
addition of the Church, which is His body.
2. "Hear My righteousness, O God, consider My supplication" (ver. 1).
"Hearken unto My prayer, not in deceitful lips:" not going forth to
Thee in deceitful lips. "Let My judgment from Thy countenance go forth"
(ver. 2). From the enlightening of the knowledge of Thee, let Me judge
truth. Or at least, let My judgment go forth, not in deceitful lips,
from Thy countenance, that is, that I may not in judging utter aught
else than I understand in Thee. "Let Mine eyes see equity:" the eyes,
of course, of the heart.
3. "Thou hast proved and visited Mine heart in the night-season" (ver.
3). For this Mine heart hath been proved by the visitation of
tribulation. "Thou hast examined Me by fire, and iniquity hath not been
found in Me." Now not night only, in that it is wont to disturb, but
fire also, in that it burns, is this tribulation to be called; whereby
when I was examined I was found righteous.
4. "That My mouth may not speak the works of men" (ver. 4). That
nothing may proceed out of My mouth, but what relates to Thy glory and
praise; not to the works of men, which they do beside Thy will.
"Because of the words of Thy lips." [514] Because of the words of Thy
peace, or of Thy prophets. "I have kept hard ways." I have kept the
toilsome ways of human mortality and suffering.
5. "To perfect My steps in Thy paths" (ver. 5). That the love of the
Church might be perfected in the strait ways, whereby she arrives at
Thy rest. "That My footsteps be not moved." That the signs of My way,
which, like footsteps, have been imprinted on the Sacraments and
Apostolical writings, be not moved, that they may mark them who would
follow Me. Or at least, that I may still abide fixedly in eternity,
after that I have accomplished the hard ways, and have finished My
steps in the straits of Thy paths.
6. "I have cried out, for Thou hast heard Me, O God" (ver. 6). With a
free and strong effort have I directed My prayers unto Thee: for that I
might have this power, Thou hast heard Me when praying more weakly.
"Incline Thine ear to Me, and hear My words." Let not Thy hearing
forsake My humiliation.
7. "Make Thy mercies marvellous" (ver. 7). Let not Thy mercies be
disesteemed, lest they be loved too little.
8. "Who savest them that hope in Thee from such as resist Thy right
hand:" from such as resist the favour, whereby Thou favourest Me. "Keep
Me, O Lord, as the apple of Thine eye" (ver. 8): which seems very
little and minute: yet by it is the sight of the eye directed, whereby
the light is distinguished from the darkness; as by Christ's humanity,
the divinity of the Judgment [515] distinguishing between the righteous
and sinners. "In the covering of Thy wings protect Me." In the defence
of Thy love and mercy protect Me. "From the face of the ungodly who
have troubled Me" (ver. 9).
9. "Mine enemies have compassed about My soul;" "they have shut up
their own fat" (ver. 10). They have been covered with their own gross
joy, after that their desire hath been satiated with wickedness. "Their
mouth hath spoken pride." And therefore their mouth spoke pride, in
saying, "Hail, King of the Jews," [516] and other like words.
10. "Casting Me forth they have now compassed Me about" (ver. 11).
Casting Me forth outside the city, they have now compassed Me about on
the Cross. "Their eyes they have determined to turn down on the earth."
The bent of their heart they have determined to turn down on these
earthly things: deeming Him, who was slain, to endure a mighty evil,
and themselves, that slew Him, none.
11. "As a lion ready for prey, have they taken Me" (ver. 12). They have
taken Me, like that adversary who "walketh about, seeking whom he may
devour." [517] "And as a lion's whelp dwelling in secret places." And
as his whelp, the people to whom it was said, "Ye are of your father
the devil:" [518] meditating on the snares, whereby they might
circumvent and destroy the just One.
12. "Arise, O Lord, prevent them, and cast them down" (ver. 13). Arise,
O Lord, Thou whom they suppose to be asleep, and regardless of men's
iniquities; be they blinded before by their own malice, that vengeance
may prevent their deed; and so cast them down.
13. "Deliver My soul from the ungodly." Deliver My soul, by restoring
Me after the death, which the ungodly have inflicted on Me. "Thy
weapon: from the enemies of Thine hand" (ver. 14). For My soul is Thy
weapon, which Thy hand, that is, Thy eternal Power, hath taken to
subdue thereby the kingdoms of iniquity, and divide the righteous from
the ungodly. This weapon then "deliver from the enemies of Thine hand,"
that is, of Thy Power, that is, from Mine enemies. "Destroy them, O
Lord, from off the earth, scatter them in their life." O Lord, destroy
them from off the earth, which they inhabit, scatter them throughout
the world in this life, which only they think their life, who [519]
despair of life eternal. "And by Thy hidden things their belly hath
been filled." Now not only this visible punishment shall overtake them,
but also their memory hath been filled with sins, which as darkness are
hidden from the light of Thy truth, that they should forget God. "They
have been filled with swine's flesh." They have been filled with
uncleanness, treading under foot the pearls of God's words. "And they
have left the rest to their babes:" crying out, "This sin be upon us
and upon our children." [520]
14. "But I shall appear in Thy righteousness in Thy sight" (ver. 15).
But I, Who have not appeared to them that, with their filthy and
darkened heart, cannot see the light of wisdom, "I shall appear in Thy
righteousness in Thy sight."
"I shall be satiated, when Thy glory shall be manifested." And when
they have been satiated with their uncleanness, that they could not
know Me, I shall be satiated, when Thy glory shall be manifested, in
them that know Me. In that verse indeed where it is said, "filled with
swine's flesh," some copies have, "filled with children:" for from the
ambiguity of the Greek [521] a double interpretation has resulted. Now
by "children" we understand works; and as by good children, good works,
so by evil, evil.
__________________________________________________________________
[513] Lat. XVI.
[514] See on Ps. xlv. 2: "the word of grace, the kiss of grace."
[515] Al. "the judgment of Godhead."
[516] Matt. xxvii. 29.
[517] 1 Pet. v. 8.
[518] John viii. 44.
[519] Al. "because they."
[520] Matt. xxvii. 25.
[521] huion, hu?n, hueion, various readings.--Ben.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XVIII. [522]
To the end, for the servant of the Lord, David himself.
1. That is, for the strong of hand, Christ in His Manhood. [523] "The
words of this song which he spoke to the Lord on the day when the Lord
delivered him out of the hands of his enemies, and of the hand of Saul;
and he said, On the day when the Lord delivered him out of the hands of
his enemies and of the hand of Saul:" namely, the king of the Jews,
whom they had demanded for themselves. [524] For as "David" is said to
be by interpretation, strong of hand; so "Saul" is said to be
demanding. Now it is well known, how that People demanded for
themselves a king, and received him for their king, not according to
the will of God, but according to their own will.
2. Christ, then, and the Church, that is, whole Christ, the Head and
the Body, saith here, "I will love Thee, O Lord, My strength" (ver. 1).
I will love Thee, O Lord, by whom I am strong. [525]
3. "O Lord, My stay, and My refuge, and My deliverer" (ver. 2). O Lord,
who hast stayed Me, because I sought refuge with Thee: and I sought
refuge, because Thou hast delivered Me. "My God is My helper; and I
will hope in Him." My God, who hast first afforded me the help of Thy
call, that I might be able to hope in Thee. "My defender, and the horn
of My salvation, and My redeemer." My defender, because I have not
leant upon Myself, lifting up as it were the horn of pride against
Thee; but have found Thee a horn indeed, that is, the sure height of
salvation: and that I might find it, Thou redeemedst Me.
4. "With praise will I call upon the Lord, and I shall be safe from
Mine enemies" (ver. 3). Seeking not My own but the Lord's glory, I will
call upon Him, and there shall be no means whereby the errors of
ungodliness can hurt Me.
5. "The pains of death," that is, of the flesh, have "compassed Me
about. And the overflowings of ungodliness have troubled Me" (ver. 4).
Ungodly troubles [526] stirred up for a time, like torrents of rain
which will soon subside, have come on to trouble Me.
6. "The pains of hell compassed Me about" (ver. 5). Among those that
compassed Me about to destroy Me, were pains of envy, which work death,
and lead on to the hell of sin. "The snares of death prevented Me."
They prevented Me, so that they wished to hurt Me first, which shall
afterwards be recompensed unto them. Now they seize unto destruction
such men as they have evilly persuaded by the boast of righteousness:
in the name but not in the reality of which they glory against the
Gentiles.
7. "And in Mine oppression I called upon the Lord, and cried unto My
God. And He heard My voice from His holy temple" (ver. 6). He heard
from My heart, wherein He dwelleth, My voice. "And My cry in His sight
entered into His ears;" and My cry, which I utter, not in the ears of
men, but inwardly before Him Himself, "entered into His ears."
8. "And the earth was moved and trembled" (ver. 7). When the Son of Man
was thus glorified, sinners were moved and trembled. "And the
foundations of the mountains were troubled." And the hopes of the
proud, which were in this life, were troubled. "And were moved, for God
was wroth with them." That is, that the hope of temporal goods might
have now no more establishment in the hearts of men.
9. "There went up smoke in His wrath" (ver. 8). The tearful
supplication of penitents went up, when they came to know God's
threatenings against the ungodly. "And fire burneth from His face." And
the ardour of love after repentance burns by the knowledge of Him.
"Coals were kindled from Him." They, who were already dead, abandoned
by the fire of good desire and the light of righteousness, and who
remained in coldness and darkness, re-enkindled and enlightened, have
come to life again.
10. "And He bowed the heaven, and came down" (ver. 9). And He humbled
the just One, that He might descend to men's infirmity. "And darkness
under His feet." And the ungodly, who savour of things earthly, in the
darkness of their own malice, knew not Him: for the earth under His
feet is as it were His footstool.
11. "And He mounted above the cherubim, and did fly" (ver. 10). And He
was exalted above the fulness of knowledge, that no man should come to
Him but by love: for "love is the fulfilling of the law." [527] And
full soon He showed to His lovers that He is incomprehensible, lest
they should suppose that He is comprehended by corporeal imaginations.
"He flew above the wings of the winds." But that swiftness, whereby He
showed Himself to be incomprehensible, is above the powers of souls,
whereon as upon wings they raise themselves from earthly fears into the
air of liberty.
12. "And hath made darkness His hiding place" (ver. 11). And hath
settled the obscurity of the Sacraments, and the hidden hope in the
heart of believers, where He may lie hid, and not abandon them. In this
darkness too, wherein "we yet walk by faith, and not by sight," [528]
as long as "we hope for what we see not, and with patience wait for
it." [529] "Round about Him is His tabernacle." Yet they that believe
Him turn to Him and encircle Him; for that He is in the midst of them,
since He is equally the friend of all, in whom as in a tabernacle He at
this time dwells. "Dark water in clouds of air." Nor let any one on
this account, if he understand the Scripture, imagine that he is
already in that light, which will be when we shall have come out of
faith into sight: for in the prophets and in all the preachers of the
word of God there is obscure teaching.
13. "In respect of the brightness in His sight" (ver. 12): in
comparison with the brightness, which is in the sight of His
manifestation. "His clouds have passed over." The preachers of His word
are not now bounded by the confines of Judaea, but have passed over to
the Gentiles. "Hail and coals of fire." Reproofs are figured, [530]
whereby, as by hail, the hard hearts are bruised: but if a cultivated
and genial soil, that is, a godly mind, receive them, the hail's
hardness dissolves into water, that is, the terror of the
lightning-charged, [531] and as it were frozen, reproof dissolves into
satisfying doctrine; and hearts kindled by the fire of love revive. All
these things in His clouds have passed over to the Gentiles.
14. "And the Lord hath thundered from heaven" (ver. 13). And in
confidence of the Gospel the Lord hath sounded forth from the heart of
the just One. "And the Highest gave His voice;" that we might entertain
it, and in the depth of human things, might hear things heavenly.
15. "And He sent out His arrows, and scattered them" (ver. 14). And He
sent out Evangelists traversing straight paths on the wings of
strength, not in their own power, but His by whom they were sent. And
"He scattered them," to whom they were sent, that to some of them they
should be "the savour of life unto life, to others the savour of death
unto death." [532] "And He multiplied lightnings, and troubled them."
And He multiplied miracles, and troubled them.
16. "And the fountains of water were seen. And the fountains of water
springing up into everlasting life," [533] which were made in the
preachers, were seen. "And the foundations of the round world were
revealed" (ver. 15). And the Prophets, who were not understood, and
upon whom was to be built the world of believers in the Lord, were
revealed. "At Thy chiding, O Lord:" crying out, "The kingdom of God is
come nigh unto you." [534] "At the blasting of the breath of Thy
displeasure;" saying, "Except ye repent, ye shall all likewise perish."
[535]
17. "He hath sent down from on high, and hath fetched Me (ver. 16): by
calling out of the Gentiles for an inheritance "a glorious Church, not
having spot, or wrinkle." [536] "He hath taken Me out of the multitude
of waters." He hath taken Me out of the multitude of peoples.
18. "He hath delivered Me from My strongest enemies" (ver. 17). He hath
delivered Me from Mine enemies, who prevailed to the afflicting and
overturning of this temporal life of Mine. "And from them which hate
Me; for they are too strong for Me:" as long as I am under them knowing
not God.
19. "They have prevented Me in the day of My affliction" (ver. 18).
They have first injured Me, in the time when I am bearing a mortal and
toilsome body. "And the Lord hath become My stay." And since the stay
of earthly pleasure was disturbed and torn up by the bitterness of
misery, the Lord hath become My stay.
20. "And hath brought Me forth into a broad place" (ver. 19). And since
I was enduring the straits of the flesh, He brought Me forth into the
spiritual breadth of faith. "He hath delivered Me, because He desired
Me." Before that I desired Him, He delivered Me from My most powerful
enemies (who were envious of Me when I once desired Him), and from them
that hated Me, because I do desire Him.
21. "And the Lord shall reward Me according to My righteousness" (ver.
20). And the Lord shall reward Me according to the righteousness of My
good will, who first showed mercy, before that I had the good will.
"And according to the cleanness of My hands He will recompense Me." And
according to the cleanness of My deeds He will recompense Me, who hath
given Me to do well by bringing Me forth into the broad place of faith.
22. "Because I have kept the ways of the Lord" (ver. 21). That the
breadth of good works, that are by faith, and the long-suffering of
perseverance should follow after.
23. "Nor have I walked impiously apart from My God." "For all His
judgments are [537] in My sight" (ver. 22). "For" with persevering
contemplation I weigh "all His judgments," that is, the rewards of the
righteous, and the punishments of the ungodly, and the scourges of such
as are to be chastened, and the trials of such as are to be proved.
"And I have not cast out His righteousness from Me:" as they do that
faint under their burden of them, and return to their own vomit.
24. "And I shall be undefiled with Him, and I shall keep Myself from
Mine iniquity" (ver. 23).
25. "And the Lord shall reward Me according to My righteousness (ver.
24). Accordingly not only for the breadth of faith, which worketh by
love; but also for the length of perseverance, will the Lord reward Me
according to My righteousness. "And according to the cleanness of My
hands in the sight of His eyes." Not as men see, but "in the sight of
His eyes." For "the things that are seen are temporal; but the things
that are not seen are eternal:" [538] whereto the height of hope
appertains.
26. "With the holy Thou shalt be holy" (ver. 25). There is a hidden
depth also, wherein Thou art known to be holy with the holy, for that
Thou makest holy. "And with the harmless Thou shalt be harmless." For
Thou harmest no man, but each one is bound by the bands of his own
sins. [539]
27. "And with the chosen Thou shalt be chosen." (ver. 26). And by him
whom Thou choosest, Thou art chosen. "And with the froward Thou shalt
be froward." And with the froward Thou seemest froward: for they say,
"The way of the Lord is not right:" [540] and their way is not right.
28. "For Thou wilt make whole the humble people" (ver. 27). Now this
seems froward to the froward, that Thou wilt make them whole that
confess their sins. "And Thou wilt humble the eyes of the proud." But
them that are "ignorant of God's righteousness, and seek to establish
their own," [541] Thou wilt humble.
29. "For thou wilt light My candle, O Lord" (ver. 28). For our light is
not from ourselves; but "Thou wilt light my candle, O Lord. O my God,
Thou wilt enlighten my darkness." For we through our sins are darkness;
but "Thou, O my God, wilt enlighten my darkness."
30. "For by Thee shall I be delivered from temptation" (ver. 29). For
not by myself, but by Thee, shall I be delivered from temptation. "And
in my God shall I leap over the wall." And not in myself, but in my God
shall I leap over the wall, which sin has raised between men and the
heavenly Jerusalem.
31. "My God, His way is undefiled" (ver. 30). My God cometh not unto
men, except they shall have purified the way of faith, whereby He may
come to them; for that "His way is undefiled." "The words of the Lord
have been proved by fire." The words of the Lord are tried by the fire
of tribulation. "He is the Protector of them that hope in Him." And all
that hope not in themselves, but in Him, are not consumed by that same
tribulation. For hope followeth faith.
32. "For who is God, but the Lord?" (ver. 31) whom we serve. "And who
God, but our God?" And who is God, but the Lord? whom after good
service we sons shall possess as the hoped-for inheritance.
33. "God, who hath girded me with strength" (ver. 32). God, who hath
girded me that I might be strong, lest the loosely flowing folds of
desire hinder my deeds and steps. "And hath made my way undefiled." And
hath made the way of love, whereby I may come to Him, undefiled, as the
way of faith is undefiled, whereby He comes to me.
34. "Who hath made my feet perfect like harts' feet" (ver. 33). Who
hath made my love perfect to surmount the thorny and dark entanglements
of this world. "And will set me up on high." And will fix my aim on the
heavenly habitation, that "I may be filled with all the fulness of
God." [542]
35. "Who teacheth my hands for battle" (ver. 34). Who teacheth me to
work for the overthrow of mine enemies, who strive to shut the kingdom
of heaven against us. "And Thou hast made mine arms as a bow of steel."
And Thou hast made my earnest striving after good works unwearied.
36. "And Thou hast given me the defence of my salvation, and Thy right
hand hath held me up" (ver. 35). And the favour of Thy grace hath held
me up. "And Thy discipline hath directed me to the end." And Thy
correction, not suffering me to wander from the way, hath directed me
that whatsoever I do, I refer to that end, whereby I may cleave to
Thee. "And this Thy discipline, it shall teach me." And that same
correction of Thine shall teach me to attain to that, whereunto it hath
directed me.
37. "Thou hast enlarged my steps under me" (ver. 36). Nor shall the
straits of the flesh hinder me; for Thou hast enlarged my love, working
in gladness even with these mortal things and members which are under
me. "And my footsteps have not been weakened." And either my goings, or
the marks which I have imprinted for the imitation of those that
follow, have not been weakened.
38. "I will follow up mine enemies, and seize them" (ver. 37). I will
follow up my carnal affections, and will not be seized by them, but
will seize them, so that they may be consumed. "And I will not turn,
till they fail." And from this purpose I will not turn myself to rest,
till they fail who make a tumult about me.
39. "I will break them, and they shall not be able to stand" (ver. 38):
and they shall not hold out against me. "They shall fall under my
feet." When they are cast down, I will place before me the loves [543]
whereby I walk for evermore.
40. "And Thou hast girded me with strength to the war" (ver. 39). And
the loose desires of my flesh hast Thou bound up with strength, that in
such a fight I may not be encumbered. "Thou hast supplanted under me
them that rose up against me." Thou hast caused them to be deceived,
who followed upon me, that they should be brought under me, who desired
to be over me.
41. "And thou hast given mine enemies the back to me" (ver. 40). And
thou hast turned mine enemies, and hast made them to be a back to me,
that is, to follow me. "And Thou hast destroyed them that hate me." But
such other of them as have persisted in hatred, Thou hast destroyed.
42. "They have cried out, and there was none to save them" (ver. 41).
For who can save them, whom Thou wouldest not save? "To the Lord, and
He did not hear them." Nor did they cry out to any chance one, but to
the Lord: and He did not judge them worthy of being heard, who depart
not from their wickedness.
43. "And I will beat them as small as dust before the face of the wind"
(ver. 42). And I will beat them small; for dry they are, receiving not
the shower of God's mercy; that borne aloft and puffed up with pride
they may be hurried along from firm and unshaken hope, and as it were
from the earth's solidity and stability. "As the clay of the streets I
will destroy them." In their wanton and loose course along the broad
ways of perdition, which many walk, will I destroy them.
44. "Thou wilt deliver Me from the contradictions of the people" (ver.
43). Thou wilt deliver Me from the contradictions of them who said, "If
we send Him away, all the world will go after Him." [544]
45. "Thou shalt make Me the head of the Gentiles. A people whom I have
not known have served Me." The people of the Gentiles, whom in bodily
presence I have not visited, have served Me. "At the hearing of the ear
they have obeyed Me" (ver. 44). They have not seen Me with the eye:
but, receiving my preachers, at the hearing of the ear they have obeyed
Me.
46. "The strange children have lied unto Me." Children, not to be
called Mine, but rather strange children, to whom it is rightly said,
"Ye are of your father the devil," [545] have lied unto Me. "The
strange children have waxen old" (ver. 45). The strange children, to
whom for their renovation I brought the new Testament, have remained in
the old man. "And they have halted from their own paths." And like
those that are weak in one foot, for holding the old they have rejected
the new Testament, they have become halt, even in their old Law, rather
following their own traditions, than God's. For they brought frivolous
charges of unwashen hands, [546] because such were the paths, which
themselves had made and worn by long use, in wandering from the ways of
God's commands.
47. "The Lord liveth, and blessed be my God." "But to be carnally
minded is death:" [547] for "the Lord liveth, and blessed be my God.
And let the God of my salvation be exalted" (ver. 46). And let me not
think after an earthly fashion of the God of my salvation; nor look
from Him for this earthly salvation, but that on high.
48. "O God, who givest Me vengeance, and subduest the people under Me"
(ver. 47). O God, who avengest Me by subduing the people under Me. "My
Deliverer from My angry enemies:" the Jews crying out, "Crucify Him,
Crucify Him." [548]
49. "From them that rise up against Me Thou wilt exalt Me" (ver. 48).
From the Jews that rise up against Me in My passion, Thou wilt exalt Me
in My resurrection. "From the unjust man Thou wilt deliver Me." From
their unjust rule Thou wilt deliver Me.
50. "For this cause will I confess to Thee among the Gentiles, O Lord"
(ver. 49). For this cause shall the Gentiles confess to Thee through
Me, O Lord. "And I will sing unto Thy Name." And Thou shalt be more
widely known by My good deeds.
51. "Magnifying the salvation of His King" (ver. 50). God, who
magnifieth, so as to make wonderful, the salvation, which His Son
giveth to believers. [549] "And showing mercy to His Christ:" God, who
showeth mercy to His Christ: "To David and to His seed for evermore:"
to the Deliverer Himself strong of hand, who hath overcome this world;
and to them whom, as believers in the Gospel, He hath begotten for
evermore. What things soever are spoken in this Psalm which cannot
apply to the Lord Himself personally, that is to the Head of the
Church, must be referred to the Church. For whole Christ speaks here,
in whom are all His members.
__________________________________________________________________
[522] Lat. XVII.
[523] Secundum Hominem.
[524] 1 Sam. viii. 5.
[525] [2 Sam. xxii.--C.]
[526] Or, "crowds."
[527] Rom. xiii. 10.
[528] 2 Cor. v. 7.
[529] Rom. viii. 25.
[530] Read "full lightning-charged reproofs."
[531] Fulguratae.
[532] 2 Cor. ii. 16.
[533] John iv. 14.
[534] Luke x. 9.
[535] Luke xiii. 5.
[536] Eph. v. 27.
[537] Oxford mss. "are always."
[538] 2 Cor. iv. 18.
[539] Prov. v. 22.
[540] Ezek. xviii. 25.
[541] Rom. x. 3.
[542] Eph. iii. 19.
[543] See p. 37. "The foot of sinners; that is, their love."
[544] John xi. 48, xii. 19.
[545] John viii. 44.
[546] Matt. xv. 2.
[547] Rom. viii. 6.
[548] John xix. 6.
[549] [The epigraph of this Psalm in 2 Sam. xxiii. 1-5 seems to connect
with Isa. lv. 3, and so with Acts xiii. 34.--C.]
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XIX. [550]
To the end, a psalm of David himself.
1. It is a well-known title; nor does the Lord Jesus Christ say what
follows, but it is said of Him.
2. "The heavens tell out the glory of God" (ver. 1). The righteous
Evangelists, in whom, as in the heavens, God dwelleth, set forth the
glory of our Lord Jesus Christ, or the glory wherewith the Son
glorified the Father upon earth. "And the firmament showeth forth the
works of His hands." And the firmament showeth forth the deeds of the
Lord's power, that now made heaven by the assurance of the Holy Ghost,
which before was earth by fear.
3. "Day unto day uttereth word" (ver. 2). To the spiritual the Spirit
giveth out the fulness of the unchangeable Wisdom of God, the Word
which in the beginning is God with God. [551] "And night unto night
announceth knowledge." And to the fleshly, as to those afar off, the
mortality of the flesh, by conveying faith, announceth future
knowledge.
4. "There is no speech nor language, in which their voices are not
heard" (ver. 3). In which the voices of the Evangelists have not been
heard, seeing that the Gospel was preached in every tongue.
5. "Their sound is gone out into all the earth, and their words to the
ends of the world" [552] (ver. 4).
6. "In the sun hath He set His tabernacle." Now that He might war
against the powers of temporal error, the Lord, being about to send not
peace but a sword on earth, [553] in time, or in manifestation, set so
to say His military dwelling, that is, the dispensation of His
incarnation. "And He as a bridegroom coming forth out of His chamber"
(ver. 5). And He, coming forth out of the Virgin's womb, where God was
united to man's nature as a bridegroom to a bride. "Rejoiced as a giant
to run His way." Rejoiced as One exceeding strong, and surpassing all
other men in power incomparable, not to inhabit, but to run His way.
For, "He stood not in the way of sinners." [554]
7. "His going forth is from the highest heaven" (ver. 6). From the
Father is His going forth, not that in time, but from everlasting,
whereby He was born of the Father. "And His meeting is even to the
height of heaven." And in the fulness of the Godhead He meets even to
an equality with the Father. [555] "And there is none that may hide
himself from His heat." But whereas, "the Word was even made flesh, and
dwelt in us," [556] assuming our mortality, He permitted no man to
excuse himself from the shadow of death; for the heat of the Word
penetrated even it.
8. "The law of the Lord is undefiled, converting souls" (ver. 7). The
law of the Lord, therefore, is Himself who came to fulfil the law, not
to destroy it; [557] an undefiled law, "Who did no sin, neither was
guile found in His mouth," [558] not oppressing souls with the yoke of
bondage, but converting them to imitate Him in liberty. "The testimony
of the Lord is sure, giving wisdom to babes." "The testimony of the
Lord is sure;" for, "no man knoweth the Father save the Son, and he to
whomsoever the Son will reveal Him," [559] which things have been
hidden from the wise and revealed to babes; [560] for, "God resisteth
the proud, but giveth grace to the humble." [561]
9. "The statutes of the Lord are right, rejoicing the heart" (ver. 8).
All the statutes of the Lord are right in Him who taught not what He
did not; that they who should imitate Him might rejoice in heart, in
those things which they should do freely with love, not slavishly with
fear. "The commandment of the Lord is lucid, enlightening the eyes."
"The commandment of the Lord is lucid," with no veil of carnal
observances, enlightening the sight of the inner man.
10. "The fear of the Lord is chaste, enduring for ever" (ver. 9). "The
fear of the Lord;" not that distressing [562] fear under the law,
dreading exceedingly the withdrawal of temporal goods, by the love of
which the soul commits fornication; but that chaste fear wherewith the
Church, the more ardently she loves her Spouse, the more carefully does
she take heed of offending Him, and therefore, "perfect love casteth"
not "out" this "fear," [563] but it endureth for ever.
11. "The judgments of the Lord are true, justified together." The
judgments of Him, who "judgeth no man, but hath committed all judgment
unto the Son," [564] are justified in truth unchangeably. For neither
in His threatenings nor His promises doth God deceive any man, nor can
any withdraw either from the ungodly His punishment, or from the godly
His reward. "To be desired more than gold, and much precious stone"
(ver. 10). Whether it be "gold and stone itself much," or "much
precious," or "much to be desired;" still, the judgments of God are to
be desired more than the pomp of this world; by desire of which it is
brought to pass that the judgments of God are not desired, but feared,
or despised, or not believed. But if any be himself gold and precious
stone, that he may not be consumed by fire, but received into the
treasury of God, more than himself does he desire the judgments of God,
whose will he preferreth to his own. "And sweeter than honey and the
honey comb." And whether one be even now honey, who, disenthralled
already from the chains of this life, is awaiting the day when he may
come up to God's feast; or whether he be yet as the honey comb, wrapped
about with this life as it were with wax, not mixed and become one with
it, but filling it, needing some pressure of God's hand, not oppressing
but expressing it, whereby from life temporal it may be strained out
into life eternal: to such an one the judgments of God are sweeter than
he himself is to himself, for that they are "sweeter than honey and the
honey comb."
12. "For Thy servant keepeth them" (ver. 11). For to him who keepeth
them not the day of the Lord is bitter. "In keeping them there is great
reward." Not in any external benefit, but in the thing itself, that
God's judgments are kept, is there great reward; great because one
rejoiceth therein.
13. "Who understandeth sins?" (ver. 12.) But what sort of sweetness can
there be in sins, where there is no understanding? For who can
understand sins, which close the very eye, to which truth is pleasant,
to which the judgments of God are desirable and sweet? yea, as darkness
closes the eye, so do sins the mind, and suffer it not to see either
the light, or itself.
14. "Cleanse me, O Lord, from my secret faults." From the lusts which
lie hid in me, cleanse me, O Lord. "And from the" faults "of others
preserve Thy servant" (ver. 13). Let me not be led astray by others.
For he is not a prey to the faults of others, who is cleansed from his
own. Preserve therefore from the lusts of others, not the proud man,
and him who would be his own master, but, Thy servant. "If they get not
the dominion over me, then shall I be undefiled." If neither my own
secret sins, nor those of others, get the dominion over me, then shall
I be undefiled. For there is no third source of sin, but one's own
secret sin, by which the devil fell, and another's sin, by which man is
seduced, so as by consenting to make it his own. "And I shall be
cleansed from the great offence." What but pride? for there is none
greater than apostasy from God, which is "the beginning of the pride of
man." [565] And he shall indeed be undefiled, who is free from this
offence also; for this is the last to them who are returning to God,
which was the first as they departed from Him.
15. "And the words of my mouth shall be pleasing, and the meditation of
my heart is always in Thy sight" (ver. 14). The meditation of my heart
is not after the vain glory of pleasing men, for now there is pride no
more, but in Thy sight alway, who regardest a pure conscience. "O Lord,
my Helper, and my Redeemer" [566] (ver. 15). O Lord, my Helper, in my
approach to Thee; for Thou art my Redeemer, that I might set out unto
Thee: lest any attributing to his own wisdom his conversion to Thee, or
to his own strength his attaining to Thee, should be rather driven back
by Thee, who resistest the proud; for he is not cleansed from the great
offence, nor pleasing in Thy sight, who redeemest us that we may be
converted, and helpest us that we may attain unto Thee.
__________________________________________________________________
[550] Lat. XVIII.
[551] John i. 1.
[552] [Rom. x. 18. "And therefore are we even speaking here" says our
author in his second homily (omitted) on this Psalm.--C.]
[553] Matt. x. 34.
[554] Ps. i. 1.
[555] Vid. in Psalm lviii (lix. E.V.). Enarrat. i. S: 10.
[556] John i. 14.
[557] Matt. v. 17.
[558] 1 Pet. ii. 22.
[559] Matt. xi. 27.
[560] Luke x. 21.
[561] Jas. iv. 6.
[562] Poenalis.
[563] 1 John iv. 18.
[564] John v. 22.
[565] Ecclus. x. 12.
[566] [Here the word is rendered "Redeemer" in the Septuagint, and is
the same in the Hebrew as in Job xix. 25.--C.]
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XX. [567]
To the end, a psalm of David.
1. This is a well-known title; and it is not Christ who speaks; but the
prophet speaks to Christ, under the form of wishing, foretelling things
to come. [568]
2. "The Lord hear Thee in the day of trouble" (ver. 1). The Lord hear
Thee in the day in which Thou saidst, "Father glorify Thy Son." [569]
"The name of the God of Jacob protect Thee." For to Thee belongeth the
younger people. Since "the elder shall serve the younger." [570]
3. "Send Thee help from the Holy, and from Sion defend Thee" (ver. 2).
Making for Thee a sanctified Body, the Church, from watching [571]
safe, which waiteth when Thou shalt come from the wedding.
4. "Be mindful of all Thy sacrifice" (ver. 3). Make us mindful of all
Thy injuries and despiteful treatment, which Thou hast borne for us.
"And be Thy whole burnt offering made fat." And turn the cross, whereon
Thou wast wholly offered up to God, into the joy of the resurrection.
5. "Diapsalma." The Lord render to Thee according to Thine Heart" (ver.
4). The Lord render to Thee, not according to their heart, who thought
by persecution they could destroy Thee; but according to Thine Heart,
wherein Thou knewest what profit Thy passion would have. [572] "And
fulfil all Thy counsel." "And fulfil all Thy counsel," not only that
whereby Thou didst lay down Thy life for Thy friends, [573] that the
corrupted grain might rise again to more abundance; [574] but that also
whereby "blindness in part hath happened unto Israel, that the fulness
of the Gentiles might enter in, and so all Israel might be saved."
[575]
6. "We will exult in Thy salvation" (ver. 5). We will exult in that
death will in no wise hurt Thee; for so Thou wilt also show that it
cannot hurt us either. "And in the name of the Lord our God will we be
magnified." And the confession of Thy name shall not only not destroy
us, but shall even magnify us.
7. "The Lord fulfil all Thy petitions." The Lord fulfil not only the
petitions which Thou madest on earth, but those also whereby Thou
intercedest for us in heaven. "Now have I known that the Lord hath
saved his Christ" (ver. 6). Now hath it been shown to me in prophecy,
that the Lord will raise up His Christ again. "He will hear Him from
His holy heaven." He will hear Him not from earth only, where He prayed
to be glorified; [576] but from heaven also, where interceding for us
at the Right Hand of the Father, [577] He hath from thence shed abroad
the Holy Spirit on them that believe on Him. "In strength is the safety
of His right hand." Our strength is in the safety of His favour, when
even out of tribulation He giveth help, that "when we are weak, then we
may be strong." [578] "For vain is" that "safety of man," [579] which
comes not of His right hand but of His left: for thereby are they
lifted up to great pride, whosoever in their sins have secured a
temporal safety.
8. "Some in chariots, and some in horses" (ver. 7). Some are drawn away
by the ever moving succession of temporal goods; and some are preferred
to proud honours, and in them exult: "But we will exult in the name of
the Lord our God." But we, fixing our hope on things eternal, and not
seeking our own glory, will exult in the name of the Lord our God.
9. "They have been bound, and fallen" (ver. 8). And therefore were they
bound by the lust of temporal things, fearing to spare the Lord, lest
they should lose their place by "the Romans:" [580] and rushing
violently on the stone of offence and rock of stumbling, they fell from
the heavenly hope: to whom the blindness in part of Israel hath
happened, being ignorant of God's righteousness, and wishing to
establish their own. [581] "But we are risen, and stand upright." But
we, that the Gentile people might enter in, out of the stones raised up
as children to Abraham, [582] who followed not after righteousness,
have attained to it, and are risen; [583] and not by our own strength,
but being justified by faith, we stand upright.
10. "O Lord, save the King:" that He, who in His Passion hath shown us
an example of conflict, should also offer up our sacrifices, the Priest
raised from the dead, and established in heaven. "And hear us in the
day when we shall call on Thee" (ver. 9). And as He now offereth for
us, "hear us in the day when we shall call on Thee."
__________________________________________________________________
[567] Lat. XIX.
[568] [This and the next Psalm are a prelude to the great Psalm of the
expiation which is to follow.--C.]
[569] John xvii. 5 and xii. 28.
[570] Gen. xxv. 23; Rom. ix. 12.
[571] "Sion," "beholding," p. 13, ver. 6.
[572] John xii. 32.
[573] John xv. 13.
[574] John xii. 24.
[575] Rom. xi. 25, 26.
[576] John xvii. 1.
[577] Heb. vii. 25.
[578] 2 Cor. xii. 10.
[579] Ps. lx. 11.
[580] John xi. 48.
[581] Rom. xi. 25; Rom. x. 3.
[582] Matt. iii. 9.
[583] Rom. ix. 30.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XXI. [584]
To the end, a psalm of David himself.
1. The title is a familiar one; the Psalm is of Christ. [585]
2. "O Lord, the King shall rejoice in Thy strength" (ver. 1). O Lord,
in Thy strength, whereby the Word was made flesh, the Man Christ Jesus
shall rejoice. "And shall exult exceedingly in Thy salvation." And in
that, whereby Thou quickenest all things, shall exult exceedingly.
3. "Thou hast given Him the desire of His soul" (ver. 2). He desired to
eat the Passover, [586] and to lay down His life when He would, and
again when He would to take it; and Thou hast given it to Him. [587]
"And hast not deprived Him of the good pleasure of His lips." "My
peace," saith He, "I leave with you:" [588] and it was done.
4. "For Thou hast presented Him with the blessings of sweetness" (ver.
3). Because He had first quaffed the blessing of Thy sweetness, the
gall of our sins did not hurt Him. "Diapsalma. Thou hast set a crown of
precious stone on His Head." [589] At the beginning of His discoursing
precious stones were brought, and compassed Him about; [590] His
disciples, from whom the commencement of His preaching should be made.
5. "He asked life; and Thou gavest Him:" He asked a resurrection,
saying, "Father, glorify Thy Son;" [591] and Thou gavest it Him,
"Length of days for ever and ever" (ver. 4). The prolonged ages of this
world which the Church was to have, and after them an eternity, world
without end.
6. "His glory is great in Thy salvation" (ver. 5). Great indeed is His
glory in the salvation, whereby Thou hast raised Him up again. "Glory
and great honour shalt Thou lay upon Him." But Thou shalt yet add unto
Him glory and great honour, when Thou shalt place Him in heaven at Thy
right hand.
7. "For Thou shalt give Him blessing for ever and ever." This is the
blessing which Thou shalt give Him for ever and ever: "Thou shalt make
Him glad in joy together with Thy countenance" (ver. 6). According to
His manhood, Thou shalt make Him glad together with Thy countenance,
which He lifted up to Thee.
8. "For the King hopeth in the Lord." For the King is not proud, but
humble in heart, he hopeth in the Lord. "And in the mercy of the Most
Highest He shall not be moved" (ver. 7). And in the mercy of the Most
Highest His obedience even unto the death of the Cross shall not
disturb His humility.
9. "Let Thy hand be found by all Thine enemies." Be Thy power, O King,
when Thou comest to judgment, found by all Thine enemies; who in Thy
humiliation discerned it not. "Let Thy right hand find out all that
hate Thee" (ver. 8). Let the glory, wherein Thou reignest at the right
hand of the Father, find out for punishment in the day of judgment all
that hate Thee; for that now they have not found it.
10. "Thou shalt make them like a fiery oven:" Thou shalt make them on
fire within, by the consciousness of their ungodliness: "In the time of
Thy countenance:" in the time of Thy manifestation. "The Lord shall
trouble them in His wrath, and the fire shall devour them" (ver. 9).
And then, being troubled by the vengeance of the Lord, after the
accusation of their conscience, they shall be given up to eternal fire,
to be devoured.
11. "Their fruit shalt Thou destroy out of the earth." Their fruit,
because it is earthly, shalt Thou destroy out of the earth. "And their
seed from the sons of men" (ver. 10). And their works; or, whomsoever
they have seduced, Thou shalt not reckon among the sons of men, whom
Thou hast called into the everlasting inheritance.
12. "Because they turned evils against Thee." Now this punishment shall
be recompensed to them, because the evils which they supposed to hang
over them by Thy reign, they turned against Thee to Thy death. "They
imagined a device, which they were not able to establish" (ver. 11).
They imagined a device, saying, "It is expedient that one die for all:"
[592] which they were not able to establish, not knowing what they
said.
13. "For Thou shalt set them low." For Thou shalt rank them among those
from whom in degradation and contempt Thou wilt turn away. "In Thy
leavings [593] Thou shalt make ready their countenance" (ver. 12). And
in these things that Thou leavest, that is, in the desires of an
earthly kingdom, Thou shalt make ready their shamelessness for Thy
passion.
14. "Be Thou exalted, O Lord, in Thy strength" (ver. 13). Be Thou,
Lord, whom in humiliation they did not discern, exalted in Thy
strength, which they thought weakness. "We will sing and praise Thy
power." In heart and in deed we will celebrate and make known Thy
marvels.
__________________________________________________________________
[584] Lat. XX.
[585] [Prophetic of His ascension.--C.]
[586] Luke xxii. 15.
[587] John x. 18.
[588] John xiv. 27.
[589] [Rev. xix. 12. Our author agrees with the Septuagint and the
Vulgate here, as to "precious stone." Jerome gives coronam obrizam. Gr.
obruzon.--C.]
[590] Matt. v. 1. [Compare Mal. iii. 17.--C.]
[591] John xvii. 1.
[592] John xi. 50.
[593] [In reliquiis tuis. So Vulgate.--C.]
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XXII. [594]
To the end, for the taking up of the morning, a psalm of David. [595]
1. "To the end," for His own resurrection, the Lord Jesus Christ
Himself speaketh. [596] For in the morning on the first day of the week
was His resurrection, whereby He was taken up, into eternal life, "Over
whom death shall have no more dominion." [597] Now what follows is
spoken in the person of The Crucified. For from the head of this Psalm
are the words, which He cried out, whilst hanging on the Cross,
sustaining also the person of the old man, whose mortality He bare. For
our old man was nailed together with Him to the Cross. [598]
2. "O God, my God, look upon me, why hast Thou forsaken [599] me far
from my salvation?" (ver. 1). Far removed from my salvation: for
"salvation is far from sinners." [600] "The words of my sins." For
these are not the words of righteousness, but of my sins. For it is the
old man nailed to the Cross that speaks, ignorant even of the reason
why God hath forsaken him: or else it may be thus, The words of my sins
are far from my salvation.
3. "My God, I will cry unto Thee in the daytime, and Thou wilt not hear
(ver. 2). My God, I will cry unto Thee in the prosperous circumstances
of this life, that they be not changed; and Thou wilt not hear, because
I shall cry unto Thee in the words of my sins. "And in the
night-season, and not to my folly." And so in the adversities of this
life will I cry to Thee for prosperity; and in like manner Thou wilt
not hear. And this Thou doest not to my folly, but rather that I may
have wisdom to know what Thou wouldest have me cry for, not with the
words of sins out of longing for life temporal, but with the words of
turning to Thee for life eternal.
4. "But Thou dwellest in the holy place, O Thou praise of Israel" (ver.
3). But Thou dwellest in the holy place, and therefore wilt not hear
the unclean words of sins. The "praise" of him that seeth Thee; not of
him who hath sought his own praise in tasting of the forbidden fruit,
that on the opening of his bodily eyes he should endeavour to hide
himself from Thy sight.
5. "Our Fathers hoped in Thee." All the righteous, namely, who sought
not their own praise, but Thine. "They hoped in Thee, and Thou
deliveredst them" (ver. 4).
6. "They cried unto Thee, and were saved." They cried unto Thee, not in
the words of sins, from which salvation is far; and therefore were they
saved. "They hoped in Thee, and were not confounded" (ver. 5). "They
hoped in Thee," and their hope did not deceive them. For they placed it
not in themselves.
7. "But I am a worm, and no man" (ver. 6). But I, speaking now not in
the person of Adam, but I in My own person, Jesus Christ, was born
without human generation in the flesh, that I might be as man beyond
men; that so at least human pride might deign to imitate My humility.
"The scorn of men, and outcast of the people." In which humility I was
made the scorn of men, so as that it should be said, as a reproachful
railing, "Be thou His disciple:" [601] and that the people despise Me.
8. "All that saw Me laughed Me to scorn" (ver. 7). All that saw Me
derided Me. "And spake with the lips, and shook the head." [602] And
they spoke, not with the heart, but with the lips.
9. For they shook their head in derision, saying, "He trusted in the
Lord, let Him deliver Him:" [603] "let Him save Him, since He desireth
Him" (ver. 8). These were their words; but they were spoken "with the
lips."
10. "Since Thou art He who drew Me out of the womb" (ver. 9). Since
Thou art He who drew Me, not only out of that Virgin womb (for this is
the law of all men's birth, that they be drawn out of the womb), but
also out of the womb of the Jewish nation; by the darkness whereof he
is covered, and not yet born into the light of Christ, whosoever places
his salvation in the carnal observance of the Sabbath, and of
circumcision, and the like. "My hope from My mother's breasts." "My
hope," O God, not from the time when I began to be fed by the milk of
the Virgin's breasts; for it was even before; but from the breasts of
the Synagogue, as I have said, out of the womb, Thou hast drawn Me,
that I should not suck in the customs of the flesh.
11. "I have been strengthened in Thee from the womb" (ver. 10). It is
the womb of the Synagogue, which did not carry Me, but threw Me out:
but I fell not, for Thou heldest me. "From My mother's womb Thou art My
God." "From My mother's womb: My mother's womb did not cause that, as a
babe, I should be forgetful of Thee.
12. "Thou art My God," "depart not from Me; for trouble is hard at
hand" (ver. 11). Thou art, therefore, My God, depart not from Me; for
trouble is nigh unto Me; for it is in My body. "For there is none to
help." For who helpeth, if Thou helpest not?
13. "Many calves came about Me." The multitude of the wanton populace
came about Me. "Fat bulls closed Me in" (ver. 12). And their leaders,
glad at My oppression, "closed Me in."
14. "They opened their mouth upon Me" (ver. 13). They opened their
mouth upon Me, not out of Thy Scripture, but of their own lusts. "As a
ravening and roaring lion." As a lion, whose ravening is, that I was
taken and led; and whose roaring, "Crucify, Crucify." [604]
15. "I was poured out like water, and all My bones were scattered"
(ver. 14). "I was poured out like water," when My persecutors fell: and
through fear, the stays of My body, that is, the Church, My disciples
were scattered from Me. [605] "My heart became as melting wax, in the
midst of my belly." My wisdom, which was written of Me in the sacred
books, was, as if hard and shut up, not understood: but after that the
fire of My Passion was applied, it was, as if melted, manifested, and
entertained in the memory of My Church.
16. "My strength dried up as a potsherd" (ver. 15). My strength dried
up by My Passion; not as hay, but a potsherd, which is made stronger by
fire. "And My tongue cleaved to My jaws." And they, through whom I was
soon to speak, kept My precepts in their hearts. "And Thou broughtest
Me down to the dust of death." And to the ungodly appointed to death,
whom the wind casteth forth as dust from the face of the earth, [606]
Thou broughtest Me down.
17. "For many dogs came about Me" (ver. 16). For many came about Me
barking, not for truth, but for custom. "The council of the malignant
came about Me." The council of the malignant besieged Me. [607] "They
pierced My hands and feet." They pierced with nails My hands and feet.
18. "They numbered distinctly all My bones" (ver. 17). They numbered
distinctly all My bones, while extended on the wood of the Cross. "Yea,
these same regarded, and beheld Me." Yea, these same, that is,
unchanged, regarded and beheld Me.
19. "They divided My garments for themselves, and cast the lot upon My
vesture" [608] (ver. 18).
20. "But Thou, O Lord, withhold not Thy help far from Me" (ver. 19).
But Thou, O Lord, raise Me up again, not as the rest of men, at the end
of the world, but immediately. "Look to My defence." "Look," that they
in no wise hurt Me.
21. "Deliver My soul from the sword." "Deliver My soul" from the tongue
of dissension. "And My only One from the hand of the dog" (ver. 20).
And from the power of the people, barking after their custom, deliver
My Church.
22. "Save Me from the lion's mouth:" save Me from the mouth of the
kingdom of this world: "and my humility from the horns of the unicorns"
[609] (ver. 21). And from the loftiness of the proud, exalting
themselves to special pre-eminence, and enduring no partakers, save My
humility.
23. "I will declare Thy name to My brethren" [610] (ver. 22). I will
declare Thy name to the humble, [611] and to My Brethren that love one
another as they have been beloved by Me. [612] "In the midst of the
Church will I sing of Thee." In the midst of the Church will I with
rejoicing preach Thee.
24. "Ye that fear the Lord, praise Him." "Ye that fear the Lord," seek
not your own praise, but "praise Him." "All ye seed of Jacob, magnify
Him" (ver. 23). All ye seed of him whom the elder shall serve, magnify
Him.
25. "Let all the seed of Israel fear Him." Let all who have been born
to a new life, and restored to the vision of God "fear Him." "Since He
hath not despised, nor disregarded the prayer of the poor man" (ver.
24). Since He hath not despised the prayer, not of him who, crying unto
God in the words of sins was loath to overpass a vain life, but the
prayer of the poor man, not swollen up with transitory pomps. "Nor hath
He turned away His face from Me." As from him who said, I will cry unto
Thee, but Thou wilt not hear. "And when I cried unto Him He heard Me."
26. "With Thee is My praise" (ver. 25). For I seek not Mine own praise,
[613] for Thou art My praise, who dwellest in the holy place; and,
praise of Israel, Thou hearest The Holy One now beseeching Thee. "In
the great Church I will confess Thee." In the Church of the whole world
"I will confess Thee." "I will offer My vows in the sight of them that
fear Him." I will offer the sacraments of My Body and Blood in the
sight of them that fear Him.
27. "The poor shall eat, and be filled" (ver. 26). The humble and the
despisers of the world shall eat, and imitate Me. For so they will
neither desire this world's abundance, nor fear its want. "And they
shall praise the Lord, who seek Him." For the praise of the Lord is the
pouring out of that fulness. "Their hearts shall live for ever and
ever." For that food is the food of the heart.
28. "All the borders of the earth shall remember themselves, and be
turned to the Lord" (ver. 27). They shall remember themselves: for, by
the Gentiles, born in death and bent on outward things, God had been
forgotten; and then shall all the borders of the earth be turned to the
Lord. "And all the kindreds of the nations shall worship in His sight."
And all the kindreds of the nations shall worship in their own
consciences.
29. "For the kingdom is the Lord's, and He shall rule over the nations"
(ver. 28). For the kingdom is the Lord's, not proud men's: and He shall
rule over the nations.
30. "All the rich of the earth have eaten, and worshipped" [614] (ver.
29). The rich of the earth too have eaten the Body of their Lord's
humiliation, and though they have not, as the poor, been filled even to
imitation, yet they have worshipped. "In His sight shall fall all that
descend to earth." For He alone seeth how all they fall, who abandoning
a heavenly conversation, make choice, on earth, to appear happy to men,
who see not their fall.
31. "And My Soul shall live to Him." And My Soul, which in the contempt
of this world seems to men as it were to die, shall live, not to
itself, but to Him. "And My seed shall serve Him" (ver. 30). And My
deeds, or they who through Me believe on Him, shall serve Him.
32. "The generation to come shall be declared to the Lord" (ver. 31).
The generation of the New Testament shall be declared to the honour of
the Lord. "And the heavens shall declare His righteousness." And the
Evangelists shall declare His righteousness. "To a people that shall be
born, whom the Lord hath made." To a people that shall be born to the
Lord through faith.
__________________________________________________________________
[594] Lat. XXI.
[595] [This was read on the anniversary of our Lord's passion, as
appears from the (omitted) Second Exposition.--C.]
[596] John xx. 1-17.
[597] Rom. vi. 9.
[598] Rom. vi. 6.
[599] Vid. Ps. xxxvii. S: 6 and xliii. S: 2, and Enarr. i. Ps. lviii.
S: 2, and Ep. 149. [Opp. S. August. ed Migne, tom. iv. pp. 399, 483,
691, etc.--C.]
[600] Ps. cxix. 155.
[601] John ix. 28.
[602] Matt. xxvii. 39.
[603] Matt. xxvii. 43.
[604] John xix. 6.
[605] Matt. xxvi. 56.
[606] Ps. i. 4.
[607] These seven words from the Oxford ms.
[608] [The garments he elsewhere makes the sacraments, his vesture the
undivided unity of the Church. See his Second Exposition, here
omitted.--C.]
[609] [The original Hebrew seems to me a foreshadowing of the Romans,
as Peres (Dan. v. 28) points to the Persians.--C.]
[610] [Here he makes Part II. to begin; i.e., the triumph over death
and the grave.--C.]
[611] Or, "to My Brethren that are humble, and," etc.
[612] John xvii. 6, 21.
[613] John viii. 50.
[614] [Here the African Psalter reads, "divites terrae," the
counterpart of pauperes in ver. 26. Would this had been followed in our
English, which makes a ludicrous transition in this sublime
prophecy.--C.]
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XXIII. [615]
A psalm of David himself.
1. The Church speaks to Christ: "The Lord feedeth me, and I shall lack
nothing" (ver. 1). The Lord Jesus Christ is my Shepherd, "and I shall
lack nothing."
2. "In a place of pasture there hath He placed me" (ver. 2). In a place
of fresh pasture, leading me to faith, [616] there hath He placed me to
be nourished. "By the water of refreshing hath He brought me up." By
the water of baptism, whereby they are refreshed who have lost health
and strength, hath He brought me up.
3. "He hath converted my soul: He hath led me forth in the paths of
righteousness, for His Name's sake" (ver. 3). He hath brought me forth
in the narrow ways, wherein few walk, of His righteousness; not for my
merit's sake, but for His Name's sake.
4. "Yea, though I walk in the midst of the shadow of death" (ver. 4).
Yea, though I walk in the midst of this life, which is the shadow of
death. [617] "I will fear no evil, for Thou art with me." I will fear
no evil, for Thou dwellest in my heart by faith: and Thou art now with
me, that after the shadow of death I too may be with Thee. "Thy rod and
Thy staff, they have comforted me." Thy discipline, like a rod for a
flock of sheep, and like a staff for children of some size, and growing
out of the natural into spiritual life, they have not been grievous to
me; rather have they comforted me: because Thou art mindful of me.
5. "Thou hast prepared a table in my sight, against them that trouble
me" (ver. 5). Now after the rod, whereby, whilst a little one, and
living the natural life, I was brought up among the flock in the
pastures; after that rod, I say, when I began to be under the staff,
Thou hast prepared a table in my sight, that I should no more be fed as
a babe with milk, [618] but being older should take meat, strengthened
against them that trouble me. "Thou hast fattened my head with oil."
Thou hast gladdened my mind with spiritual joy. "And Thy inebriating
cup, how excellent is it!" And Thy cup yielding forgetfulness of former
vain delights, how excellent is it!
6. "And Thy mercy shall follow me all the days of my life:" that is, as
long as I live in this mortal life, not Thine, but mine. "That I may
dwell in the house of the Lord [619] for length of days" (ver. 6). Now
Thy mercy shall follow me not here only, but also that I may dwell in
the house of the Lord for ever.
__________________________________________________________________
[615] Lat. XXII.
[616] Pascuae incipientis.
[617] [Note this very comprehensive comment on the real meaning of the
valley.--C.]
[618] 1 Cor. iii. 2.
[619] [He applies the figures of ver. 5 and here to the Lord's Table,
the chrism (i.e., confirmation), and the Church in time and
eternity.--C.]
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XXIV. [620]
A psalm of David himself, on the first day of the week. [621]
1. A Psalm of David himself, touching the glorifying and resurrection
of the Lord, which took place early in the morning on the first day of
the week, which is now called the Lord's Day.
2. "The earth is the Lord's, and the fulness thereof, the compass of
the world, and all they that dwell therein" (ver. 1); when the Lord,
being glorified, is announced for the believing of all nations; and the
whole compass of the world becomes His Church. "He hath founded it
above the seas." He hath most firmly established it above all the waves
of this world, that they should be subdued by it, and should not hurt
it. "And hath prepared it above the rivers" (ver. 2). The rivers flow
into the sea, and men of lust lapse into the world: these also the
Church, which, when worldly lusts have been conquered by the grace of
God, hath been prepared by love for the reception of immortality,
subdues.
3. "Who shall ascend into the mount of the Lord?" Who shall ascend to
the height of the righteousness of the Lord? "Or who shall stand in His
holy place?" (ver. 3). Or who shall abide in that place, whither He
shall ascend, [622] founded above the seas, and prepared above the
rivers?
4. "The innocent of hand, and the pure in heart" (ver. 4). Who then
shall ascend thither, and abide there, but the guiltless in deed, and
pure in thought? "Who hath not received his soul in vain." Who hath not
reckoned his soul among things that pass away, but feeling it to be
immortal, hath longed for an eternity stedfast and unchangeable. "And
hath not sworn in deceit to his neighbour." And therefore without
deceit, as things eternal are simple and undeceiving, hath so behaved
himself to his neighbour.
5. "This man shall receive blessing from the Lord, and mercy from the
God of his salvation" [623] (ver. 5).
6. "This is the generation of them that seek the Lord" (ver. 6). For
thus are they born that seek Him. "Of them that seek the face of the
God of Jacob. [624] Diapsalma." Now they seek the face of God, who gave
the pre-eminence to the younger born. [625]
7. "Take away your gates, ye princes" (ver. 7). All ye, that seek rule
among men, remove, that they hinder not, the entrances which ye have
made, of desire and fear. "And be ye lift up, ye everlasting gates."
And be ye lift up, ye entrances of eternal life, of renunciation of the
world, and conversion to God. "And the King of glory shall come in."
And the King, in whom we may glory without pride, shall come in: who
having overcome the gates of death, and having opened for Himself the
heavenly places, fulfilled that which He said, "Be of good cheer, for I
have overcome the world." [626]
8. "Who is this King of glory?" Mortal nature is awe-struck in wonder,
and asks, "Who is this King of glory?" "The Lord strong and mighty." He
whom thou didst deem weak and overwhelmed. "The Lord mighty in battle"
(ver. 8). Handle the scars, and thou wilt find them made whole, and
human weakness restored to immortality. The glorifying of the Lord,
which was owing to earth, where It warred with death, hath been paid.
9. "Take away your gates, ye princes." [627] Let us go hence
straightway into heaven. Again, let the Prophet's trumpet cry aloud,
"Take away too, ye princes of the air, the gates, which ye have in the
minds of men who `worship the host of heaven.'" [628] "And be ye lift
up, ye everlasting gates." And be ye lift up, ye doors of everlasting
righteousness, of love, and chastity, through which the soul loveth the
One True God, and goeth not a-whoring with the many that are called
gods. "And the King of glory shall come in" (ver. 9). "And the King of
glory shall come in," that He may at the right hand of the Father
intercede for us.
10. "Who is this King of glory?" What! dost thou too, prince of the
power of this air, [629] marvel and ask, "Who is this King of glory?"
"The Lord of powers, He is the King of glory" (ver. 10). Yea, His Body
now quickened, He who was tempted marches above thee; He who was
tempted by the angel, the deceiver, goes above all angels. Let none of
you put himself before us and stop our way, that he may be worshipped
as a god by us: neither principality, nor angel, nor power, separateth
us from the love of Christ. [630] It is good to trust in the Lord,
rather than to trust in a prince; [631] that he who glorieth, should
glory in the Lord. [632] These indeed are powers in the administration
of this world, but "the Lord of powers, He is the King of glory."
__________________________________________________________________
[620] Lat. XXIII.
[621] [Surely a foretokening of our Sunday.--C.]
[622] Al. "hath ascended."
[623] [Light, resurrection, and sanctification are the glories of the
Lord's Day, and "this man" inherits all this.--C.]
[624] ["God of Jacob." So the Vulgate, after the Septuagint.--C.]
[625] Rom. ix. 12.
[626] John xvi. 33.
[627] ["Ye princes." So Septuagint and Vulgate.--C.]
[628] 2 Kings xvii. 16.
[629] Eph. ii. 2.
[630] Rom. viii. 39.
[631] Ps. cxviii. 9.
[632] 1 Cor. i. 31.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XXV. [633]
To the end, a psalm of David himself. [634]
1. Christ speaks, but in the person of the Church: for what is said has
reference rather to the Christian People turned unto God.
2. "Unto Thee, O Lord, have I lift up my soul" (ver. 1): with spiritual
longing have I lift up the soul, that was trodden down on the earth
with carnal longings. "O my God, in Thee I trust, I shall not be
ashamed" (ver. 2). O my God, from trusting in myself I was brought even
to this weakness of the flesh; and I who on abandoning God wished to be
as God, fearing death from the smallest insect, was in derision ashamed
for my pride; now, therefore, "in Thee I trust, I shall not be
ashamed."
3. "And let not my enemies mock me." And let them not mock me, who by
ensnaring me with serpent-like and secret suggestions, and prompting me
with "Well done, well done," have brought me down to this. "For all
that wait upon Thee shall not be confounded" (ver. 3).
4. "Let them be confounded who do vain things unrighteously." Let them
be confounded who act unrighteously for the acquiring things that pass
away. "Make Thy ways, O Lord, known to me, and teach me Thy paths"
(ver. 4): not those which are broad, and lead the many to destruction;
[635] but Thy paths, narrow, and known to few, teach Thou me.
5. "In Thy truth guide me:" avoiding error. "And teach me:" for by
myself I know nothing, but falsehood. "For Thou art the God of my
salvation; and for Thee have I waited all the day" (ver. 5). For
dismissed by Thee from Paradise, and having taken my journey into a far
country, [636] I cannot by myself return, unless Thou meetest the
wanderer: for my return hath throughout the whole tract of this world's
time waited for Thy mercy.
6. "Remember Thy compassions, O Lord" (ver. 6). Remember the works of
Thy mercy, O Lord; for men deem of Thee as though Thou hadst forgotten.
"And that Thy mercies are from eternity." And remember this, that Thy
mercies are from eternity. For Thou never wast without them, who hast
subjected even sinful man to vanity indeed, but in hope; [637] and not
deprived him of so many and great consolations of Thy creation.
7. "Remember not the offences of my youth and of my ignorance" (ver.
7). The offences of my presumptuous boldness and of my ignorance
reserve not for vengeance, but let them be as if forgotten by Thee.
"According to Thy mercy, be mindful of me, O God." Be mindful indeed of
me, not according to the anger of which I am worthy, but according to
Thy mercy which is worthy of Thee. "For Thy goodness, O Lord." Not for
my deservings, but for Thy goodness, O Lord.
8. "Gracious and upright is the Lord" (ver. 8). The Lord is gracious,
since even sinners and the ungodly He so pitied, as to forgive all that
is past; but the Lord is upright too, who after the mercy of vocation
and pardon, which is of grace without merit, will require merits meet
for the last judgment. "Wherefore He will establish a law for them that
fail in the way." For He hath first bestowed mercy to bring them into
the way.
9. "He will guide the meek in judgment." He will guide the meek, and
will not confound in the judgment those that follow His will, and do
not, in withstanding It, prefer their own. "The gentle He will teach
His ways" (ver. 9). He will teach His ways, not to those that desire to
run before, as if they were better able to rule themselves; but to
those who do not exalt the neck, nor lift the heel, when the easy yoke
and the light burden is laid upon them. [638]
10. "All the ways of the Lord are mercy and truth" (ver. 10). And what
ways will He teach them, but mercy wherein He is placable, and truth
wherein He is incorrupt? Whereof He hath exhibited the one in forgiving
sins, the other in judging deserts. And therefore "all the ways of the
Lord" are the two advents of the Son of God, the one in mercy, the
other in judgment. He then attaineth unto Him holding on His ways, who
seeing himself freed by no deserts of his own, lays pride aside, and
henceforward bewares of the severity of His trial, having experienced
the clemency of His help. "To them that seek His testament and His
testimonies." For they understand the Lord as merciful at His first
advent, and as the Judge at His second, who in meekness and gentleness
seek His testament, when with His Own Blood He redeemed us to a new
life; and in the Prophets and Evangelists, His testimonies.
11. "For Thy Name's sake, O Lord, Thou wilt be favourable to my sin;
for it is manifold" (ver. 11). Thou hast not only forgiven my sins,
which I committed before I believed; but also to my sin, which is
manifold, since even in the way there is no lack of stumbling, Thou
wilt be made favourable by the sacrifice of a troubled spirit. [639]
12. "Who is the man that feareth the Lord?" from which fear he begins
to come to wisdom. "He shall establish a law for him in the way, which
he hath chosen" (ver. 12). He shall establish a law for him in the way,
which in his freedom he has taken, that he may not sin now with
impunity.
13. "His soul shall dwell in good, and his seed shall, by inheritance,
possess the earth" (ver. 13). And his work shall possess the stable
inheritance of a renewed body.
14. "The Lord is the stay of them that fear Him" (ver. 14). Fear seems
to belong to the weak, but the Lord is the stay of them that fear Him.
And the Name of the Lord, which hath been glorified throughout the
whole world, is a stay to them that fear Him. "And His testament, that
it may be manifested unto them." And He maketh His testament to be
manifested unto them, for the Gentiles and the bounds of the earth are
Christ's inheritance.
15. "Mine eyes are ever unto the Lord; for He shall pluck my feet out
of the snare" (ver. 15). Nor would I fear the dangers of earth, while I
look not upon the earth: for He upon whom I look, will pluck my feet
out of the snare.
16. "Look upon me, and have mercy upon me; for I am single and poor"
(ver. 16). For I am a single people, keeping the lowliness of Thy
single Church, which no schisms or heresies possess.
17. "The tribulations of my heart have been multiplied" (ver. 17). The
tribulations of my heart have been multiplied by the abounding of
iniquity and the waxing cold of love. [640] "O bring Thou me out of my
necessities." Since I must needs bear this, that by enduring unto the
end I may be saved, bring Thou me out of my necessities.
18. "See my humility and my travail" (ver. 18). See my humility,
whereby I never, in the boast of righteousness, break off from unity;
and my travail, wherein I bear with the unruly ones that are mingled
with me. "And forgive all my sins." And, propitiated by these
sacrifices, forgive all my sins, not those only of youth and my
ignorance before I believed, but those also which, living now by faith,
I commit through infirmity, or the darkness of this life.
19. "Consider mine enemies, how they are multiplied" (ver. 19). For not
only without, but even within, in the Church's very communion, they are
not wanting. "And with an unrighteous hate they hate me." And they hate
me who love them.
20. "Keep my soul, and deliver me." Keep my soul, that I turn not aside
to imitate them; and draw me out from the confusion wherein they are
mingled with me. "Let me not be confounded, for I have put my trust in
Thee" (ver. 20). Let me not be confounded, if haply they rise up
against me: for not in myself, but in Thee have I put my trust.
21. "The innocent and the upright have cleaved to me, for I have waited
for Thee, O Lord" (ver. 21). The innocent and the upright, not in
bodily presence only, as the evil, are mingled with me, but in the
agreement of the heart in the same innocence and uprightness cleave to
me: for I have not fallen away to imitate the evil; but I have waited
for Thee, expecting the winnowing of Thy last harvest. [641]
22. "Redeem Israel, O God, out of all his troubles" (ver. 22). "Redeem
Thy people, O God," whom Thou hast prepared to see Thee, out of his
troubles, not those only which he bears without, but those also which
he bears within.
__________________________________________________________________
[633] Lat. XXIV.
[634] [Alphabetical Psalm.--C.]
[635] Matt. vii. 13.
[636] Luke xv. 13.
[637] Rom. viii. 20.
[638] Matt. xi. 30.
[639] [Here our author, as did St. Chrysostom, treats true contrition
as completed by pardon, without sacramental absolution.--C.]
[640] Matt. xxiv. 12.
[641] [So the dying Jacob, Gen. xlix. 18.--C.]
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XXVI. [642]
Of David himself.
1. It may be attributed to David himself, not the Mediator, the Man
Christ Jesus, but the whole Church now perfectly established in Christ.
2. "Judge me, O Lord, for I have walked in my innocence" (ver. 1).
Judge me, O Lord, for, after the mercy which Thou first showedst [643]
me, I have some desert of my innocence, the way whereof I have kept.
"And trusting in the Lord I shall not be moved." And yet not even so
trusting in myself, but in the Lord, I shall abide in Him.
3. "Prove me, O Lord, and try me" (ver. 2). Lest, however, any of my
secret sins should be hid from me, prove me, O Lord, and try me, making
me known, not to Thee from whom nothing is hid, but to myself, and to
men. "Burn my reins and my heart." Apply a remedial purgation, as it
were fire, to my pleasures and thoughts. "For Thy mercy is before mine
eyes" (ver. 3). For, that I be not consumed by that fire, not my
merits, but Thy mercy, whereby Thou hast brought me on to such a life,
is before my eyes. "And I have been pleasing in Thy truth." And since
my own falsehood hath been displeasing to me, but Thy truth pleasing, I
have myself been pleasing also with it and in it.
4. "I have not sat with the council of vanity" (ver. 4). I have not
chosen to give my heart to them who endeavour to provide, what is
impossible, how they may be blessed in the enjoyment of things
transitory. "And I will not enter in with them that work wickedly." And
since this is the very cause of all wickedness, therefore I will not
have my conscience hid, with them that work wickedly.
5. "I have hated the congregation of evil doers." But to arrive at this
council of vanity, congregations of evil doers are formed, which I have
hated. "And I will not sit with the ungodly" (ver. 5). And, therefore,
with such a council, with the ungodly, I will not sit, that is, I will
not place my consent. [644] "And I will not sit with the ungodly."
6. "I will wash mine hands amid the innocent" (ver. 6). I will make
clean my works among the innocent: among the innocent will I wash mine
hands, with which I shall embrace Thy glorious gifts. [645] "And I will
compass Thy altar, O Lord." [646]
7. "That I may hear the voice of Thy praise." That I may learn how to
praise Thee. "And that I may declare all Thy wondrous works" (ver. 7).
And after I have learnt, I may set forth all Thy wondrous works.
8. "O Lord, I have loved the beauty of Thy house:" of Thy Church. "And
the place of the habitation of Thy glory" (ver. 8): where Thou
dwellest, and art glorified.
9. "Destroy not my soul with the ungodly" (ver. 9). Destroy not then,
together with them that hate Thee, my soul, which hath loved the beauty
of Thy house. "And my life with the men of blood." And with them that
hate their neighbour. For Thy house is beautified with the two
commandments. [647]
10. "In whose hands is wickedness." Destroy me not then with the
ungodly and the men of blood, whose works are wicked. "Their right hand
is full of gifts" (ver. 10). And that which was given them to obtain
eternal salvation, they have converted into the receiving this world's
gifts, "supposing that godliness is a trade." [648]
11. "But I have walked in mine innocence: deliver me, and have mercy on
me" (ver. 11). Let so great a price of my Lord's Blood avail for my
complete deliverance: and in the dangers of this life let not Thy mercy
leave me.
12. "My foot hath stood in uprightness." My Love hath not withdrawn
from Thy righteousness. "In the Churches I will bless Thee, O Lord"
(ver. 12). I will not hide Thy blessing, O Lord, from those whom Thou
hast called; for next to the love of Thee I join the love of my
neighbour.
__________________________________________________________________
[642] Lat. XXV.
[643] Praerogasti.
[644] Placitum non collocabo.
[645] Sublimia tua.
[646] [We are "made unto our God, priests."--C.]
[647] [Matt. xxii. 40.--C.]
[648] 1 Tim. vi. 5.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XXVII. [649]
Of David himself, before he was anointed. [650]
1. Christ's young soldier speaketh, on his coming to the faith. "The
Lord is my light, and my salvation: whom shall I fear?" (ver. 1). The
Lord will give me both knowledge of Himself, and salvation: who shall
take me from Him? "The Lord is the Protector of my life: of whom shall
I be afraid?" The Lord will repel all the assaults and snares of mine
enemy: of no man shall I be afraid.
2. "Whilst the guilty approach unto me to eat up my flesh" (ver. 2).
Whilst the guilty come near to recognise and insult me, that they may
exalt themselves above me in my change for the better; that with their
reviling tooth they may consume not me, but rather my fleshly desires.
"Mine enemies who trouble me." Not they only who trouble me, blaming me
with a friendly intent, and wishing to recall me from my purpose, but
mine enemies also. "They became weak, and fell." [651] Whilst then they
do this with the desire of defending their own opinion, they became
weak to believe better things, and began to hate the word of salvation,
whereby I do what displeases them.
3. "If camps stand together against me, my heart will not fear." But if
the multitude of gain-sayers conspire to stand together against me, my
heart will not fear, so as to go over to their side. "If war rise up
against me, in this will I trust" (ver. 3). If the persecution of this
world arise against me, in this petition, which I am pondering, will I
place my hope.
4. "One have I asked of the Lord, this will I require." For one
petition have I asked the Lord, this will I require. "That I may dwell
in the house of the Lord all the days of my life" (ver. 4). That as
long as I am in this life, no adversities may exclude me from the
number of them who hold the unity and the truth of the Lord's faith
throughout the world. "That I may contemplate the delight of the Lord."
With this end, namely, that persevering in the faith, the delightsome
vision may appear to me, which I may contemplate face to face. "And I
shall be protected, His temple." And death being swallowed up in
victory, I shall be clothed with immortality, being made His temple.
[652]
5. "For He hath hidden me in His tabernacle in the day of my evils"
(ver. 5). For He hath hidden me in the dispensation of His Incarnate
Word in the time of temptations, to which my mortal life is exposed.
"He hath protected me in the secret place of His tabernacle." He hath
protected me, with the heart believing unto righteousness.
6. "On a rock hath He exalted me." And that what I believed might be
made manifest for salvation, He hath made my confession to be
conspicuous in His own strength. "And now, lo! He hath exalted mine
head above mine enemies" (ver. 6). What doth He reserve for me at the
last, when even now the body is dead because of sin, lo! I feel that my
mind serves the law of God, and is not led captive under the rebellious
law of sin? "I have gone about, and have sacrificed in His tabernacle
the sacrifice of rejoicing." I have considered the circuit of the
world, believing on Christ; and in that for us God was humbled in time,
I have praised Him with rejoicing: for with such sacrifice He is well
pleased. "I will sing and give praises to the Lord." In heart and in
deed I will be glad in the Lord.
7. "Hear my voice, O Lord, wherewith I have cried unto Thee" (ver. 7).
Hear, Lord, my interior voice, which with a strong intention I have
addressed to Thy ears. "Have mercy upon me, and hear me." Have mercy
upon me, and hear me therein.
8. "My heart hath said to Thee, I have sought Thy countenance" (ver.
8). For I have not exhibited myself to men; but in secret, where Thou
alone hearest, my heart hath said to Thee; I have not sought from Thee
aught without Thee as a reward, but Thy countenance. "Thy countenance,
O Lord, will I seek." In thus search will I perseveringly persist: for
not aught that is common, but Thy countenance, O Lord, will I seek,
that I may love Thee freely, since nothing more precious do I find.
9. "Turn not away Thy face from me" (ver. 9): that I may find what I
seek. "Turn not aside in anger from Thy servant:" lest, while seeking
Thee, I fall in with somewhat else. For what is more grievous than this
punishment to one who loveth and seeketh the truth of Thy countenance?
"Be Thou my Helper." How shall I find it, if Thou help me not? "Leave
me not, neither despise me, O God my Saviour." Scorn not that a mortal
dares to seek the Eternal; for Thou, God, dost heal the wound of my
sin.
10. "For my father and my mother have left me" (ver. 10). For the
kingdom of this world and the city of this world, of which I was born
in time and mortality, have left me seeking Thee, and despising what
they promised, since they could not give what I seek. "But the Lord
took me up." But the Lord, who can give me Himself, took me up.
11. "Appoint me a law, O Lord, in Thy way" (ver. 11). For me then who
am setting out toward Thee, and commenting so great a profession, of
arriving at wisdom, from fear, appoint, O Lord, a law in Thy way, lest
in my wandering Thy rule abandon me. "And direct me in the right path
because of mine enemies." And direct me in the right way of its
straits. For it is not enough to begin, since enemies cease not until
the end is attained.
12. "Deliver me not up unto the souls of them that trouble me" (ver.
12). Suffer not them that trouble me to be satiated with my evils. "For
unrighteous witnesses have risen up against me." For there have risen
up against me they that speak falsely of me, to remove and call me back
from Thee, as if I seek glory of men. "And iniquity hath lied unto
itself." Therefore iniquity hath been pleased with its own lie. For me
it hath not moved, to whom because of this there hath been promised a
greater reward in heaven.
13. "I believe to see the good things of the Lord in the land of the
living" (ver. 13). And since my Lord hath first suffered these things,
if I too despise the tongues of the dying ("for the mouth that lieth
slayeth the soul" [653] ), I believe to see the good things of the Lord
in the land of the living, where there is no place for falsity.
14. "Wait on the Lord, quit thyself like a man: and let thy heart be
strong, yea wait on the Lord" (ver. 14). But when shall this be? It is
arduous for a mortal, it is slow to a lover: but listen to the voice,
that deceiveth not, of him that saith, "Wait on the Lord." Endure the
burning of the reins manfully, and the burning of the heart stoutly.
Think not that what thou dost not as yet receive is denied thee. That
thou faint not in despair, see how it is said, "Wait on the Lord."
[654]
__________________________________________________________________
[649] Lat. XXVI.
[650] [In the Second Exposition he dwells on the spiritual chrism, from
which the Son of David is called Christ; affirms that Christians
partake of the same anointing; speaking of confirmation as their
sacramental anointing and what it implies.--C.]
[651] [A minute prophecy. John xviii. 6.--C.]
[652] [The Old Latin of this charming verse seems to have read, "One
hope have I desired," etc. See Cyprian, A.N.F. vol. v. p. 501.--C.]
[653] Wisd. i. 11.
[654] [On the first three verses of this Psalm, see Origen, A.N.F. vol.
iv. pp. 333, 575, 649. Compare Cyprian, A.N.F. vol. iv. p. 501.--C.]
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XXVIII. [655]
Of David himself.
1. It is the Voice of the Mediator Himself, strong of hand in the
conflict of the Passion. Now what He seems to wish for against His
enemies, is not the wish of malevolence, but the declaration of their
punishment; as in the Gospel, [656] with the cities, in which though He
had performed miracles, yet they had not believed on Him, He doth not
wish in any evil will what He saith, but predicteth what is impending
over them.
2. "Unto Thee, O Lord, have I cried; [657] My God, be not silent from
me" (ver. 1). Unto Thee, O Lord, have I cried; My God, separate not the
unity of Thy Word from that which as Man I am. "Lest at any time Thou
be silent from me: and I shall be like them that go down into the pit."
For from this, that the Eternity of Thy Word ceaseth not to unite
Itself to Me, it comes that I am not such a man as the rest of men, who
are born into the deep misery of this world: where, as if Thou art
silent, Thy Word is not recognised. "Hear, O Lord, the voice of my
supplication, whist I pray unto Thee, whilst I hold up my hands to Thy
holy temple" (ver. 2). Whilst I am crucified for their salvation, who
on believing become Thy holy temple.
3. "Draw not My Soul away with sinners, and destroy me not with them
that work iniquity, with them that speak peace with their neighbours"
(ver. 3). With them that say unto Me, "We know that Thou art a Master
come from God." [658] "But evil in their hearts." But they speak evil
in their hearts.
4. "Give unto them according to their works" (ver. 4). Give unto them
according to their works, for this is just. "And according to the
malice of their affections." [659] For aiming at evil, they cannot
discover good. "According to the works of their hands give Thou unto
them." Although what they have done may avail for salvation to others,
yet give Thou unto them according to the works of their wills. "Pay
them their recompense." Because, for the truth which they heard, they
wished to recompense deceit; let their own deceit deceive them.
5. "For they have not had understanding in the works of the Lord" (ver.
5). And whence is it clear that this hath befallen them? From this
forsooth, "for they have not had understanding in the works of the
Lord." This very thing, in truth, hath been, even now, their
recompense, that in Him whom they tempted with malicious intent as a
Man, they should not recognise God, with what design the Father sent
Him in the Flesh. "And the works of His hands." Nor be moved by those
visible works, which are laid out before their very eyes. "Thou shalt
destroy them, and not build them up." Let them do Me no hurt, nay, nor
again in their endeavour to raise engines against My Church, let them
aught avail.
6. "Blessed be the Lord, for He hath heard the voice of My prayer"
(ver. 6).
7. "The Lord My Helper and My Protector" (ver. 7). The Lord helping Me
in so great sufferings, and protecting Me with immortality in My
resurrection. "In Him hath My Heart trusted, and I have been helped."
"And My Flesh hath flourished again:" that is, and My Flesh hath risen
again. "And of my will I will confess unto Him." Wherefore, the fear of
death being now destroyed, not by the necessity of fear under the Law,
but with a free will with the Law, shall they who believe on Me,
confess unto Him; and because I am in them, I will confess.
8. "The Lord is the strength of His people" (ver. 8). Not that people
"ignorant of the righteousness of God, and willing to establish their
own." [660] For they thought not themselves strong in themselves: for
the Lord is the strength of His people, struggling in this life's
difficulties with the devil. "And the protector of the salvation of His
Christ." That, having saved them by His Christ after the strength of
war, He may protect them at the last with the immortality of peace.
9. "Save Thy people, and bless Thine inheritance" (ver. 9). I intercede
therefore, after My Flesh hath flourished again, because Thou hast
said, "Desire of Me, and I will give Thee the heathen for Thine
inheritance;" [661] "Save Thy people, and bless Thine inheritance:" for
"all Mine are Thine." [662] "And rule them, and set them up even for
ever." And rule them in this temporal life, and raise them from hence
into life eternal.
__________________________________________________________________
[655] Lat. XXVII.
[656] Matt. xi. 20-24.
[657] [The Greek and Vulgate omit the epithet of the Hebrew, "My Rock,"
which is the link with the Psalm foregoing (ver. 5), and the key to
other parallels. St. Jerome renders it, fortis meus.--C.]
[658] John iii. 2.
[659] Al. affectationum, "aims."
[660] Rom. x. 3.
[661] Ps. ii. 8.
[662] John xvii. 10.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XXIX. [663]
A psalm of David himself, of the consummation of the tabernacle.
1. A Psalm of the Mediator Himself, strong of hand, of the perfection
of the Church in this world, where she wars in time against the devil.
2. The Prophet speaks, "Bring unto the Lord, O ye Sons of God, bring
unto the Lord the young of rams" (ver. 1). Bring unto the Lord
yourselves, whom the Apostles, the leaders of the flocks, have begotten
by the Gospel. [664] "Bring unto the Lord glory and honour" (ver. 2).
By your works let the Lord be glorified and honoured. "Bring unto the
Lord glory to His name." Let Him be made known gloriously throughout
the world. "Worship the Lord in His holy court." Worship the Lord in
your heart enlarged and sanctified. For ye are His regal holy
habitation.
3. "The Voice of the Lord is upon the waters" (ver. 3). The Voice of
Christ is upon the peoples. "The God of majesty hath thundered." The
God of majesty, from the cloud of the flesh, hath awfully preached
repentance. "The Lord is upon many waters." The Lord Jesus Himself,
after that He sent forth His Voice upon the peoples, and struck them
with awe, converted them to Himself, and dwelt in them.
4. "The Voice of the Lord is in power" (ver. 4). The Voice of the Lord
now in them themselves, making them powerful. "The Voice of the Lord is
in great might." The Voice of the Lord working great things in them.
5. "The Voice of the Lord breaking the cedars" (ver. 5). The Voice of
the Lord humbling the proud in brokenness of heart. "The Lord shall
break the cedars of Libanus." The Lord by repentance shall break them
that are lifted on high by the splendour of earthly nobility, when to
confound them He shall have "chosen the base things of this world,"
[665] in the which to display His Divinity.
6. "And shall bruise them as the calf of Libanus" (ver. 6). And when
their proud exaltation hath been cut off, He will lay them low after
the imitation of His Own humility, who like a calf was led to slaughter
[666] by the nobility of this world. "For the kings of the earth stood
up, and the rulers agreed together against the Lord, and against His
Christ." [667] "And the Beloved is as the young of the unicorns." For
even He the Beloved, and the Only One of the Father, "emptied Himself"
of His glory; and was made man, [668] like a child of the Jews, that
were "ignorant of God's righteousness," [669] and proudly boasting of
their own righteousness as peculiarly theirs.
7. "The Voice of the Lord cutting short the flame of fire" (ver. 7).
The Voice of the Lord, without any harm to Himself, passing through all
the excited ardour of them that persecute Him, or dividing the furious
rage of His persecutors, so that some should say, "Is not this haply
the very Christ;" others, "Nay; but He deceiveth the people:" [670] and
so cutting short their mad tumult, as to pass some over into His love,
and leave others in their malice.
8. "The Voice of the Lord moving the wilderness" (ver. 8). The Voice of
the Lord moving to the faith the Gentiles once "without hope, and
without God in the world;" [671] where no prophet, no preacher of God's
word, as it were, no man had dwelt. "And the Lord will move the desert
of Cades." And then the Lord will cause the holy word of His Scriptures
to be fully known, which was abandoned by the Jews who understood it
not.
9. "The Voice of the Lord perfecting the stags" [672] (ver. 9). For the
Voice of the Lord hath first perfected them that overcame and repelled
the envenomed tongues. [673] "And will reveal the woods." And then will
He reveal to them the darknesses of the Divine books, and the shadowy
depths of the mysteries, where they feed with freedom. "And in His
temple doth every man speak of His glory." And in His Church all born
again to an eternal hope praise God, each for His own gift, which He
hath received from the Holy Spirit.
10. "The Lord inhabiteth the deluge" (ver. 10). The Lord therefore
first inhabiteth the deluge of this world in His Saints, kept safely in
the Church, as in the ark. "And the Lord shall sit a King for ever."
And afterward He will sit reigning in them for ever.
11. "The Lord will give strength to His people" [674] (ver. 11). For
the Lord will give strength to His people fighting against the storms
and whirlwinds of this world, for peace in this world He hath not
promised them. [675] "The Lord will bless His people in peace." And the
same Lord will bless His people, affording them peace in Himself; for,
saith He, "My peace I give unto you, My peace I leave with you." [676]
__________________________________________________________________
[663] Lat. XXVIII.
[664] 1 Cor. iv. 15.
[665] 1 Cor. i. 28.
[666] Isa. liii. 7.
[667] Ps. ii. 2.
[668] Phil. ii. 7.
[669] Rom. x. 3.
[670] John vii. 41, 12.
[671] Eph. ii. 12.
[672] [Jerome's Hebraic version reads, Vox Domini obstetricans cervas,
which the Authorized English follows.--C.]
[673] Plin. Hist. Nat. viii. 32 and xxviii. 9 says, that they bring
serpents out of their holes with their breath, and kill and eat them.
See S. Greg. Mor. xxx. 36.
[674] [This Psalm was referred to Pentecost by the Jews, and to the
giving of the law. Heb. xii. 18-21.--C.]
[675] John xvi. 33.
[676] John xiv. 27.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XXX. [677]
To the end, the psalm of the canticle [678] of the dedication of the
house, of David himself.
1. To the end, a Psalm of the joy of the Resurrection, and the change,
the renewing of the body to an immortal state, and not only of the
Lord, but also of the whole Church. For in the former Psalm the
tabernacle was finished, wherein we dwell in the time of war: but now
the house is dedicated, which will abide in peace everlasting.
2. It is then whole Christ who speaketh. "I will exalt Thee, O Lord,
for Thou hast taken Me up" (ver. 1). I will praise Thy high Majesty, O
Lord, for Thou hast taken Me up. "Thou hast not made Mine enemies to
rejoice over Me." And those, who have so often endeavoured to oppress
Me with various persecutions throughout the world, Thou hast not made
to rejoice over Me.
3. "O Lord, My God, I have cried unto Thee, and Thou hast healed Me"
(ver. 2). O Lord, My God, I have cried unto Thee, and I no longer bear
about a body enfeebled and sick by mortality.
4. "O Lord, Thou hast brought back My Soul from hell, and Thou hast
saved Me from them that go down into the pit" (ver. 3). Thou hast saved
Me from the condition of profound darkness, and the lowest slough of
corruptible flesh.
5. "Sing to the Lord, O ye saints of His." The prophet seeing these
future things, rejoiceth, and saith, "Sing to the Lord, O ye saints of
His. And make confession of the remembrance of His holiness" (ver. 4).
And make confession to Him, that He hath not forgotten the
sanctification, wherewith He hath sanctified you, although all this
intermediate period belong to your desires.
6. "For in His indignation is wrath" (ver. 5). For He hath avenged
against you the first sin, for which you have paid by death. "And life
in His will." And life eternal, whereunto you could not return by any
strength of your own, hath He given, because He so would. "In the
evening weeping will tarry." Evening began, when the light of wisdom
withdrew from sinful man, when he was condemned to death: from this
evening weeping will tarry, as long as God's people are, amid labours
and temptations, awaiting the day of the Lord. "And exultation in the
morning." Even to the morning, when there will be the exultation of the
resurrection, which hath shone forth by anticipation in the morning
resurrection of the Lord.
7. "But I said in my abundance, I shall not be moved for ever" (ver.
6). But I, that people which was speaking from the first, said in mine
abundance, suffering now no more any want, "I shall not be moved for
ever."
8. "O Lord, in Thy will Thou hast afforded strength unto my beauty"
(ver. 7). But that this my abundance, O Lord, is not of myself, but
that in Thy will Thou hast afforded strength unto my beauty, I have
learnt from this, "Thou turnedst away Thy Face from me, and I became
troubled;" for Thou hast sometimes turned away Thy Face from the
sinner, and I became troubled, when the illumination of Thy knowledge
withdrew from me.
9. "Unto Thee, O Lord, will I cry, and unto my God will I pray" (ver.
8). And bringing to mind that time of my trouble and misery, and as it
were established therein, I hear the voice of Thy First-Begotten, my
Head, about to die for me, and saying "Unto Thee, O Lord, will I cry,
and unto My God will I pray."
10. "What profit" is there in the shedding of My blood, whilst I go
down to corruption? "Shall dust confess unto Thee?" For if I shall not
rise immediately, and My body shall become corrupt, "shall dust confess
unto Thee?" that is, the crowd of the ungodly, whom I shall justify by
My resurrection? "Or declare Thy truth?" Or for the salvation of the
rest declare Thy truth?
11. "The Lord hath heard, and had mercy on Me, the Lord hath become My
helper." Nor did "He suffer His holy One to see corruption" [679] (ver.
10).
12. "Thou hast turned My mourning into joy to Me" (ver. 11). Whom I,
the Church, having received, the First-Begotten from the dead, [680]
now in the dedication of Thine house, say, "Thou hast turned my
mourning into joy to me. Thou hast put off my sackcloth, and girded me
with gladness." Thou hast torn off the veil of my sins, the sadness of
my mortality; and hast girded me with the first robe, with immortal
gladness.
13. "That my glory should sing unto Thee, and I should not be pricked"
(ver. 12). That now, not my humiliation, but my glory should not
lament, but should sing unto Thee, for that now out of humiliation Thou
hast exalted me; and that I should not be pricked with the
consciousness of sin, with the fear of death, with the fear of
judgment. "O Lord, my God, I will confess unto Thee for ever." And this
is my glory, O Lord, my God, that I should confess unto Thee for ever,
that I have nothing of myself, but that all my good is of Thee, who art
"God, All in all." [681]
__________________________________________________________________
[677] Lat. XXIX.
[678] [A shir, or "song." So Psalm xviii.=shirah, the only two
instances in the first division of the Psalter, forty-one Psalms.--C.]
[679] Ps. xvi. 10.
[680] Rev. i. 5.
[681] 1 Cor. xv. 28. [This Psalm was used at Easter and Pentecost.
Compare Cyprian, vol. v. p. 525, A.N.F.--C.]
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XXXI. [682]
To the end, a psalm of David himself, an ecstasy. [683]
1. To the end a Psalm of David Himself, the Mediator strong of hand in
persecutions. For the word ecstasy, which is added to the title,
signifies a transport of the mind, which is produced either by a panic,
or by some revelation. But in this Psalm the panic of the people of God
troubled by the persecution of all the heathen, and by the failing of
faith throughout the world, is principally seen. But first the Mediator
Himself speaks: then the People redeemed by His Blood gives thanks: at
last in trouble it speaks at length, which is what belongs to the
ecstasy; but the Person of the Prophet himself is twice interposed,
near the end, and at the end.
2. "In Thee, O Lord, have I trusted, let Me not be put to confusion for
ever" (ver. 1). In Thee, O Lord, have I trusted, let Me never be
confounded, whilst they shall insult Me as one like other men. "In Thy
righteousness rescue Me, and deliver Me." And in Thy righteousness
rescue Me from the pit of death, and deliver Me out of their company.
3. "Bend down Thine ear unto Me" (ver. 2). Hear Me in My humiliation,
nigh at hand unto Me. "Make haste to deliver Me." Defer not to the end
of the world, as with all who believe on Me, My separation from
sinners. "Be unto Me a God who protecteth Me." Be unto Me God, and
Protector. "And a house of refuge, that Thou mayest save Me." And as a
house, wherein taking refuge I may be saved.
4. "For Thou art My strength, and My refuge" (ver. 3). For Thou art
unto Me My strength to bear My persecutors, and My refuge to escape
them. "And for Thy Name's sake Thou shalt be My guide, and shalt
nourish Me." And that by Me Thou mayest be known to all the Gentiles. I
will in all things follow Thy will; and, by assembling, by degrees,
Saints unto Me, Thou shalt fulfil My body, and My perfect stature.
5. "Thou shalt bring Me out of this trap, which they have hidden for
Me" (ver. 4). Thou shalt bring Me out of these snares, which they have
hidden for Me. "For Thou art My Protector."
6. "Into Thy hands I commend My Spirit" (ver. 5). To Thy power I
commend My Spirit, soon to receive It back. "Thou hast redeemed Me, O
Lord God of truth." Let the people too, redeemed by the Passion of
their Lord, and joyful in the glorifying of their Head, say, "Thou hast
redeemed me, O Lord God of truth."
7. "Thou hatest them that hold to vanity uselessly" (ver. 6). Thou
hatest them that hold to the false happiness of the world. "But I have
trusted in the Lord."
8. "I will be glad, and rejoice in Thy mercy:" which doth not deceive
me. "For Thou hast regarded My humiliation:" wherein Thou hast
subjected me to vanity in hope. [684] "Thou hast saved my soul from
necessities" (ver. 7). Thou hast saved my soul from the necessities of
fear, that with a free love it may serve Thee.
9. "And hast not shut me up into the hands of the enemy" (ver. 8). And
hast not shut me up, that I should have no opening for recovering unto
liberty, and be given over for ever into the power of the devil,
ensnaring me with the desire of this life, and terrifying me with
death. "Thou hast set my feet in a large room." The resurrection of my
Lord being known, and mine own being promised me, my love, having been
brought out of the straits of fear, walks abroad in continuance, into
the expanse of liberty.
10. "Have mercy on me, O Lord, for I am troubled" (ver. 9). But what is
this unlooked-for cruelty of the persecutors, striking such dread into
me? "Have mercy on me, O Lord." For I am now no more alarmed for death,
but for torments and tortures. "Mine eye hath been disordered by
anger." I had mine eye upon Thee, that Thou shouldest not abandon me:
Thou art angry, and hast disordered it. "My soul, and my belly." By the
same anger my soul hath been disturbed, and my memory, whereby I
retained what my God hath suffered for me, and what He hath promised
me.
11. "For my life hath failed in pain" (ver 10). For my life is to
confess Thee, but it failed in pain, when the enemy had said, Let them
be tortured until they deny Him. "And my years in groanings." The time
that I pass in this world is not taken away from me by death, but
abides, and is spent in groanings. "My strength hath been weakened by
want." I want the health of this body, and racking pains come on me: I
want the dissolution of the body, and death forbears to come: and in
this want my confidence hath been weakened. "And my bones have been
disturbed." And my stedfastness hath been disturbed.
12. "I have been made a reproach above all mine enemies" (ver 11). All
the wicked are my enemies; and nevertheless they for their wickednesses
are tortured only till they confess: I then have overpassed their
reproach, I, whose confession death doth not follow, but racking pains
follow upon it. "And to my neighbours too much." This hath seemed too
much to them, who were already drawing near to know Thee, and to hold
the faith that I hold. "And a fear to mine acquaintance." And into my
very acquaintance I struck fear by the example of my dreadful
tribulation. "They that did see me, fled without from me." Because they
did not understand my inward and invisible hope, they fled from me into
things outward and visible.
13. "I have been forgotten, as one dead from the heart" (ver. 12). And
they have forgotten me, as if I were dead from their hearts. "I have
become as a lost vessel." I have seemed to myself to be lost to all the
Lord's service, living in this world, and gaining none, when all were
afraid to join themselves unto me.
14. "For I have heard the rebuking of many dwelling by in a circuit"
(ver. 13). For I have heard many rebuking me, in the pilgrimage of this
world near me, following the circuit of time, and refusing to return
with me to the eternal country. "Whilst they were assembling themselves
together against me, they conspired that they might take my soul." That
my soul, which should by death easily escape from their power, might
consent unto them, they imagined a device, whereby they would not
suffer me even to die.
15. "But I have hoped in Thee, O Lord; I have said, Thou art my God"
(ver. 14). For Thou hast not changed, that Thou shouldest not save, Who
dost correct.
16. "In Thy hands" are "my lots" (ver. 15). In Thy power are my lots.
For I see no desert for which out of the universal ungodliness of the
human race Thou hast elected me particularly to salvation. And though
there be with Thee some just and secret order in my election, yet I,
from whom this is hid, have attained by lot unto my Lord's vesture.
[685] "Deliver me from the hands of mine enemies, and from them that
persecute me."
17. "Make Thy Face to shine upon Thy servant" (ver. 16). Make it known
to men, who do not think that I belong unto Thee, that Thy Face is bent
upon me, and that I serve Thee. "Save me in Thy mercy."
18. "O Lord, let me not be confounded, for I have called upon Thee"
(ver. 17). O Lord, let me not be put to shame by those who insult me,
for that I have called upon Thee. "Let the ungodly be ashamed, and be
brought down to hell." Let them rather who call upon stones be ashamed,
and made to dwell with darkness. [686]
19. "Let the deceitful lips be made dumb" (ver. 18). In making known to
the peoples Thy mysteries wrought in me, strike with dumb amazement the
lips of them that invent falsehood of me. "Which speak iniquity against
the Righteous, in pride and contempt." Which speak iniquity against
Christ, in their pride and contempt of Him as a crucified man.
20. "How great" is "the multitude of Thy sweetness, O Lord" (ver. 19).
Here the Prophet exclaims, having sight of all this, and admiring how
manifoldly plenteous is Thy sweetness, O Lord. "Which Thou hast hid for
them that fear Thee." Even those, whom Thou correctest, Thou lovest
much: but lest they should go on negligently from relaxed security,
Thou hidest from them the sweetness of Thy love, for whom it is
profitable to fear Thee. "Thou hast perfected it for them that hope in
Thee." But Thou hast perfected this sweetness for them that hope in
Thee. For Thou dost not withdraw from them what they look for
perseveringly even unto the end. "In sight of the sons of men." For it
does not escape the notice of the sons of men, who now live no more
after Adam, but after the Son of Man. "Thou wilt hide them in the
hidden place of Thy Countenance:" which seat Thou shalt preserve for
everlasting in the hidden place of the knowledge of Thee for them that
hope in Thee. "From the troubling of men." So that now they suffer no
more trouble from men.
21. "Thou wilt protect them in Thy tabernacle from the contradiction of
tongues" (ver. 20). But here meanwhile whilst evil tongues murmur
against them, saying, Who hath come thence? Thou wilt protect them in
the tabernacle, that of faith in those things, which the Lord wrought
and endured for us in time.
22. "Blessed be the Lord; for He hath made His mercy marvellous, in the
city of compassing" (ver. 21). Blessed be the Lord, for after the
correction of the sharpest persecutions He hath made His mercy
marvellous to all throughout the world, in the circuit of human
society. [687]
23. "I said in my ecstasy" [688] (ver. 22). Whence that people again
speaking saith, I said in my fear, when the heathen were raging
horribly against me. "I have been cast forth from the sight of Thine
eyes." For if Thou hadst regard to me, Thou wouldest not suffer me to
endure these things. "Therefore Thou heardest, O Lord, the voice of my
prayer, when I cried unto Thee." Therefore putting a limit to
correction, and showing that I have part in Thy care, Thou heardest, O
Lord, the voice of my prayer, when I raised it high [689] out of
tribulation.
24. "Love the Lord, all ye His saints" (ver. 23). The Prophet again
exhorts, having sight of these things, and saith, "Love the Lord, all
ye His saints; for the Lord will require truth." Since "if the
righteous shall scarcely be saved, where shall the sinner and the
ungodly appear?" [690] "And He will repay them that do exceeding
proudly." And He will repay them who even when conquered are not
converted, because they are very proud.
25. "Quit you like men, and let your heart be strengthened" (ver. 24):
working good without fainting, that ye may reap in due season. "All ye
who trust in the Lord:" that is, ye who duly fear and worship Him,
trust ye in the Lord.
__________________________________________________________________
[682] Lat. XXX.
[683] [Borrowed from the Septuagint, where it is anticipated from ver.
22. See p. 70, infra.--C.]
[684] Rom. viii. 20.
[685] John xix. 24.
[686] Umbris socientur.
[687] [Compare Hippolytus, vol. v. p. 202, A.N.F.--C.]
[688] [Elsewhere St. Augustin explains the word "ecstasy" as
sometimes=transport, sometimes=panic. See his sermon on this Psalm,
usually following this exposition.--C.]
[689] Nimis.
[690] 1 Pet. iv. 18.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XXXII. [691]
To David himself; for understanding.
1. To David himself; for understanding; by which it is understood that
not by the merits of works, but by the grace of God, man is delivered,
confessing his sins.
2. "Blessed are they whose unrighteousness is forgiven, and whose sins
are covered" (ver. 1): and whose sins are buried in oblivion. "Blessed
is the man to whom the Lord hath not imputed sin, nor is there guile in
his mouth" (ver. 2): nor has he in his mouth boastings of
righteousness, when his conscience is full of sins.
3. "Because I kept silence, my bones waxed old:" because I made not
with my mouth "confession unto salvation," [692] all firmness in me has
grown old in infirmity. "Through my roaring all the day long" (ver. 3):
when I was ungodly and a blasphemer, crying against God, as though
defending and excusing my sins.
4. "Because day and night Thy Hand was heavy upon me:" because, through
the continual punishment of Thy scourges, "I was turned in misery,
while a thorn was fixed through me" (ver. 4): I was made miserable by
knowing my misery, being pricked with an evil conscience.
5. "I acknowledged my sin, and my unrighteousness have I not hid:" that
is, my unrighteousness have I not concealed. [693] "I said, I will
confess against myself my unrighteousness to the Lord:" I said, I will
confess, not against God (as in my ungodly crying, when I kept
silence), but against myself, my unrighteousness to the Lord. "And Thou
forgavest the iniquity of my heart" (ver. 5); hearing the word of
confession in the heart, before it was uttered with the voice.
6. "For this shall every one that is holy pray unto Thee in an
acceptable time:" for this wickedness of heart shall every one that is
righteous pray unto Thee. For not by their own merits will they be
holy, but by that acceptable time, that is, at His coming, who redeemed
us from sin. "Nevertheless in the flood of great waters they shall not
come nigh him" (ver. 6): nevertheless, let none think, when the end has
come suddenly, as in the days of Noah, [694] that there remaineth a
place of confession, whereby he may draw nigh unto God.
7. "Thou art my refuge from the pressures, which have compassed me
about:" Thou art my refuge from the pressure of my sins, which hath
compassed my heart. "O Thou, my Rejoicing, deliver me from them that
compass me about" (ver. 7): in Thee is my joy: deliver me from the
sorrow which my sins bring upon me.
8. Diapsalma. The answer of God: "I will give thee understanding, and
will set thee in the way in which thou shalt go;" I will give thee
understanding after confession, that thou depart not from the way in
which thou shouldest go; lest thou wish to be in thine own power. "I
will fix Mine Eyes upon thee" (ver. 8); so will make sure upon thee My
Love.
9. "Be not ye like unto horse or mule, which have no understanding:"
and therefore would govern themselves. But saith the Prophet, "Hold in
their jaws with bit and bridle." Do Thou then, O God, unto them "that
will not come nigh Thee" (ver. 9), what man doth to horse and mule,
that by scourges Thou make them to bear Thy rule.
10. "Many are the scourges of the sinner:" much is he scourged, who,
confessing not his sins to God, would be his own ruler. "But he that
trusteth in the Lord, mercy compasseth him about" (ver. 10); but he
that trusteth in the Lord, and submitteth himself to His rule, mercy
shall compass him about.
11. "Be glad in the Lord, and rejoice, ye righteous:" be glad, and
rejoice, ye righteous, not in yourselves, but in the Lord. "And glory,
all ye that are right in heart" (ver. 11): and glory in Him, all ye who
understand that it is right to be subject unto Him, that so ye may be
placed above all things beside.
__________________________________________________________________
[691] Lat. XXXI.
[692] Rom. x. 10.
[693] [Here in our Psalter version is verse 6; not so the Authorized,
nor the Vulgate, nor the other versions.--C.]
[694] Matt. xxiv. 37-41.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XXXIII. [695]
1. "Rejoice in the Lord, O ye righteous:" rejoice, O ye righteous, not
in yourselves, for that is not safe; but in the Lord. "For praise is
comely to the upright" (ver. 1): these praise the Lord, who submit
themselves unto the Lord; for else they are distorted and perverse.
2. "Praise the Lord with harp:" praise the Lord, presenting unto Him
your bodies a living sacrifice. [696] "Sing unto Him with the psaltery
for ten strings" (ver. 2): let your members be servants to the love of
God, and of your neighbour, in which are kept both the three and the
seven commandments. [697]
3. "Sing unto Him a new song:" sing unto Him a song of the grace of
faith. "Sing skilfully unto Him with jubilation" (ver. 3): sing
skillfully unto Him with rejoicing.
4. "For the Word of the Lord is right:" for the Word of the Lord is
right, to make you that which of yourselves ye cannot be. "And all His
works are done in faith" (ver. 4): lest any think that by the merit of
works he hath arrived at faith, when in faith are done all the works
which God Himself loveth.
5. "He loveth Mercy and Judgment:" for He loveth Mercy, which now He
showeth first; and Judgment, wherewith He exacteth that which He hath
first shown. "The earth is full of the Mercy of the Lord" (ver. 5):
throughout the whole world are sins forgiven unto men by the Mercy of
the Lord.
6. "By the Word of the Lord were the heavens made firm:" for not by
themselves, but by the Word of the Lord were the righteous made strong.
"And all the strength [698] of them by the Breath of His Mouth" (ver.
6). And all their faith by His Holy Spirit.
7. "He gathereth the waters of the sea together as into a bottle:" He
gathered the people of the world together, to confession of mortified
sin, lest through pride they flow too freely. "He layeth up the deep in
storehouses" (ver. 7): and keepeth in them His secrets for riches.
8. "Let all the earth fear the Lord:" let every sinner fear, that so he
may cease to sin. "Let all the inhabitants of the world stand in awe of
Him" (ver. 8): not of the terrors of men, or of any creature, but of
Him let them stand in awe.
9. "For He spake, and they were made:" for no other one made those
things which are to fear; but He spake, and they were made. "He
commanded, and they were created" (ver. 9): He commanded by His Word,
[699] and they were created.
10. "The Lord bringeth the counsel of the heathen to nought;" of them
that seek not His Kingdom, but kingdoms of their own. "He maketh the
devices of the people of none effect:" of them that covet earthly
happiness. "And reproveth the counsels of princes" (ver. 10): of them
that seek to rule over such peoples.
11. "But the counsel of the Lord standeth for ever;" but the counsel of
the Lord, whereby He maketh none blessed but him that submitteth unto
Himself, standeth for ever. The thoughts of His Heart to all
generations" (ver. 11): the thoughts of His Wisdom are not mutable, but
endure to all generations.
12. "Blessed is the nation whose God is the Lord:" one nation is
blessed, belonging to the heavenly city, which hath not chosen save the
Lord for their God: "And the people whom He hath chosen for His own
inheritance" (ver. 12): and which not of itself, but by the gift of
God, hath been chosen, that He by possessing it may not suffer it to be
uncared for and miserable.
13. "The Lord looketh from Heaven; He beholdeth all the sons of men"
(ver. 13). From the souls of the righteous, the Lord looketh mercifully
upon all who would rise to newness of life.
14. "From His prepared habitation:" from His habitation of assumed
Humanity, which He prepared for Himself. "He looketh upon all the
inhabitants of the earth" (ver. 14): He looketh mercifully upon all who
live in the flesh, that He may be over them in ruling them.
15. "He fashioneth their hearts singly:" He giveth spiritually to their
hearts their proper gifts, so that neither the whole body may be eye,
nor the whole hearing; [700] but that one in this manner, another in
that manner, may be incorporated with Christ. "He understandeth all
their works" (ver. 15). Before Him are all their works understood.
16. "A king shall not be saved by much strength:" he shall not be saved
who ruleth his own flesh, if he presume much upon his own strength.
"Neither shall a giant be saved by much strength" (ver. 16): nor shall
he be saved whoever warreth against the habit of his own lust, or
against the devil and his angels, if he trust much to his own might.
17. "A horse is a deceitful thing for safety:" he is deceived, who
thinketh either that through men he gaineth salvation received among
men, or that by the impetuosity of his own courage he is defended from
destruction. "In the abundance of his strength shall he not be saved"
(ver. 17).
18. "Behold, the Eyes of the Lord are upon them that fear Him:" because
if thou seek salvation, behold, the love of the Lord is upon them that
fear Him. "Upon them that hope in His mercy" (ver. 18): that hope not
in their own strength, but in His mercy.
19. "To deliver their souls from death, and to keep them alive in
famine" (ver. 19). To give them the nourishment of the Word, and of
Everlasting Truth, which they lost while presuming on their own
strength, and therefore have not even their own strength, from lack of
righteousness.
20. "My soul shall be patient for the Lord:" that hereafter it may be
filled with dainties incorruptible, meanwhile, whilst here it
remaineth, my soul shall be patient for the Lord. "For He is our Helper
and Defender" (ver. 20): our Helper He is, while we endeavour after
Him; and our Defender, while we resist the adversary.
21. "For our heart shall rejoice in Him:" for not in ourselves, wherein
without Him there is great need; but in Himself shall our heart
rejoice. "And we have trusted in His holy Name" (ver. 21); and
therefore have we trusted that we shall come to God, because unto us
absent hath He sent, through faith, His own Name.
22. "Let Thy mercy, O Lord, be upon us, according as we have hoped in
Thee" (ver. 22): let Thy mercy, O Lord, be upon us; for hope
confoundeth not, because we have hoped in Thee.
__________________________________________________________________
[695] Lat. XXXII.
[696] Rom. xii. 1.
[697] See St. Augustin on Faith and Works, S: 17, Tr. note h. He takes
our first and second as one, dividing the tenth. [Compare St. Augustin,
Sermon ix. cap. 5. He is credited with introducing this division into
the Western churches. Compare Irenaeus (Adv. Haeres. ii. 24, S: 4, note
9), A.N.F. vol. i. p. 395; also Clement, Stromata, A.N.F. vol. ii. p.
512.--C.]
[698] Virtus.
[699] See De Genesi ad Lit. b. i. S:S: 5, 6.
[700] 1 Cor. xii. 17.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XXXIV. [701]
A psalm of David, when he changed his countenance before Abimelech, and
he sent him away, and he departed.
1. Because there was there a sacrifice after the order of Aaron, and
afterwards He of His Own Body and Blood appointed a sacrifice after the
order of Melchizedek; He changed then His Countenance in the
Priesthood, and sent away the kingdom of the Jews, and came to the
Gentiles. What then is, "He affected"? [702] He was full of affection.
For what is so full of affection as the Mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ,
who, seeing our infirmity, that He might deliver us from everlasting
death, underwent temporal death with such great injury and contumely?
"And He drummed:" because a drum is not made, except when a skin is
extended on wood; and David drummed, to signify that Christ should be
crucified. But, "He drummed upon the doors of the city:" what are "the
doors of the city," but our hearts which we had closed against Christ,
who by the drum of His Cross hath opened the hearts of mortal men? "And
was carried in His Own Hands:" how "carried in His Own Hands"? Because
when He commended His Own Body and Blood, He took into His Hands that
which the faithful know; and in a manner carried Himself, when He said,
"This is My Body." [703] "And He fell down at the doors of the gate;"
that is, He humbled Himself. For this it is, to fall down even at the
very beginning of our faith. For the door of the gate is the beginning
of faith; whence beginneth the Church, and arriveth at last even unto
sight: that as it believeth those things which it seeth not, it may
deserve to enjoy them, when it shall have begun to see face to face. So
is the title of the Psalm; briefly we have heard it; let us now hear
the very words of Him that affecteth, and drummeth upon the doors of
the city.
2. "I will bless the Lord at all times; His praise shall be ever in my
mouth" (ver. 1). So speaketh Christ, so also let a Christian speak; for
a Christian is in the Body of Christ; and therefore was Christ made
Man, that that Christian might be enabled to be an Angel, who saith, "I
will bless the Lord at all times." When shall I "bless the Lord"? When
He blesseth thee? When the goods of this world abound? When thou hast
great abundance of corn, oil, and wine, of gold and silver, of servants
and cattle; when this mortal health remaineth unwounded and sound; when
all that are born to thee grow up, nothing is withdrawn by immature
death, happiness wholly reigneth in thy house, and all things overflow
around thee; then shalt thou bless the Lord? No; but "at all times."
Therefore both then, and when according to the time, or according to
the scourges of our Lord God, these things are troubled, are taken
away, are seldom born to thee, and born pass away. For these things
come to pass, and thence followeth penury, need, labour, pain, and
temptation. But thou, who hast sung, "I will bless the Lord at all
times: His praise shall be ever in my mouth," both when He giveth them,
bless; and when He taketh them away, bless. For it is He that giveth,
it is He that taketh away: but Himself from him that blesseth Him He
taketh not away.
3. But who is it that blesseth the Lord at all times, except the humble
in heart. For very humility taught our Lord in His Own Body and Blood:
because when He commendeth His Own Body and Blood, He commendeth His
Humility, in that which is written in this history, in that seeming
madness of David, which we have passed by, "And his spittle ran down
over his beard." [704] When the Apostle was read, [705] Ye heard the
same spittle, but running down over the beard. One saith perhaps, What
spittle have we heard? Was it not read but now, where the Apostle
saith, "The Jews require a sign, and the Greeks seek after wisdom?" But
now it was read, "But we preach," saith he, "Christ crucified" (for
then He drummed), "unto the Jews a stumbling block, and unto the Greeks
foolishness; but unto them which are called, both Jews and Greeks,
Christ the Power of God, and the Wisdom of God. Because the Foolishness
of God is wiser than men, and the Weakness of God is stronger than
men." [706] For spittle signifieth foolishness; spittle signifieth
weakness. But if the Foolishness of God is wiser than men, and the
Weakness of God is stronger than men; let not the spittle as it were
offend thee, but observe that it runneth down over the beard: for as by
the spittle, weakness; so by the beard, strength is signified. He
covered then His Strength by the body of His Weakness, and that which
without was weak, appeared as it were in spittle; but within His Divine
Strength was covered as a beard. Therefore humility is commended unto
us. Be humble if thou wouldest bless the Lord at all times, and that
His praise should be ever in thy mouth....
4. But wherefore doth man bless the Lord at all times? Because he is
humble. What is it to be humble? To take not praise unto himself. Who
would himself be praised, is proud: who is not proud, is humble.
Wouldest thou not then be proud? That thou mayest be humble, say what
is here written; "In the Lord shall my soul be praised: the humble
shall hear thereof and be glad" (ver. 2). Those then who will not be
praised in the Lord, are not humble, but fierce, rough, lifted up,
proud. Gentle cattle would the Lord have; be thou the Lord's jumentum;
that is, be thou humble. He sitteth upon thee, He ruleth thee: fear not
lest thou stumble, and fall headlong: that indeed is thy infirmity; but
consider Who sitteth upon thee. Thou art an ass's colt, but thou
carriest Christ. For even He on an ass's colt came into the city; and
that beast was gentle...."Be not ye as the horse or as the mule, which
have no understanding." [707] For horse and mule sometimes lift up
their neck, and by their own fierceness throw off their rider. They are
tamed with the bit, with bridle, with stripes, until they learn to
submit, and to carry their master. But thou, before thy jaws are
bruised with the bridle, be humble, and carry thy Lord: wish not praise
for thyself, but praised be He who sitteth upon thee, and say thou, "In
the Lord shall my soul be praised; the humble shall hear thereof, and
be glad."...
5. Now followeth, "O magnify the Lord with me" (ver. 3). Who is this
that exhorteth us, that we should magnify the Lord with him? Whoever,
Brethren, is in the body of Christ, ought for this to labour, that the
Lord may be magnified with him. For he loveth the Lord, whoever he is.
And how doth he love Him? So as not to envy his fellow-lover....Let
them blush who so love God as to envy others. Abandoned men love a
charioteer, and whoever loveth a charioteer or hunter, wisheth the
whole people to love with him, and exhorteth, saying, Love with me this
pantomime, love with me this or that shame. He calleth among the people
that shame may be loved with him; and doth not a Christian call in the
Church, that the Truth of God may be loved with him? Stir up then love
in yourselves, Brethren; and call to every one of yours, and say, "O
magnify the Lord with me." Let there be in you that fervour. Wherefore
are these things recited and explained? If ye love God, bring quickly
to the love of God all who are joined unto you, and all who are in your
house; if the Body of Christ is loved by you, that is, if the unity of
the Church, bring them quickly to enjoy, and say, "O magnify the Lord
with me."
6. "And let us exalt His Name together." [708] What is, "let us exalt
His Name together"? That is, in one. For many copies so have it, "O
magnify the Lord with me; and let us exalt His Name in one." [709]
Whether it be said, "together," or "in one," it is the same thing.
Therefore bring quickly whom ye can, by exhorting, by transporting,
[710] by beseeching, by disputing, by rendering a reason, with
meekness, with gentleness. Bring them quickly unto love; that if they
magnify the Lord, they may magnify Him in one....
7. "I sought the Lord, and He heard me" (ver. 4). Where heard the Lord?
Within. Where giveth He? Within. There thou prayest, there thou art
heard, there thou art blessed. Thou hast prayed, thou art heard, thou
art blessed; and he knoweth not who standeth by thee: it is all carried
on in secret, as the Lord saith in the Gospel, "Enter into thy closet,
and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father which is in
secret; and thy Father which seeth in secret, shall reward thee
openly." [711] When therefore thou enterest into thy chamber, thou
enterest into thy heart. Blessed are they who rejoice when they enter
into their heart, and find therein nought of evil....
8. "I sought the Lord, and He heard me." Who then are not heard, seek
not the Lord. Attend, Holy Brethren; [712] he said not, I sought gold
from the Lord, and He heard me; I sought from the Lord long life, and
He heard me; I sought from the Lord this or that, and He heard me. It
is one thing to seek anything from the Lord, another to seek the Lord
Himself. "I sought" (saith he) "the Lord, and He heard me." But thou,
when thou prayest, saying, Kill that my enemy, seekest not the Lord,
but, as it were, makest thyself a judge over thy enemy, and makest thy
God an executioner. [713] How knowest thou that he is not better than
thou, whose death thou seekest? In that very thing haply he is, that he
seeketh not thine. Therefore seek not from the Lord anything without,
but seek the Lord Himself, and He will hear thee, and while thou yet
speakest, He will say, "Lo, here I am." [714] ...
9. I have said who was the exhorter, namely, that lover who would not
alone embrace what he loveth, and saith, "Approach unto Him, and be ye
lightened" (ver. 5). For he saith what he himself proved. For some
spiritual person in the Body of Christ, or even our Lord Jesus Christ
Himself according to the flesh, the Head exhorting His Own Members,
saith; what? "Approach unto Him, and be ye lightened." Or rather some
spiritual Christian inviteth us to approach to our Lord Jesus Christ
Himself. But let us approach to Him and be lightened; not as the Jews
approached to Him, that they might be darkened; for they approached to
Him that they might crucify Him: let us approach to Him that we may
receive His Body and Blood. They by Him crucified were darkened; we by
eating and drinking The Crucified are lightened. "Approach unto Him,
and be ye lightened." Lo, this is said to the Gentiles. Christ was
crucified amid the Jews raging and seeing; the Gentiles were absent;
lo, they have approached who were in darkness, and they who saw not are
lightened. Whereby approach the Gentiles? By following with faith, by
longing with the heart, by running with charity. Thy feet are thy
charity. Have two feet, be not lame. What are thy two feet? The two
commandments of love, of thy God, and of thy Neighbour. With these feet
run thou unto God, approach unto Him, for He hath both exhorted thee to
run, and hath Himself shed His Own Light, as he hath magnificently and
divinely continued. [715] "And your faces shall not be ashamed."
"Approach" (saith he) "unto Him, and be ye lightened; and your faces
shall not be ashamed." No face shall be ashamed but of the proud.
Wherefore? Because he would be lifted up, and when he hath suffered
insult, or ignominy, or mischance in this world, or any affliction, he
is ashamed. But fear not thou, approach unto Him, and thou shalt not be
ashamed....
10. As the Prophet testifieth, "The poor man cried, and the Lord heard
him" (ver. 6). He teacheth thee how thou mayest be heard. Therefore art
thou not heard, because thou art rich. Lest haply thou say, thou
criedst and wast not heard, hear wherefore; "The poor man cried, and
the Lord heard him." As poor cry thou, and the Lord heareth. And how
shall I cry as poor? By not, if thou hast aught, presuming therefrom
upon thy own strength: by understanding that thou art needy; by
understanding that so long art thou poor, as thou hast not Him who
maketh thee rich. But how did the Lord hear him? "And saved him out of
all his troubles." And how saveth He men out of all their troubles?
"The Angel of the Lord shall send [716] round about them that fear Him,
and shall deliver them" (ver. 7). So it is written, brethren, not as
some bad copies have it, "The Lord shall send His Angel round about
them that fear Him, and He shall deliver them:" but thus, "The Angel of
the Lord shall send round about them that fear Him, and shall deliver
them." Whom called He here the Angel of the Lord, who shall send round
about them that fear Him, and shall deliver them? Our Lord Jesus Christ
Himself is called in Prophecy, the Angel of the great Counsel, the
Messenger of the great Counsel; [717] so the Prophets called Him. [718]
Even He then, the Angel of the great Counsel, that is, the Messenger,
shall send unto them that fear the Lord, and shall deliver them. Fear
not then lest thou be hid: wheresoever thou hast feared the Lord, there
doth that Angel know thee, who shall send to succour thee, and shall
deliver thee.
11. Now will He speak openly of the same Sacrament, whereby He was
carried in His Own Hands. "O taste and see that the Lord is good" (ver.
8). Doth not the Psalm now open itself, and show thee that seeming
insanity and constant madness, the same insanity and sober inebriety of
that David, who in a figure showed I know not what, when in the person
of king Achis they said to him, How is it? [719] When the Lord said,
"Except a man eat My Flesh and drink My Blood, he shall have no life in
him"? [720] And they in whom reigned Achis, that is, error and
ignorance, said; what said they? "How can this man give us his flesh to
eat?" [721] If thou art ignorant, "Taste and see that the Lord is
good:" but if thou understandest not, thou art king Achis: David shall
change His Countenance and shall depart from thee, and shall quit thee,
and shall depart. [722]
12. "Blessed is the man that trusteth in Him." Why needeth this to be
explained at length? Whoever trusteth not in the Lord, is miserable.
Who is there that trusteth not in the Lord? He that trusteth in
himself....
13. "O fear the Lord, all ye His saints, for there is no want to them
that fear Him" (ver. 9). For many therefore will not fear God the Lord,
lest they suffer hunger. It is said to them, Defraud not; and they say,
Whence can I feed myself? No art can be without imposture; no business
can be without fraud. But fraud God punisheth: fear God. But if I
should fear God, I shall not have whence to live. "O fear the Lord, all
ye His saints, for there is no want to them that fear Him." He
promiseth plenty to him that trembleth, and doubteth, lest haply if he
should fear God, he should lose things superfluous. The Lord fed thee
despising Him, and will He desert thee fearing Him? Attend, and say
not, Such an one is rich, and I am poor. I fear the Lord, he by not
fearing how much has he gained, and I by fearing am bare! See what
follows; "The rich [723] do lack and suffer hunger, but they that seek
the Lord shall not want any good thing" (ver. 10). If thou receive it
according to the letter, He seemeth to deceive thee, for thou seest
that many rich men that are wicked die in their riches, and are not
made poor while they live; thou seest them grow old, and come even to
the end of life amid great abundance and riches. Thou seest their
funeral pomp celebrated with great profusion, the man himself brought
rich even to the sepulchre, having expired in beds of ivory, his family
weeping around; and thou sayest in thy mind, if haply thou knowest some
both sins and crimes done by him: I know what things that man hath
done; lo, he hath grown old, he hath died in his bed, his friends
follow him to the grave, his funeral is celebrated with all this pomp;
I know what he hath done; the Scripture has deceived me, and has spoken
falsely, where I hear and sing; "The rich do lack and suffer hunger."
When was this man in need? when did he suffer hunger? "But they that
seek the Lord shall not want any good thing." Daily I rise up to
Church, daily I bend the knee, daily I seek the Lord, and have nothing
good: this man sought not the Lord, and he hath died in the midst of
all these good things! Thus thinking, the snare of offence choketh him;
for he seeketh mortal food on the earth, and seeketh not a true reward
in heaven, and so he putteth his head into the devil's noose, his jaws
are tied close, and the devil holdeth him fast unto evil doing, that so
he may imitate the evil men, whom he seeth to die in such plenty.
14. Therefore understand it not so....When thou art filled with
spiritual riches, canst thou be poor? And was he therefore rich,
because he had a bed of ivory; and art thou poor who hast the chamber
of thy heart filled with such jewelry of virtues, justice, truth,
charity, faith, endurance? Unfold thy riches, if thou hast them, and
compare them with the riches of the rich. But such an one has found in
the market mules of great value, and has bought them. If thou couldest
find faith to be sold, how much wouldest thou give for that, which God
willeth that thou shouldest have gratis, and thou art ungrateful? Those
rich then lack, they lack, and what is heavier, they lack bread....For
He hath said, "I am the Living Bread which came down from Heaven."
[724] And again, "Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after
righteousness: for they shall be filled." [725] "But they that seek the
Lord shall not want any good thing:" but what manner of good, I have
already said.
15. "Come, ye children, hearken unto me: I will teach you the fear of
the Lord" (ver. 11). Ye think, [726] brethren, that I say this: think
that David saith it; think that an Apostle saith it; nay think that our
Lord Jesus Christ Himself saith it; "Come, ye children, hearken unto
Me." Let us hearken unto Him together: hearken ye unto Him through us.
For He would teach us; He the Humble, He that drummeth, He that
affecteth, would teach us....
16. "What man is he that desireth life, and loveth to see good days?"
(ver. 12). He asketh a question. Doth not every one among you answer,
I? Is there any man among you that loveth not life, that is, that
desireth not life, and loveth not to see good days? Do ye not daily
thus murmur, and thus speak; How long shall we suffer these things?
Daily are they worse and worse: in our fathers' time were days more
joyful, were days better. O if thou couldest ask those same, thy
fathers, in like manner would they murmur to thee of their own days.
Our fathers were happy, miserable are we, evil days have we: such an
one ruled over us, we thought that after his death might some
refreshing be given to us; worse things have come: O God, show unto us
good days! "What man is he that desireth life, and loveth to see good
days?" Let him not seek here good days. A good thing he seeketh, but
not in its right place doth he seek it. As, if thou shouldest seek some
righteous man in a country, wherein he lived not, it would be said to
thee, A good man thou seekest, a great man thou seekest, seek him
still, but not here; in vain thou seekest him here, thou wilt never
find him. Good days thou seekest, together let us seek them, seek not
here....Read the Scriptures....
17. Let not a Christian then murmur, let him see whose steps he
followeth: but if he loveth good days, let him hearken unto Him
teaching and saying, "Come, ye children, hearken unto Me; I will teach
you the fear of the Lord." What wouldest thou? Life and good days.
Hear, and do. "Keep thy tongue from evil" (ver. 13). This do. I will
not, saith a miserable man, I will not keep my tongue from evil, and
yet I desire life and good days. If a workman of thine should say to
thee, I indeed lay waste this vineyard, yet I require of thee my
reward; thou broughtest me to the vineyard to lop and prune it, I cut
away all the useful wood, I will cut short also the very trunks of the
vines, that thou have thereon nothing to gather, and when I have done
this, thou shalt repay to me my labour. Wouldest thou not call him mad?
Wouldest thou not drive him from thy house or ever he put his hand to
the knife? Such are those men who would both do evil, and swear
falsely, and speak blasphemy against God, and murmur, and defraud, and
be drunken, and dispute, and commit adultery, and use charms, and
consult diviners, and withal see good days. To such it is said, thou
canst not doing ill seek a good reward. If thou art unjust, shall God
also be unjust? What shall I do, then? What desirest thou? Life I
desire, good days I desire. "Keep thy tongue from evil, and thy lips
that they speak no guile," that is, defraud not any, lie not to any.
18. But what is, "Depart from evil"? (ver. 14). It is little that thou
injure none, murder none, steal not, commit not adultery, do no wrong,
speak no false witness; "Depart from evil." When thou hast departed,
thou sayest, Now I am safe, I have done all, I shall have life, I shall
see good days. Not only saith he, "Depart from evil," but also, "and do
good." It is nothing that thou spoil not: clothe the naked. If thou
hast not spoiled, thou hast declined from evil; but thou wilt not do
good, except thou receive the stranger into thine house. So then depart
from evil, as to do good. "Seek peace, and ensue it." He hath not said,
Thou shalt have peace here; seek it, and ensue it. Whither shall I
ensue it? Whither it hath gone before. For the Lord is our peace, hath
risen again, and hath ascended into Heaven. "Seek peace, and ensue it;"
because when thou also hast risen, this mortal shall be changed, and
thou shalt embrace peace there where no man shall trouble thee. For
there is perfect peace, where thou wilt not hunger....
19. "The Eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous:" fear not then;
labour; the eyes of the Lord are upon thee. "And His Ears are open unto
their prayers" (ver. 15). What wouldest thou more? If an householder in
a great house should not hearken to a servant murmuring, he would
complain, and say, What hardship do we here suffer, and none heareth
us. Canst thou say this of God, What hardships I suffer, and none
heareth me? If He heard me, haply, sayest thou, He would take away my
tribulation: I cry unto Him, and yet have tribulation. Only do thou
hold fast His ways, and when thou art in tribulation, He heareth thee.
But He is a Physician, and still hast thou something of putrefaction;
thou criest out, but still He cutteth, and taketh not away His Hand,
until He hath cut as much as pleaseth Him. For that Physician is cruel
who heareth a man, and spareth his wound and putrefaction. How do
mothers rub their children in the baths for their health. Do not the
little ones cry out in their hands? Are they then cruel because they
spare not, nor hearken unto their tears? Are they not full of
affection? And yet the children cry out, and are not spared. So our God
also is full of charity, but therefore seemeth He not to hear, that He
may spare and heal us for everlasting.
20. Haply say the wicked, I securely do evil, because the Eyes of the
Lord are not upon me: God attendeth to the righteous, me He seeth not,
and whatever I do, I do securely. Immediately added the Holy Spirit,
seeing the thoughts of men, and said, "But the Face of the Lord is
against them that do evil; to cut off the remembrance of them from the
earth" (ver. 16).
21. "The righteous cried, and the Lord heard them, and delivered them
out of all their troubles" (ver. 17). Righteous were the Three
Children; out of the furnace cried they unto the Lord, and in His
praises their flames cooled. The flame could not approach nor hurt the
innocent and righteous Children praising God, and He delivered them out
of the fire. [727] Some one saith, Lo, truly righteous were those who
were heard, as it is written, "The righteous cried, and the Lord heard
them, and delivered them out of all their troubles:" but I have cried,
and He delivereth me not; either I am not righteous, or I do not [728]
the things which He commandeth me, or haply He seeth me not. Fear not:
only do what He commandeth; and if He deliver thee not bodily, He will
deliver thee spiritually. For He who took out of the fire the Three
Children, did He take out of the fire the Maccabees? [729] Did not the
first sing hymns in the flames, these last in the flames expire? The
God of the Three Children, was not He the God also of the Maccabees?
The one He delivered, the other He delivered not. Nay, He delivered
both: but the Three Children He so delivered, that even the carnal were
confounded; but the Maccabees therefore He delivered not so, that those
who persecuted them should go into greater torments, while they thought
that they had overcome God's Martyrs. He delivered Peter, when the
Angel came unto him being in prison, and said, "Arise, and go forth,"
[730] and suddenly his chains were loosed, and he followed the Angel,
and He delivered him. Had Peter lost righteousness when He delivered
him not from the cross? Did He not deliver him then? Even then He
delivered him. Did his long life make him unrighteous? Haply He heard
him more at last than at first, when truly He delivered him out of all
his troubles. For when He first delivered him, how many things did he
suffer afterwards! For thither He sent him at last, where he could have
suffered no evil.
22. "The Lord is nigh unto them that have broken their heart; and
saveth such as be lowly in spirit" (ver. 18). God is High: let a
Christian be lowly. If he would that the Most High God draw nigh unto
him, let him be lowly. A great mystery, Brethren. God is above all:
thou raisest thyself, and touchest not Him: thou humblest thyself, and
He descendeth unto thee. "Many are the troubles of the righteous" (ver.
19): doth He say, "Therefore let Christians be righteous, therefore let
them hear My Word, that they may suffer no tribulation? He promiseth
not this; but saith, "Many are the troubles of the righteous." Rather,
if they be unrighteous they have fewer troubles, if righteous they have
many. But after few tribulations, or none, these shall come to
tribulation everlasting, whence they shall never be delivered: but the
righteous after many tribulations shall come to peace everlasting,
where they shall never suffer any evil. "Many are the tribulations of
the righteous: but the Lord delivereth him out of all."
23. "The Lord keepeth all their bones: not one of them shall be broken"
(ver. 20): this also, Brethren, let us not receive carnally. Bones are
the firm supports of the faithful. For as in flesh our bones give
firmness, so in the heart of a Christian it is faith that gives
firmness. [731] The patience then which is in faith, is as the bones of
the inner man: this is that which cannot be broken. "The Lord keepeth
all their bones: not one of them shall be broken." If of our Lord God
Jesus Christ he had said this, "The Lord keepeth all the bones of His
Son; not one of them shall be broken;" as is prefigured of Him also in
another place, when the lamb was spoken of that should be slain, and it
was said of it, "Neither shall ye break a bone thereof:" [732] then was
it fulfilled in the Lord, because when He hung upon the Cross, He
expired before they came to the Cross, and found His Body lifeless
already, and would not break His legs, that it might be fulfilled which
was written. [733] But He gave this promise to other Christians also,
"The Lord keepeth all their bones; not one of them shall be broken."
Therefore, Brethren, if we see any Saint suffer tribulation, and haply
either by a Physician so cut, or by some persecutor so mangled, that
his bones be broken; let us not say, This man was not righteous, for
this hath the Lord promised to His righteous, of whom He said, "The
Lord keepeth all their bones; not one of them shall be broken."
Wouldest thou see that He spoke of other bones, those which we called
the firm supports of faith, that is, patience and endurance in all
tribulations? For these are the bones which are not broken. Hear, and
see ye in the very Passion of our Lord, what I say. The Lord was in the
middle Crucified; near Him were two thieves: the one mocked, the other
believed: the one was condemned, the other justified: the one had his
punishment both in this world, and that which shall be, but unto the
other said the Lord, "Verily I say unto thee, To-day shalt thou be with
Me in Paradise;" [734] and yet those who came brake not the bones of
the Lord, but of the thieves they brake: as much were broken the bones
of the thief who blasphemed, as of the thief who believed. Where then
is that which is spoken, "The Lord keepeth all their bones; not one of
them shall be broken"? Lo, unto whom He said, "To-day shalt thou be
with Me in Paradise," could He keep all his bones? The Lord answereth
thee: Yea, I kept them: for the firm support of his faith could not be
broken by those blows whereby his legs were broken.
24. "The death of sinners is the worst" (ver. 21). Attend, Brethren,
for the sake of those things which I said. Truly Great is the Lord, and
His Mercy, truly Great is He who gave to us to eat His Body, wherein He
suffered such great things, and His Blood to drink. How regardeth He
them that think evil and say, "Such an one died ill, by beasts was he
devoured: he was not a righteous man, therefore he perished ill; for
else would he not have perished." Is he then righteous who dieth in his
own house and in his own bed? This then (sayest thou) it is whereat I
wonder; because I know the sins and the crimes of this same man, and
yet he died well; in his own house, within his own doors, with no
injury of travel, with none even in mature [735] age. Hearken, "The
death of sinners is worst." What seemeth to thee a good death, is worst
if thou couldest see within. Thou seest him outwardly lying on his bed,
dost thou see him inwardly carried to hell? Hearken, Brethren, and
learn from the Gospel what is the "worst death" of sinners. Were there
not two in that age, [736] a rich man who was clothed in purple and
fine linen, and fared sumptuously every day; another a poor man who lay
at his door full of sores, and the dogs came and licked his sores, and
he desired to be fed with the crumbs which fell from the rich man's
table? Now it came to pass that the poor man died (righteous was that
poor man), and was carried by Angels into Abraham's bosom. He who saw
his body lying at the rich man's door, and no man to bury it, what
haply said he? So die he who is my enemy; and whoever persecutes me, so
may I see him. His body is accursed with spitting, his wounds stink;
and yet in Abraham's bosom he resteth. [737] If we are Christians, let
us believe: if we believe not, Brethren, let none feign himself a
Christian. Faith bringeth us to the end. As the Lord spake these
things, so are they. Doth indeed an astrologer [738] speak unto thee,
and it is true, and doth Christ speak, and it is false? But by what
sort of death died the rich man? What sort of death must it not be in
purple and fine linen, how sumptuous, how pompous! What funeral
ceremonies were there! In what spices was that body buried! And yet
when he was in hell, being in torments, from the finger of that
despised poor man he desired one drop of water to be poured upon his
burning tongue, and obtained it not. Learn then what meaneth, "The
death of sinners is worst;" and ask not beds covered with costly
garments, and to have the flesh wrapped in many rich things, friends
exhibiting a show of lamentation, a household beating their breasts, a
crowd of attendants going before and following when the body is carried
out, marble and gilded memorials. For if ye ask those things, they
answer you what is false, that of many not light sinners, but
altogether wicked, the death is best, who have deserved to be so
lamented, so embalmed, so covered, so carried out, so entombed. But ask
the Gospel, and it will show to your faith the soul of the rich man
burning in torments, which was nothing profited by all those honours
and obsequies, which to his dead body the vanity of the living did
afford.
25. But because there are many kinds of sinners, and not to be a sinner
is difficult, or perhaps in this life impossible, he added immediately,
of what kind of sinners the death is worst. "And they that hate the
righteous one" (saith he) "shall perish." What righteous one, but "Him
that justifieth the ungodly"? [739] Whom, but our Lord Jesus Christ,
who is also "the propitiation for our sins"? [740] Who then hate Him,
have the worst death; because they die in their sins, who are not
through Him reconciled to our God. "For the Lord redeemeth the souls of
His servants." But according to the soul is death to be understood
either the worst or best, not according to bodily either dishonour, or
honours which men see. "And none of them which trust in Him shall
perish" (ver. 22); this is the manner of human righteousness, that
mortal life, however advanced, because without sin it cannot be, in
this perisheth not, while it trusteth in Him, in whom is remission of
sins. Amen.
__________________________________________________________________
[701] Lat. XXXIII.
[702] [1 Sam. xxi. 13. He follows the Septuagint, which differs from
the Vulgate.--C.]
[703] Matt. xxvi. 26.
[704] 1 Sam. xxi. 13.
[705] [This expression, so frequent in St. Augustin, refers to the
Epistle for the day. As the Law and Prophets in the synagogue, so also
the Evangelists and Apostles were read ceremonially in the Church.--C.]
[706] 1 Cor. i. 22-25.
[707] Ps. xxxii. 9.
[708] In idipsum.
[709] In unum. [In the Septuagint epi to auto, as in Acts ii. 1.--C.]
[710] Al. "by working."
[711] Matt. vi. 6.
[712] [He makes the same exhortation to a brother bishop who was
present: attendat, Sanctitas Vestra.--C.]
[713] Quaestionarium.
[714] Isa. lxv. 24.
[715] So our mss. and others, as Ed. Ben. says, magno consensu. Sicut
magnifice et divine secutus est. Ben. however reads, "so that ye may be
able magnificently and divinely to follow Him." Sic, ut magnifice et
divine se sequi possitis. See on Ps. xxii. Exp. ii. S: 16. "Gloriously
expressed." The word is magnifice.
[716] Immittet. LXX. parembalei, "shall encamp."
[717] Isa. ix. 6, LXX.; Mal. iii. 1.
[718] [See Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. i. p. 223, note 7; also vol. v. p.
628, note 2, and passim.--C.]
[719] Al. "when those wretched ones before king Achis said, How is it?"
[720] John vi. 53.
[721] John vi. 52.
[722] [Luther's doctrine, and even Calvin's, admits of this language.
Rhetorically, even Zwinglians might use the same. For the primitive
doctrine see Justin Martyr and Irenaeus, A.N.F. vol. i. p. 185, note 6,
and 528, note 4. Observe also the fragment (xiii.) on p. 570.--C.]
[723] E.V. "The young lions do lack," etc.
[724] John vi. 51.
[725] Matt. v. 6; Luke i. 53; 1 Sam. ii. 5.
[726] Most mss. "Think," imperative, as in the other clauses.
[727] Dan. iii. 28.
[728] Al. "and do not."
[729] 2 Macc. vii. 3.
[730] Acts xii. 7.
[731] ["Let us not receive carnally" is language which reflects light
upon ver. 8, p. 75, supra. Note also what is here said of faith.--C.]
[732] Exod. xii. 46.
[733] John xix. 33.
[734] Luke xxiii. 43.
[735] Al. "even at no premature."
[736] Al. "in this world."
[737] Luke xvi. 19-22.
[738] Mathematicus.
[739] Rom. iv. 5.
[740] 1 John ii. 2.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XXXV. [741]
1. ...The title of it causeth us no delay, for it is both brief, and to
be understood not difficult, especially to those nursed in the Church
of God. For so it is, "To David himself." The Psalm then is to David
himself: now David is interpreted, Strong in hand, or Desirable. The
Psalm then is to the Strong in hand, and Desirable, to Him who for us
hath overcome death, who unto us hath promised life: for in this is He
Strong in hand, that He hath overcome death for us; in this is He
Desirable, that He hath promised unto us life eternal. For what
stronger than that Hand which touched the bier, and he that was dead
rose up? [742] What stronger than that Hand which overcame the world,
not armed with steel, but pierced with wood? Or what more desirable
than He, whom not having seen, the Martyrs wished even to die, that
they might be worthy to come unto Him? Therefore is the Psalm unto Him:
to Him let our heart, to Him our tongue sing worthily: if yet Himself
shall deign to give somewhat to sing....
2. "Judge Thou, O Lord" (saith he), "them that hurt me, and fight Thou
against them that fight against me" (ver. 1). "If God be for us, who
can be against us?" [743] And whereby doth God this for us? "Take hold"
(saith he) "of arms and shield, and rise up to my help" (ver. 2). A
great spectacle is it, to see God armed for thee. And what is His
Shield, what are His Arms? "Lord," in another place saith the man who
here also speaketh, "as with the shield of Thy good-will hast Thou
compassed us." [744] But His Arms, wherewith He may not only us defend,
but also strike His enemies, if we have well profited, shall we
ourselves be. For as we from Him have this, that we be armed, so is He
armed from us. But He is armed from those whom He hath made, we are
armed with those things which we have received from Him who made us.
These our arms the Apostle in a certain place calleth, "The shield of
Faith, the helmet of Salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is
the Word of God." [745] He hath armed us with such arms as ye have
heard, arms admirable, and unconquered, insuperable and shining;
spiritual truly and invisible, because we have to fight also against
invisible enemies. If thou seest thine enemy, let thine arms be seen.
We are armed with faith in those things which we see not, and we
overthrow enemies whom we see not....
3. "Pour forth the weapon, and stop the way against them that persecute
me" (ver. 3). Who are they that persecute thee? Haply thy neighbour, or
he whom thou hast offended, or to whom thou hast done wrong, or who
would take away what is thine, or against whom thou preachest the
truth, or whose sin thou rebukest, or whom living ill by thy well
living thou offendest. There are indeed even these enemies to us, and
they persecute us: but other enemies we are taught to know, those
against whom we fight invisibly, of whom the Apostle warneth us,
saying, "We wrestle not against flesh and blood," [746] that is,
against men; not against those whom ye see, but against those whom ye
see not; "against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of
the world, of this darkness."..."The whole world lieth in wickedness;"
[747] therefore the Apostle explained of what world they were rulers,
he said, "of this darkness." The rulers of this world, I say, are the
rulers of this darkness....
4. And what follows? "Let them be confounded and put to shame, that
seek after my soul" (ver. 4): for to this end they seek after it, to
destroy it. For I would that they would seek it for good! for in
another Psalm he blameth this in men, that there was none who would
seek after his soul: "Refuge failed me: there was none that would seek
after my soul." [748] Who is this that saith, "There was none that
would seek after my soul"? [749] Is it haply He, of whom so long before
it was predicted, "They pierced My Hands and My Feet, they numbered all
My Bones, they stared and looked upon Me, they have parted My Garments
among them, and cast lots for My Vesture"? [750] Now all these things
were done before their eyes, and there was none who would seek after
His Soul....
5. ...Many have been confounded to their health: many, put to shame,
have passed over from the persecution of Christ to the society of His
members with devoted piety; and this would not have been, had they not
been confounded and put to shame. Therefore he wished well to
them....Let them not go before, but follow; let them not give counsel,
but take it. For Peter would go before the Lord, when the Lord spake of
His future Passion: he would to Him as it were give counsel for His
health. The sick man to the Saviour give counsel for His health! And
what said he to the Lord, affirming that His future Passion? "Be it far
from Thee, Lord. Be gracious to Thyself. This shall not be to Thee." He
would go before that the Lord might follow; and what said He? "Get thee
behind Me, Satan." [751] By going before thou art Satan, by following
thou wilt be a disciple. The same then is said to these also, "Let them
be turned back and brought to confusion that think evil against me."
For when they have begun to follow after, now they will not think evil
against me, but desire my good.
6. What of others? For all are not so conquered as to be converted and
believe: many continue in obstinacy, many preserve in heart the spirit
of going before, and if they exert it not, yet they labour with it, and
finding opportunity bring it forth. Of such, what followeth? "Let them
be as dust before the wind" (ver. 5). "Not so are the ungodly, not so;
but as the dust which the wind driveth away from the face of the
earth." [752] The wind is temptation; the dust are the ungodly. When
temptation cometh, the dust is raised, it neither standeth nor
resisteth. "Let them be as dust before the wind, and let the Angel of
the Lord trouble them." "Let their way be darkness and slipping" (ver.
6). A horrible way! Darkness alone who feareth not? A slippery way
alone who avoids not? In a dark and slippery way how shalt thou go?
where set foot? These two ills are the great punishments of men:
darkness, ignorance; a slippery way, luxury. "And let the Angel of the
Lord persecute them;" that they be not able to stand. For any one in a
dark and slippery way, when he seeth that if he move his foot he will
fall, and there is no light before his feet, haply resolveth to wait
until light come; but here is the Angel of the Lord persecuting them.
These things he predicted would come upon them, not as though he wished
them to happen. Although the Prophet in the Spirit of God so speaketh
these things, even as God doth the same, with sure judgment, with a
judgment good, righteous, holy, tranquil; not moved with wrath, not
with bitter jealousy, not with desire of wreaking enmities, but of
punishing wickedness with righteousness; nevertheless, it is a
prophecy.
7. But wherefore these so great evils? By what desert? Hear by what
desert. "For without cause have they hid for me the corruption of their
trap" (ver. 7). For Him that is our Head, observe, the Jews did this:
they hid the corruption of their trap. For whom hid they their trap?
For Him who saw the hearts of those that hid. But yet was He among them
like one ignorant, as though He were deceived, whereas they were in
that deceived, that they thought Him to be deceived. For therefore was
He as though deceived, living among them, because we among such as they
were so to live, as to be without doubt deceived. He saw His betrayer,
and chose him the more to a necessary work. By his evil He wrought a
great good: and yet among the twelve was he chosen, lest even the small
number of twelve should be without one evil. This was an example of
patience to us, because it was necessary that we should live among the
evil: it was necessary that we should endure the evil, either knowing
them or knowing them not: an example of patience He gave thee lest thou
shouldest fail, when thou hast begun to live among the evil. And
because that School of Christ in the twelve failed not, how much more
ought we to be firm, when in the great Church is fulfilled what was
predicted of the mixture of the evil....
8. But yet what is to be done? "Without a cause have they hid for me
the corruption of their trap." What meaneth, "Without a cause"? I have
done them no evil, I have hurt them not at all. "Vainly have they
reviled my soul." What is, "Vainly"? Speaking falsely, proving nothing.
"Let a trap come upon them which they know not of" (ver. 8). A
magnificent retribution, nothing more just! They have hidden a trap
that I might know not: let a trap come upon them which they know not
of. For I know of their trap. But what trap is coming upon them? That
which they know not of. Let us hear, lest haply he speak of that. "Let
a trap come upon them, which they know not of." Perhaps that is one
which they hid for him, that another which shall come upon themselves.
Not so: but what? "The wicked shall be holden with the cords of his own
sins." [753] Thereby are they deceived, whereby they would deceive.
Thence shall come mischief to them, whence they endeavoured mischief.
For it follows, "And let the net which they have hidden catch
themselves, and let them fall into their own trap." As if any one
should prepare a cup of poison for another, and forgetting should drink
it up himself: or as if one should dig a pit, that his enemy might fall
thereinto in the darkness and himself forgetting what he had dug,
should first walk that way, and fall into it....
9. This then for the wicked that would hurt me: what for me? "But my
soul shall rejoice in the Lord" (ver. 9); as in Him from whom it hath
heard, "I am thy salvation;" as not seeking other riches from without;
as not seeking to abound in pleasures and good things of earth; but
loving freely the true Spouse, not from Him wishing to receive aught
that may delight, but Him alone proposing to itself, by whom it may be
delighted. For what better than God will be given unto me? God loveth
me: God loveth thee. See He hath proposed to thee, Ask what thou wilt.
[754] If the emperor should say to thee, Ask what thou wilt, what
commands, [755] what dignities, [756] wouldest thou burst forth with!
What great things wouldest thou propose to thyself, both to receive and
to bestow! When God saith unto thee, Ask what thou wilt, what wilt thou
ask? empty thy mind, exert thy avarice, stretch forward as far as
possible, and enlarge thy desire: it is not any one, but Almighty God
that said, Ask what thou wilt. If of possessions thou art a lover, thou
wilt desire the whole earth, that all who are born may be thy
husbandmen, or thy slaves. And what when thou hast possessed the whole
earth? Thou wilt ask the sea, in which yet thou canst not live. In this
greediness the fishes will have the better of thee. But perhaps thou
wilt possess the islands. Pass over these also; ask the air although
thou canst not fly; stretch thy desire even unto the heavens, call
thine own the sun, the moon, and the stars, because He who made all
said, Ask what thou wilt: yet nothing wilt thou find more precious,
nothing wilt thou find better, than Himself who made all things. Him
seek, who made all things, and in Him and from Him shalt thou have all
things which He made. All things are precious, because all are
beautiful; but what more beautiful than He? Strong are they; but what
stronger than He? And nothing would He give thee rather than Himself.
If aught better thou hast found, ask it. If thou ask aught else, thou
wilt do wrong to Him, and harm to thyself, by preferring to Him that
which He made, when He would give to thee Himself who made....
"But my soul shall be joyful in the Lord; it shall rejoice in His
salvation." The salvation of God is Christ: "For mine eyes have seen
Thy salvation." [757]
10. "All my bones shall say, Lord, who is like unto Thee" (ver. 10).
Who can speak anything worthily of these words? I think them only to be
pronounced, not to be expounded. Why seekest thou this or that? What is
like unto thy Lord? Him hast thou before thee. "The unrighteous have
declared unto me delights, but not after Thy law, O Lord!" [758]
Persecutors have been who have said, Worship Saturn, worship Mercury. I
worship not idols (saith he): "Lord, who is like unto Thee? They have
eyes, and see not; ears have they, but they hear not." [759] "Lord, who
is like unto Thee," who hast made the eye to see, the ear to hear? But
I (saith he) worship not idols, for them a workman made. Worship a tree
or mountain; did a workman make them also? Here too, Lord, who is like
unto Thee? Earthly things are shown unto me; Thou art Creator of the
earth. And from these haply they turn to the higher creation, and say
to me, Worship the Moon, worship this Sun, who with his light, as a
great lamp in the Heavens, maketh the day. Here also I plainly say,
"Lord, who is like unto Thee?" The Moon and the Stars Thou hast made,
the Sun to rule the day hast Thou kindled, the Heavens hast Thou framed
together. There are many invisible things better. But haply here also
it is said to me, Worship Angels, adore Angels. And here also will I
say, "Lord, who is like unto Thee?" Even the Angels Thou hast created.
The Angels are nothing, but by seeing Thee. It is better with them to
possess Thee, than by worshipping them to fall from Thee.
11. O Body of Christ, Holy Church, let all thy bones say, "Lord, who is
like unto thee?" And if the flesh under persecution hath fallen away,
let the bones say, "Lord, who is like unto Thee?" For of the righteous
it is said, "The Lord keepeth all their bones; not one of them shall be
broken." [760] Of how many righteous have the bones under persecution
been broken? Finally, "The just shall live by faith," [761] and "Christ
justifieth the ungodly." [762] But how justifieth He any except
believing and confessing? "For with the heart man believeth unto
righteousness, and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation."
[763] Therefore also that thief, although from His theft led to the
judge, and from the judge to the cross, yet on the very cross was
justified: with his heart he believed, with his mouth he confessed. For
neither to a man unrighteous and not already justified, would the Lord
have said, "To-day shalt thou be with Me in Paradise," [764] and yet
his bones were broken. For when they came to take down the bodies, by
reason of the approaching Sabbath, the Lord was found already dead, and
His Bones were not broken. [765] But of those that yet lived, that they
might be taken down, the legs were broken, that so from this pain
having died, they might be buried. Were then of the one thief, who
persisted in his ungodliness on the cross, the bones broken, and not
also of the other who with his heart believed, and with his mouth made
confession unto salvation? Where then is that which was said, "The Lord
keepeth all his bones; not one of them shall be broken;" except that in
the Body of the Lord the name of bones is given to all the righteous,
the firm in heart, the strong, yielding to no persecutions, no
temptations, so as to consent unto evil?...
12. "Which deliverest the poor from him that is too strong for him;
yea, the poor and needy from him that spoileth him."...Who that
deliverest, but He who is Strong in hand? Even that David shall deliver
the poor from him that is too strong for him. For the devil was too
strong for thee, and held thee, because he conquered thee, when thou
consentedst unto him. But what hath the Strong in hand done? "No man
entereth into a strong man's house, to spoil his goods, except he first
bind the strong man." [766] By His own Power, most Holy, most
Magnificent, hath He bound the devil by pouring forth the weapon to
stop the way against him, that He may deliver the poor and needy, to
whom there was no helper. [767] For who is thy helper but the Lord to
whom thou sayest, "O Lord, My Strength, and My Redeemer." [768] If thou
wilt presume of thy own strength, thereby wilt thou fall, whereof thou
hast presumed: if of another's, he would lord it over thee, not succour
thee. He then alone is to be sought Who hath redeemed them, and made
them free, and hath given His Blood to purchase them, and of His
servants hath made them His Brethren....
13. Let then our Head say, "False witnesses did rise up, they laid to
My charge things that I knew not" (ver. 11). But let us say to our
Head, Lord, what knewest Thou not? Didst Thou indeed know not anything?
Didst Thou not know the hearts of them that charged Thee? Didst Thou
not foresee their deceits? Didst Thou not give Thyself into their hands
knowingly? Hadst Thou not come that Thou mightest suffer by them? What
then knewest Thou not? He knew not sin, and thereby He knew not sin,
not by not judging, but by not committing. There are phrases of this
kind also in daily use, as when thou sayest of any one, He knoweth not
to stand, that is, he doth not stand; and, He knoweth not to do good,
because he doth not good; and, He knoweth not to do ill, because he
doth not ill....What knew not Christ so much, as to blaspheme? Thereof
was He called in question by His persecutors, and because He spake
truth, He was judged to have spoken blasphemy. [769] But by whom? By
them of whom it followeth, "They rewarded Me evil for good, and
barrenness to My Soul" (ver. 12). I gave unto them fruitfulness, they
rewarded Me barrenness; I gave life, they death; I honour, they
dishonour; I medicine, they wounds; and in all these which they
rewarded Me, was truly barrenness. This barrenness in the tree He
cursed, when seeking fruit He found none. [770] Leaves there were, and
fruit there was not: words there were, and deeds there were not. See of
words abundance, and of deeds barrenness. "Thou that preachest a man
should not steal, stealest: thou that sayest a man should not commit
adultery, committest adultery." [771] Such were they who charged Christ
with things that He knew not.
14. "But I, when they troubled me, clothed myself with sackcloth, and
humbled my soul with fasting, and my prayer shall return into mine own
bosom" (ver. 13)...Brethren, if for some little space with pious
curiosity we lift the veil, and search with the intent eye of the heart
the inner part of this Scripture, we find that even this the Lord did.
Sackcloth, haply He calleth His mortal flesh. Wherefore Sackcloth? For
the likeness of sinful flesh. For the Apostle saith, "God sent His Son
in the likeness of sinful flesh, that through sin He might condemn sin
in the flesh:" [772] that is, He clothed His Own Son with sackcloth,
that through sackcloth [773] He might condemn the goats. Not that there
was sin, I say not in the Word of God, but not even in that Holy Soul
and Mind of a Man, which the Word and Wisdom of God had so joined to
Himself as to be One Person. Nay, nor even in His very Body was any
sin, but the likeness of sinful flesh there was in the Lord; because
death is not but by sin, [774] and surely that Body was mortal. For had
It not been mortal, It had not died; had It not died, It had not risen
again; had It not risen again, It had not showed us an example of
eternal life. So then death, which is caused by sin, is called sin; as
we say the Greek tongue, the Latin tongue, meaning not the very member
of flesh, but that which is done by the member of flesh. For the tongue
in our members is one among others, as the eyes, nose, ears, and the
rest: but the Greek tongue is Greek words, not that the tongue is
words, but that words are by the tongue....So then the sin of the Lord
is that which was caused by sin; because He assumed flesh, of the same
lump which had deserved death by sin. For to speak more briefly, Mary
who was of Adam died for sin, [775] Adam died for sin, and the Flesh of
the Lord which was of Mary died to put away sin. With this sackcloth
the Lord clothed Himself, and therefore was He not known, because He
lay hid under sackcloth. "When they," saith He, "troubled Me, I clothed
Myself with sackcloth:" that is, they raged, I lay hid. For had He not
willed to lie hid neither could He have died, since in one moment of
time one drop only of His Power, if indeed it is to be called a drop,
He put forth, when they wished to seize Him, and at His one question,
"Whom seek ye?" they all went back and fell to the ground. [776] Such
power could He not have humbled in passion, if He had not lain hid
under sackcloth.
15. Again, if we have understood the sackcloth, how understand we the
fasting? Wished Christ to eat, when He sought fruit on the tree, [777]
and if He had found, would He have eaten? Wished Christ to drink, when
He said to the woman of Samaria, "Give Me to drink"? [778] when He said
on the Cross, "I thirst"? [779] For what hungered, for what thirsted
Christ, but our good works? Because in them that crucified and
persecuted Him He had found no good works, He fasted; for they rewarded
barrenness to His soul. For what a fast was His, who found barely one
thief, whom on the Cross He might taste! For the Apostles had fled, and
had hidden themselves in the multitude. And even Peter, who even to the
death of his Lord had promised to persevere, had now thrice denied Him,
had now wept, and still lay hid in the multitude, still feared lest He
should be known. Lastly, having seen Him dead, all of them despaired of
their own safety and despairing He found them, after His resurrection,
and when He spake with them, found them grieving and mourning, no
longer hoping anything....In great fasting had the Lord remained, had
He not refreshed them that He might feed on them. For He refreshed
them, He comforted them, He confirmed them, and into His Own Body
converted them. In this manner then was our Lord also in fasting.
16. "And My prayer shall return into Mine Own Bosom." In the bosom of
this verse is plainly a great depth, and may the Lord grant that it be
fathomable by us. For in the "bosom" a secret is understood. And we
ourselves, Brethren, are here well admonished to pray within our own
bosom, where God seeth, where God heareth, where no human eye
penetrateth, where none seeth but He who succoureth; where Susanna
prayed, and her voice, though it was not heard by men, yet by God was
heard. [780] ...We read also that in the mount Jesus prayed alone,
[781] we read that He passed the night in prayer, [782] even at the
time of His Passion. [783] What then? "And My prayer shall return into
Mine Own Bosom." I know not what better to understand concerning the
Lord: take meanwhile what now occurs; [784] perhaps something better
will occur hereafter, either to me or to some better: "My prayer shall
return into Mine Own Bosom:" this I understand to be said, because in
His Own Bosom He had the Father. "For God was in Christ reconciling the
world unto Himself." [785] In Himself He had Him to whom He prayed. He
was not far from Him, for Himself had said, "I am in the Father, and
the Father in Me." [786] But because prayer rather belongeth to very
Man (for according as Christ is the Word, He prayeth not, but heareth
prayer; and seeketh not to be succoured for Himself, but with the
Father succoureth all): what is, "My prayer shall return into Mine Own
Bosom," but in Me My Manhood invoketh in Me My Godhead.
17. "As a Neighbour, as our Brother, so I pleased Him: as one mourning
and sorrowful, so I humbled myself" (ver. 14). Now looketh He back to
His Own Body: let us now look to this. When we rejoice in prayer, when
our mind is calmed, not by the world's prosperity, but by the light of
Truth: (who perceiveth this light, knoweth what I say, and he seeth and
acknowledgeth what is said, "As a Neighbour, as our Brother, so I
pleased Him"): even then our soul pleaseth God, not placed afar off,
for, "In Him," saith one, "we live and move and have our being," [787]
but as a Brother, as a Neighbour, as a Friend. But if it be not such
that it can so rejoice, so shine, so approach, so cleave unto Him, and
seeth itself far off thence, then let it do what followeth, "As one
mourning and sorrowful, so I humbled Myself. As our Brother, so I
pleased Him," said He, drawing near; "As one mourning and sorrowful, so
I humbled Myself," said He, removed and set afar off....Did not Peter
draw near, when he said, "Thou art the Christ, the Son of the Living
God"? And yet the same man became afar off by saying, "Be it far from
Thee, Lord; this shall not be unto Thee." Lastly, what said He, his
Neighbour, as it were, to him drawing near? "Blessed art thou, Simon,
Barjona." To him afar off, as it were, and unlike, what said He? "Get
thee behind Me, Satan." [788] To him drawing near, "Flesh and blood,"
saith He, "hath not revealed it unto thee, but My Father, which is in
Heaven." His Light is shed over thee, in His Light thou shinest. But
when having become afar off, he spake against the Lord's Passion, which
should be for our Salvation, "Thou savourest not," said He, "the things
that be of God, but those that be of men." One rightly placing together
both of these saith in a certain Psalm, "I said in my ecstasy, I am
cast off from before Thine Eyes." [789] In my ecstasy, would he not
have said, had he not drawn near; for ecstasy is the transporting of
the mind. He poured over himself his own soul, and drew near unto God;
and through some cloud and weight of the flesh being again cast down to
earth, and recollecting where he had been, and seeing where he was, he
said, "I am cast off from before Thine Eyes." This then, "As a
Neighbour, as our Brother, so I pleased Him," may He grant to be done
in us; but when that is not, let even this be done, "As one mourning
and sorrowful, so I humbled myself."
18. "And against Me they rejoiced, and gathered themselves together"
[790] (ver. 15), against Me only: they rejoicing, I sorrowful. But we
heard just now in the Gospel, "Blessed are they that mourn." [791] If
they are blessed that mourn, miserable are they that laugh. "Against Me
they rejoiced, and gathered themselves together: scourges were gathered
together against Me, and they knew not." [792] Because they laid to My
charge things that I knew not, they also knew not Whom they charged.
19. "They tempted Me, and mocked Me with mocking" [793] (ver. 16). That
is, they derided Me, they insulted Me; this of the Head, this of the
Body. Consider, Brethren, the glory of the Church which now is;
remember its past dishonours, remember how once were Christians
everywhere put to flight, and wherever found, mocked, beaten, slain,
exposed to beasts, burned, men rejoicing against them. As it was to the
Head, so it is also to the Body. For as it was to the Lord on the
Cross, so has it been to His Body in all that persecution which was
made but now: nor even now cease the persecutions of the same. Wherever
men find a Christian, they are wont to insult, to persecute, to deride
him, to call him dull, senseless, of no spirit, of no knowledge. Do
they what they will, Christ is in Heaven: do they what they will, He
hath honoured His punishment, already hath He fixed His Cross in the
foreheads of all; the ungodly is permitted to insult, to rage he is not
permitted; but yet from that which the tongue uttereth, is understood
what he beareth in his heart: "They gnashed upon Me with their teeth."
20. "Lord, when wilt Thou look on? Rescue My Soul from their deceits,
My Darling from the lions" (ver. 17). For to us the time is slow; and
in our person is this said, "When wilt Thou look on?" that is, when
shall we see vengeance upon those who insult us? When shall the Judge,
overcome by weariness, hear the widow? [794] But our Judge, not from
weariness, but from love, delayeth our salvation; from reason, not from
need; not that He could not even now succour us, but that the number of
us all may be filled up even to the end. And yet out of our desire,
what do we say? "Lord, when wilt Thou look on? Rescue My Soul from
their deceits, My Darling from the lions:" that is, My Church from
raging powers.
21. Lastly, wouldest thou know what is that Darling? Read the words
following: "I will confess unto Thee, O Lord, in the great
Congregation; in a weighty [795] people will I praise Thee" (ver. 18).
Truly saith He, "I will confess unto Thee:" for confession is made in
all the multitude, but not in all is God praised: the whole multitude
heareth our confession, [796] but not in all the multitude is the
praise of God. For in all the whole multitude, that is, in the Church
which is spread abroad in the whole world, is chaff, and wheat: the
chaff flieth, the wheat remaineth; therefore, "in a weighty people will
I praise Thee." In a weighty people, which the wind of temptation
carries not away, in such is God praised. For in the chaff He is ever
blasphemed....
22. "Let not them that are Mine enemies wrongfully rejoice over Me:"
for they rejoice over Me because of My chaff. "Who hate Me without a
cause;" that is, whom I never hurt; "winking with their eyes" (ver.
19): that is, pretending hypocrites, "For they spake indeed peace to
Me" (ver. 20). What is, "winking with their eyes"? Declaring by their
looks, what they carry not in their heart. And who are these "winking
with their eyes"? "For they spake indeed peace to Me; and with wrath
devised craftily." "Yea they opened their mouth wide against Me" (ver.
21). First winking with their eyes, those lions sought to ravish and
devour; first fawning they spake peace, and then with wrath devised
craftily. What peace spake they? "Master, we know that Thou acceptest
not man's person, and teachest the way of God in truth. Is it lawful to
give tribute unto Caesar, or not?" They spake indeed peace unto Me.
What then? Didst not Thou know them, and deceived they Thee, winking
with their eyes? Truly He knew them; therefore said He, "Why tempt ye
Me, ye hypocrites?" [797] Afterward, "they opened their mouth wide
against Me," crying, "Crucify Him, Crucify Him! [798] and said, Aha,
Aha, our eyes have seen it." This, when they insulted Him, "Aha, Aha,
Prophesy unto us, Thou Christ." [799] As their peace was pretended when
they tempted Him concerning the money, so now insulting was their
praise. "They said, Aha, Aha, our eyes have seen it" (ver. 21): that
is, Thy deeds, Thy miracles. This Man is the Christ. "If He be the
Christ, let Him come down from the Cross, and we will believe Him. He
saved others, Himself He cannot save." [800] "Our eyes have seen it."
This is all whereof He boasted Himself, when "He called Himself the Son
of God." [801] But the Lord was hanging patient upon the Cross: His
power had He not lost, but He showed His patience. For what great thing
was it for Him to come down from the Cross, who could afterward rise
again from the sepulchre? But He seems to have yielded to His
insulters; and this, beloved, that having risen again He should show
Himself to His own, and not to them, and this is a great mystery; for
His resurrection signified the New Life, but the New Life is known to
His friends, not to His enemies.
23. "This Thou hast seen, O Lord; keep not silence" (ver. 22). What is,
"keep not silence"? Judge Thou. For of judgment is it said in a certain
place, [802] "I have kept silence; shall I keep silence for ever?" And
of the delaying of judgment it is said to the sinner, "These things
hast thou done, and I kept silence;" "Thou thoughtest that I was
altogether such an one as thyself." [803] How keepeth He silence, who
speaketh by the Prophets, who speaketh with His own mouth in the
Gospel, who speaketh by the Evangelists, who speaketh by us, when we
speak the truth? What then? He keepeth silence from judgment, not from
precept, not from doctrine. But this His judgment the Prophet in a
manner invoketh, and predicteth: "Thou hast seen, O Lord: keep not
silence;" that is, Thou wilt not keep silence, needs must that Thou
wilt judge. "O Lord, be not far from Me." Until Thy judgment come, be
not far from Me, as Thou hast promised, "Lo, I am with you alway, even
unto the end of the world."
24. "Arise, Lord, and attend to My judgment" (ver. 23). To what
judgment? That Thou art in tribulation; that Thou art tormented with
labours and pains? Do not even many wicked men suffer the same? To what
judgment? Therefore art Thou righteous, because Thou sufferest these
things? No: but what? "To My judgment." What followeth? "Attend to My
judgment; even to My cause, My God, and My Lord." Not to My punishment,
but to My cause: not to that which the robber hath in common with Me,
but to that whereof is said, "Blessed are they which are persecuted for
righteousness' sake." [804] For this cause is distinguished. For
punishment is equal to good and bad. Therefore Martyrs, not the
punishment, but the cause maketh, for if punishment made Martyrs, all
the mines would be full of Martyrs, every chain would drag Martyrs, all
that are executed with the sword would be crowned. Therefore let the
cause be distinguished; let none say, because I suffer, I am righteous.
Because He who first suffered, suffered for righteousness' sake,
therefore He added a great exception, "Blessed are they which are
persecuted for righteousness' sake." For many having a good cause do
persecution, and many having a bad cause suffer persecution. For if
persecution could not be done rightly, it had not been said in a
certain Psalm, "Whoso privily slandereth his neighbour, him did I
persecute." [805] ...Let none then say, I suffer persecution: let him
not sift the punishment, but prove the cause: lest if he prove not the
cause, he be numbered with the ungodly. Therefore how watchfully, how
excellently hath This Man recommended Himself, "O Lord, attend to My
judgment," not to My punishments; "even to My cause, My God, and My
Lord."
25. "Judge me, O Lord, according to My righteousness" (ver. 24); that
is, attend to My cause. Not according to My punishment, but "according
to My righteousness, O Lord, My God," that is, according to this judge
Thou Me. "And let them not rejoice over Me;" that is, Mine enemies.
26. "Let them not say in their heart, Aha, aha, so would we have it"
(ver. 25); that is, We have done what we could, [806] we have slain
him, we have taken him away. "Let them not say:" show them that they
have done nothing. "Let them not say, We have swallowed him up." Whence
say those Martyrs, "If the Lord had not been on our side, then they had
swallowed us up quick." [807] What is, "had swallowed us up"? Had
passed into their own body. For that thou swallowest up, which thou
passest into thy own body. The world would swallow thee up; swallow
thou the world, pass it into thy own body: kill and eat. As it was said
to Peter, "Kill and eat;" [808] do thou kill in them what they are,
make them what thou art. But if they on the other hand persuade thee to
ungodliness, thou art swallowed up by them. Not when they persecute
thee art thou swallowed up by them, but when they persuade thee to be
what they are. "Let them not say, We have swallowed him up." Do thou
swallow up the body of Pagans. Why the body of Pagans? It would swallow
thee up. Do thou to it, what it would to thee. Therefore perhaps that
calf, being ground to powder, was cast into the water and given to the
children of Israel to drink, [809] that so the body of ungodliness
might be swallowed up by Israel. "Let them be ashamed and brought to
confusion together that rejoice at mine hurt: let them be clothed with
shame and dishonour" (ver. 26); so that we may swallow up them ashamed
and brought to confusion. "Who speak evil against me:" let them be
ashamed, let them be brought to confusion.
27. What sayest thou now, the Head with the Members? "Let them shout
for joy and be glad that favour My righteous cause:" who cleave to My
Body. Yea, let them say "continually, Let the Lord be magnified, which
hath pleasure in the prosperity of His servant" (ver. 27). "And my
tongue shall speak of Thy righteousness, and of Thy praise all the day
long" (ver. 28). And whose tongue endureth to speak the praise of God
all the day long? See now I have made a discourse something longer; ye
are wearied. Who endureth to praise God all the day long? I will
suggest a remedy, whereby thou mayest praise God all the day long if
thou wilt. Whatever thou dost, do well, and thou hast praised God. When
thou singest an hymn, thou praisest God, but what doth thy tongue,
unless thy heart also praise Him? Hast thou ceased from singing hymns,
and departed, that thou mayest refresh thyself? Be not drunken, and
thou hast praised God. Dost thou go away to sleep? Rise not to do evil,
and thou hast praised God. Dost thou transact business? Do no wrong,
and thou hast praised God. Dost thou till thy field? Raise not strife,
and thou hast praised God. In the innocency of thy works prepare
thyself to praise God all the day long.
__________________________________________________________________
[741] Lat. XXXIV. Delivered upon the occasion of some Council. [He
begins by addressing his "fellow-bishops."--C.]
[742] Luke vii. 14.
[743] Rom. viii. 31.
[744] Ps. v. 12.
[745] Eph. vi. 16, 17.
[746] Eph. vi. 12.
[747] 1 John v. 19. [Gr. "in the Wicked One."--C.]
[748] Ps. cxlii. 4.
[749] "Who is," etc. Most mss. read, "That is, who asks, Who is that
who is crucified? There is no one that saith, It is haply He," etc.
[750] Ps. xxii. 16-18.
[751] Matt. xvi. 22, 23.
[752] Ps. i. 4.
[753] Prov. v. 22.
[754] Matt. vii. 7.
[755] Tribunatus.
[756] Comitivas. [Part Second begins with ver. 11.--C.]
[757] Luke ii. 30.
[758] Ps. cxix. 85.
[759] Ps. cxv. 5, 6.
[760] Ps. xxxiv. 20.
[761] Rom. i. 17. [P. 78, supra.--C.]
[762] Rom. iv. 5.
[763] Rom. x. 10.
[764] Luke xxiii. 43.
[765] John xix. 33.
[766] Matt. xii. 29.
[767] Ps. lxxii. 12.
[768] Ps. xix. 14.
[769] Matt. xxvi. 65.
[770] Matt. xxi. 19.
[771] Rom. ii. 21, 22.
[772] Rom. viii. 3.
[773] Lat. de cilicio; i.e., sackcloth made of goats' hair. [Acts xvii.
3 and xxi. 39.--C.] Compare Matt. xxv. 32, 33.
[774] Rom. v. 12.
[775] ["All, without one exception, were dead in sins." See (City of
God, book xx. cap. 6) vol. ii. p. 425, supra. Mary is not excepted by
any of the Fathers; and the Latin Fathers, the last of whom is St.
Bernard, unanimously ascribe to Christ the only immaculate
conception.--C.]
[776] John xviii. 4, 6.
[777] Mark xi. 13.
[778] John iv. 7.
[779] John xix. 28. [On assimilation, compare p. 86, n. 2.--C.]
[780] Susanna i. 35, 44.
[781] Matt. xiv. 23.
[782] Luke vi. 12.
[783] Matt. xxvi. 36; Mark xiv. 35; Luke xxii. 41.
[784] [A significant hint of the improvised character of many of the
saint's expositions.--C.]
[785] 2 Cor. v. 19.
[786] John xiv. 10.
[787] Acts xvii. 28.
[788] Matt. xvi. 16-23.
[789] Ps. xxxii. 22. [See p. 70, supra.]
[790] E.V. "But in mine adversity they rejoiced and gathered themselves
together."
[791] Matt. v. 5.
[792] E.V. "Yea, the abjects gathered themselves together against me,
and I knew it not."
[793] E.V. "They did tear Me and ceased not:" 16. "With hypocritical
mockers in feasts, they gnashed upon Me with their teeth." The words
here omitted are mentioned on Ps. lvii.--Ben.
[794] Luke xviii. 3.
[795] Latin, "in populo gravi."
[796] [The recitation of the Creed, perhaps; but in the ancient Church
the confession of sin, also, was public. Bingham, b. xviii. cap.
3.--C.]
[797] Matt. xxii. 16-18.
[798] Luke xxiii. 21.
[799] Matt. xxvi. 68.
[800] Matt. xxvii. 42; Luke xxiii. 35.
[801] John xix. 7.
[802] Isa. xlii. 14, Sept.
[803] Ps. l. 21.
[804] Matt. v. 10.
[805] Ps. ci. 5.
[806] Al. "We have done it, we have prevailed" (potuimus).
[807] Ps. cxxiv. 1-3.
[808] Acts x. 13.
[809] Exod. xxxii. 20.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XXXVI. [810]
1. ..."The ungodly hath said in himself that he will sin: there is no
fear of God before his eyes" (ver. 1). Not of one man, but of a race of
ungodly men he speaketh, who fight against their own selves, by not
understanding, that so they may live well; not because they cannot, but
because they will not. For it is one thing, when one endeavours to
understand some thing, and through infirmity of flesh cannot; as saith
the Scripture [811] in a certain place, "For the corruptible body
presseth down the soul, and the earthly tabernacle weigheth down the
mind that museth upon many things;" but another when the human heart
acts mischievously against itself, so that what it could understand, if
it had but good will thereto, it understandeth not, not because it is
difficult, but because the will is contrary. But so it is when men love
their own sins, and hate God's Commandments. For the Word of God is thy
adversary, if thou be a friend to thy ungodliness; but if thou art an
adversary to thy ungodliness, the Word of God is thy friend, as well as
the adversary of thy ungodliness....
2. "For he hath wrought deceitfully in His sight" (ver. 2). In whose
sight? In His, whose fear was not before the eyes of him that did work
deceitfully. "To find out his iniquity, and hate it." He wrought so as
not to find it. For there are men who as it were endeavour to seek out
their iniquity, and fear to find it; because if they should find it, it
is said to them, Depart from it: this thou didst before thou knewest;
thou didst iniquity being in ignorance; God giveth pardon: now thou
hast discovered it, forsake it, that to thy ignorance pardon may easily
be given; and that with a clear face thou mayest say to God, "Remember
not the sins of my youth, and of my ignorance." [812] Thus he seeketh
it, thus he feareth lest he find it; for he seeketh it deceitfully.
When saith a man, I knew not that it was sin? When he hath seen that it
is sin, and ceaseth to do the sin, which he did only because he was
ignorant: such an one in truth would know his sin, to find it out, and
hate it. But now many "work deceitfully to find out their iniquity:"
they work not from their heart to find it out and hate it. But because
in the very search after iniquity, there is deceit, in the finding it
there will be defence of it. For when one hath found his iniquity, lo
now it is manifest to him that it is iniquity. Do it not, thou sayest.
And he who wrought deceitfully to find it out, now he hath found,
hateth it not; for what saith he? How many do this! Who is there that
doth it not? And will God destroy them all? Or at least he saith this:
if God would not these things to be done, would men live who commit the
same? Seest thou that thou didst work deceitfully to find out thy
iniquity? For if not deceitfully but sincerely thou hadst wrought, thou
wouldest now have found it out, and hated it; now thou hast found it
out, and thou defendest it; therefore thou didst work deceitfully, when
thou soughtest it.
3. "The words of his mouth are iniquity and deceit: he would not
understand, that he might do good" (ver. 3). Ye see that he attributeth
that to the will: for there are men who would understand and cannot,
and there are men who would not understand, and therefore understand
not. "He would not understand, that he might do good."
4. "He hath meditated iniquity on his bed." What said He, "On his bed?"
(ver. 4). "The ungodly hath said in himself, that he will sin:" what
above he said, in himself, that here he said, "On his bed." Our bed is
our heart: there we suffer the tossing of an evil conscience; and there
we rest when our conscience is good. Whoso loveth the bed of his heart,
let him do some good therein. There is our bed, where the Lord Jesus
Christ commands us to pray. "Enter into thy chamber, and shut thy
door." [813] What is, "Shut thy door?" Expect not from God such things
as are without, but such as are within; "and thy Father which seeth in
secret, shall reward thee openly." Who is he that shutteth not the
door? He who asketh much from God such things, and in such wise
directeth all his prayers, that he may receive the goods that are of
this world. Thy door is open, the multitude seeth when thou prayest.
What is it to shut thy door? To ask that of God, which God alone
knoweth how He giveth. What is that for which thou prayest, when thou
hast shut the door? What "eye hath not seen, nor ear heard, or hath
entered into the heart of man." [814] And haply it hath not entered
into thy very bed, that is, into thy heart. But God knoweth what He
will give: but when shall it be? When the Lord shall be revealed, when
the Judge shall appear....
5. "He hath set himself in every way that is not good." What is, "he
hath set himself"? He hath sinned perseveringly. Whence also of a
certain pious and good man it is said, "He hath not stood in the way of
sinners." [815] As this "hath not stood," so that "hath set himself."
"But wickedness hath he not hated." There is the end, there the fruit:
if a man cannot but have wickedness, let him at least hate it. For when
thou hatest it, it scarcely occurs to thee to do any wickedness. For
sin is in our mortal body, but what saith the Apostle? "Let not sin
reign in your mortal body, that ye should obey it in the lusts
thereof." [816] When beginneth it not to be therein? When that shall be
fulfilled in us which he saith, "When this corruptible shall have put
on incorruption, and this mortal shall have put on immortality." [817]
Before this come to pass, there is a delighting in sin in the body, but
greater is the delighting and the pleasure in the Word of Wisdom, in
the Commandment of God. Overcome sin and the lust thereof. Sin and
iniquity do thou hate, that thou mayest join thyself to God, who hateth
it as well as thou. Now being joined in mind unto the Law of God, in
mind thou servest the Law of God. And if in the flesh thou therefore
servest [818] the law of sin, [819] because there are in thee certain
carnal delightings, then will there be none when thou shalt no longer
fight. It is one thing not to fight, and to be in true and lasting
peace; another to fight and overcome; another to fight and to be
overcome; another not to fight at all, but to be carried away....
6. "Thy mercy, O Lord, is in the heavens, and Thy truth reacheth even
unto the clouds" (ver. 5). I know not what Mercy of Him he meaneth,
which is in the heavens. For the Mercy of the Lord is also in the
earth. Thou hast it written, "The earth is full of the Mercy of the
Lord." [820] Of what Mercy then speaketh He, when He saith, "Thy Mercy,
O Lord, is in the heavens"? The gifts of God are partly temporal and
earthly, partly eternal and heavenly. Whoso for this worshippeth God,
that he may receive those temporal and earthly goods, which are open to
all, is still as it were like the brutes: he enjoyeth indeed the Mercy
of God, but not that which is excepted, which shall not be given, save
only to the righteous, to the holy, to the good. What are the gifts
which abound to all? "He maketh His sun to rise on the evil and on the
good, and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust." [821] Who hath
not this Mercy of God, first that he hath being, that he is
distinguished from the brutes, that he is a rational animal, so as to
understand God; secondly, that he enjoys this light, this air, rain,
fruits, diversity of seasons, and all the earthly comforts, health of
body, the affection of friends, the safety of his family? All these are
good, and they are God's gifts....
7. But this man rightly understood what mercy he should pray for from
God. "Thy Mercy, O Lord, is in the Heavens; and Thy Truth reacheth even
to the clouds." That is, the Mercy which Thou givest to Thy Saints, is
Heavenly, not earthly; is Eternal, not temporal. And how couldest Thou
declare it unto men? Because "Thy Truth reacheth even unto the clouds."
For who could know the Heavenly Mercy of God, unless God should declare
it unto men? How did He declare it? By sending His truth even unto the
clouds. What are the clouds? The Preachers of the Word of God....Truth
reached even to the clouds: therefore unto us could be declared the
Mercy of God, which is in Heaven and not in earth. And truly, Brethren,
the clouds are the Preachers of the Word of Truth. When God threateneth
through His Preachers, He thunders through the clouds. When God worketh
miracles through His Preachers, He lightneth through the clouds, He
terrifieth through the clouds, and watereth by the rain. Those
Preachers, then, by whom is preached the Gospel of God, are the clouds
of God. Let us then hope for Mercy, but for that which is in the
Heavens.
8. "Thy Righteousness is like the mountains of God: Thy Judgments are a
great deep" (ver. 6). Who are the mountains of God? Those who are
called clouds, the same are also the mountains of God. The great
Preachers are the mountains of God. And as when the sun riseth, he
first clothes the mountains with light, and thence the light descends
to the lowest parts of the earth: so our Lord Jesus Christ, when He
came, first irradiated the height of the Apostles, first enlightened
the mountains, and so His Light descended to the valley of the world.
And therefore saith He in a certain Psalm, "I lifted up mine eyes unto
the mountains, from whence cometh my help." [822] But think not that
the mountains themselves will give thee help: for they receive what
they may give, give not of their own. And if thou remain in the
mountains, thy hope will not be strong: but in Him who enlighteneth the
mountains, ought to be thy hope and presumption. Thy help indeed will
come to thee through the mountains, because the Scriptures are
administered to thee through the mountains, through the great Preachers
of the Truth: but fix not thy hope in them. Hear what He saith next
following: "I lifted up mine eyes unto the mountains, from whence
cometh my help." What then? Do the mountains give thee help? No; hear
what follows, "My help cometh from the Lord, which made Heaven and
earth." [823] Through the mountains cometh help, but not from the
mountains. From whom then? "From the Lord, which made Heaven and
earth."...
9. "Thy Judgments are like the great abyss." The abyss he calleth the
depth of sin, whither every one cometh by despising God; as in a
certain place it is said, "God gave them over to their own hearts'
lusts, to do the things which are not convenient." [824] ...Because
then they were proud and ungrateful, they were held worthy to be
delivered up to the lusts of their own hearts, and became a great
abyss, so that they not only sinned, but also worked craftily, lest
they should understand their iniquity, and hate it. That is the depth
of wickedness, to be unwilling to find it out and to hate it. But how
one cometh to that depth, see; "Thy Judgments are the great abyss." As
the mountains are by the Righteousness of God, [825] who through His
Grace become great: so also through His Judgments come they unto the
depth, who sink lowest. By this then let the mountains delight thee, by
this turn away from the abyss, and turn thyself unto that, of which it
is said, "My help cometh from the Lord." But whereby? "I have lifted up
mine eyes unto the mountains." What meaneth this? I will speak plainly.
[826] In the Church of God thou findest an abyss, thou findest also
mountains; thou findest there but few good, because the mountains are
few, the abyss broad; that is, thou findest many living ill after the
wrath of God, because they have so worked that they are delivered up to
the lusts of their own heart; so now they defend their sins and confess
them not; but say, Why? What have I done? Such an one did this, and
such an one did that. Now will they even defend what the Divine Word
reproves. This is the abyss. Therefore in a certain place [827] saith
the Scripture (hear this abyss), "The sinner when he cometh unto the
depth of sin despiseth." See, "Thy Judgments are like the great abyss."
But yet not art thou a mountain; not yet art thou in the abyss; fly
from the abyss, tend towards the mountains; but yet remain not on the
mountains. "For thy help cometh from the Lord, which made Heaven and
earth."
10. Because he said, Thy Mercy is in the Heavens, that it may be known
to be also on earth, he said, "O Lord, Thou savest man and beast, [828]
as Thy Mercy is multiplied, O God" (ver. 7). Great is Thy Mercy, and
manifold is Thy Mercy, O God; and that showest Thou both to man and
beast. For from whom is the saving of men? From God. Is not the saving
of beasts also from God? For He who made man, made also beasts; He who
made both, saveth both; but the saving of beasts is temporal. But there
are who as a great thing ask this of God, which He hath given to
beasts. "Thy Mercy, O God, is multiplied," so that not only unto men,
but unto beasts also is given the same saving which is given to men, a
carnal and temporal saving.
11. Have not men then somewhat reserved with God, which beasts deserve
not, and whereunto beasts arrive not? They have evidently. And where is
that which they have. "The children of men put their trust under the
shadow of Thy wings." Attend, my Beloved, to this most pleasant
sentence; "Thou savest man and beast." First, he spake of "man and
beast," then of "the children of men;" as though "men" were one, "the
children of men" other. Sometimes in Scripture children of men is said
generally of all men, sometimes in some proper manner, with some proper
signification, so that not all men are understood; chiefly when there
is a distinction. For not without reason is it here put; "O Lord, Thou
savest man and beast: but the children of men;" as though setting aside
the first, he keepeth separate the children of men. Separate from whom?
Not only from beasts, but also from men, who seek from God the saving
of beasts, and desire this as a great thing. Who then are the children
of men? Those who put their trust under the shadow of His wings. For
those men together with beasts rejoice in possession, but the children
of men rejoice in hope: those follow after present goods with beasts,
these hope for future goods with Angels....
12. "They shall be satiated [829] with the fulness of Thy House" (ver.
8). He promiseth us some great thing. He would speak it, and He
speaketh it not. Can He not, or do not we receive it? I dare, my
Brethren, to say, even of holy tongues and hearts, by which Truth is
declared to us, that it can neither be spoken, which they declared, nor
even thought of. For it is a great thing, and ineffable; and even they
saw through a glass darkly, as saith the Apostle, "For now we see
through a glass darkly; but then face to face." [830] Lo, they who saw
through a glass darkly, thus burst forth. What then shall we be, when
we shall see face to face? That with which they travailed in heart, and
could not with their tongue bring forth, that men might receive it. For
what necessity was there that he should say, "They shall be satiated
with the fulness of Thy House"? He sought a word whereby to express
from human things what he would say; and because he saw that men
drowning themselves in drunkenness receive indeed wine without measure,
but lose their senses, he saw what to say; for when shall have been
received that ineffable joy, then shall be lost in a manner the human
soul, it shall become Divine, and be satiated with the fulness of God's
House. Wherefore also in another Psalm it is said, "Thy cup
inebriating, how excellent is it!" [831] With this cup were the Martyrs
satiated when going to their passion, they knew not their own. What so
inebriated as not to know a wife weeping, not children, not parents?
They knew them not, they thought not that they were before their eyes.
Wonder not: they were inebriated. Wherewith were they so? Lo, they had
received a cup wherewith they were satiated. Wherefore he also gives
thanks to God, saying, "What shall I render unto the Lord for all His
benefits towards me? I will take the cup of Salvation, and call upon
the Name of the Lord." [832] Therefore, Brethren of men, let us be
children and let us trust under the shadow of His wings and be satiated
with the fulness of His House. As I could, I have spoken; and as far as
I can I see; and how far I see, I cannot speak. [833] "And of the
torrent of Thy Pleasure shalt Thou give them to drink." A torrent we
call water coming with a flood. There will be a flood of God's Mercy to
overflow and inebriate those who now put their trust under the shadow
of His wings. What is that Pleasure? As it were a torrent inebriating
the thirsty. Let him then who thirsts now, lay up hope: whoso thirsts
now, let him have hope; when inebriated, he shall have possession:
before he have possession, let him thirst in hope. "Blessed are they
which do hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they shall be
filled." [834]
13. With what fountain then wilt thou be overflowed, and whence runneth
such a torrent of His Pleasure? "For with Thee," saith he, "is the
fountain of Life." What is the fountain of Life, but Christ? He came to
thee in the flesh, that He might bedew thy thirsty lips: He will
satisfy thee trusting, who bedewed thee thirsting. "For with Thee is
the fountain of Life; in Thy Light shall we see light" (ver. 9). Here a
fountain is one thing, light another: there not so. For that which is
the Fountain, the same is also Light: and whatever thou wilt thou
callest It, for It is not what thou callest It: for thou canst not find
a fit name: for It remaineth not in one name. If thou shouldest say,
that It is Light only, it would be said to thee, Then without cause am
I told to hunger and thirst, for who is there that eateth light? It is
said to me plainly, directly, "Blessed are the pure in heart: for they
shall see God." [835] If It is Light, my eyes must I prepare. Prepare
also lips; for That which is Light is also a Fountain: a Fountain,
because It satisfieth the thirsty: Light, because It enlighteneth the
blind. Here sometimes, light is in one place, a fountain in another.
For sometimes fountains run even in darkness; and sometimes in the
desert thou sufferest the sun, findest no fountain: here then can these
two be separated: there thou shalt not be wearied, for there is a
Fountain; there thou shalt not be darkened, for there is Light.
14. "Show forth Thy Mercy unto them that know Thee; Thy Righteousness
to them that are of a right heart" (ver. 10). As I have said, Those are
of a right heart who follow in this life the Will of God. The will of
God is sometimes that thou shouldest be whole, sometimes that thou
shouldest be sick. If when thou art whole God's Will be sweet, and when
thou art sick God's Will be bitter; thou art not of a right heart.
Wherefore? Because thou wilt not make right thy will according to God's
Will, but wilt bend God's Will to thine. That is right, but thou art
crooked: thy will must be made right to That, not That made crooked to
thee; and thou wilt have a right heart. It is well with thee in this
world; be God blessed, who comforteth thee: it goeth hardly with thee
in this world; be God blessed, because He [836] chasteneth and proveth
thee; and so wilt thou be of a right heart, saying, "I will bless the
Lord at all times: His Praise shall be ever in my mouth." [837]
15. "Let not the foot of pride come against me" (ver. 11). But now he
said, The children of men shall put their trust under the shadow of Thy
wings: they shall be satiated with the fulness of Thy House. When one
hath begun to be plentifully overflowed with that Fountain, let him
take heed lest he grow proud. For the same was not wanting to Adam, the
first man: but the foot of pride came against him, and the hand of the
sinner removed him, that is, the proud hand of the devil. As he who
seduced him, said of himself, "I will sit in the sides of the north;"
[838] so he persuaded him, by saying, "Taste, and ye shall be as gods."
[839] By pride then have we so fallen as to arrive at this mortality.
And because pride had wounded us, humility maketh us whole. God came
humbly, that from such great wound of pride He might heal man. He came,
for "The Word was made Flesh, and dwelt among us." [840] He was taken
by the Jews; He was reviled of them. Ye heard when the Gospel was read,
what they said, and to Whom they said, "Thou hast a devil:" [841] and
He said not, Ye have a devil, for ye are still in your sins, and the
devil possesseth your hearts. He said not this, which if He had said,
He had said truly: but it was not meet that He should say it, lest He
should seem not to preach Truth, but to retort evil speaking. He let go
what He heard as though He heard it not. For a Physician was He, and to
cure the madman had He come. As a Physician careth not what he may hear
from the madman; but how the madman may recover and become sane; nor
even if he receive a blow from the madman, careth he; but while he to
him giveth new wounds, he cureth his old fever: so also the Lord came
to the sick man, to the madman came He, that whatever He might hear,
whatever He might suffer, He should despise; by this very thing
teaching us humility, that being taught by humility, we might be healed
from pride: from which he here prayeth to be delivered, saying, "Let
not the foot of pride come against me; neither let the hand of the
sinner remove me." For if the foot of pride come, the hand of the
sinner removeth. What is the hand of the sinner? The working of him
that adviseth ill. Hast thou become proud? Quickly he corrupteth thee
who adviseth ill. Humbly fix thyself in God, and care not much what is
said to thee. Hence is that which is elsewhere spoken, "From my secret
sins cleanse Thou me; and from others' sins also keep Thy servant."
[842] What is, "From my secret sins"? "Let not the foot of pride come
against me." What is, "From other men's sins also keep Thy servant"?
"Let not the hand of the wicked remove me." Keep that which is within,
and thou shalt not fear from without.
16. But wherefore so greatly fearest thou this? Because it is said,
"Thereby have fallen all that work iniquity" (ver. 12); so that they
have come into that abyss of which it is said, "Thy judgments are like
the great abyss:" so that they have come even to that deep wherein
sinners who despise have fallen. "Have fallen." Whereby did they first
fall? By the foot of pride. Hear the foot of pride. "When they knew
God, they glorified Him not as God." Therefore came against them the
foot of pride, whereby they came into the depth. "God gave them over to
their own hearts' lusts, to do those things which are not convenient."
[843] The root of sin, and the head of sin feared he who said, "Let not
the foot of pride come against me." Wherefore said he, "the foot"?
Because by walking proudly man deserted God, and departed from Him. His
foot, called he his affection. "Let not the foot of pride come against
me: let not the hand of the wicked remove me:" that is, let not the
works of the wicked remove me from Thee, that I should wish to imitate
them. But wherefore said he this against pride, "Thereby have fallen
all that work iniquity"? Because those who now are ungodly, have fallen
by pride. Therefore when the Lord would caution His Church, He said,
"It shall watch thy head, and thou shalt watch [844] his heel." [845]
The serpent watcheth when the foot of pride may come against thee, when
thou mayest fall, that he may cast thee down. But watch thou his head:
the beginning of all sin is pride. [846] "Thereby have fallen all that
work iniquity: they are driven out, and are not able to stand." He
first, who in the Truth stood not, then, through him, they whom God
sent out of Paradise. Whence he, the humble, who said that he was not
worthy to unloose His shoe's latchet, is not driven out, but standeth
and heareth Him, and rejoiceth greatly because of the Bridegroom's
voice; [847] not because of his own, lest the foot of pride come
against him, and he be driven out, and be not able to stand....
__________________________________________________________________
[810] Lat. XXXV.
[811] Wisd. ix. 15. [Here cited as Scripture, but only deuterocanonical
(as St. Jerome testifies), illustrating the Law and the Prophets, but
not of authority in itself.--C.]
[812] Ps. xxv. 7.
[813] Matt. vi. 6.
[814] Isa. lxiv. 4; 1 Cor. ii. 9.
[815] Ps. i. 1.
[816] Rom. vi. 12.
[817] 1 Cor. xv. 54.
[818] i.e., "art subject to it," not "obeyest it." He is not here
speaking of actual wilful sin, but of motions toward sin to which the
man does not consent. [Concupiscence, art. ix. Angl. XXXIX.
Articles.--C.]
[819] Rom. vii. 25.
[820] Ps. xxxiii. 5.
[821] Matt. v. 45.
[822] Ps. cxxi. 1.
[823] Ps. cxxi. 2.
[824] Rom. i. 28.
[825] Al. "The Righteousness of God is like the mountains."
[826] Latine.
[827] Prov. xviii. 3.
[828] [In Vulgate and Septuagint this is included in verse 6. The
English Version agrees with the text as here connected.--C.]
[829] [I cannot but change the word "drunken" here for one more decent
and equally faithful. But note "sober inebriety," p. 75, supra.--C.]
[830] 1 Cor. xiii. 12.
[831] Ps. xxiii. 5, LXX.
[832] Ps. cxvi. 12, 13.
[833] [To spiritualize inebriation seems a difficult task; but as in
heraldry we introduce the boar and the serpent for other qualities than
their filth and their venom, so here the suggestion is explained by a
reference to Acts ii. 13-18 and Eph. v. 18, 19.--C.]
[834] Matt. v. 6.
[835] Matt. v. 6, 8.
[836] Al. "Who."
[837] Ps. xxxiv. 1.
[838] Isa. xiv. 13.
[839] Gen. iii. 5.
[840] John i. 34.
[841] John viii. 48. [This was then the Gospel for the day, or one of
the Lessons.--C.]
[842] Ps. xix. 12, 13.
[843] Rom. i. 21-24.
[844] Lat. observabit.
[845] Gen. iii. 15.
[846] Ecclus. x. 13.
[847] John i. 27, iii. 29.
__________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XXXVII. [848]
On the first part of the psalm.
1. With terror do they hear of the coming of the last day, who will not
be secure by living well: and who fain would live ill, long. But it was
for useful purposes that God willed that day to remain unknown; that
the heart may be ever ready to expect that of which it knows it is to
come, but knows not when it is to come. Seeing, however, that our Lord
Jesus Christ was sent to us to be our "Master," [849] He said, that "of
the day not even the Son of Man knew," [850] because it was not part of
His office as our Master that through Him it should become known to us.
For indeed the Father knoweth nothing that the Son knoweth not; since
that is the Very Knowledge of the Father Itself, which is His Wisdom;
now His Son, His Word, is "His Wisdom." But because it was not for our
good to know that, which however was known to Him who came indeed to
teach us, though not to teach us that which it was not good for us to
know, He not only, as a Master, taught us something, but also, as a
Master, left something untaught. For, as a Master, He knew how both to
teach us what was good for us, and not to teach us what was injurious.
Now thus, according to a certain form of speech, the Son [851] is said
not to know what He does not teach: that is, in the same way that we
are daily in the habit of speaking, He is said not to know what He
causes us not to know. [852] ...
2. This it is that disturbs you who are a Christian; that you see men
of bad lives prospering, and surrounded with abundance of things like
these; you see them sound in health, distinguished with proud honours;
you see their family unvisited by misfortune; the happiness of their
relatives, the obsequious attendance of their dependants, their most
commanding influence, their life uninterrupted by any sad event; you
see their characters most profligate, their external resources most
affluent; and your heart says that there is no Divine judgment; that
all things are carried to and fro by accidents, and blown about in
disorderly and irregular motions. For if God, thou sayest, regarded
human affairs, would his iniquity flourish, and my innocence suffer?
Every sickness of the soul hath in Scripture its proper remedy. Let him
then whose sickness is of that kind that he says in his heart things
like these, let him drink this Psalm by way of potion....
3. "Be not envious because of evil-doers, neither be envious against
the workers of iniquity" (ver. 1). "For they shall soon wither like the
grass, and shall fade like the herbs of the meadow" (ver. 2). That
which to thee seemeth long, is "soon" in the sight of God. Conform
[853] thou thyself to God; and it will be "soon" to thee. That which he
here calls "grass," that we understand by the "herbs of the meadow."
They are some worthless things, occupying the surface only of the
ground, they have no depth of root. In the winter then they are green;
but when the summer sun shall begin to scorch, they will wither away.
For now it is the season of winter. Thy glory doth not as yet appear.
But if thy love hath but a deep root, like that of many trees during
winter, the frost passes away, the summer (that is, the Day of
Judgment) will come; then will the greenness of the grass wither away.
Then will the glory of the trees appear. "For ye" (saith the Apostle)
"are dead," [854] even as trees seem to be in winter, as it were dead,
as it were withered. What is our hope then, if we are dead? The root is
within; where our root is, there is our life also, for there our love
is fixed. "And your life is hid with Christ in God." [855] When shall
he wither who is thus rooted? But when will our spring be? When our
summer? When will the honour of foliage clothe us around, and the
fulness of fruit make us rich? When shall this come to pass? Hear what
follows: "When Christ, who is our life, shall appear, then shall ye
also appear with Him in glory." And what then shall we do now? "Be not
envious because of the evil-doers, neither be envious against the
workers of iniquity. For they shall soon wither like the grass, and
fade like the herb of the meadow."
4. What shouldest thou do then? "Trust in the Lord" (ver. 3). For they
too trust, but not "in the Lord." Their hope is perishable. Their hope
is short-lived, frail, fleeting, transitory, baseless. "Trust thou in
the Lord." "Behold," thou sayest, "I do trust; what am I to do?"
"And do good." Do not do that evil which thou beholdest in those men,
who are prosperous in wickedness. "Do good, and dwell in the land."
Lest haply thou shouldest be doing good without "dwelling in the land."
For it is the Church that is the Lord's land. It is her whom He, the
Father, the tiller of it, waters and cultivates. For there are many
that, as it were, do good works, but yet, in that they do not "dwell in
the land," they do not belong to the husbandman. Therefore do thou thy
good, not outside of the land, but do thou "dwell in the land." And
what shall I have?
"And thou shalt be fed in its riches." What are the riches of that
land? Her riches are her Lord! Her riches are her God! He it is to whom
it is said, "The Lord is the portion of mine inheritance, and of my
cup." [856] In a late discourse we suggested to you, dearly beloved,
that God is our possession, [857] and that we are at the same time
God's possession. Hear how that He is Himself the riches of that land.
"Delight thyself in the Lord" (ver. 4). As if thou hadst put the
question, and hadst said "Show me the riches of that land, in which
thou biddest me dwell," he says, "Delight thyself in the Lord."
5. "And He shall give thee the desires of thine heart." Understand in
their proper signification, [858] "the desires of thine heart."
Distinguish the "desires of thine heart" from the desires of thy flesh;
distinguish as much as thou canst. It is not without a meaning that it
is said in a certain Psalm, "God is" (the strength) "of mine heart."
For there it says in what follows: "And God is my portion for ever."
For instance: One labours under bodily blindness. He asks that he may
receive his sight. Let him ask it; for God does that too, and gives
those blessings also. But these things are asked for even by the
wicked. This is a desire of the flesh. One is sick, and prays to be
made sound. From the point of death he is restored to health. That too
is a desire of the flesh, as are all of such a kind. What is "the
desire of the heart"? As the desire of the flesh is to wish to have
one's eyesight restored, to enable him, that is, to see that light,
which can be seen by such eyes; so "the desire of the heart" relates to
a different sort of light. For, "Blessed are the pure in heart, for
they shall see God. Delight thou thyself in the Lord; and He shall give
thee the desires of thine heart."
6. "Behold" (you say), "I do long after it, I do ask for it, I do
desire it. Shall I then accomplish it?" No. Who shall then? "Reveal thy
way unto the Lord: trust also in Him, and He shall bring it to pass"
(ver. 5). Mention to Him what thou sufferest, mention to Him what thou
dost desire. For what is it that thou sufferest? "The flesh lusteth
against the spirit, and the spirit against the flesh." [859] What is it
then that thou dost desire? "Wretched man that I am! Who shall deliver
me from the body of this death?" [860] And because it is He "Himself"
that "will bring it to pass," when thou shalt have "revealed thy ways
unto Him;" hear what follows: "The grace of God through Jesus Christ
our Lord." What is it then that He is to bring to pass, since it is
said, "Reveal thy way unto Him, and He will bring it to pass"? What
will He bring to pass?
"And He shall bring forth thy righteousness as the light" (ver. 6). For
now, "thy righteousness" is hid. Now it is a thing of faith; not yet of
sight. You believe something that you may do it. You do not yet see
that in which you believe. But when thou shalt begin to see that, which
thou didst believe before, "thy righteousness will be brought forth to
the light," because it is thy faith that was [861] thy righteousness.
For "the just lives by faith."
7. "And He shall bring forth thy judgment as the noon-day." That is to
say, "as the clear light." It was too little to say, "as the light."
For we call it "light" already, even when it but dawns: we call it
light even while the sun is rising. But never is the light brighter
than at mid-day. Therefore He will not only "bring forth thy
righteousness as the light," but "thy judgment shall be as the
noon-day." For now dost thou make thy "judgment" to follow Christ. This
is thy purpose: this is thy choice: this is thy "judgment."...
8. "What should I do then?" Hear what thou shouldest do. "Submit thee
to the Lord, and entreat Him" (ver. 7). Be this thy life, to obey His
commandments. For this is to submit thee to Him; and to entreat Him
until He give thee what He hath promised. Let good works "continue;"
[862] let prayer "continue." For "men ought always to pray, and not to
faint." [863] Wherein dost thou show that thou art "submitted to Him"?
In doing what He hath commanded. But haply thou dost not receive thy
wages as yet, because as yet thou art not able. For He is already able
to give them; but thou art not already able to receive them. Exercise
thou thyself in works. Labour in the vineyard; at the close of the day
crave thy wages. "Faithful is He" who brought thee into the vineyard.
"Submit thee to the Lord, and entreat Him."
9. "See! I do so; I do `submit to the Lord, and I do entreat.' But what
do you think? That neighbour of mine is a wicked man, living a bad
life, and prosperous! His thefts, adulteries, robberies, are known to
me. Lifted up above every one, proud, and raised on high by wickedness,
he deigns not to notice me. In these circumstances, how shall I hold
out with patience?" This is a sickness; drink, by way of remedy. "Fret
not thyself because of him who prospereth in his way." He prospereth,
but it is "in his way:" thou sufferest, but it is in God's way! His
portion is prosperity on his way, misery on arriving at its end: yours,
toil on the road, happiness in its termination. "The Lord knoweth the
way of the righteous; and the way of the ungodly shall perish." [864]
Thou walkest those ways which "the Lord knoweth," and if thou dost
suffer toil in them, they do not deceive thee. The "way of the ungodly"
is but a transitory happiness; at the end of the way the happiness is
at an end also. Why? Because that way is "the broad road;" its
termination leads to the pit of hell. Now, thy way is narrow; and "few
there be" that enter in through it: [865] but into how ample a field it
comes at the last, thou oughtest to consider. "Fret not thyself at him
who prospereth in his way; because of the man who bringeth wicked
devices to pass."
"Cease from anger, and forsake wrath" (ver. 8). Wherefore art thou
wroth? Wherefore is it that, through that passion and indignation, thou
dost blaspheme, or almost blaspheme? Against "the man who bringeth
wicked devices to pass, cease from anger, and forsake wrath." Knowest
thou not whither that wrath tempts thee on? Thou art on the point of
saying unto God, that He is unjust. It tends to that. "Look! why is
that man prosperous, and this man in adversity?" Consider what thought
it begets: stifle the wicked notion. "Cease from anger, and forsake
wrath:" so that now returning to thy senses, thou mayest say, "Mine eye
is disturbed because of wrath." [866] What eye is that, but the eye of
faith? To the eye of thy faith I appeal. [867] Thou didst believe in
Christ: why didst thou believe? What did He promise thee? If it was the
happiness of this world that Christ promised thee, then murmur against
Christ; yes! murmur against Him, when thou seest the wicked
flourishing. What of happiness did He promise? What, save in the
Resurrection of the Dead? But what in this life? That which was His
portion. His portion, I say! Dost thou, servant and disciple, disdain
what thy Lord, what thy Master bore?...
"For evil-doers shall be cut off" (ver. 9). "But I see their
prosperity." Believe Him who saith, "they shall be cut off;" Him who
seeth better than thou, since His eye anger cannot cloud. "For
evil-doers shall be cut off. But those that wait upon the Lord,"--not
upon any one that can deceive them; but verily on Him who is the Truth
itself,--"But those that wait upon the Lord, they shall inherit the
land." What "land," but that Jerusalem, with the love of which
whosoever is inflamed, shall come to peace at the last.
10. "But how long is the sinner to flourish? How long shall I have to
endure?" Thou art impatient; [868] that which seems long to thee, will
soon come to pass. It is infirmity makes that seem long, which is
really short, as is found in the case of the longings of sick men.
Nothing seems so long as the mixing of the potion for him when athirst.
For all that his attendants are making all speed, lest haply the
patient be angry; "When will it be done? (he cries). When will it be
drest? When will it be served?" Those who are waiting upon you are
making haste, but your infirmity fancies that long which is being done
with expedition. Behold ye, therefore, our Physician complying with the
infirmity of the patient, saying, "How long shall I have to endure? How
long will it be?"
"Yet a little while, and the sinner shall not be" (ver. 10). Is it
certainly among sinners, and because of the sinner, that thou
murmurest? "A little while, and he shall not be." Lest haply because I
said, "They that wait upon the Lord, they shall inherit the land," thou
shouldest think that waiting to be of very long duration. Wait "a
little while," thou shalt receive without end what thou waitest for. A
little while, a moderate space. Review the years from Adam's time up to
this day; run through the Scriptures. It is almost yesterday that he
fell from Paradise! So many ages have been measured out, and unrolled.
[869] Where now are the past ages? Even so, however, shall the few
which remain, pass away also. Hadst thou been living throughout all
that time, since Adam was banished from Paradise up to this present
day, thou wouldest certainly see that the life, which had thus flown
away, had not been of long duration. But how long is the duration of
each individual's life? Add any number of years you please: prolong old
age to its longest duration: what is it? Is it not but a morning
breeze? Be it so, however, that the Day of Judgment is far off, when
the reward of the righteous and of the unrighteous is to come: your
last day at all events cannot be far off. Make thyself ready against
this! For such as thou shall have departed from this life, shalt thou
be restored to the other. At the close of that short life, you will not
yet be, where the Saints shall be, to whom it shall be said, "Come, ye
blessed of My Father: inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the
beginning of the world." [870] You will not yet be there? Who does not
know that? But you may already be there, where that beggar, once
"covered with sores," was seen at a distance, at rest, by that proud
and unfruitful "rich man" in the midst of his torments. [871] Surely
hid in that rest thou waitest in security for the Day of Judgment, when
thou art to receive again a body, to be changed so as to be made equal
to an Angel. How long then is that for which we are impatient, and are
saying, "When will it come? Will it tarry long?" This our sons will say
hereafter, and our sons' sons will say too; and, though each one of
these in succession will say this same thing, that "little while" that
is yet to be, passes away, as all that is already past hath passed away
already! O thou sick one! "Yet a little while, and the sinner shall not
be. Yea, thou shalt diligently consider his place, and thou shalt not
find him."...
11. "But the meek shall inherit the land" [872] (ver. 11). That land is
the one of which we have often spoken, the holy Jerusalem, which is to
be released from these her pilgrimages, and to live for ever with God,
and on God. Therefore, "They shall inherit the land." What shall be
their delight? "And they shall delight themselves in the abundance of
peace." Let the ungodly man delight himself here in the multitude of
his gold, in the multitude of his silver, in the multitude of his
slaves, in the multitude, lastly, of his baths, his roses, his
intoxicating wines, his most sumptuous and luxurious banquets. Is this
the power thou enviest? Is this the glory that delights thee? Would not
his fate be worthy to be deplored, even if he were to be so for ever?
What shall be thy delights? "And they shall delight themselves in the
abundance of peace." Peace shall be thy gold. Peace shall be thy
silver. Peace shall be thy lands. Peace shall be thy life, thy God
Peace. Peace shall be to thee whatsoever thou dost desire....
__________________________________________________________________
[848] Lat. XXXVI. This is a sermon which was delivered at Carthage, as
well as the two following. It should be noticed that in the life of St.
Fulgentius, c. 3, we are told that, "having some time before resolved
with himself to renounce the world, he was so roused and moved by St.
Augustin's exposition of this Psalm that he determined to make his vow
public, and earnestly desired to adopt the religious habit."--Ben.
[849] Magister Magisterio. Master, in sense of teacher or guide;
Kathegetes, in Matt. xxiii. 8, being in the Latin translated
"Magister," as in English, "Master."
[850] Mark xiii. 32.
[851] Al. "Son of Man," as below.
[852] [Here he enlarges; but our common use of the word "ignore"
sufficiently explains the use here. We ignore what it is needless to
say.--C.]
[853] Subjunge.
[854] Col. iii. 3.
[855] Col. iii. 3.
[856] Ps. xvi. 5.
[857] See Disc. 2 (omitted) on Ps. 33, delivered at Carthage in the
Church of St. Cyprian.
[858] Signanter accipe.
[859] Gal. v. 17.
[860] Rom. vii. 24.
[861] Al. "shall be."
[862] Perseveret, alluding to a word in the portion omitted. Matt.
xxiv. 13.
[863] Luke xviii. 1.
[864] Ps. i. 6.
[865] Matt. vii. 13, 14.
[866] Ps. vi. 7.
[867] Interrogo.
[868] Festinas.
[869] [Few consider how very short is the span of all human history.
Daily we read of men and women who live a hundred years. Eighteen such
lives go back to the age of Christ and His Apostles. Official lives of
fifty years are not uncommon, and six-and-thirty such cover the entire
Christian era.--C.]
[870] Matt. xxv. 34.
[871] Luke xvi. 20, 23.
[872] [Comp. St. Matt. v. 5. The earlier Fathers believed in the
"regeneration" of this earth. See A.N.F. vol. i. 240, 435, and
(Apocryphal Revelation) viii. 584, vii. 218, 254, iv. 211, 212, 218,
and conversely, 274, 275. Our author, after sharing this early opinion,
gave it up, and founded a new school.--C.]
__________________________________________________________________
On the Second Part of the Psalm. [873]
1. Then follow these words: "The wicked plotteth against the just, and
gnasheth upon him with his teeth" (ver. 12): "But the Lord shall laugh
at him" (ver. 13). At whom? Surely at the sinner, "gnashing upon" the
other "with his teeth." But wherefore shall the Lord "laugh at him"?
"For He foreseeth that his day is coming." He seems indeed full of
wrath, while, ignorant of the morrow that is in store for him, he is
threatening the just. But the Lord beholds and "foresees his day."
"What day?" That in which "He will render to every man according to his
works." For he is "treasuring up unto himself wrath against the day of
wrath, and revelation of the just judgment of God." [874] But it is the
Lord that foresees it; thou dost not foresee it. It hath been revealed
to thee by Him who foresees it. Thou didst not know of the "day of the
unrighteous," in which he is to suffer punishment. But He who knows it
hath revealed it to thee. It is a main part of knowledge to join
thyself to Him who hath knowledge. He hath the eyes of knowledge: have
thou the eyes of a believing mind. That which God "sees," be thou
willing to believe. For the day of the unjust, which God foresees, will
come. What day is that? The day for all vengeance! For it is necessary
that vengeance should be taken upon the ungodly, that vengeance be
taken upon the unjust, whether he turn, or whether he turn not. For if
he shall turn from his ways, that very thing, that his "injustice is
come to an end," is the infliction of vengeance....
2. "The wicked have drawn out the sword, and have bent their bow, to
cast down the poor and needy, and to slay such as be of upright heart"
(ver. 14). "Their weapon shall enter into their own heart" (ver. 15).
It is an easy thing for his weapon, that is, his sword, to reach thy
body, even as the sword of the persecutors reached the body of the
Martyrs, but when the body had been smitten, "the heart" remained
unhurt; but his heart who "drew out the sword against" the body of the
just did not clearly remain unhurt. This is attested by this very
Psalm. It saith, Their weapon, that is, "Their sword shall," not go
into their body, but, "their weapon shall go into their own heart."
They would fain have slain him in the body. Let them die the death of
the soul. For those whose bodies they sought to kill, the Lord hath
freed from anxiety, saying, "Fear not them who kill the body, but
cannot kill the soul." [875] ...
3. "And their bows shall be broken." What is meant by, "And their bows
shall be broken"? Their plots shall be frustrated. For above He had
said, "The wicked have drawn out the sword and bent their bows." By the
"drawing out of the sword" he would have understood open hostility; but
by the" bending of the bow," secret conspiracies. See! His sword
destroys himself, and his laying of snares is frustrated. What is meant
by frustrated? That it does no mischief to the righteous. How then, for
instance (you ask), did it do no mischief to the man, whom it thus
stripped of his goods, whom it reduced to straitened circumstances by
taking away his possessions? He has still cause to sing, "A little that
a righteous man hath, is better than great riches of the ungodly" (ver.
16).
4. ..."For the arms of the wicked shall be broken" (ver. 17). Now by
"their arms" is meant their power. What will he do in hell? Will it be
what the rich man had to do, he who was wont "to fare sumptuously" in
the upper world, and in hell "was tormented"? [876] Therefore their
arms shall be broken; "but the Lord upholdeth the righteous." How does
He "uphold" them? What saith He unto them? Even what is said in another
Psalm, "Wait on the Lord, be of good courage; and let thine heart be
strengthened. Wait, I say, on the Lord." [877] What is meant by this,
"Wait on the Lord"? Thou sufferest but for a time; thou shalt rest for
ever: thy trouble is short; thy happiness is to be everlasting. It is
but for "a little while" thou art to sorrow; thy joy shall have no end.
But in the midst of trouble does thy "foot" begin to "slip"? The
example even of Christ's sufferings is set before thee. Consider what
He endured for thee, in whom no cause was found why He should endure
it? How great soever be thy sufferings, thou wilt not come to those
insults, those scourgings, to that robe of shame, to that crown of
thorns, and last of all to that Cross, which He endured; because that
is now removed from the number of human punishments. [878] For though
under the ancients criminals were crucified, in the present day no one
is crucified. It was honoured, and it came to an end. It came to an end
as a punishment; it is continued in glory. It hath removed from the
place of execution to the foreheads of Emperors. He who hath invested
His very sufferings with such honour, what doth He reserve for His
faithful servants?...
5. But observe whether that was fulfilled in his case which the Psalm
now speaks of. "The Lord strengtheneth the righteous.--Not only so"
(saith that same Paul, whilst suffering many evils), "but we glory in
tribulations also: knowing that tribulation worketh patience, and
patience experience; and experience hope; but hope maketh not ashamed,
because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost,
which is given unto us." [879] Justly is it said by him, now righteous,
now "strengthened." As therefore those who persecuted him did no harm
to him, when now "strengthened," so neither did he himself do any harm
to those whom he persecuted. "But the Lord," he saith, "strengtheneth
the righteous."...
6. Therefore "the Lord does strengthen the righteous." In what way does
He strengthen them? "The Lord knoweth the ways [880] of the spotless
ones" (ver. 18). When they suffer ills, they are believed to be walking
ill ways by those who are ignorant, by those who have not knowledge to
discern "the ways of the spotless ones." He who "knoweth those ways,"
knoweth by what way to lead His own, "them that are gentle," in the
right way. Whence in another Psalm he said, "The meek shall He guide in
judgment; them that are gentle will He teach His way." [881] How, think
you, was that beggar, who lay covered with sores before the rich man's
door, [882] spurned by the passers by! How did they, probably, close
their nostrils and spit at him! The Lord, however, knew how to reserve
[883] Paradise for him. How did they, on the other hand, desire for
themselves the life of him who was "clad in purple and fine linen, and
fared sumptuously every day!" [884] But the Lord, who foresaw that
man's "day coming," knew the torments, the torments without end, that
were in store for him. Therefore "The Lord knoweth the ways of the
upright."
7. "And their inheritance shall be for ever" (ver. 18). This we hold by
faith. Doth the Lord too know it by faith? The Lord knoweth those
things with as clear a manifestation, as we cannot speak of even when
we shall be made equal to the Angels. For the things that shall be
manifest to us, shall not be equally manifest to us as they are now to
Him, who is incapable of change. Yet even of us ourselves what is said?
"Beloved, now are we the sons of God: and it doth not yet appear what
we shall be: but we know that, when He shall appear, we shall be like
Him, for we shall see Him as He is." [885] There is therefore surely
some blissful vision reserved for us; and if it can be now in some
measure conceived, "darkly and through a glass," [886] yet cannot we in
any way express in language the ravishing beauty of that bliss, which
God reserves for them that fear Him, which He consummates in those that
hope in Him. It is for that destination that our hearts are being
disciplined in all the troubles and trials of this life. Wonder not
that it is in trouble that thou art disciplined for it. It is for
something glorious that thou art being disciplined. Whence comes that
speech of the now strengthened righteous man: "The sufferings of this
present time are not worthy to be compared to the glory which shall be
revealed in us"? [887] What is that promised glory to be, but to be
made equal to the Angels and to see God? How great a benefit doth he
bestow on the blind man, who makes his eyes sound so as to be able to
see the light of this life....What reward then shall we give unto that
Physician who restores soundness to our inward eyes, to enable them to
see a certain eternal Light, which is Himself?...
8. "They shall not be ashamed in the evil time" (ver. 19). In the day
of trouble, in the day of distress, they shall not be "ashamed," as he
is ashamed whose hope deceives him. Who is the man that is "ashamed"?
He who saith, "I have not found that which I was in hopes of." Nor
undeservedly either; for thou didst hope it from thyself or from man,
thy friend. But "cursed is he that putteth his trust in man." [888]
Thou art ashamed, because thy hope hath deceived thee; thy hope that
was set on a lie. For "every man is a liar." [889] But if thou dost
place thy hopes on thy God, thou art not made "ashamed." For He in whom
thou hast put thy trust, cannot be deceived. [890] Whence also the man
whom we mentioned just above, the now "strengthened" righteous man,
when fallen on an evil time, on the day of tribulation, what saith he
to show that he was not "ashamed"? "We glory in tribulation; knowing
that tribulation worketh patience, and patience experience, and
experience hope; but hope maketh not ashamed." Whence is it that hope
"maketh not ashamed"? Because it is placed on God. Therefore follows
immediately, "Because the love of God is spread in our hearts by the
Holy Spirit, which is given unto us." [891] The Holy Spirit hath been
given to us already: how should He deceive us, of whom we possess such
an "earnest" already? "They shall not be ashamed in the evil time, and
in the days of famine they shall be satisfied."...
9. "For the wicked shall perish. But the enemies of the Lord, when they
shall begin to glory, and to be lifted up, immediately shall consume
away utterly, even as the smoke" (ver. 20). Recognise from the
comparison itself the thing which he intimates. Smoke, breaking forth
from the place where fire has been, rises up on high, and by the very
act of rising up, it swells into a large volume: but the larger that
volume is, the more unsubstantial does it become; for from that very
largeness of volume, which has no foundation or consistency, but is
merely loose, shifting and evanescent, it passes into air, and
dissolves; so that you perceive its very largeness to have been fatal
to it. For the higher it ascends, the farther it is extended, the wider
the circumference which it spreads itself over, the thinner, and the
more rare and wasting and evanescent does it become. "But the enemies
of the Lord, when they shall begin to glory, and to be lifted up,
immediately shall consume away utterly even as the smoke." Of such as
these was it said, "As Jannes and Jambres withstood Moses, so do these
also resist the Truth; men of corrupt minds, reprobate concerning the
faith." [892] But how is it that they resist the Truth, except by the
vain inflation of their swelling pride, while they raise themselves up
on high, as if great and righteous persons, though on the point of
passing away into empty air? But what saith he of them? As if speaking
of smoke, he says, "They shall proceed no farther, for their folly
shall be manifest unto all men, even as theirs also was."...
10. "The wicked borroweth, and payeth not again" (ver. 20). He
receiveth, and will not repay. What is it he will not repay?
Thanksgiving. For what is it that God would have of thee, what doth He
require of thee, except that He may do thee good? And how great are the
benefits which the sinner hath received, and which he will not repay!
He hath received the gift of being; he hath received the gift of being
a man; and of a being highly distinguished above the brutes; he hath
received the form of a body, and the distinction of the senses in the
body, eyes for seeing, ears for hearing, the nostrils for smelling, the
palate for tasting, the hands for touching, and the feet for walking;
and even the very health and soundness of the body. But up to this
point we have these things in common even with the brute; he hath
received yet more than this; a mind capable of understanding, capable
of Truth, capable of distinguishing right from wrong; capable of
seeking after, of longing for, its Creator, of praising Him, and fixing
itself upon Him. All this the wicked man hath received as well as
others; but by not living well, he fails to repay that which he owes.
Thus it is, "the wicked borroweth, and payeth not again:" he will not
requite Him from whom he hath received; he will not return thanks; nay,
he will even render evil for good, blasphemies, murmuring against God,
indignation. Thus it is that he "borroweth, and payeth not again; but
the righteous showeth mercy, and lendeth" (ver. 21). The one therefore
hath nothing; the other hath. See, on the one side, destitution: see,
on the other, wealth. The one receiveth and "payeth not again:" the
"other showeth mercy, and lendeth:" and he hath more than enough. What
if he is poor? Even so he is rich; do you but look at his riches with
the eyes of Religion. For thou lookest at the empty chest; but dost not
look at the conscience, that is full of God....
11. "For such as shall bless Him [893] shall inherit the land" (ver.
23), that is, [894] they shall possess that righteous One: the only One
who both is truly righteous, and maketh righteous: who both was poor in
this world, and brought great riches to it, wherewith to make those
rich whom He found poor. For it is He who hath enriched the hearts of
the poor with the Holy Spirit; and having emptied out their souls by
confession of sins, hath filled them with the richness of
righteousness: He who was able to enrich the fisherman, who, by
forsaking his nets, spurned what he possessed already, but sought to
draw up what he possessed not. For "God hath chosen the weak things of
the world to confound the things which are mighty." [895] And it was
not by an orator that He gained to Himself the fisherman; but by the
fisherman that He gained to Himself the orator; by the fisherman that
He gained the Senator; by the fisherman that He gained the Emperor. For
"such as shall bless Him shall inherit the land;" they shall be
fellow-heirs with Him, in that "land of the living," of which it is
said in another Psalm, "Thou art my hope, my portion in the land of the
living." [896] ...
12. Observe what follows: "The steps of a good man are ordered by the
Lord; and he delighteth in His way" (ver. 23). That man may himself
"delight in the Lord's way," his steps are ordered by the Lord Himself.
For if the Lord did not order the steps of man, so crooked are they
naturally, that they would always be going through crooked paths, and
by pursuing crooked ways, would be unable to return again. He however
came, and called us, and redeemed us, and shed His blood; He hath given
this ransom; He hath done this good, and suffered these evils. Consider
Him in what He hath done, He is God! Consider Him in what He hath
suffered, He is Man! Who is that God-Man? Hadst not thou, O man,
forsaken God, God would not have been made Man for thee! For that was
too little for thee to requite, or for Him to bestow, that He had made
thee man; unless He Himself should become Man for thee also. For it is
He Himself that hath "ordered our steps;" that we should "delight in
His way."...
13. Now if man were to be through the whole of his life in toil, and in
sufferings, in pain, in tortures, in prison, in scourgings, in hunger,
and in thirst, every day and every hour through the whole length of
life, to the period of old age, yet the whole life of man is but a few
days. That labour being over, there is to come the Eternal Kingdom;
there is to come happiness without end; there is to come equality with
the Angels; there is to come Christ's inheritance, and Christ, our
"joint Heir," [897] is to come. How great is the labour, for which thou
receivest so great a recompense? The Veterans who serve in the wars,
and move in the midst of wounds for so many years, enter upon the
military service from their youth, and quit it in old age: and to
obtain a few days of repose in their old age, when age itself begins to
weigh down those whom the wars do not break down, how great hardships
do they endure; what marches, what frosts, what burning suns; what
privations, what wounds, and what dangers! And while suffering all
these things, they fix their thoughts on nothing but those few days of
repose in old age, at which they know not whether they will ever
arrive. Thus it is, the "steps of a good man are ordered by the Lord,
and he delighteth in His way." This is the point with which I
commenced. If thou dost "delight in the way" of Christ, and art truly a
Christian (for he is a Christian indeed who does not despise the way of
Christ, but "delighteth in" following Christ's "way" through His
sufferings), do not thou go by any other way than that by which He
Himself hath also gone. It appears painful, but it is the very way of
safety; another perhaps is delightful, but it is full of robbers. "And
he delighteth in His way."
14. "Though he fall, he shall not be utterly cast down; for the Lord
upholdeth his hand" (ver. 24). See what it is "to delight in" Christ's
"way." Should it happen that he suffers some tribulation; some
forfeiture of honour, some affliction, some loss, some contumely, or
all those other accidents incident to mankind frequently in this life,
he sets the Lord before him, what kind of trials He endured! and,
"though he fall he shall not be utterly cast down, for the Lord
upholdeth his hand," because He has suffered before him. For what
shouldest thou fear, O man, whose steps are ordered so, that thou
shouldest "delight in the way of the Lord"? What shouldest thou fear?
Pain? Christ was scourged. Shouldest thou fear contumelies? He was
reproached with, "Thou hast a devil," [898] who was Himself casting out
the devils. Haply thou fearest faction, and the conspiracy of the
wicked. Conspiracy was made against Him. Thou canst not make clear the
purity of thy conscience in some accusation, and sufferest wrong and
violence, because false witnesses are listened to against thee. False
witness was borne against Him first, not only before His death, but
also after His resurrection....
__________________________________________________________________
[873] Preached at another time.
[874] Rom. ii. 6, 5.
[875] Matt. x. 28.
[876] Luke xvi. 19, 23.
[877] Ps. xxvii. 14.
[878] [Sozomen, b. i. cap. 8. This author tells us that Constantine
made this change, dictated alike by reverence and humanity.--C.]
[879] Rom. v. 3-5.
[880] E.V. and Vulgate, "days."
[881] Ps. xxv. 9.
[882] Luke xvi. 20.
[883] Al. "knew that Paradise was in store."
[884] Luke xvi. 19.
[885] 1 John iii. 2.
[886] 1 Cor. xiii. 12.
[887] Rom. viii. 18.
[888] Jer. xvii. 5.
[889] Ps. cxvi. 11.
[890] Al. "deceive."
[891] Rom. v. 3-5.
[892] 2 Tim. iii. 8.
[893] E.V. "such as be blessed."
[894] Scilicet, Ben. Conj. for sicut.
[895] 1 Cor. i. 27.
[896] Ps. cxlii. 5.
[897] Rom. viii. 17.
[898] John vii. 20, viii. 48.
__________________________________________________________________
On the Third Part of the Psalm. [899]
1. "I have been young, and now am old; yet have I not seen the
righteous forsaken, nor his seed begging bread" (ver. 25).
If it is spoken but in the person of one single individual, how long is
the whole life of one man? And what is there wonderful in the
circumstance, that a single man, fixed in some one part of the earth,
should not, throughout the whole space of his life, being so short as
man's life is, have ever seen "the righteous forsaken, nor his seed
begging bread," although he may have advanced from youth to age. It is
not anything worthy of marvel; for it might have happened, that before
his lifetime there should have been some "righteous man seeking bread;"
it might have happened, that there had been some one in some other part
of the earth not where he himself was. Hear too another thing, which
makes an impression upon us. Any single one among you (look you) who
has now grown old, may perhaps, when, looking back upon the past course
of his life, he turns over in his thoughts the persons whom he has
known, not find any instance of a righteous man begging bread, or of
his seed begging bread, suggest itself to him; but nevertheless he
turns to the inspired Scriptures, and finds that righteous Abraham was
straitened, and suffered hunger in his own country, and left that land
for another; he finds too that the son of the very same man, Isaac,
removed to other countries in search of bread, for the same cause of
hunger. And how will it be true to say, "I have never seen the
righteous forsaken, nor his seed begging bread"? And if he finds this
true in the duration of his own life, he finds it is otherwise in the
inspired writings, which are more trustworthy than human life is.
2. What are we to do then? Let us be seconded by your pious attention,
so that we may discern the purpose of God in these verses of the Psalm,
what it is He would have us understand by them. For there is a fear,
lest any unstable person, not capable of understanding the Scriptures
spiritually, should appeal to human instances, and should observe the
virtuous servants of God to be sometimes in some necessity, and in
want, so as to be compelled to beg bread: should particularly call to
mind the Apostle Paul, who says, "In hunger and thirst; in cold and
nakedness;" [900] and should stumble thereat, saying to himself, "Is
that certainly true [901] which I have been singing? Is that certainly
true, which I have been sounding forth in so devout a voice, standing
in church? `I have never seen the righteous forsaken, nor his seed
begging bread.'" Lest he should say in his heart, "Scripture deceives
us;" and all his limbs should be paralyzed to good works: and when
those limbs within him, those limbs of the inner man, shall have been
paralyzed (which is the more fearful paralysis), he should henceforth
leave off from good works, and say to himself, "Wherefore do I do good
works? Wherefore do I break my bread to the hungry, and clothe the
naked, and take home to mine house him who hath no shelter, [902]
putting faith in that which is written? `I have never seen the
righteous forsaken, nor his seed begging bread;' whereas I see so many
persons who live virtuously, yet for the most part suffering from
hunger. But if perhaps I am in error in thinking the man who is living
well, and the man who is living ill, to be both of them living well,
and if God knows him to be otherwise; that is, knows him, whom I think
just, to be unjust, what am I to make of Abraham's case, who is
commended by Scripture itself as a righteous person? What am I to make
of the Apostle Paul, who says, `Be ye followers of me, even as I also
am of Christ.' [903] What? that I should myself be in evils such as he
endured, `In hunger and thirst, in cold and nakedness'?" [904]
3. Whilst therefore he thus thinks, and whilst his limbs are paralyzed
to the power of good works, can we, my brethren, as it were, lift up
the sick of the palsy; and, as it were, "lay open the roof" of this
Scripture, and let him down before the Lord. [905] For you observe that
it is obscure. If obscure therefore, it is covered. And I behold a
certain patient paralytic in mind, and I see this roof, and am
convinced that Christ is concealed beneath the roof. Let me, as far as
I am able, do that which was praised in those who opened the roof, and
let down the sick of the palsy before Christ; that He might say unto
him, "Son, be of good cheer, thy sins be forgiven thee." [906] For it
was so that He made the inner man whole of his palsy, by loosing his
sins, by binding fast his faith....
4. But who is "the righteous" man, who "hath never been seen forsaken,
nor his seed begging bread"? If you understand what is meant by
"bread," you understand who is meant by him. For the "bread" is the
Word of God, which never departs from the righteous man's mouth....See
now if "holy meditation doth `keep thee'" in the rumination of this
bread, then "hast thou never seen the righteous forsaken, nor his seed
begging bread."
5. "He is always merciful, and lendeth" (ver. 26). "Foeneratur" is used
in Latin indeed, both for him who lendeth, and for him who borroweth.
But in this passage the meaning is more plain, if we express it by
"foenerat." What matters it to us, what the grammarians please to rule?
It were better for us to be guilty of a barbarism, so that ye
understand, than that in our propriety of speech ye be left unprovided.
Therefore, that "righteous man is all day merciful, and (foenerat)
lendeth." Let not the lenders of money on usury, however, rejoice. For
we find it is a particular kind of lender that is spoken of, as it was
a particular kind of bread; that we may, in all passages, "remove the
roof," and find our way to Christ. I would not have you be lenders of
money on usury; and I would not have you be such for this reason,
because God would not have you....Whence does it appear that God would
not have it so? It is said in another place, "He that putteth not out
his money to usury." [907] And how detestable, odious, and execrable a
thing it is, I believe that even usurers themselves know. Again, on the
other hand, I myself, nay rather our God Himself bids thee be an
usurer, and says to thee, "Lend unto God." If thou lendest to man, hast
thou hope? and shalt thou not have hope, if thou lendest to God? If
thou hast lent thy money on usury to man, that is, if thou hast given
the loan of thy money to one, from whom thou dost expect to receive
something more than thou hast given, not in money only, but anything,
whether it be wheat, or wine, or oil, or whatever else you please, if
you expect to receive more than you have given, you are an usurer, and
in this particular are not deserving of praise, but of censure. "What
then," you say, "am I to do, that I may `lend' profitably?" Consider
what the usurer does. He undoubtedly desires to give a less sum, and to
receive a larger; do thou this also; give thou a little, receive much.
See how thy principal grows, and increases! Give "things temporal,"
receive "things eternal:" give earth, receive heaven! And perhaps thou
wouldest say, "To whom shall I give them?" The self-same Lord, who bade
thee not lend on usury, comes forward as the Person to whom thou
shouldest lend on usury! Hear from Scripture in what way thou mayest
"lend unto the Lord." "He that hath pity on the poor, lendeth unto the
Lord." [908] For the Lord wanteth not aught of thee. But thou hast one
who needs somewhat of thee: thou extendest it to him; he receives it.
For the poor hath nothing to return to thee, and yet he would himself
fain requite thee, and finds nothing wherewith to do it: all that
remains in his power is the good-will that desires to pray for thee.
Now when the poor man prays for thee, he, as it were, says unto God,
"Lord, I have borrowed this; be Thou surety for me." Then, though you
have no bond on the poor man to compel his repayment, yet you have on a
sponsible security. See, God from His own Scriptures saith unto thee;
"Give it, and fear not; I repay it. It is to Me thou givest it." In
what way do those who make themselves sureties for others, express
themselves? What is it that they say? "I repay it: I take it upon
myself. It is to me you are giving it." Do we then suppose that God
also says this, "I take it on Myself. It is unto me thou givest it"?
Assuredly, if Christ be God, of which there is no doubt, He hath
Himself said, "I was an hungred, and ye gave Me meat." [909] And when
they said unto Him, "When saw we Thee hungry?" [910] that He might show
Himself to be the Surety for the poor, that He answers for all His
members, that He is the Head, they the members, and that when the
members receive, the Head receiveth also; He says, "Inasmuch as ye have
done it to one of the least of these that belong to Me, ye have done it
unto Me." [911] Come, thou covetous usurer, consider what thou hast
given; consider what thou art to receive. Hadst thou given a small sum
of money, and he to whom thou hadst given it were to give thee for that
small sum a great villa, worth incomparably more money than thou hadst
given, how great thanks wouldest thou render, with how great joy
wouldest thou be transported! Hear what possession He to whom thou hast
been lending bestows. "Come, ye blessed of My Father, receive" [912]
--What? The same that they have given? God forbid! What you gave were
earthly things, which, if you had not given them, would have become
corrupted on earth. For what could you have made of them, if you had
not given them? That which on earth would have been lost, has been
preserved in heaven. Therefore what we are to receive is that which
hath been preserved. It is thy desert that hath been preserved, thy
desert hath been made thy treasure. For consider what it is that thou
art to receive. Receive--"the kingdom prepared for you from the
foundation of the world." On the other hand, what shall be their
sentence, who would not "lend"? "Go ye into everlasting fire, prepared
for the devil and his angels." [913] And what is the kingdom which we
receive called? Consider what follows: "And these shall go into
everlasting burning; but the righteous into life eternal." [914] Make
interest for this; purchase this. Give your money on usury to earn
this. You have Christ throned in heaven, begging on earth. We have
discovered in what way the righteous lendeth. "He is alway merciful,
and lendeth."
6. "And his seed is blessed." Here too let not any carnal notion
suggest itself. We see many of the sons of the righteous dying of
hunger; in what sense then will his seed be blessed? His seed is that
which remains of him afterwards; that wherewith he soweth here, and
will hereafter reap. For the Apostle says, "Let us not be weary in
well-doing; for in due season we shall reap if we faint not. As we have
therefore time," he says, "let us do good unto all men." [915] This is
that "seed" of thine which shall "be blessed." You commit it to the
earth, and gather ever so much more; and dost thou lose it in
committing it to Christ? See it expressly termed "seed" by the Apostle,
when he was speaking of alms. For this he saith; "He which soweth
sparingly, shall reap also sparingly; and he which soweth in blessings,
[916] shall also reap in blessings." [917] ...
7. Observe therefore what follows, and be not slothful. "Depart from
evil, and do good" (ver. 27). Do not think it to be enough for thee to
do, if thou dost not strip the man who is already clothed. For in not
stripping the man who is already clothed, thou hast indeed "departed
from evil:" but do not be barren, and wither. So choose not to strip
the man who is clothed already, as to clothe the naked. For this is to
"depart from evil, and to do good." And you will say, "What advantage
am I to derive from it?" He to whom thou lendest has already assured
thee of what He will give thee. He will give thee everlasting life.
Give to Him, and fear not! Hear too what follows: "Depart from evil,
and do good, and dwell for evermore." And think not when thou givest
that no one sees thee, or that God forsakes thee, when haply after thou
hast given to the poor, and some loss, or some sorrow for the property
thou hast lost, should follow, and thou shouldest say to thyself, "What
hath it profited me to have done good works? I believe God doth not
love the men who do good." Whence comes that buzz, that subdued murmur
among you, except that those expressions are very common? Each one of
you at this present moment recognises these expressions, either in his
own lips, or on those of his friend. May God destroy them; may He root
out the thorns from His field; may He plant "the good seed," and "the
tree bearing fruit"! For wherefore art thou afflicted, O man, that thou
hast given some things away to the poor, and hast lost certain other
things? Seest thou not that it is what thou hast not given, that thou
hast lost? Wherefore dost thou not attend to the voice of thy God?
Where is thy faith? wherefore is it so fast asleep? Wake it up in thy
heart. Consider what the Lord Himself said unto thee, while exhorting
thee to good works of this kind: "Provide yourselves bags which wax not
old; a treasure in the heavens that faileth not, where no thief
approacheth." [918] Call this to mind therefore when you are lamenting
over a loss. Wherefore dost thou lament, thou fool of little mind, or
rather of unsound mind? Wherefore didst thou lose it, except that thou
didst not lend it to Me? Wherefore didst thou lose it? Who has carried
it off? Thou wilt answer, "A thief." Was it not this, that I forewarned
thee of? that thou shouldest not lay it up where the thief could
approach? If then he who has lost anything, grieves, let him grieve for
this, that he did not lay it up there, whence it could not be lost.
8. "For the Lord loveth judgment, and forsaketh not His Saints" (ver.
28). When the Saints suffer affliction, think not that God doth not
judge, or doth not judge righteously. Will He, who warns thee to judge
righteously, Himself judge unrighteously? He "loveth judgment, and
forsaketh not His Saints." But (think) how [919] the "life" of the
Saints is "hid with Him," in such a manner, that who now suffer trouble
on earth, like trees in the winter-time, having no fruit and leaves,
when He, like a newly-risen sun, shall have appeared, that which before
was living in their root, will show itself forth in fruits. He does
then "love judgment, and doth not forsake His Saints."...
9. "But the unrighteous shall be punished; the seed of the wicked shall
be cut off." Just as the "seed of the" other "shall be blessed," so
shall the "seed of the wicked be cut off." For the "seed" of the wicked
is the works of the wicked. For again, on the other hand, we find the
son of the wicked man flourish in the world, and sometimes become
righteous, and flourish in Christ. Be careful therefore how thou takest
it; that thou mayest remove the covering, and make thy way to Christ.
[920] Do not take the text in a carnal sense; for thou wilt be
deceived. But "the seed of the wicked"--all the works of the
wicked--"will be cut off:" they shall have no fruit. For they are
effective indeed for a short time; afterwards they shall seek for them,
and shall not find the reward of that which they have wrought. For it
is the expression of those who lose what they have wrought, that text
which says, "What hath pride profited us, or what good hath riches with
our vaunting brought us? All those things are passed away like a
shadow." [921] "The seed of the wicked," then, "shall be cut off."
10. "The righteous shall inherit the land" (ver. 29). Here again let
not covetousness steal on thee, nor promise thee some great estate;
hope not to find there, what you are commanded to despise in this
world. That "land" in the text, is a certain "land of the living," the
kingdom of the Saints. Whence it is said: "Thou art my hope, my portion
in the land of the living." [922] For if thy life too is the same life
as that there spoken of, think what sort of "land" thou art about to
inherit. That is "the land of the living;" this the land of those who
are about to die: to receive again, when dead, those whom it nourished
when living. Such then as is that land, such shall the life itself be
also: if the life be for ever, "the land" also is to be thine "for
ever." And how is "the land" to be thine "for ever"?
"And they shall dwell therein" (it says) "for ever." It must therefore
be another land, where "they are to dwell therein for ever." For of
this land (of this earth) it is said, "Heaven and earth shall pass
away." [923]
11. "The mouth of the righteous speaketh wisdom" (ver. 30). See here is
that "bread." Observe with what satisfaction this righteous man feedeth
upon it; how he turns wisdom over and over in his mouth. "And his
tongue talketh of judgment."
"The law of his God is in his heart" (ver. 31). Lest haply thou
shouldest think him to have that on his lips, which he hath not in his
heart, lest thou shouldest reckon him among those of whom it is said,
"This people honour Me with their lips, but their heart is far from
Me." [924] And of what use is this to him?
"And none of his steps shall slide." The "word of God in the heart"
frees from the snare; the "word of God in the heart" delivers from the
evil way; "the word of God in the heart" delivers from "the slippery
place." [925] He is with thee, Whose word departeth not from thee. Now
what evil doth he suffer, whom God keepeth? Thou settest a watchman in
thy vineyard, and feelest secure from thieves; and that watchman may
sleep, and may himself fall, and may admit a thief. But "He who keepeth
Israel shall neither slumber nor sleep." [926] "The law of his God is
in his heart, and none of his steps shall slide." Let him therefore
live free from fear; let him live free from fear even in the midst of
the wicked; free from fear even in the midst of the ungodly. For what
evil can the ungodly or unrighteous man do to the righteous? Lo! see
what follows.
"The wicked watcheth the righteous, and seeketh to slay him" (ver. 32).
For he says, what it was foretold in the book of Wisdom that he should
say, "He is grievous unto us, even to behold; for his life is not like
other men's." [927] Therefore he "seeks to slay him." What? Doth the
Lord, who keepeth him, who dwelleth with him, who departeth not from
his lips, from his heart, doth He forsake him? What then becomes of
what was said before: "And He forsaketh not His Saints"? [928]
12. "The wicked therefore watcheth the righteous, and seeketh to slay
him. But the Lord will not leave him in his hands" (ver. 33). Wherefore
then did He leave the Martyrs in the hands of the ungodly? Wherefore
did they do unto them "whatsoever they would"? [929] Some they slew
with the sword; some they crucified; some they delivered to the beasts;
some they burnt by fire; others they led about in chains, till wasted
out by a long protracted decay. Assuredly "the Lord forsaketh not His
Saints." He will not "leave him in his hands." Lastly, wherefore did He
leave His own Son in "the hands of the ungodly"? Here also, if thou
wouldest have all the limbs of thy inner man made strong, remove the
covering of the roof, and find thy way to the Lord. Hear what another
Scripture, foreseeing our Lord's future suffering at the hands of the
ungodly, saith. What saith it? "The earth is given into the hands of
the wicked." [930] What is meant by "earth" being "given into the hands
of the ungodly"? The delivering of the flesh into the hands of the
persecutors. But God did not leave "His righteous One" [931] there:
from the flesh, which was taken captive, He leads forth the soul
unconquered....
"The Lord will not leave him in his hand, nor condemn him when there
shall be judgment for him" (ver. 33). Some copies have it, "and when He
shall judge him, there shall be judgment for him." "For him," however,
means when sentence is passed upon him. For we can express ourselves so
as to say to a person, "Judge for me," i.e. "hear my cause." When
therefore God shall begin to hear the cause of His righteous servant,
since "we must all" be presented "before the tribunal of Christ," and
stand before it to receive every one "the things he hath done in this
body," [932] whether good or evil, when therefore he shall have come to
that Judgment, He will not condemn him; though he may seem to be
condemned in this present life by man. Even though the Proconsul may
have passed sentence on Cyprian, [933] yet the earthly seat of judgment
is one thing, the heavenly tribunal is another. From the inferior
tribunal he receives sentence of death; from the superior one a crown,
"Nor will He condemn him when there shall be judgment for him."
13. "Wait on the Lord" (ver. 34). And while I am waiting upon Him, what
am I to do?--"and keep His ways." And if I keep them, what am I to
receive? "And He shall exalt thee to inherit the land." "What land"?
Once more let not any estate suggest itself to your mind:--the land of
which it is said, "Come, ye blessed of My Father, inherit the kingdom
prepared for you from the foundation of the world." [934] What of those
who have troubled us, in the midst of whom we have groaned, whose
scandals we have patiently endured, for whom, while they were raging
against us, we have prayed in vain? What will become of them? What
follows? "When the wicked are cut off, thou shall see it."...
"I have seen the ungodly lifted up on high, and rising above the cedars
of Libanus" (ver. 35). And suppose him to be "lifted up on high;"
suppose him to be towering above the "rest;" what follows?
"I passed by, and, lo, he was not! I sought him, and his place could
nowhere be found!" (ver. 36). Why was he "no more, and his place
nowhere to be found"? Because thou hast "passed by." But if thou art
yet carnally-minded, and that earthly prosperity appears to thee to be
true happiness, thou hast not yet "passed by" him; thou art either his
fellow, or thou art below him; go on, and pass him; and when thou hast
made progress, and hast passed by him, thou observest him by the eye of
faith; thou seest his end, thou sayest to thyself, "Lo! he who so
swelled before, is not!" just as if it were some smoke that thou wert
passing near to. For this too was said above in this very Psalm, "They
shall consume and fade away as the smoke." [935] ...
14. "Keep innocency" (ver. 37); keep it even as thou usedst to keep thy
purse, when thou wert covetous; even as thou usedst to hold fast that
purse, that it might not be snatched from thy grasp by the thief, even
so "keep innocency," lest that be snatched from thy grasp by the devil.
Be that thy sure inheritance, of which the rich and the poor may both
be sure. "Keep innocency." What doth it profit thee to gain gold, and
to lose innocence?
"Keep innocency, and take heed unto the thing which is right." Keep
thou thine eyes "right," that thou mayest see "the thing which is
right;" not perverted, wherewith thou lookest upon the wicked; not
distorted, so that God should appear to thee distorted and wrong, in
that He favours the wicked, and afflicts the faithful with
persecutions. Dost thou not observe how distorted thy vision is? Set
right thine eyes, and "behold the thing that is right." What "thing
that is right"? Take no heed of things present. And what wilt thou see?
"For there is a remainder for the man that maketh peace." [936] What is
meant by "there is a remainder"? When thou art dead, thou shalt not be
dead. This is the meaning of "there is a remainder." He will still have
something remaining to him, even after this life, that is to say, that
"seed," which "shall be blessed." Whence our Lord saith, "He that
believeth on Me, though he die, yet shall he live;" [937] --"seeing
there is a remainder for the man that maketh peace."
15. "But the transgressors shall be destroyed in the self-same thing"
[938] (ver. 38). What is meant by, "in the self-same thing"? It means
for ever: or all together in one and the same destruction.
"The remainder of the wicked shall be cut off." Now there is "(a
remainder) for the man that maketh peace:" they therefore who are not
peace-makers [939] are ungodly. For, "Blessed are the peace-makers: for
they shall be called the children of God." [940]
16. "But the salvation of the righteous is of the Lord, and He is their
strength in the time of trouble" (ver. 39). "And the Lord shall help
them, and deliver them; He shall deliver them from the sinners" [941]
(ver. 40). At present therefore let the righteous bear with the sinner;
let the wheat bear with the tares; let the grain bear with the chaff:
for the time of separation will come, and the good seed shall be set
apart from that which is to be consumed with fire. [942] The one will
be consigned to the garner, the other to "everlasting burning;" for it
was for this reason that the just and the unjust were at the first
together; that the one should lay a stumbling-block, [943] that the
other should be proved; that afterwards the one should be condemned,
the other receive a crown....
__________________________________________________________________
[899] On another day.
[900] 2 Cor. xi. 27.
[901] Al. vanum, "Is it not false."
[902] Isa. lviii. 7.
[903] 1 Cor. xi. 1.
[904] 2 Cor. xi. 27.
[905] Luke v. 19.
[906] Luke v. 20.
[907] Ps. xv. 5. [This intricate subject is nowhere more ably handled
than by M. Huet in his Regne Social du Christianisme, cap. ix. p. 317,
Paris, 1853.--C.]
[908] Prov. x. 17.
[909] Matt. xxv. 35.
[910] Matt. xxv. 37.
[911] Matt. xxv. 40.
[912] Matt. xxv. 34.
[913] Matt. xxv. 41.
[914] Matt. xxv. 46.
[915] Gal. vi. 9, 10.
[916] In benedictionibus (ep' eulogiais), Rec. text; E.V.
"bountifully."
[917] 2 Cor. ix. 6.
[918] Luke xii. 33.
[919] Quomodo.--Ben. Quo modo. Quod modo, "that now," gives a better
sense, or quo modo, "in such sort that."
[920] Luke v. 19.
[921] Wisd. v. 8, 9.
[922] Ps. cxlii. 5.
[923] Matt. xxiv. 35.
[924] Isa. xxix. 13.
[925] Labina. Lubricus locus. Isidor.
[926] Ps. cxxi. 4.
[927] Wisd. ii. 15.
[928] Ps. xxxvii. 28.
[929] Matt. xvii. 12.
[930] Job ix. 24.
[931] Ps. xvi. 10.
[932] 2 Cor. v. 10.
[933] [See A.N.F. vol. V. p. 273.--C.]
[934] Matt. xxv. 34.
[935] Ps. xxxvii. 20.
[936] E.V. "For the end of that man is peace."
[937] John xi. 25.
[938] In id ipsum.
[939] The Donatists.
[940] Matt. v. 9.
[941] St. Augustin omits, "because they trust in Him." Vulgate has,
quia speraverunt in eo.
[942] Matt. xiii. 30.
[943] Most mss. "should stumble."
__________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XXXVIII. [944]
A psalm to David himself, on the remembrance of the Sabbath.
1. What doth this recollection of the Sabbath mean? What is this
Sabbath? For it is with groaning that he "calls it to recollection."
You have both heard already when the Psalm was read, and you will now
hear it when we shall go over it, how great is his groaning, his
mourning, his tears, his misery. But happy he who is wretched after
this manner! Whence the Lord also in the Gospel [945] called some who
mourn blessed. "How should he be blessed if he is a mourner? How
blessed, if he is miserable?" Nay rather, he would be miserable, if he
were not a mourner. Such an one then let us understand here too,
calling the Sabbath to remembrance (viz.), some mourner or other: and
would that we were ourselves that "some one or other"! For there is
here some person sorrowing, groaning, mourning, calling the Sabbath to
remembrance. The Sabbath is rest. Doubtless he was in some disquietude,
who with groaning was calling the Sabbath to remembrance....
2. "O Lord, rebuke me not in Thine indignation; neither chasten me in
Thy hot displeasure" (ver. 1). For it will be that some shall be
chastened in God's "hot displeasure," and rebuked in His "indignation."
And haply not all who are "rebuked" will be "chastened;" yet are there
some that are to be saved in the chastening. [946] So it is to be
indeed, because it is called "chastening," [947] but yet it shall be
"so as by fire." But there are to be some who will be "rebuked," and
will not be "corrected." For he will at all events "rebuke" [948] those
to whom He will say, "I was an hungred, and ye gave me no meat." [949]
... "Neither chasten me in Thy hot displeasure;" so that Thou mayest
cleanse me in this life, and make me such, that I may after that stand
in no need of the cleansing fire, for those "who are to be saved, yet
so as by fire." [950] Why? Why, but because they "build upon the
foundation, wood, stubble, and hay." Now they should build on it,
"gold, silver, and precious stones;" [951] and should have nothing to
fear from either fire: not only that which is to consume the ungodly
for ever, but also that which is to purge those who are to escape
through [952] the fire. For it is said, "he himself shall be saved, yet
so as by fire." And because it is said, "he shall be saved," that fire
is thought lightly of. For all that, though we should be "saved by
fire," yet will that fire be more grievous than anything that man can
suffer in this life whatsoever. [953] ...
3. Now on what ground does this person pray that he may not be "rebuked
in indignation, nor chastened in hot displeasure"? (He speaks) as if he
would say unto God, "Since the things which I already suffer are many
in number, I pray Thee let them suffice;" and he begins to enumerate
them, by way of satisfying God; offering what he suffers now, that he
may not have to suffer worse evils hereafter.
4. "For Thine arrows stick fast in me, and Thy hand presseth me sore"
(ver. 2). "There is no soundness in my flesh, from the face of Thine
anger" (ver. 3). He has now begun telling these evils, which he is
suffering here: and yet even this already was from the wrath of the
Lord, because it was of the vengeance of the Lord. "Of what vengeance?"
That which He took upon Adam. For think not that punishment was not
inflicted upon him, or that God had said to no purpose, "Thou shalt
surely die;" [954] or that we suffer anything in this life, except from
that death which we earned by the original sin....Whence then do His
"arrows stick fast in" him? The very punishment, the very vengeance,
and haply the pains both of mind and of body, which it is necessary for
us to suffer here, these he describes by these self-same "arrows." For
of these arrows holy Job also made mention, [955] and said that the
arrows of the Lord stuck fast in him, whilst he was labouring under
those pains. We are used, however, to call God's words also arrows; but
could he grieve that he should be struck by these? The words of God are
arrows, as it were, that inflame love, not pain....We may then
understand the "arrows sticking fast," thus: Thy words are fixed fast
in my heart; and by those words themselves is it come to pass, that I
"called the Sabbath to remembrance:" and that very remembrance of the
Sabbath, and the non-possession of it at present, prevents me from
rejoicing at present; and causes me to acknowledge that there "is
neither health in my very flesh," neither ought it to be so called when
I compare this sort of soundness to that soundness which I am to
possess in the everlasting rest; where "this corruptible shall put on
incorruption, and this mortal shall put on immortality," [956] and see
that in comparison with that soundness this present kind is but
sickness.
5. "Neither is there any rest in my bones, from the face of my sin." It
is commonly enquired, of what person this is the speech; and some
understand it to be Christ's, on account of some things which are here
said of the Passion of Christ; to which we shall shortly come; and
which we ourselves shall acknowledge to be spoken of His Passion. But
how could He who had no sin, say, "There is no rest in my bones, from
the face of my sin."...For if we were to say that they are not the
words of Christ, those words, "My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken
Me?" [957] will also not be the words of Christ. For there too you
have, "My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" "The words of mine
offences are far from my health." Just as here you have, "from the face
of my sins," so there also you have, "the words of my offences." And if
Christ is, for all that, without "sin," and without "offences," we
begin to think those words in the Psalm also not to be His. And it is
exceedingly harsh and inconsistent that that Psalm should not relate to
Christ, where we have His Passion as clearly laid open as if it were
being read to us out of the Gospel. For there we have, "They parted My
garments among them, and cast lots upon My vesture." [958] Why should I
mention that the first verse of that Psalm was pronounced by the Lord
Himself while hanging on the Cross, with His own mouth, saying, "My
God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?" What did He mean to be
inferred from it, but that the whole of that Psalm relates to Him,
seeing He Himself, the Head of His Body, pronounced it in His own
Person? Now when it goes on to say, "the words of mine offences," it is
beyond a doubt that they are the words of Christ. Whence then come "the
sins," but from the Body, which is the Church? Because both the Head
and the Body of Christ are speaking. Why do they speak as if one person
only? Because "they twain," as He hath said, "shall be one flesh."
[959] "This" (says the Apostle) "is a great mystery; but I speak
concerning Christ and the Church."...For why should He not say, "my
sins," who said, "I was an hungred, and ye gave Me no meat; I was
thirsty, and ye gave Me no drink; I was a stranger, and ye took Me not
in. I was sick and in prison, and ye visited Me not." [960] Assuredly
the Lord was not in prison. Why should He not say this, to whom when it
was said, "When saw we Thee a hungred, and athirst, or in prison; and
did not minister unto Thee?" He replied, that He spake thus in the
person of His Body. "Inasmuch as ye did it not unto one of the least of
Mine, ye did it not unto Me." [961] Why should He not say, "from the
face of my sins," who said to Saul, "Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou
Me," [962] who, however, being in Heaven, now suffered from no
persecutors? But just as, in that passage, the Head spake for the Body,
so here too the Head speaks the words of the Body; whilst you hear at
the same time the accents of the Head Itself also. Yet do not either,
when you hear the voice of the Body, separate the Head from it; nor the
Body, when you hear the voice of the Head: because "they are no more
twain, but one flesh." [963]
6. "There is no soundness in my flesh from the face of thine anger."
But perhaps God is unjustly angry with thee, O Adam; unjustly angry
with thee, O son of man; because now brought to acknowledge that thy
punishment, now that thou art a man that hath been placed in Christ's
Body, thou hast said, "There is no soundness in my flesh from the face
of Thine anger." Declare the justice of God's anger: lest thou
shouldest seem to be excusing thyself, and accusing Him. Go on to tell
whence the "anger" of the Lord proceeds. "There is no soundness in my
flesh from the face of Thine anger; neither is there any rest in my
bones." He repeats what he said before, "There is no soundness in my
flesh;" for, "There is no rest in my bones," is equivalent to this. He
does not however repeat "from the face of Thine anger;" but states the
cause of the anger of God. "There is no rest in my bones from the face
of my sins."
7. "For mine iniquities have lifted up my head; and are like a heavy
burden too heavy for me to bear" (ver. 4). Here too he has placed the
cause first, and the effect afterwards. What consequence followed, and
from what cause, he has told us. "Mine iniquities have lift up mine
head." For no one is proud but the unrighteous man, whose head is
lifted up. He is "lifted up," whose "head is lifted up on high" against
God. You heard when the lesson of the Book of Ecclesiasticus was read:
"The beginning of pride is when a man departeth from God." [964] He who
was the first to refuse to listen to the Commandment, "his head
iniquity lifted up" against God. And because his iniquities have lifted
up his head, what hath God done unto him? They are "like a heavy
burden, too heavy for me to bear"! It is the part of levity to lift up
the head, just as if he who lifts up his head had nothing to carry.
Since therefore that which admits of being lifted up is light, it
receives a weight by which it may be weighed down. For "his mischief
returns upon his own head, and his violent dealing comes down upon his
own pate." [965] "They are like a heavy burden, too heavy for me to
bear."
8. "My wounds stink and are corrupt" (ver. 5). Now he who has wounds is
not perfectly sound. Add to this, that the wounds "stink and are
corrupt." Wherefore do they "stink"? Because they are "corrupt:" now in
what way this is explained in reference to human life, who doth not
understand? Let a man but have his soul's sense of smelling sound, he
perceives how foully sins stink. The contrary to which stink of sin, is
that savour of which the Apostle says, "We are the sweet savour of
Christ unto God, in every place, unto them which be saved." [966] But
whence is this, except from hope? Whence is this, but from our "calling
the Sabbath to remembrance"? For it is a different thing that we mourn
over in this life, from that which we anticipate in the other. That
which we mourn over is stench, that which we reckon upon is fragrance.
Were there not therefore such a perfume as that to invite us, we should
never call the Sabbath to remembrance. [967] But since, by the Spirit,
we have such a perfume, as to say to our Betrothed, "Because of the
savour of Thy good ointments we will run after Thee;" [968] we turn our
senses away from our own unsavourinesses, and turning ourselves to Him,
we gain some little breathing-time. But indeed, unless our evil deeds
also did smell rank in our nostrils, we should never confess with those
groans, "My wounds stink and are corrupt." And wherefore? "from the
face of my foolishness." [969] From the same cause that he said before,
"from the face of my sins;" from that same cause he now says, "from the
face of my foolishness."
9. "I am troubled, I am bowed down even unto the end" (ver. 6).
Wherefore was he "bowed down"? Because he had been "lifted up." If thou
art "humble, thou shalt be exalted;" if thou exaltest thyself, thou
shalt be "bowed down;" for God will be at no loss to find a weight
wherewith to bow thee down....Let him groan on these things; that he
may receive the other; let him "call the Sabbath to remembrance," that
he may deserve to arrive at it. For that which the Jews used to
celebrate was but a sign. Of what thing was it the sign? Of that which
he calls to remembrance, who saith, "I am troubled, and am bowed down
even unto the end." What is meant by even "unto the end"? Even to
death.
"I go mourning all the day long." "All day long," that is, "without
intermission." By "all the day long," he means, "all my life long." But
from what time hath he known it? From the time that he began to "call
the Sabbath to remembrance." For so long as he "calls to remembrance"
what he no longer possesses, wouldest thou not have him "go mourning"?
"All the day long have I gone mourning."
10. "For my soul is filled with illusions, and there is no soundness in
my flesh" (ver. 7). Where there is the whole man, there there is soul
and flesh both. The "soul is filled with illusions;" the flesh hath "no
soundness." What does there remain that can give joy? Is it not meet
that one should "go mourning"? "All the day long have I gone mourning."
Let mourning be our portion, until our soul be divested of its
illusions; and our body be clothed with soundness. For true soundness
is no other than immortality. How great however are the soul's
illusions, were I even to attempt to express, when would the time
suffice me? For whose soul is not subject to them? There is a brief
particular that I will remind you of, to show how our soul is filled
with illusions. The presence of those illusions sometimes scarcely
permits us to pray. We know not how to think of material objects
without images, and such as we do not wish, rush in upon the mind; and
we wish to go from this one to that, and to quit that for another. And
sometimes you wish to return to that which you were thinking of before,
and to quit that which you are now thinking of; and a fresh one
presents itself to you; you wish to call up again what you had
forgotten; and it does not occur to you; and another comes instead
which you would not have wished for. Where meanwhile was the one that
you had forgotten? For why did it afterwards occur to you, when it had
ceased to be sought after; whereas, while it was being sought for,
innumerable others, which were not desired, presented themselves
instead of it? I have stated a fact briefly; I have thrown out a kind
of hint or suggestion to you, brethren, taking up which, you may
yourselves suggest the rest to yourselves, and discover what it is to
mourn over the "illusions" of our "soul." He hath received therefore
the punishment of illusion; he hath forfeited Truth. For just as
illusion is the soul's punishment, so is Truth its reward. But when we
were set in the midst of these illusions, the Truth Itself came to us,
and found us overwhelmed by illusions, took upon Itself our flesh, or
rather took flesh from us; that is, from the human race. He manifested
himself to the eyes of the Flesh, that He might "by faith" heal those
to whom He was going to reveal the Truth hereafter, that Truth might be
manifested to the now healed eye. For He is Himself "the Truth," [970]
which He promised unto us at that time, when His Flesh was to be seen
by the eye, that the foundation might be laid of that Faith, of which
the Truth was to be the reward. For it was not Himself that Christ
showed forth on earth; but it was His Flesh that He showed. For had He
showed Himself, the Jews would have seen and known Him; but had they
"known Him, they would never have crucified the Lord of Glory." [971]
But perhaps His disciples saw Him, when they said unto Him, "Show us
the Father, and it sufficeth us;" [972] and He, to show that it was not
Himself that had been seen by them, added: "Have I been so long with
you, and have ye not known Me, Philip? He that seeth Me, seeth the
Father also." [973] If then they saw Christ, wherefore did they yet
seek for the Father? For if it were Christ whom they saw, they would
have seen the Father also. They did not therefore yet see Christ, who
desired that the Father should be shown unto them. To prove that they
did not yet see Him, hear that, in another place, He promised it by way
of reward, saying, "He who loveth Me, keepeth My commandments; and
whoso loveth Me, shall be loved of My Father; and I will love Him and"
(as if it were said to Him, "what wilt Thou give unto him, as Thou
lovest him?" He saith), "I will manifest Myself unto him." [974] If
then He promises this by way of a reward unto them that love Him, it is
manifest that the vision of the Truth, promised to us, is of such a
nature, that, when we have seen it, we shall no longer say, "My soul is
filled with illusions."
11. "I am become feeble, [975] and am bowed down greatly" (ver. 8). He
who calls to mind the transcendent height of the Sabbath, sees how
"greatly" he is himself "bowed down." For he who cannot conceive what
is that height of rest, sees not where he is at present. Therefore
another Psalm hath said, "I said in my trance, I am cast out of the
sight of Thine eyes." [976] For his mind being taken up thither, [977]
he beheld something sublime; and was not yet entirely there, where what
he beheld was; and a kind of flash, as it were, if one may so speak, of
the Eternal Light having glanced upon him, when he perceived that he
was not yet arrived at this, which he was able after a sort to
understand, he saw where he himself was, and how he was cramped and
"bowed down" by human infirmities. And he says, "I said in my trance, I
am cast out of the sight of Thine eyes." Such is that certain something
which I saw in my trance, that thence I perceive how far off I am, who
am not already there. He was already there who said that he was "caught
up into the third Heaven, and there heard unspeakable words, which it
is not lawful for a man to utter." [978] But he was recalled to us, in
order that, as requiring to be made perfect, he might first mourn his
infirmity, and afterwards be clothed with might. Yet encouraged for the
ministration of his office by having seen somewhat of those things, he
goes on saying, "I heard unspeakable words, which it is not lawful for
a man to utter." [979] Now then what use is it for you to ask, either
of me or of any one, the "things which it is not lawful for man to
utter." If it was not lawful for him to utter them, to whom is it
lawful to hear them? Let us however lament and groan in Confession; let
us own where we are; let us "call the Sabbath to remembrance," and wait
with patience for what He has promised, who hath, in His own Person
also, showed forth an example of patience to us. "I am become feeble,
and bowed down greatly."
12. "I have roared with the groaning of my heart." [980] You observe
the servants of God generally interceding with groaning; and the reason
of it is asked, and there is nothing apparent, but the groaning of some
servant of God, if indeed it does find its way at all to the ears of a
person placed near him. For there is a secret groaning, which is not
heard by man: yet if the thought of some strong desire has taken so
strong hold of the heart, that the wound of the inner man finds
expression in some uttered exclamation, the reason of it is asked; and
a man says to himself, "Perhaps this is the cause of his groaning;"
and, "Perhaps this or that hath befallen him." Who can determine, but
He in whose Eyes and Ears he groaned? Therefore he says, "I roared with
the groaning of mine heart;" because if men ever hear a man's
groanings, they for the most part hear but the groaning of the flesh;
they do not hear him who groans "with the groaning of his heart." Some
one hath carried off his goods; he "roareth," but not "with the
groaning of his heart:" another because he has buried his son, another
his wife; another because his vineyard has been injured by a hailstorm;
another because his cask has turned sour; another because some one hath
stolen his beast; another because he has suffered some loss; another
because he fears some man who is his enemy: all these "roar" with the
"groaning of the flesh." The servant of God, however, because he
"roareth" from the recollection of the Sabbath, where the Kingdom of
God is, which flesh and blood shall not possess, says, "I have roared
with the groaning of my heart."
13. And who observed and noticed the cause of his groaning? "All my
desire is before Thee" (ver. 9). For it is not before men who cannot
see the heart, but it is before Thee that all my desire is open! Let
your desire be before Him; and "the Father, who seeth in secret, shall
reward thee." [981] For it is thy heart's desire that is thy prayer;
and if thy desire continues uninterrupted, thy prayer continueth also.
For not without a meaning did the Apostle say, "Pray without ceasing."
[982] Are we to be "without ceasing" bending the knee, prostrating the
body, or lifting up our hands, that he says, "Pray without ceasing"? Or
if it is in this sense that we say that we "pray," this, I believe, we
cannot do "without ceasing." There is another inward kind of prayer
without ceasing, which is the desire of the heart. Whatever else you
are doing, if you do but long for that Sabbath, you do not cease to
pray. If you would never cease to pray, never cease to long after it.
The continuance of thy longing is the continuance of thy prayer. You
will be ceasing to speak, if you cease to long for it. Who are those
who have ceased to speak? They of whom it is said, "Because iniquity
shall abound, the love of many shall wax cold." [983] The freezing of
charity is the silence of the heart; the burning of charity is the cry
of the heart. If love continues still you are still lifting up your
voice; if you are always lifting up your voice, you are always longing
after something; if always longing for something absent, you are
calling "the Sabbath rest to remembrance." And it is important you
should understand too before whom the "roaring of thine heart" is open.
Now then consider what sort of desires those should be, that are before
the eyes of God. Should it be the desire for the death of our enemy? a
thing which men flatter themselves they lawfully wish for? For
sometimes we pray for what we ought not. Let us consider what they
flatter themselves they pray for lawfully! For they pray that some
person may die, and his inheritance come to them. But let those too,
who pray for the death of their enemies, hear the Lord saying, "Pray
for your enemies." [984] Let them not pray for this, that their enemies
may die; but rather pray for this, that they may be reclaimed; then
will their enemies be dead; for from the time that they are reclaimed,
henceforth they will be enemies no longer. "And all my desire is before
Thee." What if we suppose that our desire is before Him, and that yet
that very "groaning" is not before Him? How can that be, since our
desire itself finds its expression in "groaning"? Therefore follows,
"And my groaning is not hid from Thee."
From Thee indeed it is not hid; but from many men it is hid. The
servant of God sometimes seems to be saying in humility, "And my
groaning is not hid from Thee." Sometimes also he seems to smile. Is
then that longing dead in his heart? If however there is the desire
within, there is the "groaning" also. It does not always find its way
to the ears of man; but it never ceases to sound in the ears of God.
14. "My heart is troubled" (ver. 10). Wherefore is it troubled? "And my
courage hath failed me." Generally something comes upon us on a sudden;
the "heart is troubled;" the earth quakes; thunder is sent from Heaven;
a formidable attack is made upon us, or a horrible sound heard. Perhaps
a lion is seen on the road; the "heart is troubled." Perhaps robbers
lie in wait for us; the "heart is troubled:" we are filled with a panic
fear; from every quarter something excites anxiety. Wherefore? Because
"my courage hath failed me." For what would be feared, did that courage
still remain unmoved? Whatever bad tidings were brought, whatever
threatened us, whatever sound was heard, whatever were to fall,
whatever appeared horrible, would inspire no terror. But whence that
trouble? "My courage faileth me." Wherefore hath my courage failed me?
"The light of mine eyes also is gone from me." Thus Adam also could not
see "the light of his eyes." For the "light of his eyes" was God
Himself, whom when he had offended, he fled to the shade, and hid
himself among the trees of Paradise. [985] He shrunk in alarm from the
face of God: and sought the shelter of the trees; thenceforth among the
trees he had no more "the light of his eyes," at which he had been wont
to rejoice....
15. "My lovers;" why should I henceforth speak of my enemies? "My
lovers and my neighbours drew nigh, and stood over against me" (ver.
11). Understand this that he saith, "Stood over against me." For if
they stood over against me, they fell against themselves. "My lovers
and my neighbours drew nigh and stood over against me." [986] Let us
now recognise the words of the Head speaking; now let our Head in His
Passion begin to dawn upon us. Yet again when the Head begins to speak,
do not sever the Body from it. If the Head would not separate itself
from the words of the Body, should the Body dare to separate itself
from the sufferings of the Head? Do thou suffer in Christ's suffering:
for Christ, as it were, sinned in thy infirmity. For just now He spoke
of thy sins, as if speaking in His own Person, and called them His
own....To those who wished to be near His exaltation, yet thought not
of His humility, He answered and said to them, "Can ye drink of the cup
that I shall drink of?" [987] Those sufferings of the Lord then are our
sufferings also: and were each individual to serve God well, to keep
faith truly, to render to each their dues, and to conduct himself
honestly among men, I should like to see if he does not suffer even
that which Christ here details in the account of His Passion. "My
lovers and my neighbours drew nigh, and stood over against me."
16. "And my neighbours stood afar off." Who were the "neighbours" that
drew nigh, and who were those who stood afar off? The Jews were
"neighbours" because "near kinsmen," they drew near even when they
crucified Him: the Apostles also were His "neighbours;" and they also
"stood afar off," that they might not have to suffer with Him. This may
also be understood thus: "My friends," that is, those who feigned
themselves "My friends:" for they feigned themselves His friends, when
they said, "We know that Thou teachest the way of God in truth;" [988]
when they wished to try Him, whether tribute ought to be paid to
Caesar; when He convinced them out of their own mouth, they wished to
seem to be His friends. "But He needed not that any should testify of
man, for He Himself knew what was in man;" [989] so that when they
spoke unto Him words of friendship, He answered them, "Why tempt ye Me,
ye hypocrites?" [990] "My friends and my neighbours" then "drew near
and stood over against me, and my neighbours stood afar off." You
understand what I said. I called those neighbours who "drew nigh," and
at the same time "stood afar off." For they "drew nigh" in the body,
but "stood afar off" in their heart. Who were in the body so near to
Him as those who lifted Him on the Cross? Who in heart so as those who
blasphemed Him? Hear this sort of distance described by the Prophet
Isaiah; observe this nearness and distance at one and the same time.
"This people honours Me with their lips:" behold, with their body they
draw near; "but their heart is far from Me." [991] The same persons are
at the same time "near" and "afar off" also: with their lips they are
near, in heart afar off. However, because the Apostles also stood afar
off, through fear, we understand it more simply and properly of them;
so that we mean by it, that some drew near, and others stood afar off;
since even Peter, who had followed more boldly than the rest, was still
so far off, that being questioned and alarmed, he thrice denied the
Lord, with whom he had promised to "be ready to die." Who afterwards
that, from being afar off, he might be made to draw nigh, heard after
the resurrection the question, "Lovest thou Me?" and said, "I love
Thee;" [992] and by so saying was brought "nigh," even as by denying
Him, he had become "far off;" till with the threefold confession of
love, he had put away from him his threefold denial. "And my neighbours
stood afar off."
17. "They also that sought after my soul were preparing violence
against me" (ver. 12). It is now plain who "sought after His soul;"
viz. those who had not His soul, in that they were not in His Body.
They who were "seeking after His soul," were far removed from His soul;
but they were "seeking it" to destroy it. For His soul may be "sought
after" in a right way also. For in another passage [993] He finds fault
with some persons, saying, "There is no man to care for My soul." He
finds fault with some for not seeking after His soul; and again, with
others for seeking after it. Who is he that seeketh after His soul in
the right way? He who imitates His sufferings. Who are they that sought
after His soul in the wrong way? Even those who "prepared violence
against Him," and crucified Him.
18. He goes on: "Those who sought after My faults had spoken vanity."
What is, "sought after My faults"? They sought after many things, and
found them not. Perhaps He may have meant this: "They sought for
criminal charges against me." For they sought for somewhat to say
against Him, and "they found not." [994] For they were seeking to find
evil things to say of "the Good;" crimes of the Innocent; When would
they find such things in Him, who had no sin? But because they had to
seek for sins in Him who had no sin, it remained for them to invent
that which they could not find. Therefore, "those who sought after My
faults have spoken vanity," i.e., untruth, "and imagined deceit all the
day long;" that is, they meditated treachery without intermission. You
know how atrocious false-witness was borne against the Lord, before He
suffered. You know how atrocious false-witness was borne against Him,
even after His resurrection. For those soldiers who watched His
sepulchre of whom Isaiah spake, "I will appoint the wicked for His
burial" [995] (for they were wicked men, and would not speak the truth,
and being bribed they disseminated a lie), consider what "vanity" they
spake. They also were examined, and they said, "While we slept, His
disciples came and stole Him away." [996] This it is, "to speak
vanity." For if they were sleeping, how could they know what had been
done?
19. He saith then, "But I as a deaf man heard not" (ver. 13). He who
replied not to what He heard, did, as it were, not hear them. "But I as
a deaf man heard not. And I was as a dumb man that openeth not his
mouth." And he repeats the same things again.
"And I became as a man that heareth not, and in whose mouth are no
reproofs" (ver. 14). As if He had nothing to say unto them, as if He
had nothing wherewith to reproach them. Had He not already reproached
them for many things? Had He not said many things, and also said, "Woe
unto you, Scribes and Pharisees," [997] and many things besides? Yet
when He suffered, He said none of these things; not that He had not
what to say, but He waited for them to fulfil all things, and that all
the prophecies might be fulfilled of Him, of whom it had been said,
"And as a sheep before her shearer is dumb, so openeth He not His
mouth." [998] It behoved Him to be silent in His Passion, though not
hereafter to be silent in Judgment. For He had come to be judged, then,
who was hereafter coming to judge; and who was for this reason to come
with great power to judge, that He had been judged in great humility.
20. "For in Thee, O Lord, do I hope; Thou wilt hear, O Lord, my God"
(ver. 15). As if it were said to Him, "Wherefore openedst thou not thy
mouth? Wherefore didst Thou not say, `Refrain'? Wherefore didst Thou
not rebuke the unrighteous, while hanging on the Cross?" He goes on and
says, "For in Thee, O Lord, do I hope; Thou, O Lord my God, wilt hear."
He warns you what to do, should tribulation haply befall. For you seek
to defend yourself, and perhaps your defence is not listened to by any
one. Then are you confounded, as if you had lost your cause; because
you have none to defend or to bear testimony in your favour. "Keep" but
your "innocence" within, where no one can pervert thy cause.
False-witness has prevailed against you before men. Will it then
prevail before God, where your cause has to be pleaded? When God shall
be Judge, there shall be no other witness than your own conscience. In
the presence of a just judge, and of your own conscience, fear nothing
but your own cause. If you have not a bad cause, you will have no
accuser to dread; no false-witness to confute, nor witness to the truth
to look for. Do but bring into court a good conscience, that you may
say, "For in Thee, O Lord, do I hope; Thou, O Lord my God, wilt hear."
21. "For I said, Let not mine enemies ever rejoice over me. And when my
feet slip, they magnify themselves against me" (ver. 16). Again He
returns to the infirmity of His Body: and again the Head takes heed of
Its "feet." The Head is not in such a manner in Heaven, as to forsake
what It has on earth; He evidently sees and observes us. For sometimes,
as is the way of this life, our feet are "turned aside," and they slip
by falling into some sin; there the tongues of the enemy rise up with
the bitterest malignity. From this then we discern what they really had
in view, even while they kept silence. Then they speak with an
unsparing harshness; rejoicing to have discovered what they ought to
have grieved for. "And I said, Lest at any time my adversaries should
rejoice over me." I said this indeed; and yet it was perhaps for my
correction that Thou hast caused them to "magnify themselves against
me, when my feet slipped;" that is to say, when I stumbled, they were
elated, and said many things. For pity, not insult, was due from them
to the weak; even as the Apostle speaks: "Brethren, if a man be
overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual restore such an one in the
spirit of meekness;" and he combines the reason why: "considering
thyself also, lest thou also be tempted." [999] Not such as these were
the persons of whom He speaks: "And when my feet slipped, they rejoiced
greatly against me;" but they were such as those of whom He says
elsewhere: "They that hate me will rejoice if I fall."
22. "For I am prepared for the scourges" (ver. 17). Quite a magnificent
expression; as if He were saying, "It was even for this that I was
born; that I might suffer." For He was not to be born, [1000] but from
Adam, to whom the scourge is due. But sinners are in this life
sometimes not scourged at all, or are scourged less than their deserts:
because the wickedness of their heart is given over as already
desperate. Those, however, for whom eternal life is prepared, must
needs be scourged in this life: for that sentence is true: "My son,
faint not under the chastening of the Lord, neither be weary when thou
art rebuked of Him." [1001] "For whom the Lord loveth He chasteneth,
and scourgeth every son whom He receiveth." [1002] Let not mine enemies
therefore insult over me; let "them not magnify themselves;" and if my
Father scourgeth me, "I am prepared for the scourge;" because there is
an inheritance in store for me. Thou wilt not submit to the scourge:
the inheritance is not bestowed upon thee. For "every son" must needs
be scourged. So true it is that "every son" is scourged, that He spared
not even Him who had no sin. For "I am prepared for the scourges."
23. "And my sorrow is continually before me." What "sorrow" is that?
Perhaps, a sorrow for my scourge. And, in good truth, my brethren, in
good truth, let me say unto you, men do mourn for their scourges, not
for the causes on account of which they are scourged. Not such was the
person here. Listen, my brethren: If any person suffers any loss, he is
more ready to say, "I did not deserve to suffer it," than to consider
why he suffered it, mourning the loss of money, not mourning over that
of righteousness. If thou hast sinned, mourn for the loss of thy inward
treasure. Thou hast nothing in thy house, but perhaps thou art still
more empty in heart; but if thine heart is full of its Good, even thy
God, why dost thou not say, "The Lord gave, the Lord hath taken away;
as it pleased the Lord was it done. Blessed be the Name of the Lord."
[1003] Whence then was it that He was grieving? Was it for the
"scourging" wherewith He was scourged? God forbid. "And my sorrow"
(says He) "is continually before me." And as if we were to say, "What
sorrow? whence comes that sorrow?" he says: "For I declare mine
iniquity; and I will have a care for my sin" (ver. 18). See here the
reason for the sorrow! It is not a sorrow occasioned by the scourge;
not one for the remedy, not for the wound. For the scourge is a remedy
against sins. Hear, brethren; We are Christians, and yet if any one's
son dies, he mourns for him but does not mourn for him if he sins. It
is then, when he sees him sinning, that he ought to make mourning for
him, to lament over him. It is then he should restrain him, and give
him a rule to live by; should impose a discipline upon him: or if he
has done so, and the other has not taken heed, then was the time when
he ought to have been mourned over; then he was more fatally dead
whilst living in luxury, than when, by death, he brought his luxury to
its close: at that time, when he was doing such things in thine house,
he was not only "dead, but he stank also." [1004] These things were
worthy to be lamented, the others were such as might well be endured;
those, I say, were tolerable, these worthy to be mourned over. They
were to be mourned over in the same way that you have heard this person
mourn over them: "For I declare mine iniquity. I will have a care for
my sin." Be not free from anxiety when you have confessed your sin, as
if always able to confess thy sin, and to commit it again. Do thou
"declare thine iniquity in such a manner, as to have a care for thy
sin." What is meant by "having a care of thy sin"? To have a care of
thy wound. If you were to say, "I will have a care of my wound," what
would be meant by it, but I will do my endeavour to have it healed. For
this is "to have a care for one's sin," to be ever struggling, ever
endeavouring, ever exerting one's self, earnestly and zealously, to
heal one's wound. Behold! thou art from day to day mourning over thy
sins; but perhaps thy tears indeed flow, but thy hands are unemployed.
Do alms, redeem [1005] thy sins, let the poor rejoice of thy bounty,
that thou also mayest rejoice of the Grace of God. He is in want; so
art thou in want also: he is in want at thy hands; so art thou also in
want at God's hand. Dost thou despise one who needs thy aid; and shall
God not despise thee when thou needest His? Do thou therefore supply
the needs of him who is in want of thine aid; that God may supply thy
needs within. [1006] This is the meaning of, "I will have a care for my
sin." I will do all that ought to be done, to blot out and to heal my
sin. "And I will have a care for my sin."
24. "But mine enemies live" (ver. 19). They are well off: they rejoice
in worldly prosperity, while I am suffering, and "roaring with the
groaning of my heart." In what way do His enemies "live," in that He
hath said of them already, that they have "spoken vanity"? Hear in
another Psalm also: "Whose sons are as young plants; firmly rooted."
But above He had said, "Whose mouth speaketh vanity. Their daughters
polished after the similitude of a temple: their garners full bursting
forth more and more; their cattle fat, their sheep fruitful,
multiplying in their streets; no hedge falling into ruin; no cry in
their streets." [1007] "Mine enemies" then "live." This is their life;
this life they praise; this they set their hearts upon: this they hold
fast to their own ruin. For what follows? They pronounce "the people
that is in such a case" blessed. But what sayest thou, who "hast a care
for thy sin"? What sayest thou, who "confessest thine iniquity"? He
says, "Blessed is the people whose God is the Lord." [1008]
"But mine enemies live, and are strengthened against me, and they that
hate me wrongfully are multiplied." What is "hate me wrongfully"? They
hate me, who wish their good, whereas were they simply requiting evil
for evil, they would not be righteous; were they not to requite with
good the good done to them, they would be ungrateful: they, however,
who "hate wrongfully," actually return evil for good. Such were the
Jews; Christ came unto them with good things; they requited Him evil
for good. Beware, brethren, of this evil; it soon steals [1009] upon
us. Let no one of you think himself to be far removed from the danger,
because we said, "Such were the Jews." Should a brother, wishing your
good, rebuke you, and you hate him, you are like them. And observe, how
easily, how soon it is produced; and avoid an evil so great, a sin so
easily committed.
25. "They also that render evil for good, were speaking evil of me,
because I have pursued the thing that is just" (ver. 20). Therefore was
it that I was requited evil for good. What is meant by "pursued after
the thing that is just"? Not forsaken it. That you might not always
understand persecutio in a bad sense, He means by persecutus pursued
after, thoroughly followed. "Because I have followed the thing that is
just." Hear also our Head crying with a lamentable voice in His
Passion: "And they cast Me forth, Thy Darling, even as a dead man in
abomination." [1010] Was it not enough that He was "dead"? wherefore
"in abomination" also? Because He was crucified. For this death of the
Cross was a great abomination in their eyes, as they did not perceive
that it was spoken in prophecy, "Cursed is every one that hangeth on a
tree." [1011] For He did not Himself bring death; but He found it here,
propagated from the curse of the first man; and this same death of
ours, which had originated in sin, He had taken upon Himself, and hung
on the Tree. Lest therefore some persons should think (as some of the
Heretics think), that our Lord Jesus Christ had only a false body of
flesh; and that the death by which He made satisfaction on the Cross
was not a real death, the Prophet notices this, and says, "Cursed is
every one that hangeth on a tree." He shows then that the Son of God
died a true death, the death which was due to mortal flesh: lest if He
were not "accursed," you should think that He had not truly died. But
since that death was not an illusion, but had descended from that
original stock, which had been derived from the curse, when He said,
"Ye shall surely die:" [1012] and since a true death assuredly extended
even to Him, that a true life might extend itself to us, the curse of
death also did extend to Him, that the blessing of life might extend
even unto us. "And they cast Me forth, Thy Darling, even as a dead man
in abomination."
26. "Forsake me not, O Lord; O my God, depart not from me" (ver. 21).
Let us speak in Him, let us speak through Him (for He Himself
intercedeth for us), and let us say, "Forsake me not, O Lord my God."
And yet He had said, "My God! My God! why hast Thou forsaken Me?"
[1013] and He now says, "O My God, depart not from Me." If He does not
forsake the body, did He forsake the Head? Whose words then are these
but the First Man's? To show then that He carried about Him a true body
of flesh derived from him, He says, "My God, My God why hast Thou
forsaken Me?" God had not forsaken Him. If He does not forsake Thee,
who believest in Him, could the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost,
One God, forsake Christ? But He had transferred to Himself the person
of the First Man. We know by the words of an Apostle, that "our old man
is crucified with Him." [1014] We should not, however, be divested of
our old nature, had He not been crucified "in weakness." For it was to
this end that He came that we may be renewed in Him, because it is by
aspiration after Him, and by following the example of His suffering,
that we are renewed. Therefore that was the cry of infirmity; that cry,
I mean, in which it was said, "Why hast Thou forsaken Me?" Thence was
it said in that passage above, "the words of mine offences." As if He
were saying, These words are transferred to My Person from that of the
sinner.
27. "Depart not from me. Make haste to help me, Lord of my salvation"
(ver. 22). This is that very "salvation," Brethren, concerning which,
as the Apostle Peter saith, "Prophets have enquired diligently," [1015]
and though they have enquired diligently, yet have not found it. But
they searched into it, and foretold of it; while we have come and have
found what they sought for. And see, we ourselves too have not as yet
received it; and after us shall others also be born, and shall find,
what they also shall not receive, and shall pass away, that we may, all
of us together, receive the "penny of salvation in the end of the day,"
with the Prophets, the Patriarchs, and the Apostles. For you know that
the hired servants, or labourers, were taken into the vineyard at
different times; yet did they all receive their wages on an equal
footing. [1016] Apostles, then, and Prophets, and Martyrs, and
ourselves also, and those who will follow us to the end of the world,
it is in the End itself that we are to receive everlasting salvation;
that beholding the face of God, and contemplating His Glory, we may
praise Him for ever, free from imperfection, free from any punishment
of iniquity, free from every perversion of sin: praising Him; and no
longer longing after Him, but now clinging to Him for whom we used to
long to the very end, and in whom we did rejoice, in hope. For we shall
be in that City, where God is our Bliss, God is our Light, God is our
Bread, God is our Life; whatever good thing of ours there is, at being
absent from which we now grieve, we shall find in Him. In Him will be
that "rest," which when we "call to remembrance" now, we cannot choose
but grieve. For that is the "Sabbath" which we "call to remembrance;"
in the recollection of which, so great things have been said already;
and so great things ought to be said by us also, and ought never to
cease being said by us, not with our lips indeed, but in our heart: for
therefore do our lips cease to speak, that we may cry out with our
hearts. [1017]
__________________________________________________________________
[944] Lat. XXXVII.
[945] Matt. v. 4.
[946] Futuri sunt in emendatione quidam salvi.
[947] Emendatio (alluding to emendes in the Latin of v. 1.).
[948] Utique arguet.
[949] Matt. xxv. 42.
[950] 1 Cor. iii. 15.
[951] 1 Cor. iii. 12.
[952] Per.
[953] [See Augustin's ideas as to a possible meaning of the text 1 Cor.
iii. 11-15 in vol. ii. this series, p. 474. He there propounds, as a
conjecture merely, a purification of some souls in the intermediate
state, which he does not care to reject. It is not his own theory; he
says, I do not contradict; possibly it is true." He thus proves there
was no dogma of any sort of purgatory in his day, and even this theory
is entirely inconsistent with the dogma as expounded in the Trent
Catechism.--C.]
[954] Gen. ii. 17.
[955] Job vi. 4.
[956] 1 Cor. xv. 53.
[957] Ps. xxii. 1.
[958] Ps. xxii. 18.
[959] Gen. ii. 24.
[960] Matt. xxv. 42, 43.
[961] Matt. xxv. 44, 45.
[962] Acts ix. 4.
[963] Matt. xix. 6.
[964] Ecclus. x. 12. [Note "as a Lesson:" part of Divine Service.--C.]
[965] Ps. vii. 16.
[966] 2 Cor. ii. 15.
[967] [Isa. lviii. 13.--C.]
[968] Song of Sol. i. 3, 4.
[969] Ps. xxxviii. 5.
[970] John xiv. 6.
[971] 1 Cor. ii. 10.
[972] John xiv. 8.
[973] John xiv. 9.
[974] John xiv. 21.
[975] St. Augustin, infirmatus; E.V. "troubled;" Prayer Book, "feeble;"
Vulgate, afflictus.
[976] Ps. xxxi. 22.
[977] Assumpta mente.
[978] 2 Cor. xii. 2, 4.
[979] 2 Cor. xii. 4.
[980] Rugiebam a gemitu cordis mei. E.V. "by reason of the
disquietness."
[981] Matt. vi. 6.
[982] 1 Thess. v. 17.
[983] Matt. xxiv. 12.
[984] Matt. v. 44.
[985] Gen. iii. 8.
[986] E.V. "and my friends stand aloof."
[987] Matt. xx. 22.
[988] Matt. xxii. 16.
[989] John ii. 25.
[990] Matt. xxii. 18.
[991] Isa. xxix. 13.
[992] John xxi. 15.
[993] Ps. cxlii. 4.
[994] Matt. xxvi. 60.
[995] Isa. liii. 9. St. Augustin, Ponam malos pro sepultura ejus.
Vulgate, Dabit impios, etc.
[996] Matt. xxviii. 13.
[997] Matt. xxiii. 13.
[998] Isa. liii. 7.
[999] Gal. vi. 1.
[1000] Al. "He would not suffer."
[1001] Prov. iii. 11.
[1002] Heb. xii. 6.
[1003] Job i. 21.
[1004] John xi. 39.
[1005] Fiant, redimantur.
[1006] Al. "fill thine inward parts."
[1007] Ps. cxliv. 12-14.
[1008] Ps. cxliv. 15.
[1009] Cito subintrat.
[1010] A few mss. of LXX. note this to be added here.
[1011] Deut. xxi. 23.
[1012] Gen. ii. 17.
[1013] Matt. xxvii. 46.
[1014] Rom. vi. 6.
[1015] 1 Pet. i. 10.
[1016] Matt. xx. 9.
[1017] [Heb. iv. 9. The Sabbath that "remaineth" is the only Sabbath
our author sees in this Psalm.--C.]
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XXXIX. [1018]
1. The title of this Psalm, which we have just chanted and proposed to
discuss, is, "On the end, for Idithun, a Psalm for David himself." Here
then we must look for, and must attend to, the words of a certain
person who is called Idithun; and if each one of ourselves may be
Idithun, in that which he sings he recognises himself, and hears
himself speak. For thou mayest see who was called Idithun, according to
the ancient descent of man; let us, however, understand what this name
is translated, and seek to comprehend the Truth in the translation of
the word. According therefore to what we have been able to discover by
enquiry in those names which have been translated from the Hebrew
tongue into the Latin, by those who study the sacred writings, Idithun
being translated is "over-leaping them." Who then is this person
"over-leaping them"? or who those whom he hath "over-leaped"?...For
there are some persons, yet clinging to the earth, yet bowed down to
the ground, yet setting their hearts on what is below, yet placing
their hopes in things that pass away, whom he who is called
"over-leaping them" hath "over-leaped."
2. You know that some of the Psalms are entitled, "Songs of Degrees;"
and in the Greek it is obvious enough what the word /=nabathmon means.
For /=nabathmoi are degrees (or steps) of them that ascend, not of them
that descend. The Latin, not being able to express it strictly,
expresses it by the general term; and in that it called them "steps,"
left it undetermined, whether they were "steps" of persons ascending or
descending. But because there is no "speech or language where their
voices are not heard among them," [1019] the earlier language explains
the one which comes after it: and what was ambiguous in one is made
certain in another. Just then as there the singer is some one who is
"ascending," so here is it some one who is "over-leaping."...Let this
Idithun come still to us, let him "over-leap" those whose delight is in
things below, and take delight in these things, and let him rejoice in
the Word of the Lord; in the delight of the law of the Most High....
3. "I said, I will take heed to my ways, that I sin not with my tongue"
(ver. 1)....For it is not without reason that the tongue is set in a
moist place, but because it is so prone to slip. [1020] Perceiving
therefore how hard it was for a man to be under the necessity of
speaking, and not to say something that he will wish unsaid, and filled
with disgust at these sins, he seeks to avoid the like. To this
difficulty is he exposed who is seeking to "leap beyond."...Although I
have "leaped beyond" the pleasures of earth, although the fleeting
[1021] passions for things temporal ensnare me not, though now I
despise these things below, and am rising up to better things than
these, yet in these very better things the satisfaction of knowledge in
the sight of God is enough for me. Of what use is it for me to speak
what is to be laid hold of, and to give a handle to cavillers?
Therefore, "I said, I will take heed to my ways, that I sin not with my
tongue. I keep my mouth with a bridle." Wherefore is this? Is it on
account of the religious, the thoughtful, the faithful, the holy ones?
God forbid! These persons hear in such a manner, as to praise what they
approve; but as for what they disapprove, perhaps, among much that they
praise they rather excuse than cavil at it; on account of what persons
then dost thou "take heed to thy ways," and place a guard on thy lips
"that thou mayest not sin with thy tongue"? Hear: it is, "While the
wicked standeth over against me." It is not "by me" that he takes up
his station, but "against me." Why?...Even the Lord Himself says, "I
have yet many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear them now."
[1022] And the Apostle, "I could not speak unto you as unto spiritual,
but as unto carnal." [1023] Yet not as to persons to be despaired of,
but as to those who still required to be nourished. For he goes on to
say, "As babes in Christ, I have fed you with milk, and not with meat;
for hitherto ye were not able." Well, tell it unto us even now.
"Neither yet now are ye able." [1024] Be not therefore impatient to
hear that which as yet thou art not capable of; but grow that thou
mayest be "able to bear it." It is thus we address the little one, who
yet requires to be fed with kindly milk [1025] in the bosom of Mother
Church, and to be rendered meet for the "strong meat" of the Lord's
Table. But what can I say even of that kind to the sinner, who "taketh
his stand against me," who either thinks or pretends himself capable of
what he "cannot bear;" so that when I say anything unto him, and he has
failed to comprehend it, he should not suppose that it was not he that
had failed to comprehend, but I who had broken down. Therefore because
of this sinner, who "taketh up his stand against me, I keep my mouth as
it were with a bridle."
4. "I became deaf, and was humbled, I held my peace from good" (ver.
2). For this person, who is "leaping beyond," suffers some difficulty
in a certain stage to which he hath already attained; and he desires to
advance beyond, even from thence, to avoid this difficulty. I was
afraid of committing a sin; so that I spoke not; that I imposed on
myself the necessity of silence: for I had spoken thus, "I will take
heed to my ways, that I may not sin with my tongue." Whilst I was too
much afraid of saying anything wrong, I kept silence from all that is
good. For whence could I say good things, except that I heard them? "It
is Thou that shalt make me to hear of joy and gladness." [1026] And the
"friend of the bridegroom standeth and heareth Him, and rejoiceth on
account of the bridegroom's voice," [1027] not his own. That he may
speak true things, he hears what he is to say. For it is he that
"speaketh a lie," that "speaketh of his own." [1028] ...When therefore
I had "put a bridle," as it were, "on my lips;" and constrained myself
to silence, because I saw that everywhere speech was dangerous, then,
says he, that came to pass upon me, which I did not wish, "I became
deaf, and was humbled;" not humbled myself, but was humbled; "and I
held my peace even from good." Whilst afraid of saying any evil, I
began to refrain from speaking what is good: and I condemned my
determination; for "I was holding my peace even from what is good."
"And my sorrow was stirred up again" (ver. 2). Inasmuch as I had found
in silence a kind of respite from a certain "sorrow," that had been
inflicted upon me by those who cavilled at my words, and found fault
with me: and that sorrow that was caused by the cavillers, had ceased
indeed; but when "I held my peace even from good, my sorrow was stirred
up again." I began to be more grieved at having refrained from saying
what I ought to have said, than I had before been grieved by having
said what I ought not. "And my sorrow was stirred up again." [1029]
5. "And while I was musing, the fire burned" (ver. 3)....I reflected on
the words of my Lord, "Thou wicked and slothful servant, thou oughtest
to have put My money to the exchangers, and I at My coming should
receive it again with usury." [1030] And that which follows may God
avert from those who are His stewards! Bind him hand and foot, and let
him be cast into outer darkness; [1031] the servant, who was not a
waster of his master's goods, so as to destroy them, but was slothful
in laying them out to improve them. What ought they to expect, who have
wasted them in luxury, if they are condemned who through slothfulness
have kept them? "As I was musing, the fire burned." And as he was in
this state of wavering suspense, between speaking and holding his
peace, between those who are prepared to cavil and those who are
anxious to be instructed,...in this state of suspense, he prays for a
better place, a place different from this his present stewardship, in
which man is in such difficulty and in such danger, and sighing after a
certain "end," when he was not to be subject to these things, when the
Lord is to say to the faithful dispenser, "Enter thou into the joy of
thy Lord," [1032] he says, "Then spake I with my tongue." In this
fluctuation, in the midst of these dangers and these difficulties,
because, that in consequence of the abundance of offences "the love of
many is waxing cold," [1033] although the law of the Lord inspires
delight, in this fluctuation then, (I say), "then spake I with my
tongue." To whom? not to the hearer whom I would fain instruct; but to
Him who heareth and taketh heed also, by whom I would fain be
instructed myself. "I spake with my tongue" to Him, from whom I
inwardly hear whatever I hear that is good or true.--What saidst thou?
"Lord, make me to know mine end" (ver. 4). For some things I have
passed by already; and I have arrived at a certain point, and that to
which I have arrived is better than that from which I have advanced to
this; but yet there remains a point, which has to be left behind. For
we are not to remain here, where there are trials, offences, where we
have to bear with persons who listen to us and cavil at us. "Make me to
know mine end;" the end, from which I am still removed, not the course
which is already before me.
6. The "end" he speaks of, is that which the Apostle fixed his eye
upon, in his course; and made confession of his own infirmity,
perceiving in himself a different state of things from that which he
looked for elsewhere. For he says, "Not that I have already attained,
or am already perfect. Brethren, I count not myself to have
apprehended." [1034] And that you might not say, "If the Apostle hath
not apprehended, have I apprehended? If the Apostle is not perfect, am
I perfect?"...
7. "And the number of my days, what it is." I ask of "the number of my
days, what it is." I can speak of "number" without number, and
understand "number without number," in the same sense as "years without
years" may be spoken of. For where there are years, there is a sort of
"number" at all events, also. But yet, "Thou art the same, and Thy
years shall not fail." [1035] "Make me to know the number of my days;"
but "to know what it is." What then? that number in which thou art,
think you that it "is" not? Assuredly, if I weigh the matter well, it
has no being; if I linger behind, it has a sort of being; if I rise
above it, it has none. If, shaking off the trammels of these things, I
contemplate things above, if I compare things that pass away with those
that endure, I see what has a true being, and what rather seems to be,
than really is. Should I say that these days of mine "are;" and shall I
rashly apply this word so full of meaning to this course of things
passing away? To such a degree have I my own self almost ceased to "be,
failing" as I am in my weakness, that He escaped from my memory, who
said, "I AM HE THAT IS." [1036] Hath then any number of days any
existence? In truth it hath, and it is "number without
end."...Everything is swept on by a series of moments, fleeting by, one
after the other; there is a torrent of existences ever flowing on and
on; a "torrent," [1037] of which He "drank in the way," who hath now
"lift up His Head." These days then have no true being; they are gone
almost before they arrive; and when they are come, they cannot
continue; they press upon one another, they follow the one the other,
and cannot check themselves in their course. Of the past nothing is
called back again; what is yet to be, is expected as something to pass
away again: it is not as yet possessed, whilst as yet it is not
arrived; it cannot be kept when once it has arrived. He asks then
concerning "the number of his days, which is;" not that which is "not:"
and (which confounds me by a still greater and more perplexing
difficulty) at once "is," and "is not." We can neither say that "is,"
which does not continue; nor that it "is not," when it has come and is
passing. It is that absolute "IS," that true "IS," that "IS" in the
true sense of the word, that I long for; that "IS;" which "is" in that
"Jerusalem" which is "the Bride" of my Lord; [1038] where there will
not be death, there will not be failing; there will be a day that
passeth not away, but continueth: which has neither a yesterday to
precede it, nor a to-morrow pressing close upon it. [1039] This "number
of my days, which is," this (I say), "make Thou me to know."
8. "That I may know what is wanting to me." For while I am struggling
here, "this" is wanting unto me: and so long as it is wanting unto me,
I do not call myself perfect. So long as I have not received it, I say,
"not that I have already attained, either am already perfect; but I am
pressing towards the prize of God's high calling." [1040] This let me
receive as the prize of my running the race! There will be a certain
resting-place, to terminate my course; and in that resting-place there
will be a Country, and no pilgrimage, no dissension, no temptation.
Make me then to know "this number of my days, which is, that I may know
what is wanting unto me;" because I am not there yet; lest I should be
made proud of what I already am, that "I may be found in Him, not
having mine own righteousness." [1041] ...
9. "Behold, thou hast made my days old" [1042] (ver. 5). For these days
are "waxing old." I long for new days "that never shall wax old," that
I may say, "Old things have passed away; behold, things are become
new." [1043] Already new in hope; then in reality. For though, in hope
and in faith, made new already, how much do we even now do after our
old nature! For we are not so completely "clothed upon" with Christ, as
not to bear about with us anything derived from Adam. Observe that Adam
is "waxing old" within us, and Christ is being "renewed" in us. "Though
our outward man is perishing, yet is our inward man being renewed day
by day." [1044] Therefore, while we fix our thoughts on sin, on
mortality, on time, that is hastening by, on sorrow, and toil, and
labour, on stages of life following each other in succession, and
continuing not, passing on insensibly from infancy even to old age;
whilst, I say, we fix our eyes on these things, let us see here "the
old man," the "day that is waxing old;" the Song that is out of date;
the Old Testament; [1045] when however we turn to the inner man, to
those things that are to be renewed in place of these which are to be
changed, let us find the "new man," the "new day," the "new song," the
"New Testament;" and that "newness," let us so love, as to have no
fears of its "waxing old."...This man, therefore, who is hasting
forward to those things which are new, and "reaching forward to those
things which are before," says, "Lord, make me to know mine end, and
the number of my days, which really is, that I may know what is wanting
unto me." See he still drags with him Adam; and even so he is hasting
unto Christ. "Behold," saith he, "thou hast made my days old." It is
those days that are derived from Adam, those days, I say, that thou
hast made old. They are waxing old day by day: and so waxing old, as to
be at some day or other consumed also. "And my substance is as nothing
before Thee." [1046] "Before Thee, O Lord, my substance is as nothing."
"Before Thee;" who seest this; and I too, when I see it, see it only
when "before Thee."
When "before men" I see it not. For what shall I say? What words shall
I use to show, that which I now am is nothing in comparison of That
which truly "IS"? But it is within that it is said; [1047] it is within
that it is felt, so far as it is felt. "Before Thee, O Lord," where
Thine eyes are; and not where the eyes of men are. And where Thine eyes
are, what is the state of things? "That which I am is as nothing."
10. "But, verily, every man living is altogether vanity." "But,
verily." For what was he saying above? Behold, I have already "leaped
beyond" all mortal things, and despised things below, have trampled
under foot the things of earth, have soared upwards to the delights of
the law of the Lord, I have been afloat in the dispensation of the
Lord, [1048] have yearned for that "End" which Itself is to know no
end, have yearned for the number of my days that truly "is," because
the number of days like these hath no real being. Behold, I am already
such a one as this; I have already overleaped so much; I am longing for
those things which abide. "But verily," in the state in which I am
here, so long as I am here, so long as I am in this world, so long as I
bear mortal flesh, so long as the life of man on earth is a trial, so
long as I sigh among causes of offence, as long as while I "stand" I am
in "fear lest I fall," [1049] as long as both my good and my ill hangs
in uncertainty, "every man living is altogether vanity."...
11. "Albeit man walketh in the Image" [1050] (ver. 6). In what "Image,"
save that of Him who said, "Let Us make man in Our Image, after Our
Likeness." [1051] "Albeit man walks in the Image." For the reason he
says "albeit," is, that this is some great thing. And this "albeit" is
followed by "nevertheless," that the "albeit" which you have already
heard, should relate to what is beyond the sun; but this
"nevertheless," which is to follow, to what is "under the sun," and
that the one should relate to the Truth, the other to "vanity."
"Albeit," then, "that man walketh in the Image, nevertheless he is
disquieted in vain." Hear the cause of his "disquieting," and see if it
be not a vain one; that thou mayest trample it under foot, that thou
mayest "leap beyond it," and mayest dwell on high, where that "vanity"
is not. What "vanity" is that? "He heapeth up riches, and knoweth not
for whom he may be gathering them together." O infatuated vanity!
"Blessed is the man that maketh the Lord his trust, and hath not
respected vanities, nor lying deceits." [1052] To you indeed, O
covetous man, to you I seem to be out of my senses, these words appear
to you to be "old wives' tales." For you, a man of great judgment, and
of great prudence, to be sure, are daily devising methods of acquiring
money, by traffic, by agriculture, by eloquence perhaps, by making
yourself learned in the law, by warfare, perhaps you even add that of
usury. Like a shrewd man as you are, you leave nothing untried, whereby
you may pile coin on coin; and may store it up [1053] more carefully in
a place of secrecy. You plunder others; you guard against the
plunderer; you are afraid lest you should yourself suffer the wrong,
that you yourself do; and even what you do suffer, does not correct
you....Examine your own heart, and that prudence of yours, which leads
you to deride me, to think me out of my senses for saying these things:
and tell me now, "You are heaping up treasures; for whom are you
gathering them together?" I see what you would tell me; as if what you
would say had not occurred to the person described here; you will say,
I am keeping them for my children? This is the voice of parental
affection; the excuse of injustice. "I am keeping them" (you say) "for
my children." So then you are keeping them for your children, are you?
Did not Idithun then know this? Assuredly he did; but he reckoned it
one of the things of the "old days," that have waxed old, and therefore
he despised it: because he was hastening on to the new "days."...
12. For He, "by whom all things were made," [1054] hath built
"mansions" for all of us: thither He would have that which we have go
before us; that we may not lose it [1055] on earth. When, however, you
have kept them on earth, tell me for whom you are to "gather them
together"? You have children: add one more to their number; and give
something to Christ also. "He is disquieted in vain."
13. "And now" (ver. 7). "And now," saith this Idithun,--looking back on
a certain "vain" show, and looking up to a certain Truth, standing
midway where he has something beyond him, and something also behind
him, having below him the place from which he took his spring, having
above him that toward which he has stretched forth;--"And now," when I
have "over-leaped" some things, when I have trampled many things under
foot, when I am no longer captivated by things temporal; even now, I am
not perfect, "I have not yet apprehended." [1056] "For it is by hope
that we are saved; but hope that is seen is not hope; for what a man
seeth, why doth he yet hope for? But if we hope for that we see not,
then do we with patience wait for it." [1057] Therefore he says: "And
now what wait I for? Is it not for the Lord?" [1058] He is my
expectation, who hath given me all those things, that I might despise
them. He will give unto me Himself also, even He who is above all, and
"by whom all things were made," [1059] and by whom I was made amongst
all; even He, the Lord, is my Expectation! You see Idithun, brethren,
you see in what way he waiteth for Him! Let no man therefore call
himself perfect here; he deceives and imposes upon himself; he is
beguiling himself, he cannot have perfection here, and what avails it
that he should lose humility?...
"And my substance is ever before Thee." Already advancing, already
tending towards Him, and to some extent already beginning to "be,"
still (he says [1060] ) "my substance is ever before Thee." Now that
other substance is also before men. You have gold, silver, slaves,
estates, trees, cattle, servants. These things are visible even to men.
There is a certain "substance that is ever before Thee."
14. "Deliver me from all my transgressions" (ver. 8). I have
"over-leaped" a great deal of ground, a very great deal of ground
already; but, "If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and
the Truth is not in us." [1061] I have "over-leaped" a great deal: but
still do I "beat my breast," and say, "Forgive us our debts, as we
forgive our debtors." [1062] Thou therefore art "my expectation!" my
"End." For "Christ is the end of the Law unto righteousness, unto every
man that believeth." [1063] From all mine offences: not only from
those, that I may not relapse into those which I have already
"over-leaped;" but from all, without exception, of those on account of
which I now beat my breast, and say, "Forgive us our debts." "Deliver
me from all mine offences:" me being thus minded, and holding fast what
the Apostle said, "As many of us as be perfect, let us be thus minded."
[1064] For at the time that he said that he was not "already perfect,"
he then immediately goes on and says, "As many of us as be perfect, let
us be thus minded."...Art thou then, O Apostle, not perfect, and are we
perfect? But hath it escaped you, that he did just now call himself
"perfect"? For he does not say, "As many of you as are perfect, be ye
thus minded;" but "As many of us as be perfect, let us be thus minded;"
after having said a little before, "Not that I have already attained;
either am already perfect." In no other way then can you be perfect in
this life, than by knowing that you cannot be perfect in this life.
This then will be your perfection, so to have "over-leaped" some
things, as to have still some point to which you are hastening on: so
as to have something remaining, to which you will have to leap on, when
everything else has been passed by. It is such faith as this that is
secure; for whoever thinks that he has already attained, is "exalting
himself," so as to be "abased" hereafter. [1065] ...
15. "Thou hast made me the reproach of the foolish." Thou hast so
willed it, that I should live among those, and preach the Truth among
those, who love vanity; and I cannot but be a laughing-stock to them.
"For we have been made a spectacle unto this world, and unto angels,
and unto men:" [1066] to angels who praise, to men who censure, us; or
rather to angels, some of whom praise, some of whom are censuring us:
and to men also, some of whom are praising, and some censuring
us....Both the one and the other are arms to us: the one "on the right
hand," the other "on the left:" arms however they are both of them;
both of these kinds of arms, both those "on the right hand," and those
"on the left;" both those who praise, and those who censure; both those
who pay us honour, and those who heap dishonour upon us; with both
these kinds I contend against the devil; with both of these I smite
him; I defeat him with prosperity, if I be not corrupted by it; by
adversity, if I am not broken in spirit by it.
16. "I became dumb; [1067] and I opened not my mouth" (ver. 9). But it
was to guard against "the foolish man," that "I became dumb, and opened
not my mouth." For to whom should I tell what is going on within me?
"For I will hear what the Lord God will speak in me; [1068] for He will
speak peace unto His people." [1069] But "There is no peace," saith the
Lord, "to the wicked." [1070] "I was dumb, and opened not my mouth;
because it is Thou that madest me." Was this the reason that thou
openedst not thy mouth, "because God made thee"? That is strange; for
did not God make thy mouth, that thou shouldest speak? "He that planted
the ear, doth He not hear? He that formed the eye, doth He not see?"
[1071] God hath given thee a mouth to speak with; and dost thou say, "I
was dumb, and opened not my mouth, because Thou madest me"? Or does the
clause, "Because Thou madest me," belong to the verse that follows?
"Remove Thy stroke away from me" (ver. 10). Because it is "Thou that
hast made me," let it not be Thy pleasure to destroy me utterly;
scourge, so that I may be made better, not so that I faint; beat me, so
that I may be [1072] beaten out to a greater length and breadth, not so
that I may be ground to powder. "By the heaviness of Thy hand I fainted
in corrections." That is, I "fainted" while Thou wast correcting me.
And what is meant by "correcting" me? except what follows.
17. "Thou with rebukes hast chastened man for iniquity; Thou hast made
my life to consume away like a spider" (ver. 11). There is much that is
discerned by this Idithun; by every one who discerns as he does; who
overleaps as he does. For he says, that he has fainted in God's
corrections; and would fain have the stroke removed away from him,
"because it is He who made him." Let Him renew me, who also made me;
let Him who created me, create me anew. But yet, Brethren, do we
suppose that there was no cause for his fainting, so that he wishes to
be "renewed," to be "created anew"? It is "for iniquity," saith he,
"that Thou hast chastened man." All this, my having fainted, my being
weak, my "crying out of the deep," all of this is because of
"iniquity;" and in this Thou hast not condemned, but hast "chastened"
me. "Thou hast chastened man for sin." Hear this more plainly from
another Psalm: "It is good for me that Thou hast afflicted me, that I
might learn Thy righteousness." [1073] I have been "afflicted," and at
the same time "it is good for me;" it is at once a punishment, and an
act of favour. What hath He in store for us after punishment is over,
who inflicts punishment itself by way of favour? For He it is of whom
it was said, "I was brought low, and He made me whole:" and, "It is
good for me that Thou hast afflicted me, that I might learn Thy
righteousness." [1074] "Thou chastenest man for iniquity." And that
which is written, "Thou formest my grief in teaching me," [1075] could
only be said unto God by one who was "leaping beyond" his fellows;
"Thou formest my grief in teaching me;" Thou makest, that is to say, a
lesson for me out of my sorrow. It is Thou that formest that very grief
itself; Thou dost not leave it unformed, but formest it; and that
grief, that has been inflicted by Thee, when formed, will be a lesson
unto me, that I may be set free by Thee. For the word finges is used in
the sense of "forming," as it were moulding, my grief; not in the sense
of "feigning" it; in the same way that fingit is applied to the artist,
in the same sense that figulus is derived from fingere. Thou therefore
"hast chastened man for iniquity." I see myself in afflictions; I see
myself under punishment; and I see no unrighteousness in Thee. If I
therefore am under punishment, and if there is no unrighteousness with
Thee, it remains that Thou must have been "chastening man for
iniquity."
18. And by what means hast Thou "chastened" him? Tell us, O Idithun,
the manner of thy chastening; tell us in what way thou hast been
"chastened." "And Thou hast made my life consume like a spider." This
is the chastening! What consumes away sooner than the spider? I speak
of the creature itself; though what can be more liable to "consume
away" than the spider's webs? Observe too how liable to decay is the
creature itself. Do but set your finger lightly upon it, and it is a
ruin: there is nothing at all more easily destroyed. To such a state
hast Thou brought my life, by chastening me "because of iniquity." When
chastening makes us weak, there is a kind of strength that would be a
fault....It was by a kind of strength that man offended, so as to
require to be corrected by weakness: for it was by a certain "pride"
that he offended; so as to require to be chastened by humility. All
proud persons call themselves strong men. Therefore have many "come
from the East and the West," and have attained "to sit down with
Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, in the kingdom of Heaven." [1076]
Wherefore was it that they so attained? Because they would not be
strong. What is meant by "would not be strong"? They were afraid to
presume of their own merits. They did not "go about to establish their
own righteousness," that they might "submit themselves to the
righteousness of God." [1077] ...Behold! you are mortal; and you bear
about you a body of flesh that is corrupting away: "And ye shall fall
like one of the princes. Ye shall die like men," [1078] and shall fall
like the devil. [1079] What good does the remedial discipline of
mortality do you? The devil is proud, as not having a mortal body, as
being an angel. But as for you, who have received a mortal body, and to
whom even this does no good, so as to humble you by so great weakness,
you shall "fall like one of the princes." This then is the first grace
of God's gift, to bring us to the confession of our infirmity, that
whatever good we can do, whatever ability we have, we may be that in
Him; that "He that glorieth, may glory in the Lord." [1080] "When I am
weak," saith he, "then am I strong." [1081]
19. "But surely every man living disquieteth himself in vain." He
returns to what he mentioned a little before. Although he be improving
here, yet for all that, "every man living disquieteth himself in vain;"
forasmuch as he lives in a state of uncertainty. For who has any
assurance even of his own goodness? "He is disquieted in vain." Let him
"cast upon the Lord the burden" [1082] of his care; let him cast upon
Him whatever causes him anxiety. "Let Him sustain thee;" let Him keep
thee. For on this earth what is there that is certain, except death?
Consider the whole sum of all the good or the ill of this life, either
those belonging to righteousness, or those belonging to
unrighteousness; what is there that is certain here, except death? Have
you been advancing in goodness? You know what you are to-day; what you
will be to-morrow, you know not! Are you a sinner? you know what you
are to-day; what you will be to-morrow, you know not! You hope for
wealth; it is uncertain whether it will fall to your lot. You hope to
have a wife; it is uncertain whether you will obtain one, or what sort
of one you will obtain. You hope for sons: it is uncertain whether they
will be born to you. Are they born? it is uncertain whether they will
live: if they live, it is uncertain whether they will grow up in
virtue, or whether they will fall away. Whichever way you turn, all is
uncertain, death alone is certain. Art thou poor? It is uncertain
whether thou wilt grow rich. Art thou unlearned? It is uncertain
whether thou wilt become learned. Art thou in feeble health, it is
uncertain whether thou wilt regain thy strength. Art thou born? It is
certain that thou wilt die: and in this certainty of death itself, the
day of thy death is uncertain. Amidst these uncertainties, where death
alone is certain, while even of that the hour is uncertain, and while
it alone is studiously guarded against, though at the same time it is
in no way to be escaped, "every man living disquieteth himself in
vain."...
20. "Hear my prayer, O Lord" (ver. 12). Whereof shall I rejoice?
Whereof should I groan? I rejoice on account of what is past, I groan
longing for these which are not yet come. "Hear my prayer, and give ear
unto my cry. Hold not Thy peace at my tears." For do I now no longer
weep, because I have already "passed by," have "left behind" so great
things as these? "Do I not weep much the more?" For, "He that
increaseth knowledge, increaseth sorrow." [1083] The more I long for
what is not here, do I not so much the more groan for it until it
comes? do I not so much the more weep until it comes?...
21. "For I am a sojourner with Thee." But with whom am I a "sojourner"?
When I was with the devil, I was a "sojourner;" but then I had a bad
host and entertainer; now, however, I am with Thee; but I am a
"sojourner" still. What is meant by a sojourner? I am a "sojourner" in
the place from which I am to remove; not in the place where I am to
dwell for ever. The place where I am to abide for ever, should be
rather called my home. In the place from which I am to remove I am a
"sojourner;" but yet it is with my God that I am a sojourner, with whom
I am hereafter to abide, when I have reached my home. But what home is
that to which you are to remove from this estate of a sojourner?
Recognise that home, of which the Apostle speaks, "We have an
habitation of God, an house not made with hands, eternal in the
Heavens." [1084] If this house is eternal in the Heavens, when we have
come to it, we shall not be sojourners any more. For how should you be
a sojourner in an eternal home? But here, where the Master of the house
is some day to say to you, "Remove," while you yourself know not when
He will say it, be thou in readiness. And by longing for your eternal
home, you will be keeping yourself in readiness for it. And be not
angry with Him, because He gives thee notice to remove, when He Himself
pleases. For He made no covenant with thee, nor did He bind Himself by
any engagement; nor didst thou enter upon the tenancy of this house on
a certain stipulation for a definite term: thou art to quit, when it is
its Master's pleasure. For therefore is it that you now dwell there
free of charge. "For I am a sojourner with Thee, and a stranger."
Therefore it is there is my country: it is there is my home. "I am a
sojourner with Thee, and a stranger." Here too is understood "with
Thee." For many are strangers with the devil: but they who have already
believed and are faithful, are, it is true, "strangers" as yet, because
they have not yet come to that country and to that home: but still they
are strangers with God. For so long as we are in the body, we are
strangers from the Lord, and we desire, whether we are strangers, or
abiding here, "we may be accepted with Him." [1085] I am a "sojourner
with Thee; and a stranger, as all my fathers were." If then I am as all
my fathers were, shall I say that I will not remove, when they have
removed? Am I to lodge here on other terms, than those on which they
lodged here also?...
22. "Grant me some remission, that I may be refreshed before I go
hence" (ver. 13). Consider well, Idithun, consider what knots those are
which thou wouldest have "loosed" unto thee, that thou mightest be
"refreshed before thou goest hence." For thou hast certain fever-heats
from which thou wouldest fain be refreshed, and thou sayest, "that I
may be refreshed," and "grant me a remission." What should He remit, or
loosen unto thee, save that difficulty under which, and in consequence
of which, thou sayest, "Forgive us our debts. Grant me a remission
before I go hence, and be no more." Set me free from my sins, "before I
go hence," that I may not go hence with my sins. Remit them unto me,
that I may be set at rest in my conscience, that it may be disburthened
of its feverish anxiety, the anxiety with which "I am sorry for my sin.
Grant me a remission, that I may be refreshed" (before everything
else), "before I go hence, and be no more." For if thou grantest me not
a "remission, that I may be refreshed," I shall "go and be no more."
"Before I go" thither, where if I go, I shall thenceforth "be no more.
Grant me a remission, that I may be refreshed." A question has
suggested itself, how he will be no more....What is meant then by
"shall be no more," unless Idithun is alluding to what is true "being,"
and what is not true "being." For he was beholding with the mind, with
which he could do so, with the "mind's eye," by which he was able to
behold it, that end, which he had desired to have shown unto him,
saying, "Lord, make me to know mine end." He was beholding "the number
of his days, which truly is;" and he observed that all that is below,
in comparison of that true being, has no true being. For those things
are permanent; these are subject to change; mortal, and frail, and the
eternal suffering, though full of corruption, is for this very reason
not to be ended, that it may ever be being ended without end. He
alluded therefore to that realm of bliss, to the happy country, to the
happy home, where the Saints are partakers of eternal Life, and of
Truth unchangeable; and he feared to "go" where that is not, where
there is no true being; longing to be there, where "Being" in the
highest sense is! It is on account of this contrast then, while
standing midway between them, he says, "Grant me a remission, that I
may be refreshed before I go hence and be no more." For if Thou
"grantest me not a remission" of my sins, I shall go from Thee unto all
eternity! And from whom shall I go to all eternity? From Him who said,
I Am HE that Am: from Him who said, "Say unto the children of Israel, I
Am hath sent me unto you." [1086] He then who goes from Him, in the
contrary direction, goes to non-existence....
__________________________________________________________________
[1018] Lat. XXXVIII.
[1019] Ps. xix. 3.
[1020] Non frustra in udo est, nisi quia facile labitur.
[1021] Volatici.
[1022] John xvi. 12.
[1023] 1 Cor. iii. 1.
[1024] 1 Cor. iii. 2.
[1025] Pio lacte.
[1026] Ps. li. 8.
[1027] John iii. 29.
[1028] John viii. 44.
[1029] He omits, "My heart became hot within me."
[1030] Matt. xxv. 26, 27.
[1031] Matt. xxv. 30.
[1032] Matt. xxv. 27.
[1033] Matt. xxiv. 12.
[1034] Phil. iii. 12, 13.
[1035] Ps. cii. 27.
[1036] Exod. iii. 14.
[1037] E.V. Ps. cx. 7, "the brook."
[1038] Rev. xxi. 9.
[1039] Rev. xxi. 25.
[1040] Phil. iii. 12, 14.
[1041] Phil. iii. 9.
[1042] E.V. "as an hand-breadth."
[1043] 2 Cor. v. 17.
[1044] 2 Cor. iv. 16.
[1045] Alluding to palaioumenon, Heb. viii. 13.
[1046] Ps. cxxxix. 16.
[1047] Al. "learned."
[1048] i.e., in the high doctrine, p. 114; but some mss. ap. Ben. and
ours, Fluctuavi in dispensatione munerum (or nummorum) Dominicorum: "I
have wavered in the dispensing of the Lord's gifts (or moneys)." A
better sense, see p. 113.
[1049] Job iii. 25.
[1050] E.V. "in a vain show."
[1051] Gen. i. 26.
[1052] Ps. xl. 4.
[1053] Text, castigetur. Four mss. have congregetur, one collocetur;
three cartigetur, on which word there is a gloss. Cartigare est in
charta propter memoriam aliquid scribere; usitatius de usurariis
dicitur. Nine mss. castigetur, as Martial, Et cujus laxas arca
flagellat opes, and the Jurisconsults flagellare annonam, for "to shut
up."--Ben. Flagellare annonam, however, seems rather to mean to "drive
up the prices," and perhaps arca flagellat may be the lid striking the
heaped contents, thus affording no parallel. However, it may be to
"keep it from peeping out." Oxf. mss. cartigetur.
[1054] Col. i. 16.
[1055] Hoc, qu. hic, "here."
[1056] Phil. iii. 13.
[1057] Rom. viii. 24, 25.
[1058] E.V. "And now, Lord, what wait I for," etc.
[1059] Col. i. 16.
[1060] Oxf. mss. inquit.
[1061] 1 John i. 8.
[1062] Matt. vi. 12.
[1063] Rom. x. 4.
[1064] Phil. iii. 15.
[1065] Luke xviii. 14.
[1066] 1 Cor. iv. 9.
[1067] Or, "deaf."
[1068] Augustin and Vulgate, quid loquatur in me.
[1069] Ps. lxxxv. 8.
[1070] Isa. xlviii. 22.
[1071] Ps. xciv. 9.
[1072] Ut producar, non ut comminuar.
[1073] Ps. cxix. 71. Justificationes.
[1074] Ps. cxvi. 6, cxix. 71.
[1075] Ps. xliv. 20. Qui fingis dolorem in praecepto (Vulgate,
laborem); E.V. "which frameth mischief by a law."
[1076] Matt. viii. 11.
[1077] Rom. x. 3.
[1078] Ps. lxxxii. 7.
[1079] [Dan. x. 13. "Princes" understood of angels. Then, Isa. xiv. 12.
So Shaks.: "He falls like Lucifer," etc.--C.]
[1080] 1 Cor. i. 31.
[1081] 2 Cor. xii. 10.
[1082] Ps. lv. 22.
[1083] Eccles. i. 18.
[1084] 2 Cor. v. 1.
[1085] 2 Cor. v. 9.
[1086] Ex. iii. 14.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XL. [1087]
1. Of all those things which our Lord Jesus Christ has foretold, we
know part to have been already accomplished, part we hope will be
accomplished hereafter. All of them, however, will be fulfilled,
because He is "the Truth" who speaks them, and requires of us to be as
"faithful," as He Himself speaks them faithfully....
2. Let us say then what this Psalm says. "I waited patiently for the
Lord" (ver. 1). I waited patiently for the promise of no mere mortal
who can both deceive and be himself deceived: I waited for the
consolation of no mere mortal, who may be consumed by sorrow of his
own, before he gives me comfort. Should a brother mortal attempt to
comfort me, when he himself is in sorrow likewise? Let us mourn in
company; let us weep together, let us "wait patiently" together, let us
join our prayers together also. Whom did I wait for but for the Lord?
The Lord, who though He puts off the fulfilment of His promises, yet
never recalls them? He will make it good; assuredly He will make it
good, because He has made many of His promises good already: and of
God's truth we ought to have no fears, even if as yet He had made none
of them good. Lo! let us henceforth think thus, "He has promised us
everything; He has not as yet given us possession of anything; He is a
sponsible Promiser; a faithful Paymaster: do you but show yourself a
dutiful exactor of what is promised; and if you be "weak," if you be
one of the little ones, claim the promise of His mercy. Do you not see
tender [1088] lambs striking their dams' teats with their heads, in
order that they may get their fill of milk?..."And He took heed unto
me, and heard my cry." He took heed to it, and He heard it. See thou
hast not waited in vain. His eyes are over thee. His ears turned
towards thee. For, "the eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous, and
His ears are open unto their cry." [1089] What then? Did He not see
thee, when thou usedst to do evil and to blaspheme Him? What then
becomes of what is said in that very Psalm, "The face of the Lord is
upon them that do evil"? [1090] But for what end? "that He may cut off
the remembrance of them from the earth." Therefore, even when thou wert
wicked, He "took heed of thee;" but He "took no heed to thee." [1091]
So then to him who "waited patiently for the Lord," it was not enough
to say, "He took heed of me, He says, "He took heed to me;" that is, He
took heed by comforting me, that He might do me good. What was it that
He took heed to? "and He heard my cry."
3. And what hath He accomplished for thee? What hath He done for thee?
"He brought me up also out of a horrible pit, out of the miry clay, and
set my feet upon a rock, and established my goings" (ver. 2). He hath
given us great blessings already: and still He is our debtor; but let
him who hath this part of the debt repaid already, believe that the
rest will be also, seeing that he ought to have believed even before he
received anything. Our Lord has employed facts themselves to persuade
us, that He is a faithful promiser, a liberal giver. What then has He
already done? "He has brought me out of a horrible pit." What horrible
pit is that? It is the depth of iniquity, from the lusts of the flesh,
for this is meant by "the miry clay." [1092] Whence hath He brought
thee out? Out of a certain deep, out of which thou criedst out in
another Psalm, "Out of the deep have I called unto Thee, O Lord."
[1093] And those who are already "crying out of the deep," are not
absolutely in the lowest deep: the very act of crying is already
lifting them up. There are some deeper in the deep, who do not even
perceive themselves to be in the deep. Such are those who are proud
despisers, not pious entreaters for pardon; not tearful criers for
mercy: but such as Scripture thus describes. "The sinner [1094] when he
comes into the depth of evil despiseth." [1095] For he is deeper in the
deep, who is not satisfied with being a sinner, unless instead of
confessing he even defends his sins. But he who has already "cried out
of the deep," hath already lifted up his head in order that he might
"cry out of the deep," has been heard already, and has been "brought
out of the horrible pit, and out of the mire and clay." He already has
faith, which he had not before; he has hope, which he was before
without; he now walks in Christ, who before used to go astray in the
devil. For on that account it is that he says, "He hath set my feet
upon a rock, and established my goings." Now "that Rock was Christ."
[1096] Supposing that we are "upon the rock," and that our "goings are
ordered," still it is necessary that we continue to walk; that we
advance to something farther. For what did the Apostle Paul say when
now upon the Rock, when his "goings had now been established"? "Not as
though I had already attained, either were already perfect: Brethren, I
count not myself to have apprehended." [1097] What then has been done
for thee, if thou hast not apprehended? On what account dost thou
return thanks, saying, "But I have obtained mercy"? [1098] Because his
goings are now established, because he now walks on the
Rock?...Therefore, when he was saying, "I press forward toward the
prize of my high calling," because "his feet were now set on the Rock,"
and "his goings were ordered," because he was now walking on the right
way, he had something to return thanks for; something to ask for still;
returning thanks for what he had received already, while he was
claiming that which still remained due. For what things already
received was he giving thanks? For the remission of sins, for the
illumination of faith; for the strong support of hope, for the fire of
charity. But in what respects had he still a claim of debt on the Lord?
"Henceforth," he says, "there is laid up for me a crown of
righteousness." There is therefore something due me still. What is it
that is due? "A crown of righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous
Judge, shall give me at that day." He was at first a loving Father to
"bring him forth from the horrible pit;" to forgive his sins, to rescue
him from "the mire and clay;" hereafter he will be a "righteous Judge,"
requiting to him walking rightly, what He promised; to him (I say),
unto whom He had at the first granted that power to walk rightly. He
then as a "righteous Judge" will repay; but whom will he repay? "He
that endureth unto the end, the same shall be saved." [1099]
4. "And He hath put a new song in my mouth." What new song is this?
"Even a hymn unto our God" (ver. 3). Perhaps you used to sing hymns to
strange gods; old hymns, because they were uttered by the "old man,"
not by the "new man;" let the "new man" be formed, and let him sing a
"new song;" being himself made "new," let him love those "new" things
by which he is himself made new. For what is more Ancient than God, who
is before all things, and is without end and without beginning? He
becomes "new" to thee, when thou returnest to Him; because it was by
departing from Him, that thou hadst become old; and hadst said, "I have
waxed old because of all mine enemies." [1100] We therefore utter "a
hymn unto our God;" and the hymn itself sets us free. "For I will call
upon the Lord to praise Him, and I will be safe from all mine enemies."
For a hymn is a song of praise. Call on God to "praise" Him, not to
find fault with Him....
5. If haply any one asks, what person is speaking in this Psalm? I
would say briefly, "It is Christ." But as ye know, brethren, and as we
must say frequently, Christ sometimes speaks in His own Person, in the
Person of our Head. For He Himself is "the Saviour of the Body." [1101]
He is our Head; the Son of God, who was born of the Virgin, suffered
for us, "rose again for our justification," sitteth "at the right hand
of God," to "make intercession for us:" [1102] who is also to
recompense to the evil and to the good, in the judgment, all the evil
and the good that they have done. He deigned to be come our Head; to
become "the Head of the Body," by taking of us that flesh in which He
should die for us; that flesh which He also raised up again for our
sakes, that in that flesh He might place before us an instance of the
resurrection; that we might learn to hope for that of which we
heretofore despaired, and might henceforth have our feet upon the rock,
and might walk in Christ. He then sometimes speaks in the name of our
Head; sometimes also He speaks of us who are His members. For both when
He said, "I was an hungred, and ye gave Me meat," [1103] He spoke on
behalf of His members, not of Himself: and when He said, "Saul, Saul,
why persecutest thou Me?" [1104] the Head was crying on behalf of its
members: and yet He did not say, "Why dost thou persecute My members?"
but, "Why persecutest thou Me?" If He suffers in us, then shall we also
be crowned in Him. Such is the love of Christ. What is there can be
compared to this? This is the thing on account of which "He hath put a
hymn in our mouth," and this He speaks on behalf of His members.
6. "The just shall see, and shall fear, and shall trust in the Lord."
"The just shall see." Who are the just? The faithful; because it is "by
faith that the just shall live." [1105] For there is in the Church this
order, some go before, others follow; and those who go before make
themselves "an example" to those who follow; and those who follow
imitate those who go before. But do those then follow no one, who
exhibit themselves as an ensample to them that come after? If they
follow no one at all, they will fall into error. These persons then
must themselves also follow some one, that is, Christ Himself...."The
just," therefore, "shall see, and shall fear." They see a narrow way on
the one hand; on the other side, "a broad road:" on this side they see
few, on the other many. But thou art a just man; count them not, but
weigh them; bring "a just balance," not a "deceitful" one: because thou
art called just. "The just shall see, and fear," applies to thee. Count
not therefore the multitudes of men that are filling the "broad ways,"
that are to fill the circus tomorrow; celebrating with shouts the
City's Anniversary, [1106] while they defile the City itself by evil
living. Look not at them; they are many in number; and who can count
them? But there are a few travelling along the narrow road. Bring forth
the balance, I say. Weigh them; see what a quantity of chaff you lift
up on the one side, against a few grains of corn on the other. Let this
be done by "the just," the "believers," who are to follow. And what
shall they who precede do? Let them not be proud, let them not "exalt
themselves;" let them not deceive those who follow them. How may they
deceive those who follow them? By promising them salvation in
themselves. What then ought those who follow to do? "The just shall
see, and fear: and shall trust in the Lord;" not in those who go before
them. But indeed they fix their eyes on those who go before them, and
follow and imitate them; but they do so, because they consider from
Whom they have received the grace to go before them; and because they
trust in Him. [1107] Although therefore they make these their models,
they place their trust in Him from whom the others have received the
grace whereby they are such as they are. "The just shall see it, and
fear, and shall trust in the Lord." Just as in another Psalm, "I lift
up mine eyes unto the hills," [1108] we understand by hills, all
distinguished and great spiritual persons in the Church; great in
solidity, not by swollen inflation. By these it is that all Scripture
hath been dispensed unto us; they are the Prophets, they are the
Evangelists; they are sound Doctors: to these "I lift up mine eyes,
from whence shall come my help." And lest you should think of mere
human help, he goes on to say, "My help cometh from the Lord, which
made heaven and earth. The just shall see it, and fear, and shall trust
in the Lord."...
7. "Blessed is that man that maketh the name of the Lord his trust, and
hath not respected vanities or lying madnesses" (ver. 4). Behold the
way by which thou wouldest fain have gone. Behold the "multitude that
fill the Broad way." [1109] It is not without reason "that" road leads
to the amphitheatre. It is not without reason it leads to Death. The
"broad way" leads unto death, [1110] its breadth delights for time: its
end is straitness to all eternity. Aye; but the multitudes murmur; the
multitudes are rejoicing together; the multitudes are hastening along;
the multitudes are flocking together! Do not thou imitate them; do not
turn aside after them: they are "vanities, and lying madnesses." Let
the Lord thy God be thy hope. Hope for nothing else from the Lord thy
God; but let the Lord thy God Himself be thine hope. For many persons
hope to obtain from God's hands riches, and many perishable and
transitory honours; and, in short, anything else they hope to obtain at
God's hands, except only God Himself. But do thou seek after thy God
Himself: nay, indeed, despising all things else, make thy way unto Him!
Forget other things, remember Him. Leave other things behind, and
"press forward" [1111] unto Him. Surely it is He Himself, who set thee
right, when turned away from the right path; who, now that thou art set
in the right path, guides thee aright, who guides thee to thy
destination. Let Him then be thy hope, who both guides thee, and guides
thee to thy destination. Whither does worldly covetousness lead thee?
And to what point does it conduct thee at the last? Thou didst at first
desire a farm; then thou wouldest possess an estate; thou wouldest shut
out thy neighbours; having shut them out, thou didst set thy heart on
the possessions of other neighbours; and didst extend thy covetous
desires till thou hadst reached the shore: arriving at the shore, thou
covetest the islands: having made the earth thine own, thou wouldest
haply seize upon heaven. Leave thou all thy loves. He who made heaven
and earth is more beautiful than all.
8. "Blessed is the man that maketh the name of the Lord his hope, and
who hath not regarded vanities and lying madnesses." For whence is it
that "madness" is called "lying"? Insanity is a lying thing, even as it
is sanity that sees the Truth. For what thou seest as good things,
[1112] thou art deceived; thou art not in thy sound senses: a violent
fever has driven thee to frenzy: that which thou art in love with is
not a reality. Thou applaudest the charioteer; thou cheerest the
charioteer; thou art madly in love with the charioteer. It is "vanity;"
it is "a lying madness." "It is `not'" (he cries). "Nothing can be
better; nothing more delightful." What can I do for one in a state of
high fever? Pray ye for such persons, if you have any feelings of
compassion in you. For the physician himself also in a desperate case
generally turns to those in the house, who stand around weeping; who
are hanging on his lips to hear his opinion of the patient who is sick
and in danger. The physician stands in a state of doubt: he sees not
any good to promise; he fears to pronounce evil, lest he should excite
alarm. He devises a thoroughly modest sentence: "The good God can do
all things. Pray ye for him." Which then of these madmen shall I check?
Which of them will listen to me? Which of them would not call us
miserable? Because they suppose us to have lost great and various
pleasures, of which they are madly fond, in that we are not as madly in
love with them as they are: and they do not see that they are "lying"
pleasures...."And hath not respected vanities, and lying madnesses."
"Such a one has won," he cries; "he harnessed such and such a horse,"
he proclaims aloud. He would fain be a kind of diviner; he aspires to
the honours of divination by abandoning the fountain of Divinity; and
he frequently pronounces an opinion, and is frequently mistaken. Why is
this? Even because they are "lying madnesses." But why is it that what
they say sometimes comes true? That they may lead astray the foolish
ones; that by loving the semblance of truth there, they may fall into
the snare of falsehood: let them be left behind, let them be "given
over," let them be "cut off." If they were members of us, they must be
mortified. "Mortify," he says, "your members which are upon the earth."
[1113] Let our God be our hope. He who made all things, is better than
all! He who made what is beautiful, is more beautiful than all that is
such. He who made whatever is mighty, is Himself mightier. He who made
whatever is great, is Himself greater. He will be unto you everything
that you love. Learn in the creature to love the Creator; and in the
work Him who made it. Let not that which has been made by Him detain
thine affections, so that thou shouldest lose Him by whom thou thyself
wert made also. "Blessed," then, "is the man that maketh the Name of
the Lord his trust, and hath not respected vanities and lying
madnesses."...
9. We will give him other sights in exchange for such sights as these.
And what sights shall we present to the Christian, whom we would fain
divert from those sights? I thank the Lord our God; He in the following
verse of the Psalm hath shown us what sights we ought to present and
offer to spectators who would fain have sights to see? Let us now
suppose him to be weaned from the circus, the theatre, the
amphitheatre; let him be looking after, let him by all means be looking
after, some sight to see; we do not leave him without a spectacle. What
then shall we give in exchange for those? Hear what follows.
"Many, O Lord my God, are the wonderful works which Thou hast made"
(ver. 5). He used to gaze at the "wonderful works" of man; let him now
contemplate the wonderful works of God. "Many are the wonderful works"
that God "has made." Why are they become vile in his eyes? He praises
the charioteer guiding four horses; running all of them without fault
and without stumbling. Perhaps the Lord has not made such "wonderful
works" in things spiritual. Let him control lust, [1114] let him
control cowardice, [1115] let him control injustice, let him control
imprudence, I mean, the passions which falling into excess produce
those vices; let him control these and bring them into subjection, and
let him hold the reins, and not suffer himself to be carried away; let
him guide them the way he himself would have them go; let him not be
forced away whither he would not. He used to applaud the charioteer, he
himself shall be applauded for his own charioteering; he used to call
out that the charioteer should be invested with a dress of honour; he
shall himself be clothed with immortality. These are the spectacles,
these the sights that God exhibits to us. He cries out of heaven, "My
eyes are upon you. Strive, and `I will' assist you; triumph, and I will
crown you."
"And in Thy thought there is none that is like unto Thee." Now then
look at the actor! For the man hath by dint of great pains learnt to
walk upon a rope; and hanging there he holds thee hanging in suspense.
Turn to Him who exhibits spectacles far more wonderful. This man hath
learned to walk upon the rope; but hath he caused another to walk on
the sea? Forget now thy theatre; behold our Peter; not a walker on the
rope, but, so to speak, a walker on the sea. [1116] And do thou also
walk on other waters (though not on those on which Peter walked, to
symbolize a certain truth), for this world is a sea. It hath a
deleterious bitterness; it hath the waves of tribulations, the tempests
of temptations; it hath men in it who, like fish, delight in their own
ruin, and prey upon each other; walk thou here, set thou thy foot on
this. Thou wouldest see sights; be thyself a "spectacle." That thy
spirit may not sink, look on Him who goes before thee, and says, "We
have been made a spectacle unto this world, and unto angels, and unto
men." [1117] Tread thou on the waters; suffer not thyself to be drowned
in the sea. Thou wilt not go there, thou wilt not "tread it under
foot," unless it be His bidding, who was Himself the first to walk upon
the sea. For it was thus that Peter spoke. "If Thou art, bid me come
unto Thee on the waters." [1118] And because "He was," He heard him
when praying; He granted his wish to him when expressing his desire; He
raised him up when sinking. These are the "wonderful works" that the
"Lord hath made." Look on them; let faith be the eye of him who would
behold them. And do thou also likewise; for although the winds alarm
thee, though the waves rage against thee, and though human frailty may
have inspired thee with some doubt of thy salvation, thou hast it in
thy power to "cry out," thou mayest say "Lord, I perish." [1119] He who
bids thee walk there, suffers thee not to perish. For in that thou now
walkest "on the Rock," thou fearest not even on the sea! If thou art
without "the Rock," thou must sink in the sea; for the Rock on which
thou must walk is such an one as is not sunk in the sea,
10. Observe then the "wonderful works" of God. "I have declared, and
have spoken; they are multiplied beyond number." There is "a number,"
there are some over and above the number. There is a fixed number that
belongs to that heavenly Jerusalem. For "the Lord knoweth them that are
His;" [1120] the Christians that fear Him, the Christians that believe,
the Christians that keep the commandments, that walk in God's ways,
that keep themselves from sins; that if they fall confess: they belong
to "the number." But are they the only ones? There are also some
"beyond the number." For even if they be but a few (a few in comparison
of the numbers of the larger majority), with how great numbers are our
Churches filled, crowded up to the very walls; to what a degree do they
annoy each other by the pressure, and almost choke each other by their
overflowing numbers. Again, out of these very same persons, when there
is a public spectacle, [1121] there are numbers flocking to the
amphitheatre; these are over and above "the number." But it is for this
reason that we say this, that they may be in "the number." Not being
present, they do not hear this from us; but when ye have gone from
hence, let them hear it from you. "I have declared," he says, "and have
spoken." It is Christ who speaks. "He hath declared it," in His own
Person, as our Head. He hath Himself declared it by His members. He
Himself hath sent those who should "declare" it; He Himself hath sent
the Apostles. "Their sound is gone out into all lands, and their words
unto the ends of the world." [1122] How great the number of believers
that are gathered together; how great the multitudes that flock
together; many of them truly converted, many but in appearance: and
those who are truly converted are the minority; those who are so but in
appearance are the majority: because "they are multiplied beyond the
number."
11. ...These are the "wonderful works" of God; these are the "thoughts"
of God, to which "no man's thoughts are like;" that the lover of
sight-seeing may be weaned from curiosity: [1123] and with us may seek
after those more excellent, those more profitable things, in which,
when he shall have attained unto them, he will rejoice....
12. "Sacrifice and offering Thou didst not desire" (ver. 6), saith the
Psalm to God. For the men of old time, when as yet the true Sacrifice,
which is known to the faithful, was foreshown in figures, used to
celebrate rites that were figures of the reality that was to be
hereafter; many of them understanding their meaning; but more of them
in ignorance of it. For the Prophets and the holy Patriarchs understood
what they were celebrating; but the rest of the "stiff-necked people"
were so carnal, that what was done by them was but to symbolize the
things that were to come afterwards; and it came to pass, [1124] when
that first sacrifice was abolished; when the burnt-offerings of "rams,
of goats, and of calves," and of other victims, had been abolished,
"God did not desire them." Why did God not desire them? And why did He
at the first desire them? Because all those things were, as it were,
the words of a person making a promise; and the expressions conveying a
promise, when the thing that they promise is come, are no longer
uttered....Those sacrifices then, as being but expressions of a
promise, have been abrogated. What is that which has been given as its
fulfilment? That "Body;" which ye know; which ye do not all of you
know; which, of you who do know it, I pray God all may not know it unto
condemnation. Observe the time when it was said; for the person is
Christ our Lord, speaking at one time for His members, at another in
His own person. "Sacrifice and offering," said He, "Thou didst not
desire." What then? Are we left at this present time without a
sacrifice? God forbid!
"But a Body hast Thou perfected for me." [1125] It was for this reason
that Thou didst not desire the others; that Thou mightest "perfect"
this; before Thou "perfectedst" this, Thou didst desire the others. The
fulfilment of the promise has done away with the words that express the
promise. For if they still hold out a promise, that which was promised
is not yet fulfilled. This was promised by certain signs; the signs
that convey the promise are done away; because the Substance that was
promised is come. We are in this "Body." We are partakers of this
"Body." We know that which we ourselves receive; and ye who know it not
yet, will know it bye and bye; and when ye come to know it, I pray ye
may not receive it unto condemnation. [1126] "For he that eateth and
drinketh unworthily, eateth and drinketh damnation unto himself."
[1127] "A Body" hath been "perfected" for us; let us be made perfect in
the Body.
13. "Burnt-offerings also for sin hast Thou not required." "Then said
I, Lo, I come!" (ver. 7). It is time that what "was promised should
come;" because the signs, by means of which they were promised, have
been put away. And indeed, Brethren, observe these put away; those
fulfilled. Let the Jewish nation at this time show me their priest, if
they can! Where are their sacrifices? They are brought to an end;
[1128] they are put away now. Should we at that time have rejected
them? [1129] We do reject them now; because, if you chose to celebrate
them now, it were unseasonable; [1130] unfitting at the time;
incongruous. You are still making promises; I have already received!
There has remained to them a certain thing for them to celebrate; that
they might not remain altogether without a sign....In such a case then
are they; like Cain with his mark. The sacrifices, however, which used
to be performed there, have been put away; and that which remained unto
them for a sign like that of Cain, hath by this time been fulfilled;
and they know it not. They slay the Lamb; they eat the unleavened
bread. "Christ has been sacrificed for us, as our Passover." [1131] Lo,
in the sacrifice of Christ, I recognise the Lamb that was slain! What
of the unleavened bread? "Therefore," says he, "let us keep the feast;
not with old leaven, neither with the leaven of wickedness" (he shows
what is meant by "old;" it is "stale" flour; it is sour), "but in the
unleavened bread of sincerity and truth." [1132] They have continued in
the shade; they cannot abide the Sun of Glory. We are already in the
light of day. We have "the Body" of Christ, we have the Blood of
Christ. If we have a new life, let us "sing a new song, even a hymn
unto our God." [1133] "Burnt offerings for sin Thou didst not desire.
Then said I, Lo, I come!"
14. "In the head [1134] of the Book it is written of me, that I should
fulfil Thy will: O my God, I am willing, and Thy Law is within my
heart" (ver. 8). Behold! He turns His regards to His members. Behold!
He hath Himself "fulfilled the will" of the Father. But in what
"beginning [1135] of a Book" is it written of Him? Perhaps in the
beginning of this Book of Psalms. For why should we seek far for it, or
examine into other books for it? Behold! It is written in the beginning
of this Book of Psalms! "His will is in the Law of the Lord;" [1136]
that is, "`O my God, I am willing,' and `Thy Law is within my heart;'"
that is the same as, "And in His Law doth he meditate day and night."
15. "I have well declared Thy righteousness in the great congregation"
(ver. 9). He now addresses His members. He is exhorting them to do what
He has already done. He has "declared;" let us declare also. He has
suffered; let us "suffer with Him." He has been glorified; we shall be
"glorified with Him." [1137] "I have declared Thy righteousness in the
great congregation." How great an one is that? In all the world. How
great is it? Even among all nations. Why among all nations? Because He
is "the Seed of Abraham, in whom all nations shall be blessed." [1138]
Why among all nations? "Because their sound hath gone forth into all
lands." [1139] "Lo! I will not refrain my lips, O Lord, and that Thou
knowest." My lips speak; I will not "refrain" them from speaking. My
lips indeed sound audibly in the ears of men; but "Thou knowest" mine
heart. "I will not refrain my lips, O Lord; that Thou knowest." It is
one thing that man heareth; another that God "knoweth." That the
"declaring" of it should not be confined to the lips alone, and that it
might not be said of us, "Whatsoever things they say unto you, do; but
do not after their works;" [1140] or lest it should be said to the
people, "praising God with their lips, but not with their heart," "This
people honoureth Me with their lips, but their heart is far from Me;"
[1141] do thou make audible confession with thy lips; draw nigh with
thine heart also. [1142] "For with the heart man believeth unto
righteousness; but with the mouth confession is made unto salvation."
[1143] In case like unto which that thief was found, who, hanging on
the Cross with the Lord, did on the Cross acknowledge the Lord. Others
had refused to acknowledge Him while working miracles; this man
acknowledged Him when hanging on the Cross. That thief had every other
member pierced through; his hands were fastened by the nails; his feet
were pierced also; his whole body was fastened to the tree; the body
was not disengaged in its other members; the heart and the tongue were
disengaged; [1144] "with the heart" he "believed; with the tongue" he
made "confession." "Remember me, O Lord," he said, "when Thou comest
into Thy kingdom." He hoped for the coming of his salvation at a time
far remote; he was content to receive it after a long delay; his hope
rested on an object far remote. The day, however, was not postponed!
The answer was, "This day shalt thou be with Me in Paradise." [1145]
Paradise hath happy trees! This day hast thou been with Me on "the
Tree" of the Cross. This day shalt thou be with Me on "the Tree" of
Salvation....
16. "I have not hid my [1146] righteousness within my heart" (ver. 10).
What is meant by "my righteousness"? My faith. For, "the just shall
live by faith." [1147] As suppose the persecutor under threat of
punishment, as they were once allowed to do, puts you to the question,
"What art thou? Pagan or Christian?" "A Christian." That is his
"righteousness." He believeth; he "lives by faith." He doth not "hide
his righteousness within his heart." He has not said in his heart, "I
do indeed believe in Christ; but I will not tell what I believe to this
persecutor, who is raging against me, and threatening me. My God
knoweth that inwardly, within my heart, I do believe. He knoweth that I
renounce Him not." Lo! you say that you have this inwardly within your
heart! What have you upon your lips? "I am not a Christian." Your lips
bear witness against your heart. "I have not hid my righteousness
within my heart."...
17. "I have declared Thy Truth and Thy Salvation." I have declared Thy
Christ. This is the meaning of, "I have declared Thy Truth and Thy
Salvation." How is "Thy Truth" Christ? "I am the Truth." [1148] How is
Christ "His Salvation"? Simeon recognised the infant in His Mother's
hands in the Temple, and said, "For mine eyes have seen Thy Salvation."
[1149] The old man recognised the little child; the old man having
himself "become a little child" [1150] in that infant, having been
renewed by faith. For he had received an oracle from God; and it said
this, "The Lord had said unto him, that he was not to depart out of
this life, until he had seen the "Salvation of God." This "Salvation of
God" it is a good thing to have shown unto men; but let them cry, "Show
us Thy mercy, O Lord, and grant us Thy Salvation."...
18. "I have not concealed Thy mercy and Thy Truth from the great
congregation." Let us be there; let us also be numbered among the
members of this Body: let us not keep back "the mercy" of the Lord, and
"the Truth" of the Lord. Wouldest thou hear what "the mercy of the
Lord" is? Depart from thy sins; He will forgive thy sins. Wouldest thou
hear what "the truth" of the Lord is? Hold fast righteousness. Thy
righteousness shall receive a crown. For mercy is announced to you now;
"Truth" is to be shown unto thee hereafter. For God is not merciful in
such a way as not to be just, nor just in such a way as not to be
merciful. Does that mercy seem to thee an inconsiderable one? He will
not impute unto thee all thy former sins: thou hast lived ill up to
this present day; thou art still living; this day live well; then thou
wilt not "conceal" this "mercy." If this is meant by "mercy," what is
meant by "truth"?...
19. "Remove not Thou Thy mercies far from me, O Lord" (ver. 11). He is
turning his attention to the wounded members. Because I have not
"concealed Thy mercy and Thy Truth from the great congregation," from
the Unity of the Universal Church, look Thou on Thy afflicted members,
look on those who are guilty of sins of omission, and on those who are
guilty of sins of commission: and withhold not Thou Thy mercies. "Thy
mercy and Thy Truth have continually preserved me." I should not dare
to turn from my evil way, were I not assured of remission; I could not
endure so as to persevere, if I were not assured of the fulfilment of
Thy promise....
"Innumerable evils have compassed me about" (ver. 12). Who can number
sins? Who can count his own sins, and those of others? A burden under
which he was groaning, who said, "Cleanse Thou me from my secret
faults; and from the faults of others, spare Thou Thy servant, O Lord."
[1151] Our own are too little; those "of others" are added to the
burden. I fear for myself; I fear for a virtuous brother, I have to
bear with a wicked brother; and under such burthen what shall we be, if
God's mercy were to fail? "But Thou, Lord, remove not afar off." Be
Thou near unto us! To whom is the Lord near? "Even" unto them that "are
of a broken heart." [1152] He is far from the proud: He is near to the
humble. "For though the Lord is high, yet hath He respect unto the
lowly." [1153] But let not those that are proud think themselves to be
unobserved: for the things that are high, He "beholdeth afar off." He
"beheld afar off" the Pharisee, who boasted himself; He was near at
hand to succour the Publican, who made confession. [1154] The one
extolled his own merits, and concealed his wounds; the other boasted
not of his merits, but laid bare his wounds. He came to the Physician;
he knew that he was sick, and that he required to be made whole; he
"dared not lift up his eyes to Heaven: he smote upon his breast." He
spared not himself, that God might spare him; he acknowledged himself
guilty, that God might "ignore" the charge against him. He punished
himself, that God might free him from punishment....
20. "Mine iniquities have taken hold upon me, so that I could not see."
There is a something for us "to see;" what prevents us so that we see
it not? Is it not iniquity? From beholding this light [1155] your eye
is prevented perhaps by some humour penetrating into it; perhaps by
smoke, or dust, or by something else that has been thrown into it: and
you have not been able to raise your wounded eye to contemplate this
light of day. What then? Will you be able to lift up your wounded heart
unto God? Must it not be first healed, in order that thou mayest see?
Do you not show your pride, when you say, "First let me see, and then I
will believe"? Who is there who says this? For who that would fain see,
says, "Let me see, and then I will believe"? I am about to manifest the
Light unto thee; or rather the Light Itself would fain manifest Itself
to thee! To whom? It cannot manifest Itself to the blind. He does not
see. Whence is it that he seeth not? It is that the eye is clogged by
the multitude of sins....
21. "They are more than the hairs of my head." He subjects the number
of the "hairs of his head" to calculation. Who is there can calculate
the number of the hairs of his head? Much less can he tell the number
of his sins, which exceed the number of the hairs of his head. They
seem to be minute; but they are many in number. You have guarded
against great ones; you do not now commit adultery, or murder; you do
not plunder the property of others; you do not blaspheme; and do not
bear false witness; those are the weightier kind of sins. You have
guarded against great sins, what are you doing about your smaller ones?
You have cast off the weight; beware lest the sand overwhelm you. "And
my heart hath forsaken me." What wonder if thine heart is forsaken by
thy God, when it is even "forsaken" by itself? What is meant by
"faileth me," "forsaketh me"? Is not capable of knowing itself. He
means this: "My heart hath forsaken me." I would fain see God with mine
heart, and cannot from the multitude of my sins: that is not enough;
mine heart does not even know itself. For no one thoroughly knows
himself: let no one presume upon his own state. Was Peter able to
comprehend with his own heart the state of his own heart, who said, "I
will be with Thee even unto death"? [1156] There was a false
presumption in the heart; there was lurking in that heart at the same
time a real fear: and the heart was not able to comprehend the state of
the heart. Its state was unknown to the sick heart itself: it was
manifest to the physician. That which was foretold of him was
fulfilled. God knew that in him which he knew not in himself: because
his heart had forsaken him, his heart was unknown to his heart.
22. "Be pleased, O Lord, to deliver me" (ver. 13). As if he were
saying, "`If Thou wilt, Thou canst make me clean.' [1157] Be pleased to
deliver me. O Lord, look upon me to help me." Look, [1158] that is, on
the penitent members, members that lie in pain, members that are
writhing under the instruments of the surgeon; but still in hope.
23. "Let them be ashamed and confounded together that seek after my
soul to destroy it" (ver. 14). For in a certain passage he makes an
accusation, and says, "I looked upon my right hand, and beheld; and
there was no man who sought after my soul;" [1159] that is, there was
no man to imitate Mine example. Christ in His Passion is the Speaker.
"I looked on my right hand," that is, not on the ungodly Jews, but on
Mine own right hand, the Apostles,--"and there was no man who sought
after My soul." So thoroughly was there no man to "seek after My soul,"
that he who had presumed on his own strength, "denied My soul." But
because a man's soul is sought after in two ways, either in order that
you may enjoy his society; or that you may persecute him; therefore he
here speaks of others, whom he would have "confounded and ashamed," who
are "seeking after his soul." But lest you should understand it in the
same way as when he complains of some who did not "seek after his
soul," He adds, "to destroy it;" that is, they seek after my soul in
order to my death....
24. "Let them be turned backward [1160] and put to shame that wish me
evil." "Turned backwards." Let us not take this in a bad sense. He
wishes them well; and it is His voice, who said from the Cross,
"Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do." [1161]
Wherefore then doth he say to them, that they should return
"backwards"? Because they who before were proud, so that they fell, are
now become humble, so that they may rise again. For when they are
before, they are wishing to take precedence of their Lord; to be better
than He; but if they go behind Him, they acknowledge Him to be better
than they; they acknowledge that He ought to go before; that He should
precede, [1162] they follow. Thence He thus rebukes Peter giving Him
evil counsel. For the Lord, when about to suffer for our salvation,
also foretold what was to happen concerning that Passion itself; and
Peter says, "Be it far from Thee," [1163] "God forbid it!" "This shall
not be!" He would fain have gone before his Lord; would have given
counsel to his Master! But the Lord, that He might make him not go
before Him, but follow after Him, says, "Get thee behind, Satan!" It is
for this reason He said "Satan," because thou art seeking to go before
Him, whom thou oughtest to follow; but if thou art behind, if thou
follow Him, thou wilt henceforth not be "Satan." What then? "Upon this
Rock I will build My Church." [1164] ...
25. "Let them speedily bear away their own confusion, that say unto me,
Well done! Well done!" [1165] (ver. 15). They praise you without
reason. "A great man! A good man! A man of education and of learning;
but why a Christian?" They praise those things in you which you should
wish not to be praised; they find fault with that at which you rejoice.
But if perhaps you say, "What is it you praise in me, O man? That I am
a virtuous man? A just man? If you think this, Christ made me this;
praise Him." But the other says, "Be it far from you. Do yourself no
wrong! You yourself made yourself such." "Let them be confounded who
say unto me, Well done! Well done!" And what follows?
"Let all those that seek Thee, O Lord, rejoice and be glad" (ver. 16).
Those who "seek" not me, but "Thee;" who say not to me, "Well done!
Well done!" but see me "glory in Thee," if I have anything whereof to
glory; for "he who glories, let him glory in the Lord." [1166] "Let all
those who seek Thee, Lord, rejoice and be glad."
"And say continually, the Lord be magnified." For even if the sinner
becometh righteous, thou shouldest give the glory to "Him who
justifieth the ungodly." [1167] Whether therefore it be a sinner, let
Him be praised who calls him to forgiveness; or one already walking in
the way of righteousness, let Him be praised who calls him to receive
the crown! Let the Name of the Lord be magnified continually by "such
as love Thy salvation."
"But I" (ver. 17). I for whom they were seeking evil, I whose "life
they were seeking, that they might take it away." But turn thee to
another description of persons. But I to whom they said, "Well done!
Well done!" "I am poor and needy." There is nothing in me that may be
praised as mine own. Let Him rend my sackcloth in sunder, and cover me
with His robe. For, "Now I live, not I myself; but Christ liveth in
me." [1168] If it is Christ that "liveth in thee," and all that thou
hast is Christ's, and all that thou art to have hereafter is Christ's
also; what art thou in thyself? "I am poor and needy." Now I am not
rich, because I am not proud. He was rich who said, "Lord, I thank Thee
that I am not as other men are;" [1169] but the publican was poor, who
said, "Lord, be merciful to me a sinner!" The one was belching from his
fulness; the other from want was crying piteously, "I am poor and
needy!" And what wouldest thou do, O poor and needy man? Beg at God's
door; "Knock, and it shall be opened unto thee." [1170] --"As for me, I
am poor and needy. Yet the Lord careth for me."--"Cast thy care upon
the Lord, and He shall bring it to pass." [1171] What canst thou effect
for thyself by taking care what canst thou provide for thyself? Let Him
who made thee "care for thee." He who cared for thee before thou wert,
how shall He fail to have a care of thee, now that thou art what He
would have thee be? For now thou art a believer, now thou art walking
in the "way of righteousness." Shall not He have a care for thee, who
"maketh His sun rise on the good and on the evil, and sendeth rain on
the just and on the unjust"? [1172] ...
"Thou art my Help, and my Deliverer; make no tarrying, O my God" (ver.
17). He is calling upon God, imploring Him, fearing lest he should fall
away: "Make no tarrying." What is meant by "make no tarrying"? We
lately read concerning the days of tribulation: "Unless those days
should be shortened, there should no flesh be saved." [1173] The
members of Christ--the Body of Christ extended everywhere--are asking
of God, as one single person, one single poor man, and beggar! For He
too was poor, who "though He was rich, yet became poor, that ye through
His poverty might be made rich." [1174] It is He that maketh rich those
who are the true poor; [1175] and maketh poor those who are falsely
rich. He crieth unto Him; "From the end of the earth I cried unto Thee,
when my heart was in heaviness." There will come days of tribulations,
and of greater tribulations; they will come even as the Scripture
speaks: and as days advance, so are tribulations increased also. Let no
one promise himself what the Gospel doth not promise....
__________________________________________________________________
[1087] Lat. XXXIX.
[1088] Al. "very small."
[1089] Ps. xxxiv. 15.
[1090] Ps. xxxiv. 16. E.V. "against." Lat. Vulgate, super.
[1091] Attendebat te; sed non attendebat tibi.
[1092] Or thus, "What horrible pit is that? It is the depth of
iniquity. From the lusts of the flesh, for this is meant by the `miry
clay.'"
[1093] Ps. cxxx. 1.
[1094] Eng. Vers. "When the wicked cometh, then cometh also contempt."
[1095] Prov. xviii. 3.
[1096] 1 Cor. x. 4.
[1097] Phil. iii. 12, 13.
[1098] 1 Tim. i. 13.
[1099] Matt. x. 22.
[1100] Ps. vi. 7.
[1101] Eph. v. 23.
[1102] Rom. viii. 34.
[1103] Matt. xxv. 35.
[1104] Acts ix. 4.
[1105] Hab. ii. 4.
[1106] Civitatis Natalem.
[1107] [A clear exposition of the Catholic (Nicene) doctrine concerning
the merits of the saints.--C.]
[1108] Ps. cxxi. 1.
[1109] A street perhaps so named.
[1110] Matt. vii. 13.
[1111] Phil. iii. 14.
[1112] mss. want putas; with it, the sense is, "What you see, you think
to be good things."
[1113] Col. iii. 5.
[1114] Luxuriam.
[1115] Ignaviam.
[1116] Mariambulum.
[1117] 1 Cor. iv. 9.
[1118] Matt. xiv. 28.
[1119] Matt. xiv. 30.
[1120] 2 Tim. ii. 19.
[1121] Munus.
[1122] Ps. xix. 4.
[1123] Al. "may be drawn to curiosity.
[1124] Et venit. Some mss. en venit veritas, "Lo, the Truth came,"
which makes easier sense.
[1125] Corpus perfecisti, Augustin; aures perfecisti, Vulgate; corpus
aptasti, Heb. x. 5, Vulgate.
[1126] Judicium. So Vulgate.
[1127] 1 Cor. xi. 29.
[1128] Perierunt.
[1129] Reprobaremus.
[1130] Intemporale.
[1131] 1 Cor. v. 7.
[1132] 1 Cor. v. 8.
[1133] Supra, ver. 3.
[1134] Capite.
[1135] Capite.
[1136] Ps. i. 2.
[1137] Rom. viii. 17.
[1138] Gen. xxii. 18.
[1139] Ps. xix. 4.
[1140] Matt. xxiii. 3.
[1141] Isa. xxix. 31.
[1142] Sona labiis, propinqua corde. [Audible confession, in the great
congregation, was the primitive discipline. But St. Chrysostom, who
teaches the like discipline, urges to private penitence before God as
all-sufficient. Hom. xxxi. In Hebr. tom. xii. p. 216, ed. Migne.--C.]
[1143] Rom. x. 10.
[1144] Corpus illud non vacabat caeteris membris; lingua vacabat et
cor.
[1145] Luke xxiii. 42, etc.
[1146] E.V. "Thy." So Vulgate also, tuam.
[1147] Hab. ii. 4; Rom. i. 17.
[1148] John xiv. 6.
[1149] Luke ii. 30.
[1150] Factus in puero puer. He alludes to Matt. xviii. 3, "Except ye
be converted, and become as little children."
[1151] Ps. xix. 12.
[1152] Ps. xxxiv. 18; Isa. lvii. 15.
[1153] Ps. cxxxviii. 6.
[1154] Luke xviii. 9-14.
[1155] Natural light.
[1156] Luke xxii. 33.
[1157] Matt. viii. 2.
[1158] Oxf. mss. repeat respice.
[1159] Ps. cxlii. 4.
[1160] E.V. "driven backwards." Text, convertantur.
[1161] Luke xxiii. 34.
[1162] Priorem.
[1163] Matt. xvi. 22.
[1164] Matt. xvi. 18.
[1165] E.V. "Let them be desolate for a reward of their shame, that say
unto me, Aha! Aha!"
[1166] 1 Cor. i. 31.
[1167] Rom. iv. 5.
[1168] Gal. ii. 20.
[1169] Luke xviii. 11.
[1170] Matt. vii. 7.
[1171] Ps. lv. 22.
[1172] Matt. v. 45.
[1173] Matt. xxiv. 22.
[1174] 2 Cor. viii. 9.
[1175] Compare Matt. v. 3, "Blessed are the poor in spirit," and Luke
vi. 20, "Blessed be ye poor."
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XLI. [1176]
To the people, on the Feast of the Martyrs.
1. The solemn day of the Martyrs hath dawned; therefore to the glory of
the Passion of Christ, the Captain of Martyrs, who spared not Himself,
ordering His soldiers to the fight; but first fought, first conquered,
that their fighting He might encourage by His example, and aid with His
majesty, and crown with His promise: let us hear somewhat from this
Psalm pertaining to His Passion. I commend unto you oftentimes, nor
grieve I to repeat, what for you is useful to retain, that our Lord
Jesus Christ speaketh often of Himself, that is, in His own Person,
which is our Head; often in the person of His Body, which are we and
His Church; but so that the words sound as from the mouth of one, that
we may understand the Head and the Body to consist together in the
unity of integrity, and not be separated the one from the other; as in
that marriage whereof it is said, "They two shall be one flesh." [1177]
If then we acknowledge two in one flesh, let us acknowledge two in one
voice. First, that which responding to the reader [1178] we have sung,
though it be from the middle of the Psalm, from that I will take the
beginning of this Sermon.
"Mine enemies speak evil of Me, When He shall die, then shall His Name
perish" (ver. 5). This is the Person of our Lord Jesus Christ: but see
if herein are not understood the members also. This was spoken also
when our Lord Himself walked in the flesh here on earth....When they
saw the people go after Him, they said, "When He shall die, then shall
His Name perish;" that is, when we have slain Him, then shall His Name
be no more in the earth, nor shall He seduce any, being dead; but by
that very slaying of Him shall men understand, that He was but a man
whom they followed, that there was in Him no hope of salvation, and
shall desert His Name, and it shall no more be. He died, and His Name
perished not, but His Name was sown as seed: He died, but He was a
grain, which dying, the corn immediately sprang up. [1179] When
glorified then was our Lord Jesus Christ, began they much more, and
much more numerously to trust in Him; then began His members to hear
what the Head had heard. Now then our Lord Jesus Christ being in heaven
set down, and Himself in us labouring on earth, still spake His
enemies, "When He shall die, then shall His Name perish." For hence
stirred up the devil persecutions in the Church to destroy the Name of
Christ. Unless haply ye think, brethren, that those Pagans, when they
raged against Christians, said not this among themselves, "to blot out
the Name of Christ from the earth." That Christ might die again, not in
the Head, but in His Body, were slain also the Martyrs. To the
multiplying of the Church availed the Holy Blood poured forth, to help
Its seminating came also the death of the Martyrs. "Precious in the
sight of the Lord is the death of His Saints." [1180] More and more
were the Christians multiplied, nor was it fulfilled which spake the
enemies, "When He shall die, then shall His Name perish." Even now also
is it spoken. Down sit the Pagans, and compute them the years, they
hear their fanatics [1181] saying, A time shall come when Christians
shall be none, and those idols must be worshipped as before they were
worshipped: still say they, "When He shall die, then shall His Name
perish." Twice conquered, now the third time be wise! Christ died, His
Name has not perished: the Martyrs died, multiplied more is the Church,
groweth through all nations the Name of Christ. He who foretold of His
own Death, and of His Resurrection, He who foretold of His Martyrs'
death, and of their crown, He Himself foretold of His Church things yet
to come, if truth He spake twice, has He the third time lied? Vain then
is what ye believe against Him; better is it that ye believe in Him,
that ye may "understand upon the needy and poor One;" [1182] that
"though He was rich, yet for your sakes He became poor, that ye through
His poverty might be rich." [1183] ...
2. "Blessed is he that understandeth upon the needy and poor One: in
the evil day shall the Lord deliver him" (ver. 1). For the evil day
will come: will thou, nill thou, come it will: the Day of Judgment will
come upon thee, an evil day if thou "understand not the needy and
poor." For what now thou wilt not believe, shall be made manifest in
the end. But neither shalt thou escape, when it shall be made manifest,
because thou believest not, when it is kept secret. Invited art thou,
what thou seest not to believe, lest when thou see, thou be put to the
blush. "Understand then upon the needy and poor One," that is, Christ:
understand in Him the hidden riches, whom poor thou seest. "In Him are
hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge." [1184] For thereby in
the evil day shall He deliver thee, in that He is God: but in that He
is man, and that which in Him is human hath raised to life, and changed
for the better, He hath lifted (thee [1185] ) to heaven. But He who is
God, who would have one person in man and with man, could neither
decrease nor increase, neither die nor rise again. He died out of man's
infirmity, but God dieth not....But as we rightly say, Such a man died,
though his soul dieth not; so we rightly say, Christ died, though His
Divinity dieth not. Wherefore died? Because needy and poor. Let not His
death offend thee, and avert thee from beholding His Divinity. "Blessed
is he that understandeth upon the needy and poor One." Consider also
the poor, the needy, the hungry and thirsty, the naked, the sick, the
prisoners; understand also upon such poor, for if upon such thou
understand, thou understandest upon Him who said, "I was an hungred, I
was thirsty, I was a stranger, naked, sick, in prison;" [1186] so in
the evil day shall the Lord deliver thee....
3. "And deliver him not into the hand of his enemy" (ver. 2). The enemy
is the devil. Let none think of a man his enemy, when he hears these
words. Haply one thought of his neighbour, of him who had a suit with
him in court, of him who would take from him his own possession, of him
who would force him to sell to him his house. Think not this; but that
enemy think of, of whom said the Lord, "an enemy hath done this."
[1187] For He it is who suggests that for things earthly he be
worshipped, for overthrow the Christian Name this enemy cannot. For he
hath seen himself conquered by the fame and praises of Christ, he hath
seen, whereas he slew Christ's Martyrs, that they are crowned, he
triumphed over. He hath begun to be unable to persuade men that Christ
is nought; and because by reviling Christ, he now with difficulty
deceives, by lauding Christ, he endeavours to deceive. Before this what
said he? Whom worship ye? A Jew, dead, crucified, a man of no moment,
who could not even from himself drive away death. When after His Name
he saw running the whole human race, saw that in the Name of the
Crucified temples are thrown down, idols are broken, sacrifices
abolished; and that all these things predicted in the Prophets are
considered by men, by men with wonder astonished, and closing now their
hearts against the reviling of Christ; he clothes himself with praise
of Christ, and begins to deter from the faith in another manner. Great
is the law of Christ, powerful is that law, divine, ineffable! but who
fulfilleth it? In the name of our Saviour, [1188] "tread upon the lion
and the dragon." [1189] By reviling openly roared the lion; by lauding
craftily lurks the dragon. Let them come to the faith, who doubted; and
not say, Who fulfilleth it? If on their own strength they presume, they
will not fulfil it. Presuming on the grace of God let them believe,
presuming (on it) let them come; to be aided come, not to be judged. So
live all the faithful in the Name of Christ, each one in his degree
fulfilling the commands of Christ, whether married, or celibates and
virgins, they live as much as God granteth them to live; neither
presume they in their own strength, but know that in Him they ought to
glory....
4. "The Lord help him" (ver. 3). But when? Haply in heaven, haply in
the life eternal, that so it remain to worship the devil for earthly
needs, for the necessities of this life. Far be it! Thou hast "promise
of the life that now is, and of that which is to come." [1190] He came
unto thee on earth, by Whom were made heaven and earth. Consider then
what He saith, "The Lord help him, on his bed of pain." The bed of pain
is the infirmity of the flesh; lest thou shouldest say, I cannot hold,
and carry, and tie up my flesh; thou art aided that thou mayest. The
Lord help thee on thy bed of pain. Thy bed did carry thee, thou
carriedst not thy bed, but wast a paralytic inwardly; He cometh who
saith to thee, "Take up thy bed, and go thy way into thy house." [1191]
"The Lord help him on his bed of pain." Then to the Lord Himself He
turneth, as though it were asked, [1192] Why then, since the Lord
helpeth us, suffer we such great ills in this life, such great
scandals, such great labours, such disquiet from the flesh and the
world? He turneth to God, and as though explaining to us the counsel of
His healing, He saith, "Thou hast turned all his bed in his infirmity."
By the bed is understood anything earthly. Every soul that is infirm in
this life seeketh for itself somewhat whereon to rest, because
intensity of labour, and of the soul extended toward God, it can hardly
endure perpetually, somewhat it seeketh on earth whereon to rest, and
in a manner with a kind of pausing to recline, as are those things
which innocent ones love....The innocent man resteth in his house, his
family, his wife, his children; in his poverty, his little farm, his
orchard planted with his own hand, in some building fabricated with his
own study; in these rest the innocent. But yet God willing us not to
have love but of life eternal, even with these, though innocent
delights, mixeth bitterness, that even in these we may suffer
tribulation, and so He turneth all our bed in our infirmity. "Thou hast
turned all his bed in his infirmity." Let him not then complain, when
in these things which he hath innocently, he suffereth some
tribulations. He is taught to love the better, by the bitterness of the
worse; lest going a traveller to his country, he choose the inn instead
of his own home.
5. But why this? Because He "scourgeth every son whom He receiveth."
[1193] Why this? Because to men sinning was it said, "In the sweat of
thy face shalt thou eat bread." [1194] Therefore because all these
chastisements, in which all our bed is turned in our infirmity, man
ought to acknowledge that he suffers for sin; let him turn himself, and
say what follows: "I said, Lord, be merciful unto me; heal my soul, for
I have sinned against Thee" (ver. 4). O Lord, by tribulations do Thou
exercise me; to be scourged Thou judgest every son whom Thou wilt
receive, who sparedst not even the Only-Begotten. He indeed without sin
was scourged; but I say, "I have sinned against Thee."...
6. "Mine enemies speak evil of Me, When He shall die, then shall His
Name perish" (ver. 5). Of this we have already spoken, [1195] and from
this began.
7. "And entered in [1196] to see" (ver. 6). What Christ suffered, that
suffereth also the Church; what the Head suffered, that suffer also the
Members. "For the disciple is not above his Master, nor the servant
above his Lord." [1197] ...
If to Christ's Members thou belongest, come within, cling to the Head.
Endure the tares if thou art wheat, endure the chaff if thou art grain.
[1198] Endure the bad fish within the net if thou art a good fish.
Wherefore before the time of winnowing dost thou fly away? Wherefore
before the time of harvest, dost thou root up the corn also with
thyself? Wherefore before thou art come to the shore, hast thou broken
the nets? "They go abroad, and tell it."
8. "All mine enemies whisper against Me unto the same thing" (ver. 7).
Against Me all unto the same thing. How much better with me unto the
same thing, than against me [1199] "unto the same thing." What is,
"Against me unto the same thing"? With one counsel, with one
conspiring. Christ then speaketh unto thee, Ye consent against Me,
consent ye to Me: why against Me? wherefore not with Me? That same
thing if ye had always had, ye had not divided you into schisms. For,
saith the Apostle, "I beseech you, brethren, that ye all speak the same
thing, and that there be no division among you." [1200] "All mine
enemies whisper against Me unto the same thing:" against Me do they
"devise evil to Me." To themselves rather, for "they have gathered
iniquity to themselves;" but therefore to Me, because by their
intention they are to be weighed: for not because to do nothing was in
their power, to do nothing was in their will. For the devil lusted to
extinguish Christ, and Judas would slay Christ; yet Christ slain and
rising again, we are made alive, but to the devil and to Judas is
rendered the reward of their evil will, not of our salvation....The
intention wherewith they spake, not what they spake, did He consider,
who related that they spake evil of Him, "Against Me they devised evil
to Me." And what evil to Christ, to the Martyrs what evil? All hath God
turned to good.
9. "An ungodly word do they set forth against Me" (ver. 8). What sort
of ungodly word? Listen to the Head Itself. "Come, let us kill Him, and
the inheritance shall be ours." [1201] Fools! How shall the inheritance
be yours? Because ye killed Him? Lo! ye even killed Him; yet shall not
the inheritance be yours. "Shall not He that sleepeth add this also,
that He rise again"? When ye exulted that ye had slain Him, He slept;
for He saith in another Psalm, "I slept." They raged and would slay Me;
"I slept." If I had not willed, I had not even slept. "I slept,"
because "I have power to lay down My life, and I have power to take it
again." [1202] "I laid Me down and slept, and rose up again." [1203]
Rage then the Jews; be "the earth given into the hands of the wicked,"
[1204] be the flesh left to the hands of persecutors, let them on wood
suspend it, with nails transfix it, with a spear pierce it. "Shall He
that sleepeth, not add this, that He rise up again?" Wherefore slept
He? Because "Adam is the figure of Him that was to come." [1205] And
Adam slept, when out of his side was made Eve. [1206] Adam in the
figure of Christ, Eve in the figure of the Church; whence she was
called "the mother of all living." [1207] When was Eve created? While
Adam slept. When out of Christ's side flowed the Sacraments of the
Church? While He slept upon the Cross....
10. "The man of My peace, in whom I trusted, which did eat of My bread,
hath enlarged his heel against Me" (ver. 9): hath raised up his foot
against Me: would trample upon Me. Who is this man of His peace? Judas.
And in him did Christ trust, that He said, "in whom I trusted"? Did He
not know him from the beginning? Did He not before he was born know
that he would be? Had He not said to all His disciples, "I have chosen
you twelve, and one of you is a devil"? [1208] How then trusted He in
him, but that He is in His Members, and that because many faithful
trusted in Judas, the Lord transferred this to Himself?..."The man of
My peace, in whom I trusted, which did eat of My bread." How showed He
him in His Passion? By the words of His prophecy: by the sop He marked
Him out, that it might appear said of him, "Which did eat of My bread."
[1209] Again, when he came to betray Him, He granted him a kiss, [1210]
that it might appear said of him, "The man of My peace."
11. "But Thou, O Lord, be merciful unto Me" (ver. 10). This is the
person of a servant, this is the person of the needy and poor: for,
[1211] "Blessed is he that understandeth upon the needy and poor One."
See, as it was spoken, "Be merciful unto Me, and raise Me up, and I
will requite them," so is it done. For the Jews slew Christ, lest they
should lose their place. [1212] Christ slain, they lost their place.
Rooted out of the kingdom were they, dispersed were they. He, raised
up, requited them tribulation, He requited them unto admonition, not
yet unto condemnation. For the city wherein the people raged, as a
ramping and a roaring lion, crying out, "Crucify Him, Crucify Him,"
[1213] the Jews rooted out therefrom, hath now Christians, by not one
Jew is inhabited. [1214] There is planted the Church of Christ, whence
were rooted out the thorns of the synagogue. For truly this fire blazed
"as the fire of thorns." [1215] But the Lord was as a green tree. This
said Himself, when certain women mourned Christ as dying...."For if
they do these things in a green tree, what shall be done in a dry?"
When can a green tree be consumed by the fire of thorns? For they
blazed as fire among thorns. Fire consumeth thorns, but whatsoever
green tree it is applied to, is not easily kindled....Yet lest ye think
that God the Father of Christ could raise up Christ, that is, the Flesh
of His Son, and that Christ Himself, though He be the Word equal with
the Father, could not raise up His own Flesh; hear out of the Gospel,
"Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up." [1216]
"But," said the Evangelist (lest even after this we should doubt), "He
spake of the temple of His Body. Raise Me up, and I will requite them."
12. "By this I know that Thou favourest Me, that Mine enemies shall not
triumph over Me" (ver. 11.) Because the Jews did triumph, when they saw
Christ crucified; they thought that they had fulfilled their will to do
Him hurt: the fruits of their cruelty they saw in effect, Christ
hanging on the Cross: they shook their heads, saying, "If Thou be the
Son of God, come down from the Cross." [1217] He came not down, who
could; His Potency He showed not, but patience taught. For if, on their
saying these things, He had come down from the Cross, He would have
seemed as it were to yield to them insulting, and not being able to
endure reproach, would have been believed conquered: more firm remained
He upon the Cross, than they insulting; fixed was He, they wavering.
For therefore shook they their heads, because to the true Head they
adhered not. He taught us plainly patience. For mightier is that which
He did, who would not do what the Jews challenged. For much mightier is
it to rise from the sepulchre, than to come down from the Cross. "That
Mine enemies shall not triumph over Me." They triumphed then at that
time. Christ rose again, Christ was glorified. Now see they in His Name
the human race converted: now let them insult, now shake the head:
rather now let them fix the head, or if they shake the head, in wonder
and admiration let them shake....
13. "But as for Me, Thou upholdest Me, because of Mine innocence" (ver.
12). Truly innocence; integrity without sin, requiting without debt,
scourging without desert. "Thou upholdest Me because of Mine innocence,
and hast made Me strong in Thy sight for ever." Thou hast made Me
strong for ever, Thou madest Me weak for a time: Thou hast made Me
strong in Thy sight, Thou madest Me weak in sight of men. What then?
Praise to Him, glory to Him. "Blessed be the Lord God of Israel." For
He is the God of Israel, our God, the God of Jacob, the God of the
younger son, the God of the younger people. Let none say, Of the Jews
said He this, I am not Israel; rather the Jews are not Israel. For the
elder son, he is the elder people reprobated; the younger, the people
beloved. "The elder shall serve the younger:" [1218] now is it
fulfilled: now, brethren, the Jews serve us, they are as our
satchellers, [1219] we studying, they carry our books. Hear wherein the
Jews serve us, and not without reason....With them are the Law and the
Prophets, in which Law, and in which Prophets, Christ is preached. When
we have to do with Pagans, and show this coming to pass in the Church
of Christ, which before was predicted of the Name of Christ, of the
Head and Body of Christ, lest they think that we have forged these
predictions, and from things which have happened, as though they were
future, had made them up, we bring forth the books of the Jews. The
Jews forsooth are our enemies, from an enemy's books convince we the
adversary. [1220] ...If any enemy clamour and say, "Ye for yourselves
have forged prophecies;" be the books of the Jews brought forth,
because the elder shall serve the younger. Therein let them read those
predictions, which now we see fulfilled; and let us all say, "Blessed
be the Lord God of Israel, from everlasting to everlasting, and all the
people shall say, So be it, So be it."
__________________________________________________________________
[1176] Lat. XL.
[1177] Gen. ii. 24; Eph. v. 31.
[1178] [He begins with the "Antiphon;" i.e., a verse selected from the
Psalm as expressing the chief thought of the Psalmist or the spirit of
the festival. This was interjected, at set places, in response to the
reader.--C.]
[1179] John xii. 24.
[1180] Ps. cxvi. 15.
[1181] In the City of God, b. xviii. c. 53, 54, he mentions that the
heathens had some Greek verses, in the form of an oracle, to the effect
that the magical arts of Peter had prevailed to procure divine worship
to Christ for 365 years, after which it was to terminate. This period,
he says, if computed from the first Pentecost after the Resurrection,
would expire in the consulship of Honorius and Eutychianus, A.D. 398.
The next year, which ought to have seen paganism re-established, was
marked by the demolition of idols by imperial authority.--Ben. [See
vol. ii. p. 394, this series.--C.]
[1182] Ps. xli. 1.
[1183] 2 Cor. viii. 9.
[1184] Col. ii. 3.
[1185] Or "It," reading as Ben. Oxf. mss. have "not in that He is Man;
and that which in Him was human, in thee He will raise again, and
change to better, and lift to heaven." The future, "shall lift," is
probably right. Ed. Ben. gives no various readings here; our mss. vary
somewhat.
[1186] Matt. xxv. 35, 36.
[1187] Matt. xiii. 28.
[1188] Oxf. mss. "It is fulfilled in the Name," etc.
[1189] Ps. xci. 13.
[1190] 1 Tim. iv. 8.
[1191] Mark ii. 11.
[1192] Al. "he complained."
[1193] Heb. xii. 6.
[1194] Gen. iii. 19.
[1195] [On the Antiphon, p. 128, supra.--C.]
[1196] Al. "if they entered in."
[1197] Matt. x. 24.
[1198] Matt. xiii. 30.
[1199] "Than," etc., added from Oxf. mss.
[1200] 1 Cor. i. 10.
[1201] Mark xii. 7.
[1202] John x. 18.
[1203] Ps. iii. 5.
[1204] Job ix. 24.
[1205] Rom. v. 14.
[1206] Gen. ii. 21.
[1207] Gen. iii. 20.
[1208] John vi. 70.
[1209] John xiii. 26.
[1210] Matt. xxvi. 49.
[1211] [He recurs to ver. 1.--C.]
[1212] John xi. 48.
[1213] Luke xxiii. 21.
[1214] [Circa A.D. 400. Very noteworthy. Till the middle of our century
only three hundred were permitted to dwell there; now nearly twenty
thousand are said to inhabit Jerusalem. Is it a sign? Luke xxi.
24.--C.]
[1215] Ps. cxviii. 12.
[1216] John ii. 19.
[1217] Matt. xxvii. 39, 40.
[1218] Gen. xxv. 13.
[1219] Capsarii.
[1220] [Notably with reference to the book of Daniel. See Pusey on
Daniel the Prophet, p. viii. preface, and 1-8, ed. Oxford, 1864.--C.]
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XLII. [1221]
1. We have undertaken the exposition of a Psalm corresponding to your
own "longings," on which we propose to speak to you. For the Psalm
itself begins with a certain pious "longing;" and he who sings so,
says, "Like as the hart desireth the water-brooks, so longeth my soul
after Thee, O God" (ver. 1). Who is it then that saith this? It is
ourselves, if we be but willing! And why ask, who it is other than
thyself, when it is in thy power to be the thing which thou art asking
about? It is not however one individual, but it is "One Body;" but
"Christ's Body is the Church." [1222] Such "longing" indeed is not
found in all who enter the Church: let all however who have "tasted"
the sweetness "of the Lord," [1223] and who own in Christ that for
which they have a relish, think that they are not the only ones; but
that there are such seeds scattered throughout "the field" of the Lord,
this whole earth: and that there is a certain Christian unity, whose
voice thus speaks, "Like as the hart desireth the water-brooks, so
longeth my soul after Thee, O God." And indeed it is not ill understood
as the cry of those, who being as yet Catechumens, [1224] are hastening
to the grace of the holy Font. On which account too this Psalm is
ordinarily [1225] chanted on those occasions, that they may long for
the Fountain of remission of sins, even "as the hart for the
water-brooks." Let this be allowed; and this meaning retain its place
in the Church; a place both truthful and sanctioned by usage. [1226]
Nevertheless, it appears to me, my brethren, that such "a longing" is
not fully satisfied even in the faithful in Baptism: but that haply, if
they know where they are sojourning, and whither they have to remove
from hence, their "longing" is kindled in even greater intensity.
2. The title then of it is, "On the end: a Psalm for understanding for
the sons of Korah." We have met with the sons of Korah in other titles
of Psalms: [1227] and remember to have discussed and stated already the
meaning of this name. Yet we must even now take notice of this title in
such a way, that what we have said already should be no prejudice
against our saying it again: for all were not present in every place
where we said it. Now Korah may have been, as indeed he was, a certain
definite person; and have had sons, who might be called "the sons of
Korah;" let us however search for the secret of which this is the
sacrament, that this name may bring to light the mystery with which it
is pregnant. For there is some great mystery in the matter that the
name "sons of Korah" is given to Christians. Why "sons of Korah"? They
are "sons of the bridegroom, sons of Christ." [1228] Why then does
"Korah" stand for Christ? Because "Korah" is equivalent to
"Calvaria."...Therefore, the "sons of the bridegroom," the sons of His
Passion, the sons redeemed by His Blood, the sons of His Cross, who
bear on their forehead that which His enemies erected on Calvary, are
called "the sons of Korah;" to them is this Psalm sung as a Psalm for
"understanding." Let then our understanding be roused: and if the Psalm
be sung to us, let us follow it with our "understanding."...Run to the
brooks; long after the water-brooks. "With God is the fountain of
Life;" a "fountain" that shall never be dried up: in His "Light" is a
Light that shall never be darkened. Long thou for this light: for a
certain fountain, a certain light, such as thy bodily eyes know not; a
light to see which the inward eye must be prepared; a fountain, to
drink of which the inward thirst is to be kindled. Run to the fountain;
long for the fountain; but do it not anyhow, be not satisfied with
running like any ordinary animal; run thou "like the hart." What is
meant by "like the hart"? Let there be no sloth in thy running; run
with all thy might: long for the fountain with all thy might. For we
find in "the hart" an emblem of swiftness.
3. But perhaps Scripture meant us to consider in the stag not this
point only, but another also. Hear what else there is in the hart. It
destroys serpents, [1229] and after the killing of serpents, it is
inflamed with thirst yet more violent; having destroyed serpents, it
runs to "the water-brooks," with thirst more keen than before. The
serpents are thy vices, destroy the serpents of iniquity; then wilt
thou long yet more for "the Fountain of Truth." Perhaps avarice
whispers in thine ear some dark counsel, hisses against the word of
God, hisses against the commandment of God. And since it is said to
thee, "Disregard this or that thing," if thou prefer working iniquity
to despising some temporal good, thou choosest to be bitten by a
serpent, rather than destroy it. Whilst, therefore, thou art yet
indulgent to thy vice, thy covetousness or thy appetite, when am I to
find in thee "a longing" such as this, that might make thee run to the
water-brooks?...
4. There is another point to be observed in the hart. It is reported of
stags...that when they either wander in the herds, or when they are
swimming to reach some other parts of the earth, that they support the
burdens of their heads on each other, in such a manner as that one
takes the lead, and others follow, resting their heads upon him, as
again others who follow do upon them, and others in succession to the
very end of the herd; but the one who took the lead in bearing the
burden of their heads, when tired, returns to the rear, and rests
himself after his fatigue by supporting his head just as did the
others; by thus supporting what is burdensome, each in turn, they both
accomplish their journey, and do not abandon each other. Are they not a
kind of "harts" that the Apostle addresses, saying, "Bear ye one
another's burdens, and so fulfil the Law of Christ"? [1230] ...
5. "My soul is athirst for the living God" (ver. 2). What I am saying,
that "as the hart panteth after the water-brooks, so longs my soul
after Thee, O God," means this, "My soul is athirst for the living
God." For what is it athirst? "When shall I come and appear before
God?" This it is for which I am athirst, to "come and to appear before
Him." I am athirst in my pilgrimage, in my running; I shall be filled
on my arrival. But "When shall I come?" And this, which is soon in the
sight of God, is late to our "longing." [1231] "When shall I come and
appear before God?" This too proceeds from that "longing," of which in
another place comes that cry, "One thing have I desired of the Lord;
that will I seek after; that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all
the days of my life." Wherefore so? "That I may behold" (he saith) "the
beauty of the Lord." [1232] "When shall I come and appear before the
Lord?"...
6. "My tears have been my meat day and night, while they daily say unto
me, Where is thy God?" (ver. 3). My tears (he saith) have been not
bitterness, but "my bread." Those very tears were sweet unto me: being
athirst for that fountain, inasmuch as I was not as yet able to drink
of it, I have eagerly made my tears my meat. For he said not, "My tears
became my drink," lest he should seem to have longed for them, as for
"the water-brooks:" but, still retaining that thirst wherewith I burn,
and by which I am hurried away towards the water-brooks, "My tears
became my meat," whilst I am not yet there. [1233] And assuredly he
does but the more thirst for the water-brooks from making his tears his
meat...."And they daily say unto me, Where is thy God?" For if a Pagan
should say this to me, I cannot retort it upon him, saying, "Where is
thine?" inasmuch as he points with his finger to some stone, and says,
"Lo, there is my God!" When I have laughed at the stone, and he who
pointed to it has been put to the blush, he raises his eyes from the
stone, looks up to heaven, and perhaps says, pointing his finger to the
Sun, "Behold there my God! Where, I pray, is your God?" He has found
something to point out to the eyes of the flesh; whereas I, on my part,
not that I have not a God to show to him, cannot show him what he has
no eyes to see. For he indeed could point out to my bodily eyes his
God, the Sun; but what eyes hath he to which I might point out the
Creator of the Sun?...
7. "I thought on these things, and poured out my soul above myself"
[1234] (ver. 4). When would my soul attain to that object of its
search, which is "above my soul," if my soul were not to "pour itself
out above itself"? For were it to rest in itself, it would not see
anything else beyond itself; and in seeing itself, would not, for all
that, see God. Let then my insulting enemies now say, "Where is thy
God?" aye, let them say it! I, so long as I do not "see," so long as my
happiness is postponed, make my tears my "bread day and night." Let
them still say, "Where is thy God?" I seek my God in every corporeal
nature, terrestrial or celestial, and find Him not: I seek His
Substance in my own soul, and I find it not, yet still I have thought
on these things, and wishing to "see the invisible things of my God,
being understood by the things made," [1235] I have poured forth my
soul above myself, and there remains no longer any being for me to
attain to, save my God. For it is "there" is the "house of my God." His
dwelling-place is above my soul; from thence He beholds me; from thence
He created me; from thence He directs me and provides for me; from
thence he appeals to [1236] me, and calls me, and directs me; leads me
in the way, and to the end of my way. [1237] ...
8. For when I was "pouring out my soul above myself," in order to reach
my God, why did I do so? "For I will go into the place of Thy
Tabernacle." For I should be in error were I to seek for my God without
"the place of His tabernacle." "For I will go into the place of Thy
wonderful tabernacle, even unto the house of God."
"I will go," he says, "into the place of the wonderful tabernacle, even
unto the house of God!" For there are already many things that I admire
in "the tabernacle." See how great wonders I admire in the tabernacle!
For God's tabernacle on earth is the faithful; I admire in them the
obedience of even their bodily members: that in them "Sin does not
reign so that they should obey its lusts; neither do they yield their
members instruments of unrighteousness unto sin; but unto the living
God in good works." [1238] I admire the sight of the bodily members
warring in the service of the soul that serves God....And wonderful
though the tabernacle be, yet when I come to "the house of God," I am
even struck dumb with astonishment. Of that "house" he speaks in
another Psalm, after he had put a certain abstruse and difficult
question to himself (viz., why is it that it generally goes well with
the wicked on earth, and ill with the good?), saying, "I thought to
know this; it is too painful for me, until I go into the sanctuary of
God, and understand of the last things." [1239] For it is there, in the
sanctuary of God, in the house of God, is the fountain of
"understanding." There he "understood of the last things;" and solved
the question concerning the prosperity of the unrighteous, and the
sufferings of the righteous. How does he solve it? Why, that the
wicked, when reprieved here, are reserved for punishments without end;
and the good when they suffer here, are being tried in order that they
may in the end obtain the inheritance. And it was in the sanctuary of
God that he understood this, and "understood of the last things."...For
he tells us of his progress, and of his guidance thither; as if we had
been saying, "You are admiring the tabernacle here on earth; how came
you to the sanctuary of the house of God?" he says, "In the voice of
joy and praise; the sound of keeping holiday." Here, when men keep
festival simply for their own indulgence, it is their custom to place
musical instruments, or to station a chorus of singers, [1240] before
their houses, or any kind of music that serves and allures to
wantonness. And when these are heard, what do we passers by say? "What
is going on here?" And we are told in answer, that it is some festival.
"It is a birthday that is being celebrated" (say they), "there is a
marriage here;" that those songs may not appear out of place, but the
luxurious indulgence [1241] may be excused by the festive occasion. In
the "house of God" there is a never-ending festival: for there it is
not an occasion celebrated once, and then to pass away. [1242] The
angelic choir makes an eternal "holiday:" the presence of God's face,
joy that never fails. This is a "holiday" of such a kind, as neither to
be opened by any dawn, nor terminated by any evening. From that
everlasting perpetual festivity, a certain sweet and melodious strain
strikes on the ears of the heart, provided only the world do not drown
the sounds. As he walks in this tabernacle, and contemplates God's
wonderful works for the redemption of the faithful, the sound of that
festivity charms his ears, and bears the "hart" away to "the
water-brooks."
9. But seeing, brethren, so long as "we are at home in this body, we
are absent from the Lord;" [1243] and "the corruptible body presseth
down the soul, and the earthly tabernacle weigheth down the mind that
museth on many things;" [1244] even though we have some way or other
dispersed the clouds, by walking as "longing" leads us on, and for a
brief while have come within reach of that sound, so that by an effort
we may catch something from that "house of God," yet through the
burden, so to speak, of our infirmity, we sink back to our usual level,
and relapse to our ordinary state. [1245] And just as there we found
cause for rejoicing, so here there will not be wanting an occasion for
sorrow. For that hart that made "tears" its "bread day and night,"
borne along by "longing to the water-brooks" (that is, to the spiritual
delights of God), "pouring forth his soul above himself," that he may
attain to what is "above" his own soul, walking towards "the place of
the wonderful tabernacle, even unto the house of God," and led on by
the sweetness of that inward spiritual [1246] sound to feel contempt
for all outward things, and be borne on to things spiritual, is but a
mortal man still; is still groaning here, still bearing about the
frailty of flesh, still in peril in the midst of the "offences" [1247]
of this world. He therefore glances back to himself, [1248] as if he
were coming from that world; and says to himself, now placed in the
midst of these sorrows, comparing these with the things, to see which
he had entered in there, and after seeing which he had come forth from
thence;
"Why art thou cast down, O my soul, and why dost thou disquiet me?"
(ver. 5). Lo, we have just now been gladdened by certain inward
delights: with the mind's eye we have been able to behold, though but
with a momentary glance, something not susceptible of change: why dost
thou still "disquiet me, why art thou" still "cast down"? For thou dost
not doubt of thy God. For now thou art not without somewhat to say to
thyself, in answer to those who say, "Where is thy God?" I have now had
the perception of something that is unchangeable; why dost thou
disquiet me still?
"Hope in God." Just as if his soul was silently replying to him, "Why
do I disquiet thee, but because I am not yet there, where that delight
is, to which I was, as it were, rapt for a moment? [1249] Am I already
`drinking' from this `fountain' with nothing to fear?"...Still "Hope in
God," is his answer to the soul that disquiets him, and would fain
account for her disquiet from the evils with which this world abounds.
In the mean while dwell in hope: for "hope that is seen is not hope;
but if we hope for that we see not, then do we with patience wait for
it." [1250]
10. "Hope in God." Why "hope"? "For I will confess unto Him." What wilt
thou "confess"? "My God is the saving health of my countenance." My
"health" (my salvation) cannot be from myself; this it is that I will
say, that I will "confess." It is my God that is "the saving health of
my countenance." [1251] For to account for his fears, in the midst of
those things, which he now knows, having come after a sort to the
"understanding" of them, [1252] he has been looking behind him again in
anxiety, lest the enemy be stealing upon him: he cannot yet say, "I am
made whole every whit." For having but "the first-fruits of the Spirit,
we groan within ourselves; waiting for the adoption, to wit, the
redemption of the body." [1253] When that "health" (that salvation) is
perfected in us, then shall we be living in the house of God for ever,
and praising for ever Him to whom it was said, "Blessed are they that
dwell in Thy house, they will be praising Thee world without end."
[1254] This is not so yet, because the salvation which is promised, is
not as yet in being; but it is "in hope" that I confess unto God, and
say, "My God is the saving health of my countenance." For it is "in
hope" that "we are saved; but hope that is seen, is not hope."...
11. "My soul is disquieted on account of myself" [1255] (ver. 6). Is it
disquieted on account of God? It is on my own account it is disquieted.
By the Unchangeable it was revived; it is by the changeable it is
disquieted. I know that the righteousness of God remaineth; whether my
own will remain stedfast, I know not. For I am alarmed by the Apostle's
saying, "Let him that thinketh he standeth, take heed lest he fall."
[1256] Therefore since "there is no soundness in me for myself," there
is no hope either for me of myself. "My soul is disquieted on account
of myself."..."Therefore I remember Thee, O Lord, from the land of
Jordan, and from the little hill of Hermon." From whence did I remember
thee? From the "little hill," and from the "land of Jordan." Perhaps
from Baptism, where the remission of sins is given. For no one runs to
the remission of sins, except he who is dissatisfied with himself; no
one runs to the remission of sins, but he who confesses himself a
sinner; no one confesses himself a sinner, except by humbling himself
before God. Therefore it is from "the land of Jordan I have remembered
thee, and from the hill;" observe, not "of the great hill," that thou
mayest make of the "little hill" a great one: for "whoso exalteth
himself shall be abased, and whoso humbleth himself shall be exalted."
If you would also ask the meanings of the names, Jordan means "their
descent." Descend then, that thou mayest be "lifted up:" be not lifted
up, lest thou be cast down. "And the little hill of Hermon." Hermon
means "anathematizing." Anathematize thyself, by being displeased with
thyself; for if thou art pleased with thyself, God will be displeased
with thee. Because then God gives us all good things, because He
Himself is good, not because we are worthy of it; because He is
merciful, not because we have in anything deserved it; it is from "the
land of Jordan, and from Hermon," that I remember thee. And because he
so remembers with humility, he shall earn his exaltation to fruition,
[1257] for he is not "exalted" in himself, who "glories in the Lord."
12. "Deep calleth unto deep with the voice of thy water-spouts" [1258]
(ver. 7). I may perhaps finish the Psalm, aided as I am by your
attention, whose fervour I perceive. As for your fatigue in hearing, I
am not greatly solicitous, since you see me also, who speak, toiling in
the heat of these exertions. [1259] Assuredly it is from your seeing me
labouring, that you labour with me: for I am labouring not for myself,
but for you. "Deep calleth unto deep with the voice of thy
water-spouts." It was God whom he addressed, who "remembered him from
the land of Jordan and Hermon." It was in wonder and admiration he
spake this: "Abyss calleth unto abyss with the voice of Thy
water-spouts." What abyss is this that calls, and to what other abyss?
Justly, because the "understanding" [1260] spoken of is an "abyss." For
an "abyss" is a depth that cannot be reached or comprehended; and it is
principally applied to a great body of water. For there is a "depth," a
"profound," the bottom of which cannot be reached by sounding.
Furthermore, it is said in a certain passage, [1261] "Thy judgments are
a mighty abyss," Scripture meaning to suggest that the judgments of God
are incomprehensible. What then is the "abyss" that calls, and to what
other "abyss" does it call? If by "abyss" we understand a great depth,
is not man's heart, do you not suppose, "an abyss"? For what is there
more profound than that "abyss"? Men may speak, may be seen by the
operations of their members, may be heard speaking in conversation: but
whose thought is penetrated, whose heart seen into? What he is inwardly
engaged on, what he is inwardly capable of, [1262] what he is inwardly
doing or what purposing, what he is inwardly wishing to happen, or not
to happen, who shall comprehend? I think an "abyss" may not
unreasonably be understood of man, of whom it is said elsewhere, "Man
shall come to a deep heart, and God shall be exalted." [1263] If man
then is an "abyss," in what way doth "abyss" call on "abyss"? Does man
"call on" man as God is called upon? No, but "calls on" is equivalent
to "calls to him." For it was said of a certain person, he calls on
death; [1264] that is, lives in such a way as to be inviting death; for
there is no man at all who puts up a prayer, and calls expressly on
death: but men by evil-living invite death. "Deep [1265] calls on
deep," then, is, "man calls to man." Thus is it wisdom is learnt, and
thus faith, when "man calls to man." The holy preachers of God's word
call on the "deep:" are they not themselves "a deep" also?...
13. "Deep calleth to deep with the voice of Thy water-spouts." I, who
tremble all over, when my soul was disquieted on account of myself,
feared greatly on account of Thy "judgments."...Are those judgments
slight ones? They are great ones, severe, hard to bear; but would they
were all. "Deep calls to deep with the voice of Thy water-spouts," in
that Thou threatenest, Thou sayest, that there is another condemnation
in store even after those sufferings. "Deep calls on deep with the
voice of Thy water-spouts." "Whither then shall I go from Thy presence?
And whither shall I flee from Thy Spirit?" seeing that deep calls to
deep, and after those sufferings severer ones are to be dreaded.
14. "All Thy overhangings [1266] and Thy waves are come upon me." The
"waves" in what I already feel, the "overhangings" in that Thou
denouncest. All my sufferings are Thy waves; all Thy denouncements of
judgments are Thy "overhangings." In the "waves" that deep "calleth;"
in the "overhangings" is the other "deep" which it "calls to." In this
that I suffer are all Thy waves; in the severer punishment that Thou
threatenest, all Thy "overhangings" are come unto me. For He who
threatens does not let His judgments fall upon us, but keeps them
suspended over us. [1267] But inasmuch as Thou sittest at liberty, I
have thus spoken unto my soul. "Hope in God: for I will confess unto
Him. My God is the saving health of my countenance." The more numerous
my sufferings, the sweeter will be Thy mercy.
15. Therefore follows: "The Lord will commend His loving-kindness in
the day-time; and in the night-time will He declare it" [1268] (ver.
8). In tribulation no man has leisure to hear: attend, when it is well
with you; hear, when it is well with you; learn, when you are in
tranquillity, the discipline of wisdom, and store up the word of God as
you do food. For in tribulation every one must be profited by what he
heard in the time of security. For in prosperity God "commends to thee
His mercy," in case thou serve Him faithfully, for He frees thee from
tribulation; but it is "in the night" only that He "declares" His mercy
to thee, which He "commended" to thee by day. When tribulation shall
actually come, He will not leave thee destitute of His help; He will
show thee that which He commended to thee in the daytime is true. For
it is written in a certain passage, "The mercy of the Lord is
seasonable [1269] in the time of affliction, as clouds of rain in the
time of drought." "The Lord hath commended His loving-kindness in the
day-time, and in the night will He declare it." He does not show that
He is thine Helper, unless tribulation come, from whence thou must be
rescued by Him who promised it to thee "in the day-time." Therefore we
are warned to be like "the ant." For just as worldly prosperity is
signified by "the day," adversity by the night, so again in another way
worldly prosperity is expressed by "the summer," adversity by the
winter. And what is it that the ant does? She lays up in summer what
will be useful to her in winter. Whilst therefore it is summer, whilst
it is well with you, whilst you are in tranquillity, hear the word of
the Lord. For how can it be that in the midst of these tempests of the
world, you should pass through the whole of that sea, without
suffering? How could it happen? To what mortal's lot has it fallen? If
even it has been the lot of any, that very calm is more to be dreaded.
"The Lord hath commended His loving-kindness in the day-time, and in
the night-time will He declare it."..."There is with me prayer unto the
God of my life." This I make my business here; I who am the "hart
thirsting and longing for the water-brooks," calling to mind the
sweetness of that strain, by which I was led on through the tabernacle
even to the house of God; whilst this "corruptible body presseth down
the soul," [1270] there is yet with me "prayer unto the God of my
life." For in order to making supplication unto God, I have not to buy
aught from places beyond the sea; or in order that He may hear me, have
I to sail to bring from a distance frankincense and perfumes, or have I
to bring "calf or ram from the flock." There is "with me prayer to the
God of my life." I have within a victim to sacrifice; I have within an
incense to place on the altar; I have within a sacrifice wherewith to
propitiate my God. "The sacrifice of God is a troubled spirit." What
sacrifice of a "troubled spirit" I have within, hear.
16. "I will say unto God, Thou art my lifter up. Why hast Thou
forgotten me?" (ver. 9). For I am suffering here, even as if Thou hadst
forgotten me. But Thou art trying me, and I know that Thou dost but put
off, not take utterly from me, what Thou hast promised me. But yet,
"Why hast Thou forgotten me?" So cried our Head also, as if speaking in
our name. "My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken me?" [1271] I will
say unto God, "Thou art my lifter up; why hast Thou forgotten me?"
17. "Why hast Thou rejected me?" [1272] "Rejected" me, that is to say,
from that height of the apprehension of the unchangeable Truth. "Why
hast Thou rejected me?" Why, when already longing for those things,
have I been cast down to these, by the weight [1273] and burden of my
iniquity? This same voice in another passage said, "I said in my
trance" [1274] (i.e., in my rapture, when he had seen some great thing
or other), "I said in my trance, I am cast out of the sight of Thine
eyes." For he compared these things in which he found himself, to those
toward which he had been raised; and saw himself cast out far "from the
sight of God's eyes," as he speaks even here, "Why hast Thou rejected
me? Why go I mourning, while mine enemy troubleth me, while he breaketh
my bones?" Even he, my tempter, the devil; while offences are
everywhere on the increase, because of the abundance of which "the love
of many is waxing cold." [1275] When we see the strong members of the
Church generally giving way to the causes of offence, does not Christ's
body say, "The enemy breaketh my bones"? For it is the strong members
that are "the bones;" and sometimes even those that are strong sink
under their temptations. For whosoever of the body of Christ considers
this, does he not exclaim, with the voice of Christ's Body, "Why hast
Thou rejected me? Why go I mourning, while mine enemy troubleth me,
while he breaketh my bones?"
You may see not my flesh merely, but even my "bones." To see those who
were thought to have some stability, giving way under temptations, so
that the rest of the weak brethren despair when they see those who are
strong succumbing; how great, my brethren, are the dangers!
18. "They who trouble me cast me in the teeth." Again that voice!
"While they say daily unto me, Where is thy God?" (ver. 10). And it is
principally in the temptations of the Church they say this, "Where is
thy God?" How much was this cast in the teeth of the Martyrs! Those men
so patient and courageous for the name of Christ, how often was it said
to them, "Where is your God?" "Let Him deliver you, if He can." For men
saw their torments outwardly; they did not inwardly behold their
crowns! "They who trouble me cast me in the teeth, while they say daily
unto me, Where is thy God?" And on this account, seeing "my soul is
disquieted on account of myself," what else should I say unto it than
those words:
"Why art thou cast down, O my soul; and why dost thou disquiet me?"
(ver. 11). And, as it seems to answer, "Wouldest thou not have me
disquiet thee, placed as I am here in so great evils? Wouldest thou
have me not disquiet thee, panting as I am after what is good,
thirsting and labouring as I am for it?" What should I say, but,
"Hope thou in God; for I will yet confess unto Him" (ver. 11). He
states the very words of that confession; he repeats the grounds on
which he fortifies his hope. "He is the health of my countenance, and
my God."
__________________________________________________________________
[1221] Lat. XLI.
[1222] Col. i. 24.
[1223] Ps. xxxiv. 8.
[1224] [See Bingham, b. x. cap. 2. Catechised in Lent, to be baptized
at Easter. See the treatise on Faith and Works.--C.]
[1225] Solenniter.
[1226] Et veracem et solennem.
[1227] Later Psalms had been treated before.
[1228] Matt. ix. 15. Filii sponsi, Lat.
[1229] [See p. 67, supra.--C.]
[1230] Gal. vi. 2.
[1231] Citius Deo, tardum desiderio.
[1232] Ps. xxvii. 4.
[1233] Differor.
[1234] Super me; Vulgate, in me. Compare Aristotle, Eth. ix. 9: nooumen
hoti nooumen; to d' aisthEURnesthai e noein, hoti aisthanometha e
nooumen, [esti to aisthEURnesthai e noein] hoti esmen; to gar einai en
to aisthEURnesthai e noein, k. t. l. "By the exercise of the powers of
sensation and of thought, we become conscious of the exercise of those
powers of sensation and of thought, and thereby conscious of our own
being, for being is implied in the exercise of the powers of thought
and sensation."
[1235] Rom. i. 20.
[1236] Excitat.
[1237] Ducit...perducit.
[1238] Rom. vi. 12, 13.
[1239] Ps. lxxiii. 16, 17.
[1240] Symphoniacos.
[1241] Luxuria. Most mss. laetitia, "the mirth."
[1242] Non enim aliquid ibi celebratur et transit.
[1243] 2 Cor. v. 6.
[1244] Wisd. ix. 15.
[1245] Compare Wordsworth's Excursion, "Despondency Corrected," p.
120:-- "`Tis a thing impossible to frame Conceptions equal to the
soul's desires, And the most difficult of tasks to keep Heights which
the soul is competent to gain. Man is of dust; ethereal hopes are his,
Which, when they should sustain themselves aloft, Want due consistence;
like a pillar of smoke That with majestic energy from earth Rises, but
having reach'd the thinner air Melts and dissolves, and is no longer
seen." Compare also p. 122:-- "Alas! the endowment of immortal power Is
match'd unequally with custom, time, And domineering faculties of sense
In all...in most with superadded foes," etc.
[1246] Intelligibilis, answering to the Greek noetou.
[1247] Matt. xviii. 7.
[1248] ...Inter scandala Respexit ergo ad se.
[1249] Per transitum.
[1250] Rom. viii. 24, 25.
[1251] E.V. "I shall yet give Him thanks for the help of His
countenance."
[1252] Utcunque intellecta cognoscit.
[1253] Rom. viii. 23.
[1254] Ps. lxxxiv. 4.
[1255] E.V. "within."
[1256] 1 Cor. x. 12.
[1257] Exaltatus perfrui merebitur.
[1258] Cataractarum.
[1259] Ita in his laboribus sudare.
[1260] In the title of the Psalm.
[1261] Ps. xxxvi. 6, 7.
[1262] "Quid intus gerat, quid possit."
[1263] Ps. lxiv. 6, 7.
[1264] Wisd. i. 16.
[1265] Abyssum invocat.
[1266] Suspensiones; Vulgate, excelsa; E.V. "billows."
[1267] Non premit sed suspendit. Perhaps his idea is rather, "suspends
us over the abyss."
[1268] E.V. "In the night-time His song shall be with me."
[1269] Ecclus. xxxv. 26. ;;Oraion zleos; Vulgate, Speciosa
misericordia.
[1270] Wisd. ix. 15.
[1271] Matt. xxvii. 46; Ps. xxii. 1.
[1272] Ut quid me repulisti. Neither in the Vulgate nor in our version.
[1273] Gravedine.
[1274] In ecstasi mea. Ps. xxxi. 22. E.V. "in my haste."
[1275] Matt. xxiv. 12.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XLIII. [1276]
1. This Psalm is a short one; it satisfies the mental cravings of the
hearers, without imposing too severe a trial on the hunger of those
fasting. [1277] Let our soul feed upon it; our soul, which he who sings
in this Psalm, speaks of as "cast down;" cast down, I suppose, either
in consequence of some fist, or rather in consequence of some hunger he
was in. For fasting is a voluntary act; being an-hungered is an
involuntary thing. That which is an-hungered, is the Church, is the
Body of Christ: and that "Man" who is extended throughout the whole
world, of which the Head is above, the limbs below: it is His voice
which ought by this time to be perfectly known, and perfectly familiar,
to us, in all the Psalms; now chanting joyously, now sorrowing; now
rejoicing in hope, now sighing at its actual state, even as if it were
our own. We need not then dwell long on pointing out to you, who is the
speaker here: let each one of us be a member of Christ's Body; and he
will be speaker here....
2. "Judge me, O Lord, and separate my cause from the ungodly nation"
(ver. 1). I do not dread Thy judgment, because I know Thy mercy. "Judge
me, O God," he cries. Now, meanwhile, in this state of pilgrimage, Thou
dost not yet separate my place, because I am to live together with the
"tares" even to the time of the "harvest:" Thou dost not as yet
separate my rain from theirs; my light from theirs: "separate my
cause." Let a difference be made between him who believes in Thee, and
him who believes not in Thee. Our infirmity is the same; but our
consciences not the same: our sufferings the same; but our longings not
the same. "The desire of the ungodly shall perish," [1278] but as to
the desire of the righteous, we might well doubt, if He were not "sure"
who promised. The object of our desires is He Himself, who promiseth:
He will give us Himself, because He has already given Himself to us; He
will give Himself in His immortality to us then immortal, even because
He gave Himself in His mortality to us when mortal....
3. And since patience is needful in order to endure, until the harvest,
a certain distinction without separation, [1279] if we may so speak
(for they are together with us, and therefore not yet separated; the
tares however being still tares, and the corn still corn, and therefore
they are already distinct); since then a kind of strength [1280] is
needful, which must be implored of Him who bids us to be strong, and
without whose making us strong, we should not be what He bids us to be;
of Him who said, "He that endures unto the end shall be saved," [1281]
lest the soul's powers should be impaired in consequence of her
ascribing any strength to herself, he subjoins immediately,
"For Thou, O God, art my strength: why hast Thou cast me off, and why
go I mourning, while the enemy harasseth me?" (ver. 2). I go mourning:
the enemy is harassing me with daily temptations: inspiring either some
unlawful love, or some ungrounded cause of fear; and the soul that
fights against both of them, though not taken prisoner by them, yet
being in danger from them, is contracted with sorrow, and says unto
God, "Why?"
Let her then ask of Him, and hear "Why?" For she is in the Psalm
enquiring the cause of her dejection; saying, "Why hast Thou cast me
off? and why go I mourning?" Let her hear from Isaiah; let the lesson
which has just been read, suggest itself to her. "The spirit shall go
forth from me, and every breath have I made. For iniquity have I a
little afflicted him; I hid my face from him, and he departed from me
sorrowful in the ways of his heart." [1282] Why then didst thou ask,
"Why hast Thou cast me off, and why go I mourning?" Thou hast heard, it
was "for iniquity." "Iniquity" is the cause of thy mourning; let
"Righteousness" be the cause of thy rejoicing! Thou wouldest sin; and
yet thou wouldest fain not suffer; so that it was too little for thee
to be thyself unrighteous, without also wishing Him to be unrighteous,
in that thou wouldest fain not be punished by Him. Consider a speech of
a better kind in another Psalm. "It is good for me that Thou hast
humbled me, that I might learn Thy righteousnesses." [1283] By being
lifted up, I had learned my own iniquities; let me by being "humbled,"
learn "Thy righteousnesses." "Why go I mourning, while the enemy
harasses me?" Thou complainest of the enemy. It is true he does harass
thee; but it was thou didst "give place" [1284] to him. And even now
there is a course open to thee; choose the course of prudence; admit
thy King, shut the tyrant out.
4. But in order that she may do this, hear what she says, what she
supplicates, what she prays for. Pray thou for what thou hearest; pray
for it when thou hearest it; let these words be the voice of us all: "O
send out Thy Light and Thy Truth. They have led me, and brought me on
unto Thy holy hill, and into Thy Tabernacles" (ver. 3). For that very
"Light" and "Truth" are indeed two in name; the reality expressed is
but One. For what else is the "Light" of God, except the "Truth" of
God? Or what else is the "Truth" of God, except the "Light" of God? And
the one Person of Christ is both of these. "I am the Light of the
world: he that believeth on Me, shall not walk in darkness." "I am the
Way, the Truth, and the Life." [1285] He is Himself "the Light:" He is
Himself "the Truth." Let Him come then and rescue us, and "separate at
once our cause from the ungodly nation; let Him deliver us from the
deceitful and unjust man," let him separate the wheat from the tares,
for at the time of harvest He will Himself send His Angels, that they
may "gather out of His kingdom all things that offend," [1286] and cast
them into flaming fire, while they gather together the corn into the
garner. He will send out His "Light," and His "Truth;" for that they
have already "brought us and led us to His holy hill, and into His
Tabernacles." We possess the "earnest;" [1287] we hope for the prize.
"His holy Hill" is His holy Church. It is that mountain which,
according to Daniel's vision, [1288] grew from a very small "stone,"
till it crushed the kingdoms of the earth; and grew to such a size,
that it "filled the face of the earth." This is the "hill," from which
he tells us that his prayer was heard, who says, "I cried unto the Lord
with my voice, and He heard me out of His holy hill." [1289] Let no one
of those that are without that mountain, hope to be heard unto eternal
life. For many are heard in their prayers for many things. Let them not
congratulate themselves [1290] on being heard; the devils were heard in
their prayer, that they might be sent into the swine. Let us desire to
be heard unto eternal life, by reason of our longing, through which we
say, "Send out Thy Light and Thy Truth." [1291] That is a "Light" which
requires the eye of the heart. For "Blessed" (He saith) "are the pure
in heart, for they shall see God." [1292] We are now on His Hill, that
is, in His Church, and in His Tabernacle. The "tabernacle" is for
persons sojourning; the house, for those dwelling in one community.
[1293] The tabernacle is also for those who are both from home, and
also in a state of warfare. When thou hearest of a tabernacle, form a
notion of a war; guard against an enemy. But what shall the house be?
"Blessed are they that dwell in Thine house: they will be alway
praising Thee." [1294]
5. Now then that we have been led on even to "the Tabernacle," and are
placed on "His holy Hill," what hope do we carry with us?
"Then will I go in unto the Altar of God" (ver. 4). For there is a
certain invisible Altar on high, which the unrighteous man approaches
not. To that Altar he alone draws nigh, who draws nigh to this one
without cause to fear. There he shall find his Life, who in this one
"separates his cause." "And I will go in unto the Altar of God." From
His holy Hill, and from His Tabernacle, from His Holy Church, I will go
in unto the Altar of God on High. What manner of Sacrifice is there? He
himself who goeth in is taken for a burnt-offering. "I will go in unto
the Altar of God." What is the meaning of what he says, "The Altar of
my God"?
"Unto God, who makes glad my youth." Youth signifies newness: just as
if he said, "Unto God, who makes glad my newness." It is He who makes
glad my newness, who hath filled my old estate [1295] with mourning.
For now "I go mourning" in oldness, then shall "I stand," exulting in
newness!
"Yea, upon the harp will I praise Thee, O God my God." What is the
meaning of "praising on the harp," and praising on the psaltery? For he
does not always do so with the harp, nor always with the psaltery.
These two instruments of the musicians have each a distinct meaning of
their own, worthy of our consideration and notice. They are both borne
in the hands, and played by the touch; and they stand for certain
bodily works of ours. Both are good, if one knows how to play the
psaltery, [1296] or to play the harp. [1297] But since the psaltery is
that instrument which has the shell [1298] (i.e. that drum, that hollow
piece of wood, by straining on which [1299] the chords resound) on the
upper part of it, whereas the harp has that same concave sounding-board
on the lower part, there is to be a distinction made between our works,
when they are "upon the harp," when "on the psaltery:" both however are
acceptable to God, and grateful to His ear. When we do anything
according to God's Commandments, obeying His commands and hearkening to
Him, that we may fulfil His injunctions, when we are active and not
passive, it is the psaltery that is playing. For so also do the Angels:
for they have nothing to suffer. But when we suffer anything of
tribulation, of trials, of offences on this earth (as we suffer only
from the inferior part of ourselves; i.e. from the fact that we are
mortal, that we owe somewhat of tribulation to our original cause,
[1300] and also from the fact of our suffering much from those who are
not "above"); this is "the harp." For there rises a sweet strain from
that part of us which is "below:" we "suffer," and we strike the
psaltery, [1301] or shall I rather say we sing and we strike the
harp....
6. And again, in order that he may draw the sound from that
sounding-board below, he addresses his soul: he says, "Why art thou
sorrowful, O my soul, and why dost thou disquiet me?" (ver. 5). I am in
tribulations, in weariness, [1302] in mourning, "Why dost thou disquiet
me, O my soul?" Who is the speaker, to whom is he speaking? That it is
the soul to which he is speaking, everybody knows: for it is obvious:
the appeal is addressed to it directly: "Why art thou sorrowful, O my
soul, and why dost thou disquiet me?" The question is as to the
speaker. It is not the flesh addressing the soul, surely, since the
flesh cannot speak without the soul. For it is more appropriate for the
soul to address the flesh, than for the flesh to address the soul....We
perceive then that we have a certain part, in which is "the image of
God;" viz. the mind and reason. [1303] It was that same mind that
prayed for "God's Light" and "God's Truth." It is the same mind by
which we apprehend [1304] right and wrong: it is by the same that we
discern truth from falsehood. It is this same that we call
"understanding;" which "understanding," indeed, is wanting to the
brutes. And this "understanding" whoever neglects in himself, and holds
it in less account than the other parts of his nature, and casts it
off, just as if he had it not, is addressed in the Psalm, "Be ye not as
the horse and the mule, which have no understanding." [1305] It is our
"understanding" then that is addressing our soul. The latter is
withered away from tribulations, worn out in anguish, [1306] made
"sorrowful" in temptations, fainting in toils. The mind, catching a
glimpse of Truth above, would fain rouse her spirits, and she says,
"Why art thou sorrowful, O my soul?"...
7. These expressions, brethren, are safe ones: but yet be watchful in
good works. Touch "the psaltery," by obeying the Commandments; touch
the harp, by patiently enduring your sufferings. You have heard from
Isaiah, "Break thy bread to the hungry;" [1307] think not that fasting
by itself is sufficient. Fasting chasteneth thine own self: it does not
refresh others. Thy distress will profit thee, if thou affordest
comfort [1308] to others. See, thou hast denied thyself; to whom wilt
thou give that of which thou hast deprived thyself? Where wilt thou
bestow what thou hast denied thyself? How many poor may be filled
[1309] by the breakfast [1310] we [1311] have this day given up? Fast
in such a way that thou mayest rejoice, that thou hast breakfasted,
while another has been eating; fast on account of thy prayers, that
thou mayest be heard in them. For He says in that passage, "Whilst thou
art yet speaking I will say, Here I am," [1312] provided thou wilt with
cheerful mind "break thy bread to the hungry." For generally this is
done by men reluctantly and with murmurs, to rid themselves of the
wearisome importunity of the beggar, not to refresh the bowels of him
that is needy. But it is "a cheerful giver" that "God loves." [1313] If
thou givest thy bread reluctantly, thou hast lost both the bread, and
the merit of the action. Do it then from the heart: that He "who seeth
in secret," [1314] may say, "whilst thou art yet speaking, Here I am."
How speedily are the prayers of those received, who work righteousness!
And this is man's righteousness in this life, fasting, alms, and
prayer. Wouldest thou have thy prayer fly upward to God? Make for it
those two wings of alms and fasting. Such may God's "Light" and God's
"Truth" find us, that He may find us without cause for fear, when He
comes to free us from death, who has already come to undergo death for
us. Amen.
__________________________________________________________________
[1276] Lat. XLII.
[1277] Ventribus. It is noted that this was an afternoon sermon on a
fast-day.
[1278] Ps. cxii. 14.
[1279] Quandam indiscretam discretionem.
[1280] Fortitudine.
[1281] Matt. xxiv. 31.
[1282] Isa. lvii. 16, 17.
[1283] Ps. cxix. 71.
[1284] Eph. iv. 27.
[1285] John viii. 12, xiv. 6.
[1286] Matt. xiii. 41.
[1287] Pignus.
[1288] Dan. ii. 35.
[1289] Ps. iii. 4.
[1290] Sibi plaudant.
[1291] Matt. viii. 31, 32.
[1292] Matt. v. 8.
[1293] Cohabitantium.
[1294] Ps. lxxxiv. 4.
[1295] Vetustatem.
[1296] Psallere.
[1297] Citharizare.
[1298] Testudinem.
[1299] Cui innitentes.
[1300] Prima nostra causa. He seems to mean our original from Adam.
[1301] Psallimus.
[1302] Al. "anguishes."
[1303] T. Aquin. Prolog ad. I. II. Per imaginem Dei significatur (sicut
Damascen. dicit), intellectuale, et arbitrio liberum; et per se
potestativum.
[1304] Capimus.
[1305] Ps. xxxii. 9.
[1306] Some mss. languoribus.
[1307] Isa. lviii. 7.
[1308] Latitudinem.
[1309] Saginare.
[1310] Prandium.
[1311] Al. "you."
[1312] Isa. lviii. 9 and lxv. 24.
[1313] 2 Cor. ix. 7.
[1314] Matt. vi. 6.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XLIV. [1315]
1. This Psalm is addressed "to the sons of Korah," as its title shows.
Now Korah is equivalent to the word baldness; [1316] and we find in the
Gospel that our Lord Jesus Christ was crucified in "the place of a
skull." [1317] It is clear then that this Psalm is sung to the "sons of
His `Passion.'" Now we have on this point a most certain and most
evident testimony from the Apostle Paul; because that at the time when
the Church was suffering under the persecutions of the Gentiles, he
quoted from hence a verse, to insert by way of consolation, and
encouragement to patience. For that which he inserted in his Epistle,
is said here: "For Thy sake are we killed all the day long; we are
counted as sheep for the slaughter." [1318] Let us then hear in this
Psalm the voice of the Martyrs; and see how good is the cause which the
voice of the Martyrs pleads, saying, For Thy sake, etc....
2. The title then is not simply "To the sons of Korah," but, "For
understanding, to the sons of Korah." This is the case also with that
Psalm, the first verse of which the Lord Himself uttered on the Cross:
"My God, My God, look upon Me; why hast Thou forsaken Me?" [1319] For
"transferring us in a figure" [1320] to what He was saying, and to His
own Body (for we are also "His Body," and He is our "Head"), He uttered
from the Cross not His own cry, but ours. For God never "forsook" Him:
nor did He Himself ever depart from the Father; but it was in behalf of
us that He spake this: "My God, My God, why hast thou forsaken Me?" For
there follows, "Far from My health are the words of My offences:" and
it shows in whose person He said this; for sin could not be found in
Him....
3. "O God, we have heard with our ears; our fathers have told us the
work that Thou didst in their days, and in the days of old" (ver. 1).
Wondering wherefore, in these days, He has seemingly forsaken those
whom it was His will to exercise in sufferings, they recall the past
events which they have heard of from their fathers; as if they said, It
is not of these things that we suffer, that our fathers told us! For in
that other Psalm also, He said this, "Our fathers trusted in Thee; they
trusted, and Thou didst deliver them. But I am a worm and no man; a
reproach of men, and the outcast of the people." [1321] They trusted,
and Thou didst deliver them; have I then hoped, and hast Thou forsaken
me? And have I believed upon Thee in vain? And is it in vain that my
name has been written in Thy Book, [1322] and Thy name has been
inscribed on me? What our fathers told us was this:
"Thy hand destroyed the nations; and Thou plantedst them: Thou didst
weaken the peoples, and cast them out" (ver. 2). That is to say: "Thou
didst drive out `the peoples' from their own land, that Thou mightest
bring `them' in, and plant them; and mightest by Thy mercy stablish
their kingdom." These are the things that we heard from our fathers.
But perhaps it was because they were brave, were men of battle, were
invincible, were well-disciplined, and warlike, that they could do
these things. Far from it. This is not what our fathers told us; this
is not what is contained in Scripture. But what does it say, but what
follows?
"For they gat not the land in possession by their own sword, neither
did their own arm save them; but Thy right hand, and Thine arm, and the
light of Thy countenance" (ver. 3). Thy "right hand" is Thy Power:
Thine "arm" is Thy Son Himself. [1323] And "the light of Thy
countenance." What means this, but that Thou wert present with them, in
miracles of such a sort that Thy presence was perceived. For when God's
presence with us appears by any miracle, do we see His face with our
own eyes? No. It is by the effect of the miracle He intimates to man
His presence. In fact, what do all persons say, who express wonder at
facts of this description? "I saw God present." "But Thy right hand,
and Thine arm, and the light of Thy countenance; because Thou pleasedst
in them:" [1324] i.e. didst so deal with them, that Thou wert
well-pleasing in them: that whoso considered how they were being dealt
with, might say, that "God is with them of a truth;" and it is God that
moves [1325] them.
4. "What? Was He then other than now He is?" Away with the supposition.
For what follows?
"Thou art Thyself [1326] my King and my God." (ver. 4). "Thou art
Thyself;" for Thou art not changed. I see that the times are changed;
but the Creator of times is unchanged. "Thou art Thyself my King and my
God." Thou art wont to guide me: to govern me, to save me. "Thou who
commandest salvation unto Jacob." What is, "Thou who commandest"? Even
though in Thine own proper Substance and Nature, in which Thou art
whatsoever Thou art, Thou wast hid from them; and though Thou didst not
converse with the fathers in that which Thou art in Thyself, so that
they could see Thee "face to face," yet by any created being whatsoever
"Thou commandest salvation unto Israel." For that sight of Thee "face
to face" is reserved for those set free in the Resurrection. And the
very "fathers" of the New Testament too, although they saw Thy
mysteries revealed, although they preached the secret things so
revealed to them, nevertheless said that they themselves saw but "in a
glass, darkly," but that "seeing face to face" [1327] is reserved to a
future time, when what the Apostle himself speaks of shall have come.
"When Christ our life shall appear, then shall ye also appear with Him
in glory." [1328] It is against that time then that vision "face to
face" is reserved for you, of which John also speaks: "Beloved, we are
now the sons of God: and it doth not yet appear what we shall be. We
know that, when He shall appear, we shall be like Him; for we shall see
Him as He is." [1329] Although then at that time our fathers saw Thee
not as Thou art, "face to face," although that vision is reserved
against the resurrection, yet, even though they were Angels who
presented themselves, it is Thou, "Who commandest salvation unto
Jacob." Thou art not only present by Thine own Self; but by whatsoever
created being Thou didst appear, it is Thou that dost "command" by
them, that which Thou doest by Thine own Self in order to the salvation
of Thy servants: but that which they do whom Thou "commandest" it, is
done to procure the salvation of Thy servants. Since then Thou art
Thyself "my King and my God, and Thou commandest salvation unto Jacob,"
wherefore are we suffering these things?
5. But perhaps it is only what is past that has been described to us:
but nothing of the kind is to be hoped for by us for the future. Nay
indeed, it is still to be hoped for. "Through Thee will we winnow away
[1330] our enemies" (ver. 5). Our fathers then have declared to us a
work that Thou didst "in their days, and in the days of old," that Thy
hand destroyed the Gentiles: that Thou "didst cast out the peoples; and
didst plant them." Such was the past; but what is to be hereafter?
"Through Thee we shall winnow away our enemies." A time will come, when
all the enemies of Christians will be winnowed away like chaff, be
blown like dust, and be cast off from the earth....Thus much of the
future. "I will not trust in my bow," even as our fathers did not in
"their sword. Neither shall my sword help me" (ver. 6).
6. "For Thou hast saved us from our enemies" (ver. 7). This too is
spoken of the future under the figure of the past. But this is the
reason that it is spoken of as if it were past, that it is as certain
as if it were past. Give heed, wherefore many things are expressed by
the Prophets as if they were past; whereas it is things future, not
past facts that are the subject of prophecy. For the future Passion of
our Lord Himself was foretold: [1331] and yet it says, "They pierced My
hands and My feet. They told all My bones;" not, "They shall pierce,"
and "shall tell." "They looked and stared upon Me;" not "They shall
look and stare upon Me." "They parted My garments among them." It does
not say, "They shall part" them. All these things are expressed as if
they were past, although they were yet to come: because to God things
to come also are as certain as if they were past....It is for this
reason, in consequence of their certainty, that those things which are
yet future, are spoken of as if past. This it is then that we hope. For
it is, "Thou hast saved us from our enemies, and hast put them to shame
that hated us."
7. "In God will we boast [1332] all the day long" (ver. 8). Observe how
he intermingles words expressive of a future time, that you may
perceive that what was spoken of before as in past time was foretold of
future times. "In God will we boast all day long; and in Thy name will
we confess for ever." [1333] What is, "We shall boast"? What, "We shall
confess"? That Thou hast "saved us from our enemies;" that Thou art to
give us an everlasting kingdom: that in us are to be fulfilled the
words, "Blessed are they that dwell in Thine house: they will be always
praising Thee." [1334]
8. Since then we have the certainty that these things are to be
hereafter, and since we have heard from our fathers that those we spoke
of were in time past, what is our state at present? "But now Thou hast
cast us off, and put us to shame" (ver. 9). Thou hast "put us to shame"
not before our own consciences, but in the sight of men. For there was
a time when Christians were persecuted; when in every place they were
outcasts, when in every place it used to be said, "He is a Christian!"
as if it conveyed an insult and reproach. Where then is He, "our God,
our King," who "commands salvation unto Jacob"? Where is He who did all
those works, which "our fathers have told us"? Where is He who is
hereafter to do all those things which He revealed unto us by His
Spirit? Is He changed? No. These things are done in order to
"understanding, for the sons of Korah." For we ought to "understand"
something of the reason, why He has willed we should suffer all these
things in the mean time. What "all things"? "But now Thou hast cast us
off and put us to shame: and goest not forth, O God, in our powers."
[1335] We go forth to meet our enemies, and Thou goest not forth with
us. We see them: they are very strong, and we are without strength.
Where is that might of Thine? Where Thy "right hand," and Thy power?
[1336] Where the sea dried up, and the Egyptian pursuers overwhelmed
with the waves? Where Amalek's resistance subdued by the sign of the
Cross? [1337] "And Thou, O God, goest not forth in our powers."
9. "Thou hast turned us away backward in presence of our enemies" (ver.
10), so that they are, as it were, before; we, behind; they are counted
as conquerors, we as conquered. "And they which hate us spoiled for
themselves." What did they "spoil" but ourselves?
10. "Thou has given us like sheep appointed for meat, and hast
scattered us among the nations" (ver. 11). We have been "devoured" by
"the nations." Those persons are meant, who, through their sufferings,
have by process of assimilation, becomes part of the "body" of the
Gentile world. For the Church mourns over them, as over members of her
body, that have been devoured. [1338]
11. "Thou hast sold Thy people for no price" (ver. 12). For we see whom
Thou hast made over; what Thou hast received, we have not seen. "And
there was no multitude in their jubilees." [1339] For when the
Christians were flying before the pursuit of enemies, who were
idolaters, were there then held any congregations and "jubilees" to the
honour of God? Were those Hymns chanted in concert from the Churches of
God, that are wont to be sung in concert in time of peace, and to be
sounded in a sweet accord of the brotherhood in the ears of God?
12. "Thou madest us a reproach to our neighbours; a scorn and a
derision to them that are round about us" (ver. 13). "Thou madest us a
similitude [1340] among the heathen" (ver. 14). What is meant by a
"similitude"? It is when men in imprecating a curse make a "similitude"
of his name whom they detest. "So mayest thou die;" "So mayest thou be
punished!" What a number of such reproaches were then uttered! "So
mayest thou be crucified!" Even in the present day there are not
wanting enemies of Christ (those very Jews themselves), against whom
whensoever we defend Christ, they say unto us, "So mayest thou die as
He did." For they would not have inflicted that kind of death had they
not an intense horror of dying by such a death: or had they been able
to comprehend what mystery was contained in it. When the ointment is
applied to the eyes of the blind man, he does not see the eye-salve in
the physician's hand. For the very Cross was made for the benefit even
of the persecutors themselves. Hereby they were healed afterwards; and
they believed in Him whom they themselves had slain. "Thou madest us a
similitude among the heathen; a shaking of the head among the peoples,"
a "shaking of the head" by way of insult. "They spake with their lips,
they shook the head." [1341] This they did to the Lord: this to all His
Saints also, whom they were able to pursue, to lay hold of, to mock, to
betray, to afflict, and to slay.
13. "My shame is continually before me; and the confusion of my face
has covered me" (ver. 15). "For the voice of him that reproacheth and
blasphemeth" (ver. 16): that is to say, from the voice of them that
insult over me, and who make it a charge against me that I worship
Thee, that I confess Thee! and who make it a charge against me that I
bear that name by which all charges against me shall be blotted out.
"For the voice of him that reproacheth and blasphemeth," that is, of
him that speaketh against me. "By reason of the enemy and the
persecutor." And what is the "understanding" conveyed here? Those
things which are told us of the time past, will not be done in our
case: [1342] those which are hoped for, as to be hereafter, are not as
yet manifest. Those which are past, as the leading out of Thy people
with great glory from Egypt; its deliverance from its persecutors; the
guiding of it through the nations, the placing of it in the kingdom,
whence the nations had been expelled. What are those to be hereafter?
The leading of the people out of this Egypt of the world, when Christ,
our "leader" shall appear in His glory: the placing of the Saints at
His right hand; of the wicked at His left; the condemnation of the
wicked with the devil to eternal punishment; the receiving of a kingdom
from Christ with the Saints to last for ever. [1343] These are the
things that are yet to be: the former are what are past. In the
interval, what is to be our lot? Tribulations! "Why so?" That it may be
seen with respect to the soul that worships God, to what extent it
worships God; that it may be seen whether it worships Him "freely" from
whom it received salvation "freely."...What hast thou given unto God?
Thou wert wicked, and thou wert redeemed! What hast thou given unto
God? What is there that thou hast not "received" from Him "freely"?
With reason is it named "grace," because it is bestowed (gratis, i.e.)
freely. [1344] What is required of thee then is this, "that thou too
shouldest worship "Him freely;" not because He gives thee things
temporal, but because He holds out to thee things eternal....
14. "All this is come upon us; yet have we not forgotten Thee" (ver.
17). What is meant by, "have not forgotten Thee"? "Neither have we
behaved ourselves frowardly in Thy covenant."
"Our heart has not turned back; and Thou hast turned aside our goings
out of Thy way" (ver. 18). See here is "understanding," in that "our
heart has not gone back;" that we have not "forgotten Thee, have not
behaved frowardly in Thy covenant;" placed as we are in great
tribulations, and persecutions of the Gentiles. "Thou hast turned aside
our goings out of Thy way." Our "goings" were in the pleasures of the
world; our "goings" were in the midst of temporal prosperities. Thou
hast taken "our goings out of Thy way;" and hast shown us [1345] how
"strait and narrow is the way that leadeth unto life." [1346] What is
meant by, "hast turned aside our goings out of Thy way"? It is as if He
said, "Ye are placed in the midst of tribulation; ye are suffering many
things; ye have already lost many things that ye loved in this life:
but I have not abandoned you on the way, the narrow way that I am
teaching you. Ye were seeking "broad ways." What do I tell you? This is
the way we go to everlasting life; by the way ye wish to walk, ye are
going to death. How "broad and wide is the road that leads to
destruction: and" how "many there be that find it! How strait and
narrow the way that leadeth unto life, and" how "few there be" that
walk therein! [1347] Who are the few? They who patiently endure
tribulations, patiently endure temptations; who in all these troubles
do not "fall away:" who do not rejoice in the word "for a season" only;
and in the time of tribulation fade away, as on the sun's arising; but
who have the "root" of "love," according to what we have lately heard
read in the Gospel. [1348] ...
15. "For Thou hast brought us low in the place of infirmity" [1349]
(ver. 18): therefore Thou wilt exalt us in the place of strength. "And
the shadow of death has covered us" (ver. 19). For this mortality of
ours is but the "shadow" of death. The true death is condemnation with
the devil.
16. "If we have forgotten the Name of our God." Here is the
"understanding" of the "sons of Korah." "And stretched out our hands to
a strange God" (ver. 20). "Shall not God search this out? For He
knoweth the secrets of the heart" (ver. 21). He "knows," and yet He
"searches them out"? If He knows the secrets of the heart, what do the
words, "Shall not God search it out," do there? He "knows" it in
Himself; He "searches it out" for our sakes. For it is for this reason
God sometimes "searches a thing out;" and speaks of that becoming known
to Himself, which He is Himself making known to thee. He is speaking of
His own work, not of His knowledge. We commonly say, "A gladsome day,"
when it is fine. Yet is it the day itself that experiences delight? No:
we speak of the day as gladsome, because it fills us with delight. And
we speak of a "sullen sky." Not that there is any such feeling in the
clouds, but because men are affected with sullenness at the sight of
such an appearance of the skies, it is called sullen for this reason,
that it makes us sullen. So also God is said to "know" when He causes
us to know. God says to Abraham, "Now I know that thou fearest God."
[1350] Did He then not know it before then? But Abraham did not know
himself till then: for it was in that very trial he came to know
himself....And God is said to "know" that which He had caused him to
know. Did Peter know himself, when he said to the Physician, "I will be
with Thee even unto death?" [1351] The Physician had felt his pulse,
[1352] and knew what was going on within His patient's soul: the
patient knew it not. The crisis [1353] of trial came; and the Physician
approved the correctness of His opinion: the sick man gave up his
presumption. Thus God at once "knows" it and "searches it out." "He
knows it already. Why does He `search it out'?" For thy sake: that thou
mayest come to know thine own self, and mayest return thanks to Him
that made thee. "Shall not God search it out?"
17. "For, for Thy sake we are killed all the day long: we are counted
as sheep for the slaughter" (ver. 22). For you may see a man being put
to death; you do not know why he is being put to death. God knoweth
this. The thing in itself is hid. But some one will say to me, "See, he
is detained in prison for the name of Christ, he is a confessor for the
name of Christ." Why do not [1354] heretics also confess the name of
Christ, and yet they do not die for His sake? Nay more; let me say it,
in the Catholic Church itself, do you think there either are, or have
been wanting persons such as would suffer for the sake of glory among
men? Were there no such persons, the Apostle would not say, "Though I
give my body to be burned, and have not charity, it profiteth me
nothing." [1355] He knew therefore that there might be some persons,
who did this not from "charity," but out of vainglory. It is therefore
hid from us; God alone sees this; we cannot see it. He alone can judge
of this, who "knoweth the secrets of the heart." "For," for Thy sake
"are we killed all the day long; we are counted as sheep for the
slaughter." I have already mentioned that from hence the Apostle Paul
had borrowed a text [1356] for the encouragement of the Martyrs: that
they might not "faint in the tribulations" undergone by them for the
name of Christ. [1357]
18. "Awake; why sleepest Thou, O Lord?" (ver. 23). Who is addressed,
and who is the speaker? Would not he be more correctly said to sleep
and slumber, [1358] who speaks such words as these? He replies to you,
I know what I am saying: I know that "He that keepeth Israel doth not
sleep:" [1359] but yet the Martyrs cry, "Awake; why sleepest Thou, O
Lord?" O Lord Jesus, Thou wast slain; Thou didst "sleep" in Thy
Passion; to us Thou hast now "awaked" from sleep. For "we" know that
Thou hast now "awaked" again. To what purpose hast Thou awaked and
risen again? The Gentiles that persecute us, think Thee to be dead; do
not believe Thee to have risen again. "Arise Thou" then to them also!
"Why sleepest Thou," though not to us, yet to them? For if they already
believed Thee to have risen again, could they persecute us who believe
in Thee? But why do they persecute? "Destroy, slay so and so, whoever
have believed in Thee, such an one, who died an ill death!" As yet to
them "Thou sleepest;" arise to them, that they may perceive that Thou
hast "awaked" again; and may be at rest. Lastly, it has come to pass,
while the Martyrs die, and say these things; while they sleep, and
"awaken" Christ, truly dead in their sleepings, Christ has, in a
certain sense, risen again in the Gentiles; i.e. it becomes believed,
that He has risen again; so by degrees they themselves, becoming
converted to Christ by believing, collected a numerous body: such as
the persecutors dreaded; and the persecutions have come to an end. Why?
Because Christ, who before was asleep to them, as not believing, hath
risen in the Gentiles. "Arise, and cast us not off for ever!"
19. "Wherefore hidest Thou Thy face:" as if Thou wert not present; as
if thou hadst forgotten us? "And forgettest our misery and trouble?"
(ver. 24).
20. "For our soul is bowed down to the dust" (ver. 25). Where is it
bowed down? "To the dust:" i.e. dust persecutes us. They persecute us,
of whom Thou hast said, "The ungodly are not so; but are like the dust,
which the wind driveth away from the face of the earth." [1360] "Our
belly hath cleaved to the earth." He seems to me to have expressed the
punishment of the extreme of humiliation, in which, when any one
prostrates himself, "his belly cleaveth to the earth." For whosoever is
humbled so as to be on his knees, has yet a lower degree of humiliation
to which he can come: but he who is so humbled, that his "belly
cleaveth to the ground," there is no farther humiliation for him.
Should one wish to do still farther, it will, after that point, be not
bowing him down, but crushing him. Perhaps then he may have meant this:
We are "bowed down very low" in this dust; there is no farther point to
which humiliation can go. Humiliation has now reached its highest
point: let mercy then come also....
21. "Arise, O Lord, help us" (ver. 26). And indeed, dearly beloved, He
has arisen and helped us. For when he awaked (i.e. when He arose again,
and became known to the Gentiles) on the cessation of persecutions,
even those who had cleaved to the earth were raised up from the earth,
and on performing penance, [1361] have been restored to Christ's body,
feeble and imperfect though they were: so that in them was fulfilled
the text, "Thine eyes did see my substance yet being imperfect; and in
Thy book shall they all be written." [1362]
"Arise, O Lord, help us, and redeem us for Thy Name's sake;" that is to
say, freely; for Thy Name's sake, not for the sake of my merits:
because Thou hast vouchsafed to do it, not because I am worthy that
Thou shouldest do it unto me. For this very thing, that "we have not
forgotten Thee;" that "our heart hath not gone back;" that we "have not
stretched out our hands to any strange god;" how should we have been
able to achieve, except with Thy help? How should we have strength for
it, except through Thy appealing to us within, exhorting us, and not
forsaking us? Whether then we suffer in tribulations, or rejoice in
prosperities, redeem Thou us, not for our merits, but for Thy Name's
sake.
__________________________________________________________________
[1315] Lat. XLIII.
[1316] Calvitium.
[1317] Matt. xxvii. 33. Calvariae.
[1318] Rom. viii. 36.
[1319] Ps. xxii. 1.
[1320] 1 Cor. iv. 6.
[1321] Ps. xxii. 4-6.
[1322] Ps. xl. 7.
[1323] [So Cyprian, A.N.F. vol. v. p. 516; also others passim.--C.]
[1324] Complacuisti in eis.
[1325] Agit.
[1326] "Tu es Ipse."
[1327] 1 Cor. xiii. 12.
[1328] Col. iii. 4.
[1329] 1 John iii. 2.
[1330] Vulgate, ventilabimus. [To which St. Jerome's Hebraic Psalter
adheres.--C.]
[1331] Ps. xxii. 16-18.
[1332] Laudabimur.
[1333] [Here is the Diapsalma in the Septuagint; and in St. Jerome,
following the Hebrew.--C.]
[1334] Ps. lxxxiv. 4.
[1335] Or "hosts," virtutibus.
[1336] Virtus.
[1337] Exod. xvii. 12.
[1338] Conversely, in like manner the Fathers (so under Ps. iii. ver.
7) often explain, "Rise, Peter, kill, and eat," and passages where the
preachers of the Gospel are represented by beasts of prey. See p. 16,
supra, between notes 5 and 6. [A fanciful rendering, perhaps; but the
assimilation of unclean Gentiles, and their identification with the
clean body of the Church, is strikingly illustrated by it.--C.]
[1339] [St. Augustin's Psalter has jubilationibus.--C.] For which
Vulgate, commutationibus.
[1340] E.V. "by-word."
[1341] Ps. xxii. 7. E.V. "They shoot out the lips," etc.
[1342] In nobis.
[1343] Matt. xxv. 34. St. Augustin, Ser. xviii. 4.
[1344] Rom. xi. 6.
[1345] Oxf. mss. "hast showed us a way. What way? How," etc. He seems
to mean that God has removed such ways as men like from the path of His
Saints, and given them narrow ways. St. Ambrose takes it as a complaint
of difficulties, so great that we cannot perfectly keep to the right
way. E.V. "Neither have our steps declined from Thy way," rightly
continuing the negative.
[1346] Matt. vii. 14.
[1347] Matt. vii. 13, 14.
[1348] Matt. xiii. 6, 20, 21.
[1349] E.V. "broken us in the place of dragons."
[1350] Gen. xxii. 12.
[1351] Luke xxii. 33.
[1352] Inspecta vena.
[1353] Accessio.
[1354] Oxf. mss. om. "not."
[1355] 1 Cor. xiii. 3.
[1356] Testimonium posuisse. Rom. viii. 36. [Also Rom. v. 3; Eph. iii.
13.--C.]
[1357] [See p. 140, note 19.--C.]
[1358] Halare.
[1359] Ps. cxxi. 4.
[1360] Ps. i. 4.
[1361] [A debased rendering of our author's words, agentes
poenitentiam; for the primitive discipline exacted true contrition. See
Chrysos. Hom. xxi. p. 215, vol. xii. ed. Migne. The "attrition" of the
Trent Catechism is indeed a perfunctory "performance."--C.]
[1362] Ps. cxxxix. 16.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XLV. [1363]
1. This Psalm, even as we ourselves have been singing with gladness
together with you, we would beg you in like manner to consider with
attention together with us. For it is sung of the sacred
Marriage-feast; of the Bridegroom and the Bride; of the King and His
people; of the Saviour and those who are to be saved....His sons are
we, in that we are the "children of the Bridegroom;" and it is to us
that this Psalm is addressed, whose title has the words, "For the sons
of Korah, for the things that [1364] shall be changed."
2. Why need I explain what is meant by, "for the things that shall be
changed"? Every one who is himself "changed," recognises the meaning of
this. Let him who hears this, "for the things that shall be changed,"
consider what was before, and what is now. And first let him see the
world itself to be changed, lately worshipping idols, now worshipping
God; lately serving things that they themselves made, now serving Him
by whom they themselves were made. Observe at what time the words, "for
the things that shall be changed," were said. Already by this time the
Pagans that are left are in dread of the "changed" state of things: and
those who will not suffer themselves to be "changed" see the churches
full; the temples deserted; see crowds here, and there solitude! They
marvel at the things so changed; let them read that they were foretold;
let them lend their ears to Him who promised it; let them believe Him
who fulfils that promise. But each one of us, brethren, also undergoes
a change from "the old" to "the new man:" from an infidel to a
believer: from a thief to a giver of alms: from an adulterer to a man
of chastity; from an evildoer to a doer of good. To us then be sung the
words, "for the things that shall be changed;" and so let the
description of Him by whom they were changed, begin.
3. For it goes on, "For the things that shall be changed, to the sons
of Korah for understanding; a song for the beloved." For that "beloved"
One was seen by His persecutors, but yet not for "understanding." For
"had they known Him, they would never have crucified the Lord of
Glory." [1365] In order to this "understanding," other eyes were
required by Him when He said, "He that seeth Me, seeth My Father also."
[1366] Let the Psalm then now sound of Him, let us rejoice in the
marriage-feast, and we shall be with those of whom the marriage is
made, [1367] who are invited to the marriage; and the very persons
invited are the Bride herself. For the Church is "the Bride," Christ
the Bridegroom. There are commonly spoken by balladists [1368] certain
verses to Bridegrooms and Brides, called Epithalamia. [1369] Whatever
is sung there, is sung in honour of the Bride and Bridegroom. Is there
then no Bridechamber [1370] in that marriage-feast to which we are
invited? Whence then does another Psalm say, "He hath set up His
tabernacle in the Sun; and He is even as a bridegroom coming out of his
chamber." The nuptial union is that of "the Word," and the flesh. The
Bridechamber of this union, the Virgin's womb. For the flesh itself was
united to the Word: whence also it is said, "Henceforth they are not
twain, but one flesh." [1371] The Church was assumed unto Him out of
the human race: so that the Flesh itself, being united to the Word,
might be the Head of the Church: and the rest who believe, members of
that Head....
4. "Mine heart hath uttered a good word" [1372] (ver. 1). Who is the
speaker? The Father, or the Prophet? For some understand it to be the
Person of the Father, which says, "Mine heart hath uttered a good
word," intimating to us a certain unspeakable generation. [1373] Lest
you should haply think something to have been taken unto Him, out of
which God should beget the Son (just as man takes something to himself
out of which he begets children, that is to say, an union of marriage,
[1374] without which man cannot beget offspring), lest then you should
think that God stood in need of any nuptial union, to beget "the Son,"
he says, "Mine heart hath uttered a good word." [1375] This very day
thine heart, O man, begets a counsel, and requires no wife: by the
counsel, so born of thine heart, thou buildest something or other, and
before that building subsists, the design subsists; [1376] and that
which thou art about to produce, exists already in that by which thou
art going to produce it; and thou praisest the fabric that as yet is
not existing, not yet in the visible form of a building, but on the
projecting of a design: nor does any one else praise thy design, unless
either thou showest it to him, or he sees what thou hast done. If then
by the Word "all things were made," [1377] and the Word is of God,
consider the fabric reared by the Word, and learn from that building to
admire His counsels! What manner of Word is that by which heaven and
earth were made; [1378] and all the splendour of the heavens; all the
fertility of the earth; the expanse of the sea; the wide diffusion of
air; the brightness of the constellations; the light of sun and moon?
These are visible things: rise above these also; think of the Angels,
"Principalities, Thrones, Dominions, and Powers." [1379] All were made
by Him. How then were these good things made? Because there was
"uttered forth `a good Word,'" by which they were to be made....
5. It proceeds: "I speak of the things which I have made unto the
King." Is the Father still speaking? If the Father is still speaking,
let us enquire how this also can be understood by us, consistently with
the true Catholic Faith, "I speak of the things that I have made unto
the King." For if it is the Father speaking of His own works to His
Son, our "King," what works is the Father to speak of to the Son,
seeing that all the Father's works were made by the Son's agency? Or,
in the words, "I speak of My works unto the King," does the word, "I
speak," itself signify the generation of the Son? I fear whether this
can ever be made intelligible to those slow of comprehension: I will
nevertheless say it. Let those who can follow me, do so: lest if it
were left unsaid, even those who can follow should not be able. We have
read where it is said in another Psalm, "God hath spoken once." [1380]
So often has He spoken by the Prophets, so often by the Apostles, and
in these days by His Saints, and does He say, "God has spoken once"?
How can He have spoken but "once," except with reference to His "Word"?
[1381] But as the "Mine heart hath uttered a good Word," [1382] was
understood by us in the other clause of the generation of the Son, it
seems that a kind of repetition is made in the following sentence, so
that the "Mine heart hath uttered a good Word," which had been already
said, is repeated in what He is now saying, "I speak." For what does "I
speak" mean? "I utter a Word." And whence but from His heart, from His
very inmost, does God utter the Word? You yourself do not speak
anything but what you bring forth from your "heart," this word of yours
which sounds once and passes away, is brought forth from no other
place: and do you wonder that God "speaks" in this manner? But God's
"speaking" is eternal. You are speaking something at the present
moment, because you were silent before: or, look you, you have not yet
brought forth your word; but when you have begun to bring it forth, you
as it were "break silence;" and bring into being a word, that did not
exist before. It was not so God begat the "Word." God's "speaking" is
without beginning, and without end: and yet the "Word" He utters is but
"One." Let Him utter another, if what He has spoken shall have passed
away. But since He by whom it is uttered abideth, and That which is
uttered abideth; and is uttered but once, and has no end, that very
"once" too is said without beginning, and there is no second speaking,
because that which is said once, does not pass away. The words "Mine
heart hath uttered a good Word," then, are the same thing with, "I
speak of the things which I have made unto the King." Why then, "I
speak of the things which I have made"? Because in the Word Itself are
all the works of God. For whatever God designed to make in the creation
already existed in "the Word;" and would not exist in the reality, had
it not existed in the Word, [1383] just as with you the thing would not
exist in the building, had it not existed in your design: even as it is
said in the Gospel: "That which was made in Him was life." [1384] That
which was made then was in existence; but it had its existence in the
Word: and all the works of God existed there, and yet were not as yet
"works." "The Word" however already was, as this "Word was God, and was
with God:" and was the Son of God, and One God with the Father. "I
speak of the things I have made unto the King." Let him hear Him
"speaking," who apprehends "the Word:" and let him see together with
the Father the Everlasting Word; in whom exist even those things that
are yet to come: in whom even those things that are past have not
passed away. These "works" of God are in "the Word," as in the Word, as
in the Only-Begotten, as in the "Word of God."
6. What follows then? "My tongue is the pen of a writer writing
rapidly." What likeness, my brethren, what likeness, I ask, has the
"tongue" of God with a transcriber's pen? What resemblance has "the
rock" to Christ? [1385] What likeness does the "lamb" bear to our
Saviour, [1386] or what "the lion" to the strength of the
Only-Begotten? [1387] Yet such comparisons have been made; and were
they not made, we should not be formed to a certain extent by these
visible things to the knowledge of the "Invisible One." So then with
this mean simile of the pen; let us not compare it to His excellent
greatness, so let us not reject it with contempt. For I ask, why He
compares His "tongue" to "the pen of a writer writing rapidly"? But how
swiftly soever the transcriber writes, still it is not comparable to
that swiftness of which another Psalm says, "His word runneth very
swiftly." [1388] But it appears to me (if human understanding may
presume so far) that this too may be understood as spoken in the Person
of the Father: "My tongue is the pen of a writer." Inasmuch as what is
spoken by the "tongue," sounds once and passes away, what is written,
remains; seeing then that God uttereth "a Word," and the Word which is
uttered does not sound once and pass away, but is uttered and yet
continues, God chose rather to compare this to words written than to
sounds. But what He added, saying, "of one writing swiftly," stimulates
the mind unto "understanding." Let it however not slothfully rest here,
thinking of transcribers, [1389] or thinking of some kind of quick
shorthand writers: if it be this it sees in the passage, it will be
resting there. Let it think swiftly what is the meaning of that word
"swiftly." The "swiftly" of God is such that nothing exceeds in
swiftness. For in writings letter is written after letter; syllable
after syllable; word after word: nor do we pass to the second except
when the first is written out. But there nothing can exceed the
swiftness, where there are not several words; and yet there is not
anything omitted: since in the One are contained all things.
7. Lo! now then that Word, so uttered, Eternal, the Co-eternal
Offspring of the Eternal, will come as "the Bridegroom;" "Fairer than
the children of men" (ver. 2). "Than the children of men." I ask, why
not than the Angels also? Why did he say, "than the children of men,"
except because He was Man? Lest you should think "the Man Christ"
[1390] to be any ordinary man, he says, "Fairer than the children of
men." Even though Himself "Man," He is "fairer than the children of
men;" though among the children of men, "fairer than the children of
men:" though of the children of men, "fairer than the children of men."
"Grace is shed abroad on Thy lips." "The Law was given by Moses. Grace
and Truth came by Jesus Christ." [1391] ...
8. There have not been wanting those who preferred understanding all
the preceding passage also of the Prophet's own person; and would have
even this verse, "Mine heart hath uttered forth a good word,"
understood as spoken by the Prophet, supposed to be uttering a hymn.
For whoever utters a hymn to God, his heart is, as it were, "uttering
forth a good word," just as his heart who blasphemes God, is uttering
forth an evil word. So that even by what follows, "I speak of the
things which I have made [1392] unto the King," he meant to express
that man's chief work was but to praise God. To Him it belongs to
satisfy thee, by His beauty; to thee to praise Him with
thanksgiving....
9. "My tongue is the pen of a writer writing quickly." There have been
persons who have understood the Prophet to have been describing in this
manner what he was writing; and therefore to have compared his tongue
to "the pen of a writer writing quickly:" but that he chose to express
himself in the words "writing quickly," to signify, that he was writing
of things which were to come "quickly;" that "writing quickly" should
be understood to be equivalent to "writing things that are quick;" i.e.
writing things that would not long tarry. For God did not tarry long to
manifest Christ. How quickly is that perceived to have rolled by, which
is acknowledged to be already past! Call to mind the generations before
thee; thou wilt find that the making of Adam is but a thing of
yesterday. So do we read that all things have gone on from the very
beginning: [1393] they were therefore done "quickly." The day of
Judgment also will be here "quickly." Do thou anticipate its "quick"
coming. It is to come "quickly;" do thou become converted yet more
"quickly." The Judge's face will appear: but observe thou what the
Prophet says, "Let us come before" (let us "prevent") "His face with
confession." [1394]
10. "Gird Thy sword upon Thy thigh, O most Mighty" (ver. 3). What is
meant by "Thy sword," but "Thy word"? It was by that sword He scattered
His enemies; by that sword he divided the son from the father, "the
daughter from the mother, the daughter-in-law from the mother-in-law."
We read these words in the Gospel, "I came not to send peace, but a
sword." [1395] And, "In one house shall five be divided against each
other; three against two, and two against three;" [1396] i.e. "the
father against the son, the daughter against the mother, the
daughter-in-law against the mother-in-law." By what "sword," but that
which Christ brought, was this division wrought? And indeed, my
brethren, we see this exemplified daily. Some young man is minded to
give himself up to God's service; his father is opposed to it; they are
"divided against each other:" the one promises an earthly inheritance,
the other loves an heavenly; the one promises one thing, the other
prefers another. The father should not think himself wronged: God alone
is preferred to him. And yet he is at strife [1397] with the son, who
would fain give himself to God's service. But the spiritual sword is
mightier to separate them, than the ties of carnal nature to bind them
together. This happens also in the case of a mother against her
daughter; still more also in that of a daughter-in-law against a
mother-in-law. For sometimes in one house mother-in-law and daughter-in
law are found orthodox and heretical respectively. And where that sword
is forcibly felt, [1398] we do not dread the repetition of Baptism.
Could daughter be divided against mother; and could not daughter-in-law
be divided against mother-in-law?...
11. What does he mean to express by the "thigh"? The flesh. Whence
those words, "A prince shall not depart from Judah; and a lawgiver from
his thighs"? [1399] Did not Abraham himself (to whom was promised the
seed in which "all the nations of the earth were to be blessed"), when
he sent his servant to seek and to bring home a wife for his son, being
by faith fully persuaded, that in that, so to speak, contemptible seed
was contained the great Name; [1400] that is, that the Son of God was
to come of the seed of Abraham, out of all the children of men; did not
he, I say, cause his servant to swear unto him in this manner, saying,
"Put thy hand under my thigh," [1401] and so swear; as if he had said,
"Put thy hand on the altar, or on the Gospel, or on the Prophet, or on
any holy thing." "Put" (he says) "thy hand under my thigh;" having full
confidence, not ashamed of it as unseemly, but understanding therein a
truth. "With Thy beauty and Thy glory." Take to Thee that
righteousness, in which Thou art at all times beautiful and glorious.
"And speed on, and proceed prosperously, and reign" (ver. 4). Do we not
see it so? Is it not already come to pass? He has "sped on; has
proceeded prosperously, and He reigns;" all nations are subdued unto
Him. What a thing was it to see that "in the Spirit," of which same
thing it is now in our power to experience in the reality! At the time
when these words were said, Christ did not yet "reign" thus; had not
yet sped on, nor "proceeded prosperously." They were then being
preached, they have now been fulfilled: in many things we have God's
promise fulfilled already; in some few we have to claim its fulfilment
yet.
12. "Because of truth, meekness, and righteousness." Truth was restored
unto us, when "the Truth sprung out of the earth: and Righteousness
looked out from heaven." [1402] Christ was presented to the expectation
of mankind, that in Abraham's Seed "all nations should be blessed." The
Gospel has been preached. It is "the Truth." What is meant by
"meekness"? The Martyrs have suffered; and the kingdom of God has made
much progress from thence, and advanced throughout all nations; because
the Martyrs suffered, and neither "fell away," nor yet offered
resistance; confessing everything, concealing nothing; prepared for
everything, shrinking from nothing. Marvellous "meekness"! This did the
body of Christ, by its Head it learned. He was first "led as a sheep to
the slaughter, and as a lamb before his shearer is dumb, even so opened
not His mouth;" [1403] meek to that degree, that while hanging on the
Cross, He said, "Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do."
[1404] Why because of "righteousness"? He will come also to judge, and
to "render to every man according to his works." He spake "the truth;"
He patiently endured unrighteousness: He is to bring "righteousness"
hereafter.
13. "And Thy right hand shall lead Thee on marvellously." We shall be
guided on by His right hand: He by His own. For He is God, we mortal
men. He was led on by His own right hand; i.e. by His own power. For
the power which the Father hath, He hath also; the Father's immortality
He hath also; He hath the Father's Divinity, the Father's Eternity, the
Father's Power. [1405] Marvellously will His right hand lead Him on,
performing the works of God; undergoing human sufferings, overthrowing
the evil wills [1406] of men by His own goodness. Even now, He is being
led on even to places where as yet He is not; and it is His own right
hand that is leading Him on. For that is leading Him thither which He
has Himself bestowed upon His Saints. "Thy right hand shall lead Thee
on marvellously."
14. "Thine arrows are sharp, are most powerful" (ver. 5); words that
pierce the heart, that kindle love. Whence in the Song of Songs it is
said, "I am wounded with love." [1407] For she speaks of being "wounded
with love;" that is, of being in love, of being inflamed with passion,
of sighing for the Bridegroom, from whom she received the arrow of the
Word. "Thine arrows are sharp, are most powerful;" both piercing, and
effective; "sharp, most powerful." "The peoples shall fall under Thee."
Who have "fallen"? They who were "wounded" have also "fallen." We see
the nations subdued unto Christ; we do not see them "fall." He explains
where they "fall," viz. "in the heart." It was there they lifted
themselves up against Christ, there they "fall" down before Christ.
Saul was a blasphemer of Christ: he was then lifted up, he prays to
Christ, "he is fallen," he is prostrate before Him: the enemy of Christ
is slain, that the disciple of Christ may live! By an arrow launched
from heaven, Saul (not as yet Paul, but still Saul), still lifted up,
still not yet prostrate, is wounded in "the heart:" he received the
arrow, he fell "in heart." For though he fell prostrate on his face, it
was not there that he fell down in heart: [1408] but it was there where
he said aloud, "Lord, what dost Thou bid me do?" [1409] But just now
thou wert going to bind the Christians, and to bring them to
punishment: and now thou sayest unto Christ, "What dost Thou bid me
do?" O arrow sharp and most mighty, by whose stroke "Saul" fell, so as
to become "Paul." As it was with him, so was it also with "the
peoples;" consider the nations, observe their subjection unto Christ.
"The peoples" (then) "shall fall under Thee in the heart of the King's
enemies;" that is, in the heart of Thine enemies. For it is Him that he
calls King, Him that he recognises as King. "The peoples shall fall
under Thee in the heart of the King's enemies." They were "enemies"
before; they have been stricken by thine arrows: they have fallen
before Thee. Out of enemies they have been made friends: the enemies
are dead, the friends survive. This is the meaning of, "for those which
shall be changed." We are seeking to "understand" each single word, and
each separate verse; yet so far only are we to seek for their
"understanding," as to leave no one to doubt that they are spoken of
Christ.
15. "Thy throne, O God, is for ever and ever" (ver. 6). Because God has
"`blessed Thee' for ever," on account of the "grace poured over Thy
lips." Now the throne of the Jewish Kingdom was a temporal one;
belonging to those who were under the Law, not to those who were under
"grace:" He came to "redeem those who were under the Law," and to place
them under "Grace." His "Throne is for ever and ever." Why? for that
first throne of the Kingdom was but a temporal one: whence then have we
a "throne for ever and ever"? Because it is God's throne. O divine
Attribute of Eternity! [1410] for God could not have a temporal throne.
"Thy throne, O God, is for ever and ever--a sceptre of direction is the
sceptre of Thy Kingdom." "The sceptre of direction" is that which
directs mankind: they were before crooked, distorted; they sought to
reign for themselves: they loved themselves, loved their own evil
deeds: they submitted not their own will to God; but would fain have
bent God's will to conformity with their own lusts. For the sinner and
the unrighteous man is generally angry with God, because it rains not!
[1411] and yet would have God not be angry with himself, because he is
profligate. [1412] And it is pretty much for this very reason that men
daily sit, to dispute against God: "This is what He ought to have done:
this He has not well done." Thou forsooth seest what thou doest; He
knows not what He does! It is thou that art crooked! His ways are
right. When wilt thou make the crooked coincide with the straight? It
cannot be made to coincide with it. [1413] Just as if you were to place
a crooked stick on a level pavement; it does not join on to it; it does
not cohere; it does not fit into the pavement. The pavement is even in
every part: but that is crooked; it does not fit into that which is
level. The will of God then is "equal," thine own is "crooked:" it is
because thou canst not be conformed unto it, that it seems "crooked"
unto thee: rule thou thyself by it; seek not to bend it to thine own
will: for thou canst not accomplish it; that is at all times
"straight"! Wouldest thou abide in Him? "Correct thou thyself;" so will
the sceptre of Him who rules thee, be unto thee "a rule of direction."
Thence is He also called King, [1414] from "ruling." For that is no
"ruler" that does not correct. [1415] Hereunto is our King a King of
"right ones." [1416] Just as He is a Priest (Sacerdos) by sanctifying
us, so is He our King, our Ruler, by "ruling" us....
16. "Thou hast loved righteousness, and hated iniquity" (ver. 7). See
there "the rod of direction" described. "Thou hast loved righteousness,
and hated iniquity." Draw near to that "rod;" let Christ be thy King:
let Him "rule" thee with that rod, not crush thee with it. For that rod
is "a rod of iron;" an inflexible rod. [1417] "Thou shalt rule them
with a rod of iron: and break them in pieces like a potter's vessel."
[1418] Some He rules; others He "breaks in pieces:" He "rules" them
that are spiritual: He "breaks in pieces" them that are carnal....Would
He so loudly declare that He was about to smite thee, if He wished to
smite thee? He is then holding back His hand from the punishment of
thine offences; but do not thou hold back. Turn thou thyself to the
punishment of thine offences: for unpunished offences cannot be:
punishment therefore must be executed either by thyself, or by Him: do
thou then plead guilty, that He may reprieve thee. Consider an instance
in that penitential Psalm: "Hide Thy face from my sins." [1419] Did he
mean "from me"? No: for in another passage he says plainly, "Hide not
Thy face from me." "Turn" then "Thy face from my sins." I would have
Thee not see my sins. For God's "seeing" is animadverting upon. Hence
too a Judge is said to "animadvert" [1420] on that which he punishes;
i.e. to turn his mind on it, to bend it thereon, even to the punishment
of it, inasmuch as he is the Judge. So too is God a Judge. "Turn Thou
Thy face from my sins." But thou thyself, if thou wouldest have God
turn "His face" from them, turn not thine own face from them. Observe
how he proposes this to God in that very Psalm: "I acknowledge," he
says, "my transgression, and my sin is ever before me." [1421] He would
fain have that which he wishes to be ever before his own eyes, not be
before God's eyes. Let no one flatter himself with fond hopes of God's
mercy. His sceptre is "a sceptre of righteousness." Do we say that God
is not merciful? What can exceed His mercy, who shows such forbearance
to sinners; who takes no account of the past in all that turn unto Him?
So love thou Him for His mercy, as still to wish that He should be
truthful. For mercy cannot strip Him of His attribute of justice: nor
justice of that of mercy. Meanwhile during the time that He postpones
thy punishment, do not thou postpone it.
17. "Therefore, God, Thy God, hath anointed Thee." It was for this
reason that He anointed thee, that thou mightest love righteousness,
and hate iniquity. And observe in what way he expresses himself.
"Therefore, God, Thy God, hath anointed Thee:" i.e. "God hath anointed
Thee, O God." "God" is "anointed" by God. For in the Latin it is
thought to be the same case of the noun repeated: in the Greek however
there is a most evident distinction; one being the name of the Person
addressed; and one His who makes the address, saying, "God hath
anointed Thee." "O God, Thy God hath anointed Thee," just as if He were
saying, "Therefore hath Thy God, O God, anointed Thee." Take it in that
sense, understand it in that sense; that such is the sense is most
evident in the Greek. Who then is the God that is "anointed" by God?
Let the Jews tell us; these Scriptures are common to us and them. It
was God, who was anointed by God: you hear of an "Anointed" one;
understand it to mean "Christ." For the name of "Christ" comes from
"chrism;" this name by which He is called "Christ" expresses "unction:"
nor were kings and prophets anointed in any kingdom, in any other
place, save in that kingdom where Christ was prophesied of, where He
was anointed, and from whence the Name of Christ was to come. It is
found nowhere else at all: in no one nation or kingdom. God, then, was
anointed by God; with what oil was He anointed, but a spiritual one?
For the visible oil is in the sign, the invisible oil is in the
mystery; [1422] the spiritual oil is within. "God" then was "anointed"
for us, and sent unto us; and God Himself was man, in order that He
might be "anointed:" but He was man in such a way as to be God still.
He was God in such a way as not to disdain to be man. "Very man and
very God;" in nothing deceitful, in nothing false, as being everywhere
true, everywhere "the Truth" itself. God then is man; and it was for
this cause that "God" was "anointed," because God was Man, and became
"Christ."
18. This was figured in Jacob's placing a stone at his head, and so
sleeping. [1423] The patriarch Jacob had placed a stone at his head:
sleeping with that stone at his head, he saw heaven opened, and a
ladder from heaven to earth, and Angels ascending and descending;
[1424] after this vision he awaked, anointed the stone, and departed.
In that "stone" he understood Christ; for that reason he anointed it.
Take notice what it is whereby Christ is preached. What is the meaning
of that anointing of a stone, especially in the case of the Patriarchs
who worshipped but One God? It was however done as a figurative act:
and he departed. For he did not anoint the stone, and come to worship
there constantly, and to perform sacrifice there. It was the expression
of a mystery; not the commencement of sacrilege. And notice the meaning
of "the stone." "The Stone which the builders refused, this is become
the head of the corner." [1425] Notice here a great mystery. The
"Stone" is Christ. Peter calls Him "a living Stone, disallowed indeed
of men, but chosen of God." [1426] And the stone is set at "the head,"
because "Christ is the Head of the man." [1427] And "the stone" was
anointed, because "Christ" was so called from His being anointed. And
in the revelation of Christ, the ladder from earth to heaven is seen,
or from heaven to earth, and the Angels ascending and descending. What
this means, we shall see more clearly, when we have quoted the
testimony from the Lord Himself in the Gospel. You know that Jacob is
the same as Israel. For when he wrestled with the Angel, and
"prevailed," and had been blest by Him over whom he prevailed, his
named was changed, so that he was called "Israel;" just as the people
of Israel "prevailed" [1428] against Christ, so as to crucify Him, and
nevertheless was (in those who believed in Christ) blest by Him over
whom it prevailed. But many believed not; hence the halting of Jacob.
Here we have at once, blessing and halting. Blessing on those who
became believers; for we know that afterward many of that people did
believe: Halting on the other hand in those who believed not. And
because the greater part believed not, and but few believed, therefore
that a halting might be produced, He touched "the breadth [1429] of his
thigh." [1430] What is meant by the breadth of the thigh? The great
multitude of his descendants. [1431] ...
19. "God, Thy God, hath anointed Thee." We have been speaking of God,
who was "anointed;" i.e. of Christ. The name of Christ could not be
more clearly expressed than by His being called "God the Anointed." In
the same way in which He was "beautiful before the children of men," so
is He here "anointed with the oil of gladness above His fellows." Who
then are His "fellows"? The children of men; for that He Himself (as
the Son of Man) became partaker of their mortality in order to make
them partakers of His Immortality.
20. "Out of Thy garments is the smell of myrrh, amber, and cassia"
(ver. 8). Out of Thy garments is perceived the smell of fragrant
odours. By His garments are meant His Saints, His elect, His whole
Church, which he shows forth, as His garment, so to speak; His robe
"without spot and wrinkle," [1432] which on account of its spots He has
"washed" in His blood; on account of its "wrinkles" extended on His
Cross. Hence the sweet savour which is signified by certain perfumes
there mentioned. Hear Paul, that "least of the Apostles" (that "hem of
that garment," which the woman with the issue of blood touched, and was
healed), hear him saying: "We are a sweet savour of Christ, in every
place, both in them that are saved, and in them that perish." [1433] He
did not say, "We are a sweet savour in them that are saved, and a foul
savour in them that are lost:" but, as far as relates to ourselves, "we
are a sweet savour both in them that are saved, and in them that
perish."...They who loved him were saved by the odour of "sweet
savour;" they who envied him, perished by means of that "sweet savour."
To them that perished then he was not a foul "savour," but a "sweet
savour." For it was for this very reason they the more envied him, the
more excellent that grace was which reigned in him: for no man envies
him who is unhappy. He then was glorious in the preaching of God's
Word, and in regulating his life according to the rule of that "rod of
direction;" and he was loved by those who loved Christ in him, who
followed after and pursued the odour of sweet savour; who loved the
friend of the bridegroom: that is to say, by the Bride Herself, who
says in the Song of Songs, [1434] "We will run after the sweet savour
of thy perfumes." But the others, the more they beheld him invested
with the glory of the preaching of the Gospel, and of an irreproachable
life, were so much the more tortured with envy, and found that sweet
savour prove death to them.
21. "Out of thy ivory palaces, whereby kings' daughters have made Thee
glad." Choose whichever you please, "ivory" palaces, or "magnificent,"
or "royal" palaces, it is out of these that the kings' daughters have
made Christ glad. Would you understand the spiritual sense of "ivory
palaces"? Understand by them the magnificent houses, and tabernacles of
God, the hearts of the Saints; and by these self-same "kings" those who
rule their flesh; who bring into subjection to themselves the
rebellious commonalty of human affections, who chastise the body, and
reduce it to bondage: for it is from these that the daughters of kings
have made Him glad. For all the souls that have been born through their
preaching and evangelizing are "daughters of kings:" and the Churches,
as the daughters of Apostles, are daughters of kings. For He is "King
of kings;" they themselves kings, of whom it was said, "Ye shall sit
upon twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel." [1435] They
preached the "Word of Truth;" and begat Churches not for themselves,
but for Him....Therefore as "raising up seed [1436] to their brother,"
to as many as they begat, they gave the name not of "Paulians" or
"Petrians," but of "Christians." Observe whether that sense is not
wakefully kept [1437] in these verses. For when he said, "out of the
ivory palaces, he spake of mansions royal, ample, honourable, peaceful,
like the heart of the Saints; he added, "Whereby the kings' daughters
have made Thee glad in Thine honour." They are indeed daughters of
kings, daughters of thine Apostles, but still "in Thine honour:" for
they raised up seed to their brother. Hence Paul, when he saw those
whom he had raised up unto his Brother, running after his own name,
exclaimed, "Was Paul crucified for you?" [1438] ...No; for he says, "Or
were ye baptized in the name of Paul?"
"The daughters of kings have made Thee glad in Thine honour." Keep,
hold fast this "in Thine honour." This is meant by having "a wedding
garment;" seeking His honour, His glory. Understand moreover by "kings'
daughters" the cities, which were founded by kings, and have received
the faith: and out of the ivory palaces (palaces rich, the proud, the
lifted up). "Kings' daughters have made Thee glad in Thine honour;" in
that they sought not the honour of their founders, but have sought
Thine honour. Show me at Rome a temple of Romulus held in so great
honour as I can show you the Monument of Peter. [1439] In Peter, who is
honoured but He who died for us? For we are followers of Christ, not
followers of Peter. And even if we were born from the brother of Him
that is dead, yet are we named after the name of Him who is dead.
[1440] We were begotten by the one, but begotten to the other. Behold,
Rome, Carthage, and several other cities are the daughters of kings,
and yet have they "made glad the King in His honour:" and all these
make up one single Queen.
22. What a nuptial song! Behold in the midst of songs full of
rejoicing, comes forth the Bride herself. For the Bridegroom was
coming. It was He who was being described: it was on Him all our
attention was fixed.
"Upon Thy right hand did stand the Queen" (ver. 9). She which stands on
the left is no Queen. For there will be one standing on "the left"
also, to whom it will be said, "Go into everlasting fire." [1441] But
she shall stand on the right hand, to whom it will be said, "Come, ye
blessed of My Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the
foundation of the world." [1442] On Thy right hand did stand the Queen,
"in a vesture of gold, clothed about with divers colours." What is the
vesture of this Queen? It is one both precious, and also of divers
colours: it is the mysteries of doctrine in all the various tongues:
one African, one Syrian, one Greek, one Hebrew, one this, and one that;
it is these languages that produce the divers colours of this vesture.
[1443] But just as all the divers colours of the vesture blend together
in the one vesture, so do all the languages in one and the same faith.
In that vesture, let there be diversity, let there be no rent. See we
have "understood" the divers colours of the diversity of tongues; and
the vesture to refer to unity: but in that diversity itself, what is
meant by the "gold"? Wisdom itself. Let there be any diversity of
tongues you please, but there is but one "gold" that is preached of:
not a different gold, but a different form of that gold. For it is the
same Wisdom, the same doctrine and discipline that every language
preaches. In the languages there is diversity; gold in the thoughts.
23. The Prophet addresses this Queen (for he delights in singing to
her), and moreover each one of us, provided, however, we know where we
are, and endeavour to belong to that body, and do belong to it in faith
and hope, being united in the membership of Christ. [1444] For it is us
whom he addresses, saying, "Hearken, O daughter, and behold" (ver. 10),
as being one of the "Fathers" (for they are "daughters of kings"),
although it be a Prophet, or although it be an Apostle [1445] that is
addressing her; addressing her, as a daughter, for we are accustomed to
speak in this way, "Our fathers the Prophets, our fathers the
Apostles;" if we address them as "fathers," they may address us as
children: and it is one father's voice addressing one daughter.
"Hearken, O daughter, and see." "Hear" first; afterward "see." For they
came to us with the Gospel; and that has been preached to us, which as
yet we do not see, and which on hearing of it we believed, which by
believing it, we shall come to see: even as the Bridegroom Himself
speaks in the Prophet, "A people whom I have not known served me. In
the hearing of me with the ear it obeyed me." [1446] What is meant by
on "hearing of me with the ear"? That they did not "see." The Jews saw
Him, and crucified Him; the Gentiles saw Him not, and believed. Let the
Queen who comes from the Gentiles come in "the vesture of gold, clothed
with divers colours;" [1447] let her come from among the Gentiles clad
in all languages, in the unity of Wisdom: let it be said unto her,
"Hearken, O daughter, and see." If thou wilt not hear, thou shalt not
"see."...
"And incline thine ear." It is not enough to "hearken;" hearken with
humility: bow down thine ear. "Forget also thine own people, and thy
father's house." There was a certain "people," and a certain house of
thy father, in which thou wast born, the people of Babylon, having the
devil for thy king. Whencesoever the Gentiles came, they came from
their father the devil; but they have renounced their sonship to the
devil. "Forget also thine own people, and thy father's house." He, in
making thee a sinner, begat thee loathsome: the Other, in that "He
justifies the ungodly," [1448] begetteth thee again in beauty.
24. "For the King hath greatly desired thy beauty" (ver. 11). What
"beauty" is that, save that which is His own work? "Greatly desired the
beauty"--Of whom? Of her the sinner, the unrighteous, the ungodly, such
as she was with her "father," the devil, and among her own "people"?
No, but hers of whom it is said, "Who is this that cometh up made
white?" [1449] She was not white then at the first, but was "made"
white afterwards. For "though your sins shall be as scarlet, I will
make them white as snow." [1450] "The king has greatly desired thy
beauty." What King is this? "For He is the Lord thy God." [1451] Now
consider whether thou oughtest not to forego that thy father, and thy
own people, and to come to this King, who is thy God? Thy God is "thy
King," thy "King" is also thy Bridegroom. Thou weddest to thy King, who
is thy God: being endowed by Him, being adorned by Him; redeemed by
Him, and healed by Him. Whatever thou hast, wherewith to be pleasing to
Him, thou hast from Him.
25. "And the daughters of Tyre shall worship Him with gifts" (ver. 12).
It is that selfsame "King, who is thy God," that the daughters of Tyre
shall worship with gifts. The daughters of Tyre are the daughters of
the Gentiles; the part standing for the whole. Tyre, a city bordering
on this country, where the prophecy was delivered, typified the nations
that were to believe in Christ. Thence came that Canaanitish woman, who
was at first called "a dog;" for that ye may know that she was from
thence, the Gospel speaks thus. "He departed into the parts of Tyre and
Sidon, and behold a woman of Canaan came out of the same coasts," with
all the rest that is related there. She who at first, at the house of
her "father," and among her "own people," was but "a dog," who by
coming to, and crying after that "King," was made beautiful by
believing in Him, what did she obtain to hear? "O woman, great is thy
faith." [1452] "The King has greatly desired thy beauty. And the
daughters of Tyre shall worship with gifts." [1453] With what gifts?
Even so would this King be approached, and would have His treasuries
filled: and it is He Himself who has given us that wherewith they may
be filled, and may be filled [1454] by you. Let them come (He says) and
"worship Him with gifts." What is meant by "with gifts"?..."Give alms,
and all things are clean unto you." Come with gifts to Him that saith,
"I will have mercy rather than sacrifice." [1455] To that Temple that
existed aforetime as a shadow of that which was to come, they used to
come with bulls, and rams, and goats, with every different kind of
animal for sacrifice: that with that blood one thing should be done,
and another be typified by it. Now that very blood, which all these
things used to figure, hath come: the King Himself hath come, and He
Himself would have your "gifts." What gifts? Alms. For He Himself will
judge hereafter, and will Himself hereafter account "gifts" to certain
persons. "Come" (He says), "ye blessed of My Father." Why? "I was an
hungred, and ye gave Me meat," [1456] etc. These are the gifts with
which the daughters of Tyre worship the King; for when they said, "When
saw we Thee?" He who is at once above and below (whence those
"ascending" and "descending" are spoken of [1457] ), said, "Inasmuch as
ye have done it unto one of the least of Mine, ye have done it unto
Me." [1458]
26. ..."The rich among the people shall entreat Thy face." Both they
who shall entreat that face, and He whose face they will entreat, are
all collectively but one Bride, but one Queen, mother and children
belonging all together unto Christ, belonging unto their Head....
27. "All the glory of her, the King's daughter, is from within" (ver.
13). Not only is her robe, outwardly, "of gold, and of divers colours;"
but He who loved her beauty, knew her to be also beautiful within.
[1459] What are those inward charms? [1460] Those of conscience. It is
there Christ sees; it is there Christ loves her: it is there He
addresses her, there punishes, there crowns. Let then thine alms be
done in secret; for "all the glory of her, the King's daughter, is from
within." "With fringes of gold, clothed with divers colours" (ver. 14).
Her beauty is from within; yet in the "fringes of gold" is the
diversity of languages: the beauty of doctrine. What do these avail, if
them be not that beauty "from within"? "The virgins shall be brought
unto the King after her." It has been fulfilled indeed. The Church has
believed; the Church has been formed throughout all nations. And to
what a degree do virgins now seek to find favour in the eyes of that
King! Whence are they moved to do so? Even because the Church preceded
them. "The virgins shall be brought unto the King after her. Her near
kinswomen [1461] shall be brought unto Thee." For they that are brought
unto Him are not strangers, but her "near kinswomen," that belong to
her. And because he had said, "unto the King," he says, turning the
discourse to Him, "her near kinswomen shall be brought unto Thee."
28. "With gladness and rejoicing shall they be brought and shall be led
into the Temple of the King" (ver. 15). The "Temple of the King" is the
Church itself: it is the Church itself that enters into "the Temple of
the King." Whereof is that Temple constructed? Of the men who enter the
Temple? Who but God's "faithful" ones are its "living stones"? [1462]
"They shall be led into the Temple of the King." For there are virgins
without the Temple of the King, the nuns among the heretics: [1463]
they are virgins, it is true; but what will that profit them, unless
they be led into the "Temple of the King"? The "Temple of the King" is
in unity: the "Temple of the King" is not ruinous, is not rent asunder,
is not divided. The cement [1464] of those living stones is "charity."
29. "Instead of thy fathers, children are born to thee" (ver. 16).
Nothing can be more manifest. Now consider the "Temple of the King"
itself, for it is on its behalf he speaks, on account of the unity of
the body that is spread throughout all the world: for those very
persons who have chosen to be virgins, cannot find favour with the King
unless they be led into the Temple of the King. "Instead of thy
fathers, are thy children born to thee." It was the Apostles begat
thee: they were "sent:" they were the preachers: they are "the
fathers." But was it possible for them to be with us in the body for
ever? Although one of them said, "I desire to depart, and to be with
Christ, which is far better: to abide in the flesh is necessary for
your sakes." It is true he said this, but how long was it possible for
him to remain here? Could it be till this present time, could it be to
all futurity? Is the Church then left desolate by their departure? God
forbid. "Instead of thy fathers, children have been born to thee." What
is that? The Apostles were sent to thee as "fathers," instead of the
Apostles sons have been born to thee: there have been appointed
Bishops. For in the present day, whence do the Bishops, throughout all
the world, derive their origin? The Church itself calls them fathers;
the Church itself brought them forth, and placed them on the thrones of
"the fathers." Think not thyself abandoned then, because thou seest not
Peter, nor seest Paul: seest not those through whom thou wert born. Out
of thine own offspring has a body of "fathers" been raised up to thee.
"Instead of thy fathers, have children been born to thee." Observe how
widely diffused is the "Temple of the King," that "the virgins that are
not led to the Temple of the King," may know that they have nothing to
do with that marriage. "Thou shalt make them princes [1465] over all
the earth." This is the Universal Church: her children have been made
"princes over all the earth:" her children have been appointed instead
of the "fathers." Let those who are cut off own the truth of this, let
them come to the One Body: let them be led into the Temple of the King.
God hath established His Temple everywhere: hath laid everywhere "the
foundations of the Prophets and Apostles." [1466] The Church has
brought "forth sons;" has made them "instead of her fathers" to be
"princes over all the earth."
30. "They shall be mindful of thy name in every generation and
generation; therefore shall the peoples confess unto [1467] Thee" (ver.
17). What does it profit then to "confess" indeed and yet to confess
out of "the Temple"? What does it profit to pray, and yet not to pray
on the Mount? "I cried," says he, "unto the Lord with my voice: and He
heard me out of His holy hill." [1468] Out of what "hill"? Out of that
of which it is said, "A city set upon a hill cannot be hid." [1469] Of
what "hill"? Out of that hill which Daniel saw "grow out of a small
stone, and break all the kingdoms of the earth; and cover all the face
of the earth." [1470] There let him pray, who hopes to receive: there
let him ask, who would have his prayer heard: there let him confess,
who wishes to be pardoned. "Therefore shall the peoples confess unto
thee for ever, world without end." For in that eternal life it is true
indeed there will no longer be the mourning over sins: but yet in the
praises of God by that everlasting City which is above, there will not
be wanting a perpetual confession of the greatness of that happiness.
For to that City itself, to which another Psalm [1471] sings, "Glorious
things are spoken of thee, O City of God," to her who is the very Bride
of Christ, the very Queen, a "King's daughter, and a King's
consort;"...the peoples shall for this very cause confess even to
herself; the hearts of all, now enlightened by perfect charity, being
laid bare, and made manifest, that she may know the whole of herself
most completely, who here is, in many parts of her, unknown to
herself....
__________________________________________________________________
[1363] Lat. XLIV.
[1364] Some copies have qui for "those (persons) that."
[1365] 1 Cor. ii. 8.
[1366] John xiv. 9.
[1367] Qui fiunt nuptiae (omitted in some mss.).
[1368] Scholasticis; mss. scolasticis="scholars," or perhaps
scoliasticis, "ballad-mongers."--Ben.
[1369] "Songs of the Bridechamber."
[1370] Thalamus. Ps. xix. 5, so Vulgate.
[1371] Matt. xix. 5. [For this point in the theology of the
Incarnation, see A.N.F. vol. vii. p. 367, Athanas. Creed, part ii.--C.]
[1372] Eructavit verbum bonum. [See Justin Martyr, vol. i. p. 213,
A.N.F., and Cyprian, vol. v. p. 516, A.N.F., and so passim.--C.]
[1373] Nativitatem.
[1374] Conjugium.
[1375] [Confusion comes to the human mind by arguing from humanity up
to God. His is the only true generative process; the production of a
Son by man is not to be considered in process, but in product only.
This product is of one substance with the human (though divided). The
undivided substance of the Divine Father is the one substance of the
Son, by eternal generation.--C.]
[1376] So all mss. antequam stet, stat consilium, acc. to Ben., which
however reads antequam stet in opere, stat in consilio. "That building,
before it subsists in construction, subsists in design." On the meaning
of Verbum see St. Aug. on John i. 1. St. Ath. on Nic. Def. c. 4, and
Disc. i. against Ar. c. 6.
[1377] John i. 3.
[1378] Heb. xi. 3.
[1379] Col. i. 16.
[1380] Ps. lxii. 11.
[1381] Heb. i. 1, 2.
[1382] Heb. i. 3, 4, 5.
[1383] Nec esset in rebus, nisi esset in verbo.
[1384] John i. 3, 4.
[1385] 1 Cor. x. 4.
[1386] John i. 29.
[1387] Rev. v. 5.
[1388] Ps. cxlvii. 15.
[1389] Antiquarios.
[1390] 1 Tim. ii. 5.
[1391] John i. 17.
[1392] Lit. "my works."
[1393] 2 Pet. iii. 4.
[1394] Ps. xcv. 2.
[1395] Matt. x. 34.
[1396] Luke xii. 52.
[1397] Litigat.
[1398] Recipitur. He seems to mean that the Catholic daughter-in-law
who receives the word of Christ is sure not to submit to heretical
baptism. [On which compare Cyprian's teaching, A.N.F. vol. v. pp.
376-385, etc.--C.]
[1399] Gen. xlix. 10. E.V. "from between his feet."
[1400] "In illa veluti humilitate seminis esse magnitudinem Nominis."
[The promise (Gen. iii. 15) dignified the loins of Isaac (Gen. xvii.
19) as with the Incarnation in its germ. Hence this mysterious form of
oath was an oath by the Promised Seed (Gal. iii. 16). St. Paul quotes
"the promises" (not one text only), and honours the Septuagint, which
gives what he makes so emphatic in Gen. xii. 7, xv. 18, and xxii.
18.--C.]
[1401] Gen. xxiv. 2.
[1402] Ps. lxxxv. 11.
[1403] Isa. liii. 7.
[1404] Luke xxiii. 34.
[1405] Virtutem.
[1406] Malitias.
[1407] Song of Sol. ii. 5.
[1408] In corde, editions not in mss.
[1409] Acts ix. 6.
[1410] O aeternitatis divinitas.
[1411] Quia non pluit.
[1412] Quia fluit.
[1413] Collineari.
[1414] Rex, a regendo.
[1415] Non autem regit qui non corrigit.
[1416] Rectorum.
[1417] Haec est tota virga. Al. tuta, "This is a safe rod."
[1418] Ps. ii. 9.
[1419] Ps. li. 9.
[1420] Animum advertere.
[1421] Ps. li. 3.
[1422] Al. "The visible oil is for a sign of the oil invisible, for it
is in a sacrament." [The use of oil in confirmation, designed to teach
this, operated to conceal it rather; the material chrism absorbing the
spiritual idea.--C.]
[1423] Gen. xxviii. 11-18.
[1424] [With which he subjoins a reference to John i. 51.--C.]
[1425] Ps. cxviii. 22.
[1426] 1 Pet. ii. 4.
[1427] 1 Cor. xi. 3.
[1428] Luke xxiii. 23.
[1429] Latitudinem; but Vulgate, nervum.
[1430] Gen. xxxii. 25.
[1431] Multitudo generis.
[1432] Eph. v. 27.
[1433] 2 Cor. ii. 14, 15.
[1434] Sol. Song i. 3, Lat.
[1435] Matt. xix. 28.
[1436] Oxf. mss. add, "For the Brother's name's sake."
[1437] Vigilat.
[1438] 1 Cor. i. 13.
[1439] Memoriam Petri. [The first basilica of St. Peter, on the
Vatican, is attributed to Constantine.--C.]
[1440] Deut. xxv. 26.
[1441] Matt. xxv. 41.
[1442] Matt. xxv. 34.
[1443] [Hence the beauty of a Liturgy is not that it should be in
(Latin) one language, but in the many tongues of the many nations,
confessing one faith. A.N.F. vol. vii. p. 533.--C.]
[1444] Uniti in membris Christ.
[1445] Al. "and thus a Prophet addresses her, and thus an Apostle
addresses her."
[1446] Ps. xviii. 43, 44.
[1447] Ben. "with truth." Oxf. mss. varietate.
[1448] Rom. iv. 5.
[1449] Sol. Song viii. 5. Dealbata; or, Vulgate, deliciis affluens.
[1450] Isa. i. 18.
[1451] [With the Septuagint our author omits et adora cum. The text of
the Vulgate here, and that of St. Augustin and of Jerome's Hebraic
Psalter, differ widely.--C.]
[1452] Matt. xv. 21-28.
[1453] "They shall worship Him with gifts." [A truly Punic outburst,
and full of point for the Carthaginians. A.N.F. vol. iii. p. 3.--C.]
[1454] Or, "and let them be filled." Al. "and they are filled."
[1455] Hos. vi. 6; Matt. ix. 13.
[1456] Matt. xxv. 34, 35.
[1457] Gen. xxviii. 12. See S: 18. John i. 51.
[1458] Matt. xxv. 40.
[1459] [Omnis gloria filiae regis intrinsecus is Jerome's version of
the Hebrew; preferable, certainly, to the tame idea of modern critics,
that "within" means "(intus domum) within the palaces."--C.]
[1460] Interiora pulcritudinis.
[1461] Proximae.
[1462] 1 Pet. ii. 4.
[1463] Haereticae sanctimoniales.
[1464] Junctura.
[1465] [Not worldly princes, but spiritual chiefs and leaders of the
flock.--C.]
[1466] Eph. ii. 20.
[1467] E.V. "praise Thee."
[1468] Ps. iii. 4.
[1469] Matt. v. 14.
[1470] Dan. ii. 34, 35.
[1471] Ps. lxxxvii. 3.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XLVI. [1472]
1. It is called, "A Psalm, to the end, for the sons of Korah, for
things secret." Secret is it then; but He Himself, who in the place of
Calvary was crucified, ye know, hath rent the veil, [1473] that the
secrets of the temple might be discovered. Furthermore since the Cross
of our Lord was a key, whereby things closed might be opened; let us
trust that He will be with us, that these secrets may be revealed. What
is said, "To the end," always ought to be understood of Christ. For
"Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to every one that
believeth." [1474] But The End He is called, not because He consumeth,
but because He perfecteth. For ended call we the food which is eaten,
and ended the coat which is woven, the former to consumption, the
latter to perfection. Because then we have not where to go farther when
we have come to Christ, Himself is called the end of our course. Nor
ought we to think, that when we have come to Him, we ought to strive
any further to come also to the Father. For this thought Philip also,
when he said to Him, "Lord, show us the Father, and it sufficeth us."
When he said, "It sufficeth us," he sought the end of satisfaction and
perfection. Then said He, "Have I been so long time with you, and hast
thou not known Me, Philip: he that hath seen Me, hath seen the Father."
[1475] In Him then have we the Father, because He is in the Father, and
the Father in Him, and He and His Father are One. [1476]
2. "Our God is a refuge and strength" (ver. 1). There are some refuges
wherein is no strength, whereto when any fleeth, he is more weakened
than strengthened. Thou fleest, for example, to some one greater in the
world, that thou mayest make thyself a powerful friend; this seemeth to
thee a refuge. Yet so great are this world's uncertainties, and so
frequent grow the ruins of the powerful day by day, that when to such
refuge thou art come, thou beginnest to fear more than ever
therein....Our refuge is not such, but our refuge is strength. When
thither we have fled, we shall be firm.
3. "A helper in tribulations, which find us out too much." Tribulations
are many, and in every tribulation unto God must we flee; whether it be
a tribulation in our estate, or in our body's health, or about the
peril of those dearest to us, or any other thing necessary to the
sustaining of this life, refuge ought there to be none at all to a
Christian man, other than his Saviour, other than his God, to whom when
he has fled, he is strong. For he will not in himself be strong, nor
will he to himself be strength, but He will be his strength, who has
become his refuge. But, dearly beloved, among all tribulations of the
human soul is no greater tribulation than the consciousness of sin. For
if there be no wound herein, and that be sound within man which is
called conscience, wherever else he may suffer tribulation, thither
will he flee, and there find God....Ye see, dearly beloved, when trees
are cut down and proved by the carpenters, sometimes in the surface
they seem as though injured and rotten; but the carpenter looks into
the inner marrow as it were of the tree, and if within he find the wood
sound, he promises that it will last in a building; nor will he be very
anxious about the injured surface, when that which is within he
declares sound. Furthermore, to man anything more inward than
conscience is not found; what then profits it, if what is without is
sound, and the marrow of conscience has become rotton? These are close
and vehement overmuch, and as this Psalm saith, too great tribulations;
yet even in these the Lord hath become a helper by forgiving sin. For
the consciences of the ungodly hateth nothing save indulgence; for if
one saith he hath great tribulations, being a confessed debtor to the
treasury, when he beholdeth the narrowness of his estate, and seeth
that he cannot be solvent; if on account of the distrainers every year
hanging over him, he saith that he suffereth great tribulations, and
doth not breathe freely except in hope of indulgence, and that in
things earthly; [1477] how much more the debtor of penalties out of the
abundance of sins: when shall he pay what he owes out of his evil
conscience, when if he pay, he perisheth? For to pay this debt, is to
undergo the penalties. Remaineth then that of His indulgence, we may be
secure, yet so that, indulgence received, we return not again to
contract debts....
4. Now then, such security received, what say they? "Therefore will not
we fear, when the earth shall be confounded" (ver. 2). Just before
anxious, suddenly secure; out of too great tribulations set in great
tranquillity. For in them Christ was sleeping, therefore were they
tossed: Christ awoke (as but now we heard out of the Gospel), He
commanded the winds, and they were still. [1478] Since Christ is in
each man's heart by faith, it is signified to us, that his heart as a
ship in this world's tempest is tossed, who forgetteth his faith: as
though Christ sleeping it is tossed, but Christ awaking cometh
tranquillity. Nay, the Lord Himself, what said He? "Where is your
faith?" [1479] Christ aroused, aroused up faith, that what had been
done in the ship, might be done in their hearts. "A helper in
tribulations, which found us [1480] out too much." He caused that
therein should be great tranquillity.
5. See what tranquillity: "Therefore will not we fear when the earth
shall be confounded, and the mountains shall be carried into the heart
of the sea." Then we shall find not fear. Let us seek mountains
carried, and if we can find, it is manifest that this is our security.
The Lord truly said to His disciples, "If ye have faith as a grain of
mustard seed, ye shall say to this mountain, Be Thou removed, and be
Thou cast into the sea, and it shall be done." [1481] Haply "to this
mountain," He said of Himself; for He is called a Mountain: "It shall
come to pass in the last days, that the mountain of the Lord shall be
manifest." [1482] But this Mountain is placed above other mountains;
because the Apostles also are mountains, supporting this Mountain.
Therefore followeth, "In the last days the Mountain of the Lord shall
be manifest, established in the top of the mountains." Therefore
passeth It the tops of all mountains, and on the top of all mountains
is It placed; because the mountains are preaching The Mountain. But the
sea signifieth this world, in comparison of which sea, like earth
seemed the nation of the Jews. For it was not covered over with the
bitterness of idolatry, but, like dry land, was surrounded with the
bitterness of the Gentiles as with sea. It was to be, that the earth be
confounded, that is, that nation of the Jews; and that the mountains be
carried into the heart of the sea, that is, first that great Mountain
established in the top of the mountains. For He deserted the nation of
the Jews, and came among the Gentiles. He was carried from the earth
into the sea. Who carrying Him? The Apostles, to whom He had said, "If
ye have faith as a grain of mustard seed, ye shall say to this
mountain, Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea, and it shall
be done:" that is, through your most faithful preaching it shall come
to pass, that this mountain, that is, I Myself, be preached among the
Gentiles, be glorified among the Gentiles, be acknowledged among the
Gentiles, and that be fulfilled which was predicted of Me, "A people
whom I have not known shall serve Me." [1483] ...
6. "The waters thereof roared, and were troubled" (ver. 3): when the
Gospel was preached, "What is this? He seemeth to be a setter forth of
strange gods:" [1484] this the Athenians; but the Ephesians, with what
tumult would they have slain the Apostles, when in the theatre, for
their goddess Diana, they made such an uproar, as to be shouting,
"Great is Diana of the Ephesians!" [1485] Amidst which waves and
roaring of the sea, feared not they who to that refuge had fled. Nay,
the Apostle Paul would enter in to the theatre, and was kept back by
the disciples, because it was necessary that he should still abide in
the flesh for their sakes. But yet, "the waters thereof roared, and
were troubled: the mountains shook at the mightiness thereof." Whose
might? The sea's? or rather God's, of whom was said, "refuge and
strength, a helper in tribulations, which have found us out too much?"
For shaken were the mountains, that is, the powers of this world. For
one thing are the mountains of God, another the mountains of the world:
the mountains of the world, they whose head is the devil, the mountains
of God, they whose Head is Christ. But by these mountains were shaken
those mountains. Then gave they their voices against Christians, when
the mountains were shaken, the waters roaring; for the mountains were
shaken, and there was made a great earthquake, with quaking of the sea.
But against whom this? Against the City founded upon a rock. The waters
roar, the mountains shake, the Gospel being preached. What then, the
City of God? Hear what followeth.
7. "The streams of the river make glad the City of God" (ver. 4). When
the mountains shake, when the sea rages, God deserteth not His City, by
the streams of the river. What are these streams of the river? That
overflowing of the Holy Spirit, of which the Lord said, "If any man
thirst, let him come unto Me, and drink. He that believeth on Me, out
of his bosom [1486] shall flow rivers of living water." [1487] These
rivers then flowed out of the bosom [1488] of Paul, Peter, John, the
other Apostles, the other faithful Evangelists. Since these rivers
flowed from one river, many "streams of the river make glad the City of
God." For that ye might know this to be said of the Holy Spirit, in the
same Gospel next said the Evangelist, "But this spake He of the Spirit,
which they that were to believe on Him should receive. For the Holy
Ghost was not yet given, because that Jesus was not yet glorified."
[1489] Jesus being glorified after His Resurrection, glorified after
His Ascension, on the day of Pentecost came the Holy Spirit, and filled
the believers, [1490] who spake with tongues, and began to preach the
Gospel to the Gentiles. Hence was the City of God made glad, while the
sea was troubled by the roaring of its waters, while the mountains were
confounded, asking what they should do, how drive out the new doctrine,
how root out the race of Christians from the earth. Against whom?
Against the streams of the river making glad the City of God. For
thereby showed He of what river He spake; that He signified the Holy
Spirit, by "the streams of the river make glad the City of God." And
what follows? "The Most High hath sanctified His tabernacle:" since
then there followeth the mention of Sanctification, it is manifest that
these streams of the river are to be understood of the Holy Spirit, by
whom is sanctified every godly soul believing in Christ, that it may be
made a citizen of the City of God.
8. "God is in the midst of her: she shall not be moved" (ver. 5). Let
the sea rage, the mountains shake; "God is in the midst of her: she
shall not be moved." What is, "in the midst of her"? That God stands in
any one place, and they surround Him who believe in Him? Then is God
circumscribed by place; and broad that which surroundeth, narrow that
which is surrounded? God forbid. No such thing imagine of God, who is
contained in no place, whose seat is the conscience of the godly: and
so is God's seat in the hearts of men, that if man fall from God, God
in Himself abideth, not falleth like one not finding where to be. For
rather doth He lift up thee, that thou mayest be in Him, than so lean
upon thee, as if thou withdraw thyself, to fall. Himself if He
withdraw, fall wilt thou: thyself if thou withdraw, fall will not He.
What then is, "God is in the midst of her"? It signifieth that God is
equal to all, and accepteth not persons. For as that which is in the
middle has equal distances to all the boundaries, so God is said to be
in the middle, because He consulteth equally for all. "God is in the
midst of her: she shall not be moved." Wherefore shall she not be
moved? Because God is in the midst of her. He is "the Helper in
tribulations that have found us out too much. God shall help her with
His Countenance." What is, "with His Countenance"? With manifestation
of Himself. How manifests God Himself, so as that we see His
Countenance? I have already told you; ye have learned God's Presence;
we have learned it through His works. When from Him we receive any help
so that we cannot at all doubt that it was granted to us by the Lord,
then God's Countenance is with us.
9. "The heathen are troubled" (ver. 6). And how troubled? why troubled?
To cast down the City of God, in the midst whereof is God? To overthrow
the tabernacle sanctified, which God helpeth with His Countenance? No:
with a wholesome trouble are the heathen now troubled. For what
followeth? "And the kingdoms are bowed." Bowed, saith He, are the
kingdoms; not now erected that they may rage, but bowed that they may
adore. When were the kingdoms bowed? When that came to pass which was
predicted in another Psalm, "All kings shall fall down before Him, all
nations shall serve Him." [1491] What cause made the kingdoms to bow?
Hear the cause. "The Most High gave His Voice, and the earth was
moved." The fanatics [1492] of idolatry, like frogs in the marshes,
clamoured, the more tumultuously, the more sordidly, in filth and mire.
And what is the brawling of frogs to the thunder of the clouds? For out
of them "the Most High gave His Voice, and the earth was moved:" He
thundered out of His clouds. And what are His clouds? His Apostles, His
preachers, by whom He thundered in precepts, lightened in miracles. The
same are clouds who are also mountains: mountains for their height and
firmness, clouds for their rain and fruitfulness. For these clouds
watered the earth, of which it was said, "The Most High gave His Voice,
and the earth was moved." For it is of those clouds that He threateneth
a certain barren vineyard, whence the mountains were carried into the
heart of the sea; "I will command," saith He, "the clouds that they
rain no rain upon it." [1493] This was fulfilled in that which I have
mentioned, when the mountains were carried into the heart of the sea;
when it was said, "It was necessary that the word of God should have
been spoken first to you; but seeing ye put it from you, we turn to the
Gentiles;" [1494] then was fulfilled, "I will command the clouds that
they rain no rain upon it." The nation of the Jews hath just so
remained as a fleece dry upon the ground. For this, ye know, happened
in a certain miracle, the ground was dry, the fleece only was wet, yet
rain in the fleece appeared not. [1495] So also the mystery of the New
Testament appeared not in the nation of the Jews. What there was the
fleece, is here the veil. For in the fleece was veiled the mystery. But
on the ground, in all the nations open lieth Christ's Gospel; the rain
is manifest, the Grace of Christ is bare, for it is not covered with a
veil. But that the rain might come out of it, the fleece was pressed.
For by pressure they from themselves excluded Christ, and the Lord now
from His clouds raineth on the ground, the fleece hath remained dry.
But of them then "the Most High gave His Voice," out of those clouds;
by which Voice the kingdoms were bowed and worshipped.
10. "The Lord of Hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is our taker up"
(ver. 7). Not any man, not any power, not, in short, Angel, or any
creature either earthly or heavenly, but "the Lord of Hosts is with us;
the God of Jacob is our taker up." He who sent Angels, came after
Angels, came that Angels might serve Him, came that men He might make
equal to Angels. Mighty Grace! If God be for us, who can be against us?
"The Lord of Hosts is with us." What Lord of Hosts is with us? "If" (I
say) "God be for us, who can be against us? He that spared not His own
Son, but delivered Him up for us all; how hath He not with Him also
freely given [1496] us all things." [1497] Therefore be we secure, in
tranquillity of heart nourish we a good conscience with the Bread of
the Lord. "The Lord of Hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is our taker
up." However great be thy infirmity, see who taketh thee up. One is
sick, a physician is called to him. His own taken-up, the Physician
calleth the sick man. Who hath taken him up? Even He. A great hope of
salvation; a great Physician hath taken him up. What Physician? [1498]
Every Physician save He is man: every Physician who cometh to a sick
man, another day can be made sick, beside Him. "The God of Jacob is our
taker up." Make thyself altogether as a little child, such as are taken
up by their parents. For those not taken up, are exposed; those taken
up are nursed. Thinkest thou God hath so taken thee up, as when an
infant thy mother took thee up? Not so, but to eternity. For thy voice
is in that Psalm, "My father and my mother forsake me, but the Lord
hath taken me up." [1499]
11. "Come and see the works of the Lord" (ver. 8). Now of this taking
up, what hath the Lord done? Consider the whole world, come and see.
For if thou comest not, thou seest not; if thou seest not, thou
believest not; if thou believest not, thou standest afar off: if thou
believest thou comest, if thou believest thou seest. For how came we to
that mountain? Not on foot? Is it by ship? Is it on the wing? Is it on
horses? For all that pertain to space and place, be not concerned,
trouble not thyself, He cometh to thee. For out of a small stone He
hath grown, and become a great mountain, so that He hath filled all the
face of the earth. Why then wouldest thou by land come to Him, who
filleth all lands? Lo, He hath already come: watch thou. By growing He
waketh even sleepers; if yet there is not in them so deep sleep, as
that they be hardened even against the mountain coming; but they hear,
"Awake, thou that sleepest, and arise from the dead, and Christ shall
give thee light." [1500] For it was a great thing for the Jews to see
the stone. For the stone was yet small: and small they deservedly
despised it, and despising they stumbled, and stumbling they were
broken; remains that they be ground to powder. For so was it said of
the stone, "Whosoever shall fall upon that stone shall be broken; but
on whomsoever it shall fall, it will grind him to powder." [1501] It is
one thing to be broken, another to be ground to powder. To be broken is
less than to be ground to powder: but none grindeth He coming exalted,
save whom He brake lying low. For now before His coming He lay low
before the Jews, and they stumbled at Him, and were broken; hereafter
shall He come in His Judgment, glorious and exalted, great and
powerful, not weak to be judged, but strong to judge, and grind to
powder those who were broken stumbling at Him. For "A stone of
stumbling and a rock of offence," [1502] is He to them that believe
not. Therefore, brethren, no wonder if the Jews acknowledged not Him,
whom as a small stone lying before their feet they despised. They are
to be wondered at, who even now so great a mountain will not
acknowledge. The Jews at a small stone by not seeing stumbled; the
heretics stumble at a mountain. For now that stone hath grown, now say
we unto them, Lo, now is fulfilled the prophecy of Daniel, "The stone
that was small became a great mountain, and filled the whole earth."
[1503] Wherefore stumble ye at Him, and go not rather up to Him? Who is
so blind as to stumble at a mountain? Came He to thee that thou
shouldest have whereat to stumble, and not have whereto to go up? "Come
ye, and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord." [1504] Isaiah saith
this: "Come ye, and let us go up." What is, "Come ye, and let us go
up"? "Come ye," is, Believe ye. "Let us go up," is, Let us profit.
[1505] But they will neither come, nor go up, nor believe, nor profit.
They bark against the mountain. Even now by so often stumbling on Him
they are broken, and will not go up, choosing always to stumble. Say we
to them, "Come ye, and see the works of the Lord:" what "prodigies He
hath set forth through the earth." Prodigies are called, because they
portend something, those signs of miracles which were done when the
world believed. And what thereafter came to pass, and what did they
portend?
12. "He maketh wars to cease unto the end of the earth" (ver. 9). This
not yet see we fulfilled: yet are there wars, wars among nations for
sovereignty; among sects, among Jews, Pagans, Christians, heretics, are
wars, frequent wars, some for the truth, some for falsehood contending.
Not yet then is this fulfilled, "He maketh wars to cease unto the end
of the earth;" but haply it shall be fulfilled. Or is it now also
fulfilled? In some it is fulfilled; in the wheat it is fulfilled, in
the tares it is not yet fulfilled. What is this then, "He maketh wars
to cease unto the end of the earth"? Wars He calleth whereby it is
warred against God. But who warreth against God? Ungodliness. And what
to God can ungodliness do? Nothing. What doth an earthen vessel dashed
against the rock, however vehemently dashed? With so much greater harm
to itself it cometh, with how much the greater force it cometh. These
wars were great, frequent were they. Against God fought ungodliness,
and earthen vessels were dashed in pieces, even men by presuming on
themselves, by too much prevailing by their own strength. This is that,
the shield whereof Job also named concerning one ungodly. "He runneth
against God, upon the stiff neck of his shield." [1506] What is, "upon
the stiff neck of his shield"? Presuming too much upon his own
protection. Were they such who said, "God is our refuge and strength, a
Helper in tribulations which have found us out too much"? or in another
Psalm, "For I will not trust in my bow, neither shall my sword save
me." [1507] When one learneth that in himself he is nothing, and help
in himself has none, arms in him are broken in pieces, wars are made to
cease. Such wars then destroyed that Voice of the Most High out of His
holy clouds, whereby the earth was moved, and the kingdoms were bowed.
These wars hath He made to cease unto the end of the earth. "He shall
break the bow, and dash in pieces the arms, and burn the shield with
fire." Bow, arms, shield, fire. [1508] The bow is plots; arms, public
warfare; shields, vain presuming of self-protection: the fire wherewith
they are burned, is that whereof the Lord said, "I am come to send fire
on the earth;" [1509] of which fire saith the Psalm, "There is nothing
hid from the heat thereof." [1510] This fire burning, no arms of
ungodliness shall remain in us, needs must all be broken, dashed in
pieces, burned. Remain thou unharmed, not having any help of thine own;
and the more weak thou art, having no arms thine own, the more He
taketh thee up, of whom it is said, "The God of Jacob is our taker
up."...But when God taketh us up, doth He send us away unarmed? He
armeth us, but with other arms, arms Evangelical, arms of truth,
continence, salvation, faith, hope, charity. These arms shall we have,
but not of ourselves: but the arms which of ourselves we had, are burnt
up: yet if by that fire of the Holy Spirit we are kindled, whereof it
is said, "He shall burn the shields with fire;" thee, who didst wish to
be powerful in thyself, hath God made weak, that He may make thee
strong in Him, because in thyself thou wast made weak.
13. What then followeth? "Be still." To what purpose? "And see that I
am God" (ver. 10). That is, Not ye, but I am God. I created, I create
anew; I formed, I form anew; I made, I make anew. If thou couldest not
make thyself, how canst thou make thyself anew? This seeth not the
contentious tumult of man's soul; to which contentious tumult is it
said, "Be still." That is, restrain your souls from contradiction. Do
not argue, and, as it were, arm against God. Else yet live thy arms,
not yet burned up with fire. But if they are burned, "Be still;"
because ye have not wherewith to fight. But if ye be still in
yourselves, and from Me seek all, who before presumed on yourselves,
then shall ye "see that I am God." "I will be exalted among the
heathen, I will be exalted in the earth." Just before I said, by the
name of earth is signified the nation of the Jews, by the name of sea
the other nations. The mountains were carried into the heart of the
sea; the nations are troubled, the kingdoms are bowed; the Most High
gave His Voice, and the earth was moved. "The Lord of Hosts is with us,
the God of Jacob is our taker up" (ver. 11). Miracles are done among
the heathen, full filled is the faith of the heathen; burned are the
arms of human presumption. Still are they, in tranquillity of heart, to
acknowledge God the Author of all their gifts. And after this
glorifying, doth He yet desert the people of the Jews? of which saith
the Apostle, "I say unto you, lest ye should be wise in your own
conceits; that blindness in part is happened unto Israel, until the
fulness of the Gentiles be come in." [1511] That is, until the
mountains be carried hither, the clouds rain here, the Lord here bows
the kingdoms with His thunder, "until the fulness of the Gentiles be
come in." And what thereafter? "And so all Israel shall be saved."
Therefore, here too observing the same order, "I will be exalted"
(saith He) "among the heathen, I will be exalted in the earth;" that
is, both in the sea, and in the earth, that now might all say what
followeth: "the God of Jacob is our taker up."
__________________________________________________________________
[1472] Lat. XLV. [In his exordium the Saint recurs to his favourite
idea as follows: "Korah is interpreted `Baldness,' and that our Lord,
since in the `place of the Bald skull' [Matt. xxvii. 33] He was
crucified, hath drawn unto Him many; like that corn of wheat, which
except it die, should abide alone; and that those who are drawn unto
Him are called sons of Korah [John xii. 24, 32]. Thus much in the
mystery. There were indeed some sons of Korah at the time when this was
first sung [1 Chron. xxvi. 1], but to us ought the Spirit to give life,
not the letter to be a veil" [2 Cor. iii. 6.]--C.]
[1473] Matt. xxvii. 51.
[1474] Rom. x. 4.
[1475] John xiv. 8, 9.
[1476] John x. 30, 38.
[1477] Many mss. "of earthly princes."
[1478] Matt. viii. 24-26.
[1479] Luke viii. 25.
[1480] Al. "them."
[1481] Matt. xvii. 20, xxi. 21.
[1482] Isa. ii. 2.
[1483] Ps. xviii. 43.
[1484] Acts xvii. 18.
[1485] Acts xix. 34.
[1486] ["Belly," English version. But I have not hesitated to
substitute a word more literal in fact, which relieves the text of a
ludicrous profanation.--C.]
[1487] John vii. 37, 38.
[1488] ["Belly," English version. But I have not hesitated to
substitute a word more literal in fact, which relieves the text of a
ludicrous profanation.--C.]
[1489] John vii. 39.
[1490] Acts ii. 1, 2.
[1491] Ps. lxxii. 11.
[1492] Arreptitii.
[1493] Isa. v. 6.
[1494] Acts xiii. 46.
[1495] Judg. vi. 36-40.
[1496] So Vulgate.
[1497] Rom. viii. 31, 32.
[1498] Oxf. mss. add, "hath taken him up? What Physician?"
[1499] Ps. xxvii. 10.
[1500] Eph. v. 14.
[1501] Luke xx. 18.
[1502] 1 Pet. ii. 8.
[1503] Dan. ii. 35.
[1504] Isa. ii. 3.
[1505] Oxf. mss. add, "come, and let us go up, believe, and let us
profit."
[1506] Job xv. 26.
[1507] Ps. xliv. 6.
[1508] Oxf. mss. "with fire."
[1509] Luke xii. 49.
[1510] Ps. xix. 6.
[1511] Rom. xi. 25.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XLVII. [1512]
1. The title of the Psalm goeth thus. "To the end: for the sons of
Korah: a Psalm of David himself." These sons of Korah have the title
also of some other Psalms, and indicate a sweet mystery, insinuate a
great Sacrament: wherein let us willingly understand ourselves, and let
us acknowledge in the title us who hear, and read, and as in a glass
set before us behold who we are. The sons of Korah, who are they?
[1513] ...Haply the sons of the Bridegroom. For the Bridegroom was
crucified in the place of Calvary. Recollect the Gospel, [1514] where
they crucified the Lord, and ye will find Him crucified in the place of
Calvary. Furthermore, they who deride His Cross, by devils, as by
beasts, are devoured. For this also a certain Scripture signified. When
God's Prophet Elisha was going up, children called after him mocking,
"Go up thou bald head, Go up thou bald head:" but he, not so much in
cruelty as in mystery, made those children to be devoured by bears out
of the wood. [1515] If those children had not been devoured, would they
have lived even till now? Or could they not, being born mortal, have
been taken off by a fever? But so in them had no mystery been shown,
whereby posterity might be put in fear. Let none then mock the Cross of
Christ. The Jews were possessed by devils, and devoured; for in the
place of Calvary, crucifying Christ, and lifting on the Cross, they
said as it were with childish sense, not understanding what they said,
"Go up, thou bald head." For what is, "Go up"? "Crucify Him, Crucify
Him." [1516] For childhood is set before us to imitate humility, and
childhood is set before us to beware of foolishness. To imitate
humility, childhood was set before us by the Lord, when He called
children to Him, [1517] and because they were kept from Him, He said,
"Suffer them to come unto Me, for of such is the Kingdom of Heaven."
[1518] The example of childhood is set before us to beware of
foolishness by the Apostle, "Brethren, be not children in
understanding:" and again he proposeth it to imitate, "Howbeit in
malice be ye children, that in understanding ye may be men." [1519]
"For the sons of Korah" the Psalm is sung; for Christians then is it
sung. Let us hear it as sons of the Bridegroom, whom senseless children
crucified in the place of Calvary. For they earned to be devoured by
beasts; we to be crowned by Angels. For we acknowledge the humility of
our Lord, and of it are not ashamed. We are not ashamed of Him called
in mystery "the bald" (Calvus), from the place of Calvary. For on the
very Cross whereon He was insulted, He permitted not our forehead to be
bald; for with His own Cross He marked it. Finally, that ye may know
that these things are said to us, see what is said.
2. "O clap your hands, all ye nations" (ver. 1). Were the people of the
Jews all the nations? No, but blindness in part is happened to Israel,
that senseless children might cry, "Calve," "Calve;" and so the Lord
might be crucified in the place of Calvary, that by His Blood shed He
might redeem the Gentiles, and that might be fulfilled which saith the
Apostle, "Blindness in part is happened unto Israel, until the fulness
of the Gentiles be come in." [1520] Let them insult, then, the vain,
and foolish, and senseless, and say, "Calve," "Calve;" but ye redeemed
by His Blood which was shed in the place of Calvary, say, "O clap your
hands, all ye nations;" because to you hath come down the Grace of God.
"O clap your hands." What is "O clap"? Rejoice. But wherefore with the
hands? Because with good works. Do not rejoice with the mouth while
idle with the hands. If ye rejoice, "clap your hands." The hands of the
nations let Him see, who joys hath deigned to give them. What is, the
hands of the nations? The acts of them doing good works. "O clap your
hands, all ye nations: shout unto God with the voice of triumph." Both
with voice and with hands. If with the voice only it is not well,
because the hands are slow; if only with the hands it is not well,
because the tongue is mute. Agree together must the hands and tongue.
Let this confess, these work. "Shout unto God with the voice of
triumph."
3. "For the Lord Most High is terrible" (ver. 2). The Most High in
descending made like one ludicrous, by ascending into Heaven is made
terrible. "A great King over all the earth." Not only over the Jews;
for over them also He is King. For of them also the Apostles believed
and of them many thousands of men sold their goods, and laid the price
at the Apostles' feet, [1521] and in them was fulfilled what in the
title of the Cross was written, "The King of the Jews." [1522] For He
is King also of the Jews. But "of the Jews" is little. [1523] "O clap
your hands, all ye nations: for God is the King of all the earth." For
it sufficeth not Him to have under Him one nation: therefore such great
price gave He out of His side, as to buy the whole world.
4. "He hath subdued the people under us, and the nations under our
feet" (ver. 3). Which subdued, and to whom? Who are they that speak?
Haply Jews? Surely, if Apostles; surely, if Saints. For under these God
hath subdued the people and the nations, that to-day are they honoured
among the nations, who by their own citizens earned to be slain: as
their Lord was slain by His citizens, and is honoured among the
nations; was crucified by His own, is adored by aliens, but those by a
price made His own. For therefore bought He us, that aliens from Him we
might not be. Thinkest thou then these are the words of Apostles, "He
hath subdued the people under us, and the nations under our feet"? I
know not. Strange that Apostles should speak so proudly, as to rejoice
that the nations were put under their feet, that is, Christians under
the feet of Apostles. For they rejoice that we are with them under the
feet of Him who died for us. For under Paul's feet ran they, who would
be of Paul, to whom He said, "Was Paul crucified for you?" [1524] What
then here, what are we to understand? "He hath subdued the people under
us, and the nations under our feet." All pertaining to Christ's
inheritance are among "all the nations," and all not pertaining to
Christ's inheritance are among "all the nations:" and ye see so exalted
in Christ's Name is Christ's Church, that all not yet believing in
Christ lie under the feet of Christians. For what numbers now run to
the Church; not yet being Christians, they ask aid of the Church;
[1525] to be succoured by us temporally they are willing, though
eternally to reign with us as yet they are unwilling. When all seek aid
of the Church, even they who are not yet in the Church, hath He not
"subdued the people under us, and the nations under our feet"?
5. "He hath chosen an inheritance for us, the excellency [1526] of
Jacob, whom He loved" (ver. 4). A certain beauty of Jacob He hath
chosen for our inheritance. Esau and Jacob were two brothers; in their
mother's womb both struggled, and by this struggle their mother's
bowels were shaken; and while they two were yet therein, the younger
was elected and preferred to the elder, and it was said, "Two peoples
are in thy womb, and the elder shall serve the younger." [1527] Among
all nations is the elder, among all nations the younger; but the
younger is in good Christians, elect, godly, faithful; the elder in the
proud, unworthy, sinful, stubborn, defending rather than confessing
their sins: as was also the very people of the Jews, "being ignorant of
God's righteousness, and going about to establish their own
righteousness." [1528] But for that it is said, "The elder shall serve
the younger;" it is manifest that under the godly are subdued the
ungodly, under the humble are subdued the proud. Esau was born first,
and Jacob was born last; but he who was last born, was preferred to the
first-born, who through gluttony lost his birthright. So thou hast it
written, [1529] He longed for the pottage, and his brother said to him,
If thou wilt that I give it thee, give me thy birthright. He loved more
that which carnally he desired, than that which spiritually by being
born first he had earned: [1530] and he laid aside his birthright, that
he might eat lentils. But lentils we find to be the food of the
Egyptians, for there it abounds in Egypt. Whence is so magnified the
lentil of Alexandria, that it comes even to our country, as if here
grew no lentil. Therefore by desiring Egyptian food he lost his
birthright. So also the people of the Jews, of whom it is said, "in
their hearts they turned back again into Egypt." [1531] They desired in
a manner the lentil, and lost their birthright.
6. "God is gone up with jubilation" (ver. 5). Even He our God, the Lord
Christ, is gone up with jubilation; "the Lord with the sound of a
trumpet." "Is gone up:" whither, save where we know? Whither the Jews
followed Him not, even with their eyes. For exalted on the Cross they
mocked Him, ascending into Heaven they did not see Him. "God hath gone
up with jubilation." What is jubilation, but admiration of joy which
cannot be expressed in words? As the disciples in joy admired, seeing
Him go into Heaven, whom they had mourned dead; truly for the joy,
words sufficed not: remained to jubilate what none could express. There
was also the voice of the trumpet, the voice of Angels. For it is said,
"Lift up thy voice like a trumpet." Angels preached the ascension of
the Lord: they saw the Disciples, their Lord ascending, tarrying,
admiring, confounded, nothing speaking, but in heart jubilant: and now
was the sound of the trumpet in the clear voice of the Angels, "Ye men
of Galilee, why stand ye gazing up into Heaven? this is Jesus." [1532]
As if they knew not that it was the same Jesus. Had they not just
before seen Him before them? Had they not heard Him speaking with them?
Nay, they not only saw the figure of Him present, but handled also His
limbs. Of themselves then knew they not, that it was the same Jesus?
But they being by very admiration, from joy of jubilation, as it were
transported in mind, the Angels said, "that same is Jesus." As though
they said, If ye believe Him, this is that same Jesus, whom crucified,
your feet stumbled, whom dead and buried, ye thought your hope lost.
Lo, this is the same Jesus. He hath gone up before you, "He shall so
come in like manner as ye have seen Him go into Heaven." His Body is
removed indeed from your eyes, but God is not separated from your
hearts: see Him going up, believe on Him absent, hope for Him coming;
but yet through His secret Mercy, feel Him present. For He who ascended
into Heaven that He might be removed from your eyes, promised unto you,
saying, "Lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world."
[1533] Justly then the Apostle so addressed us, "The Lord is at hand;
be careful for nothing." [1534] Christ sitteth above the Heavens; the
Heavens are far off, He who there sitteth is near....
7. "Sing praises to our God, sing praises" (ver. 6). Whom as Man mocked
they, who from God were alienated. "Sing praises to our God." For He is
not Man only, but God. Man of the seed of David, [1535] God the Lord of
David, of the Jews having flesh. "Whose" (saith the Apostle) "are the
fathers, of whom as concerning the flesh Christ came." [1536] Of the
Jews then is Christ, but according to the flesh. But who is this Christ
who is of the Jews according to the flesh? "Who is over all, God
blessed for ever." God before the flesh, God in the flesh, God with the
flesh. Nor only God before the flesh, but God before the earth whence
flesh was made; nor only God before the earth whereof flesh was made,
but even God before the Heaven which was first made; God before the day
which was first made; God before Angels; the same Christ is God: for
"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word
was God." [1537]
8. "For God is the King of all the earth" (ver. 7). What? And before
was He not God of all the earth? Is He not God of both heaven and
earth, since by Him surely were all things made? Who can say that He is
not his God? But not all men acknowledged Him their God; and where He
was acknowledged, there only, so to say, He was God. "In Judah is God
known." [1538] Not yet was it said to the sons of Korah, "O clap your
hands, all ye nations." For that God known in Judah, is King of all the
earth: now by all He is acknowledged, for that is fulfilled which
Isaiah saith, "He is thy God who hath delivered thee, the God of the
whole earth shall He be called." [1539] "Sing ye praises with
understanding." He teacheth us and warneth us to sing praises with
understanding, not to seek the sound of the ear, but the light of the
heart. The Gentiles, whence ye were called that ye might be Christians,
adored gods made with hands, and sang praises to them, but not with
understanding. If they had sung with understanding, they had not adored
stones. When a man sensible sang to a stone insensible, did he sing
with understanding? But now, brethren, we see not with our eyes Whom we
adore, and yet correctly [1540] we adore. [1541] Much more is God
commended to us, that with our eyes we see Him not. If with our eyes we
saw Him, haply we might despise. For even Christ seen, the Jews
despised; unseen, the Gentiles adored.
9. "God shall reign over all nations" (ver. 8). Who reigned over one
nation, "shall reign" (saith He) "over all nations." When this was
said, God reigned over one nation. It was a prophecy, the thing was not
yet shown. Thanks be to God, we now see fulfilled what before was
prophesied. A written promise God sent unto us before the time, the
time fulfilled He hath repaid us. "God shall reign over all nations,"
is a promise. "God sitteth upon His Holy Seat." What then was promised
to come, now being fulfilled, is acknowledged and held. "God sitteth
upon His Holy Seat." What is His Holy Seat? Haply saith one, The
Heavens, and he understandeth well. For Christ hath gone up, [1542] as
we know, with the Body, wherein He was crucified, and sitteth at the
right hand of the Father; thence we expect Him to come to judge the
quick and the dead. [1543] "God sitteth upon His Holy Seat." The
Heavens are His Holy Seat. Wilt thou also be His Seat? think not that
thou canst not be; prepare for Him a place in thy heart. He cometh, and
willingly sitteth. The same Christ is surely "the Power of God, and the
Wisdom of God:" [1544] and what saith the Scripture of Wisdom Herself?
The soul of the righteous is the seat of Wisdom. [1545] If then the
soul of the righteous is the seat of Wisdom, be thy soul righteous, and
thou shalt be a royal seat of Wisdom. And truly, brethren, all men who
live well, who act well, converse in godly charity, doth not God sit in
them, and Himself command? Thy soul obeyeth God sitting in it, and
itself commandeth the members. For thy soul commandeth thy members,
that so may move the foot, the hand, the eye, the ear, and itself
commandeth the members as its servants, but yet itself serveth its Lord
sitting within. It cannot well rule its inferior, unless its superior
it have not disdained to serve.
10. "The princes of the peoples are gathered together unto the God of
Abraham" (ver. 9). The God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the
God of Jacob. [1546] True it is, God said this, and thereupon the Jews
prided themselves, and said, "We are Abraham's children;" [1547]
priding themselves in their father's name, carrying his flesh, not
holding his faith; by seed cleaving to Him, in manners degenerating.
But the Lord, what said He to them so priding themselves? "If ye are
Abraham's children, do the works of Abraham." [1548] Again..."The
princes of the peoples:" the princes of the nations: not the princes of
one people, but the princes of all people have "gathered together unto
the God of Abraham." Of these princes was that Centurion too, of whom
but now when the Gospel was read ye heard. For he was a Centurion
having honour and power among men, he was a prince among the princes of
the peoples. Christ coming to him, he sent his friends to meet Him, nay
unto Christ truly passing over to him he sent his friends, and asked
that He would heal his servant who was dangerously sick. And when the
Lord would come, he sent to Him this message: "I am not worthy that
Thou shouldest enter under my roof, but say in a word only, and my
servant shall be healed." "For I also am a man set under authority,
having under me soldiers." [1549] See how he kept his rank! first he
mentioned that he was under another, and afterwards that another was
under him. I am under authority, and I am in authority; both under some
I am, and over some I am....As though he said, If I being set under
authority command those who are under me, Thou who art set under no
man's authority, canst not Thou command Thy creature, since all things
were made by Thee, and without Thee was nothing made. "Say," then, said
he, "in a word, and my servant shall be healed. For I am not worthy
that Thou shouldest enter under my roof."...Admiring at his faith,
Jesus reprobates the Jews' misbelief. For sound to themselves they
seemed, whereas they were dangerously sick, when their Physician not
knowing they slew. Therefore when He reprobated, and repudiated their
pride what said he? "I say unto you, that many shall come from the east
and west," not belonging to the kindred of Israel: many shall come to
whom He said, "O clap your hands, all ye nations;" "and shall sit down
with Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, in the kingdom of heaven." Abraham
begat them not of his own flesh; yet shall they come and sit down with
him in the kingdom of heaven, and be his sons. Whereby his sons? Not as
born of his flesh, but by following his faith. "But the children of the
kingdom," that is, the Jews, "shall be cast into outer darkness, there
shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth." [1550] They shall be condemned
to outer darkness who are born of the flesh of Abraham, and they shall
sit down with him in the kingdom of heaven, who have imitated Abraham's
faith.
11. And what they who belonged to the God of Abraham? "For the mighty
gods of the earth are greatly lifted up." They who were gods, the
people of God, the vineyard of God, whereof it is said, "Judge betwixt
Me and My vineyard," [1551] shall go into outer darkness, shall not sit
down with Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob, are not gathered unto the God
of Abraham. Wherefore? "For the mighty gods of the earth;" they who
were mighty gods of the earth, presuming upon earth. What earth?
Themselves; for every man is earth. For to man was it said, "Dust thou
art, and unto dust shalt thou return." [1552] But man ought to presume
upon God, and thence to hope for help, not from himself. For the earth
raineth not upon itself, nor shineth for itself; but as the earth from
heaven expecteth rain and light, so man from God ought to expect mercy
and truth. They then, "the mighty gods of the earth, were greatly
lifted up," that is, greatly prided themselves: they thought no
physician necessary for themselves, and therefore remained in their
sickness, and by their sickness were brought down even to death. The
natural branches were broken off that the humble wild olive tree might
be grafted in. [1553] Hold we fast then, brethren, humility, charity,
godliness: since we are called, on their proving reprobate, even by
their example let us fear to pride ourselves.
__________________________________________________________________
[1512] Lat. XLVI.
[1513] Numb. xvi. 1. [See p. 155, note 8, supra.--C.]
[1514] Matt. xxvii. 33.
[1515] 2 Kings ii. 23, 24.
[1516] Luke xxiii. 21.
[1517] Matt. xviii. 2.
[1518] Matt. xix. 14.
[1519] 1 Cor. xiv. 20.
[1520] Rom. xi. 25.
[1521] Acts iv. 34.
[1522] Matt. xxvii. 37.
[1523] [Isa. xlix. 6.--C.]
[1524] 1 Cor. i. 13.
[1525] [See (A.N.F. vol. v. p. 563) the noble charities of early
Christians.--C.]
[1526] Speciem.
[1527] Gen. xxv. 23.
[1528] Rom. x. 3.
[1529] Gen. xxv. 30-34.
[1530] Meruerat.
[1531] Acts vii. 39.
[1532] Acts i. 11.
[1533] Matt. xxviii. 20.
[1534] Phil. iv. 5, 6.
[1535] Rom. i. 3.
[1536] Rom. ix. 5.
[1537] John i. 1.
[1538] Ps. lxxvi. 1.
[1539] Isa. liv. 5.
[1540] Correcti. ms. Vat. ap. Ben. corde recti, "right in heart."
[1541] [The adoration of the Host was unknown to the ancient
Church.--C.]
[1542] Acts i. 2.
[1543] 2 Tim. iv. 1.
[1544] 1 Cor. i. 24.
[1545] Wisd. vii. 27.
[1546] Exod. iii. 6.
[1547] John viii. 33.
[1548] John viii. 39.
[1549] Luke vii. 6, 7.
[1550] Matt. viii. 12.
[1551] Isa. v. 3.
[1552] Gen. iii. 19.
[1553] Rom. xi. 17.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XLVIII. [1554]
1. The title of this Psalm is, "A song of praise, to the sons of Korah,
on the second day of the week." Concerning this what the Lord deigneth
to grant receive ye like sons of the firmament. For on the second day
of the week, that is, the day after the first which we call the Lord's
day, which also is called the second week-day, was made the firmament
of Heaven. [1555] ...The second day of the week then we ought not to
understand but of the Church of Christ: but the Church of Christ in the
Saints, the Church of Christ in those who are written in Heaven, the
Church of Christ in those who to this world's temptations yield not.
For they are worthy of the name of "firmament." The Church of Christ,
then, in those who are strong, of whom saith the Apostle, "We that are
strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weak," [1556] is called the
firmament. Of this it is sung in this Psalm. Let us hear, acknowledge,
associate, glory, reign. For Her called firmament, hear also in the
Apostolic Epistles, "the pillar and firmament [1557] of the truth."
[1558] ...
2. "Great is the Lord, and greatly to be praised" (ver. 1)....That is,
"in the city of our God, in His holy mountain." This is the city set
upon an hill, which cannot be hid: this is the candle which is not
hidden under a bushel, [1559] to all known, to all proclaimed. Yet are
not all men citizens thereof, but they in whom "great is the Lord, and
greatly to be praised." What then is that city: let us see whether
perhaps, since it is said, "In the city of our God, in His holy
mountain," we ought not to enquire for this mountain where also we may
be heard....What then is that mountain, brethren? One is it with great
care to be enquired for, with great solicitude investigated, with
labour also to be occupied and ascended. But if in any part of the
earth it is, what shall we do? Shall we go abroad out of our own
country, that to that mountain we may arrive? Nay, then we are abroad,
when in it we are not. For that is our city, if we are members of the
King, who is the head of the same city....For there was a certain
corner-stone contemptible, whereat the Jews stumbled, [1560] cut out of
a certain mountain without hands, that is, coming of the kingdom of the
Jews without hands, because human operation went not with Mary of whom
was born Christ. [1561] But if that stone, when the Jews stumbled
thereat, had remained there, thou hadst not had whither to ascend. But
what was done? What saith the prophecy of Daniel? What but that the
stone grew, and became a great mountain? How great? So that it filled
the whole face of the earth. [1562] By growing, then, and by filling
the whole face of the earth, that mountain came to us. Why then seek we
the mountain as though absent, and not as being present ascend to it;
that in us the Lord may be "great, and greatly to be praised"?
3. Further,...when he had said, "in the city of our God, in His holy
mountain," what added he? "Spreading abroad the joys of the whole
earth, the mountains of Sion" (ver. 2). Sion is one mountain, why then
"mountains"? Is it that to Sion belonged also those which came from the
other side, so as to meet together on the Corner Stone, and become two
walls, as it were two mountains, one of the circumcision, the other of
the uncircumcision; one of the Jews, the other of the Gentiles: no
longer adverse, although diverse, because from different sides, now in
the corner not even diverse. "For He is our peace, who hath made both
one." [1563] The same Corner Stone "which the builders rejected, is
become the Head Stone of the corner." [1564] The mountain hath joined
in itself two mountains; one house there is, and two houses; two,
because coming from different sides; one, because of the Corner Stone,
wherein both are joined together. Hear also this, "the mountains of
Sion: the sides of the North are the city of the great King."...See the
Gentiles; "the sides of the North:" the sides of the North are joined
to the city of the great King. The North is wont to be contrary to
Sion: Sion forsooth is in the South, the North over against the South.
Who is the North, but He who said, "I will sit in the sides of the
North, I will be like the Most High"? [1565] The devil had held
dominion over the ungodly, and possessed the nations serving images,
adoring demons; and all whatsoever there was of human kind anywhere
throughout the world, by cleaving to Him, had become North. But since
He who binds the strong man, taketh away his goods, [1566] and maketh
them His own goods; men delivered from infidelity and superstition of
devils, believing in Christ, are fitted on to that city, have met in
the corner that wall that cometh from the circumcision, and that was
made the city of the great King, which had been the sides of the North.
Therefore also in another Scripture is it said, "Out of the North come
clouds of golden colour: great is the glory and honour of the
Almighty." [1567] For great is the glory of the physician, when from
being despaired of the sick recovers. "Out of the North come clouds,"
and not black clouds, not dark clouds, not lowering, but "of golden
colour." Whence but by grace illumined through Christ? See, "the sides
of the North are the city of the great King."...
4. Let the Psalm then follow, and say, "God shall be known in her
houses." Now in her "houses," because of the mountains, because of the
two walls, because of the two sons. "God shall be known in her houses,"
but he commendeth grace, therefore he added, "when He shall take her
up." For what would that city have been, unless He had taken her up?
Would it not immediately have fallen, unless it had such foundation?
For "other foundation can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus
Christ." [1568] Let none then glory in his own merits; but "he that
glorieth, let him glory in the Lord." [1569] ...The Lord then hath
taken up this city, and is known therein, that is, His grace is known
in that city: for whatever that city hath, which glorieth in the Lord,
it hath not of itself. For because of this it is said, "What hast thou
that thou didst not receive?" [1570]
5. "For, lo, the kings of the earth are gathered together" (ver. 3).
Behold now those sides of the North, see how they come, see how they
say, "Come ye, and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord: and He
will teach us His way, and we will walk in it." [1571] "And have come
together in one." In what one, but that "corner-stone"? [1572] "They
saw it, and so they marvelled" (ver. 4). After their marvelling at the
miracles and glory of Christ, what followed? "They were troubled, they
were moved" (ver. 5), "trembling took hold upon them." Whence took
trembling hold upon them, but from the consciousness of sins? Let them
run then, king after a king; kings, let them acknowledge the King.
Therefore saith He elsewhere, "Yet have I been set by Him a King upon
His holy hill of Sion." [1573] ...A King then was heard of, set up in
Sion, to Him were delivered possessions even to the uttermost parts of
the earth. Kings behoved to fear lest they should lose the kingdom,
lest the kingdom be taken from them. As wretched Herod feared, and for
the Child slew the children. [1574] But fearing to lose his kingdom, he
deserved not to know the King. Would that he too had adored the King
with the Magi: not by ill-seeking the kingdom, slain the Innocents, and
perished guilty. For as concerning him, he destroyed the Innocents: but
as for Christ, even a Child, the children dying for Him did He crown.
Therefore behoved kings to fear when it was said, "Yet have I been set
a King by Him upon His holy hill of Sion," and inheritance to the
uttermost parts of the earth shall He give Him, who set Him up
King....Thence also this is said to them, "Understand now therefore, O
ye kings; be instructed, ye judges of the earth. Serve the Lord with
fear, and rejoice unto Him with trembling." [1575] And what did they?
"There pains as of a woman in travail." What are the pains "as of a
woman in travail," but the pangs of a penitent? See the same conception
of pain and travail: "Of Thy fear" (saith Isaiah) "we have conceived,
we have travailed of the Spirit of salvation." [1576] So then the kings
conceived from the fear of Christ, that by travailing they brought
forth salvation by believing on Him whom they had feared. "There pains
as of a woman in travail:" when of travail thou hearest, expect a
birth. The old man travaileth, but the new man is born.
6. "With a strong wind Thou shalt break the ships of Tarshish" (ver.
6). Briefly understood, this is, Thou shalt overthrow the pride of the
nations. But where in this history is mentioned the overthrowing of the
pride of the nations? Because of "the ships of Tarshish." Learned men
have enquired for Tarshish a city, that is, what city was signified by
this name: and to some it has seemed that Cilicia is called Tarshish,
because its metropolis is called Tarsus. Of which city was the Apostle
Paul, being born in Tarsus of Cilicia. [1577] But some have understood
by it Carthage, being haply sometimes so named, or in some language so
signified. For in the Prophet Isaiah it is thus found: "Howl, ye ships
of Carthage." [1578] But in Ezekiel [1579] by some interpreters the
word is translated Carthage, by some Tarshish: and from this diversity
it can be understood that the same which was called Carthage, is called
Tharsus. But it is manifest, that in the beginning of its reign
Carthage flourished with ships, and so flourished, that among other
nations they excelled in trafficking and navigation. For when Dido,
flying from her brother, escaped to the parts of Africa, where she
built Carthage, the ships which had been prepared for commerce in his
country she had taken with her for her flight, the princes of the
country consenting to it; and the same ships also when Carthage was
built failed not in traffic. And hence that city became too proud, so
that justly by its ships may be understood the pride of the nations,
presuming on things uncertain, as on the breath of the winds. Now let
none presume on full sails, and on the seeming fair state of this life,
as of the sea. Be our foundation in Sion: there ought we to be
stablished, not to be "carried about with every wind of doctrine."
[1580] Whoso then by the uncertain things of this life had been puffed
up, let them be overthrown, and be all the pride of the nations
subjected to Christ, who shall "with a strong wind break all the ships
of Tarshish:" not of any city, but of "Tarshish." How "with a strong
wind"? With very strong fear. For so all pride feared Him that shall
judge, as on Him humble to believe, lest Him exalted it should fear.
7. "As we have heard, so have we seen" (ver. 7). Blessed Church! at one
time thou hast heard, at another time thou hast seen. She heard in
promises, seeth in performance: heard in Prophecy, seeth in the Gospel.
For all things which are now fulfilled were before prophesied. Lift up
thine eyes then, and stretch them over the world; see now His
"inheritance even to the uttermost parts of the earth:" [1581] see now
is fulfilled what was said, "All kings shall fall down before Him: all
nations shall serve Him:" [1582] see fulfilled what was said, "Be Thou
exalted, O God, above the heavens, and Thy glory above all the earth."
[1583] See Him whose feet and hands were pierced with nails, whose
bones hanging on the tree were counted, upon whose vesture lots were
cast: [1584] see reigning whom they saw hanging; see sitting in Heaven
[1585] whom they despised walking on earth: see thus fulfilled, "All
the ends of the earth shall remember, and turn to the Lord, and all the
kindreds of the nations shall worship before Him." Seeing all this,
exclaim with joy, "As we have heard, so have we seen." Justly the
Church herself is so called out of the Gentiles....They to whom the
Prophets were not sent, first heard and understood the Prophets: they
who first heard not, afterwards hearing marvelled. They remained behind
to whom they were sent, carrying the books, understanding not the
truth: having the tables of the Testament, and not holding the
inheritance. But we,..."As we have heard, so have we seen." And where
hearest thou? where seest thou? "In the city of the Lord of Hosts, in
the city of our God. God hath founded it for ever." Let not heretics
insult, divided into parties, let them not exalt themselves who say,
"Lo, here is Christ, or lo, there." [1586] Whoso saith, "Lo, here is
Christ, or lo, there," inviteth to parties. Unity God promised. The
kings are gathered together in one, not dissipated through schisms. But
haply that city which hath held the world, shall sometime be
overthrown? Far be the thought! "God hath founded it for ever." If then
God hath founded it for ever, why fearest thou lest the firmament
should fall?
8. "We have received Thy mercy, O God, in the midst of Thy people"
(ver. 8). Who have received, and where received? Hath not the same Thy
people received Thy mercy. If Thy people hath received Thy mercy, how
then, "in the midst of Thy people"? As if they who received were one
party, they in the midst of whom they received another. A great
mystery, but yet well known. When hence also, that is, out of these
verses, hath been extracted and brought forth what ye know; it will be
not ruder, but sweeter. Now forsooth all are reckoned the people of
God, who carry His Sacraments, but not all belong to His Mercy. All
forsooth receiving the Sacrament of the Baptism of Christ, are called
Christians, but not all live worthily of that Sacrament. There are some
of whom saith the Apostle, "Having a form of godliness, but denying the
power thereof." [1587] Yet on account of this form of godliness they
are named among God's people. As to the floor, until the corn is
threshed, belongs not the wheat only, but the chaff. But will it also
belong to the garner? In the midst then of an evil people is a good
people, which hath received the Mercy of God. He liveth worthily of the
Mercy of God who heareth, and holdeth, and doeth what the Apostle
saith, "We beseech you that ye receive not the Grace of God in vain."
[1588] Whoso then receiveth not the Grace of God in vain, the same
receiveth not only the Sacrament, but also the Mercy of God as
well....So those who have the Sacraments, and have not good manners,
are both said to be of God, and not of God; are both said to be His,
and to be strangers: His because of His own Sacraments, strangers
because of their own vice. So also strange daughters: [1589] daughters,
because of the form of godliness; strange, because of their loss of
virtue. Be the lily there; let it receive the Mercy of God: hold fast
the root of a good flower, be not ungrateful for soft rain coming from
heaven. Be thorns ungrateful, let them grow by the showers: for the
fire they grow, not for the garner. In the midst of Thy people not
receiving Thy mercy, we have received Thy mercy. For "He came unto His
own, and His own received Him not," yet, in the midst of them, "as many
as received Him, to them gave He power to become the sons of God."
[1590] ...
9. For when he had said, "We have received Thy mercy in the midst of
Thy people," he signified that there is a people not receiving the
mercy of God, in the midst of whom some do receive the mercy of God:
and then lest it should occur to men that there are so few, as to be
nearly none, how did He console them in the words following? "According
to Thy Name, O God, so is Thy praise unto the ends of the earth" (ver.
9). What is this? ...That is, as Thou art known through all the earth,
so Thou art also praised through all the earth, nor are there wanting
who now praise Thee through all the earth. But they praise Thee who
live well. For, "According to Thy Name, O God, so is Thy praise," not
in a part, but "unto the ends of the earth." "Thy right hand is full of
righteousness." That is, many are they also who shall stand at Thy
right hand. Not only shall they be many who shall stand at Thy left
hand, but there also shall be a full heap set at Thy right hand.
10. "Let mount Zion rejoice, and the daughters of Judah be glad,
because of Thy judgments, O Lord" (ver. 10). O mount Zion, O daughters
of Judah, ye labour now among tares, among chaff, among thorns ye
labour: yet be glad because of God's judgments. God erreth not in
judgment. Live ye separate, though separate ye were not born; not
vainly hath a voice gone forth from your mouth and heart, "Destroy not
my soul with sinners, nor my life with bloody men." [1591] He shall
winnow with such art, carrying in His hand a fan, that not one grain of
wheat shall fall into the heap of chaff prepared to be burned, nor one
beard of chaff pass to the heap to be laid up in the garner. [1592] Be
glad, O ye daughters of Judaea, because of the judgments of God that
erreth not, and do not yet judge rashly. To you let it belong to
collect, to Him let it belong to separate. But think not that the
"daughters of Judah" are Jews. Judah is confession; all the sons of
confession are all the sons of Judah. For "salvation is of the Jews,"
[1593] is nothing else than that Christ is of the Jews. This saith also
the Apostle, "He is not a Jew which is one outwardly; neither is that
circumcision which is outward in the flesh: but he is a Jew which is
one inwardly, and circumcision is that of the heart, in the spirit, and
not in the letter, whose praise is not of men, but of God." [1594] Be
such a Jew; glory in the circumcision of the heart, though thou hast
not the circumcision of the flesh. Let the daughters of Judah be glad,
because of Thy judgments, O Lord.
11. "Walk about Zion, and embrace her" (ver. 11). Be it said to them
who live ill, in the midst of whom is the people, which hath received
the mercy of God. In the midst of you is a people living well, "Walk
about Zion." But how? "embrace her." Not with scandals, but with love
go round about her: that so those who live well in the midst of you ye
may imitate, and by imitation of them, be incorporate with Christ,
whose members they are. "Walk about Zion, go round about her: speak in
the towers thereof." In the height of her bulwarks, set forth the
praises thereof.
12. "Set your hearts upon her might" (ver. 12). Not that ye may have
the form of godliness, deny the power thereof, [1595] but, "upon her
might set your hearts. Speak ye in her towers." What is the might of
this city? Whoso would understand the might of this city, let him
understand the force of love. That is a virtue which none conquereth.
Love's flame no waves of the world, no streams of temptation,
extinguish. Of this it is said, "Love is strong as death." [1596] For
as when death cometh, it cannot be resisted; by whatever arts, whatever
medicines, you meet it; the violence of death can none avoid who is
born mortal; so against the violence of love can the world do nothing.
For from the contrary the similitude is made of death; for as death is
most violent to take away, so love is most violent to save. Through
love many have died to the world, to live to God; by this love
inflamed, the martyrs, not pretenders, not puffed up by vain-glory, not
such as they of whom it is written, "Though I give my body to be
burned, and have not charity, it profiteth me nothing," [1597] but men
whom truly a love of Christ and of the truth led on to this passion;
what to them were the temptations of the tormentors? Greater violence
had the eyes of their weeping friends, than the persecutions of
enemies. For how many were held by their children, that they might not
suffer? to how many did their wives fall upon their knees, that they
might not be left widows? How many have their parents forbidden to die;
as we know and read in the Passion of the Blessed Perpetua! [1598] All
this was done; but tears, however great, and with whatever force
flowing, when did they extinguish the ardour of love? This is the might
of Sion, to whom elsewhere it is said, "Peace be within thy walls, and
prosperity within thy palaces." [1599]
13. What here understand we, "Set your hearts upon her might, and
distribute her houses"? That is, distinguish house from house. Do not
confound. For there is a house having the form of godliness, and not
having godliness; but there is a house having both form and godliness.
Distribute, confound not. But then ye distribute and confound not, when
ye "set your hearts upon her might;" that is, when through love ye are
made spiritual. Then ye will not judge rashly, then ye will see that
the evil harms not the good as long as we are in this floor.
"Distribute her houses." There can be also another understanding. The
two houses, one coming of the circumcision, one of the uncircumcision,
it is commanded the Apostles to distribute. For when Saul was called,
and made the Apostle Paul, agreeing in unity with his fellow Apostles,
he so with thorn determined, that they should go to the circumcision,
he to the uncircumcision. By that dispensation of their Apostleship,
they distributed the houses of the city of the great King; and meeting
in the corner, divided the Gospel in dispensation, in love united it.
And truly this is rather to be understood; for it followeth and showeth
that it is here said to the preachers, "distribute her houses: that ye
may tell it to the generation following:" that is, that even to us, who
were to come after them, their dispensation of the Gospel should reach:
For not for those only they laboured, with whom they lived in the
earth; nor the Lord for those Apostles only to whom He deigned to show
Himself alive after His Resurrection, but for us also. For to them He
spake, and signified us when He spake, "Lo, I am with you alway, even
to the end of the world." [1600] Were they then to be here alway, even
to the end of the world? Also He said, "Neither pray I for these alone,
but for them also which shall believe on Me through their word." [1601]
Therefore He considereth us, because He suffered on account of us.
Justly then it is said, "That ye may tell it to the generation
following."
14. Tell what? "For this is God, even our God" (ver. 13). The earth was
seen, the earth's Creator was not seen; the flesh was held, God in the
flesh was not acknowledged. For the flesh was held by those from whom
had been taken the same flesh, for of the seed of Abraham was the
Virgin Mary. At the flesh they stayed, the Divinity they did not
understand. O Apostles, O mighty city, preach thou on the towers, and
say, "This is God, even our God." So, even so as He was despised, as He
lay a stone before the feet of the stumbling, that He might humble the
hearts of the confessing; even so, "This is God, even our God."
Certainly He was seen, as was said, "Afterward did He show Himself upon
earth, and conversed with men." [1602] "This is God, even our God." He
is also Man, and who is there will know Him? "This is God, even our
God." But haply for a time as the false gods. For because they can be
called gods, but cannot be so, for a time they are even called so. For
what saith the Prophet, or what warneth He to be said to them? This
shall ye say to them, "The gods that have not made the heavens and the
earth, even they shall perish from the earth, and from those that are
under the heavens." [1603] He is not such a god: for our God is above
all gods. Above all what gods? "For all the gods of the nations are
idols, but the Lord made the heavens." [1604] The same then is our God.
"This is God, even our God." For how long? "For ever and ever: He shall
rule us for ever." If He is our God, He is also our King. He protecteth
us, being our God, lest we die; He ruleth us, being our King, lest we
fall. But by ruling us He doth not break us; for whom He ruleth not, He
breaketh. "Thou shalt rule them," saith He, "with a rod of iron, and
dash them in pieces like a potter's vessel." [1605] But there are whom
He ruleth not; these He spareth not, as a potter's vessel dashing them
in pieces. By Him then let us wish to be ruled and delivered, "for He
is our God for ever and ever, and He shall rule us for ever."
__________________________________________________________________
[1554] Lat. XLVII.
[1555] Gen. i. 6-8.
[1556] Rom. xv. 1.
[1557] E.V. "ground."
[1558] 1 Tim. iii. 15.
[1559] Matt. v. 14, 15.
[1560] Rom. ix. 32.
[1561] Matt. i. 16.
[1562] Dan. ii. 35.
[1563] Eph. ii. 14.
[1564] Ps. cxviii. 22.
[1565] Isa. xiv. 13, 14.
[1566] Matt. xii. 29.
[1567] Job xxxvii. 22.
[1568] 1 Cor. iii. 11.
[1569] 1 Cor. i. 31.
[1570] 1 Cor. iv. 7.
[1571] Isa. ii. 3.
[1572] Eph. ii. 20.
[1573] Ps. ii. 6.
[1574] Matt. ii. 16.
[1575] Ps. ii. 10, 11.
[1576] Isa. xxvi. 17, 18.
[1577] Acts xxi. 39.
[1578] So LXX.; Heb. Tarshish. Isa. xxiii. 1.
[1579] Ezek. xxxviii. 13. [Note the author's interest in all that bears
upon his own field of labour.--C.]
[1580] Eph. iv. 14.
[1581] Ps. ii. 8.
[1582] Ps. lxxii. 11.
[1583] Ps. cviii. 5.
[1584] Matt. xxvii. 35.
[1585] Matt. xxvi. 64.
[1586] Matt. xxiv. 23.
[1587] 2 Tim. iii. 5.
[1588] 2 Cor. vi. 1.
[1589] Cant. ii. 2.
[1590] John i. 11, 12.
[1591] Ps. xxvi. 9.
[1592] Matt. iii. 12.
[1593] John iv. 22.
[1594] Rom. ii. 28, 29.
[1595] 2 Tim. iii. 5.
[1596] Cant. viii. 6.
[1597] 1 Cor. xiii. 3.
[1598] Ruinart. Acta Martyrum, p. 86, which supports the reading
adopted from the Oxford mss. Ben. has, "How many parents did their sons
forbid." [See A.N.F. vol. iii., p. 700.--C.]
[1599] Ps. cxxii. 7.
[1600] Matt. xxviii. 20.
[1601] John xvii. 20.
[1602] Baruch iii. 37.
[1603] Jer. x. 11.
[1604] Ps. xcvi. 5.
[1605] Ps. ii. 9.
__________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm XLIX. [1606]
The First Part.
1. ..."Hear ye these things, all ye nations" (ver. 1). Not then you
only who are here. For of what power is our voice so to cry out, as
that all nations may hear? For Our Lord Jesus Christ hath proclaimed it
through the Apostles, hath proclaimed it in so many tongues that He
sent; and we see this Psalm, which before was only repeated in one
nation, in the Synagogue of the Jews, now repeated throughout the whole
world, throughout all Churches; and that fulfilled which is here spoken
of, "Hear ye these words, all ye nations."...Of whom ye are: "With ears
ponder, all ye that dwell in the world." This He seemeth to have
repeated a second time, lest to have said "hear," before, were too
little. What I say, he saith, "hear, with ears ponder," that is, hear
not cursorily. What is, "with ears ponder"? It is what the Lord said,
"he that hath ears to hear, let him hear:" [1607] for as all who were
in His presence must have had ears, what ears did He require save those
of the heart, when He said, "he that hath ears to hear, let him hear"?
The same ears also this Psalm doth smite. "With ears ponder, all ye
that dwell in the world." Perhaps there is here some distinction. We
ought not indeed to narrow our view, but there is no harm in explaining
even this view of the sense. Perhaps there is some difference between
the saying, "all nations," and the saying, "all ye that dwell in the
world." For perchance he would have us understand the expression,
"dwell in," with a further meaning, so as to take all nations for all
the wicked, but the dwellers of the world all the just. For he doth
inhabit who is not held fast: but he that is occupied is inhabited, and
doth not inhabit. Just as he doth possess whatever he hath, who is
master of his property: but a master is one who is not held in the
meshes of covetousness: while he that is held fast by covetousness is
the possessed, and not the possessor....
2. Therefore let even the ungodly hear: "Hear ye this, all ye nations."
Let the just also hear, who have not heard to no purpose, and who
rather rule the world than are ruled by the world: "with ears ponder,
all ye that dwell in the world."
3. And again he saith, "both all ye earthborn, and sons of men" (ver.
2). The expression "earthborn" he doth refer to sinners; the expression
"sons of men" to the faithful and righteous. Ye see then that this
distinction is observed. Who are the "earthborn"? The children of the
earth. Who are the children of the earth? They who desire earthly
inheritances. Who are the "sons of men"? They who appertain to the Son
of Man. We have already before explained this distinction to your
Sanctity, [1608] and have concluded that Adam was a man, but not the
son of man; that Christ was the Son of Man, but was God also. For
whosoever pertain to Adam, are "earthborn:" whosoever pertain to
Christ, are "sons of men." Nevertheless, let all hear, I withhold my
discourse from no one. If one is "earthborn," let him hear, because of
the judgment: another is a "son of man," let him hear for the kingdom's
sake. "The rich and poor together." Again, the same words are repeated.
The expression "rich" refers to the "earthborn;" but the word "poor" to
the "sons of men." By the "rich" understand the proud, by the "poor"
the humble....He saith in another Psalm, "The poor shall eat and be
satisfied." [1609] How hath he commended the poor? "The poor shall eat
and be satisfied." What eat they? That Food which the faithful know.
How shall they be satisfied? By imitating the Passion of their Lord,
and not without cause receiving their recompense. "The poor shall eat
and be satisfied, and they shall praise the Lord who seek Him." What of
the rich? Even they eat. But how eat they? "All the rich upon the earth
have eaten and worshipped." [1610] He said not, "Have eaten and are
satisfied;" but, "have eaten and worshipped." They worship God indeed,
but they will not display brotherly humaneness. These eat and worship;
those eat and are filled: yet both eat. Of the eater what he eateth is
required: let him not be forbidden by the distributor to eat, but let
him be admonished to fear him who doth require his account. Let these
words then be heard by sinners and righteous, nations, and those who
inhabit the world, "earthborn and sons of men, the rich and the poor
together:" not divided, not separated. That is for the time of the
harvest to do, the hand of the winnower will effect that. [1611] Now
together let rich and poor hear, let goats and sheep feed in the same
pasture, until He come who shall separate the one on His right hand,
the other on His left. [1612] Let them all hear together the teacher,
lest separated from one another they hear the voice of the Judge.
4. And what is it they are now to hear? "My mouth shall speak of
wisdom, and the meditation of my heart understanding" (ver. 3). And
this repetition is perhaps made, lest perchance if he had said only "my
mouth," thou shouldest suppose that one spake to thee who had
understanding but in his lips. For many have understanding in their
lips, but have not in their heart, of whom the Scripture saith, "This
people honoureth me with their lips, but their heart is far from me."
[1613] What saith he then who speaketh to thee? when he hath said, "My
mouth shall speak of wisdom," in order that thou mayest know that what
is poured forth from the mouth floweth from the bottom of the heart, he
hath added, "And the meditation of my heart of understanding."
5. "I will incline mine ear to the parable, I will show my proposition
upon the harp" (ver. 4)....And why "to a parable"? Because "now we see
through a glass darkly," [1614] as saith the Apostle; "whilst we are at
home in the body, we are absent from the Lord." [1615] For our vision
is not yet that face to face, where there are no longer parables, where
there no longer are riddles and comparisons. Whatever now we understand
we behold through riddles. A riddle is a dark parable which it is hard
to understand. Howsoever a man may cultivate his heart and apply
himself to apprehend mysteries, so long as we see through the
corruption of this flesh, we see but in part....But as He was seen by
those who believed, and by those who crucified Him, when He was judged;
so will He be seen, when He shall have begun to be judge, both by those
whom He shall condemn, and by those whom He shall crown. But that
vision of divinity, which He hath promised to them that love Him, when
He saith, "He that loveth Me shall be loved of My Father, and he that
loveth Me keepeth My commandments, and I will love him, and will
manifest Myself to him:" [1616] this the ungodly shall not see. This
manifestation is in a certain way familiar: He keepeth it for His own,
He will not show it to the ungodly. Of what sort is the vision itself?
Of what sort is Christ? Equal to the Father. Of what sort is Christ?
"In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word
was God." [1617] For this vision we sigh now, and groan so long as we
sojourn here; to this vision we shall be brought home at the last, this
vision now we see but darkly. If then we see now darkly, let us
"incline our ear to the parable," and then let us "show our proposition
upon the harp:" [1618] let us hear what we say, do what we enjoin.
6. And what hath he said? "And wherefore shall I fear in the evil day?
The iniquity of my heel shall compass me" (ver. 5). He beginneth
something obscurely. Therefore he ought the rather to fear if the
iniquity of his heel shall compass him. Nay, for let not man fear, he
saith, who hath not power to escape. For example, he who feareth death,
what shall he do to escape death? Let him tell me how he is to escape
what Adam oweth, he who is born of Adam. But let him consider that he
is born of Adam, and hath followed Christ, and ought to pay what Adam
oweth, and obtain what Christ hath promised. Therefore, he who feareth
death can no wise escape: but he who feareth the damnation which the
ungodly shall hear, "Go ye into everlasting fire," [1619] hath an
escape. Let him not fear then. For why should he fear? Will the
iniquity of his heel compass him? If then he avoid "the iniquity of his
heel," and walk in the ways of God, he shall not come to the evil day:
the evil day, the last day, shall not be evil to him....Now while they
live, let them take heed to themselves, let them put away iniquity from
their heel: let them walk in that way, let them walk in the way of
which He saith Himself, "I am the way, the truth, and the life:" [1620]
and let them not fear in the evil day, for He giveth them safety who
became "The Way." Therefore let them avoid the iniquity of their heel.
With the heel a man slippeth. Let your Love observe. What was said by
God to the Serpent? "She shall mark thy head, and thou shalt mark her
heel." [1621] The devil marketh thy heel, in order that when thou
slippest he may overthrow thee. He marketh thy heel, do thou mark his
head. What is his head? The beginning of an evil suggestion. When he
beginneth to suggest evil thoughts, then do thou thrust him away before
pleasure ariseth, and consent followeth; and so shalt thou avoid his
head, and he shall not grasp thy heel. But wherefore said He this to
Eve? Because through the flesh man doth slip. Our flesh is an Eve
within us. "He that loveth his wife," he saith, "loveth himself." What
meaneth "himself"? He continueth, and saith, "For no man ever yet hath
hated his own flesh." [1622] Because then the devil would make us slip
through the flesh, just as he made that man Adam to slip, through Eve;
Eve is bidden to mark the head of the devil, because the devil marketh
her heel. [1623] "If then the iniquity of our heel shall compass us,
why fear we in the evil day," since being converted to Christ we are
able not to do iniquity; and there will be nothing to compass us, and
we shall joy and not sorrow in the last day?
7. But who are they whom the "iniquity of their heel shall compass"?
"They who trust in their virtue, [1624] and in the abundance of their
riches do glory" (ver. 6). Therefore such sins will I avoid, and the
"iniquity of my heel" shall never compass me. What is avoiding such
sins? Let us not trust in our own virtue, let us not glory in the
abundance of our own riches, but let us glory in Him who hath promised
to us, being humble, exaltation, and hath threatened condemnation to
men exalted; and then iniquity of our heel shall never compass us.
8. There are some who rely on their friends, others rely on their
virtue, others on their riches. This is the presumption of mankind
which relieth not on God. He hath spoken of virtue, he hath spoken of
riches, he speaketh of friends. "Brother redeemeth not, [1625] shall
man redeem?" (ver. 7). Dost thou expect that man shall redeem thee from
the wrath to come? If brother redeem thee not, shall man redeem thee?
Who is the brother, who if He hath not redeemed thee, no man will
redeem? It is He who said after His resurrection, "Go, tell My
brethren." [1626] Our Brother He hath willed to be: and when we say to
God, "Our Father," this is manifested in us. For he that saith to God,
"Our Father;" saith to Christ, "Brother." [1627] Therefore let him that
hath God for his Father and Christ for his Brother, not fear in the
evil day. "For the iniquity of his heel shall not compass him;" for he
relieth not on his virtue, nor glorieth in the abundance of his riches,
nor vaunteth himself of his powerful friends. Let him rely on Him who
died for him, that he might not die eternally: who for his sake was
humbled, in order that he might be exalted; who sought him ungodly, in
order that He might be sought by him faithful. Therefore if He redeem
not, shall man redeem? Shall any man redeem, if the Son of man redeem
not? If Christ redeem not, shall Adam redeem? "Brother redeemeth not,
shall man redeem?" [1628]
9. "He shall not give to God his propitiation, and the price of the
redemption of his soul" (ver. 8). He trusteth in his virtue, and in the
abundance of his riches doth glory, who "shall not give to God his
propitiation:" that is, satisfaction whereby he may prevail with God
for his sins: "nor the price of the redemption of his soul," who
relieth on his virtue, and on his friends, and on his riches. But who
are they that give the price of the redemption of their souls? They to
whom the Lord saith, "Make to yourselves friends of the Mammon of
unrighteousness, that they may receive you into everlasting
habitations." [1629] They give the price of the redemption of their
soul who cease not to do almsdeeds. So those whom the Apostle chargeth
by Timothy he would not have to be proud, lest they should glory in the
abundance of their riches. Lastly, what they possessed he would not
have to grow old in their hands: but that something should be made of
it to be for the price of the redemption of their souls. For he saith,
"Charge them that are rich in this world, that they be not high-minded:
nor trust in uncertain riches, but in the living God, who giveth us
richly all things to enjoy." [1630] And as if they had said, "What
shall we then make of our riches?" he continueth, "Let them be rich in
good works, ready to distribute, willing to communicate," [1631] and
they will not lose that. How know we? Hear what followeth. "Let them
lay up for themselves a good foundation against the time to come, that
they may lay hold on the true life." [1632] So shall they give the
price of the redemption of their soul. And our Lord counselleth this:
"Make for yourselves bags which wax not old, a treasure in the heavens
that faileth not, where thief approacheth not, neither moth
corrupteth." [1633] God would not have thee lose thy wealth, but He
hath given thee counsel to change the place thereof. Let your love
understand. Suppose thy friend were just now to enter thy house, and
find thou hadst placed thy store of grain in a damp place, and he knew
the natural proneness of grain to decay, which thou perchance knewest
not, he would give thee counsel of this sort, saying, "Brother, thou
art losing what with great toil thou hast gathered, thou hast placed it
in a damp place, in a few days this grain will decay." "And what am I
to do, brother? "Raise it into a higher place." Thou wouldest hearken
to thy friend suggesting that thou shouldest raise grain from a lower
to a higher chamber, and dost thou not hearken to Christ charging thee
to lift thy treasure from earth to heaven, where not what thou keepest
in store may be paid to thee, but that thou mayest keep in store earth,
mayest receive heaven, mayest keep in store things mortal, mayest
receive things everlasting, that while thou lendest Christ to receive
at thy hands but a small loan upon earth, He may repay thee a great
recompense in Heaven? Nevertheless, they whom "the iniquity of their
heel shall compass," because they trust in their virtue, and in the
abundance of their riches do glory, and rely on human friends who are
able to help them in nothing, "shall not give to God their
propitiation, and the price of the redemption of their souls."
10. And what hath he said of such a man? "Yea, he hath laboured for
ever, and shall live till the end" (ver. 9). His labour shall be
without end, his life shall have an end. Wherefore saith he, "He shall
live till the end"? Because such men think life to be nought but daily
enjoyments. So when many poor and needy men of our times, unstable, and
not looking to what God doth promise them for their labours, see rich
men in daily feastings, in the splendour and glitter of gold and of
silver, they say what? "These are the only people; [1634] they really
live!" This is a saying, be it said no longer: we both warn you, and it
remains to warn you, that it be said by fewer persons than it would be
said, if we had not warned you. For we do not presume to say that we so
say these words, as that it be not said, but that it be said by fewer
persons: for it will be said even unto the end of the world. It is too
little that he saith, "he liveth;" he addeth and saith, he thundereth,
thinkest thou that he alone liveth? Let him live! his life will be
ended: because he giveth not the price of the redemption of his soul,
his life will end, his labour will not end. "He laboured for ever, and
shall live till the end." How shall he live till the end? As he lived
that was "clothed with purple and fine linen, and fared sumptuously
every day," [1635] who, being proud and puffed up, spurned the man full
of sores lying before his gate, whose sores the dogs licked, and who
longed for the crumbs which fell from his table. What did those riches
profit him? Both changed places: the one was borne from the rich man's
gate into Abraham's bosom, the other from his rich feasts was cast into
the fire; the one was in peace, the other burned; the one was sated,
the other thirsted; the one had laboured till the end, but he lived for
ever; the other had lived till the end, but he laboured for ever. And
what did it profit the rich man, who asked, while lying in torments in
hell, that a drop of water should be poured upon his tongue from the
finger of Lazarus, saying, "For I am burning here in this flame,"
[1636] and it was not granted to him? One longed for the drop from the
finger, as the other had for the crumbs from the rich man's table; but
the labour of the one is ended, and the life of the other is ended: the
labour of this is for ever, the life of that is for ever. We who labour
perchance here on the earth, have not our life here: and shall not be
so placed hereafter, for our life shall be Christ for ever: while they
who "will" have their life here, shall labour for ever and live till
the end.
11. "For he shall not see death, though he shall have seen wise men
dying" (ver. 10). The man who laboured for ever and shall live till the
end, "shall not see death, though he shall have seen wise men dying."
What is this? He shall not comprehend what death is, whenever he shall
have seen wise men dying. For he saith to himself, "this fellow, for
all he was wise and dwelled with wisdom and worshipped God with piety,
is he not dead? Therefore I will enjoy myself while I live; for if they
that are wise in other respects, could do anything, they would not have
died." Just as the Jews saw Christ hanging on the Cross and despised
Him, saying, "If this Man were the Son of God, He would come down from
the Cross:" [1637] not seeing what death is. If they had seen what
death is; if they had seen, I say. [1638] He died for a time, that He
might live again for ever: they lived for a time, that they might die
for ever. But because they saw Him dying, they saw not death, that is
to say, they understood not what was very death. What say they even in
Wisdom? "Let us condemn Him with a most shameful death, for by His own
sayings He shall be respected;" [1639] for if he is indeed the Son of
God, He will deliver Him from the hands of His adversaries: He will not
suffer His Son to die, if He is truly His Son. But when they saw
themselves insulting Him upon the Cross, and Him not descending from
the Cross, they said, He was indeed but a Man. Thus was it spoken: and
surely He could have come down from the Cross, He that could rise again
from the tomb: but He taught us to bear with those who insult us; He
taught us to be patient of the tongues of men, to drink now the cup of
bitterness, and afterwards to receive everlasting salvation....
12. "The imprudent and unwise shall perish together." Who is "the
imprudent"? He that looketh not out for himself for the future. Who is
"the unwise"? He that perceiveth not in what evil case he is. But do
thou perceive in what evil case thou art now, and look out that thou be
in a good case for the future. By perceiving in what evil case thou
art, thou wilt not be unwise: by looking out for thyself for the
future, thou wilt not be imprudent. Who is he that looketh out for
himself? That servant to whom his master gave what he should expend,
and afterwards said to him, "Thou canst not be my steward, give an
account of thy stewardship;" and who answered, "What shall I do? I
cannot dig, to beg I am ashamed;" [1640] had, nevertheless, by even his
master's goods made to himself friends, who might receive him when he
was put out of his stewardship. Now he cheated his master in order that
he might get to himself friends to receive him: fear not thou lest thou
be cheating, the Lord Himself exhorteth thee to do so: He saith Himself
to thee, "Make to thyself friends of the mammon of unrighteousness."
[1641] Perhaps what thou hast got, thou hast gotten of unrighteousness:
or perhaps this very thing is unrighteousness, that thou hast and
another hath not, thou aboundest and another needeth. Of this mammon of
unrighteousness, of these riches which the unrighteous call riches,
make to thyself friends, and thou shalt be prudent: thou art gaining
for thyself, and art not cheating. For now thou seemest to lose it.
Wilt thou lose it if thou place it in a treasury? For boys, my
brethren, no sooner find some money, wherewith to buy something, than
they put it in a money-box, [1642] which they open not until
afterwards: do they, because they see not what they have got, on that
account lose it? Fear not: boys put in a money-box, and are secure:
dost thou place it in the hand of Christ, and fear? Be prudent, and
provide for thyself against the future in Heaven. Be therefore prudent,
copy the ant, as saith the Scripture: [1643] "Store in summer, lest
thou hunger in winter;" the winter is the last day, the day of
tribulation; the winter is the day of offences and of bitterness:
gather what may be there for thee for the future: but if thou doest not
so, thou wilt perish both imprudent and unwise.
13. But that rich man [1644] too died, and a like funeral was made for
him. See to what men have brought themselves: they regard not what a
wicked life he led while he lived, but what pomp followed him when he
died! O happy he, whom so many lament! But the other lived in such
sort, that few lament. For all ought to lament a man living so sadly.
But there is the funeral train; he is received in a costly tomb, he is
wound in costly robes, he is buried in perfumes and spices. Secondly,
what a monument he hath! How marbled! Doth he live in that same
monument? He is therein dead. Men deeming these to be good things, have
strayed from God, and have not sought the true good things, and have
been deceived with the false. To this end see what followeth. He who
gave not the price of the redemption of his soul, who understood not
death, because he saw wise men dying, he became imprudent and unwise,
in order that he might die with them. And how shall they perish, who
"shall leave their riches to aliens"?...
14. But do those same aliens indeed serve them who are called their
own? Hear in what they serve them, observe how they are ridiculed: why
hath he said, "to strangers"? Because they can do them no good.
Nevertheless, wherein do they seem to themselves to do good? "And their
tombs shall be their house for ever" (ver. 11). Now because these tombs
are erected, the tombs are a house. For often thou hearest a rich man
saying, I have a house of marble which I must quit, and I think not for
myself of an eternal house, where I shall alway be. When he thinketh to
make for himself a monument of marble or of sculpture, he is deeming as
it were of an eternal house: as if therein this rich man would abide!
If he would abide there, he would not burn in hell. We must consider
that the place where the spirit of an evil doer abideth, is not where
the mortal body is laid: but "their tombs shall be their house for
ever. Their dwelling places are from generation to generation."
"Dwelling places" are wherein they abode for a season: "house" is
wherein they will abide as it were for ever, that is to say, their
tombs. Thus they leave their dwelling places, where they abode while
they lived, to their families, and they pass as it were to everlasting
houses, to their tombs. What profit to them are "their dwelling places,
from generation to generation"? Now suppose a generation and generation
are sons, grandsons there will be, and great grandsons; what do their
dwelling places, what do they profit them? What? Hear: "they shall
invoke their names in their lands." What is this? They shall take bread
and wine to their tombs, and there they shall invoke the names of the
dead. Dost thou consider how loudly was invoked the name of the rich
man after his death, when men drank them drunk at his monument, and
there came down not one drop upon his own burning tongue? Men minister
to their own belly, not to the ghosts of their friends. The souls of
the dead nothing doth reach, but what they have done of themselves
while alive: but if they have done nought of themselves while alive,
nothing doth reach them dead. But what do the survivors? They will but
"invoke their names in their lands."
15. "And man though he was in honour perceived not, he was compared to
the beasts without sense, and was made like to them" (ver. 12)....They
ought, on the contrary, to have made ready for themselves an eternal
house in good works, to have made ready for themselves everlasting
life, to have sent before them expenditure, to have followed their
works, to have ministered to a needy companion, to have given to him
with whom they were walking, not to have despised Christ covered with
sores before their gate, who hath said, "Inasmuch as ye have done it
unto one of the least of these My brethren, ye have done it unto Me."
[1645] However, "man being in honour hath not understood." What is,
"being in honour"? Being made after the image and likeness of God, man
is preferred to beasts. For God hath not so made man as He made a
beast: but God hath made man for beasts to minister to: is it to his
strength then, and not to his understanding? Nay. But he "understood
not;" and he who was made after the image of God, "is compared to the
beasts without sense, and is made like unto them." Whence it is said
elsewhere, "Be ye not like to horse and mule, in which there is no
understanding." [1646]
16. "This their own way is an offence to them" (ver. 13). Be it an
offence to them, not to thee. But when will it be so to thee too? If
thou thinkest such men to be blessed. If thou perceivest that they be
not blessed, their own way will be an offence to themselves; not to
Christ, not to His Body, not to His members. "And afterwards they shall
bless with their mouth." What meaneth, "Afterwards they shall bless
with their mouth"? Though they have become such, that they seek nothing
but temporal goods, yet they become hypocrites: and when they bless
God, with lips they bless, and not with heart. Christians like these,
when to them eternal life is commended, and they are told, that in the
name of Christ they ought to be despisers [1647] of riches, do make
grimaces in their hearts: and if they dare not do it with open face,
lest they blush, or lest they should be rebuked by men, yet they do it
in heart, and scorn; and there remaineth in their mouth blessing, and
in their heart cursing.
__________________________________________________________________
[1606] Lat. XLVIII. [From a sermon preached before a bishop.]
[1607] Matt. xi. 15.
[1608] On Ps. viii.
[1609] Ps. xxii. 26.
[1610] Ps. xxii. 29.
[1611] Matt. iii. 12.
[1612] Matt. xxv. 32.
[1613] Isa. xxix. 13.
[1614] 1 Cor. xiii. 12.
[1615] 2 Cor. v. 6.
[1616] John xiv. 21.
[1617] John i. 1.
[1618] [He explains "the harp" elsewhere as the body, used by the soul
"as the harper useth the harp"; and see p. 139, supra.--C.]
[1619] Matt. xxv. 41.
[1620] John xiv. 6.
[1621] Gen. iii. 15. ["She shall mark," etc. So the Vulgate, but not in
the older editions. The Septuagint is conclusive as to the ancient
exposition of the Jews, for the neuter (sp(TM)rma) had a masculine
pronoun (autos) as nominative to the verb. So Jerome, Dominus noster
conteret Satanam. It is noteworthy that our author attaches no such
force to his reading as Mariolatry demands.--C.]
[1622] Eph. v. 28, 29.
[1623] [See Hippolytus, A.N.F. vol. v. p. 166.--C.]
[1624] Or, "might" (virtute).
[1625] Oxf. mss. "hath not redeemed," and so through the paragraph.
[1626] Matt. xxviii. 10.
[1627] See on St. John, Hom. xxi. S: 3.
[1628] [The Latin versions do not divide into verses such as our author
seems to have made.--C.]
[1629] Luke xvi. 9.
[1630] 1 Tim. vi. 17.
[1631] 1 Tim. vi. 18.
[1632] 1 Tim. vi. 19.
[1633] Luke xii. 33.
[1634] Soli sunt isti.
[1635] Luke xvi. 19.
[1636] Luke xvi. 24.
[1637] Matt. xxvii. 40, 42.
[1638] Al. "if they had seen themselves."
[1639] Wisd. ii. 20. [The Jews, even in their own book of Wisdom, show
what they did to "the Just One." The whole passage is so remarkable,
that we need not wonder at the esteem in which this book was held by
the Fathers. St. James (v. 6) seems to refer to this passage."--C.]
[1640] Luke xvi. 1, 2, etc.
[1641] Luke xvi. 9.
[1642] Thesaurario.
[1643] Prov. vi. 8, xxx. 25.
[1644] Luke xvi. 22.
[1645] Matt. xxv. 40.
[1646] Ps. xxxii. 9.
[1647] Most mss. "there should be a despising."
__________________________________________________________________
The Second Part.
1. "Like sheep laid in hell, death is their shepherd" (ver. 14). Whose?
Of those whose way is a stumbling-block to themselves. Whose? Of those
who mind only things present, while they think not of things future: of
those who think not of any life, but of that which must be called
death. Not without cause, then, like sheep in hell, have they death to
their shepherd. What meaneth, "they have death to their shepherd"? For
is death either some thing or some power? Yea, death is either the
separation of the soul from the body, or a separation of the soul from
God, [1648] and that indeed which men fear is the separation of the
soul from the body: but the real death, which men do not fear, is the
separation of the soul from God. And ofttimes when men fear that which
doth separate the soul from the body, they fall into that wherein the
soul is separated from God. This then is death. But how is "death their
shepherd"? If Christ is life, the devil is death. But we read in many
places in Scripture, how that Christ is life. But the devil is death,
not because he is himself death, but because through him is death. For
whether that (death) wherein Adam fell was given man to drink by the
persuasion of him: or whether that wherein the soul is separated from
the body, still they have him for the author thereof, who first falling
through pride envied him who stood, and overthrew him who stood with an
invisible death, in order that he might have to pay [1649] the visible
death. They who belong to him have death to their shepherd: but we who
think of future immortality, and not without reason do wear the sign of
the Cross of Christ on the forehead, have no shepherd but life. Of
unbelievers death is the shepherd, of believers life is the shepherd.
If then in hell are the sheep, whose shepherd is death, in heaven are
the sheep, whose shepherd is life. What then? Are we now in heaven? In
heaven we are by faith. For if not in heaven, where is the "Lift up
your heart"? If not in heaven, whence with the Apostle Paul, "For our
conversation is in heaven"? [1650] In body we walk on earth, in heart
we dwell in heaven. We dwell there, if thither we send anything which
holdeth us there. For no one dwelleth in heart, save where thought is:
but there his thought is, where his treasure is. He hath treasured on
earth, his heart doth not withdraw from earth: he hath treasured in
heaven, his heart from heaven doth not come down: for the Lord saith
plainly, "Where thy treasure is, there will thy heart be also." [1651]
2. They, then, whose shepherd is death, seem to flourish for a time,
and the righteous to labour: but why? Because it is yet night. What
meaneth, it is night? The merits of the righteous appear not, and the
felicity of the unrighteous hath, as it were, a name. So long as it is
winter, grass appeareth more verdant than a tree. For grass flourisheth
through the winter, a tree is as it were dry through the winter: when
in summer time the sun hath come forth with greater heat, the tree,
which seemed dry through the winter, is bursting with leaves, and
putteth forth fruits, but the grass withereth: thou wilt see the honour
of the tree, the grass is dried. So also now the righteous labour,
before that summer cometh. There is life in the root, it doth not yet
appear in the branches. But our root is love. And what saith the
Apostle? That we ought to have our root above, in order that life may
be our shepherd, because our dwelling ought not to quit heaven, because
in this earth we ought to walk as if dead; so that living above, below
we may be dead; not so as that being dead above, we may live
below....Our labour shall appear in the morning, and there shall be
fruit in the morning: so that they that now labour shall hereafter
reign, and they that now boast them and are proud, shall hereafter be
brought under. For what followeth? "Like sheep laid in hell, death is
their shepherd; and the righteous shall reign over them in the
morning."
3. Endure thou the night, yearn for the morning. Think not because the
night hath life, the morning too hath not life. Doth then he that
sleepeth live, and he that riseth live not? Is not he that sleepeth
more like death? [1652] And who are they that sleep? They whom the
Apostle Paul rouseth, if they choose but to awake. For to certain he
saith, "Awake, thou that sleepest, and arise from the dead, and Christ
shall give thee light." [1653] They then that are lightened by Christ
watch now, but the fruit of their watchings appeareth not yet: in the
morning it shall appear, that is, when doubtful things of this world
shall have passed away. For these are very night: for do they not
appear to thee like darkness?...But they on whom men have trampled, and
who were ridiculed for believing, shall hear from Life Itself, whom
they have for shepherd, "Come, ye blessed of My Father, receive the
kingdom which was prepared for you from the foundation of the world."
Therefore the righteous "shall reign over them," not now, but "in the
morning." Let no one say, Wherefore am I a Christian? I rule no one,
[1654] I would rule the wicked. Be not in haste, thou shalt reign, but
"in the morning." "And the help of them shall grow old in hell from
their glory." Now they have glory, in hell they shall grow old. What is
"the help of them"? Help from money, help from friends, help from their
own might. But when a man shall be dead, "in that day shall perish all
his thoughts." [1655] How great glory he seemed to have among men,
while he lived, so great oldness and decay of punishments shall he
have, when he shall be dead in hell.
4. "Nevertheless, God shall redeem my soul" (ver. 15). Behold the voice
of one hoping in the future: "Nevertheless, God shall redeem my soul."
[1656] Perhaps it is the voice of one still wishing to be relieved from
oppression. Some one is in prison, he saith, "God shall redeem my
soul:" some one is in bond, "God shall redeem my soul:" some one is
suffering peril by sea, is being tossed by waves and raging tempests,
what saith he? "God shall redeem my soul." They would be delivered for
the sake of this life. Not such is the voice of this man. Hear what
followeth: "God shall redeem my soul from the hand of hell, when He
shall have received me." He is speaking of this redemption, which
Christ now showeth in Himself. For He hath descended into hell, and
hath ascended into heaven. What we have seen in the Head we have found
in the Body. For what we have believed in the Head, they that have
seen, have themselves told us, and by themselves we have seen: "For we
are" all "one body." [1657] But are they better that hear, we worse to
whom it hath been told? Not so saith The Life Itself, Our Shepherd
Himself. For He rebuketh a certain disciple of His, doubting and
desiring to handle His scars, and when he had handled the scars and had
cried out, saying, "My Lord and my God," [1658] seeing His disciple
doubting, and looking to the whole world about to believe, "Because
thou hast seen Me," He saith, "thou hast believed: blessed are they
that see not, and believe." "But God shall redeem my soul from the land
of hell, when He hath received me." Here then what? Labour, oppression,
tribulation, temptation: expect nothing else. Where joy? In future
hope....
5. ...Perchance thy heart saith, Wretch that I am, I suppose to no
purpose I have believed, God doth not regard things human. God
therefore doth awaken us: and He saith what? "Fear not, though a man
have become rich" (ver. 16). For why didst thou fear, because a man
hath become rich? Thou didst fear that thou hadst believed to no
purpose, that perchance thou shouldest have lost the labour for thy
faith, and the hope of thy conversion: because perchance there hath
come in thy way gain with guilt, and thou couldest have been rich, if
thou hadst seized upon that same gain with the guilt, and neededst not
have laboured; and thou, remembering what God hath threatened, hast
refrained from guilt, and hast contemned the gain: thou seest another
man that hath made gain by guilt, and hath suffered no harm; and thou
fearest to be good. "Fear not," saith the Spirit of God to thee,
"though a man shall have become rich." Wouldest thou not have eyes but
for things present? Things future He hath promised, who hath risen
again; peace in this world, and repose in this life, He hath not
promised. Every man doth seek repose; a good thing he is seeking, but
not in the proper region thereof he is seeking it. There is no peace in
this life; in Heaven hath been promised that which on earth we are
seeking: in the world to come hath been promised that which in this
world we are seeking.
6. "Fear not, though a man be made rich, and though the glory of his
house be multiplied." Wherefore "fear not"? "For when he shall die, he
shall not receive anything" (ver. 17). Thou seest him living, consider
him dying. Thou markest what he hath here, mark what he taketh with
him. What doth he take with him? He hath store of gold, he hath store
of silver, numerous estates, slaves: he dieth, these remain, he knoweth
not for whom. For though he leaveth them for whom he will, he keepeth
them not for whom he will. For many have gained even what was not left
them, and many have lost what was left them. All these things then
remain, and he taketh with him what? Perhaps some one saith, He taketh
that with him in which he is wound, and that which is expended upon him
for a costly and marble tomb, to erect a monument, this he taketh with
him. I say, not even this. For these things are presented to him
without his feeling them. If thou deckest a man sleeping and not awake,
he hath the decorations with him on the couch: perhaps the decorations
are resting upon the body of him as he lieth, and perhaps he seeth
himself in tatters during sleep. What he feeleth is more to him than
what he feeleth not. Though even this when he shall have awaked will
not be: yet to him sleeping, that which he saw in sleep was more than
that which he felt not. Why then, brethren, should [1659] men say to
themselves, Let money be spent at my death: why do I leave my heirs
rich? Many things will they have of mine, let me too have something of
my own for my body. What shall a dead body have? what shall rotting
flesh have? what shall flesh not feeling have? If that rich man had
anything, whose tongue was dry, then man hath something of his own. My
brethren, do we read in the Gospel, that this rich man appeared in the
fire with all-silken and fine-linen coverings? Was he of such sort in
hell as he was in feastings at table? When he thirsted and desired a
drop, all those things were not there. Therefore man carrieth not with
him anything, nor doth the dead take with him that which the burial
taketh. For where feeling is, there is the man; where is no feeling,
the man is not. There lieth fallen the vessel which contained the man,
the house which held the man. The body let us call the house, the
spirit let us call the inhabitant of the house. The spirit is tormented
in hell: what doth it profit him, that the body lieth in spices and
perfumes, wound in costly linens? just as if the master of the house
should be sent into banishment, and thou shouldest garnish the walls of
his house. He in banishment is in need, and doth faint with hunger, he
scarce findeth to himself one hovel where he may snatch a sleep, and
thou sayest, "Happy is he, for his house hath been garnished." Who
would not judge that thou wast either jesting or wast mad? Thou dost
garnish the body, the spirit is tormented. Give something to the
spirit, and ye have given something to the dead man. But what wilt thou
give him, when he desired one drop, and received not? For the man
scorned to send before him anything. Wherefore scorned? "because this
their way is a stumbling-block to them." [1660] He minded not any but
the present life, he thought not but how he might be buried, wound in
costly vestments. His soul was taken from him, as the Lord saith: "Thou
fool, this night thy soul shall be taken from thee, and whose shall
those things be which thou hast provided?" [1661] And that is fulfilled
which this Psalm saith: "Fear not, though a man be made rich, and
though the glory of his house be multiplied: for when he shall die he
shall not receive anything, nor shall his glory descend together with
him."
7. Let your love observe: "For his soul shall be blessed in his life"
(ver. 18). As long as he lived he did well for himself. This all men
say, but say falsely. It is a blessing from the mind of the blesser,
not from the truth itself. For what sayest thou? Because he ate and
drank, because he did what he chose, because he feasted sumptuously,
therefore he did well with himself. I say, he did ill for himself. Not
I say, but Christ. He did ill for himself. For that rich man, when he
feasted sumptuously every day, was supposed to do well with himself:
but when he began to burn in hell, then that which was supposed to be
well was found to be ill. For what he had eaten with men above, [1662]
he digested in hell beneath. Unrighteousness I mean, brethren, on which
he used to feast. He used to eat costly banquets with the mouth of
flesh, with his heart's mouth he used to eat unrighteousness. What he
ate with his heart's mouth with men above, this he digested amid those
punishments in the places beneath. And verily he had eaten for a time,
he digested ill for everlasting. Is then unrighteousness eaten? perhaps
some one saith: what is it that he saith? Unrighteousness eaten? It is
not I that say: hear the Scripture: "As a sour grape is vexation to the
teeth, and smoke to the eyes, so is unrighteousness to them that use
it." [1663] For he that shall have eaten unrighteousness, that is, he
that shall have had unrighteousness wilfully, shall not be able to eat
righteousness. For righteousness is bread. Who is bread? "I am the
living bread which came down from heaven." [1664] Himself is the bread
of our heart....Is then even righteousness eaten? If it were not eaten,
the Lord would not have said, "Blessed are they which do hunger and
thirst after righteousness." [1665] Therefore "since his soul shall be
blessed in life," in life it "shall" be blessed, in death it shall be
tormented....
8. "He shall confess to Thee, when Thou shalt have done him good." Be
not of such sort, brethren: see ye how that to this end we say these
words, to this end we sing, to this end we treat, to this end toil--do
not these things. Your business doth prove you: sometimes in your
business ye hear the truth, and ye blaspheme. The Church ye blaspheme.
Wherefore? Because ye are Christians. "If so it be, I betake myself to
Donatus's party: I will be a heathen." [1666] Wherefore? Because thou
hast eaten bread, and the teeth are in pain. When thou sawest the bread
itself, thou didst praise; thou beginnest to eat, and the teeth are in
pain; that is, when thou wast hearing the Word of God thou didst
praise: when it is said to thee, "Do this," thou blasphemest: do not so
ill: say this, "The bread is good, but I cannot eat it." But now if
thou seest with the eyes, thou praisest: when thou beginnest to close
the teeth thou sayest, "Bad is this bread, and like him that made it."
So it cometh to pass that thou confessest to God, when God doeth thee
good and thou liest when thou singest, "I will alway bless God, His
praise is ever in my mouth." [1667] How alway? If alway gain, alway He
is blessed: if sometime there is loss, He is not blessed, but
blasphemed. Forsooth thou blessest alway, forsooth His praise is ever
in thy mouth! Thou wilt be such as just now he describeth: "He will
confess to Thee, when Thou shalt have done him good."
9. "He shall enter even unto the generations of his fathers" (ver. 19):
that is, he shall imitate his fathers. For the unrighteous, that now
are, have brothers, have fathers. Unrighteous men of old, are the
fathers of the present; and they that are now unrighteous, are the
fathers of unrighteous posterity: just as the fathers of the righteous,
the righteous of old, are the fathers of the righteous that now are;
and they that now are, are the fathers of them that are to be. The Holy
Spirit hath willed to show that righteousness is not evil when men
murmur against her: but these men have their father from the beginning,
even to the generation of their fathers. Two men Adam begat, and in one
was unrighteousness, in one was righteousness: unrighteousness in Cain,
righteousness in Abel. [1668] Unrighteousness seemed to prevail over
righteousness, because Cain unrighteous slew Abel righteous [1669] in
the night. Is it so in the morning? Nay, "but the righteous shall reign
over them in the morning." [1670] The morning shall come, and it shall
be seen where Abel is, and where Cain. So all men who are after Cain,
and so all who are after Abel, even unto the end of the world. "He
shall enter even unto the generations of his fathers: even to eternity
he shall not see light." Because even when he was here, he was in
darkness, taking pleasure in false goods, and not loving real goods:
even so he shall go hence into hell: from the darkness of his dreams
the darkness of torments shall receive him. Therefore, "even to
eternity he shall not see light."
But wherefore this? What he hath written in the middle of the Psalm,
[1671] the same also he hath writ at the end: "Man, though he was in
honour, understood not, was compared to the beasts without sense, and
was made like to them" (ver. 20). But ye, brethren, consider that ye be
men made after the image and likeness of God. The image [1672] of God
is within, is not in the body; is not in these ears which ye see, and
eyes, and nostrils, and palate, and hands, and feet; but is made
nevertheless: [1673] wherein is the intellect, wherein is the mind,
wherein the power of discovering truth, wherein is faith, wherein is
your hope, wherein your charity, there God hath His Image: there at
least ye perceive and see that these things pass away; for so he hath
said in another Psalm, "Though man walketh in an image, yet he is
disquieted in vain: he heapeth up treasures, and knoweth not for whom
he shall gather them." [1674] Be not disquieted, for of whatsoever kind
these things be, they are transitory, if ye are men who being in honour
understand. For if being men in honour ye understand not, ye are
compared to the beasts without sense, and are made like to them.
__________________________________________________________________
[1648] Oxf. mss. add, "or a separation of the soul from God."
[1649] Al. "destroy him with the visible death."
[1650] Philip. iii. 20.
[1651] Matt. vi. 12.
[1652] Or, "a dead person."
[1653] Eph. v. 14.
[1654] Most mss. omit, "I rule no one." See Ser. 72, ad. Fr. in Erem.
[1655] Ps. cxlvi. 4.
[1656] [Compare ver. 7, p. 171, supra.--C.]
[1657] Rom. xii. 5.
[1658] John xx. 28.
[1659] Oxf. mss. "do."
[1660] Ps. xlix. 13.
[1661] Luke xii. 20.
[1662] Apud superos.
[1663] Prov. x. 26.
[1664] John vi. 51.
[1665] Matt. v. 6.
[1666] Those who became Donatists declared themselves not yet
Christians, in order to be rebaptized.
[1667] Ps. xxxiv. 1.
[1668] 1 John iii. 12.
[1669] Gen. iv. 8.
[1670] Ps. xlix. 14.
[1671] Ps. xlix. 12.
[1672] Gen. i. 26.
[1673] Most mss. "made a mind."
[1674] Ps. xxxix. 6.
__________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm L. [1675]
1. How much availeth the Word of God to us for the correction of our
life, both regarding His rewards to be expected, and His punishments to
be feared, let each one measure [1676] in himself; and let him put his
conscience without deceit before His eyes, and not flatter himself in a
danger so great: for ye see that even our Lord God Himself doth flatter
no one: though He comforteth us by promising His blessings, and by
strengthening our hope; yet them that live ill and despise His word He
assuredly spareth not. Let each one examine himself, while it is time,
and let him see where he is, and either persevere in good, or be
changed from evil. For as he saith in this Psalm, not any man whatever
nor any angel whatever, but, "The Lord, the God of gods, hath spoken"
(ver. 1). But in speaking, He hath done what? "He hath called the earth
from the rising of the sun unto the going down." He that "hath called
the world from the rising of the sun unto the going down," is Our Lord
and Saviour Jesus Christ, "the Word made Flesh," [1677] in order that
He might dwell in us. Our Lord Jesus Christ then is the "God of gods;"
because by Himself were all things made, and without Himself was
nothing made. The Word of God, if He is God, is truly the God of gods;
but whether He be God the Gospel answereth, "In the beginning was the
Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God." [1678] And if
all things were made by Himself, as He saith in the sequel, then if any
were made gods, by Himself were they made. For the one God was not
made, and He is Himself alone truly God. But Himself the only God,
Father and Son and Holy Ghost, is one God.
2. But then who are those gods, or where are they, of whom God is the
true God? Another Psalm saith, "God hath stood in the synagogue of
gods, but in the midst He judgeth gods." [1679] As yet we know not
whether perchance any gods be congregated in heaven, and in their
congregation, for this is "in the synagogue," God hath stood to judge.
See in the same Psalm those to whom he saith, "I have said, Ye are
gods, and children of the Highest all; but ye shall die like men, and
fall like one of the princes." [1680] It is evident then, that He hath
called men gods, that are deified of His Grace, not born of His
Substance. For He doth justify, who is just through His own self, and
not of another; and He doth deify who is God through Himself, not by
the partaking of another. But He that justifieth doth Himself deify, in
that by justifying He doth make sons of God. "For He hath given them
power to become the sons of God." [1681] If we have been made sons of
God, we have also been made gods: but this is the effect of Grace
adopting, not of nature generating. For the only Son of God, God, and
one God with the Father, Our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, was in the
beginning the Word, and the Word with God, the Word God. The rest that
are made gods, are made by His own Grace, are not born of His
Substance, that they should be the same as He, but that by favour they
should come to Him, and be fellow-heirs with Christ. For so great is
the love in Him the Heir, that He hath willed to have fellow-heirs.
What covetous man would will this, to have fellow-heirs? But even one
that is found so to will, will share with them the inheritance, the
sharer having less himself, than if he had possessed alone: but the
inheritance wherein we are fellow-heirs of Christ, is not lessened by
multitude of possessors, nor is it made narrower by the number of
fellow-heirs: but is as great for many as it is for few, as great for
individuals as for all. "See," saith the Apostle, "what love God hath
bestowed upon us, that we should be called, and be, the sons of God."
[1682] And in another place, "Dearly beloved, we are the sons of God,
and it doth not yet appear what we shall be." We are therefore in hope,
not yet in substance. "But we know," he saith, "that when He shall have
appeared, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is." [1683]
The Only Son is like Him by birth, we like by seeing. For we are not
like in such sort as He, who is the same as He is by whom He was
begotten: for we are like, not equal: He, because equal, is therefore
like. We have heard who are the gods that being made are justified,
because they are called the sons of God: and who are the gods that are
not Gods, to whom the God of gods is terrible? For another Psalm saith,
"He is terrible over all gods." [1684] And as if thou shouldest
enquire, what gods? He saith, "For all the gods of the nations are
devils." To the gods of the nations, to the devils, terrible: to the
gods made by Himself, to sons, lovely. Furthermore, I find both of them
confessing the Majesty of God, both the devils confessed Christ, and
the faithful confessed Christ. "Thou art Christ, the Son of the living
God," [1685] said Peter. "We know who Thou art, Thou art the Son of
God," [1686] said the devils. A like confession I hear, but like love I
find not; nay even here love, there fear. To whom therefore He is
lovely, the same are sons; to whom He is terrible, are not sons; to
whom He is lovely, the same He hath made gods; those to whom He is
terrible He doth prove not to be gods. For these are made gods, those
are reputed gods; these Truth maketh gods, those error doth so account.
3. "The God," therefore, "of gods, the Lord hath spoken" [1687] (ver.
1). Hath spoken many ways. By Angels He hath Himself spoken, by
Prophets He hath Himself spoken, by His own mouth He hath Himself
spoken, by His faithful He doth Himself speak, by our lowliness, when
we say anything true, He doth Himself speak. See then, by speaking
diversely, many ways, by many vessels, by many instruments, yet He doth
Himself sound everywhere, by touching, moulding, inspiring: see what He
hath done. For "He hath spoken, and hath called the world." What world?
Africa, perhaps! for the sake of those that say, the Church of Christ
is the portion of Donatus. Africa indeed alone He hath not called, but
even Africa He hath not severed. For He that "hath called the world
from the rising of the sun unto the going down," leaving out no parts
that He hath not called, in His calling hath found Africa. Let it
rejoice therefore in unity, not pride itself in division. We say well,
that the voice of the God of gods hath come even into Africa, hath not
stayed in Africa. For "He hath called the world from the rising of the
sun unto the going down." There is no place where may lurk the
conspiracies of heretics, they have no place wherein they may hide
themselves under the shadow of falsehood; for "there is none that can
hide himself from the heat thereof." [1688] He that hath called the
world, hath called even the whole world: He that hath called the world,
hath called as much as He hath formed. Why do false christs and false
prophets rise up against me? why is it that they strive to ensnare me
with captious words, saying, "Lo! here is Christ, Lo! He is there!"
[1689] I hear not them that point out portions: the God of gods hath
pointed out the whole: "He" that "hath called the world from the rising
of the sun unto the going down," hath redeemed the whole; but hath
condemned them that lay false claim to [1690] portions.
4. But we have heard the world called from the rising of the sun unto
the going down: whence doth He begin to call, who hath called? This
thing also hear ye: "Out of Sion is the semblance of His beauty" (ver.
2). Evidently the Psalm doth agree with the Gospel, which saith,
"Throughout all nations, beginning at Jerusalem." [1691] Hear,
"Throughout all nations:" He hath called the world from the rising of
the sun unto the going down." Hear, "Beginning at Jerusalem:" "Out of
Sion is the semblance of His beauty." Therefore, "He hath called the
world from the rising of the sun unto the going down," agreeth with the
words of the Lord, who saith, "It behoved Christ to suffer, and to rise
from the dead the third day; and that repentance and remission of sins
should be preached in His Name throughout all nations." [1692] For all
nations are from the rising of the sun unto the going down. But that,
"Out of Sion is the semblance of His beauty," that thence beginneth the
beauty of His Gospel, that thence He began to be preached, being
"beautiful in form beyond the sons of men," [1693] agreeth with the
words of the Lord, who saith, "Beginning at Jerusalem." New things are
in tune with old, old things with new: the two Seraphim say to one
another, "Holy, holy, holy, Lord God of Sabaoth." [1694] The two
Testaments are both in tune, and the two Testaments have one voice: let
the voice of the Testaments in tune be heard, not that of pretenders
disinherited. This thing then hath the God of gods done, "He hath
called the world from the rising of the sun unto the going down, His
semblance going before out of Sion." For in that place were His
disciples, [1695] who received the Holy Ghost sent from heaven on the
fiftieth day after His resurrection. Thence the Gospel, thence the
preaching, thence the whole world filled, and that in the Grace of
Faith.
5. For when the Lord Himself had come, because He came to suffer, He
came hidden: and though He was strong in Himself, He appeared in the
flesh weak. For He must needs appear in order that He might not be
perceived; be despised, in order that He might be slain. There was
semblance of glory in divinity, but it lay concealed in flesh. "For if
they had known, they would never have crucified the Lord of glory."
[1696] So then He walked hidden among the Jews, among His enemies,
doing marvels, suffering ills, until He was hanged on the tree, and the
Jews seeing Him hanging both despised Him the more, and before the
Cross wagging their heads they said, "If He be the Son of God, let Him
come down from the Cross." [1697] Hidden then was the God of gods, and
He gave forth words more out of compassion for us than out of His own
majesty. For whence, unless assumed from us, were those words, "My God,
My God, why hast Thou forsaken me?" [1698] But when hath the Father
forsaken the Son, or the Son the Father? Are not Father and Son one
God? Whence then, "My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me," save
that in the Flesh of infirmity there was acknowledged the voice of a
sinner? For as He took upon Him the likeness of the flesh of sin,
[1699] why should He not take upon Him the voice of sin? Hidden then
was the God of gods, both when He walked among men, and when He
hungered, and when He thirsted, and when fatigued He sat, and when with
wearied body He slept, and when taken, and when scourged, and when
standing before the judge, and when He made answer to him in his pride,
"Thou couldest have no power against Me, except it had been given thee
from above;" [1700] and while led as a victim "before His shearer He
opened not His mouth," [1701] and while crucified, and while buried, He
was always hidden God of gods. What took place after He rose again? The
disciples marvelled, and at first believed not, until they touched and
handled. [1702] But flesh had risen, because flesh had been dead:
Divinity which could not die, even still lay hid in the flesh of Him
rising. Form could be seen, limbs held, scars handled: the Word by whom
all things were made, who doth see? who doth hold? who doth handle? And
yet "the Word was made flesh, and dwelled among us." [1703] And Thomas,
that was holding Man, understood God as he was able. For when he had
handled the scars, he cried out, "My Lord, and my God." Yet the Lord
was showing that form, and that flesh, which they had seen upon the
Cross, which had been laid in the sepulchre. He stayed with them forty
days....But what was said to Thomas handling? "Because thou hast seen,
thou hast believed; blessed are they that see not, and believe." [1704]
We are foretold. That world called from the rising of the sun unto the
going down seeth not, and believeth. Hidden then is the God of gods,
both to those among whom He walked, and to those by whom He was
crucified, and to those before whose eyes He rose, and to us who
believe on Him in heaven sitting, whom we have not seen on earth
walking. But even if we were to see, should we not see that which the
Jews saw and crucified? It is more, that not seeing we believe Christ
to be God, than that they seeing deemed Him only to be man. They in a
word by thinking evil slew, we by believing well are made alive.
6. What then, brethren? This God of gods, both then hidden, and now
hidden, shall He ever be hidden? Evidently not: hear what followeth:
"God shall come manifest" (ver. 3). He that came hidden, shall come
manifest. Hidden He came to be judged, manifest He shall come to judge:
hidden He came that He might stand before a judge, manifest He shall
come that He may be judge even of judges: "He shall come manifest, and
shall not be silent." But why? Is He now silent? And whence are all the
words that we say? whence those precepts? whence those warnings? whence
that trumpet of terror? He is not silent, and is silent: is not silent
from warning, is silent from avenging: is not silent from precept, is
silent from judgment. For He suffereth sinners daily doing evil things,
not caring for God, not in their conscience, not in heaven, not in
earth: all these things escape Him not, and universally He doth
admonish all; and whenever He chastiseth any on earth, it is
admonition, not yet condemnation. He is silent then from judgment, He
is hidden in heaven, as yet He intercedeth for us: He is long-suffering
to sinners, not putting forth His wrath, but awaiting penitence. He
saith in another place: "I have held my peace, shall I always hold my
peace?" [1705] When then He shall not hold His peace, "God shall come
manifest." What God? "Our God." And the God Himself, who is our God:
for he is not God, who is not our God. For the gods of the nations are
devils: the God of Christians is very God. Himself shall come, but
"manifest," not still to be mocked, not still to be buffeted and
scourged: He shall come, but "manifest," not still to be smitten with a
reed upon the head, not still to be crucified, slain, buried: for all
these things God being hidden hath willed to suffer. "He shall come
manifest, and shall not be silent."
7. But that He shall come to judgment, the following words teach. "Fire
shall go before Him." [1706] Do we fear? Be we changed, and we shall
not fear. Let chaff fear the fire: what doth it to gold? What thou
mayest do is now in thy power, so thou mayest not experience, for want
of being corrected, that which is to come even against thy will. For if
we might so bring it about, brethren, that the day of judgment should
not come; I think that even then it were not for us to live ill. If the
fire of the day of judgment were not to come, and over sinners there
impended only separation from the face of God, in whatever affluence of
delights they might be, not seeing Him by whom they were created, and
separated from that sweetness of His ineffable [1707] countenance, in
whatever eternity and impunity of sin, they ought to bemoan themselves.
But what shall I say, or to whom shall I say? This is a punishment to
lovers, not to despisers. They that have begun to feel in any degree
the sweetness of wisdom and truth, know what I say, how great a
punishment it is to be only separated from the face of God: but they
that have not tasted that sweetness, if not yet they yearn for the face
of God, let them fear even fire; let punishments terrify those, whom
rewards win not. Of no value to thee is what God promiseth, tremble at
what He threateneth. The sweetness of His presence shall come; thou art
not changed, thou art not awakened, thou sighest not, thou longest not:
thou embracest thy sins and the delights of thy flesh, thou art heaping
stubble to thyself, the fire will come. "Fire shall burn in His
presence." This fire will not be like thy hearth-fire, into which
nevertheless, if thou art compelled to thrust thy hand, thou wilt do
whatsoever he would have thee who doth threaten this alternative. If he
say to thee, "write against the life [1708] of thy father, write
against the lives of thy children, for if thou do not, I thrust thy
hand into thy fire:" thou wilt do it in order that thy hand be not
burned, in order that thy member be not burned for a time, though it is
not to be ever in pain. Thine enemy threateneth then but so light an
evil, and thou doest evil; God threateneth eternal evil, and doest thou
not good? To do evil not even menaces should compel thee: from doing
good not even menaces should deter thee. But by the menaces of God, by
menaces of everlasting fire, thou art dissuaded from evil, invited to
good. Wherefore doth it grieve thee, except because thou believest not?
Let each one then examine his heart, and see what faith doth [1709]
hold there. If we believe a judgment to come, brethren, let us live
well. Now is time of mercy, then will be time of judgment. No one will
say, "Call me back to my former years." Even then men will repent, but
will repent in vain: now let there be repentance, while there is fruit
of repentance; now let there be applied to the roots of the tree a
basket of dung, [1710] sorrow of heart, and tears; lest He come and
pluck up by the roots. For when He shall have plucked up, then the fire
is to be looked for. Now, even if the branches have been broken, they
can again be grafted in: [1711] then, "every tree which bringeth not
forth good fruit, shall be cut down, and shall be cast into the fire."
[1712] "Fire shall burn in His presence."
8. "And a mighty tempest round about Him" (ver. 3). "A mighty tempest,"
in order to winnow so great a floor. In this tempest shall be that
winnowing whereby from the saints shall be put away everything impure,
from the faithful every unreality; from godly men and them that fear
the Word of God, every scorner and every proud man. For now a sort of
mixture doth lie there, from the rising of the sun unto the going down.
Let us see then how He will do that is to come, what He will do with
that tempest which "shall be a mighty tempest round about Him."
Doubtless this tempest is to make a sort of separation. It is that
separation which they waited not for, who brake the nets, before they
came to land. [1713] But in this separation there is made a sort of
distinction between good men and bad men. There be some that now follow
Christ with lightened shoulders without the load of the world's cares,
who have not heard in vain, "If thou wilt be perfect, go and sell all
that thou hast, and give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in
heaven: and come, follow Me;" [1714] to which sort is said, "Ye shall
sit upon twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel." [1715]
Some then shall be judging with the Lord: but others to be judged, but
to be placed on the right hand. For that there will be certain judging
with the Lord, we have most evident testimony, which I have but now
quoted: "Ye shall sit upon twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of
Israel."...
9. But what the Lord did after His resurrection, signified what is to
be to us after our resurrection, in that number of the kingdom of
heaven, where shall be no bad man....Lastly, those seven thousand of
whom reply was made to Elias, "I have left me seven thousand men that
have not bowed knees before Baal," [1716] far exceed that number of
fishes. Therefore the hundred and fifty-three fishes [1717] doth not
alone express just such a number of saints, but Scripture doth express
the whole number of saints and righteous men by so great a number for a
particular reason; to wit, in order that in those hundred and
fifty-three all may be understood that pertain to the resurrection to
eternal life. For the Law hath ten commandments: [1718] but the Spirit
of Grace, through which alone the Law is fulfilled, [1719] is called
sevenfold. The number then must be examined, what mean ten and seven:
ten in commandments, seven in the grace of the Holy Spirit: by which
grace the commandments are fulfilled. Ten then and seven contain all
that pertain to the resurrection, to the right hand, to the kingdom of
heaven, to life eternal, that is, they that fulfil the Law by the Grace
of the Spirit, not as it were by their own work or their own merit. But
ten and seven, if thou countest from one unto seventeen, by adding all
the numbers by steps, so that to one thou mayest add two, add three,
add four, that they may become ten, by adding five that they may become
fifteen, by adding six that they may become twenty-one, by adding seven
that they may become twenty-eight, by adding eight that they may become
thirty-six, by adding nine that they may become forty-five, by adding
ten that they may become fifty-five, by adding eleven that they may
become sixty-six, by adding twelve that they may become seventy-eight,
by adding thirteen that they may become ninety-one, by adding fourteen
that they may become one hundred and five, by adding fifteen that they
may become one hundred and twenty, by adding sixteen that they may
become one hundred and thirty-six, by adding seventeen, make up one
hundred and fifty-three, thou wilt find a vast number of all saints to
belong to this number of a few fishes. In like manner then as in five
virgins, countless virgins; as in five brethren of him that was
tormented in hell, thousands of the people of the Jews; as in the
number of one hundred and fifty-three fishes, thousands of thousands of
saints: so in twelve thrones, not twelve men, but great is the number
of the perfect. [1720]
10. But I see what is next required of us; in like manner as in the
case of the five virgins, a reason was given why many should belong to
five, and why to those five many Jews, and why to a hundred and
fifty-three many perfect--to show why and how to the twelve thrones not
twelve men, but many belong. What mean the twelve thrones, which
signify all men everywhere that have been enabled to be so perfect as
they must be perfect, to whom it is said, "Ye shall sit over the twelve
tribes of Israel"? [1721] And why do all men everywhere belong to the
number twelve? Because the very "everywhere" which we say, we say of
the whole world: but the compass of lands is contained in four
particular quarters, East, West, South, and North: from all these
quarters they being called in the Trinity and made perfect in the faith
and precept of the Trinity,--seeing that three times four are twelve,
ye perceive wherefore the saints belong to the whole world; they that
shall sit upon twelve thrones to judge the twelve tribes of Israel,
since the twelve tribes of Israel, also, are the twelve tribes of the
whole of Israel. For like as they that are to judge are from the whole
world, so also they that are to be judged are from the whole world. The
Apostle Paul of himself, when he was reproving believing laymen,
because they referred not their causes to the Church, but dragged them
with whom they had matters before the public, said, "Know ye not that
we shall judge Angels?" [1722] See after what sort He hath made Himself
judge: not only himself, but also all that judge aright in the Church.
11. Since then it is evident, that many are to judge with the Lord, but
that others are to be judged, not however on equality, but according to
their deserts; He will come with all His Angels, [1723] when before Him
shall be gathered all nations, and among all the Angels are to be
reckoned those that have been made so perfect, that sitting upon twelve
thrones they judge the twelve tribes of Israel. For men are called
Angels: the Apostle saith of himself, "As an angel of God ye received
me." [1724] Of John Baptist it is said, "Behold, I send My Angel before
Thy face, that shall prepare Thy way before Thee." [1725] Therefore,
coming with all Angels, together with Him He shall have the Saints
also. For plainly saith Isaias also, "He shall come to judgment with
the elders of the people." [1726] Those "elders of the people," then,
those but now named Angels, those thousands of many men made perfect
coming from the whole world, are called Heaven. But the others are
called earth, yet fruitful. Which is the earth that is fruitful? That
which is to be set on the right hand, unto which it shall be said, "I
was an hungred, and ye gave Me to eat:" [1727] truly fruitful earth in
which the Apostle doth joy, when they sent to him to supply his
necessities: "Not because I ask a gift," he saith, "but I require
fruit." [1728] And he giveth thanks, saying, "Because at length ye have
budded forth again to be thoughtful for me." [1729] He saith, "Ye have
budded forth again," as to trees which had withered away with a kind of
barrenness. Therefore the Lord coming to judgment (that we may now hear
the Psalm, brethren), He will do what? "He will call the heaven from
above" (ver. 4). The heaven, all the Saints, those made perfect that
shall judge, them He shall call from above, to be sitters with Him to
judge the twelve tribes of Israel. For how shall "He call the heaven
from above," when the heaven is always above? But those that He here
calleth heaven, the same elsewhere He calleth heavens. What heavens?
That tell out the glory of God: for, "The heavens tell out the glory of
God:" [1730] whereof is said, "Into all the earth their sound hath gone
forth, and into the ends of the world their words." For see the Lord
severing in judgment: "He shall call the heaven from above and the
earth, to sever His people." From whom but from evil men? Of whom here
afterwards no mention is made, now as it were condemned to punishment.
See these good men, and distinguish. "He shall call the heaven from
above, and the earth, to sever His people." He calleth the earth also,
not however to be associated, but to be dissociated. For at first He
called them together, "when the God of gods spake and called the world
from the rising of the sun unto the going down," He had not yet
severed: those servants had been sent to bid to the marriage, [1731]
who had gathered good and bad. But when the God of gods shall come
manifest and shall not keep silence, He shall so call the "heaven from
above" that it may judge with Him. For what the heaven is, the heavens
themselves are; just as what the earth is, the lands themselves, just
as what the Church is, the Churches themselves: "He shall call the
heaven from above, and the earth, to sever His people." Now with the
heaven He severeth the earth, that is, the heaven with Him doth sever
the earth. How doth He sever the earth? In such sort that He setteth on
the right hand some, others on the left. But to the earth severed, He
saith what? "Come, ye blessed of My Father, receive the kingdom which
was prepared for you from the beginning of the world. For I was an
hungred, and ye gave me to eat," and so forth. But they say, "When saw
we Thee an hungred?" And He, "Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of
the least of Mine, ye have done it unto Me." [1732] "He shall call
therefore the heaven from above, and the earth, to sever His people."
12. "Gather to Him His righteous" (ver. 5). The voice divine and
prophetic, seeing future things as if present doth exhort the Angels
gathering. For He shall send His Angels, and before Him shall be
gathered all nations. [1733] Gather to Him His righteous. What
righteous men save those that live of faith and do works of mercy? For
those works are works of righteousness. Thou hast the Gospel: "Beware
of doing your righteousness before men to be seen of them." [1734] And
as if it were inquired, What righteousness? "When therefore thou doest
alms," He saith. Therefore alms He hath signified to be works of
righteousness. Those very persons gather for His righteous: gather
those that have had compassion on the "needy," that have considered the
needy and poor: [1735] gather them, "The Lord preserve them, and make
them to live;" "Gather to Him His righteous: who order His covenant
above sacrifices:" that is, who think of His promises above those
things which they work. For those things are sacrifices, God saying, "I
will have mercy more than sacrifice." [1736] "Who keep His covenant
more than sacrifice."
13. "And the Heaven shall declare His righteousness" (ver. 6). Truly
this righteousness of God to us the "heavens have declared," the
Evangelists have foretold. Through them we have heard that some will be
on the right hand, to whom the Householder saith, "Come, ye blessed of
My Father, receive." [1737] Receive what? "A kingdom." In return for
what thing? "I was an hungred, and ye gave Me to eat." What so
valueless, what so earthly, as to break bread to the hungry? At so much
is valued the kingdom of heaven. "Break thy bread to the hungry, and
the needy without covering bring into thy house; if thou seest one
naked, clothe him." [1738] If thou hast not the means of breaking
bread, hast not house into which thou mayest bring, hast not garment
wherewith thou mayest cover: give a cup of cold water, [1739] cast two
mites into the treasury. [1740] As much the widow doth buy with two
mites, as Peter buyeth, by leaving the nets, [1741] as Zacchaeus buyeth
by giving half his goods. [1742] Of so much worth is all that thou
hast. "The heavens shall declare His righteousness, for God is Judge."
Truly judge not confounding but severing. For "the Lord knoweth them
that are His." [1743] Even if grains lie hid in the chaff, they are
known to the husbandman. Let no one fear that he is a grain even among
the chaff; the eyes of our winnower are not deceived. Fear not lest
that tempest, which shall be round about Him, should confound thee with
chaff. Certainly mighty will be the tempest; yet not one grain will it
sweep from the side of the corn to the chaff: because not any rustic
with three-pronged fork, but God, Three in One, is Judge. And the
heavens shall declare His righteousness: for God is Judge. Let heavens
go, let the heavens tell, into every land let their sound go out, and
unto the ends of the world their words: [1744] and let that body say,
"From the ends of the world unto Thee have I cried, when my heart was
in heaviness." [1745] For now mingled it groaneth, divided it shall
rejoice. Let it cry then and say, "Destroy not my soul with ungodly
men, and with men of blood my life." [1746] He destroyeth not together,
because God is Judge. Let it cry to Him and say, "Judge me, O Lord, and
sever my cause from the nation unholy:" [1747] let it say, He shall do
it: there shall be gathered to Him His righteous ones. He hath called
the earth that He may sever His people.
14. "Hear, my people, and I will speak to thee" (ver. 7). He shall come
and shall not keep silence; see how that even now, if ye hear, He is
not silent. Hear, my people, and I will speak to thee. For if thou
hearest not, I will not speak to thee. "Hear, and I will speak to
thee." For if thou hearest not, even though I shall speak, it will not
be to thee. When then shall I speak to thee? If thou hearest. When
hearest thou? If thou art my people. For, "Hear, my people:" thou
hearest not if thou art an alien people. "Hear, my people, and I will
speak to thee: Israel, and I will testify to thee."...For "Thy God," is
properly said to that man whom God doth keep more as one of His family,
as though in His household, as though in His peculiar: "Thy God am I."
What wilt thou more? Requirest thou a reward from God, so that God may
give thee something; so that what He hath given thee may be thine own?
Behold God Himself, who shall give, is thine own. What richer than He?
Gifts thou wast desiring, thou hast the Giver Himself. "God, thy God, I
am."
15. What He requireth of man, let us see; what tribute our God, our
Emperor and our King doth enjoin us; since He hath willed to be our
King, and hath willed us to be His province? Let us hear His
injunctions. Let not a poor man tremble beneath the injunction of God:
what God enjoineth to be given to Himself, He doth Himself first give
that enjoineth: be ye only devoted. God doth not exact what He hath not
given, and to all men hath given what He doth exact. For what doth He
exact? Let us hear now: "I will not reprove thee because of thy
sacrifices" (ver. 8). I will not say to thee, Wherefore hast thou not
slain for me a fat bull? why hast thou not selected the best he-goat
from thy flock? Wherefore doth that ram amble among thy sheep, and is
not laid upon mine altar? I will not say, Examine thy fields and thy
pen [1748] and thy walls, seeking what thou mayest give Me. "I will not
reprove thee because of thy sacrifices." What then: Dost Thou not
accept my sacrifices? "But thy holocausts are always in My sight" (ver.
9). Certain holocausts concerning which it is said in another Psalm,
"If Thou hadst desired sacrifice, I would surely have given, with
holocausts Thou wilt not be delighted:" [1749] and again he turneth
himself, "Sacrifice to God is a troubled spirit, a heart broken and
humbled God doth not despise." [1750] Which be then holocausts that He
despiseth not? Which holocausts that are always in His sight? "Kindly,
O Lord," he saith, "deal in Thy good will with Sion, and be the walls
of Jerusalem builded, then shalt Thou accept the sacrifice of
righteousness, oblations, and holocausts." He saith that certain
holocausts God will accept. But what is a holocaust? A whole consumed
with fire: causis is burning, holon is whole: but a "holocaust" is a
whole consumed with fire. There is a certain fire of most burning love:
be the mind inflamed with love, let the same love hurry off the limbs
to its use, let it not allow them to serve cupidity, in order that we
may wholly glow with fire of divine love that will offer to God a
holocaust. Such "holocausts of thine are in My sight always."
16. As yet that Israel perchance doth not understand what are the
holocausts thereof which He hath in His sight always, and is still
thinking of oxen, of sheep, of he-goats: let it not so think: "I will
not accept calves of thy house." Holocausts I named; at once in mind
and thought to earthly flocks thou wast running, therefrom thou wast
selecting for Me some fat thing: "I will not accept calves of thy
house." He is foretelling the New Testament, wherein all those
sacrifices have ceased. For they were then foretelling a certain
Sacrifice which was to be, with the Blood whereof we should be
cleansed. "I will not accept calves of thy house, nor he-goats of thy
flocks."
17. "For mine are all the beasts of the wood" (ver. 10). Why should I
ask of thee what I have made? Is it more thine, to whom I have given it
to possess, than Mine, who have made it? "For mine are all the beasts
of the wood." But perchance that Israel saith, The beasts are God's,
those wild beasts which I enclose not in my pen, which I bind not to my
stall; but this ox and sheep and he-goat--these are mine own. "Cattle
on the mountain, and oxen." [1751] Mine are those which thou possessest
not, Mine are these which thou possessest. For if thou art My servant,
the whole of thy property is Mine. For it cannot be, that is the
property of the master which the servant hath gotten to himself, and
yet that not be the property of the Master which the Master Himself
hath created for the servant. Therefore Mine are the beasts of the wood
which thou hast not taken; Mine are also the cattle on the mountains
which are thine, and the oxen which are at thy stall: all are Mine own,
for I have created them.
18. "I know all the winged creatures of heaven" (ver. 11). How doth He
know? He hath weighed them, hath counted. Which of us knoweth all the
winged creatures of heaven? But even though to some man God give
knowledge of all the winged creatures of heaven, He doth not Himself
know in the same manner as He giveth man to know. One thing is God's
knowledge, another man's: in like manner as there is one possession of
God's, another of man's: that is, God's possessing is one thing, man's
another. For what thou possessest thou hast not wholly in thy power, or
else thy ox, so long as it liveth, is in thy power; so as that it
either die not, or be not to be fed. With whom there is the highest
power, there is highest and most secret cognition. Let us ascribe this
to God, while praising God. Let us not dare to say, How knoweth God? Do
not, I pray you, brethren, of me expect this, that I should unfold to
you, how God doth know: this only I say, He doth not so know as a man,
He doth not so know as an Angel: and how He knoweth I dare not say,
because also I cannot ken. One thing, nevertheless, I ken, that even
before all the winged creatures of heaven were, God knew that which He
was to create. What is that knowledge? O man, thou beginnest to see,
after that thou hadst been formed, after that thou hadst received sense
of seeing. These fowls sprung of the water at the word of God, saying,
"Let the waters bring forth fowls." [1752] Whereby did God know the
things which He commanded the water to bear forth? Now surely He knew
what He had created, and before He created He knew. So great then is
the knowledge of God, so that with Himself they were in a certain
ineffable manner before they were created: and of thee doth He expect
to receive what He had, before He created? "I know all the winged
creatures of heaven," which thou to Me canst not give. The things which
thou wast about to slay for Me, I know all: not because I made I know,
but in order that I might make. "And the beauty of the field is with
Me." The fairness of the field, the abundance of all things engendering
upon earth, "is with Me," He saith. How with Him? Were they so, even
before they were made? Yea, for with Him were all things to come, and
with Him are all things by-gone: things to come in such sort, that
there be not withdrawn from Him all things by-gone. With Him are all
things by a certain cognition of the ineffable wisdom of God residing
in the Word, and the [1753] Word Himself is all things. Is not the
beauty of the field in a manner with Him, inasmuch as He is everywhere,
and Himself hath said, "Heaven and earth I fill"? [1754] What with Him
is not, of whom it is said, "If I shall have ascended into heaven, Thou
art there; and if I shall have descended into hell, Thou art present"?
[1755] With Him is the whole: but it is not so with Him as that He doth
suffer any contamination from those things which He hath created, or
any want of them. For with thee, perchance, is a pillar near which thou
art standing, and when thou art weary, thou leanest against it. Thou
needest that which is with thee, God needeth not the field which is
which Him. With Him is field, with Him beauty of earth, with Him beauty
of heaven, with Him all winged creatures, because He is Himself
everywhere. And wherefore are all things near Him? Because even before
that all things were, or were created, to Him were known all things.
19. Who can explain, who expound that which is said to Him in another
Psalm, "For my goods Thou needest not"? [1756] He hath said that He
needeth not from us any necessary thing. "If I shall be hungry, I will
not tell thee" (ver. 12). He that keepeth Israel shall neither hunger
nor thirst, nor be weary, nor fall asleep. [1757] But, lo! according to
thy carnality I speak: because thou wilt suffer hunger when thou hast
not eaten, perhaps thou thinkest even God doth hunger that He may eat.
Even though He shall be hungry, He telleth not thee: all things are
before Him, whence He will He taketh what is needful for Him. These
words are said to convince little understanding; not that God hath
declared His hunger. Though for our sake this God of gods deigned even
to hunger. He came to hunger, and to fill; He came to thirst, and give
drink; He came to be clothed with mortality, and to clothe with
immortality; He came poor, to make rich. For He lost not His riches by
taking to Him our poverty, for, "In him are all the treasures of wisdom
and knowledge hidden." [1758] "If I shall be hungry, I will not tell
thee. For Mine is the whole world, and the fulness thereof." Do not
then labour to find what to give Me, without whom I have what I will.
20. Why then dost still think of thy flocks? "Shall I eat the flesh of
bulls, or shall I drink the blood of he-goats?" (ver. 13). Ye have
heard what of us He requireth not, who willeth to enjoin us somewhat.
If of such things ye were thinking, now withdraw your thoughts from
such things: think not to offer God any such thing. If thou hast a fat
bull, kill for the poor: let them eat the flesh of bulls, though they
shall not drink the blood of he-goats. Which, when thou shalt have
done, He will account it to thee, that hath said, "If I shall be
hungry, I will not tell thee:" and He shall say to thee, "I was hungry,
and thou gavest Me to eat." "Shall I eat the flesh of bulls, or shall I
drink the blood of he-goats?" [1759]
21. Say then, Lord our God, what dost Thou enjoin thy people, Thy
Israel? "Immolate to God the sacrifice of praise" (ver. 14). Let us
also say to Him, "In me, O God, are thy vows, which I will render of
prose to Thee." I had feared lest Thou mightest enjoin something which
would be out of my power, which I was counting to be in my pen, and but
now perchance it had been taken away by a thief. What dost Thou enjoin
me? "Immolate to God the sacrifice of praise." Let me revert to myself,
wherein I may find what I may immolate: let me revert to myself; in
myself may I find immolation of praise: be Thy altar my conscience. We
are without anxiety, we go not into Arabia in quest of frankincense:
[1760] not any bags of covetous dealer do we sift: God requireth of us
the sacrifice of praise. Zacchaeus had the sacrifice of praise in his
patrimony; [1761] the widow had it in her bag; [1762] some poor host or
other hath had it in his jar: another neither in patrimony, nor in bag,
nor in jar, hath had anything, had it wholly in his heart: salvation
was to the house of Zacchaeus; and more this poor widow cast in than
those rich men: this man, that doth offer a cup of cold water, shall
not lose his reward: [1763] but there is even "peace on earth to men of
good will." [1764] "Immolate to God the sacrifice of praise." O
sacrifice gratuitous, by grace given! I have not indeed bought this to
offer, but Thou hast given: for not even this should I have had. And
this is the immolation of the sacrifice of praise, to render thanks to
Him from whom thou hast whatever of good thou hast, and by whose mercy
is forgiven thee whatsoever of evil of thine thou hast. "Immolate to
God the sacrifice of praise: and render to the Highest thy prayers."
With this odour the Lord is well pleased. [1765]
22. "And call thou upon Me in the day of thy tribulation: and I will
draw thee forth, and thou shalt glorify Me" (ver. 15). For thou
oughtest not to rely on thy powers, all thy aids are deceitful. "Upon
Me call thou in the day of tribulation: I will draw thee forth, and
thou shalt glorify Me." For to this end I have allowed the day of
tribulation to come to thee: because perchance if thou wast not
troubled, thou wouldest not call on Me: but when thou art troubled,
thou callest on Me; when thou callest upon Me, I will draw thee forth;
when I shall draw thee forth, thou shalt glorify Me, that thou mayest
no more depart from Me. A certain man had grown dull and cold in
fervour of prayer, and said, "Tribulation and grief I found, and on the
Name of the Lord I called." [1766] He found tribulation as it were some
profitable thing; he had rotted in the slough of his sins; now he had
continued without feeling, he found tribulation to be a sort of caustic
and cutting. "I found," he saith, "tribulation and grief, and on the
Name of the Lord I called." And truly, brethren, tribulations are known
to all men. Behold those afflictions that abound in mankind; one
afflicted with loss bewaileth; another smitten with bereavement
mourneth; another exiled from country grieveth and desireth to return,
deeming sojourning intolerable; another's vineyard is hailed upon, he
observeth his labours and all his toil spent in vain. When can a human
being not be made sad? An enemy he findeth in a friend. What greater
misery in mankind? These things all men do deplore and grieve at, and
these are tribulations: in all these they call upon the Lord, and they
do rightly. Let them call upon God, He is able either to teach how it
must be borne, or to heal it when borne. He knoweth how not to suffer
us to be tried above that we are able to bear. [1767] Let us call upon
God even in those tribulations: but these tribulations do find us; as
in another Psalm is written, "Helper in tribulations which have found
us too much:" [1768] there is a certain tribulation which we ought to
find. Let such tribulations find us: there is a certain tribulation
which we ought to seek and to find. What is that? The above-named
felicity in this world, abundance of temporal things: that is not
indeed tribulation, these are the solaces of our tribulation. Of what
tribulation? Of our sojourning. For the very fact that we are not yet
with God, the very fact that we are living amid trials and
difficulties, that we cannot be without fear, is tribulation: for there
is not that peace which is promised us. He that shall not have found
this tribulation in his sojourning, doth not think of going home to his
father-land. This is tribulation, brethren. Surely now we do good
works, when we deal bread to the hungry, home to the stranger, and the
like: tribulation even this is. For we find pitiful objects upon whom
we show pity; and the pitiful case of pitiful objects maketh us
compassionate. How much better now would it be with thee in that place,
where thou findest no hungry man whom thou mayest feed, where thou
findest no stranger whom thou mayest take in, no naked man whom thou
mayest cover, no sick man whom thou mayest visit, no litigant whom thou
mayest set at one! For all things in that place are most high, are
true, are holy, are everlasting. Our bread in that place is
righteousness, our drink there is wisdom, our garment there is
immortality, our house is everlasting in the heavens, our stedfastness
[1769] is immortality: doth sickness come over? Doth weariness weigh
down to sleep? No death, no litigation: there peace, quiet, joy,
righteousness. No enemy hath entrance, no friend falleth away. What is
the quiet there? If we think and observe where we are, and where He
that cannot lie hath promised that we are to be, from His very promise
we find in what tribulation we are. This tribulation none findeth, but
he that shall have sought it. Thou art whole, see if thou art
miserable; for it is easy for him that is sick to find himself
miserable: when thou art whole, see if thou art miserable; that thou
art not yet with God. "Tribulation and grief I found, and on the Name
of the Lord I called." [1770] "Immolate," therefore, "to God the
sacrifice of praise." Praise Him promising, praise Him calling, praise
Him exhorting, praise Him helping: and understand in what tribulation
thou art placed. Call upon (Him), thou shalt be drawn forth, thou shalt
glorify, shalt abide.
23. But see what followeth, my brethren. For now some one or other,
because God had said to him, "Immolate to God the sacrifice of praise,"
and had enjoined in a manner this tribute, did meditate to himself and
said, I will rise daily, I will proceed to Church, I will say one hymn
at matins, another at vespers, a third or fourth in my house, daily I
do sacrifice the sacrifice of praise, and immolate to my God. Well thou
doest indeed, if thou doest this: but take heed, lest now thou be
careless, because now thou doest this: and perchance thy tongue bless
God, and thy life curse God. O my people, saith to thee the God of
gods, the Lord that spake, "calling the earth from the rising of the
sun unto the setting," though yet thou art placed amid the tares,
[1771] "Immolate the sacrifice of praise to thy God, and render to Him
thy prayers:" but take heed lest thou live ill, and chant well.
Wherefore this? For, "Unto the sinner, saith God, why dost thou tell
out My judgments, and takest My Covenant in thy mouth?" (ver. 16). Ye
see, brethren, with what trembling we say these words. We take the
Covenant of God in our mouth, and we say these words. We take the
Covenant of God in our mouth, and we preach to you the instruction and
judgment of God. And what saith God to the sinner? "Why dost thou?"
Doth He then forbid preachers that be sinners? And where is that, "What
they say do, but what they do, do not"? [1772] Where is that, "Whether
in truth or on occasion Christ be preached"? [1773] But these words
were said, lest they should fear that hear, from whomsoever it be that
they hear: not that they should be without care that speak good words,
and do evil deeds. Now therefore, brethren, ye are without care: if ye
hear good words ye hear God, [1774] through whomsoever it be that ye
may hear. But God would not dismiss without reproof them that speak:
lest with their speaking alone, without care for themselves they should
slumber in evil life, and say to themselves, "For God will not consign
us to perdition, through whose mouth He has willed that so many good
words should be spoken to His people." Nay, but hear what thou
speakest, whoever thou art that speakest: and thou that writ be heard
thyself, first hear thyself; and speak what a certain man doth speak in
another Psalm, [1775] "I will hear what in me speaketh the Lord God,
for He shall speak peace to His people." What am I then, that hear not
what in me He speaketh, and will that other hear what through me He
speaketh? I will hear first, will hear, and chiefly I will hear what
speaketh in me the Lord God, for He shall speak peace to His people.
Let me hear, and "chasten my body, and to servitude subject it, lest
perchance to others preaching, myself be found a cast-away." [1776]
"Why dost thou tell out my judgments?" Wherefore to thee what profiteth
not thee? He admonisheth him to hear: not to lay down preaching, but to
take up obedience. "But thou, why dost thou take My Covenant in they
mouth?"
24. "But thou hatest instruction" (ver. 17). Thou hatest discipline.
When I spare, thou singest and praisest: when I chasten, thou
murmurest: as though, when I spare, I am thy God: and, when I chasten,
I am not thy God. "I rebuke and chasten those whom I love." [1777] "But
thou hatest instruction: and hast thrown My sayings behind thee." The
words that are said through thee, thou throwest behind thee. "And thou
hast thrown My sayings behind thee:" to a place where they may not be
seen by thee, but may load thee. "And thou hast thrown My sayings
behind thee."
25. "If thou sawest a thief, thou didst consent unto him, and with
adulterers thou didst make thy portion" (ver. 18). Lest perchance thou
shouldest say, I have not committed theft, I have not committed
adultery. What if he pleased thee that hath committed? Hast thou not
with the very pleasing consented? Hast thou not by approval made thy
portion with him that hath committed? For this is, brethren, to consent
with a thief, and to make with an adulterer thy portion: for even if
thou committest not, and approvest what is committed, thou art an
accessory in the deed: for "the sinner is praised in the longings of
his soul, and he that doeth iniquity shall be blessed." [1778] Thou
doest not evil things, thou praisest evil-doers. For is this a small
evil? "Thou didst make thy portion with adulterers."
26. "Thy mouth hath abounded in malice, and thy tongue hath embraced
deceit" (ver. 19). Of the malevolence and deceit, brethren, of certain
men he speaketh, who by adulation, though they know what they hear to
be evil, yet lest they offend those from whom they hear, not only by
not reproving but by holding their peace do consent. [1779] Too little
is it, that they do not say, Thou hast done evil: but they even say,
Thou hast done even well: and they know it to be evil: but their mouth
aboundeth in malice, and their tongue embraceth deceit. Deceit is a
sort of guile in words, of uttering one thing, thinking another. He
saith not, thy tongue hath committed deceit or perpetrated deceit, but
in order to point out to thee a kind of pleasure taken in the very evil
doing, He hath said, "Hath embraced." It is too little that thou doest
it, thou art delighted too; thou praisest openly, thou laughest to
thyself. Thou dost push to destruction a man heedlessly putting forth
his faults, and knowing not whether they be faults: thou that knowest
it to be a fault, sayest not, "Whither art thou rushing?" If thou wert
to see him heedlessly walk in the dark, where thou knewest a well to
be, and wert to hold thy peace, of what sort wouldest thou be? wouldest
thou not be set down for an enemy of his life? [1780] And yet if he
were to fall into a well, not in soul [1781] but in body he would die.
He doth fall headlong into his vices, he doth expose before thee his
evil doings: thou knowest them to be evil, and praisest and laughest to
thyself. Oh that at length he were to be turned to God at whom thou
laughest, and whom thou wouldest not reprove, and that he were to say,
"Let them be confounded that say to me, Well, well." [1782]
27. "Sitting against thy brother thou didst detract" (ver. 20). And
this "sitting" doth belong to that whereof he hath spoken above in,
"hath embraced." For he that doeth anything while standing or passing
along, doth it not with pleasure: but if he for this purpose sitteth,
how much leisure doth he seek out to do it! That very evil detraction
thou wast making with diligence, thou wast making sitting; thou
wouldest thereon be wholly engaged; thou wast embracing thy evil, thou
wast kissing thy craftiness. "And against thy mother's son thou didst
lay a stumbling-block." Who is "mother's son"? Is it not brother? He
would repeat then the same that he had said above, "thy brother." Hath
he intimated that any distinction must be perceived by us? Evidently,
brethren, I think a distinction must be made. Brother against brother
doth detract, for example's sake, as though for instance one strong,
and now a doctor and scholar of some weight, doth detract from his
brother, one perchance that is teaching well and walking well: but
another is weak, against him he layeth a stumbling-block by detracting
from the former. For when the good are detracted from by those that
seem to be of some weight and to be learned, the weak fall upon the
stumbling-block, who as yet know not how to judge. Therefore this weak
one is called "mother's son," not yet father's, still needing milk, and
hanging on the breast. He is borne as yet in the bosom of his mother
the Church, he is not strong enough to draw near to the solid food of
his Father's table, but from the mother's breast he draweth sustenance,
unskilled in judging, inasmuch as yet he is animal and carnal. "For the
spiritual man judgeth all things," [1783] but "the animal man
perceiveth not those things which are of the Spirit of God; for they
are foolishness to him." [1784] To such men saith the Apostle, "I could
not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto carnal, as to babes
in Christ I gave you milk to drink, not meat; for ye were not able, but
not even now are ye able." [1785] A mother I have been to you: as is
said in another place, "I became a babe among you, even as a nurse
cherishing her own children." [1786] Not a nurse nursing children of
others, but a nurse cherishing her own children. For there are mothers
who when they have borne give to nurses: they that have borne cherish
not their children, because they have given them to be nursed; [1787]
but those that cherish, cherish not their own, but those of others: but
he himself had borne, he was himself cherishing, to no nurse did commit
what he had borne; for he had said, "Of whom I travail again until
Christ be formed in you." [1788] He did cherish them, and gave milk.
But there were some as it were learned and spiritual men who detracted
from Paul. "His letters indeed, say they, are weighty and powerful; but
the presence of his body weak, and speech contemptible:" [1789] he
saith himself in his Epistle, that certain his detractors had said
these words. They were sitting, and were detracting against their
brother, and against that their mother's son, to be fed with milk, they
were laying a stumbling-block. "And against thy mother's son thou didst
lay a stumbling-block."
28. "These things hast thou done, and I held my tongue" (ver. 21).
Therefore the Lord our God shall come, and shall not keep silence. Now,
"These things hast thou done, and I held my tongue." What is, "I held
my tongue"? From vengeance I have desisted, my severity I have
deferred, patience to thee I have prolonged, thy repentance I have long
looked for..."Thou hast imagined iniquity, that I shall be like unto
thee;" Thou hast [1790] imagined that I shall be like unto thee, while
thou wilt not be like unto Me. For, "Be ye," he saith, "perfect, even
as your Father, which is in the heavens, who maketh His sun to rise on
the good and evil." [1791] Him thou wouldest not copy, who giveth good
things even to evil men, insomuch that sitting thou dost detract even
from good men. "I will reprove thee," when "God manifest shall come,
our God, and shall not keep silence," "I will reprove thee." And what
to thee shall I do in reproving thee? what to thee shall I do? Now
thyself thou seest not, I will make thee see thyself. Because if thou
shouldest see thyself, and shouldest displease thyself, thou wouldest
please Me: but because not seeing thyself thou hast pleased thyself,
thou wilt displease both Me and thyself; Me when thou shalt be judged;
thyself when thou shalt burn. But what to thee shall I do? He saith. "I
will set thee before thy face." For why wouldest thou escape thyself?
At thy back thou art to thyself, thou seest not thyself: I make thee
see thyself: what behind thy back thou hast put, before thy face will I
put; thou shalt see thy uncleanness, not that thou mayest amend, but
that thou mayest blush....
29. But, "understand these things, ye that forget God" (ver. 22). See
how He crieth, and keepeth not silence, spareth [1792] not. Thou hadst
forgotten the Lord, [1793] didst not think of thy evil life. Perceive
how thou hast forgotten the Lord. "Lest at length He seize like a lion,
and there be none to deliver." What is "like a lion"? Like a brave one,
like a mighty one, like him whom none can withstand. To this he made
reference when he said, "Lion." For it is used for praise, it is used
also for showing evil. The devil hath been called lion: "Your
adversary," He saith, "like a roaring lion, goeth about seeking whom He
may devour." [1794] May it not be that whereas he hath been called lion
because of savage fierceness, Christ hath been called Lion for wondrous
mightiness? And where is that, "The Lion hath prevailed of the tribe of
Judah?" [1795] ...
30. "Sacrifice of praise shall glorify Me" (ver. 23). How shall
"sacrifice of praise glorify Me"? Assuredly sacrifice of praise doth no
wise profit evil men, because they take Thy Covenant in their mouth,
and do damnable things that displease Thine eyes. Straightway, he
saith, even to them this I say, "Sacrifice of praise shall glorify Me."
For if thou livest ill and speakest good words, not yet dost thou
praise: but again, if, when thou beginnest to live well, to thy merits
thou dost ascribe thy living well, not yet dost thou
praise....Therefore the Publican went down justified, rather than that
Pharisee. Therefore hear ye that live well, hear ye that live ill:
"Sacrifice of praise shall glorify Me." No one offereth Me this
sacrifice, and is evil. I say not, Let there not offer Me this any one
that is evil; but no one doth offer Me this, that is evil. For he that
praiseth, is good: because if he praiseth, he doth also live well,
because if he praiseth, not only with tongue he praiseth, but life also
with tongue doth agree.
31. "And there is the way whereby I will show him the salvation of
God." In sacrifice of praise "is the way." What is "the salvation of
God"? Christ Jesus. And how in sacrifice of praise to us is shown
Christ? Because Christ with grace came to us. These words saith the
Apostle: "But I live, now not I, but Christ liveth in me: but that in
flesh I live, in faith I live of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave
Himself for me." [1796] Acknowledge then sinners, that there would not
need physician, if they were whole. [1797] For Christ died for the
ungodly. [1798] When then they acknowledge their ungodlinesses, and
first copy that Publican, saying, "Lord, be merciful to me a sinner:"
[1799] show wounds, beseech Physician: and because they praise not
themselves, but blame themselves,--"So that he that glorieth, not in
himself but in the Lord may glory," [1800] --they acknowledge the cause
of the coming of Christ, because for this end He came, that He might
save sinners: for "Jesus Christ came," he saith, "into this world to
save sinners; of whom I am chief." [1801] Further, those Jews, boasting
of their work, thus the same Apostle doth rebuke, in saying, that they
to grace belonged not, who to their merits and their works thought that
reward was owing. [1802] He therefore that knoweth himself to belong to
grace, doth know what is Christ and what is Christ's because he needeth
grace. If grace it is called, gratis it is given; if gratis it is
given, not any merits of time have preceded that it should be given....
__________________________________________________________________
[1675] Lat. XLIX. From a sermon to the people.
[1676] Some mss. "meditate."
[1677] John i. 14.
[1678] John i. 1.
[1679] Ps. lxxxii. 1.
[1680] Ps. lxxxii. 6, 7.
[1681] John i. 12.
[1682] 1 John iii. 1.
[1683] 1 John iii. 2.
[1684] Ps. xcvi. 4.
[1685] Matt. xvi. 16.
[1686] Mark iii. 11; Luke iv. 41.
[1687] Vid. Heb. i. 1.
[1688] Ps. xix. 6.
[1689] Matt. xxiv. 23.
[1690] Calumniantes.
[1691] Luke xxiv. 47.
[1692] Luke xxiv. 46, 47.
[1693] Ps. xlv. 2.
[1694] Isa. vi. 3.
[1695] Acts i. 4.
[1696] 1 Cor. ii. 8.
[1697] Matt. xxvii. 39, 40.
[1698] Ps. xxii. 1; Matt. xxvii. 46.
[1699] Rom. viii. 3.
[1700] John xix. 11.
[1701] Isa. liii. 7.
[1702] Luke xxiv. 37-40.
[1703] John i. 14.
[1704] John xx. 29.
[1705] Isa. xlii. 14.
[1706] Ps. xcvii. 3.
[1707] Oxf. mss. "ineffable sweetness of His."
[1708] Head.
[1709] Al. "he doth."
[1710] Luke xiii. 8.
[1711] Rom. xi. 19.
[1712] Matt. iii. 10.
[1713] Luke v. 6.
[1714] Matt. xix. 21.
[1715] Matt. xix. 28.
[1716] 1 Kings xix. 18.
[1717] John xxi. 11.
[1718] Deut. iv. 13.
[1719] Isa. xi. 2, 3.
[1720] [That there is ground for all this regard to numbers, fanciful
though it seems, has been demonstrated. See Dan. viii. 13; also note 1,
p. 514, vol. ii. A.N.F. Compare margin of our English Version on the
text of Daniel; Heb. Palmoni, "The Wonderful Numberer." See Dr. Mahan's
"Palmoni," Ed. New York, 1863.--C.]
[1721] Matt. xix. 28.
[1722] 1 Cor. vi. 3.
[1723] Matt. xxv. 31.
[1724] Gal. iv. 14.
[1725] Mal. iii. 1; Matt. xi. 10.
[1726] Isa. iii. 14.
[1727] Matt. xxv. 35.
[1728] Phil. iv. 17.
[1729] Phil. iv. 10.
[1730] Ps. xix. 1.
[1731] Matt. xxii. 3.
[1732] Matt. xxv. 34, etc.
[1733] Matt. xxv. 32.
[1734] Matt. vi. 1.
[1735] Ps. xli. 1.
[1736] Hos. vi. 6; Matt. ix. 13.
[1737] Matt. xxv. 34.
[1738] Isa. lviii. 7.
[1739] Matt. x. 42.
[1740] Mark xii. 42.
[1741] Matt. iv. 20.
[1742] Luke xix. 8.
[1743] 2 Tim. ii. 19.
[1744] Ps. xix. 4.
[1745] Ps. lxi. 2.
[1746] Ps. xxvi. 9.
[1747] Ps. xxvi. 1.
[1748] Curte.
[1749] Ps. li. 16.
[1750] Ps. li. 17.
[1751] Oxf. mss. add "are Mine."
[1752] Gen. i. 20.
[1753] Or, "In (or with) the Word Himself are all things."
[1754] Jer. xxiii. 24.
[1755] Ps. cxxxix. 8.
[1756] Ps. xvi. 2.
[1757] Ps. cxxi. 4.
[1758] Col. ii. 3.
[1759] Matt. xxv. 35.
[1760] [A.N.F. (Tertullian), vol. iii. p. 67, and (Irenaeus) vol. i. p.
484, note 9.--C.]
[1761] Luke xix. 8.
[1762] Mark xii. 42.
[1763] Matt. x. 42.
[1764] Luke ii. 14.
[1765] [A.N.F. vol. vii. p. 553, note 6.--C.]
[1766] Ps. cxvi. 4.
[1767] 1 Cor. x. 13.
[1768] Ps. xlvi. 1.
[1769] Firmitas (perhaps "health").
[1770] Ps. cxvi. 4.
[1771] Matt. xiii. 25.
[1772] Matt. xxiii. 3.
[1773] Philip. i. 18.
[1774] Al. "They are of God.
[1775] Ps. lxxxv. 8.
[1776] 1 Cor. ix. 27.
[1777] Rev. iii. 19.
[1778] Ps. x. 3.
[1779] mss. Bodl. and Ex Coll. "lest they offend those from whom they
hear, not only by reproof but by silence, think it not enough that they
do not say."
[1780] Animae.
[1781] Anima.
[1782] Ps. xl. 15.
[1783] 1 Cor. ii. 15.
[1784] 1 Cor. ii. 14.
[1785] 1 Cor. iii. 1, 2.
[1786] 1 Thess. ii. 7.
[1787] [See Jer. Taylor's remarkable sermon on "The Nursing of Children
by their Mothers, after the Example of the Blessed Virgin," vol. i. 38,
Bungay ed. of Heber's edition.--C.]
[1788] Gal. iv. 19.
[1789] 2 Cor. x. 10.
[1790] Oxf. ms. rep. "Thou hast," etc.
[1791] Matt. v. 48, 45.
[1792] Some mss. "When He spareth."
[1793] Oxf. mss. "God."
[1794] 1 Pet. v. 8.
[1795] Rev. v. 5.
[1796] Gal. ii. 20.
[1797] Matt. ix. 12.
[1798] Rom. v. 6.
[1799] Luke xviii. 13.
[1800] 1 Cor. i. 31.
[1801] 1 Tim. i. 15.
[1802] Gal. v. 4.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm LI. [1803]
1. Neither must this multitude's throng be defrauded, nor their
infirmity burthened. Silence we ask, and quiet, in order that our
voice, after yesterday's labour, be able with some little vigour to
last out. It must be believed, that your love hath met together in
greater numbers to-day for nothing else, but that ye may pray for those
whom an alien and perverse inclination doth keep away. For we are
speaking neither of heathens nor of Jews, but of Christians: nor of
those that are yet Catechumens, but of many that are even baptized,
from the Laver of whom ye do no wise differ, and yet to their heart ye
are unlike. For to-day how many brethren of ours we think of, and
deplore their going unto vanities and lying insanities, to the neglect
of that to which they have been called. Who, if in the very circus from
any cause they chance to be startled, do immediately cross themselves,
[1804] and stand bearing It on the forehead, in the very place, from
whence they had withdrawn, if they had borne It in heart. God's mercy
must be implored, that He may give understanding for condemning these
things, inclination to flee them, and mercy to forgive. Opportunately,
then, of Penitence a Psalm to-day has been chanted. Speak we even with
the absent: there will be to them for our voice your memory. Neglect
not the wounded and feeble, but that ye may more easily make whole,
whole ye ought to abide. Correct by reproving, comfort by addressing,
set an example by living well, He will be with them that hath been with
you. For now that ye have overpassed these dangers, the fountain of
God's mercy is not closed. Where ye have come they will come; where ye
have passed they will pass. A grievous thing it is indeed, and
exceeding perilous, nay ruinous, and for certain a deadly thing, that
witting they sin. For in one way to these vanities doth he run that
despiseth the voice of Christ; in another way, he that knoweth from
what he is fleeing. But that not even of such men we ought to despair,
this Psalm doth show.
2. For there is written over it the title thereof, "A Psalm of David
himself, when there came to him Nathan the prophet, when he went in
unto Bersabee." Bersabee was a woman, wife of another. With grief
indeed we speak, and with trembling; but yet God would not have to be
hushed what He hath willed to be written. I will say then not what I
will, but what I am obliged; I will say not as one exhorting to
imitation, but as one instructing you to fear. Captivated with this
woman's beauty, the wife of another, the king and prophet David, from
whose seed according to the flesh the Lord was to come, [1805]
committed adultery with her. This thing in this Psalm is not read, but
in the title thereof it appeareth; but in the book of Kings [1806] it
is more fully read. Both Scriptures are canonical, to both without any
doubt by Christians credit must be given. The sin was committed, and
was written down. Moreover her husband in war he caused to be killed:
and after this deed there was sent to him Nathan the prophet; [1807]
sent by the Lord, to reprove him for so great an outrage.
3. What men should beware of, we have said; but what if they shall have
fallen they should imitate, let us hear. For many men will to fall with
David, and will not to rise with David. Not then for falling is the
example set forth, but if thou shalt have fallen for rising again. Take
heed lest thou fall. Not the delight of the younger be the lapse of the
elder, but be the fall of the elder the dread of the younger. For this
it was set forth, for this was written, for this in the Church often
read and chanted: let them hear that have not fallen, lest they fall;
let them hear that have fallen, that they may rise. So great a man's
sin is not hushed, is proclaimed in the Church. There men hear that are
ill hearers, and seek for themselves countenance for sinning: they look
out for means whereby they may defend what they have made ready to
commit, not how they may beware of what they have not committed, and
they say to themselves, If David, why not I too? Thence that soul is
more unrighteous, which, forasmuch as it hath done it because David
did, therefore hath done worse than David. I will say this very thing,
if I shall be able, more plainly. David had set forth to himself none
for a precedent as thou hast: he had fallen by lapse of concupiscence,
not by the countenance of holiness: thou dost set before thine eyes as
it were a holy man, in order that thou mayest sin: thou dost not copy
his holiness, but dost copy his fall. Thou [1808] dost love that in
David, which in himself David hated: thou makest thee ready to sin,
thou inclinest to sin: in order that thou mayest sin thou consultest
the book of God: the Scriptures of God for this thou hearest, that thou
mayest do what displeaseth God. This did not David; he was reproved by
a Prophet, he stumbled not over a Prophet. But others hearing to their
health, by the fall of a strong man measure their weakness: and
desiring to avoid what God condemneth, from careless looking do
restrain their eyes. Them they fix not upon the beauty of another's
flesh, nor make themselves careless with perverse simpleness; they say
not, "With good intent I have observed, of kindness I have observed, of
charity I have long looked." For they set before themselves the fall of
David, and they see that this great man for this purpose hath fallen,
in order that little men may not be willing to look on that whereby
they may fall. For they restrain their eyes from wantonness, not
readily do they join themselves in company, they do not mingle with
strange women, they raise not complying eyes to strange balconies, to
strange terraces. For from afar David saw her with whom he was
captivated. [1809] Woman afar, lust near. What he saw was elsewhere, in
himself that whereby he fell. This weakness of the flesh must be
therefore minded, the words of the Apostle recollected, "Let not sin
therefore reign in your mortal body." [1810] He hath not said, let
there not be; but, "let there not reign." There is sin in thee, when
thou takest pleasure; there reigneth, if thou shalt have consented.
Carnal pleasure, especially if proceeding unto unlawful and strange
objects, is to be bridled, not let loose: by government to be tamed,
not to be set up for government. Look and be without care, if thou hast
nothing whereby thou mayest be moved. But thou makest answer, "I
contain with strong resolution." Art thou any wise stronger than David?
[1811]
4. He admonisheth, moreover, by such an example, that no one ought to
lift himself up in prosperous circumstances. For many fear adverse
circumstances, fear not prosperous circumstances. Prosperity is more
perilous to soul than adversity to body. First, prosperity doth
corrupt, in order that adversity may find something to break. My
brethren, stricter watch must be kept against felicity. Wherefore, see
ye after what manner the saying of God amid our own felicity doth take
from us security: "Serve ye," He saith, "the Lord in fear, and exult
unto Him with trembling." [1812] In exultation, in order that we may
render thanks; in trembling, lest we fall. This sin did not David, when
he was suffering Saul for persecutor. [1813] When holy David was
suffering Saul his enemy, when he was being vexed by his persecutions,
when he was fleeing through divers places, in order that he might not
fall into his hands, he lusted not for her that was another's, he slew
not husband after committing adultery with wife. He was in the
infirmity of his tribulation so much the more intimate with God as he
seemed more miserable. Something useful is tribulation; useful the
surgeon's lancet rather than the devil's temptation. He became secure
when his enemies were overthrown, pressure was removed, swelling grew
out. This example therefore doth avail to this end, that we should fear
felicity. "Tribulation," he saith, "and grief I found, and on the name
of the Lord I called." [1814]
5. But it was done; I would say these words to those that have not done
the like, in order that they should watch to keep their uncorruptness,
and that while they take heed how a great one has fallen, they that be
small should fear. But if any that hath already fallen heareth these
words, and that hath in his conscience any evil thing; to the words of
this Psalm let him advert; let him heed the greatness of the wound, but
not despair of the majesty of the Physician. Sin with despair is
certain death. Let no one therefore say, If already any evil thing I
have done, already I am to be condemned: God pardoneth not such evil
things, why add I not sins to sins? I will enjoy this word in pleasure,
in wantonness, in wicked cupidity: now hope of amendment having been
lost, let me have even what I see, if I cannot have what I believe.
This Psalm then, while it maketh heedful those that have not believed,
so doth not will them that have fallen to be despaired of. Whoever thou
art that hast sinned, and hesitatest to exercise penitence [1815] for
thy sin, despairing of thy salvation, hear David groaning. To thee
Nathan the prophet hath not been sent, David himself hath been sent to
thee. Hear him crying, and with him cry: hear him groaning, and with
him groan; hear him weeping, and mingle tears; hear him amended, and
with him rejoice. If from thee sin could not be excluded, be not hope
of pardon excluded. There was sent to that man Nathan the prophet,
observe the king's humility. [1816] He rejected not the words of him
giving admonition, he said not, Darest thou speak to me, a king? An
exalted king heard a prophet, let His humble people hear Christ.
6. Hear therefore these words, and say thou with him: "Have pity upon
me, O God, after Thy great mercy" (ver. 1). He that imploreth great
mercy, confesseth great misery. Let them seek a little mercy of Thee,
that have sinned in ignorance: "Have pity," he saith, "upon me, after
Thy great mercy." Relieve a deep wound after Thy great healing. Deep is
what I have, but in the Almighty I take refuge. Of my own so deadly
wound I should despair, unless I could find so great a Physician. "Have
pity upon me, O God, after Thy great mercy: and after the multitude of
Thy pities, blot out my iniquity." What he saith, "Blot out my
iniquity," is this, "Have pity upon me, O God." And what he saith,
"After the multitude of Thy pities," is this, "After Thy great mercy."
Because great is the mercy, many are the mercies; and of Thy great
mercy, many are Thy pitying. Thou dost regard mockers to amend them,
dost regard ignorant men to teach them, dost regard men confessing to
pardon. Did he this in ignorance? A certain man had done some, aye many
evil things he had done; "Mercy," he saith, "I obtained, because
ignorant I did it in unbelief." [1817] This David could not say,
"Ignorant I did it." For he was not ignorant how very evil a thing was
the touching of another's wife, and how very evil a thing was the
killing of the husband, who knew not of it, and was not even angered.
They obtain therefore the mercy of the Lord that have in ignorance done
it; and they that have knowing done it, obtain not any mercy it may
chance, but "great mercy."
7. "More and more wash me from mine unrighteousness" (ver. 2). What is,
"More and more wash"? One much stained. More and more wash the sins of
one knowing. Thou that hast washed off the sins of one ignorant. Not
even thus is it to be despaired of Thy mercy. "And from my delinquency
purge Thou me." According to the manner in which He is physician, offer
a recompense. He is God, offer sacrifice. What wilt thou give that thou
mayest be purged? For see upon whom thou callest; upon a Just One thou
callest. He hateth sins, if He is just; He taketh vengeance upon sins,
if He is just; thou wilt not be able to take away from the Lord God His
justice: entreat mercy, but observe the justice: there is mercy to
pardon the sinner, there is justice to punish the sin. What then? Thou
askest mercy; shall sin unpunished abide? Let David answer, let those
that have fallen answer, answer with David, and say, No, Lord, no sin
of mine shall be unpunished; I know the justice of Him whose mercy I
ask: it shall not be unpunished, but for this reason I will not that
Thou punish me, because I punish my sin: for this reason I beg that
Thou pardon, because I acknowledge.
8. "For mine iniquity I acknowledge, and my delinquency is before me
ever" (ver. 3). I have not put behind my back what I have done, I look
not at others, forgetful of myself, I pretend not to pull out a straw
from my brother's eye, when there is a beam in my eye; [1818] my sin is
before me, not behind me. For it was behind me when to me was sent the
Prophet, and set before me the parable of the poor man's sheep. [1819]
For saith Nathan the Prophet to David, "There was a certain rich man
having very many sheep; but a poor man his neighbour had one little ewe
sheep, which in his bosom and of his own food he was feeding: there
came a stranger to the rich man, nothing from his flock he took, for
the lithe ewe sheep of the poor man his neighbour he lusted; her he
slew for the stranger: what doth he deserve?" But the other being angry
doth pronounce sentence: then the king, evidently knowing not wherein
he had been taken, [1820] declared the rich man deserving of death, and
that the sheep be restored fourfold. Most sternly and most justly. But
his sin was not yet before him, behind his back was what he had done:
his own iniquity he did not yet acknowledge, and therefore another's he
did not pardon. But the Prophet, being for this purpose sent, took from
his back the sin, and before his eyes placed it, so that he might see
that sentence so stern to have been pronounced against himself. For
cutting and healing his heart's wound, he made a lancet of his
tongue....
9. "Against Thee alone have I sinned, and before Thee an evil thing
have I done" (ver. 4). What is this? For before men was not another's
wife debauched and husband slain? Did not all men know what David had
done? [1821] What is, "Against Thee alone have I sinned, and before
Thee an evil thing have I done." Because Thou alone art without sin. He
is a just punisher that hath nothing in Him to be punished; He is a
just reprover that hath nothing in Him to be reproved. "That thou
mayest be justified in Thy sayings, and conquer when Thou art judged."
To whom he speaketh, brethren, to whom he speaketh, is difficult to
understand. To God surely he speaketh, and it is evident that God the
Father is not judged. What is, "And conquer when Thou art judged"? He
seeth the future Judge to be judged, one just by sinners to be judged,
and therein conquering, because in Him was nothing to be judged. For
alone among men could truly say the God-Man, "If ye have found in Me
sin, say." [1822] But perchance there was what escaped men, and they
found not what was really there, but was not manifest. In another place
[1823] He saith, "Behold there cometh the Prince of the world," being
an acute observer of all sins; "Behold," He saith, "there cometh the
Prince of this world," with death afflicting sinners, presiding over
death: for, "By the malice of the devil death came into the world."
[1824] "Behold," He saith, "there cometh the Prince of the world:"--He
said these words close upon His Passion:--"and in Me he shall find
nothing," nothing of sin, nothing worthy of death, nothing worthy of
condemnation. And as if it were said to Him, Why then dost Thou die? He
continueth and saith, "But that all men may know that I do the will of
My Father; arise, let us go hence." I suffer, He saith, undeserving,
for men deserving, in order that them I may make deserving of My Life,
for whom I undeservedly suffer their death. To Him then, having no sin,
saith on the present occasion the Prophet David, "Against Thee only
have I sinned, and before Thee an evil thing have I done, that Thou
mayest be justified in Thy sayings, and conquer when Thou art judged."
For Thou overcomest all men, all judges; and he that deemeth himself
just, before Thee is unjust: Thou alone justly judgest, having been
unjustly judged, That hast power to lay down Thy life, and hast power
again to take it. [1825] Thou conquerest, then, when Thou art judged.
All men Thou overcomest, because Thou art more than men, and by Thee
were men made.
10. "For, behold, in iniquities I was conceived" (ver. 5). As though he
were saying, They are conquered that have done what thou, David, hast
done: for this is not a little evil and little sin, to wit, adultery
and man-slaying. What of them that from the day that they were born of
their mother's womb, have done no such thing? even to them dost thou
ascribe some sins, in order that He may conquer all men when He
beginneth to be judged. David hath taken upon him the person of
mankind, and hath heeded the bonds of all men, hath considered the
offspring of death, hath adverted to the origin of iniquity, and he
saith, "For, behold, in iniquities I was conceived." Was David born of
adultery; being born of Jesse, [1826] a righteous man, and his own
wife? What is it that he saith himself to have been in iniquity
conceived, except that iniquity is drawn from Adam? Even the very bond
of death, with iniquity itself is engrained? No man is born without
bringing punishment, bringing desert of punishment. A Prophet saith
also in another place, [1827] "No one is clean in Thy sight, not even
an infant, whose life is of one day upon earth." For we know both by
the Baptism of Christ that sins are loosed, and that the Baptism of
Christ availeth the remission of sins. If infants are every way
innocent, why do mothers run with them when sick to the Church? [1828]
What by that Baptism, what by that remission is put away? An innocent
one I see that rather weeps than is angry. What doth Baptism wash off?
what doth that Grace loose? There is loosed the offspring of sin. For
if that infant could speak to thee, it would say, and if it had the
understanding which David had, it would answer thee, Why heedest thou
me, an infant? Thou dost not indeed see my actions: but I in iniquity
have been conceived, "And in sins hath my mother nourished me in the
womb."
Apart from this bond of mortal [1829] concupiscence was Christ born
without a male, of a virgin conceiving by the Holy Ghost. He cannot be
said to have been conceived in iniquity, it cannot be said, In sins His
mother nourished Him in the womb, to whom was said, "The Holy Ghost
shall come upon thee, and the Virtue of the Highest shall overshadow
thee." [1830] It is not therefore because it is sin to have to do with
wives that men are conceived in iniquity, and in sins nourished in the
womb by their mother; but because that which is made is surely made of
flesh deserving punishment. [1831] For the punishment of the flesh is
death, and surely there is in it liability to death itself. Whence the
Apostle spoke not of the body as if to die, but as if dead: "The body
indeed is dead," he saith, "because of sin, but the Spirit is life
because of righteousness." [1832] How then without bond of sin is born
that which is conceived and sown of a body dead because of sin? This
chaste operation in a married person hath not sin, but the origin of
sin draweth with it condign punishment. For there is no husband that,
because he is an husband, is not subject to death, or that is subject
to death for any other reason but because of sin. For even the Lord was
subject to death, but not on account of sin: He took upon Him our
punishment, and so looseth our guilt. With reason then, "In Adam all
die, but in Christ shall all be made alive." [1833] For, "Through one
man," saith the Apostle, "sin hath entered into this world, and through
sin death, and so hath passed unto all men, in that all have sinned."
[1834] Definite is the sentence: "In Adam," he saith, "all have
sinned." Alone then could such an infant be innocent, as hath not been
born of the work of Adam.
11. "For, behold, truth Thou hast loved: uncertain and hidden things of
Thy wisdom, Thou hast manifested to me" (ver. 6). That is, Thou hast
not left unpunished even the sins of those whom Thou dost pardon.
"Truth Thou hast loved:" so mercy Thou hast granted first, [1835] as
that Thou shouldest also preserve truth. Thou pardonest one confessing,
pardonest, but only if he punisheth himself: so there are preserved
mercy and truth: mercy because man is set free; truth, because sin is
punished. "Uncertain and hidden things of Thy wisdom Thou hast
manifested to me." What "hidden things"? What "uncertain things"?
Because God pardoneth even such. Nothing is so hidden, nothing so
uncertain. [1836] For this uncertainty the Ninevites repented, for they
said, though after the threatenings of the Prophet, though after that
cry, "Three days and Nineve shall be overthrown:" [1837] they said to
themselves, Mercy must be implored; they said in this sort reasoning
among themselves, "Who knoweth whether God may turn for the better His
sentence, and have pity?" [1838] It was "uncertain," when it is said,
"Who knoweth?" on an uncertainty they did repent, [1839] certain mercy
they earned: they prostrated them in tears, in fastings, in sackcloth
and ashes they prostrated them, groaned, wept, God spared. Nineve
stood: was Nineve overthrown? One way indeed it seemeth to men, and
another way it seemed to God. But I think that it was fulfilled that
the Prophet had foretold. Regard what Nineve was, and see how it was
overthrown; overthrown in evil, builded in good; just as Saul the
persecutor was overthrown, Paul the preacher builded. [1840] Who would
not say that this city, in which we now are, was happily overthrown, if
all those madmen, leaving their triflings, [1841] were to run together
to the Church with contrite heart, and were to call upon God's mercy
for their past doings? Should we not say, Where is that Carthage?
Because there is not what there was, it is overthrown: but if there is
what there was not, it is builded. So is said to Jeremiah, "Behold, I
will give to thee to root up, to dig under, to overthrow, to destroy,"
and again, "to build, and to plant." [1842] Thence is that voice of the
Lord, "I will smite and I will heal." [1843] He smiteth the rottenness
of the deed, He healeth the pain of the wound. Physicians do thus when
they cut; they smite and heal; they arm themselves in order to strike,
they carry steel, and come to cure. But because great were the sins of
the Ninevites, they said, "Who knoweth?" This uncertainty had God
disclosed to His servant David. For when he had said, before the
Prophet standing and convicting him, "I have sinned:" straightway he
heard from the Prophet, that is, from the Spirit of God which was in
the Prophet, "Thy sin is put away from thee." [1844] "Uncertain and
hidden things" of His wisdom He manifested to him. [1845]
12. "Thou shalt sprinkle me," he saith, "with hyssop, and I shall be
cleansed" (ver. 7). Hyssop we know to be a herb humble but healing: to
the rock it is said to adhere with roots. Thence in a mystery the
similitude of cleansing the heart has been taken. Do thou also take
hold, with [1846] the root of thy love, on thy Rock: be humble in thy
humble God, in order that thou mayest be exalted in thy glorified God.
Thou shalt be sprinkled with hyssop, the humility of Christ shall
cleanse thee. Despise not the herb, attend to the efficacy of the
medicine. Something further I will say, which we are wont to hear from
physicians, or to experience in sick persons. Hyssop, they say, is
proper for purging the lungs. In the lung is wont to be noted pride:
for there is inflation, there breathing. It was said of Saul the
persecutor as of Saul the proud, that he was going to bind Christians,
breathing slaughter: [1847] he was breathing out slaughter, breathing
out blood, his lung not yet cleansed. Hear also in this place one
humbled, because with hyssop purged: "Thou shalt wash me," that is,
shalt cleanse me: "and above snow I shall be whitened." "Although," he
saith, "your sins shall have been like scarlet, like snow I will
whiten." [1848] Out of such men Christ doth present to Himself a
vesture without spot and wrinkle. [1849] Further, His vesture on the
mount, which shone forth like whitened snow, [1850] signified the
Church cleansed from every spot of sin.
13. But where is humility from hyssop? Hear what followeth: "To my
hearing Thou shall give exultation and gladness, and bones humbled
shall exult" (ver. 8). I will rejoice in hearing Thee, not in speaking
against Thee. Thou hast sinned, why defendest thou thyself? Thou wilt
speak: suffer thou; hear, yield to divine words, lest thou be put to
confusion, and be still more wounded: sin hath been committed, be it
not defended: to confession let it come, not to defence. Thou engagest
thyself as defender of thy sin, thou art conquered: no innocent patron
hast thou engaged, thy defence is not profitable to thee. For who art
thou that defendest thyself? Thou art meet to accuse thyself. Say not,
either, "I have done nothing;" or, "What great thing have I done?" or,
"Other men as well have done." If in doing sin thou sayest thou hast
done nothing, thou wilt be nothing, thou wilt receive nothing: God is
ready to give indulgence, thou closest the door against thyself: He is
ready to give, do not oppose the bar of defence, but open the bosom of
confession. "To my hearing Thou shalt give exultation and gladness."...
14. "Turn Thou away Thy face from my sins, and all mine iniquities blot
out" (ver. 9). For now bones humbled exult, now with hyssop cleansed,
humble I have become. "Turn Thou away Thy face," not from me, but "from
my sins." For in another place praying he saith, "Turn not away Thy
face from me." [1851] He that would not that God's face be turned away
from himself, would that God's face be turned away from his sins. For
to sin, when God turneth not Himself away, he adverteth: if he
adverteth, he animadverteth. "And all mine iniquities blot out." He is
busied [1852] with that capital sin: he reckoneth on more, he would
have all his iniquities to be blotted out: he relieth on the
Physician's hand, on that "great mercy," upon which he hath called in
the beginning of the Psalm: "All mine iniquities blot out." God turneth
away His face, and so blotteth out; by "turning away" His face, sins He
blotteth out. By "turning towards," He writeth them. Thou hast heard of
Him blotting out by turning away, hear of Him by turning towards, doing
what? "But the countenance of the Lord is upon men doing evil things,
that He may destroy from the earth the remembrance of them:" [1853] He
shall destroy the remembrance of them, [1854] not by "blotting out
their sins." But here he doth ask what? "Turn away Thy face from my
sins." Well he asketh. For he himself doth not turn away his face from
his own sins, saying, "For my sin I acknowledge." With reason thou
askest and well askest, that God turn away from thy sin, if thou from
thence dost not turn away thy face: but if thou settest thy sin at thy
back, God doth there set His face. Do thou turn sin before thy face, if
thou wilt that God thence turn away His face; and then safely thou
askest, and He heareth.
15. "A clean heart create in me, O God" (ver. 10). "Create"--he meant
[1855] to say, "as it were begin something new." But, because repentant
he was praying (that had committed some sin, which before he had
committed, he was more innocent), after what manner he hath said
"create" he showeth. "And a right spirit renew in my inner parts." By
my doing, he saith, the uprightness of my spirit hath been made old and
bowed. For he saith in another Psalm, "They have bowed my soul." [1856]
And when a man doth make himself stoop unto earthly lusts, he is
"bowed" in a manner, but when he is made erect for things above,
upright is his heart made, in order that God may be good to him. For,
"How good is the God of Israel to the upright of heart!" [1857]
Moreover, brethren, listen. Sometimes God in this world chastiseth for
his sin him that He pardoneth in the world to come. For even to David
himself, to whom it had been already said by the Prophet, "Thy sin is
put away," [1858] there happened certain things which God had
threatened for that very sin. [1859] For his son Abessalom against him
waged bloody war, and many ways humbled his father. [1860] He was
walking in grief, in the tribulation of his humiliation, so resigned to
God, that, ascribing to Him all that was just, he confessed that he was
suffering nothing undeservedly, having now an heart upright, to which
God was not displeasing. A slanderous person and one throwing in his
teeth harsh curses [1861] he patiently heard, one of the soldiers on
the opposite side, that were with his unnatural son. And when he was
heaping curses upon the king, one of the companions of David, enraged,
would have gone and smitten him; but he is kept back by David. And he
is kept back how? For that he said, God sent him to curse me.
Acknowledging his guilt he embraced his penance, seeking glory not his
own, praising the Lord in that good which he had, praising the Lord in
that which he was suffering, "blessing the Lord alway, ever His praise
was in his mouth." [1862] Such are all the upright in heart: not those
crooked persons who think themselves upright and God crooked: who when
they do any evil thing, rejoice; when they suffer any evil thing,
blaspheme; nay, if set in tribulation and scourging, they say from
their distorted heart, "O God, what have I done to Thee?" Truly it is
because they have done nothing to God, for they have done all to
themselves. "And an upright spirit, renew in my inner parts."
16. "Cast me not forth from Thy face" (ver. 11). Turn away Thy face
from my sins: and "cast me not forth from Thy face." Whose face he
feareth, upon the face of the Same he calleth. "And Thy Holy Spirit
take not away from me." For in one confessing there is the Holy Spirit.
Even now, to the gift of the Holy Spirit it belongeth, that what thou
hast done displeaseth thee. The unclean spirit sins do please; the Holy
One they displease. Though then thou still implore pardon, yet thou art
joined to God on the other part, because the evil thing that thou hast
committed displeaseth thee: for the same thing displeaseth both thee
and Him. Now, to assail thy fever, ye are two, thou and the Physician.
For the reason that there cannot be confession of sin and punishment of
sin in a man of himself: when one is angry with himself, and is
displeasing to himself, then it is not without the gift of the Holy
Spirit, nor doth he say, Thy Holy Spirit give to me, but, "Take not
away from me."
17. "Give back to me the exultation of Thy salvation" [1863] (ver. 12).
"Give back" what I had; what by sinning I had lost: to wit, of Thy
Christ. For who without Him can be made whole? Because even before that
He was Son of Mary, "In the beginning He was the Word, and the Word was
with God, and the Word was God;" [1864] and so, by the holy fathers a
future dispensation of flesh taken upon Him, was looked for; [1865] as
is believed by us to have been done. Times are changed, not faith. "And
with Principal Spirit confirm me." Some have here understood the
Trinity in God, Itself God; the dispensation of Flesh being excepted
therefrom: since it is written, "God is a Spirit." [1866] For that
which is not body, and yet is, seemeth to exist in such sort as that it
is spirit. Therefore some understand here the Trinity spoken of: "In
upright Spirit," the Son; in "Holy Spirit," Holy Ghost; in "Principal
Spirit," Father. [1867] It is not any heretical opinion, therefore,
whether this be so, or whether "upright Spirit" He would have to be
taken of man himself (when He saith, "An upright spirit renew in my
inner parts"), which I have bowed and distorted by sinning, so that in
that case the Holy Spirit be Himself the Principal Spirit: which also
he would not have to be taken away from him, and thereby would have
himself to be confirmed therein.
18. But see what he annexeth: "With Principal Spirit," he saith,
"confirm Thou me." Wherein "confirm"? Because Thou hast pardoned me,
because I am secure, that what Thou hast forgiven is not to be
ascribed, on this being made secure and with this grace confirmed,
therefore I am not ungrateful. But I shall do what? "I would teach
unrighteous men Thy ways" (ver. 13). Being myself of the unrighteous
[1868] (that is, one that was myself an unrighteous man, now no longer
unrighteous; the Holy Spirit not having been taken away from me, and I
being confirmed with Principal Spirit). "I would teach unrighteous men
Thy ways." What ways wilt thou teach unrighteous men? "And ungodly men
to Thee shall be converted." If David's sin is counted for ungodliness,
let not ungodly men despair of themselves, forasmuch as God hath spared
an ungodly man; but let them take heed that to Him they be converted,
that His ways they learn. But if David's deed is not counted for
ungodliness, but this is properly call ungodliness, namely, to
apostatize from God, not to worship one God, or never to have
worshipped, or to have forsaken, Him whom one did worship, then what he
saith hath the force of superabundance, "And ungodly men shall to Thee
be converted." So full art thou of the fatness of mercy, that for those
converted to Thee, not only sinners of any sort, but even ungodly,
there is no cause for despair. Wherefore? That believing on Him that
justifieth an ungodly man, their faith may be counted for
righteousness. [1869]
19. "Deliver me from bloods, O God, God of my health" (ver. 14). The
Latin translator hath expressed, though by a word not Latin, yet an
accuracy from the Greek. [1870] For we all know that in Latin,
sanguines (bloods) are not spoken of, nor yet sanguina (bloods in the
neuter), nevertheless because the Greek translator hath thus used the
plural number, not without reason, but because he found this in the
original language the Hebrew, a godly translator hath preferred to use
a word not Latin, rather than one not exact. Wherefore then hath he
said in the plural number, "From bloods"? In many bloods, as in the
origin of the sinful flesh, many sins he would have to be understood.
The Apostle having regard to the very sins which come of the corruption
of flesh and blood, saith, "Flesh and blood shall not possess the
kingdom of God." [1871] For doubtless, after the true faith of the same
Apostle, that flesh shall rise again and shall itself gain
incorruption, as He saith Himself, "This corruptible must put on
incorruption, and this mortal put on immortality." [1872] Because then
this corruption is of sin, by the name thereof sins are called. In like
manner as both that morsel of flesh and member which playeth in the
mouth when we articulate words is called a tongue, and that is called a
tongue which by the tongue is made, so we call one tongue the Greek,
another the Latin; for the flesh is not diverse, but the sound. In the
same manner, then, as the speech which is made by the tongue is called
a tongue; so also the iniquity which is made by blood is called blood.
Heeding, then, his many iniquities, as [1873] in the expression above,
[1874] "And all my iniquities blot out," and ascribing them to the
corruption of flesh and blood, "Free me," he saith, "from bloods:" that
is, free me from iniquities, cleanse me from all corruption....Not yet
is the substance, but certain hope. "And my tongue shall exult of Thy
righteousness."
20. "O Lord, my lips Thou shalt open, and my mouth shall tell of Thy
praise" (ver. 15). "Thy praise," because [1875] I have been created:
"Thy praise," because sinning I have not been forsaken: "Thy praise,"
because I have been admonished to confess: "Thy praise," because in
order that I might be secured I have been cleansed.
21. "Because if Thou hadst willed sacrifice, I would have given it
surely" (ver. 16). David was living at that time when sacrifices of
victim animals were offered to God, and he saw these times that were to
be. Do we not perceive ourselves in these words? Those sacrifices were
figurative, foretelling the One Saving Sacrifice. Not even we have been
left without a Sacrifice to offer to God. For hear what he saith,
having a concern for his sin, and wishing the evil thing which he hath
done to be forgiven him: "If Thou hadst willed," he saith, "sacrifice,
I would have given it surely. With holocausts Thou wilt not be
delighted." Nothing shall we therefore offer? So shall we come to God?
And whence shall we propitiate Him? Offer; certainly in thyself thou
hast what thou mayest offer. Do not from without fetch frankincense,
[1876] but say, "In me are, O God, Thy vows, which I will render of
praise to Thee." [1877] Do not from without seek cattle to slay, thou
hast in thyself what thou mayest kill. "Sacrifice to God is a spirit
troubled, a heart contrite and humbled God despiseth not" (ver. 17).
Utterly he despiseth bull, he-goat, ram: now is not the time that these
should be offered. They were offered when they indicated something,
when they promised something; when the things promised come, the
promises are taken away. "A heart contrite and humbled God despiseth
not." Ye know that God is high: if thou shalt have made thyself high,
He will be from thee; if thou shalt have humbled thyself, He will draw
near to thee.
22. See who this is: David as one man was seeming to implore; see ye
here our image and the type of the Church.
"Deal kindly, O Lord, in Thy good will with Sion" (ver. 18). With this
Sion deal kindly. What is Sion? A city holy. What is a city holy? That
which cannot be hidden, being upon a mountain established. Sion in
prospect, because it hath prospect of something which it hopeth for.
For Sion is interpreted "prospect," and Jerusalem, "vision of peace."
Ye perceive then yourselves to be in Sion and in Jerusalem, if being
sure ye look for hope that is to be, and if ye have peace with God.
"And be the walls of Jerusalem builded." "Deal kindly, O Lord, in Thy
good will with Sion, and be the walls of Jerusalem builded." For not to
herself let Sion ascribe her merits: do Thou with her deal kindly, "Be
the walls of Jerusalem builded:" be the battlements of our immortality
laid, in faith and hope and charity.
23. "Then Thou shalt accept the sacrifice of righteousness" (ver. 19).
But now sacrifice for iniquity, to wit, a spirit troubled, and a heart
humbled; then the sacrifice of righteousness, praises alone. For,
"Blessed they that dwell in Thy house, for ever and ever they shall
praise Thee:" [1878] for this is the sacrifice of righteousness.
"Oblations and holocausts." What are "holocausts"? A whole victim by
fire consumed. When a whole beast was laid upon the altar with fire to
be consumed, it was called a holocaust. May divine fire take us up
whole, and that fervour catch us whole. What fervour? "Neither is there
that hideth himself from the heat thereof." [1879] What fervour? That
whereof speaketh the Apostle: "In spirit fervent." [1880] Be not merely
our soul taken up by that divine fire of wisdom, but also our body;
that [1881] it may earn their immortality; so be it lifted up for a
holocaust, that death be swallowed into victory. "Oblations and
holocausts." "Then shall they lay upon thine altar calves." Whence
"calves"? What shall He therein choose? Will it be the innocence of the
new age, or necks freed from the yoke of the law?...
__________________________________________________________________
[1803] From a sermon to the people of Carthage. See below, S: 11.
[1804] [On the sign of the Cross, see (Tertullian) A.N.F. vol. iii. p.
104; also vol. vii. (Lactant.) p. 130, note 3.--C.]
[1805] Rom. i. 3.
[1806] 2 Sam. xi. 2-17.
[1807] 2 Sam. xii. 1.
[1808] Al. "Love this in David which in himself David hated not."
[1809] 2 Sam. xi. 2.
[1810] Rom. vi. 12.
[1811] [Compare the author's Confessions, vol. i. of this series, pp.
126, 153, 154, and book viii. passim.--C.]
[1812] Ps. ii. 11.
[1813] 1 Sam. xxiv. 5, xxvi. 9.
[1814] Ps. cxvi. 3, 4.
[1815] [Here I have corrected the feeble translation, "do penance,"
which is unjust to the author's entire system of thought. See
Confessions, book viii. vol. i. this series.--C.]
[1816] Al. "The pride of royalty."
[1817] 1 Tim. i. 13.
[1818] Matt. vii. 5.
[1819] 2 Sam. xii. 1, 2, etc.
[1820] Al. "he was captive," or, "was held captive."
[1821] 2 Sam. xi. 4, 15.
[1822] John viii. 46.
[1823] John xiv. 30.
[1824] Wisd. ii. 24.
[1825] John x. 18.
[1826] 1 Sam. xvi. 18.
[1827] Job xiv. 5, LXX.
[1828] Against the Pelagians.
[1829] So most mss. Ben. "carnal," but see below.
[1830] Luke i. 35.
[1831] [The mother need not be conceived of as sinning in her passive
relations to an act which is undefiled in itself (Heb. xiii. 4); but
she is a sinner like all mortals, and in that estate of sinfulness her
offspring is begotten and nourished in the womb. So he argues.--C.]
[1832] Rom. viii. 10.
[1833] 1 Cor. xv. 22.
[1834] Rom. v. 12.
[1835] Praerogasti.
[1836] i.e., as His mercy is to us beforehand.
[1837] Jonah iii. 4.
[1838] Jonah iii. 9.
[1839] [Here the translator has "did penance," which has no meaning at
all apart from ecclesiastical discipline, to which the men of Nineve
were certainly not subjected.--C.]
[1840] Acts ix. 4.
[1841] [See p. 166, note 3, supra.--C.]
[1842] Jer. i. 10.
[1843] Deut. xxxii. 39.
[1844] 2 Sam. xii. 13.
[1845] [The English Version is not sustained by Jerome, whose rendering
is (happier than that so beautifully expounded by our author),
absconditum et arcanum sapietatiae manifestasti.--C.]
[1846] Oxf. mss. radice.
[1847] Acts ix. 1.
[1848] Isa. i. 18.
[1849] Eph. v. 27.
[1850] Matt. xvii. 2.
[1851] Ps. xxvii. 9.
[1852] Satagit. Oxf. mss. Sategit, "he hath done enough for."
[1853] Ps. xxxiv. 16.
[1854] Oxf. mss. add, perdet de terra memoriam eorum.
[1855] So mss. Ben. "He meant not," but "as it were" seems to meet the
difficulty.
[1856] Ps. lvii. 6.
[1857] Ps. lxxiii. 1.
[1858] 2 Sam. xii. 13.
[1859] [Compare 2 Sam. xii. 10.--C.]
[1860] 2 Sam. xv. 10.
[1861] 2 Sam. xvi. 10.
[1862] Ps. xxxiv. 1.
[1863] Salutaris tui.
[1864] John i. 1.
[1865] [Credebatur.--C.]
[1866] John iv. 24.
[1867] Jerome on the Epist. to Gal. iv. 6.
[1868] Ex iniquo. Oxf. mss. ex iniquus.
[1869] Rom. iv. 5.
[1870] [ex haimEURton, Sept.--C.]
[1871] 1 Cor. xv. 50.
[1872] 1 Cor. xv. 53.
[1873] Some mss. ut.
[1874] Ps. li. 9.
[1875] Most mss. "whereby" throughout.
[1876] [So Lactantius, A.N.F. vol. vii. p. 193, note 1, and the whole
chapter.--C.]
[1877] Ps. lvi. 12.
[1878] Ps. lxxxiv. 4.
[1879] Ps. xix. 6.
[1880] Rom. xii. 11.
[1881] mss. omit ut, "also let our body earn," etc.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm LII. [1882]
1. The title of the Psalm hath: "At the end, understanding of David,
when there came Doeg the Edomite and told Saul, David hath come into
the house of Abimelech:" whereas we read that he had come into the
house of Achimelech. And it may chance that we do not unreasonably
suppose, that because of the similarity of a name and the difference of
one syllable, or rather of one letter, the titles have been varied. In
the manuscripts, however, of the Psalms, when we looked into them,
rather Abimelech we have found than Achimelech. And since in another
place thou hast a most evident Psalm, intimating not a dissimilarity of
name, but an utterly different name; when, for instance, David changed
his face before King Achish, not before king Abimelech, and he sent him
away, and he departed: and yet the title of the Psalm is thus written,
"When he changed his countenance in the presence of Abimelech" [1883]
--the very change of name maketh us the rather intent upon a mystery,
lest thou shouldest pursue the quasi-facts of history, and despise the
sacred veilings....
2. Observe ye two kinds of men; the one of men labouring, the other of
those among whom they labour: the one of men thinking of earth, the
other of heaven: the one of men weighing down their heart unto the
deep, the other of men with Angels their heart conjoining: the one
trusting in earthly things, wherein this world aboundeth, the other
confiding in heavenly things, which God, who lieth not, hath promised.
But mingled are these kinds of men. We see now the citizen of
Jerusalem, citizen of the kingdom of heaven, have some office upon
earth: to wit, one weareth purple, is a Magistrate, is AEdile, is
Proconsul, is Emperor, doth direct the earthly republic: but he hath
his heart above, if he is a Christian, if he is a believer, if he is
godly, if he is despising those things wherein he is, and trusteth in
that wherein he is not yet. Of which kind was that holy woman Esther,
who, though she was wife of a king, incurred the danger of interceding
for her countrymen: and when she was praying before God, where she
could not lie, in her prayer said, that her royal ornaments were to her
but as the cloth of a menstruous woman. [1884] Despair we not then of
the citizens of the kingdom of heaven, when we see them engaged in any
of Babylon's matters, doing something earthly in republic earthly: nor
again let us forthwith congratulate all men that we see doing matters
heavenly; because even the sons of pestilence sit sometimes in the seat
of Moses, of whom is said, "What things they say, do ye: but what
things they do, do not: for they say, and do not." [1885] Those, amid
earthly things, lift up heart unto heaven, these, amid heavenly words,
trail heart upon earth. But there will come time of winnowing, when
both are to be severed with greatest diligence, in order that no grain
may pass over unto the heap of chaff that is to be burned, that not one
single straw may pass over to the mass that is to be stored in the
barn. [1886] So long as then now it is mingled, hear we thence our
voice, that is, voice of the citizens of the kingdom of heaven (for to
this we ought to aspire, to bear with evil men here, rather than be
borne with by good men): and let us conjoin ourselves to this voice,
both with ear and with tongue, and with heart and work. Which if we
shall have done, we are here speaking in those things which we hear.
Let us therefore speak first of the evil body of kingdom earthly.
3. "Why doth he glory in malice that is mighty?" (ver. 1). Observe, my
brethren, the glorying of malignity, the glorying of evil men. Where is
glorying? "Why doth he glory in malice that is mighty?" That is, he
that in malice is mighty, why doth he glory? There is need that a man
be mighty, but in goodness, not in malice. Is it any great thing to
glory in malice? To build a house doth belong to few men, any ignorant
man you please can pull down. To sow wheat, to dress the crop, to wait
until it ripen, and in that fruit on which one has laboured to rejoice,
doth belong to few men: with one spark any man you please can burn all
the crop. To breed an infant, when born to feed him, to educate, to
bring him on to youth's estate, is a great task: to kill him in one
moment of time any one you please is able. Therefore those things which
are done for destruction, are most easily done. "He that glorieth, let
him glory in the Lord:" [1887] he that glorieth, let him glory in
goodness. Thou gloriest, because thou art mighty in evil. What art thou
about to do, O mighty man, what art thou about to do, boasting thyself
much? Thou art about to kill a man: this thing also a scorpion, this
also one fever, this also a poisonous fungus can do. To this is thy
mightiness reduced, that it be made equal to a poisonous fungus? This
therefore do the good citizens of Jerusalem, who not in malice but in
goodness glory: firstly, that not in themselves, but in the Lord they
glory. Secondly, that those things which make for edification they
earnestly do, and do such things as are strong to abide: but things
which make for destruction they may do, for the discipline of men
advancing, not for the oppression of the innocent. To this mightiness
then that earthly body being compared, why may it not hear out of these
words, "Why doth he glory in malice that is mighty?"
4. "In iniquity the whole day upon injustice hath thy tongue thought"
(ver. 2): that is, in the whole of time, without weariness, without
intermission, without cessation. And when thou doest not, thou
thinkest; so that when anything of evil is away from thy hands, from
thy heart it is not away; either thou doest an evil thing, or while
thou canst not do, thou sayest an evil thing, that is, thou
evil-speakest: or when not even this thou canst do, thou willest and
thinkest an evil thing. "The whole day," then, that is, without
intermission. We expect punishment to this man. Is he to himself a
small punishment? Thou threatenest him: thou, when thou threatenest
him, wilt send him whither? Unto evil? Send him away unto himself. In
order that thou mayest vent much rage, thou art going to give him into
the power of beasts: unto himself he is worse than beasts. For a beast
can mangle his body: of himself he cannot leave his heart whole.
Within, against himself he doth rage of himself, and dost thou from
without seek for stripes? Nay, pray God for him, that he may be set
free from himself. Nevertheless in this Psalm, my brethren, there is
not a prayer for evil men, or against evil men, but a prophecy of what
is to result to evil men. Think not therefore that the Psalm of
ill-will saith anything: for it is said in the spirit of prophecy.
5. There followeth then what? All thy might and all thy thought of
iniquity all the day, and meditation of malignity in thy tongue without
intermission, hath performed what, done what? "As with a sharp razor
thou hast done deceit" (ver. 3). See what do evil men to Saints, they
scrape their hair. What is it that I have said? If there be such
citizens of Jerusalem, that hear the voice of their Lord, of their
King, saying, "Fear not them which kill the body, but are not able to
kill the soul:" that hear the voice which but now from the Gospel hath
been read, "What doth it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole
world, and of himself make wreck:" [1888] they despise all present good
things, and above all life itself. And what is Doeg's razor to do to a
man on this earth meditating on the kingdom of heaven, and about to be
in the kingdom of heaven, having with him God, and about to abide with
God? What is that razor to do? Hair it is to scrape, it is to make a
man bald. And this belongeth to Christ, who in the Place of a Skull was
crucified. [1889] It maketh also the son of Core, which is interpreted
baldness. [1890] For this hair signifieth a superfluity of things
temporal. Which hairs indeed are not made by God superfluously on the
body of men, but for a sort of ornament: yet because without feeling
they are cut off, they that cleave to the Lord with their heart, so
have these earthly things as they have hair. But sometimes even
something of good with "hair" is wrought, when thou breakest bread to
the hungry, the poor without roof thou bringest into thy house; if thou
shalt have seen one naked, thou coverest him: [1891] lastly, the
Martyrs themselves also imitating the Lord, blood for the Church
shedding, hearing that voice, "As Christ laid down His life for us, so
also ought we also to lay down for the brethren," [1892] in a certain
way with their hair did good to us, that is, with those things which
that razor can lop off or scrape. But that therefore even with the very
hair some good can be done, even that woman a sinner intimated, who,
when she had wept over the feet of the Lord, with her hair wiped what
with tears she wetted. [1893] Signifying what? That when thou shalt
have pitied any one, thou oughtest to relieve him also if thou canst.
For when thou hast pity, thou sheddest as it were tears: when thou
relievest, thou wipest with hair. And if this to any one, how much more
to the feet of the Lord. The feet of the Lord are what? The holy
Evangelists, whereof is said, "How beautiful are the feet of them that
tell of peace, that tell of good things!" [1894] Therefore like a razor
let Doeg whet his tongue, let him whet deceit as much as he may: he
will take away superfluous temporal things; will he necessary things
everlasting?
6. "Thou hast loved malice above benignity" (ver. 4). Before thee was
benignity; herself thou shouldest have loved. For thou wast not going
to expend anything, nor wast thou going to fetch something to love by a
distant voyage. Benignity is before thee, iniquity before thee: compare
and choose. But perchance thou hast an eye wherewith thou seest
malignity, and hast no eye wherewith thou seest benignity. Woe to the
iniquitous heart. What is worse, it doth turn away itself, that it may
not see what it is able to see. For what of such hath been said in
another place? "He would not understand that he might do good." [1895]
For it is not said, he could not: but "he would not," he saith,
"understand that he might do good," he closed his eyes from present
light. And what followeth? "Of iniquity he hath meditated in his bed;"
that is, in the inner secrecy of his heart. Some reproach of this kind
is heaped upon this Doeg the Edomite, a malignant body, a motion of
earth, not abiding, not heavenly. "Thou hast loved malignity above
benignity." For wilt thou know how an evil man doth see both, and the
former he doth rather choose, from the other doth turn himself away?
Wherefore doth he cry out when he suffereth anything unjustly?
Wherefore doth he then exaggerate as much as he can the iniquity, and
praise benignity, censuring him that hath wrought in him malignity
above benignity? Be he then a rule to himself for seeing: out of
himself he shall be judged. Moreover, if he do what is written, "Thou
shalt love thy neighbour as thyself;" [1896] and, "Whatsoever good
things ye will that men should do unto you, these also do ye do unto
them:" [1897] at home he hath means of knowing, because what on himself
he will not have to be done, he ought not to do to another. "Thou hast
loved malice above benignity." Iniquitously, inordinately, perversely
thou wouldest raise water above oil: [1898] the water will be sunk, the
oil will remain above. Thou wouldest under darkness place a light: the
darkness will be put to flight, the light will remain. Above heaven
thou wouldest place earth, by its weight the earth will fall into its
place. Thou therefore wilt be sunk by loving malice above benignity.
For never will malice overcome benignity. "Thou hast loved malice above
benignity: iniquity more than to speak of equity." Before thee is
equity, before thee is iniquity: one tongue thou hast, whither thou
wilt thou turnest it: wherefore then rather to iniquity and not to
equity? Food of bitterness dost thou not give to thy belly, and food of
iniquity dost thou give to thy malignant tongue? As thou choosest
whereon to live, so choose what thou mayest speak. Thou preferrest
iniquity to equity, and preferrest malice to benignity; thou indeed
preferrest, but above what can ever be but benignity and equity? But
thou, by placing thyself in a manner upon those things which it is
necessary should go beneath, wilt not make them to be above good
things, but thou with them wilt be sunk unto evil things.
7. Because of this there followeth in the Psalm, "Thou hast loved all
words of sinking under" (ver. 5). Rescue therefore thyself, if thou
canst, from sinking under. From shipwreck thou art fleeing, and dost
embrace lead! If thou wilt not sink, catch at a plank, be borne on
wood, let the Cross carry thee through. But now because thou art a Doeg
the Edomite, a "motion," and "of earth," thou doest what? "Thou hast
loved all words of sinking-under, a tongue deceitful." This hath
preceded, words of sinking-under have followed a tongue deceitful. What
is a tongue deceitful? A minister of guile is a tongue deceitful, of
men bearing one thing in heart, another thing from mouth bringing
forth. But in these is overthrowing, in these sinking under.
8. "Wherefore God shall destroy thee at the end" (ver. 6): though now
thou seemest to flourish like grass in the field before the heat of the
sun. For, "All flesh is grass, and the brightness of man as the bloom
of grass: the grass hath withered, and the bloom hath fallen down: but
the word of the Lord abideth for everlasting." [1899] Behold that to
which thou mayest bind thyself, to what [1900] "abideth for
everlasting." For if to grass, and to the bloom of grass, thou shalt
have bound thyself, since the grass shall wither, and the bloom shall
fall down, "God shall destroy thee at the end:" and if not now,
certainly at the end He shall destroy, when that winnowing shall have
come, and the heap of chaff from the solid grain shall have been
separated. [1901] Is not the solid grain for the barns, and the chaff
for the fire? Shall not the whole of that Doeg stand at the left hand,
when the Lord is to say, "Go ye into fire everlasting, which hath been
prepared for the devil and his angels"? [1902] Therefore "God shall
destroy at the end: shall pluck thee out, and shall remove thee from
thy dwelling." Now then this Doeg the Edomite is in a dwelling: "But a
servant abideth not in the house for ever." [1903] Even he worketh
something of good, even if not with his doings, at least with the words
of God, so that in the Church, when he "seeketh his own," [1904] he
would say, at least, those things which are of Christ.
"But He shall remove thee from thy dwelling." "Verily, verily, I say
unto you, they have received their reward." [1905] "And thy root from
the land of the living." Therefore in the land of the living we ought
to have root. Be our root there. Out of sight is the root: fruits may
be seen, root cannot be seen. Our root is our love, our fruits are our
works: it is needful that thy works proceed from love, then is thy root
in the land of the living. Then shall be rooted up that Doeg, nor any
wise shall he be able there to abide, because neither more deeply there
hath he fixed a root: [1906] but it shall be with him in like manner as
it is with those seeds on the rock, which even if a root they throw
out, yet, because moisture they have not, with the risen sun forthwith
do wither. But, on the other hand, they that fix a root more deeply,
hear from the Apostle what? "I bow my knees for you to the Father of
our Lord Jesus Christ, that ye may be in love rooted and grounded." And
because there now is root, "That ye may be able," he saith, "to
comprehend what is the height, and breadth, and length, and depth: to
know also the supereminent knowledge of the love of Christ, that ye may
be filled unto all the fulness of God." [1907] Of such fruits so great
a root is worthy, being so single, so budding, for buddings so deeply
grounded. But truly this man's root shall be rooted up from the land of
the living.
9. "And the just shall see, and shall fear; and over him they shall
laugh" (ver. 7). Shall fear when? Shall laugh when? Let us therefore
understand, and make a distinction between those two times of fearing
and laughing, which have their several uses. For so long as we are in
this world, not yet must we laugh, lest hereafter we mourn. We have
read what is reserved at the end for this Doeg, we have read and
because we understand and believe, we see but fear. This, therefore,
hath been said, "The just shall see, and shall fear." So long as we see
what will result at the end to evil men, wherefore do we fear? Because
the Apostle hath said, "In fear and trembling work out your own
salvation:" [1908] because it hath been said in a Psalm, [1909] "Serve
the Lord in fear, and exult unto Him with trembling." Wherefore "with
fear"? "Wherefore let him that thinketh himself to stand, see that he
fall not." [1910] Wherefore "with trembling"? Because he saith in
another place: "Brethren, if a man shall have been overtaken in any
delinquency, ye that are spiritual instruct such sort in the spirit of
gentleness; heeding thyself, lest thou also be tempted." [1911]
Therefore, the just that are now, that live of faith, so see this Doeg,
what to him is to result, that nevertheless they fear also for
themselves: for what they are to-day, they know; what to-morrow they
are to be, they know not. Now, therefore, "The just shall see, and they
shall fear." But when shall they laugh? When iniquity shall have passed
over; when it shall have flown over; as now to a great degree hath
flown over the time uncertain; when shall have been put to flight the
darkness of this world, wherein now we walk not but by the lamp of the
Scriptures, and therefore fear as though in night. For we walk by
prophecy; whereof saith the Apostle Peter, "We have a more sure
prophetic word, to which giving heed ye do well, as to a lamp shining
in a dark place, until the day shine, and the day-star arise in your
hearts." [1912] So long then as by a lamp we walk, it is needful that
with fear we should live. But when shall have come our day, that is,
the manifestation of Christ, whereof the same Apostle saith, "When
Christ shall have appeared, your life, then ye also shall appear with
Himself in glory," [1913] then the just shall laugh at that Doeg....
10. But what shall they then say that shall laugh? "And over him they
shall laugh; and shall say, Behold a man that hath not set God for his
helper" (ver. 8). See ye the body earthly! "As much as thou shalt have,
so great shalt thou be," is a proverb of covetous men, of grasping men,
of men oppressing the innocent, of men seizing upon other men's goods,
of men denying things entrusted to their care. Of what sort is this
proverb? "As much as thou shalt have, so great shalt thou be;" that is,
as much as thou shalt have had of money, as much as thou shalt have
gotten, by so much the more mighty shalt thou be. "Behold a man that
hath not set God for his helper, but hath trusted in the multitude of
his riches." Let not a poor man, one perchance that is evil, say, I am
not of this body. For he hath heard the Prophet saying, "He hath
trusted in the multitude of his riches:" forthwith if he is poor, he
heedeth his rags, he hath observed near him perchance a rich man among
the people of God more richly apparelled, and he saith in his heart, Of
this man he speaketh; doth he speak of me? Do not thence except
thyself, do not separate thyself, unless thou shalt have seen and
feared, in order that thou mayest hereafter laugh. For what doth it
profit thee, if thou dost want means, and thou burnest with cupidity?
When our Lord Jesus Christ to that rich man that was grieved, and that
was departing from Him, had said, "Go, sell all that thou hast, and
give to the poor, and thou shalt have treasure in heaven, and come
follow Me:" [1914] and great hopelessness for rich men foretold, so
that He said, more easily could a camel pass through the eye of a
needle, than a rich man enter into the kingdom of Heaven, [1915] were
not forthwith the disciples grieved, saying with themselves, "Who shall
be able to be saved?" Therefore when they were saying, "Who shall be
able to be saved?" did they think of the few rich men, did there escape
them so great a multitude of poor men? Could they not say to
themselves, If it is hard, aye an impossible thing, that rich men
should enter into the kingdom of heaven, as it is impossible that a
camel should enter through the eye of a needle, let all poor men enter
into the kingdom of heaven, be the rich alone shut out? For how few are
the rich men? But of poor men are thousands innumerable. For not the
coats are we to look upon in the kingdom of heaven; but for every one's
garment shall be reckoned the effulgence of righteousness: there shall
be therefore poor men equal to Angels of God, clothed with the stoles
of immortality, they shall shine as the sun in the kingdom of their
Father: what reason is there for us about a few rich men to be
concerned, or distressed? This thought not the Apostles; but when the
Lord had spoken this, "It is easier for a camel to go through the eye
of a needle, than for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of heaven:"
they saying to themselves, "Who shall be able to be saved," meant what?
Not means, but desires; for they saw even poor men themselves, even if
not having money, yet to have covetousness. And that ye may know, that
not money in a rich man, but covetousness is condemned, attend to what
I say; Thou observest that rich man standing near thee, and perchance
in him is money, and is not covetousness; in thee is not money, and is
covetousness. A poor man full of sores, full of woe, licked by dogs,
having no help, having no morsel, not having perchance a mere garment,
was borne by the Angels unto Abraham's bosom. [1916] Ho! being a poor
man, art thou glad now; for are even sores by thee to be desired? Is
not thy patrimony soundness? There is not in this Lazarus the merit of
poverty, but that of godliness. For thou seest who was borne up, thou
seest not whither he was borne up. Who was borne up by Angels? A poor
man, full of woe, full of sores. Whither was he borne up? Unto
Abraham's bosom. Read the Scriptures, and thou shall find Abraham to
have been a rich man. [1917] In order that thou mayest know, that not
riches are blamed; Abraham had much gold, silver, cattle, household,
was a rich man, and unto his bosom Lazarus, a poor man, was borne up.
Unto bosom of rich man, poor man: are not rather both unto God rich
men, both in cupidity poor men?...
11. Therefore that man having been condemned that "hath trusted in the
multitude of his riches, and hath prevailed in his vanity:" for what
more vain, than he that thinketh coin more to avail than God? Therefore
that man having been condemned that said, blessed of the people to whom
these things are: thou that sayest, "Blessed the people of whom is the
Lord their own God," dost think of thyself what? dost hope for thyself
what? "But I;" now at length hear that body: "But I am like an olive,
fruit-bearing in the house of God" (ver. 9). Not one man speaketh, but
that olive fruit-bearing, whence have been pruned the proud branches,
and the humble wild olive graffed in. [1918] "Like an olive,
fruit-bearing in the house of God, I have trusted in the mercy of God."
He did what? "In the multitude of his riches:" therefore his root shall
be plucked out from the land of the living. "But I," because "like an
olive, fruit-bearing in the house of God," the root whereof is
nourished, is not rooted out, "have trusted in the mercy of God." But
perchance now? For even herein men err sometimes. God indeed they
worship, and are not now like to that Doeg: but though on God they
rely, it is for temporal things nevertheless; so that they say to
themselves, I worship my God, who will make me rich upon earth, who to
me will give sons, who to me will give a wife. Such things indeed
giveth none but God, but God would not have Himself for the sake of
such things to be loved. For to this end oftentimes those things He
giveth even to evil men, in order that some other thing good men of Him
may learn to seek. In what manner then sayest thou, "I have trusted in
the mercy of God"? Perchance for obtaining temporal things? Nay but,
"For everlasting and world without end." The expression, "For
everlasting," he willed to repeat by adding, "world without end," in
order that by there repeating he might affirm how rooted he was in the
love of the kingdom of heaven, and in the hope of everlasting felicity.
12. "I will confess to Thee for ever, because Thou hast done" (ver.
10). "Hast done what?" Doeg Thou hast condemned, David Thou hast
crowned. "I will confess to Thee for ever, because Thou hast done."
Great confession, "Because thou hast done"! "Hast done" what? except
these very things which above have been spoken of, that like an olive
fruit-bearing in the house of God, I should trust in the mercy of God
for everlasting and world without end? Thou hast done: an ungodly man
cannot justify himself. But who is He that justifieth? "Believing," he
saith, "on Him" that justifieth "the ungodly." [1919] "For what hast
thou which thou hast not received? But if thou hast received, why dost
thou glory as if thou hast not received, as if of thyself thou hast?"
[1920] Be it far from me that I should so glory, saith he, that is
opposed against Doeg, that beareth with Doeg upon earth, until he
remove from his dwelling, and be rooted up from the land of the living.
I glory not as if I have not received, but in God I glory. "And I will
confess to Thee because Thou hast done," that is, because Thou hast
done not according to my merits, but according to Thy mercy. But I have
done what? If thou recollectest, "Before, I was a blasphemer, and a
persecutor, and injurious." But thou, what hast thou done? "But mercy I
have obtained, because ignorant I did it." [1921] "I will confess to
Thee for ever, because Thou hast done."
13. "And I will look for Thy name, for it is pleasant." Bitter is the
world, but Thy name is pleasant. Even if certain sweet things are in
the world, yet with bitterness they are digested. Thy name is
preferred, not only for greatness but also for pleasantness. "For
unjust men have told to me their delights, but it is not as Thy law, O
Lord." [1922] For if there were nothing sweet to the Martyrs, they
would not have suffered with equanimity so great bitterness of
tribulations. Their bitterness by any one was experienced, their
sweetness easily could no one taste. The name of God therefore is
pleasant to men loving God above all pleasantnesses. "I will look for
Thy name, for it is pleasant." And to what dost Thou prove that it is
pleasant? Give me a palate to which it is pleasant. Praise honey as
much as thou art able, exaggerate the sweetness thereof with what words
thou shalt have the power: a man knowing not what honey is, unless he
shall have tasted, what thou sayest knoweth not. Therefore the rather
to the proof the Psalm inviting thee saith what? "Taste and see that
sweet is the Lord." [1923] Taste thou wilt not, and thou sayest, Is it
pleasant? What is pleasant? If thou hast tasted, in thy fruit be it
found, not in words alone, as it were only in leaves, lest by the curse
of the Lord, to wither like that fig-tree [1924] thou shouldest
deserve. "Taste," he saith, "and see, that sweet is the Lord." Taste
and see: then ye shall see, if ye shall have tasted. But to a man not
tasting, how provest thou? By praising the pleasantness of the name of
God, whatsoever things thou shalt have said are words: something else
is taste. The words of His praise there hear even the ungodly, but none
taste how sweet it is, but the Saints. Further, a man discerning the
sweetness of the name of God, and wishing to unfold and wishing to show
the same, and not finding persons to whom he may unfold it; for to the
Saints there is no need that he show it, because they even of
themselves taste and know, but the ungodly cannot discern what they
will not taste: doth, I say, what, because of the sweetness of the name
of God? He hath borne him forthwith away from the crowds of the
ungodly. "And I will look," he saith, "for Thy name, for it is
pleasant, in the sight of Thy Saints." Pleasant is Thy name, but not in
the sight of the ungodly. I know how sweet a thing it is, but it is to
them that have tasted.
__________________________________________________________________
[1882] Lat. LI.
[1883] Ps. xxxiii. tit.
[1884] Esth. xiv. 16.
[1885] Matt. xxiii. 3.
[1886] Matt. iii. 12.
[1887] 1 Cor. i. 31.
[1888] Matt. xvi. 26.
[1889] Matt. xxvii. 33.
[1890] 1 Chron. vi. 22.
[1891] Isa. lviii. 7.
[1892] 1 John iii. 16.
[1893] Luke vii. 38.
[1894] Isa. lii. 7; Rom. x. 15.
[1895] Ps. xxxvi. 4.
[1896] Matt. xxii. 39.
[1897] Matt. vii. 12.
[1898] See. S. Chrys. on 1 Thess. Hom. xi.
[1899] Isa. xl. 6-8.
[1900] Al. "to the Word that."
[1901] Matt. iii. 12, xiii. 40.
[1902] Matt. xxv. 41.
[1903] John viii. 35.
[1904] Phil. ii. 21.
[1905] Matt. vi. 2.
[1906] Matt. xiii. 5.
[1907] Eph. iii. 14, 17-19.
[1908] Phil. ii. 12.
[1909] Ps. ii. 11.
[1910] 1 Cor. x. 12.
[1911] Gal. vi. 1.
[1912] 2 Pet. i. 19.
[1913] Col. iii. 4.
[1914] Matt. xix. 21.
[1915] Matt. xix. 24.
[1916] Luke xvi. 22.
[1917] Gen. xiii. 2.
[1918] Rom. xi. 17.
[1919] Rom. iv. 5.
[1920] 1 Cor. iv. 7.
[1921] 1 Tim. i. 13.
[1922] Ps. cxix. 85.
[1923] Ps. xxxiv. 8.
[1924] Matt. xxi. 19.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm LIII. [1925]
1. Of this Psalm we undertake to treat with you, as far as the Lord
supplieth us. A brother biddeth us [1926] that we may have the will,
and prayeth that we may have the power. If anything in haste perchance
I shall have passed over, He that even to us deigneth to give what we
shall be enabled to say, will supply it in you. The title of it is: "At
the end, for Maeleth, understanding to David himself." "For Maeleth,"
as we find in interpretations of Hebrew names, seemeth to say, For one
travailing, or in pain. But who there is in this world that travaileth
and is in pain, the faithful acknowledge, because thereof they are.
Christ here travaileth, Christ here is in pain: the Head is above, the
members below. For one not travailing nor in pain would not say, "Saul,
Saul, why persecutest thou me?" [1927] Him, with whom when persecuting
He was travailing, being converted, He made to travail. For he also was
himself afterwards enlightened, and grafted on those members which he
used to persecute; being pregnant with the same love, he said, "My
little children, of whom again I travail, until Christ be formed in
you." [1928] For the members therefore of Christ, for His Body which is
the Church, [1929] for that same One Man, that is, for that very unity,
whereof the Head is above, this Psalm is sung....Who are they, then,
amid whom we travail and groan, if in the Body of Christ we are, if
under Him, the Head, we live, if amongst His members we are counted?
Who they are, hear ye.
2. "The unwise man hath said in his heart, There is no God" (ver. 1).
Such sort is it of men amid whom is pained and groaneth the Body of
Christ. If such is this sort of men, of not many do we travail; as far
as seemeth to occur to our thoughts, very few there are; and a
difficult thing it is to meet with a man that saith in his heart,
"There is no God;" [1930] nevertheless, so few there are, that, fearing
amid the many to say this, in their heart they say it, for that with
mouth to say it they dare not. Not much then is that which we are bid
to endure, hardly is it found: uncommon is that sort of men that say in
their heart, "There is no God." But, if it be examined in another
sense, is not that found to be in more men, which we supposed to be in
men few and uncommon, and almost in none? Let them come forth into the
midst that live evil lives, let us look into the doings of profligate,
daring, and wicked men, of whom there is a great multitude; who foster
day by day their sins, who, their acts having been changed into habit,
have even lost sense of shame: this is so great a multitude of men,
that the Body of Christ, set amid them, scarce dareth to censure that
which it is not constrained to commit, and deemeth it a great matter
for itself that the integrity of innocence be preserved in not doing
that which now, by habit, either it doth not dare to blame, or if it
[1931] shall have dared, there breaketh out the censure and
recrimination of them that live evil lives, more readily than the free
voice of them that live good lives. And those men are such as say in
their heart, "There is no God." Such men I am confuting. Whence
confuting? That their doings please God, they judge. He doth not
therefore affirm, "some say," but "The unwise man hath said in his
heart, There is no God." Which men do so far believe there is a God,
that the same God they judge with what they do to be pleased. But if
thou being wise dost perceive, how "the unwise man hath said in his
heart, There is no God," if thou give heed, if thou understand, if thou
examine; he that thinketh that evil doings please God, Him he doth not
think to be God. For if God is, He is just; if He is just, injustice
displeaseth Him, iniquity displeaseth. But thou, when thou thinkest
that iniquity pleaseth Him, dost deny God. For if God is one Whom
iniquity displeaseth, but God seemeth not to thee to be one whom
iniquity displeaseth, and there is no God but one whom iniquity
displeaseth, then when thou sayest in thy heart, God doth countenance
my iniquities, thou sayest nothing else than, "There is no God."
3. Let us advert also to that sense, which concerning Christ our Lord
Himself, our Head Himself, doth present itself. For when Himself in
form of a servant [1932] appeared on earth, they that crucified Him
said, "He is not God." Because Son of God He was, truly God He was. But
they that are corrupted and have become abominable said what? "He is
not God:" let us slay Him, "He is not God." Thou hast the voice of
these very men in the book of Wisdom. [1933] For after there had gone
before the verse, "The unwise man hath said in his heart, There is no
God;" as if reasons were required why the unwise man could say this, he
hath subjoined, "Corrupted they are, and abominable have become in
their iniquities" (ver. 2). Hear ye those corrupted men. "For they have
said with themselves, not rightly thinking:" [1934] corruption
beginneth with evil belief, thence it proceedeth to depraved morals,
thence to the most flagrant iniquities, these are the grades. But what
with themselves said they, thinking not rightly? "A small thing and
with tediousness is our life." [1935] From this evil belief followeth
that which also the Apostle hath spoken of, "Let us eat and drink, for
to-morrow we shall die." [1936] But in the former passage more
diffusely luxury itself is described: "Let us crown us with roses,
before they be withered; in every place let us leave the tokens of our
gladness." [1937] After the more diffuse description of that luxury,
what followeth? "Let us slay the poor just man:" [1938] this is
therefore saying, "He is not God." Soft words they seemed but now to
say: "Let us crown us with roses, before they be withered." What more
delicate, what more soft? Wouldest thou expect, out of this softness,
Crosses, swords? Wonder not, soft are even the roots of brambles; if
any one handle them, he is not pricked: but that wherewith thou shalt
be pricked from thence hath birth. "Corrupted," therefore, are those
men, "and abominable have become in their iniquities." They say, "If
Son of God He is, let Him come down from the Cross." [1939] Behold them
openly saying, "He is not God."...
4. "The Lord from Heaven hath looked forth upon the sons of men, that
He might see if there is one understanding and seeking after God" (ver.
3). What is this? "Corrupted they are," all these that say, "There is
no God"? And what? Did it escape God, that they were become such? Or
indeed to us would their inward thought be opened, except by Him it
were told? If then He understood, if then He knew, what is this which
hath been said, "that He might see"? For the words are of one
inquiring, of one not knowing. "God from Heaven hath looked forth,"
etc. And as though He had found what He sought by looking upon, and by
looking down from Heaven, He giveth sentence: "All men have gone aside,
together useless they have become: there is not one that doeth good,
not so much as one" (ver. 4). Two questions arise somewhat difficult:
for if God looketh out from Heaven, in order that He may see if there
is one understanding or seeking after God; there stealeth upon an
unwise man the thought, that God knoweth not all things. This is one
question: what is the other? If there is not one that doeth good, is
not so much as one; who is he that travaileth amid bad men? The former
question then is solved as followeth: ofttimes the Scripture speaketh
in such manner, that what by the gift of God a creature doth, God is
said to do....For hence has been said the following also, "For the
Spirit searcheth all things, even the depth of God;" [1940] not because
He that knoweth all things searcheth, but because to thee hath been
given the Spirit, which maketh thee also to search: and that which by
His own gift thou doest, He is said to do; because without Him thou
wouldest not do it: therefore God is said to do, when thou doest....And
because this by the gift of God thou doest, God from heaven is "looking
forth upon the sons of men." The former question then, according to our
measure, thus hath been solved.
5. What is that which looking forth we acknowledge? What is that which
looking forth God acknowledgeth? What (because here He giveth it) doth
He acknowledge? Hear what it is; that "All have gone aside, together
useless they have become: there is not one that doeth good, there is
not so much as one." What then is that other question, but the same
whereof a little before I have made mention? If, "There is not one that
doeth good, is not so much as one," no one remaineth to groan amid evil
men. Stay, saith the Lord, do not hastily give judgment. I have given
to men to do well; but of Me, He saith, not of themselves: for of
themselves evil they are: sons of men they are, when they do evil; when
well, My sons. For this thing God doth, out of sons of men He maketh
sons of God: because out of Son of God He hath made Son of Man. See
what this participation is: there hath been promised to us a
participation of Divinity: He lieth that hath promised, if He is not
first made partaker of mortality. For the Son of God hath been made
partaker of mortality, in order that mortal man may be made partaker of
divinity. He that hath promised that His good is to be shared with
thee, first with thee hath shared thy evil: He that to thee hath
promised divinity, showeth in thee love. Therefore take away that men
are sons of God, there remaineth that they are sons of men: "There is
none that doeth good, is not so much as one."
6. "Shall not all know that work iniquity, that devour My people for
the food of bread"? (ver. 5)....There is therefore here a people of God
that is being devoured. Nay, "There is not one that doeth good, there
is not so much as one." We reply by the rule above. But this people
that is devoured, this people that suffereth evil men, this that
groaneth and travaileth amid evil men, now out of sons of men have been
made sons of God: therefore are they devoured. For, "The counsel of the
needy man thou hast confounded, because the Lord is his hope." [1941]
For ofttimes, in order that the people of God may be devoured, this
very thing in it is despised, that it is the people of God. I will
pillage, he saith, and despoil; if he is a Christian, what will he do
to me?...But what followeth? "I will convince thee, and will set thee
before thy face." Thou wilt not now know so as thou shouldest be
displeasing to thyself, thou shalt know so as thou mayest mourn. For
God cannot but show to the unrighteous their iniquity. If He is not to
show, who will they be that are to say, "What hath profited us pride,
and what hath boasting of riches bestowed upon us?" [1942] For then
shall they know, that now will not know. "Shall not all know?" etc. Why
hath He added, "for the food of bread"? As it were as bread, they eat
My people. For all other things which we eat, we can eat now these, now
those; not always this vegetable, not always this flesh, not always
these apples: but always bread. What is then, "Devour My people for the
food of bread"? Without intermission, without cessation they devour.
7. "On God they have not called." He is comforting the man that
groaneth, and chiefly by an admonition, lest by imitating evil men, who
ofttimes prosper, they delight in evil doing. There is kept for thee
that which to thee hath been promised: their hope is present, thine is
future, but theirs is transient, thine sure; theirs false, thine true.
For they "upon God have not called." Do not daily such men ask of God?
They do "not" ask of God. Give heed, if I am able to say this by the
aid of God Himself. God gratuitously will have Himself to be
worshipped, gratuitously will have Himself to be loved, that is
chastely to be loved; not Himself to be loved for the reason that He
giveth anything besides Himself, but because He giveth Himself. He then
that calleth upon God in order that He may be made rich, on God doth
not call: for upon that He calleth which to himself he willeth to
come....But now thou wouldest have coffer full, and conscience void:
God filleth not coffer, but breast. What do outward riches profit thee,
if inward need presseth thee? Therefore those men that for the sake of
worldly comforts, that for the sake of earthly good things, that for
the sake of present life and earthly felicity, call upon God, do not
call upon God.
8. For this reason what followeth concerning them? "There have they
feared with fear, where there was no fear" (ver. 6). For is there fear,
if a man lose riches? There is no fear there, and yet in that case men
are afraid. But if a man lose wisdom, truly there is fear, and in that
case he is not afraid....Thou hast feared to give back money, and hast
willed to lose fidelity. The Martyrs took not away property of other
persons, but even their own they despised that they might not lose
fidelity: and it was too little to lose money, when they were
proscribed; they took also their life when they suffered: they lost
life, in order that unto everlasting life they might find it. [1943]
Therefore there they feared, where they ought to have been afraid. But
they that of Christ have said, "He is not God," have there feared where
was no fear. For they said, "If we shall have let Him go, there will
come the Romans, and will take away from us both place and kingdom."
[1944] O folly and imprudence saying in its heart, "He is not God"!
Thou hast feared to lose earth, thou hast lost Heaven: thou hast feared
lest there should come the Romans, and take away from thee place and
kingdom! Could they take away from thee God? What then remaineth? what
but that thou confess, that thou hast willed to keep, and by keeping
ill hast lost? For thou hast lost both place and nation by slaying
Christ. For ye did will rather to slay Christ, than to lose place; and
ye have lost place, and nation, and Christ. In fearing, they have slain
Christ: but wherefore this? "For God hath scattered the bones of them
that please men." [1945] Willing to please men, they feared to lose
their place. But Christ Himself, of whom they said, "He is not God,"
willed rather to displease such men, as they were: sons of men, not
sons of God, He willed rather to displease. Thence were scattered their
bones, His bones no one hath broken. "They were confounded, for God
hath despised them." In very deed, brethren, as far as regardeth them,
great confusion hath come to them. In the place where they crucified
the Lord, whom for this cause they crucified, that they might not lose
both place and nation, the Jews are not. "God," therefore, "hath
despised them:" and yet in despising He warned them to be converted.
Let them now confess Christ, and say, He is God, of whom they said, "He
is not God." Let them return to the inheritance of their fathers, to
the inheritance of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob, let them possess
with these very persons life eternal: though they have lost life
temporal. Wherefore this? Because out of sons of men have been made
sons of God. For so long as they remain, and will not, there is not one
that doeth good, there is not so much as one. "They were confounded,
for God hath despised them." And as though to these very persons He
were turned, He saith, "Who shall give out of Sion salvation to
Israel?" (ver. 7). O ye fools, ye revile, insult, buffet, besmear with
spittings, with thorns ye crown, upon the Cross ye lift up; whom? "Who
shall give out of Sion salvation to Israel?" Shall not That Same of
whom ye have said, "He is not God"? "In God's turning away the
captivity of His people." For there turneth away the captivity of His
people, no one but He that hath willed to be a captive in your own
hands. But what men shall understand this thing? "Jacob shall exult,
and Israel shall rejoice." "Israel;" the true Jacob, and the true
Israel, that younger, to whom the elder was servant, [1946] shall
himself exult, for he shall himself understand.
__________________________________________________________________
[1925] Lat. LII. From a sermon preached to the people at the request of
some one, perhaps of a bishop.--Ben.
[1926] Al. "Bid us, brethren,...pray for us."
[1927] Acts ix. 4.
[1928] Gal. iv. 19.
[1929] Col. i. 24.
[1930] Ps. xiv. 1.
[1931] So Oxf. mss. (ausum); Ben. ausus, "one."
[1932] Phil. ii. 7.
[1933] Wisd. ii. 18-20. [See p. 172, supra.--C.]
[1934] Wisd. ii. 1.
[1935] Wisd. ii. 1.
[1936] 1 Cor. xv. 32.
[1937] Wisd. ii. 8, 9.
[1938] Wisd. ii. 10.
[1939] Matt. xxvii. 40.
[1940] 1 Cor. ii. 10.
[1941] Ps. xiv. 6.
[1942] Wisd. v. 8.
[1943] Matt. x. 39.
[1944] John xi. 48.
[1945] E.V. "that encamp against thee."
[1946] Gen. xxv. 23.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm LIV. [1947]
1. The title of this Psalm hath fruit in the prolixity thereof, if it
be understood: and because the Psalm is short, let us make up our not
having to tarry over the Psalm by tarrying over the title. For upon
this dependeth every verse which is sung. If any one, therefore,
observe that which on the front of the house is fixed, secure he will
enter; and, when he shall have entered, he will not err. For this on
the post itself is prominently marked, namely, in what manner within he
may not be in error. The title thereof standeth thus: "At the end, in
hymns, understanding to David himself, when there came the Ziphites,
and said to Saul, Behold, is not David hidden with us?" That Saul was
persecutor of the holy man David, very well we know: that Saul was
bearing the figure of a temporal kingdom, not to life but to death
belonging, this also to your Love we remember to have imparted. And
also that David himself was bearing the figure of Christ, or of the
Body of Christ, ye ought both to know and to call to mind, ye that have
already learned. [1948] What then of the Ziphites? There was a certain
village, Ziph, whereof the inhabitants were Ziphites, in whose country
David had hidden himself, when Saul would find and slay him. These
Ziphites then, when they had learned this, betrayed him to the king his
persecutor, saying, "Behold, is not David hidden with us?" Of no good
to them indeed was their betrayal, and to David himself of no harm. For
their evil disposition was shown: but Saul not even after their
betrayal could seize David; but rather in a certain cave in that very
country, when into his hands Saul had been given to slay, David spared
him, and that which he had in his power he did not. [1949] But the
other was seeking to do that which he had not in his power. Let them
that have been Ziphites take heed: let us see those whom to us the
Psalm presenteth to be understood by the occasion of those same men.
2. If we inquire then by what word is translated Ziphites, we find,
"Men flourishing." Flourishing then were certain enemies to holy David,
flourishing before him hiding. We may find them in mankind, if we are
willing to understand the Psalm. Let us find here at first David
hiding, and we shall find his adversaries flourishing. Observe David
hiding: "For ye are dead," saith the Apostle to the members of Christ,
"and your life is hid with Christ in God." [1950] These men, therefore,
that are hiding, when shall they be flourishing? "When Christ," he
saith, "your life, shall have appeared, then ye also with Him shall
appear in glory." [1951] When these men shall be flourishing, then
shall be those Ziphites withering. For observe to what flower their
glory is compared: "All flesh is grass, and the honour of flesh as the
flower of grass." [1952] What is the end? "The grass hath withered, and
the flower hath fallen off." Where then shall be David? See what
followeth: "But the Word of the Lord abideth for ever."...
3. These men sometimes are observed of the weak sons of light, and
their feet totter, when they have seen evil men in felicity to
flourish, and they say to themselves, "Of what profit to me is
innocence? What doth it advantage me that I serve God, that I keep His
commandments, that I oppress no one, from no one plunder anything, hurt
no one, that what I can I bestow? behold, all these things I do, and
they flourish, I toil." But why? Wouldest thou also wish to be a
Ziphite? They flourish in the world, wither in judgment, and after
withering, into fire everlasting shall be cast: wouldest thou also
choose this? Art thou ignorant of what He hath promised thee, who to
thee hath come, what in Himself here He displayed? If the flower of the
Ziphites were to be desired, would not Himself thy Lord also in this
world have flourished? Or indeed was there wanting to Him the power to
flourish? Nay but here He chose rather amid the Ziphites to hide, and
to say to Pontius Pilate, as if to one being himself also a flower of
the Ziphites, and in suspicion about His kingdom, "My kingdom is not of
this world." [1953] Therefore here He was hidden: and all good men are
hidden here, because their good is within, it is concealed, in the
heart it is, where is faith, where charity, where hope, where their
treasure is. Do these good things appear in the world? Both these good
things are hidden, and the reward of these good things is hidden....
4. "O God, in Thy name make me safe, and in Thy virtue judge me" (ver.
1). Let the Church say this, hiding amid the Ziphites. Let the
Christian body say this, keeping secret the good of its morals,
expecting in secret the reward of its merits, let it say this: "In Thy
virtue [1954] judge me." Thou hast come, O Christ, humble Thou hast
appeared, despised Thou hast been, scourged hast been, crucified hast
been, slain hast been; but, on the third day hast risen, on the
fortieth day into Heaven hast ascended: Thou sittest at the right hand
of the Father, and no one seeth: Thy Spirit thence Thou hast sent,
which men that were worthy have received; fulfilled with Thy love, the
praise of that very humility of Thine throughout the world and nations
they have preached: Thy name I see to excel among mankind, but
nevertheless as weak to us hast Thou been preached. For not even did
that Teacher of the Gentiles say, that among us he knew anything, "Save
Christ Jesus, and Him crucified;" [1955] in order that of Him we might
choose the reproach, rather than the glory of the flourishing Ziphites.
Nevertheless, of Him he saith what? "Although He died of weakness, yet
He liveth of the power [1956] of God." He came then that He might die
of weakness, He is to come that He may judge in the power of God: but
through the weakness of the Cross His name hath been illustrious.
Whosoever shall not have believed upon the name made illustrious
through weakness, shall stand in awe at the Judge, when He shall have
come in power. But, lest He that once was weak, when He shall have come
strong, with that fan send us to the left hand; may He "save us in His
name, and judge us in His virtue." For who so rash as to have desired
this, as to say to God, for instance "Judge me"? Is it not wont to be
said to men for a curse, "God judge thee"? So evidently it is a curse,
if He judge thee in His virtue; and shall not have saved thee in His
name: but when in name precedent He shall have saved thee, to thy
health in virtue consequent He shall judge. Be thou without care: that
judgment shall not to thee be punishment, but dividing. For in a
certain Psalm [1957] thus is said: "Judge me, O God, and divide my
cause from the nation unholy."...
5. "O God, hearken to my prayer, in Thy ears receive the words of my
mouth" (ver. 2)....To Thee may my prayer attain, driven forth and
darted out from the desire of Thy eternal blessings: to Thy ears I send
it forth, aid it that it may reach, lest it fall short in the middle of
the way, and fainting as it were it fall down. But even if there result
not to me now the good things which I ask, I am secured nevertheless
that hereafter they will come. For even in the case of transgressions a
certain man is said to have asked of God, and not to have been
hearkened to for his good. For privations of this world had inspired
him to prayer, and being set in temporal tribulations he had wished
that temporal tribulations should pass away, and there should return
the flower of grass; and he saith, "My God, my God, why hast Thou
forsaken me?" [1958] The very voice of Christ it is, but for His
members' sake. "The words," he saith, "of my transgressions I have
cried to Thee throughout the day, and Thou hast not hearkened: and by
night, and not for the sake of folly to me:" that is, "and by night I
have cried, and Thou hast not hearkened; and nevertheless in this very
thing that Thou hast not hearkened, it is not for the sake of folly to
me that Thou hast not hearkened, but rather for the sake of wisdom that
Thou hast not hearkened, that I might perceive what of Thee I ought to
ask. For those things I was asking which to my cost perchance I should
have received." Thou askest riches, O man; how many have been overset
through their riches? Whence knowest thou whether to thee riches may
profit? Have not many poor men more safely been in obscurity; having
become rich men, so soon as they have begun to blaze forth, they have
been a prey to the stronger? How much better they would have lain
concealed, how much better they would have been unknown, that have
begun to be inquired after not for the sake of what they were, but for
the sake of what they had! In these temporal things therefore,
brethren, we admonish and exhort you in the Lord, that ye ask not
anything as if it were a thing settled, but that which God knoweth to
be expedient for you. For what is expedient for you, ye know not at
all. Sometimes that which ye think to be for you is against you, and
that which ye think to be against you is for you. For sick ye are; do
not dictate to the physician the medicines he may choose to set beside
you. If the teacher of the Gentiles, Paul the Apostle, saith, "For what
we should pray for as we ought, we know not," [1959] how much more we?
Who nevertheless, when he seemed to himself to pray wisely, namely,
that from him should be taken away the thorn of the flesh, the angel of
Satan, that did buffet him, in order that he might not in the greatness
of the revelations be lifted up, heard from the Lord what? Was that
done which he wished? Nay, [1960] in order to that being done which was
expedient, he heard from the Lord, I say, what? "Thrice," he saith, "I
besought the Lord that He would take it from me; and He said to me, My
Grace sufficeth for thee: for virtue in weakness is made perfect."
[1961] Salve to the wound I have applied; when I applied it I know,
when it should be taken away I know. Let not a sick man draw back from
the hands of the physician, let him not give advice to the physician.
So it is with all these things temporal. There are tribulations; if
well thou worshippest God, thou wilt know that He knoweth what is
expedient for each man: there are prosperities; take the more heed,
lest these same corrupt thy soul, so that it withdraw from Him that
hath given these things....
6. "For aliens have risen up against me" (ver. 3). What "aliens"? Was
not David himself a Jew of the tribe of Judah? But the very place Ziph
belonged to the tribe of Judah; it was of the Jews. How then "aliens"?
Not in city, not in tribe, not in kindred, but in flower. [1962] ...But
see the Ziphites, see them for a time flourishing. With reason "alien"
sons. Thou amid the Ziphites hiding saidst what? "Blessed the people
whereof the Lord is its God." Out of this affection this prayer [1963]
is being sent forth into the ears of the Lord, when it is said, "for
aliens have risen up against me."
7. "And mighty men have sought after my soul." For in a new manner, my
brethren, they would destroy the race of holy men, and the race of them
that abstain from hoping in this world, all they that have hope in this
world. Certainly commingled they are, certainly together they live.
Very much to one another are opposed these two sorts: the one of those
that place no hope but in things secular, and in temporal felicity, and
the other of those that do firmly place their hope in the Lord God. And
though concordant are these Ziphites, do not much trust to their
concord: temptations are wanting; when there shall have come any
temptation, so as that a person may be reproved for the flower of the
world, I say not to thee he will quarrel with the Bishop, but not even
to the Church Herself will he draw near, lest there fall any part of
the grass. [1964] Wherefore have I said these words, brethren? Because
now gladly ye all hear in the name of Christ, and according as ye
understand, so ye shout out at the word; ye would not indeed shout at
it unless ye understood. [1965] This your understanding ought to be
fruitful. But whether it is fruitful, temptation doth try; lest
suddenly when ye are said to be ours, through temptation ye be found
aliens, and it be said, "Aliens have risen up against me, and mighty
men have sought my soul." Be not that said which followeth, "They have
not set forth God before their face." For when will he set God before
his face, before whose eyes there is nought but the world? namely, how
he may have coin upon coin, how flocks may be increased, how barns may
be filled, how it may be said to his soul, "Thou hast many good things,
be merry, feast, take thy fill." Doth he set before his face Him, that
unto one so boasting and so blooming with the flower of the Ziphites
saith, "Fool" (that is, "man not understanding," "man unwise"), "this
night shall be taken from thee thy soul; all these things which thou
hast prepared, whose shall they be?" [1966]
8. "For behold, God helpeth me" (ver. 4). Even themselves know not
themselves, amid whom I am hiding. But if they too were to set God
before their face, they would find in what manner God helpeth me. For
all holy men are helped by God, but within, where no one seeth. For in
like manner as the conscience of ungodly men is a great punishment, so
a great joy is the very conscience of godly men. "For our glory this
is," saith the Apostle, "the testimony of our conscience." [1967] In
this within, not in the flower of the Ziphites without, doth glory that
man that now saith, "For behold God helpeth me." Surely though afar off
are to be those things which He promiseth, this day have I a sweet and
present help; to-day in my heart's joy I find that without cause
certain say, "Who doth show to us good things? For there is signed upon
us the light of Thy countenance, O Lord, Thou hast put pleasantness
into my heart." [1968] Not into my vineyard, not into my flock, not
into my cask, not into my table, but "into my heart." "For behold God
helpeth me." How doth He help thee? "And the Lord is the lifter up of
my soul."
9. "Turn away evil things unto mine enemies" (ver. 5). So however green
they are, so however they flourish, for the fire they are being [1969]
reserved. "In Thy virtue destroy Thou them." Because to wit they
flourish now, because to wit they spring up like grass: [1970] do not
thou be a man unwise and foolish, so that by giving thought to these
things thou perish for ever and ever. For, "Turn Thou away evil things
unto mine enemies." For if thou shalt have place in the body of David
Himself, in His virtue He will destroy them. These men flourish in the
felicity of the world, perish in the virtue of God. Not in the same
manner as they flourish, do they also perish: for they flourish for a
time, perish for everlasting: flourish in unreal good things, perish in
real torments. "In Thy strength destroy," whom in Thy weakness Thou
hast endured.
10. "Voluntarily I will sacrifice to Thee" (ver. 6). Who can even
understand this good thing of the heart, at another's speaking thereof,
unless in himself he hath tasted it? What is, "Voluntarily I will
sacrifice to Thee"?... For what sacrifice here shall I take, brethren?
or what worthily shall I offer to the Lord for His mercy? Victims shall
I seek from flock of sheep, ram shall I select, for any bull in the
herds shall I look out, frankincense indeed from the land of the
Sabaeans shall I bring? What shall I do? What offer; except that
whereof He speaketh, "Sacrifice of praise shall honour Me"? [1971]
Wherefore then "voluntarily"? Because truly I love that which I praise.
I praise God, and in the self-same praise I rejoice: in the praise of
Himself I rejoice, at whom being praised, I blush not. For He is not
praised in the same manner as by those who love the theatrical follies
is praised either by a charioteer, or a hunter, or actor of any kind,
and by their praisers, other praisers are invited, are exhorted, to
shout together: and when all have shouted, ofttimes, if their favourite
is overcome, they are all put to the blush. Not so is our God: be He
praised with the will, loved with charity: let it be gratuitous (or
voluntary) that He is loved and that He is praised. What is
"gratuitous"? Himself for the sake of Himself, not for the sake of
something else. For if thou praisest God in order that He may give thee
something else, no longer freely dost thou love God. Thou wouldest
blush, if thy wife for the sake of riches were to love thee, and
perchance if poverty should befall thee, should begin to think of
adultery. Seeing that therefore thou wouldest be loved by thy partner
freely, wilt thou for anything else love God? What reward art thou to
receive of God, O covetous man? Not earth for thee, but Himself He
keepeth, who made heaven and earth. "Voluntarily I will sacrifice to
Thee:" do it not of necessity. For if for the sake of anything else
thou praisest God, out of necessity thou praisest....These things also
which He hath given, because of the Giver are good things. For He
giveth entirely, He giveth these temporal things: and to certain men to
their good, to certain men to their harm, after the height and depth of
His judgments...."Voluntarily I will sacrifice to Thee." Wherefore
"voluntarily"? Because gratis. What is gratis? "And I will confess to
Thy name, O Lord, for it is a good thing:" for nothing else, but
because a "good thing" it is. Doth he say, "I will confess to Thy name,
O Lord," because Thou givest me fruitful manors, because Thou givest me
gold and silver, because Thou givest me extended riches, abundant
money, most exalted dignity? Nay. But what? "For it is a good thing."
Nothing I find better than Thy name.
11. "For out of all tribulation Thou hast delivered me" (ver. 7). For
this cause I have perceived how good a thing is Thy name: for if this I
were able before tribulations to acknowledge, perchance for me there
had been no need of them. But tribulation hath been applied for
admonition, admonition hath redounded to Thy praise. For I should not
have understood where I was, except of my weakness I had been
admonished. "Out of all tribulations," therefore, "Thou hast delivered
me. And upon mine enemies mine eye hath looked back:" upon those
Ziphites "mine eye hath looked back." Yea, their flower I have passed
over in loftiness of heart, unto Thee I have come, and thence I have
looked back upon them, and have seen that "All flesh is grass, and all
the glory of man as the flower of grass:" [1972] as in a certain place
is also said, "I have seen the ungodly man to be exalted and raised up
like [1973] the cedars of Lebanon: I passed by, and, lo! he was not."
[1974] Wherefore "he was not"? Because thou hast passed by. What is,
"because thou hast passed by"? Because not to no purpose hast thou
heard "Lift up thy heart;" because not on earth, where thou wouldest
have rotted, thou hast remained; because thou hast lifted thy soul to
God, and thou hast mounted beyond the cedars of Lebanon, and from that
elevation hast observed: and "Lo! he was not;" and thou hast sought
him, and there hath not been found place for him. No longer is labour
before thee; because thou hast entered into the sanctuary of God, and
hast understood for the last things. [1975] So also here thus he
concludeth. "And upon mine enemies mine eye hath looked back." This do
ye therefore, brethren, with your souls; lift up your hearts, sharpen
the edge of your mind, learn truly to love God, learn to despise the
present world, learn voluntarily to sacrifice the offerings of praise;
to the end that, mounting beyond the flower of the grass, ye may look
back upon your enemies.
__________________________________________________________________
[1947] Lat. LIII. From a sermon to the people.
[1948] See exposition upon Ps. lii. S:S: 1, 2.
[1949] 1 Sam. xxiv. 4.
[1950] Col. iii. 3.
[1951] Col. iii. 4.
[1952] Isa. xl. 6.
[1953] John xviii. 36.
[1954] [i.e., power or strength.--C.]
[1955] 1 Cor. ii. 2.
[1956] Virtute.
[1957] Ps. xliii. i.
[1958] Ps. xxii. 1.
[1959] Rom. viii. 26.
[1960] "Nay" not in mss.
[1961] 2 Cor. xii. 8, 9.
[1962] [Jas. i. 10, 11. He seems to bear this text in mind in these
comments.--C.]
[1963] [i.e., this Psalm.--C.]
[1964] [Isa. xl. 6. Note 5, p. 199, supra.--C.]
[1965] [They seem to have applauded, or shouted Amen. So, also, often
when Chrysostom preached.--C.]
[1966] Luke xii. 20.
[1967] 2 Cor. i. 12.
[1968] Ps. iv. 6, 7.
[1969] Al. "let them be."
[1970] Ps. xcii. 7.
[1971] Ps. l. 23.
[1972] Isa. xl. 6.
[1973] Oxf. mss. "above."
[1974] Ps. xxxvii. 35, 36.
[1975] Ps. lxxiii. 16, 17.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm LV. [1976]
1. Of this Psalm the title is: "At the end, in hymns, understanding to
David himself." What the "end" is, we will briefly call to your
recollection, because ye have known it. "For the end of the Law is
Christ, for righteousness unto every man believing." [1977] Be the
attention therefore directed unto the End, directed unto Christ.
Wherefore is He called the end? Because whatever we do, to Him we refer
it, and when to Him we shall have come home, more to ask we shall not
have. For there is an end spoken of which doth consume, there is an end
spoken of which doth make perfect. In one sense, for instance, we
understand it, when we hear, there is ended the food which was in
eating; and in another sense we understand it when we hear, there is
ended the vesture which was in weaving: in each case we hear, there is
ended; but the food so that it no longer is, the vesture so that it is
perfected. Our end therefore ought to be our perfection, our perfection
Christ. For in Him we are made perfect, because of Himself the Head,
the Members are we. And he hath been spoken of as "the End of the Law,"
because without Him no one doth make perfect the Law. When therefore ye
hear in the Psalms, "At the end,"--for many Psalms are thus
superscribed,--be not your thought upon consuming, but upon
consummation.
2. "In hymns:" in praises. For whether we are troubled and are
straitened, or whether we rejoice and exult, He is to be praised, who
both in tribulations doth instruct, and in gladness doth comfort. For
the praise of God from the heart and mouth of a Christian man ought not
to depart; not that he may be praising in prosperity, and speaking evil
in adversity; but after the manner that this Psalm doth prescribe, "I
will speak good of the Lord in every time, alway the praise of Him is
in my mouth." Thou dost rejoice; acknowledge a Father indulging: thou
art troubled; acknowledge a Father chastening. Whether He indulge, or
whether He chasten, He is instructing one for whom He is preparing an
inheritance.
3. What then is, "Understanding to David himself"? David indeed was, as
we know, a holy prophet, king of Israel, son of Jesse: [1978] but
because out of his seed there came for our salvation after the flesh
the Lord Jesus Christ, [1979] often under that name He is figured, and
David instead of Christ is in a figure set down, because of the origin
of the Flesh of the Same. For after some sort He is Son of David, after
some sort He is the Lord of David; Son of David after the flesh, Lord
of David after the divinity. For if by Him have been made all things,
[1980] by Him also David himself hath been made, out of whose seed He
came to men. Moreover, when the Lord had questioned the Jews, whose Son
they affirmed Christ to be, they made answer, "David's:" where the Lord
chides the Jews, when they said that He was the Son of David. [1981] He
saw that they had stayed at the flesh, and had lost sight of the
divinity; and He reproveth them by propounding a question: "How then
doth David himself in spirit call Him Lord, `The Lord hath said unto my
Lord.'...If then He in spirit calleth Him Lord, how is He is Son?"
[1982] A question He propounded; His being Son He denied not. Ye have
heard "Lord;" say ye how He is his "Son:" ye have heard "Son;" say how
He is "Lord." This question the Catholic Faith solveth. How "Lord"?
Because "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and
the Word was God." [1983] How "Son"? Because "The Word was made flesh,
and dwelt among us." [1984] Because then David in a figure is Christ,
but Christ, as we have often reminded your Love, is both Head and Body;
neither ought we to speak of ourselves as alien from Christ, of whom we
are members, nor to count ourselves as if we were any other thing:
because "The two shall be in one flesh." [1985] "This is a great
Sacrament," saith the Apostle, "but I speak in regard of Christ and the
Church." [1986] Because then whole Christ is "Head and Body;" when we
hear, "Understanding to David himself," understand we ourselves also in
David. Let the members of Christ understand, and Christ in His members
understand, and the members of Christ in Christ understand: because
Head and Members are one Christ. The Head was in heaven, and was
saying, "Why dost thou persecute Me?" [1987] We with Him are in heaven
through hope, Himself is with us on earth through love. Therefore
"understanding to David himself." Be we admonished when we hear, and
let the Church understand: for there belongeth to us great diligence to
understand in what evil we now are, and from what evil we desire to be
delivered, remembering the Prayer of the Lord, where at the end we say,
"Deliver us from evil." [1988] Therefore amid many tribulations of this
world, this Psalm complaineth somewhat of understanding. He lamenteth
not with it, who hath not understanding. But furthermore, dearly
beloved, we ought to remember, that after the image of God we have been
made, and that not in any other part than in the understanding itself.
For in many things by beasts we are surpassed: but when a man knoweth
himself to have been made after the image of God, [1989] therein
something in himself he acknowledgeth to be more than hath been given
to dumb animals. But on consideration of all those things which a man
hath, he findeth himself in this thing peculiarly distinguished from a
dumb animal, in that he hath himself an understanding. Whence certain
men despising in themselves that peculiar and especial thing which from
their Maker they had received, the Maker Himself reproveth, saying, "Do
not become like horse and mule, in which there is no understanding."
[1990] ...
4. "Hear Thou, O God, my entreaty, and despise not my prayer: give heed
unto me, and hearken unto me" (ver. 1). Of one earnest, anxious, of one
set in tribulation, are these words. He is praying, suffering many
things, from evil yearning to be delivered: it remaineth that we hear
in what evil he is, and when he beginneth to speak, let us acknowledge
there ourselves to be; in order that the tribulation being shared, we
may conjoin prayer. "I have been made sad in my exercise, and have been
troubled" (ver. 2). Where made sad, where troubled? "In my exercise,"
he saith. Of evil men, whom he suffereth, he hath made mention, and the
same suffering of evil men he hath called his "exercise." Think ye not
that without profit there are evil men in this world, and that no good
God maketh of them. Every evil man either on this account liveth that
he may be corrected, or on this account liveth that through him a good
man may be exercised. O that therefore they that do now exercise us
would be converted, and together with us be exercised! Nevertheless, so
long as they are such as to exercise, let us not hate them: because in
that wherein any one of them is evil, whether unto the end he is to
persevere, we know not; and ofttimes when to thyself thou seemest to
have been hating an enemy, thou hast been hating a brother, and knowest
not. The devil and his angels in the holy Scriptures have been
manifested to us, that for fire everlasting they have been destined. Of
them only must amendment be despaired of....Therefore since this rule
of Love for thee is fixed, that imitating the Father thou shouldest
love an enemy: for, He saith, "love your enemies:" [1991] in this
precept how wouldest thou be exercised, if thou hadst no enemy to
suffer? Thou seest then that he profiteth thee somewhat: and let God
sparing evil men profit thee, so that thou show mercy: because
perchance thou too, if thou art a good man, out of an evil man hast
been made a good man: and if God spared not evil men, not even thou
wouldest be found to return thanks. May He therefore spare others, that
hath spared thee also. For it were not right, when thou hadst passed
through, to close up the way of godliness.
5. Whence then doth this man pray, set among evil men, with whose
enmities he was being exercised? Why saith he, "I have been made sad in
my exercise, and have been troubled"? While he is extending his love so
as to love enemies, he hath been affected with disgust, being bayed at
all around by the enmities of many men, by the frenzy of many and under
a sort of human infirmity he hath sunk. He hath seen himself now begin
to be pierced through with an evil suggestion of the devil, to bring on
hatred against his enemies: wrestling against hatred in order to
perfect love herself, in the very fight, and in the wrestling, he hath
been troubled. For there is his voice in another Psalm, "Mine eye hath
been troubled, because of anger." And what followeth there? "I have
waxen old among all mine enemies." [1992] As if in storm and waves he
were beginning to sink, like Peter. [1993] For he doth trample the
waves of this world, that loveth enemies. Christ on the sea was walking
fearless, from whose heart there could not by any means be taken away
the love of an enemy, who hanging on the Cross did say, "Father,
forgive them, for they know not what they do." [1994] Peter too would
walk. He as Head, Peter as Body: because, "Upon this rock," He saith,
"I will build My Church." [1995] He was bidden to walk, and he was
walking by the Grace of Him bidding, not by his own strength. But when
he saw the wind mighty, he feared; and then he began to sink, being
troubled in his exercise. By what mighty wind? "By the voice of the
enemy, and by the tribulation of the sinner" (ver. 3). Therefore, in
the same manner as he cried out on the waves, "Lord, I perish, save
me," [1996] a similar voice from this man hath preceded, "Hearken unto
me." Wherefore? For what sufferest thou? Of what dost thou groan? "I
have been made sad in my exercise." To be exercised indeed among evil
men Thou hast set me, but too much they have risen up, beyond my
powers: calm Thou one troubled, stretch forth a hand to one sinking.
"For they have brought down upon me iniquity, and in anger they were
shadowing me." Ye have heard of waves and winds: one as it were humbled
they were insulting, and he was praying: on every side against him with
the roar of insult they were raging, but he within was calling upon Him
whom they did not see....
6. But this man being troubled and made sad was praying, his eye being
disturbed as it were on account of anger. [1997] But the anger of a
brother if it shall have been inveterate is then hatred. Anger doth
trouble the eye, hatred doth quench it: anger is a straw, hatred is a
beam. Sometimes thou hatest and chidest an angry man: in thee is
hatred, in him whom thou chidest anger: with reason to thee is said,
"Cast out first the beam from thine own eye, and so thou shalt see to
cast out the straw from thy brother's eye." [1998] For that ye may know
how much difference there is between anger and hatred: day by day men
are angry with their sons, show me them that hate their [1999] sons!
This man being troubled was praying even when made sad, wrestling
against all revilings of all revilers; not in order that he might
conquer any one of them by giving back reviling, but that he might not
hate any one of them. Hence he prayeth, hence asketh: "From the voice
of the enemy and from the tribulation of the sinner." "My heart hath
been troubled in me" (ver. 4). This is the same as elsewhere hath been
said, "Mine eye because of anger hath been troubled." [2000] And if eye
hath been troubled, what followeth? "And fear of death hath fallen upon
me." Our life is love: if life is love, death is hatred. When a man
hath begun to fear lest he should hate him that he was loving, it is
death he is fearing; and a sharper death, and a more inward death,
whereby soul is killed, not body. Thou didst mind a man raging against
thee; what was he to do, against whom thine own Lord had given thee
security, saying, "Fear not them that kill the body"? [2001] He by
raging killeth body, thou by keeping hatred hast killed soul; and he
the body of another, thou thine own soul. "Fear," therefore, "of death
hath fallen upon me."
7. "Fearfulness and trembling have come upon me, and darkness hath
covered me" (ver. 5). "And I have said," "He that hateth his brother,
is in darkness until now." [2002] If love is light, hatred is darkness.
And what saith to himself one set in that weakness and troubled in that
exercise? "Who shall give me wings as to a dove, and I shall fly and
shall rest?" (ver. 6). Either for death he was wishing, or for solitude
he was longing. So long, he saith, as this is the work with me, as this
command is given me, that I should love enemies, the revilings of these
men, increasing and shadowing me, do derange mine eye, perturb my
sight, penetrate my heart, slay my soul. I could wish to depart, but
[2003] weak I am, lest by abiding I should add sins to sins: or at
least may I be separated for a little space from mankind, lest my wound
suffer from frequent blows, in order that when it hath been made whole
it may be brought back to the exercise. This is what takes place,
brethren, and there ariseth ofttimes in the mind of the servant of God
a longing for solitude, for no other reason than because of the
multitude of tribulations and scandals, and he saith, "Who shall give
me wings?" Doth he find himself without wings, or rather with bound
wings? If they are wanting, be they given; if bound, be they loosed;
because even he that looseth a bird's wings, either giveth, or giveth
back to it its wings. For it had not as though its own them, wherewith
it could not fly. Bound wings make a burden. "Who," he saith, "shall
give me wings as to a dove, and I shall fly and shall rest?" Shall
rest, where? I have said there are two senses here: either, as saith
the Apostle, "To be dissolved and to be with Christ, for it is by far
the best thing." [2004] ...Even he that amended cannot be, is thine,
either by the fellowship of the human race, or ofttimes by Church
Communion; he is within, what wilt thou do? whither wilt go? whither
separate thyself, in order that these things thou mayest not suffer?
But go to him, speak, exhort, coax, threaten, reprove. I have done all
things, whatever powers I had I have expended and have drained, nothing
I see have I prevailed; all my labour hath been spent out, sorrow hath
remained. How then shall my heart rest from such men, except I say,
"Who shall give me wings?" "As to a dove," however, not as to a raven.
A dove seeketh a flying away from troubles, but she loseth not love.
For a dove as a type of love is set forth, and in her the plaint is
loved. Nothing is so fond of plaints as a dove: day and night she
complaineth, as though she were set here where she ought to complain.
What then saith this lover? Revilings of men to bear I am unable, they
roar, with frenzy are carried away, are inflamed with indignation, in
anger they shadow [2005] me; to do good to them I am unable; O that I
might rest somewhere, being separated from them in body, not in love;
lest in me there should be troubled love itself: with my words and my
speech no good can I do them, by praying for them perchance I shall do
good. These words men say, but ofttimes they are so bound, that to fly
they are not able. For perchance they are not bound with any birdlime,
but are bound by duty. But if they are bound with care and duty, and to
leave it are unable, let them say, "I was wishing to be dissolved and
to be with Christ, for it is by far the best thing: to abide in the
flesh is necessary because of you." [2006] A dove bound back by
affection, not by cupidity, was not able to fly away because of duty to
be fulfilled, not because of little merit. Nevertheless a longing in
heart must needs be; nor doth any man suffer this longing, but he that
hath begun to walk in that narrow way: [2007] in order that he may know
that there are not wanting to the Church persecutions, even in this
time, when a calm is seen in the Church, at least with respect to those
persecutions which our Martyrs have suffered. But there are not wanting
persecutions, because a true saying is this, "All that will godly to
live in Christ, shall suffer persecution." [2008] ...
8. "Behold I have gone afar fleeing, and have abode in the desert"
(ver. 7). In what desert? Wherever thou shalt be, there will gather
them together other men, the desert with thee they will seek, will
attach themselves to thy life, thou canst not thrust back the society
of brethren: there are mingled with thee also evil men; still exercise
is thy due portion, "Behold I have gone afar, and have abode in the
desert." In what desert? It is perchance in the conscience, whither no
man entereth, where no one is with thee, where thou art and God. For if
in the desert, in any place, what wilt thou do with men gathering
themselves together? For thou wilt not be able to be separated from
mankind, so long as among men thou livest. [2009] ...
9. "I was looking for him that should save me from weakness of mind and
tempest" (ver. 8). Sea there is, tempest there is: nothing for thee
remaineth but to cry out, "Lord, I perish." [2010] Let Him stretch
forth hand, who doth the waves tread fearlessly, let Him relieve thy
dread, let Him confirm in Himself thy security, let Him speak to thee
within, and say to thee, "Give heed to Me, what I have borne:" an evil
brother perchance thou art suffering, or an enemy without art
suffering; which of these have I not suffered? There roared without
Jews, within a disciple was betraying. There rageth therefore tempest,
but He doth save men from weakness of mind, and tempest. Perchance thy
ship is being troubled, because He in thee is sleeping. The sea was
raging, the bark wherein the disciples were sailing was being tossed;
but Christ was sleeping: at length it was seen by them that among them
was sleeping the Ruler [2011] and Creator of winds; they drew near and
awoke Christ; [2012] He commanded [2013] the winds, and there was a
great calm. With reason then perchance thy heart is troubled, because
thou hast forgotten Him on whom thou hast believed: beyond endurance
thou art suffering, because it hath not come into thy mind what for
thee Christ hath borne. If unto thy mind cometh not Christ, He
sleepeth: awake Christ, recall faith. For then in thee Christ is
sleeping, if thou hast forgotten the sufferings of Christ: then in thee
Christ is watching, if thou hast remembered the sufferings of Christ.
But when with full heart thou shalt have considered what He hath
suffered, wilt not thou too with equanimity endure? and perchance
rejoicing, because thou hast been found in some likeness of the
sufferings of thy King. When therefore on these things thinking thou
hast begun to be comforted and to rejoice, He hath arisen, He hath
commanded the winds; therefore there is a great calm. "I was looking
for Him that should save me from weakness of mind and tempest."
10. "Sink, O Lord, and divide the tongues of them" (ver. 9). He is
referring to men troubling him and shadowing him, and he hath wished
this thing not of anger, brethren. They that have wickedly lifted up
themselves, for them it is expedient that they be sunk. They that have
wickedly conspired, it is expedient for them that their tongues should
be divided: to good let them consent, and let their tongues agree
together. But if to one purpose [2014] there were a whispering against
me, [2015] he saith, all mine enemies, let them lose their "one
purpose" in evil, divided be the tongues of them, let them not with
themselves agree together. "Sink, O Lord, and divide the tongues of
them." Wherefore "sink"? Because themselves they have lifted up.
Wherefore "divide"? Because for an evil thing they have united.
Recollect that tower of proud men made after the deluge: what said the
proud men? Lest we perish in a deluge, let us make a lofty tower.
[2016] In pride they were thinking themselves to be fortified, they
builded up a lofty tower, and the Lord divided the tongues of them.
Then they began not to understand one another; hence arose the
beginning of many tongues. For before, one tongue there was: but one
tongue for men agreeing was good, one tongue for humble men was good:
but when that gathering together did into a union of pride fall
headlong, God spared them; even though He divided the tongues, lest by
understanding one another they should make a destructive unity. Through
proud men, divided were the tongues; through humble Apostles, united
were the tongues. Spirit of pride dispersed tongues, Spirit Holy united
tongues. For when the Holy Spirit came upon the disciples, with the
tongues of all men they spake, [2017] by all men they were understood:
tongues dispersed, into one were united. Therefore if still they rage
and are Gentiles, it is expedient for them divided to have their
tongues. They would have one tongue; let them come to the Church;
because even among the diversity of tongues of flesh, one is the tongue
in faith of heart.
11. "For I have seen iniquity and contradiction in the city." With
reason this man was seeking the desert, for he saw iniquity and
contradiction in the city. There is a certain city turbulent: the same
it was that was building a tower, the same was confounded and called
Babylon, the same through innumerable nations dispersed: [2018] thence
is gathered the Church into the desert of a good conscience. For he saw
contradiction in the city. "Christ cometh."--"What Christ?" thou
contradictest.--"Son of God."--"And hath God a Son?" thou
contradictest.--"He was born of a virgin, suffered, rose again."--"And
whence is it possible for this to be done?" thou contradictest.--Give
heed at least to the glory of the Cross itself. Now on the brow of
kings that Cross hath been fixed, over which enemies insulted. The
effect hath proved the virtue. [2019] It hath subdued the world, not
with steel, but with wood. The wood of the Cross deserving of insults
hath seemed to enemies, and before the wood itself standing they were
wagging the head, and saying, "If Son of God He is, let Him come down
from the Cross." [2020] He was stretching forth His hands to a people
unbelieving and contradicting. For if just he is that of faith liveth,
[2021] unjust he is that hath not faith. By that which here he saith
"iniquity," I understand unbelief. The Lord therefore was seeing in the
city iniquity and contradiction, and was stretching forth His hands to
a people unbelieving and contradicting: and nevertheless waiting for
these same, He was saying, "Father, forgive them, for they know not
what they do." [2022] Even now indeed there rage the remnant of that
city, even now they contradict. From the brows of all men now He is
stretching forth hands to the remnant unbelieving and contradicting.
12. "Day and night there will compass it upon the walls thereof
iniquity, and labour." [2023] "Upon the walls thereof;" upon the
fortifications thereof, holding as it were the heads thereof, the noble
men thereof. If that noble man were a Christian, not one would remain a
pagan! Oft-times men say, "no one would remain a pagan, if he were a
Christian." Ofttimes men say, "If he too were made a Christian, who
would remain a pagan?" Because therefore not yet they are made
Christians, as if walls they are of that city unbelieving and
contradicting. How long shall these walls stand? Not always shall they
stand. The Ark is going around the walls of Jericho: there shall come a
time at the seventh going round of the Ark, when all the walls of the
city unbelieving and contradicting shall fall. [2024] Until it come to
pass, this man is being troubled in his exercise; and enduring the
remains of men contradicting, he would choose wings for flying away,
would choose the rest of the desert. Yea let him continue amid men
contradicting, let him endure menaces, drink revilings, and look for
Him that will save him from weakness of mind and tempest: let him look
upon the Head, the pattern for his life, [2025] let him be made calm in
hope, even if he is troubled in fact. "Day and night there will compass
it upon the walls thereof iniquity; and labour in the midst thereof and
injustice." And for this reason labour is there, because iniquity is
there: because injustice is there, therefore also labour is there. But
let them hear him stretching forth hands. "Come unto Me, all ye that
labour." [2026] Ye cry, ye contradict, ye revile: He on the contrary,
"Come unto Me, all ye that labour," in your pride, and ye shall rest in
My humility. "Learn of Me," He saith, "for meek I am and humble in
heart, and ye shall find rest unto your souls." [2027] For whence do
they labour, but because they are not meek and humble in heart? God
humble was made, let man blush to be proud.
13. "There hath not failed from the streets thereof usury and deceit"
(ver. 11). Usury and deceit are not hidden at least, because they are
evil things, but in public they rage. For he that in his house doth any
evil thing, however for his evil thing doth blush: "In the streets
thereof usury and deceit." Money-lending [2028] even hath a profession,
Money-lending also is called a science; a corporation is spoken of, a
corporation as if necessary to the state, and of its profession it
payeth revenue; so entirely indeed in the streets is that which should
have been hidden. There is also another usury worse, when thou
forgivest not that which to thee is owed; and the eye is disturbed in
that verse of the prayer, "Forgive us our debts--as we too forgive our
debtors." [2029] For what there wilt thou do, when thou art going to
pray, and coming to that same verse? An insulting word thou hast heard:
thou wouldest exact the punishment of condemnation. Do but consent to
exact just so much as thou hast given, thou usurer of injuries! With
the fist thou hast been smitten, slaying thou seekest. Evil usury! How
wilt thou go to prayer? If thou shalt have left praying, which way wilt
thou come round unto the Lord? Behold thou wilt say: "Our Father which
art in heaven, hallowed be Thy Name, Thy kingdom come, Thy will be
done, as in heaven so on earth." Thou wilt say, "Our daily bread give
us to-day." Thou wilt come to, "Forgive us our debts, as we also
forgive our debtors." [2030] Even in that evil city let there abound
these usuries; let them not enter the walls where the breast is
smitten! What wilt thou do? because there thou and that verse are
[2031] in the midst? Petitions for thee hath a heavenly Lawyer
composed. [2032] He that knew what used there to be done, said to thee,
"Otherwise thou shalt not obtain." "Verily, verily, I say unto you,
that if ye shall have forgiven men sins, they shall be forgiven you;
but if ye shall not have forgiven sins unto men, neither will your
Father forgive you." [2033] Who saith this? He that knoweth what there
is being done, in the place whereat thou art standing to make request.
See how Himself hath willed to be thy Advocate; Himself thy Counsellor,
[2034] Himself the Assessor of the Father, Himself thy Judge hath said,
"Otherwise thou shalt not receive." What wilt thou do? Thou wilt not
receive, unless thou shalt speak; wilt not receive if falsely thou
shalt speak. Therefore either thou must do and speak, or else what thou
askest thou wilt not earn; because they that this do not do, are in the
midst of those evil usuries. Be they engaged therein, that yet do idols
either adore or desire: do not thou, O people of God, do not thou, O
people of Christ, do not thou the Body of Him the Head! Give heed to
the bond [2035] of thy peace, give heed to the promise of thy life. For
what doth it profit thee, that thou exactest for injuries which thou
hast endured? doth vengeance refresh thee? Therefore, over the evil of
another shalt thou rejoice? Thou hast suffered evil; pardon thou; be
not ye two. [2036] ...
14. "For if an enemy had upbraided me" (ver. 12). And indeed above he
was "troubled in his exercise" by the voice of the enemy and by the
tribulation of the sinner, perhaps being placed in that city, that
proud city that was building a tower, which was "sunk," [2037] that
divided might be the tongues: give heed to his inward groaning because
of perils from false brethren. "For if an enemy had upbraided me, I
would have undergone it assuredly, and if he that did hate me had over
me spoken great words," that is, through pride had on me trampled, did
magnify himself above me, did threaten me all in his power: "I would
hide myself assuredly from him." From him that is abroad, thou wouldest
hide thyself where? Amid those that are within. But now see whether
anything else remaineth, but that thou seek solitude. "But thou," he
saith, "man of one mind, my guide and my friend" (ver. 13). Perchance
sometimes good counsel thou hast given, perchance sometimes thou hast
gone before me, and some wholesome advice thou hast given me: in the
Church of God together we have been. "But thou,...that together with me
didst take sweet morsels" (ver. 14). What are the sweet morsels? Not
all they that are present know: but let them not be soured that do
know, in order that they may be able to say to them that as yet know
not: "Taste ye and see, how sweet is the Lord." [2038] "In the House of
God we have walked with consent." Whence then dissension? Thou that
wast within, hast become one without. He hath walked with me in the
House of God with consent: another house hath he set up against the
House of God. Wherefore hath that been forsaken, wherein we have walked
with consent? [2039] wherefore hath that been deserted, wherein
together we did take sweet morsels?
15. "Let there come death upon them, and let them go down unto Hell
living" (ver. 15). How hath he cited and hath made us call to mind that
first beginning of schism, when in that first people of the Jews
certain proud men separated themselves, and would without have
sacrificed? A new death upon them came: the earth opened herself, and
swallowed them up alive. [2040] "Let there come," he saith, "death upon
them, and let them go down into Hell living." What is "living"? knowing
that they are perishing, and yet perishing. Hear of living men
perishing and being swallowed up in a gulf of the earth, that is, being
swallowed up in the voraciousness of earthly desires. [2041] Thou
sayest to a man, What aileth thee, brother? Brethren we are, one God we
invoke, in one Christ we believe, one Gospel we hear, one Psalm we
sing, one Amen we respond, one Hallelujah we sound, one Easter we
celebrate: why art thou without and I am within? Ofttimes one
straitened, and perceiving how true are the charges which are made,
saith, May God requite our ancestors! Therefore alive he perisheth. In
the next place thou continuest and thus givest warning. At least let
the evil of separation stand alone, why dost thou adjoin thereto that
of rebaptism? Acknowledge in me what thou hast; and if thou hatest me,
spare thou Christ in me. And this evil thing doth frequently and very
greatly displease them....Because they themselves have the Scriptures
in their hands, and know well by daily reading how the Church Catholic
through the whole world is so spread, that in a word all contradiction
is void; and that there cannot be found any support for their schism
they know well: therefore unto the lower places living they go down,
because the evil which they do, they know evil to be. But the former a
fire of divine indignation consumed. For being inflamed with desire of
strife, from their evil leaders they would not depart. There came upon
fire a fire, upon the heat of dissension the heat of consuming. "For
naughtiness is in their lodgings, in the midst of them." "In their
lodgings," [2042] wherein they tarry and pass away. For here they are
not alway to be: and nevertheless in defence of a temporal animosity
they are fighting so fiercely. "In their lodgings is iniquity; in the
midst of them is iniquity:" no part of them is so near the middle of
them as their heart.
16. "Therefore to the Lord I have cried out" (ver. 16). The Body of
Christ and the oneness of Christ in anguish, in weariness, in
uneasiness, in the tribulation of its exercise, that One Man, Oneness
in One Body set, when He was wearying His soul in crying out from the
ends of the earth; saith, "From the ends of the earth to Thee I have
cried out, when My heart was being vexed." [2043] Himself one, but a
oneness [2044] that One! and Himself one, not in one place one, but
from the ends of the earth is crying as one. How from the ends of the
earth should there cry one, except there were one? "I to the Lord have
cried out." Rightly do thou cry out to the Lord, cry not to Donatus:
lest for thee he be instead of the Lord a lord, that under the Lord
would not be a fellow-servant.
17. "In evening, in morning, at noon-day I will recount and will tell
forth, and He shall hearken to my voice" [2045] (ver. 18). Do thou
proclaim glad tidings, keep not secret that which thou hast received,
"in evening" of things gone by, "in morning" of things to be, at
"noonday" of things ever to be. Therefore, to that which he saith "in
evening" belongeth that which he recounteth: to that which he saith,
"in morning," belongeth that which he telleth forth: to that which he
saith "at noon-day," belongeth that wherein his voice is hearkened to.
For the end is at noon-day; that is to say, whence there is no going
down unto setting. For at noon-day there is light full high, the
splendour of wisdom, the fervour of love. "In evening and in morning
and at noon-day." "In evening," the Lord on the Cross; "in morning," in
Resurrection; "at noon-day," in Ascension. I will recount in evening
the patience of Him dying, I will tell forth in morning the life of Him
rising, I will pray that He hearken at noon-day sitting at the right
hand of the Father. He shall hearken to my voice, That intercedeth for
us. [2046] How great is the security of this man. How great the
consolation, how great the refuge "from weakness of mind and tempest,"
against evil men, against ungodly men both without and within, and in
the case of those that are without though they had been within.
18. Therefore, my Brethren, those that in the very congregation of
these walls ye see to be rebellious men, proud, seeking their own,
lifted up; not having a zeal for God that is chaste, sound, quiet, but
ascribing to themselves much; ready for dissension, but not finding
opportunity; are the very chaff of the Lord's floor. [2047] From hence
these few men the wind of pride hath dislodged: the whole floor will
not fly, save when He at the last shall winnow. But what shall we do,
save with this man sing, with this man pray, with this man mourn and
say securely, "He shall redeem in peace my soul" (ver. 18). Against
them that love not peace: "in peace He shall redeem my soul." "Because
with those that hated peace I was peace-making." [2048] "He shall
redeem in peace my soul, from those that draw near to me." For from
those that are afar from me, it is an easy case: not so soon doth he
deceive me that saith, Come, pray to an idol: he is very far from me.
Art thou a Christian? A Christian, he saith. Out of a neighbouring
place he is my adversary, he is at hand. "He shall redeem in peace my
soul, from those that draw near to me: for in many things they were
with me." Wherefore have I said, "draw near to me"? Because "in many
things they were with me." In this verse two propositions occur. "In
many things they were with me." Baptism we had both of us, in that they
were with me: the Gospel we both read, they were in that with me: the
festivals of martyrs we celebrated, they were there with me: Easter's
solemnity we attended, they were there with me. But not entirely with
me: in schism not with me, in heresy not with me. In many things with
me, in few things not with me. But in these few things wherein not with
me, there is no profit to them of the many things wherein they were
with me. For see, brethren, how many things hath recounted the Apostle
Paul: one thing, he hath said, if it shall have been wanting, in vain
are those things. "If with the tongues of men and of angels I shall
speak," he saith, "if I have all prophecy, and all faith, and all
knowledge; if mountains I shall remove, if I shall bestow all my goods
upon the poor, if I shall deliver my body even so that it be burned."
[2049] How many things he hath enumerated! To all these many things let
there be wanting one thing, charity; the former in number are more, the
latter in weight is greater. Therefore in all Sacraments they are with
me, in one charity not with me: "In many things they were with me."
Again, by a different expression: "For in many things they were with
me." They that themselves have separated from me, with me they were,
not in few things, but in many things. For throughout the whole world
few are the grains, many are the chaffs. Therefore he saith what? In
chaff with me they were, in wheat with me they were not. And the chaff
is nearly related to the wheat, from one seed it goeth forth, in one
field is rooted, with one rain is nourished, the same reaper it
suffereth, the same threshing sustaineth, the same winnowing awaiteth,
but not into one barn entereth.
19. "God will hear me, and He shall humble them That is before ages"
(ver. 19). For they rely on some leader or other of theirs that hath
begun but yesterday. "He shall humble them That is before ages." For
even if with reference to time Christ is of Mary the Virgin,
nevertheless before ages: "In the beginning He is the Word and the Word
with God, and the Word God." [2050] "He shall humble them That is
before ages. For to them is no changing:" of them I "speak to whom is
no changing." He knew of some to persevere, and in the perseverance of
their own wickedness to die. For we see them, and to them is no
changing: they that die in that same perverseness, in that same schism,
to them is no changing. God shall humble them, shall humble them in
damnation, because they are exalted in dissension. To them is no
changing, because they are not changed for the better, but for the
worse: neither while they are here, nor in the resurrection. For all we
shall rise again, but [2051] not all shall be changed. Wherefore?
Because "'To them is no changing: and they have not feared God."...
20. "He stretcheth forth His hand in requiting" (ver. 20). "They have
polluted His Testament." Read the testament which they have polluted:
"In thy seed shall be blessed all nations." [2052] Thou against these
words of the Testator sayest what? The Africa of holy Donatus hath
alone deserved this grace, in him hath remained the Church of Christ.
Say at least the Church of Donatus. Wherefore addest thou, of Christ?
Of whom it is said, "In thy seed shall be blessed all nations." After
Donatus wilt thou go? Set aside Christ, and then secede. See therefore
what followeth: "They have polluted His Testament." What Testament? To
Abraham have been spoken the promises, and to his seed. The Apostle
saith, "Nevertheless, a man's testament confirmed no one maketh void,
or super-addeth to: to Abraham have been spoken the promises, and to
his seed. He saith not, And to seeds, as if in many; but as if in one,
And to thy Seed, which is Christ." [2053] In this Christ, therefore,
what Testament hath been promised? "In thy seed shall be blessed all
nations." Thou that hast given up the unity of all nations, and in a
part hast remained, hast polluted His Testament....
21. "And His heart hath drawn near" (ver. 22). Of whom do we understand
it, except of Him, by the anger of whom they have been divided? How
"hath his heart drawn near"? In such sort, that we may understand His
will. For by heretics hath been vindicated the Catholic Church, and by
those that think evil have been proved those that think well. For many
things lay hid in the Scriptures: and when heretics had been cut off,
with questions they troubled the Church of God: then those things were
opened which lay hid, and the will of God was understood. [2054] Thence
is said in another Psalm, "In order that they might be excluded that
have been proved with silver." [2055] For let them be excluded, He hath
said, let them come forth, let them appear. Whence even in
silver-working men are called "excluders," that is, pressers out of
form from the sort of confusion of the lump. Therefore many men that
could understand and expound the Scriptures very excellently, were
hidden among the people of God: but they did not declare the solution
of difficult questions, when no reviler again urged them. For was the
Trinity perfectly treated of before the Arians snarled thereat? Was
repentance perfectly treated of before the Novatians opposed? So not
perfectly of Baptism was it treated, before rebaptizers removed outside
[2056] contradicted; nor of the very oneness of Christ were the
doctrines clearly stated which have been stated, save after that this
separation began to press upon the weak: in order that they that knew
how to treat of and solve these questions (lest the weak should perish
vexed with the questions of the ungodly), by their discourses and
disputations should bring out unto open day the dark things of the Law.
[2057] ...This obscure sense see in what manner the Apostle bringeth
out into light; "It is needful," he saith, "that also heresies there
be, in order that men proved may be made manifest among you." [2058]
What is "men proved"? Proved with silver, proved with the word. What is
"may be made manifest"? May be brought out. [2059] Wherefore this?
Because of heretics. So therefore these also "have been divided because
of the anger of His countenance, and His heart hath drawn near."
22. "His discourses have been softened above oil, and themselves are
darts" (ver. 21). For certain things in the Scriptures were seeming
hard, while they were obscure; when explained, they have been softened.
For even the first heresy in the disciples of Christ, as it were from
the hardness of His discourse arose. For when He said, "Except a man
shall have eaten My flesh and shall have drunk My blood, he shall not
have life in himself:" they, not understanding, said to one another,
"Hard is this discourse, who can hear it?" Saying that, "Hard is this
discourse," they separated from Him: He remained with the others, the
twelve. When they had intimated to Him, that by His discourse they had
been scandalized, "Will ye also," He saith, "choose to go?" Then Peter:
"Thou hast the Word of life eternal: to whom shall we go?" [2060]
Attend, we beseech you, and ye little ones learn godliness. Did Peter
by any means at that time understand the secret of that discourse of
the Lord? Not yet he understood: but that good were the words which he
understood not, godly he believed. Therefore if hard is a discourse,
and not yet is understood, be it hard to an ungodly man, but to thee be
it by godliness softened: for whenever it is solved, it both will
become for thee oil, and even unto the bones it will penetrate.
23. Furthermore, just as Peter, after their having been scandalized by
the hardness, as they thought, of the discourse of the Lord, even then
said, "to whom shall we go?" so he hath added, "Cast upon the Lord thy
care, and He shall Himself nourish thee up" (ver. 22). A little one
thou art, not yet thou understandest the secret things of words:
perchance from thee the bread is hidden, and as yet with milk thou must
be fed: [2061] be not angry with the breasts: they will make thee fit
for the table, for which now little fitted thou art. Behold by the
division of heretics many hard things have been softened: His
discourses that were hard have been softened above oil, and they are
themselves darts. They have armed men preaching the Gospel: and the
very discourses are aimed at the breast of every one that heareth, by
men instant in season and out of season: by those discourses, by those
words, as though by arrows, hearts of men unto the love of peace are
smitten. Hard they were, and soft they have been made. Being softened
they have not lost their virtue, but into darts have been
converted....Upon the Lord cast thyself. Behold thou wilt cast thyself
upon the Lord, let no one put himself in the place of the Lord. "Cast
upon the Lord thy care."...
24. But to the others what? "But Thou, O God, shall bring them down
unto the pit of corruption" (ver. 23). The pit of corruption is the
darkness of sinking under. When blind leadeth blind, they both fall
into a ditch. [2062] God bringeth them down into the pit of corruption,
not because He is the author of their own guilt, but because He is
Himself the judge of their iniquities. "For God hath delivered them
unto the desires of their heart." [2063] For they have loved darkness,
and not light; they have loved blindness, and not seeing. For behold
the Lord Jesus hath shone out to the whole world, let them sing in
unity with the whole world: "For there is not one that can hide himself
from the heat of Him." [2064] But they passing over from the whole to a
part, from the body to a wound, from life to a limb cut off, shall meet
with what, but going into the pit of corruption?
25. "Men of bloods and of deceitfulness." Men of bloods, because of
slayings he calleth them: and O that they were corporal and not
spiritual slayings. For blood from the flesh going forth, is seen and
shuddered at: who seeth the blood of the heart in a man rebaptized?
Those deaths require other eyes. Although even about these visible
deaths Circumcelliones armed everywhere remain not quiet. And if we
think of these visible deaths, there are men of bloods. Give heed to
the armed man, whether he is a man of peace and not of blood. If at
least a club only he were to carry, well; but he carrieth a sling,
carrieth an axe, carrieth stones, carrieth lances; and carrying these
weapons, wherever they may they scour, for the blood of innocent men
they thirst. [2065] Therefore even with regard to these visible deaths
there are men of bloods. But even of them let us say, O that such
deaths alone they perpetrated, and souls they slew not. These that are
men of bloods and of deceit, let them not suppose that we thus wrongly
understand men of bloods, of them that kill souls: they themselves of
their Maximianists [2066] have so understood it. For when they
condemned them, in the very sentence of their Council they have set
down these words: "Swift are the feet of them to shed the blood" (of
the proclaimers [2067] ), "tribulation and calamity are in the ways of
them, and the way of peace they have not known." [2068] This of the
Maximianists they have said. But I ask of them, when have the
Maximianists shed the body's blood; not because they too would not
shed, if there were so great a multitude as could shed, but because of
the fear in their minority rather they have suffered somewhat from
others, than have themselves at any time done any such thing. Therefore
I question the Donatist and say: In thy Council thou hast set down of
the Maximianists, "Swift are the feet of them to shed blood." Show me
one of whom the Maximianists have hurt so much as a finger! What other
thing to me is he to answer, than that which I say? They that have
separated themselves from unity, [2069] and who slay souls by leading
astray, spiritually, not carnally, do shed blood. Very well thou hast
expounded, but in thy exposition acknowledge their own deeds. "Men of
bloods and of deceitfulness." In guile is deceitfulness, in
dissimulation, in seduction. What therefore of those very men that have
been divided because of the anger of His countenance? They are
themselves men of bloods and of deceit.
26. But of them he saith what? "They shall not halve their days." What
is, "They shall not halve their days"? They shall not make progress as
much as they think: within the time which they expect, they shall
perish. For he is that partridge, whereof hath been said, "In the half
of his days they shall leave him, and in his last days he shall be an
unwise one." [2070] They make progress, but for a time. For what saith
the Apostle? "But evil men and seducers shall make progress for the
worse, themselves erring, and other men into error driving." [2071] But
"a blind man leading a blind man, together into a ditch they fall."
[2072] Deservedly they fall "into the pit of corruption." What
therefore saith he? They shall make progress for the worse: not however
for long. For a little before he hath said, "But further they shall not
make progress:" [2073] that is, "shall not halve their days." Let the
Apostle proceed and tell wherefore: "For the madness of them shall be
manifest to all men, as also was that of the others." "But I in Thee
will hope, O Lord." But deservedly they shall not halve their days,
because in man they have hoped. But I from days temporal have reached
unto day eternal. Wherefore? Because in Thee I have hoped, O Lord.
__________________________________________________________________
[1976] Lat. LIV. From a sermon to the people, wherein he is discoursing
of enduring evil men, and disputing against the Donatists.
[1977] Rom. x. 4.
[1978] 2 Sam. xxiii. 1.
[1979] Rom. i. 3.
[1980] John i. 3.
[1981] Oxf. mss. add 16 words ending here.
[1982] Matt. xxii. 43-45.
[1983] John i. 1.
[1984] John i. 14.
[1985] Gen. ii. 24.
[1986] Eph. v. 32.
[1987] Acts ix. 4.
[1988] Matt. vi. 13.
[1989] Gen. i. 26.
[1990] Ps. xxxii. 9.
[1991] Luke vi. 27.
[1992] Ps. vi. 7.
[1993] Matt. xiv. 30.
[1994] Luke xxiii. 34.
[1995] Matt. xvi. 18.
[1996] Matt. xiv. 30.
[1997] Ps. vi. 7.
[1998] Matt. vii. 5.
[1999] Oxf. mss. "him that hateth."
[2000] Ps. vi. 7.
[2001] Matt. x. 28.
[2002] 1 John ii. 9, 11.
[2003] Oxf. mss. "for as much as."
[2004] Philip. i. 23.
[2005] Adumbrant.
[2006] Philip. i. 23, 24.
[2007] Matt. vii. 14.
[2008] 2 Tim. iii. 12.
[2009] [Professor Cooke's Scientific Culture, pp. 291, 292. New York,
1885.--C.]
[2010] Matt. xiv. 30.
[2011] Imperator.
[2012] Matt. viii. 24, 25.
[2013] Imperavit.
[2014] In idipsum.
[2015] Ps. xli. 7.
[2016] Gen. xi. 4.
[2017] Acts ii. 4.
[2018] Gen. xi. 9.
[2019] Nearly all mss. "By effect prove the virtue."--Ben.
[2020] Matt. xxvii. 40.
[2021] Rom. i. 17.
[2022] Luke xxiii. 34.
[2023] Oxf. mss. omit "and labour."
[2024] Josh. vi. 5.
[2025] Or, "way."
[2026] Matt. xi. 28.
[2027] Matt. xi. 29.
[2028] Foenus. [See note 2, p. 99, supra.--C.]
[2029] Matt. vi. 12. So Oxf. mss.
[2030] Matt. vi. 9-12.
[2031] Oxf. mss. "Where thou and that verse are there."
[2032] See Tract. 7, On the Gospel of St. John, S: 11.
[2033] Matt. vi. 14.
[2034] Jurisperitus; i.e., lawyer.
[2035] Vinculum.
[2036] i.e., evil men.
[2037] mss. submersa (not subversa), alluding to ver. 9.--Ben.
[2038] Ps. xxxiv. 8.
[2039] Against the Donatists.
[2040] Num. xvi. 31.
[2041] Against the Donatists.
[2042] Hospitiis.
[2043] Ps. lxi. 2.
[2044] Unitas.
[2045] [Acts ii. 15, iii. 1, x. 3, x. 9. The Apostles observed the
"hours of prayer;" and they survive, theoretically, in the liturgies of
Christendom. A.N.F. vol. iii. p. 689.--C.]
[2046] Rom. viii. 34.
[2047] Matt. iii. 12.
[2048] Ps. cxx. 6, 7.
[2049] 1 Cor. xiii. 1-3.
[2050] John i. 1.
[2051] E.V. omits "not." 1 Cor. xv. 51.
[2052] Gen. xii. 3, xxvi. 4.
[2053] Gal. iii. 15, 16.
[2054] [Scripture is the rule of faith. See Tertull. vol. iii. p. 265,
A.N.F., and hereafter in this series, Vincent of Lerins, passim.--C.]
[2055] Ps. lxviii. 30.
[2056] Foris positi.
[2057] [That is, not by new ideas incorporated with old truth, but by
collecting into focus the testimony of all recognised doctors of the
Church as to the true meaning and intent of Holy Scripture. This is
development as distinguished from corruption.--C.]
[2058] 1 Cor. xi. 19.
[2059] Excludantur.
[2060] John vi. 53, etc.
[2061] 1 Cor. iii. 1.
[2062] Matt. xv. 14.
[2063] Rom. i. 24.
[2064] Ps. xix. 6.
[2065] [What but Circumcelliones were the perpetrators of the
Bartholomew massacres, of the Dragonnades, of the awful butcheries
under Alva?--C.]
[2066] See on Ps. xxxvi.
[2067] The word annuntiatorum is omitted in some copies. It is not in
the sentence of the Synod of Bagai, as given in the fourth book against
Crescontius, c. 4.--Ben.
[2068] Ps. xiv. 7, Vulg. and Angl.; also Rom. iii. 15-17.
[2069] [How fearfully this comes home to those who separated themselves
from the Nicene unity under lead of Nicholas and his Decretals, in the
ninth age! (John xiii. 30.) The "Dark Ages" instantly settled upon the
Church. See A.N.F. vol. viii. p. 642.--C.]
[2070] Jer. xvii. 11.
[2071] 2 Tim. iii. 13.
[2072] Matt. xv. 14.
[2073] 2 Tim. iii. 9.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm LVI. [2074]
1. Just as when we are going to enter into any house, we look on the
title to see whose it is and to whom it belongeth, lest perchance
inopportunely we burst into a place whereunto we ought not; and again,
in order that we may not through timidity withdraw from that which we
ought to enter: as if in a word we were to read, These estates belong
to such an one or to such an one: so on the lintel of this Psalm we
have inscribed, "At the end, for the people that from holy men were put
afar off, to David himself, at the inscription of the Title, when the
Allophyli held him in Gath." [2075] Let us therefore take knowledge of
the people that from holy men were put afar off at the inscription of
the Title. For this doth belong to that David whom now ye know how to
understand spiritually. For there is here commended to our notice no
other than He of whom hath been said, "The end of the Law is Christ for
righteousness to every man believing." [2076] Therefore when thou
hearest "at the end," unto Christ give heed, lest tarrying in the way
thou arrive not at the end....
2. Who are then the people that from holy men were put afar off at the
inscription of the Title? Let the Title itself declare to us that
people. For there was written a certain title at the Passion of the
Lord, when the Lord was crucified: there was in that place a Title
inscribed in Hebrew, in Greek, and in Latin, "The King of the Jews;"
[2077] in three tongues as though by three witnesses the Title was
confirmed: because "in the mouth of two or three witnesses shall stand
every word." [2078] ...
3. What therefore meaneth that which to the title itself still
belongeth, namely, that "the Allophyli held him in Geth"? Geth was a
certain city of the Allophyli, [2079] that is, of strangers, to wit, of
people afar from holy men. All they that refuse Christ for King become
strangers. Wherefore strangers are they made? Because even that vine,
though by Him planted, when it had become sour what heard it?
"Wherefore hast thou been turned into sourness, O alien vine?" [2080]
It hath not been said, My vine: because if Mine, sweet; if sour, not
Mine; if not Mine, surely alien. "There held him," then, "Allophyli in
Geth." We find indeed, brethren, David himself, son of Jesse, king of
Israel, to have been in a strange land among the Allophyli, when he was
sought by Saul, and was in that city and with the king of that city,
[2081] but that there he was detained we read not. Therefore our David,
the Lord Jesus Christ out of the seed of that David, not alone they
held, but there hold Him still Allophyli in Geth. Of Geth we have said
that it is a city. But the interpretation of this name, if asked for,
signifieth "press."...How therefore here is He held in Geth? Held in a
winepress is His Body, that is, His Church. What is, in a winepress? In
pressings. But in a winepress fruitful is the pressing. A grape on the
vine sustaineth no pressing, whole it seemeth, but nothing thence
floweth: it is thrown into a winepress, is trodden, is pressed; harm
seemeth to be done to the grape, but this harm is not barren; nay, if
no harm had been applied, barren it would have remained.
4. Let whatsoever holy men therefore that are suffering pressing from
those that have been put afar off from the saints, give heed to this
Psalm, let them perceive here themselves, let them speak what here is
spoken, that suffer what here is spoken of....Private enmities
therefore let no one think of, when about to hear the words of this
Psalm: "Know ye that for us the wrestling is not against flesh and
blood, but against princes and powers, and spiritual things of
wickedness," [2082] that is, against the devil and his angels; because
even when we suffer men that annoy us, he is instigating, he is
inflaming, as it were his vessels he is moving. Let us give heed
therefore to two enemies, him whom we see, and him whom we see not; man
we see, the devil we see not; man let us love, of the devil beware; for
man pray, against the devil pray, and let us say to God, "Have pity on
me, O Lord, for man hath trodden me down" (ver. 1). Fear not because
man hath trodden thee down: have thou wine, a grape thou hast become in
order that thou shouldest be trodden. "All day long warring he hath
troubled me," every one that hath been put afar off from the saints.
But why should not here be understood even the devil himself? Is it
because mention is made of "man"? [2083] doth therefore the Gospel err,
because it hath said, "A man that is an enemy hath done this"? [2084]
But by a kind of figure may he also be called a man, [2085] and yet not
be a man. Whether therefore it was him whom he that said these words
was beholding, or whether it was the people and each one that was put
afar off from holy men, through which kind the devil troubleth the
people of God, who cleave to holy men, who cleave to the Holy One, who
cleave to the King, at the title of which King being indignant they
were as though beaten back, and put afar off: let him say, "Have pity
on me, O Lord, for man hath trodden me down:" and let him faint not in
this treading down, knowing Him on whom he is calling, and by whose
example he hath been made strong. The first cluster in the winefat
pressed is Christ. When that cluster by passion was pressed out, [2086]
there flowed that whence "the cup inebriating is how passing
beautiful!" [2087] Let His Body likewise say, looking upon its Head,
"Have pity on me, O Lord, for man hath trodden me down: all day long
warring he hath troubled me." "All day long," at all times. Let no one
say to himself, There have been troubles in our fathers' time, in our
time there are not. If thou supposest thyself not to have troubles, not
yet hast thou begun to be a Christian. And where is the voice of the
Apostle, "But even all that will live godly in Christ, persecutions
shall suffer." [2088] If therefore thou sufferest not any persecution
for Christ, take heed lest not yet thou hast begun godly to live in
Christ. But when thou hast begun godly to live in Christ, thou hast
entered into the winepress; make ready thyself for pressings: but be
not thou dry, lest from the pressing nothing go forth.
5. "Mine enemies have trodden me down all day long" (ver. 2). They that
have been put afar off from holy men, these are mine enemies. All day
long: already it hath been said, "From the height [2089] of the day."
What meaneth, "from the height of the day"? Perchance it is a high
thing to understand. And no wonder, because the height of the day it
is. For perchance they for this reason have been put afar off from holy
men, because they were not able to penetrate the height of the day,
whereof the Apostles are twelve shining hours. Therefore they that
crucified Him, as if man, in the day have erred. But why have they
suffered darkness, so that they should be put afar off from holy men?
Because on high the day was shining, Him in the height hidden they knew
not. "For if they had known, never the Lord of Glory would they have
crucified." [2090] ...
6. "For many men that war against me, shall fear" (ver. 3). Shall fear
when? When the day shall have passed away, wherein they are high. For
for a time high they are, when the time of their height is finished
they will fear. "But I in Thee will hope, O Lord." He saith not, "But I
will not fear:" but, "Many men, that war against me, shall fear." When
there shall have come that day of Judgment, then "shall mourn for
themselves all the tribes of the earth." [2091] When there shall have
appeared the sign of the Son of Man in heaven, then secure shall be all
holy men. For that thing shall come which they hoped for, which they
longed for, the coming whereof they prayed for: but to those men no
place for repentance shall remain, because in that time wherein
fruitful might have been repentance, their heart they hardened against
a warning Lord. Shall they too raise up a wall against a judging God?
The godliness of this man do thou indeed acknowledge, and if in that
Body thou art, imitate him. When he had said, "Many men, that war
against me, shall fear:" he did not continue, "But I will not fear;"
lest to his own powers ascribing his not fearing, he too should be amid
high temporal things, and through pride temporal he should not deserve
to come to rest everlasting: rather he hath made thee to perceive
whence he shall not fear. "But I," he saith, "in thee will hope, O
Lord:" he hath not spoken of his confidence: but of the cause of his
confidence. For if I shall not fear, I may also by hardness of heart
not fear, for many men by too much pride fear nothing....
7. "In God I will praise my discourses, in God I have [2092] hoped: I
will not fear what flesh doeth to me" (ver. 4). Wherefore? Because in
God I will praise my discourses. If in thyself thou praisest thy
discourses: I say not that thou art not to fear; it is impossible that
thou have not to fear. For thy discourses either false thou wilt have,
and therefore thine own, because false: or if thy discourses shall be
true, and thou shalt deem thyself not to have them from God but of
thyself to speak; true they will be, but thou wilt be false: but if
thou shalt have known that thou canst say nothing true in the wisdom of
God, in the faith of the Truth, save that which from Him thou hast
received, of whom is said, "For what hast thou which thou hast not
received?" [2093] Then in God thou art praising thy discourses, in
order that in God thou mayest be praised by the discourses of
God...."In God I have hoped, I will not fear what flesh doeth to me."
Wast thou not the same that a little before wast saying, "Have pity on
me, O Lord, for man hath trodden me down; all day long warring he hath
troubled me"? [2094] How therefore here, "I will not fear what flesh
doeth to me"? What shall he do to thee? Thou thyself a little before
hast said, "Hath trodden me down, hath troubled me." Nothing shall he
do, when these things he shall do? He hath had regard to the wine which
floweth from treading, and hath made answer, Evidently he hath trodden
down, evidently hath troubled; but what to me shall he do? A grape I
was, wine I shall be: "In God I have hoped, I will not fear what flesh
doeth to me."
8. "All day long my words they abhorred" (ver. 5). Thus they are, ye
know. Speak truth, preach truth, proclaim Christ to the heathen,
proclaim the Church to heretics, proclaim to all men salvation: they
contradict, they abhor my words. But when my words they abhor, whom
think ye they abhor, save Him in whom I shall praise my discourses?
"All day long my words they abhorred." Let this at least suffice, let
them abhor words, no farther let them proceed, censure, reject! Be it
far from them! Why should I say this? When words they reject, when
words they hate, those words which from the fount of truth flow forth,
what would they do to him through whom the very words are spoken? what
but that which followeth, "Against me all the counsels of them are for
evil?" If the bread itself they hate, how spare they the basket wherein
it is ministered? "Against me all the counsels of them are for evil."
If so even against the Lord Himself, let not the Body disdain that
which hath gone before in the Head, to the end that the Body may cleave
to the Head. Despised hath been thy Lord, and wilt thou have thyself be
honoured by those men that have been put afar off from holy men? Do not
for thyself wish to claim that which in Him hath not gone before. "The
disciple is not greater than his Master; the servant is not greater
than his Lord. If the Master of the family they have called Beelzebub,
how much more them of His household?" [2095] Against me all the
counsels of them are for evil."
9. "They shall sojourn, and shall hide" (ver. 6). To sojourn is to be
in a strange land. Sojourners is a term used of those then that live in
a country not their own. Every man in this life is a foreigner: in
which life ye see that with flesh we are covered round, through which
flesh the heart cannot be seen. Therefore the Apostle saith, "Do not
before the time judge anything, until the Lord come, and He shall
enlighten the hidden things of darkness, and shall manifest the
thoughts of the heart; and then praise shall be to each one from God."
[2096] Before that this be done, in this sojourning of fleshly life
every one carrieth his own heart, and every heart to every other heart
is shut. Furthermore, those men of whom the counsels are against this
man for evil, "shall sojourn, and shall hide:" because in this foreign
abode they are, and carry flesh, they hide guile in heart; whatsoever
of evil they think, they hide. Wherefore? Because as yet this life is a
foreign one. Let them hide; that shall appear which they hide, and they
too will not be hidden. There is also in this hidden thing another
interpretation, which perchance will be more approved of. For out of
those men that have been put afar off from holy men, there creep in
certain false brethren, and they cause worse tribulations to the Body
of Christ; because they are not altogether avoided as if entirely
aliens....Not even those men nevertheless let us fear, brethren: "I
will not fear what flesh doeth to me." Even if they sojourn, even if
they go in, even if they feign, even if they hide, flesh they are: do
thou in the Lord hope, nothing to thee shall flesh do. But he bringeth
in tribulation, bringeth in treading down. There is added wine, because
the grape is pressed: thy tribulation will not be unfruitful: another
seeth thee, imitateth thee: because thou also in order that thou
mightest learn to bear such a man, to thy Head hast looked up, that
first cluster, unto whom there hath come in a man that he might see,
hath sojourned, and hath hidden, to wit, the traitor Judas. All men,
therefore, that with false heart go in, sojourning and hiding, do not
thou fear: the father of these same men, Judas, with thy Lord hath
been: and He indeed knew him; although Judas the traitor was sojourning
and hiding, nevertheless, the heart of him was open to the Lord of all:
[2097] knowingly He chose one man, whereby He might give comfort to
thee that wouldest not know whom thou shouldest avoid. For He might
have not chosen Judas, because He knew Judas: for He saith to His
disciples, "Have not I chosen you twelve, and one out of you is a
devil?" [2098] Therefore even a devil was chosen. Or if chosen he was
not, how is it that He hath chosen twelve, and not rather eleven?
Chosen even he is, but for another purpose. Chosen were eleven for the
work of probation, chosen one for the work of temptation. [2099] Whence
could He give an example to thee, that wouldest not know what men thou
shouldest avoid as evil, of what men thou shouldest beware as false and
artificial, sojourning and hiding, except He say to thee, Behold, with
Myself I have had one of those very men! There hath gone before an
example, I have borne, to suffer I have willed that which I knew, in
order that to thee knowing not I might give consolation. That which to
Me he hath done, the same he will do to thee also: in order that he may
be able to do much, in order that he may make much havoc, he will
accuse, false charges he will allege....
10. "These same men shall mark my heel." For they shall sojourn and
hide in such sort, that they may mark where a man slippeth. Intent they
are upon the heel, to see when a slip may chance to be made; in order
that they may detain the foot for a fall, or trip up the foot for a
stumble; certes that they may find that which they may accuse. And what
man so walketh, that nowhere he slippeth? For example, how speedily is
a slip made even in tongue? For it is written, "Whosoever in tongue
stumbleth not, the same is a perfect man." [2100] What man I pray would
dare himself to call or deem perfect? Therefore it must needs be that
every one slip in tongue. But let them that shall sojourn and shall
hide, carp at all words, seeking somewhere to make snares and knotty
false accusations, wherein they are themselves entangled before those
whom they strive to entangle: in order that they may themselves be
taken and perish before that they catch other men in order to destroy
them....Whatever good thing I have said, whatever true thing I have
said, of God I have said it, and from God have said it: whatever other
thing perchance I have said, which to have said I ought not, as a man I
have said, but under God I have said. He that strengtheneth one
walking, doth menace one straying, forgive one acknowledging, recalleth
the tongue, recalleth him that slipped....Attend thou unto the
discourses of him whom thou blamest, whether perchance he may teach
thee something to thy health. And what, he saith, shall he be able to
teach to my health, that hath so slipped in word? This very thing
perchance he is teaching thee to thy health, that thou be not a carper
at words, but a gatherer of precepts. "As my soul hath undergone." I
speak of that which I have undergone. He was speaking as one
experienced: "As my soul hath undergone. They shall sojourn and hide."
Let my soul undergo all men, men without barking, men within hiding,
let it undergo. From without coming, like a river cometh temptation: on
the Rock let it find thee, let it strike against, not throw thee down;
the house hath been founded upon a Rock. [2101] Within he is, he shall
sojourn and hide: suppose chaff is near thee, let there come in the
treading of oxen, let there come in the roller of temptations; thou art
cleansed, the other is crushed.
11. "For nothing Thou shalt save them" (ver. 7). He hath taught us even
for these very men to pray. However "they shall sojourn and hide,"
however deceitful they be, however dissemblers and liers in wait they
be; do thou pray for them, and do not say, Shall God amend even such a
man, so evil, so perverse? Do not despair: give heed to Him whom thou
askest, not him for whom thou askest. The greatness of the disease
seest thou, the might of the Physician seest thou not? "They shall
sojourn and hide: as my soul hath undergone." Undergo, pray: and there
is done what? "For nothing Thou shalt save them." Thou shalt make them
safe so as that nothing to Thee it may be, that is, so that no labour
to Thee it may be. With men they are despaired of, but Thou with a word
dost heal; Thou wilt not toil in healing, though we are astounded in
looking on. There is another sense in this verse, "For nothing Thou
shalt save them:" with not any merits of their going before Thou shalt
save them....They shall not bring to Thee he-goats, rams, bulls, not
gifts and spices shall they bring Thee in Thy temple, not anything of
the drink-offering of a good conscience do they pour thereon; all in
them is rough, all foul, all to be detested: and though they to Thee
bring nothing whereby they may be saved; "For nothing Thou shalt save
them," that is, with the free gift of Thy Grace....
12. "In anger the peoples Thou shalt bring down." Thou art angry and
dost bring down, dost rage and save, dost terrify and call. Thou
fillest with tribulations all things, in order that being set in
tribulations men may fly to Thee, lest by pleasures and a wrong
security they be seduced. From Thee anger is seen, but that of a
father. A father is angry with a son, the despiser of his injunctions:
being angry with him he boxeth him, striketh, pulleth the ear, draggeth
with hand, leadeth to school. How many men have entered, how many men
have filled the House of the Lord, in the anger of Him brought down,
that is, by tribulations terrified and with faith filled? For to this
end tribulation stirreth up; in order to empty the vessel which is full
of wickedness, so as that it may be filled with grace.
13. "O God, my life I have told out to Thee" (ver. 8). For that I live
hath been Thy doing, and for this reason I tell out my life to Thee.
But did not God know that which He had given? What is that which thou
tellest out to Him? Wilt thou teach God? Far be it. Therefore why saith
he, "I have told out to Thee"? Is it perchance because it profiteth
Thee that I have told out my life? And what doth it profit God? To the
advantage of God it doth profit. I have told out to God my life,
because that life hath been God's doing. In like manner as his life
Paul the Apostle did tell out, saying, "I that before was a blasphemer
and a persecutor and injurious," he shall tell out his life. "But mercy
I have obtained." [2102] He hath told out his life, not for himself,
but for Him: because he hath told it out in such sort, that in Him men
believe, not for his own advantages, but for the advantages of
Him...."O God, my life I have told out to Thee. Thou hast put my tears
in Thy sight." Thou hast hearkened to me imploring Thee. "As also in
Thy promise." Because as Thou hadst promised this thing, so Thou hast
done. Thou hast said Thou wouldest hearken to one weeping. I have
believed, I have wept, I have been hearkened unto; I have found Thee
merciful in promising, true in repaying.
14. "Turned be mine enemies backward" (ver. 9). This thing to these
very men is profitable, no ill to these men he is wishing. For to go
before they are willing, therefore to be amended they are not willing.
Thou warnest thine enemy to live well, that he amend himself: he
scorneth, he rejecteth thy word: "Behold him that adviseth me; behold
him from whom I am to hear the commandments whereby I shall live!" To
go before thee he willeth, and in going before is not amended. He
mindeth not that thy words are not thine, he mindeth not that thy life
to God thou tellest out, not to thyself. In going before therefore he
is not amended: it is a good thing for him that he be turned backward,
and follow him whom to go before he willed. The Lord to His disciples
was speaking of His Passion that was to be. Peter shuddered, and saith,
"Far be it, O Lord;" [2103] he that a little before had said, "Thou art
the Christ, Son of the living God," having confessed God, feared for
Him to die, as if but a man. But the Lord who so came that He might
suffer (for we could not otherwise be saved unless with His blood we
were redeemed), a little before had praised the confession of
Peter....But immediately when the Lord beginneth to speak of His
Passion, he feared lest He should perish by death, whereas we ourselves
should perish unless He died; and he saith, "Far be it, O Lord, this
thing shall not be done." And the Lord, to him to whom a little before
He had said, "Blessed thou art, and upon this Rock I will build my
Church," saith, "Go back behind, Satan, an offence thou art to Me." Why
therefore "Satan" is he, that a little before was "blessed," and a
"Rock"? "For thou savourest not the things which are of God," He saith,
"but those things which are of man." [2104] A little before he savoured
the things which are of God: because "not flesh and blood hath revealed
to thee, but My Father which is in the Heavens." When in God he was
praising his discourse, not Satan but Peter, from petra: but when of
himself and out of human infirmity, carnal love of man, which would be
for an impediment to his own salvation, and that of the rest, Satan he
is called. Why? Because to go before the Lord he willed, and earthly
counsel to give to the heavenly Leader. "Far be it, O Lord, this thing
shall not be done." Thou sayest, "Far be it," and thou sayest, "O
Lord:" surely if Lord He is, in power He doeth: if Master He is, He
knoweth what He doeth, He knoweth what He teacheth. But thou willest to
lead thy Leader, teach thy Master, command thy Lord, choose for God:
much thou goest before, go back behind. Did not this too profit these
enemies? "Turned be Mine enemies backward;" but let them not remain
backward. For this reason let them be turned backward, lest they go
before; but so that they follow, not so that they remain.
15. "In whatsoever day I shall have called upon Thee, behold I have
known that my God art Thou" (ver. 9). A great knowledge. He saith not,
"I have known that God Thou art:" but, "that my God art Thou." For
thine He is, when thee He succoureth: thine He is, when thou to Him art
not an alien. Whence is said, "Blessed the people of whom is the Lord
the God of the same." [2105] Wherefore "of whom is"? For of whom is He
not? Of all things indeed God He is: but of those men the God
peculiarly He is said to be, that love Him, that hold Him, that possess
Him, that worship Him, as though belonging to His own House: the great
family of Him are they, redeemed by the great blood of the Only Son.
How great a thing hath God given to us, that His own we should be, and
He should be ours! But in truth foreigners afar have been put from holy
men, sons alien they are. See what of them is said in another Psalm: "O
Lord, deliver me," he saith, "from the hand of alien sons, of whom the
mouth hath spoken vanity, and the right hand of them is a right hand of
iniquity." [2106] ...
16. Let us therefore love God, brethren, purely and chastely. There is
not a chaste heart, if God for reward it worshippeth. How so? Reward of
the worship of God shall not we have? We shall have evidently, but it
is God Himself whom we worship. Himself for us a reward shall be,
because "we shall see Him as He is." [2107] Observe that a reward
[2108] thou shalt obtain....I will tell you, brethren: in these human
alliances consider a chaste heart, of what sort it is towards God:
certainly human alliances are of such sort, that a man doth not love
his wife, that loveth her because of her portion: a woman her husband
doth not chastely love, that for these reasons loveth him, because
something he hath given, or because much he hath given. Both a rich man
is a husband, and one that hath become a poor man is a husband. How
many men proscribed, by chaste wives have been the more beloved! Proved
have been many chaste marriages by the misfortunes of husbands: that
the wives might not be supposed to love any other object more than
their husband, not only have they not forsaken, but the more have they
obeyed. If therefore a husband of flesh freely is loved, if chastely he
is loved; and a wife of flesh freely is loved, if chastely she is
loved; in what manner must God be loved, the true and truth-speaking
Husband of the soul, making fruitful unto the offspring of everlasting
life, and not suffering us to be barren? Him, therefore, so let us
love, as that any other thing besides Himself be not loved: and there
takes place in us that which we have spoken of, that which we have
sung, because even here the voice is ours: "In whatsoever day I shall
have called upon Thee, behold, I have known that my God art Thou." This
is to call upon God, freely to call upon Him. Furthermore, of certain
men hath been said what? "Upon the Lord they have not called." [2109]
The Lord they seemed as it were to call unto themselves and they
besought Him about inheritances, about increasing money, about
lengthening this life, about the rest of temporal things: and
concerning them the Scripture saith what? "Upon the Lord they have not
called." Therefore there followeth what? "There they have feared with
fear, where there was no fear." What is, "where there was no fear"?
Lest money should be stolen from them, lest anything in their house
should be made less; lastly, lest they should have less of years in
this life, than they hoped for themselves: but there have they trembled
with fear, where there was no fear...."In God I will praise the word,
in the Lord I will praise the discourse" (ver. 10): "in God I have
hoped, I will not fear what man doeth unto me" (ver. 11). Now this is
the very sense which above [2110] hath been repeated.
17. "In me, O God, are Thy vows, which I will render of praise to Thee"
(ver. 12). "Vow ye, and render to the Lord your God." [2111] What vow,
what render? Perchance those animals which were offered at the altars
aforetime? No such thing offer thou: in thyself is what thou mayest vow
and render. From the heart's coffer bring forth the incense of praise;
from the store of a good conscience bring forth the sacrifice of faith.
Whatsoever thing thou bringest forth, kindle with love. In thyself be
the vows, which thou mayest render of praise to God. Of what praise?
For what hath He granted thee? "For Thou hast rescued my soul from
death" (ver. 13). This is that very life which he telleth out to Him:
"O God, my life I have told out to Thee." [2112] For I was what? Dead.
Through myself I was dead: through Thee I am what? Alive. Therefore "in
me, O God, are Thy vows, which I will render of praise to Thee." Behold
I love my God: no one doth tear Him from me: that which to Him I may
give, no one doth tear from me, because in the heart it is shut up.
With reason is said with that former confidence, "What should man do
unto me?" [2113] Let man rage, let him be permitted to rage, be
permitted to accomplish that which he attempteth: what is he to take
away? Gold, silver, cattle, men servants, maid servants, estates,
houses, let him take away all things: doth he by any means take away
the vows, which are in me, which I may render of praise to God? The
tempter was permitted to tempt a holy man, Job; [2114] in one moment he
took away all things: whatever of possessions he had had, he carried
off: took away inheritance, slew heirs; and this not little by little,
but in a crowd, at one blow, at one swoop, so that all things were on a
sudden announced: when all was taken away, alone there remained Job,
but in him were vows of praise, which he might render to God, in him
evidently there were: the coffer of his holy breast the thieving devil
had not rifled, full he was of that wherefrom he might sacrifice. Hear
what he had, hear what he brought forth: "The Lord hath given, the Lord
hath taken away; as hath pleased the Lord, so hath been done: be the
name of the Lord blessed." [2115] O riches interior, whither thief doth
not draw near! God Himself had given that whereof He was receiving; He
had Himself enriched him with that whereof to Him he was offering that
which He loved. Praise from thee God requireth, thy confession God
requireth. But from thy field wilt thou give anything? He hath Himself
rained in order that thou mayest have. From thy coffer wilt thou give
anything? He hath Himself put in that which thou art to give. What wilt
thou give, which from Him thou hast not received? "For what hast thou
which thou hast not received?" [2116] From the heart wilt thou give? He
too hath given faith, hope, and charity: this thou must bring forth:
this thou must sacrifice. But evidently all the other things the enemy
is able to take away against thy will; this to take away he is not
able, unless thou be willing. These things a man will lose even against
his will: and wishing to have gold, will lose gold; and wishing to have
house, will lose house: faith no one will lose, except him that shall
have despised her.
18. "Because Thou hast rescued my soul from death, mine eyes from
tears, and my feet from slipping: that I may be pleasing before God in
the light of the living" (ver. 13). With reason he is not pleasing to
alien sons, that are put afar off from holy men, because they have not
the light of the living, whence they may see that which to God is
pleasing. "Light of the living," is light of the immortal, light of
holy men. He that is not in darkness, is pleasing in the light of the
living. A man is observed, and the things which belong to him; no one
knoweth of what sort he is: God seeth of what sort he is. Sometimes
even the devil himself he escapeth; except he tempt, he findeth not:
just as concerning that man of whom just now I have made
mention:..."Doth Job by any means worship God for nought?" [2117] For
this was true light, this the light of the living, that gratis he
should worship God. God saw in the heart of His servant His gratuitous
worship. For that heart was pleasing in the sight of the Lord in the
light of the living: the devil's sight he escaped, because in darkness
he was. God admitted the tempter, not in order that He might Himself
know that which He did know, but in order that to us to be known and
imitated He might set it forth. Admitted was the tempter; he took away
everything, there remained the man bereft of possessions, bereft of
family, bereft of children, full of God. A wife certainly was left.
[2118] Merciful do ye deem the devil, that he left him a wife? He knew
through whom he had deceived Adam....With wound smitten from head even
unto feet, whole nevertheless within, he made answer to the woman
tempting, out of the light of the living, out of the light of his
heart: "thou hast spoken as though one of the unwise women," [2119]
that is, as though one that hath not the light of the living. For the
light of the living is wisdom, and the darkness of unwise men is folly.
Thou hast spoken as though one of the unwise women: my flesh thou
seest, the light of my heart thou seest not. For she then might more
have loved her husband, if the interior beauty she had known, and had
beheld the place where he was beautiful before the eyes of God: because
in Him were vows which he might render of praise to God. How entirely
the enemy had forborne to invade that patrimony! How whole was that
which he was possessing, and that because of which yet more to be
possessed he hoped for, being to go on "from virtues unto virtue."
[2120] Therefore, brethren, to this end let all these things serve us,
that God gratis we love, in Him hope always, neither man nor devil
fear. Neither the one nor the other doeth anything, except when it is
permitted: permitted for no other reason can it be, except because it
doth profit us. Let us endure evil men, let us be good men: because
even we have been evil. Even as nothing [2121] God shall save men, of
whom we dare to despair. Therefore of no one let us despair, for all
men whom we suffer let us pray, from God let us never depart. Our
patrimony let Him be, our hope let Him be, our safety let Him be. He is
Himself here a comforter, there a remunerator, everywhere Maker-alive,
and of life the Giver, not of another life, but of that whereof hath
been said, "I am the Way, and the Truth, and the Life:" [2122] in order
that both here in the light of faith, and there in the light of sight,
as it were in the light of the living, in the sight of the Lord we may
be pleasing.
__________________________________________________________________
[2074] Lat. LV. A discourse to the people of Carthage. A Paris ms. has
the title, "Incipit Carthagine Sermo habitus in Basilica Restituta,
Feria V. de Psalmo LV.--Ben.
[2075] 1 Sam. xxi. 10.
[2076] Rom. x. 4.
[2077] John xix. 19.
[2078] Matt. xviii. 16; Deut. xix. 15.
[2079] The usual name of the Philistines in LXX. and Vulgate.
[2080] Jer. ii. 21.
[2081] 1 Sam. xxi. 10.
[2082] Eph. vi. 12.
[2083] So mss. edd. "because he is not called man."
[2084] Matt. xiii. 28.
[2085] [Angels are so called. Dan. ix. 21, Acts x. 26. Compare Mark
xvi. 5; Rev. xix. 10; also this vol. p. 117, note 7, supra.--C.]
[2086] Isa. lxiii. 3.
[2087] Ps. xxiii. 5.
[2088] 2 Tim. iii. 12.
[2089] Or, "depth."
[2090] 1 Cor. ii. 8.
[2091] Matt. xxiv. 30.
[2092] Or, "will hope," mss.
[2093] 1 Cor. iv. 7.
[2094] Ps. lvi. 1.
[2095] Matt. x. 24, 25.
[2096] 1 Cor. iv. 5.
[2097] Oxf. mss. "guilty before the Lord."
[2098] John vi. 70.
[2099] [See A.N.F. vol. i. pp. 40, 117, 153, 157, vi. 207.--C.]
[2100] Jas. iii. 2.
[2101] Matt. vii. 25.
[2102] 1 Tim. i. 13.
[2103] Matt. xvi. 22.
[2104] Matt. xvi. 23.
[2105] Ps. cxliv. 15.
[2106] Ps. cxliv. 11.
[2107] 1 John iii. 2.
[2108] Al. "what reward."
[2109] Ps. xiv. 4.
[2110] Ps. lvi. 4, p. 220, supra.
[2111] Ps. lxxvi. 11.
[2112] Ps. lvi. 8, p. 222, supra.
[2113] Ps. lvi. 11.
[2114] Job i. 12.
[2115] Job i. 21.
[2116] 1 Cor. iv. 7.
[2117] Job i. 9.
[2118] Job ii. 9.
[2119] Job ii. 10.
[2120] Ps. lxxxiv. 7.
[2121] Pro nihilo.
[2122] John xiv. 6.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm LVII. [2123]
1. We have heard in the Gospel just now, brethren, how loveth us our
Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, God with the Father, Man with us, out of
our own selves, now at [2124] the right hand of the Father; ye have
heard how much He loveth us....
2. Because then this Psalm is singing of the Passion of the Lord, see
what is the title that it hath: "at the end." The end is Christ. [2125]
Why hath He been called end? Not as one that consumeth, but one that
consummateth....
3. "At the end, corrupt not, for David himself, for the inscription of
the title; when he fled from the face of Saul into a cavern." We
referring to holy Scripture, do find indeed how holy David, that king
of Israel, from whom too the Psalter of David hath received the name
thereof, had suffered for persecutor Saul the king of his own people,
as many of you know that have either read or have heard the Scriptures.
King David had then for persecutor Saul: and whereas the one was most
gentle, the other most ferocious: the one mild, the other envious; the
one patient, the other cruel; the one beneficent, the other ungrateful:
he endured him with so much mildness, that when he had gotten him into
his hands him he touched not, hurt not. [2126] ...What reference hath
this to Christ? If all things which then were being done, were figures
of things future, we find there Christ, and by far in the greatest
degree. For this, "corrupt not for the inscription of the title," I see
not how it belongeth to that David. For not any "title" was inscribed
over David himself which Saul would "corrupt." But we see in the
Passion of the Lord that there had been written a title, "King of the
Jews:" [2127] in order that this title might put to the blush these
very men, seeing that from their King they withheld not their hands.
For in them Saul was, in Christ David was. For Christ, as saith the
Apostolic Gospel, is, as we know, as we confess, of the seed of David
after the flesh; [2128] for after the Godhead He is above David, above
all men, above heaven and earth, above angels, above all things visible
and invisible....And because already it had been sung through the Holy
Spirit, "Unto the end, corrupt not, for the inscription of the title:"
Pilate answered them, "What I have written, I have written:" [2129] why
do ye suggest to me falsehood? I corrupt not truth.
4. What therefore is, "When he fled from the face of Saul into a
cavern"? Which thing indeed the former David also did: but because in
him we find not the inscription of the title, in the latter let us find
the flight into the cavern. [2130] For that cavern wherein David hid
himself did figure somewhat. But wherefore hid he himself? It was in
order that he might be concealed and not be found. What is to be hidden
in a cavern? To be hidden in earth. For he that fleeth into a cavern,
with earth is covered so that he may not be seen. But Jesus did carry
earth, flesh which He had received from earth: and in it He concealed
Himself, in order that by Jews He might not be discovered as God. "For
if they had known, never the Lord of glory would they have crucified."
[2131] Why therefore the Lord of glory found they not? Because in a
cavern He had hidden Himself, that is, the flesh's weakness to their
eyes He presented, but the Majesty of the Godhead in the body's
clothing, as though in a hiding-place of the earth, He hid....But
wherefore even unto death willed He to be patient? It was in order that
He might flee from the face of Saul into a cavern. For a cavern may be
understood as a lower part of the earth. And certainly, as is manifest
and certain to all, His Body in a Tomb was laid, which was cut in a
Rock. This Tomb therefore was the Cavern; thither He fled from the face
of Saul. For so long the Jews did persecute Him, even until He was laid
in a cavern. Whence prove we that so long they persecuted Him, until
therein He was laid? Even when dead, and, on the Cross hanging, with
lance they wounded Him. [2132] But when shrouded, the funeral
celebrated, He was laid in a cavern, no longer had they anything which
to the Flesh they might do. Rose therefore the Lord again out of that
cavern unhurt, uncorrupt, from that place whither He had fled from the
face of Saul: concealing Himself from ungodly men, whom Saul
prefigured, but showing Himself to His members. For the members of Him
rising again by His members were handled: for the members of Him, the
Apostles, touched Him rising again and believed; [2133] and behold
nothing profited the persecution of Saul. Hear we therefore now the
Psalm; because concerning the title thereof enough we have spoken, as
far as the Lord hath deigned to give.
5. "Have pity on me, O God, have pity on me, for in Thee hath trusted
my Soul" (ver. 1). Christ in the Passion saith, "Have pity on Me, O
God." To God, God saith, "Have pity on Me!" He that with the Father
hath pity on thee, in thee crieth, "Have pity on Me." For that part of
Him which is crying, "Have pity on Me," is thine: from thee this He
received, for the sake of thee, that thou shouldest be delivered, with
Flesh He was clothed. The flesh itself crieth: "Have pity on Me, O God,
have pity on me:" Man himself, soul and flesh. For whole Man did the
Word take upon Him, and whole Man the Word became. Let it not therefore
be thought that there Soul was not, because the Evangelist thus saith:
"The Word was made flesh, and dwelled in us." [2134] For man is called
flesh, as in another place saith the Scripture, "And all flesh shall
see the salvation of God." [2135] Shall anywise flesh alone see, and
shall Soul not be there?...Thou hearest the Master praying, learn thou
to pray. For to this end He prayed, in order that He might teach how to
pray: because to this end He suffered, in order that He might teach how
to suffer; to this end He rose again, in order that He might teach how
to hope for rising again. "And in the shadow of Thy wings I will hope,
until iniquity pass over." This now evidently whole Christ doth say:
here is also our voice. For not yet hath passed over, still rife is
iniquity. And in the end our Lord Himself said there should be an
abounding of iniquity: "And since iniquity shall abound, the love of
many shall wax cold; but he that shall have persevered unto the end,
the same shall be saved." [2136] But who shall persevere even unto the
end, even until iniquity pass over? He that shall have been in the Body
of Christ, he that shall have been in the members of Christ, and from
the Head shall have learned the patience of persevering. Thou passest
away, and behold passed are thy temptations; and thou goest into
another life whither have gone holy men, if holy thou hast been. Into
another life have gone Martyrs; if Martyr thou shalt have been, thou
also goest into another life. Because "thou" hast passed away hence,
hath by any means iniquity therefore passed away? There are born other
unrighteous men, as there die some unrighteous men. In like manner
therefore as some unrighteous men die and others are born: so some just
men go, and others are born. Even unto the end of the world neither
iniquity will be wanting to oppress, nor righteousness to suffer....
6. "I will cry to God most high" (ver. 2). If most high He is, how
heareth He thee crying? Confidence hath been engendered by experience:
"to God," he saith, "who had done good to me." If before that I was
seeking Him, He did good to me, when I cry shall He not hearken to me?
For good to us the Lord God hath done in sending to us our Saviour
Jesus Christ, that He might die for our offences, and rise again for
our justification. [2137] For what sort of men hath He willed His Son
to die? For ungodly men. But ungodly men were not seeking God, and have
been sought of God. For He is Most High in such sort, as that not far
from Him is our misery and our groaning: because "near is the Lord to
them that have bruised the heart." [2138] "God that hath done good to
me."
7. "He hath sent from heaven and hath saved me" (ver. 3). Now the Man
Himself, now the Flesh Itself, now the Son of God after His partaking
of ourselves, of Him it is manifest, how He was saved, and hath sent
from heaven the Father and hath saved Him, hath sent from heaven, and
hath raised Him again: but in order that ye may know, that also the
Lord Himself hath raised again Himself; both truths are written in
Scripture, both that the Father hath raised Him again, and that Himself
Himself hath raised again. Hear ye how the Father hath raised Him
again: the Apostle saith, "He hath been made," he saith, "obedient unto
death, even the death of the Cross: wherefore God also hath exalted
Him, and hath given Him a name which is above every name." [2139] Ye
have heard of the Father raising again and exalting the Son; hear ye
how that He too Himself His flesh hath raised again. Under the figure
of a temple He saith to the Jews, "Destroy this Temple, and in three
days I will raise it up." [2140] But the Evangelist hath explained to
us what it was that He said: "But this," he saith, "He spake of the
Temple of His Body." Now therefore out of the person of one praying,
out of the person of a man, out of the person of the flesh, He saith,
"He hath saved me. He hath given unto reproach those that trampled on
me." Them that have trampled on Him, that over Him dead have insulted,
that Him as though man have crucified, because God they perceived not,
them He hath given unto reproach. See ye whether it has not been so
done. The thing we do not believe as yet to come, but fulfilled we
acknowledge it. The Jews raged against Christ, they were overbearing
against Christ. Where? In the city of Jerusalem. For where they
reigned, there they were puffed up, there their necks they lifted up.
After the Passion of the Lord thence they were rooted out; and they
lost the kingdom, wherein Christ for King they would not acknowledge.
In what manner they have been given unto reproach, see ye: dispersed
they have been throughout all nations, nowhere having a settlement,
nowhere a sure abode. But for this reason still Jews they are, in order
that our books they may carry to their confusion. For whenever we wish
to show Christ prophesied of, we produce to the heathen these writings.
And lest perchance men hard of belief should say that we Christians
have composed these books, so that together with the Gospel which we
have preached we have forged the Prophet, through whom there might seem
to be foretold that which we preach: by this we convince them; namely,
that all the very writings wherein Christ hath been prophesied are with
the Jews, all these very writings the Jews have. We produce documents
from enemies, to confound other enemies. In what sort of reproach
therefore are the Jews? A document the Jew carrieth, wherefrom a
Christian may believe. Our librarians they have become, just as slaves
are wont behind their masters to carry documents, in such sort that
these faint in carrying, those profit by reading. [2141] Unto such a
reproach have been given the Jews: and there hath been fulfilled that
which so long before hath been foretold, "He hath given unto reproach
those that trampled on me." But how great a reproach it is, brethren,
that this verse they should read, and themselves being blind should
look upon their mirror! For in the same manner the Jews appear in the
holy Scripture which they carry, as appeareth the face of a blind man
in a mirror: by other men it is seen, by himself not seen.
8. Thou wast inquiring perhaps when he said, "He hath sent from heaven
and hath saved me." What hath He sent from heaven? Whom hath He sent
from heaven? An Angel hath He sent, to save Christ, and through a
servant is the Lord saved? For all Angels are creatures [2142] serving
Christ. For obedience there might have been sent Angels, for service
they might have been sent, not for succour: as is written, "Angels
ministered unto Him," [2143] not like men merciful to one indigent, but
like subjects to One Omnipotent. What therefore "hath He sent from
heaven, and hath saved me"? Now we hear in another verse what from
heaven He hath sent. "He hath sent from heaven His mercy and His
truth." [2144] For what purpose? "And hath drawn out my soul from the
midst of the lions' whelps." [2145] "Hath sent," he saith, "from heaven
His mercy and His truth:" and Christ Himself saith, "I am Truth." There
was sent therefore Truth, that it should draw out my soul hence from
the midst of the lions' whelps: there was sent mercy. Christ Himself we
find to be both mercy and truth; mercy in suffering with us, and truth
in requiting us....Who are the lions' whelps? That lesser [2146]
people, unto evil deceived, unto evil led away by the chiefs of the
Jews: so that these are lions, those lions' whelps. All roared, all
slew. For we are to hear even here the slaying of these very men,
presently in the following verses of this Psalm.
9. "And hath drawn out," he saith, "my soul from the midst of the
lions' whelps" (ver. 4). Why sayest thou, "And hath drawn out my soul"?
For what hadst thou suffered, that thy soul should be drawn out? "I
have slept troubled." Christ hath intimated His death....
10. Whence "troubled"? Who troubling? Let us see in what manner he
brandeth an evil conscience upon the Jews, wishing to excuse themselves
of the slaying of the Lord. For to this end, as the Gospel speaketh, to
the judge they delivered Him, that they might not themselves seem to
have killed Him....Let us question Him, and say, since Thou hast slept
troubled, who have persecuted Thee? who have slain Thee? was it
perchance Pilate, who to soldiers gave Thee, on the Tree to be hanged,
with nails to be pierced? Hear who they were, "Sons of men" (ver. 5).
Of them He speaketh, whom for persecutors He suffered. But how did they
slay, that steel bare not? They that sword drew not, that made no
assault upon Him to slay; whence slew they? "Their teeth are arms and
arrows, and their tongue a sharp sword." Do not consider the unarmed
hands, but the mouth armed: from thence the sword proceeded, wherewith
Christ was to be slain: in like manner also as from the mouth of
Christ, that wherewith the Jews were to be slain. For He hath a sword
twice whetted: [2147] and rising again He hath smitten them, and hath
severed from them those whom He would make His faithful people. They an
evil sword, He a good sword: they evil arrows, He good arrows. For He
hath Himself also arrows good, words good, whence He pierceth the
faithful heart, in order that He may be loved. Therefore of one kind
are their arrows, and of another kind their sword. "Sons of men, their
teeth are arms and arrows, and their tongue a sharp sabre." Tongue of
sons of men is a sharp sabre, and their teeth arms and arrows. When
therefore did they smite, save when they clamoured, "Crucify, crucify"?
[2148]
11. And what have they done to Thee, O Lord? Let the Prophet here
exult! For above, all those verses the Lord was speaking: a Prophet
indeed, but in the person of the Lord, because in the Prophet is the
Lord...."Be exalted," he saith, "above the Heavens, O God." Man on the
Cross, and above the Heavens, God. Let them continue on the earth
raging, Thou in Heaven be judging. Where are they that were raging?
where are their teeth, the arms and arrows? Have not "the stripes of
them been made the arrows of infants"? For in another place a Psalm
[2149] this saith, desiring to prove them vainly to have raged, and
vainly unto frenzies to have been driven headlong: for nothing they
were able to do to Christ when for the time crucified, and afterwards
when He was rising again, and in Heaven was sitting. How do infants
make to themselves arrows? Of reeds? [2150] But what arrows? or what
powers? or what bows? or what wound? "Be Thou exalted above the
Heavens, O God, and above all the earth Thy glory" (ver. 6). Wherefore
exalted above the Heavens, O God? Brethren, God exalted above the
Heavens we see not, but we believe: but above all the earth His glory
to be not only we believe, but also see. But what kind of madness
heretics are afflicted with, I pray you observe. They being cut off
from the bond of the Church of Christ, and to a part holding, the whole
losing, will not communicate with the whole earth, where is spread
abroad the glory of Christ. [2151] But we Catholics are in all the
earth, because with all the world we communicate, wherever the Glory of
Christ is spread abroad. [2152] For we see that which then was sung,
now fulfilled. There hath been exalted above the Heavens our God, and
above all the earth the Glory of the Same. O heretical insanity! That
which thou seest not thou believest with me, that which thou seest thou
deniest: thou believest with me in Christ exalted above the Heavens, a
thing which we see not; and deniest His Glory over all the earth, a
thing which we see.
12. ...Let your Love see the Lord speaking to us, and exhorting us by
His example: "A trap [2153] they have prepared for My feet, and have
bowed down My Soul" (ver. 7). They wished to bring It down as if from
Heaven, and to the lower places to weigh It down: "They have bowed My
Soul: they have digged before My face a pit and themselves have fallen
into it." Me have they hurt, or themselves? Behold He hath been exalted
above the Heavens, God, and behold above all the earth the Glory of the
Same: the kingdom of Christ we see, where is the kingdom of the Jews?
Since therefore they did that which to have done they ought not, there
hath been done in their case that which to have suffered they ought:
themselves have dug a ditch, and themselves have fallen into it. For
their persecuting Christ, to Christ did no hurt, but to themselves did
hurt. And do not suppose, brethren, that themselves alone hath this
befallen. Every one that prepareth a pit for his brother, it must needs
be that himself fall into it....
13. But the patience of good men with preparation of heart accepteth
the will of God: and glorieth in tribulations, saying that which
followeth: "Prepared is my heart, O God, I will sing and play" (ver.
8). What hath he done to me? He hath prepared a pit, my heart is
prepared. He hath prepared pit to deceive, shall I not prepare heart to
suffer? He hath prepared pit to oppress, shall I not prepare heart to
endure? Therefore he shall fall into it, but I will sing and play. Hear
the heart prepared in an Apostle, because he hath imitated his Lord:
"We glory," he saith, "in tribulations: because tribulation worketh
patience: patience probation, probation hope, but hope maketh not
ashamed: because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts through
the Holy Spirit, which hath been given to us." [2154] He was in
oppressions, in chains, in prisons, in stripes, in hunger and thirst,
in cold and nakedness, [2155] in every wasting of toils and pains, and
he was saying, "We glory in tribulations." Whence, but that prepared
was his heart? Therefore he was singing and playing.
14. "Rise up, my glory" (ver. 9). He that had fled from the face of
Saul into a cavern, saith, "Rise up, my glory:" glorified be Jesus
after His Passion. "Rise up, psaltery and harp." He calleth upon what
to rise? Two organs I see: but Body of Christ one I see, one flesh hath
risen again, and two organs have risen. The one organ then is the
psaltery, the other the harp. Organs [2156] is the word used for all
instruments of musicians. Not only is that called an organ, which is
great, and blown into with bellows; [2157] but whatsoever is adapted to
playing and is corporeal, whereof for an instrument the player maketh
use, is said to be an organ. But distinguished from one another are
these organs. [2158] ...What therefore do these two organs figure to
us? For Christ the Lord our God is waking up His psaltery and His harp;
and He saith, "I will rise up at the dawn." I suppose that here ye now
perceive the Lord rising. We have read thereof in the Gospel: [2159]
see the hour of the Resurrection. How long through shadows was Christ
being sought? He hath shone, be He acknowledged; "at the dawn" He rose
again. But what is psaltery? what is harp? Through His flesh two kinds
of deeds the Lord hath wrought, miracles and sufferings: miracles from
above have been, sufferings from below have been. But those miracles
which He did were divine; but through Body He did them, through flesh
He did them. The flesh therefore working things divine, is the
psaltery: the flesh suffering things human is the harp. Let the
psaltery sound, let the blind be enlightened, let the deaf hear, let
the paralytics be braced to strength, the lame walk, the sick rise up,
the dead rise again; this is the sound of the Psaltery. Let there sound
also the harp, let Him hunger, thirst, sleep, be held, scourged,
derided, crucified, buried. When therefore thou seest in that Flesh
certain things to have sounded from above, certain things from the
lower part, one flesh hath risen again, and in one flesh we acknowledge
both psaltery and harp. And these two kinds of things done have
fulfilled the Gospel, and it is preached in the nations: for both the
miracles and the sufferings of the Lord are preached.
15. Therefore there hath risen psaltery and harp in the dawn, and he
confesseth to the Lord; and saith what? "I will confess to Thee among
the peoples, O Lord, and will play to Thee among the nations: for
magnified even unto the Heavens hath been Thy mercy, and even unto the
clouds Thy truth" (ver. 10). Heavens above clouds, and clouds below
heavens: and nevertheless to this nearest heaven belong clouds. But
sometimes clouds rest upon the mountains, even so far in the nearest
air are they rolled. But a Heaven above there is, the habitations of
Angels, Thrones, Dominions, Principalities, Powers. This therefore may
perchance seem to be what should have been said: "Unto the Heavens Thy
truth, and even unto the clouds Thy mercy." For in Heaven Angels praise
God, seeing the very form of truth, without any darkness of vision,
without any admixture of unreality: they see, love, praise, are not
wearied. There is truth: but here in our own misery surely there is
mercy. For to a miserable one must be rendered mercy. For there is no
need of mercy above, where is no miserable one. I have said this
because that it seemeth as though it might have been more fittingly
said, "Magnified even unto the Heavens hath been Thy truth, and even
unto the clouds Thy mercy." For "clouds" we understand to be preachers
of truth, men bearing that flesh in a manner dark, whence God both
gleameth in miracles, and thundereth in precepts. [2160] ...Glory to
our Lord, and to the Mercy of the Same, and to the Truth of the Same,
because neither hath He forsaken by mercy to make us blessed through
His Grace, nor defrauded us of truth: because first Truth veiled in
flesh came to us and healed through His flesh the interior eye of our
heart, in order that hereafter face to face we may be able to see It.
[2161] Giving therefore to Him thanks, let us say with the same Psalm
the last verses, which sometime since too I have said, "Be Thou exalted
above the Heavens, O God, and above all the earth Thy glory" (ver. 11).
For this to Him the Prophet said so many years before; this now we see;
this therefore let us also say.
__________________________________________________________________
[2123] Lat. LVI. Sermon to the Commonalty.
[2124] Circa.
[2125] Rom. x. 4.
[2126] 1 Sam. xxiv. 4, 7.
[2127] Matt. xxvii. 37; John xix. 19.
[2128] Rom. i. 3; Matt. i. 1.
[2129] John xix. 22.
[2130] 1 Sam. xxiv. 3.
[2131] 1 Cor. ii. 8.
[2132] John xix. 34.
[2133] Luke xxiv. 39.
[2134] John i. 14.
[2135] Isa. xl. 5, lii. 10; Luke iii. 6.
[2136] Matt. xxiv. 12.
[2137] Rom. iv. 25.
[2138] Ps. xxxiv. 18.
[2139] Phil. ii. 8, 9.
[2140] John ii. 19.
[2141] [See p. 132, note 3, supra.--C.]
[2142] Lat. "a creature."
[2143] Matt. iv. 11.
[2144] Ps. lvii. 3.
[2145] Ps. lvii. 4.
[2146] Minutus.
[2147] Rev. i. 16.
[2148] Matt. xxvii. 22; John xix. 6.
[2149] [Vulgate and Septuagint, Ps. lxiv. 7.--C.]
[2150] Cannae.
[2151] Against the Donatists.
[2152] [This comes home with terrible import to that portion of the
Church which has made itself the whole Church with a novel creed, and
broken communion with the Easterns.--C.]
[2153] Muscipulam.
[2154] Rom. v. 3.
[2155] 2 Cor. xi. 27.
[2156] Organa.
[2157] [Of which see a primitive example in Parker's Glossary of
Architecture (vol. i. p. 264), Oxford, 1845. The use of organs in
churches is very modern. The Greeks exclude them still. St. Thomas
Aquinas testifies their non-use in the Latin churches in the thirteenth
century.--C.]
[2158] [See p. 139, supra.--C.]
[2159] Mark xvi. 2.
[2160] [Psa. xxxvi. p. 88, S: 7, supra.--C.]
[2161] 1 Cor. xiii. 12.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm LVIII. [2162]
1. The words which we have sung must be rather hearkened to by us, than
proclaimed. For to all men as it were in an assemblage of mankind, the
Truth crieth, "If truly indeed justice ye speak, judge right things, ye
sons of men" (ver. 1). For to what unjust man is it not an easy thing
to speak justice? or what man if questioned about justice, when he hath
not a cause, would not easily answer what is just? Inasmuch as the hand
of our Maker in our very hearts hath written this truth, "That which to
thyself thou wouldest not have done, do not thou to another." [2163] Of
this truth, even before that the Law was given, no one was suffered to
be ignorant, in order that there might be some rule whereby might be
judged even those to whom Law had not been given. [2164] But lest men
should complain that something had been wanting for them, there hath
been written also in tables that which in their hearts they read not.
For it was not that they had it not written, but read it they would
not. There hath been set before their eyes that which in their
conscience to see they would be compelled; and as if from without the
voice of God were brought to them, to his own inward parts hath man
been thus driven, the Scripture saying, "For in the thoughts of the
ungodly man there will be questioning." [2165] Where questioning is,
there is law. But because men, desiring those things which are without,
even from themselves have become exiles, there hath been given also a
written law: not because in hearts it had not been written, but because
thou wast a deserter from thy heart, thou art seized by Him that is
everywhere, and to thyself within art called back. Therefore the
written law, what crieth it, to those that have deserted the law
written in their hearts? [2166] "Return ye transgressors to the heart."
[2167] For who hath taught thee, that thou wouldest have no other man
draw near thy wife? Who hath taught thee, that thou wouldest not have a
theft committed upon thee? Who hath taught thee, that thou wouldest not
suffer wrong, and whatever other thing either universally or
particularly might be spoken of? For many things there are, of which
severally if questioned men with loud voice would answer, that they
would not suffer. Come, if thou art not willing to suffer these things,
art thou by any means the only man? dost thou not live in the
fellowship of mankind? He that together with thee hath been made, is
thy fellow; and all men have been made after the image of God, [2168]
unless with earthly coverings they efface that which He hath formed.
That which therefore to thyself thou wilt not have to be done, do not
thou to another. For thou judgest that there is evil in that, which to
suffer thou art not willing: and this thing thou art constrained to
know by an inward law; that in thy very heart is written. Thou wast
doing somewhat, and there was a cry raised in thy hands: how art thou
constrained to return to thy heart when this thing thou sufferest in
the hands of others? Is theft a good thing? No! I ask, is adultery a
good thing? All cry, No! Is man-slaying a good thing? All cry, that
they abhor it. Is coveting the property of a neighbour a good thing?
No! is the voice of all men. Or if yet thou confessest not, there
draweth near one that coveteth thy property: be pleased to answer what
thou wilt have. All men therefore, when of these things questioned, cry
that these things are not good. Again, of doing kindnesses, not only of
not hurting, but also of conferring and distributing, any hungry soul
is questioned thus: "thou sufferest hunger, another man hath bread, and
there is abundance with him beyond sufficiency, he knoweth thee to
want, he giveth not: it displeaseth thee when hungering, let it
displease thee when full also, when of another's hungering thou shalt
have known. A stranger wanting shelter cometh into thy country, he is
not taken in: he then crieth that inhuman is that city, at once among
barbarians he might have found a home. He feeleth the injustice because
he suffereth; thou perchance feelest not, but it is meet that thou
imagine thyself also a stranger; and that thou see in what manner he
will have displeased thee, who shall not have given that, which thou in
thy country wilt not give to a stranger." I ask all men. True are these
things? True. Just are these things? Just. But hear ye the Psalm. "If
truly therefore justice ye speak, judge right things, ye sons of men."
Be it not a justice of lips, but also of deeds. For if thou actest
otherwise than thou speakest, good things thou speakest, and ill thou
judgest....
2. But now to the present case let us come, if ye please. For the voice
is that sweet voice, so well known to the ears of the Church, the voice
of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the voice of His Body, the voice of the
Church toiling, sojourning upon earth, living amid the perils of men
speaking evil and of men flattering. Thou wilt not fear a threatener,
if thou lovest not a flatterer. He therefore, of whom this is the
voice, hath observed and hath seen, that all men speak justice. For
what man doth dare not to speak it, lest he be called unjust? When,
therefore, as though he were hearing the voices of all men, and were
observing the lips of all men, he cried out to them, "If truly indeed
justice ye speak,"--if not falsely justice ye speak, if not one thing
on lips doth sound, whilst another thing is concealed in
hearts,--"judge right things, ye sons of men." Hear out of the Gospel
His own voice, the very same as is in this Psalm: "Hypocrites," saith
the Lord to the Pharisees, "how are ye able good things to speak, when
ye are evil men?....Either make the tree good, and the fruit thereof
good: or make the tree evil, and the fruit thereof evil." [2169] Why
wilt thou whiten thee, wall of mud? I know thy inward parts, I am not
deceived by thy covering: I know what thou holdest forth, I know what
thou coverest. "For there was no need for Him, that any one to Him
should bear testimony of man: for He knew Himself what was in man."
[2170] For He knew what was in man, who had made man, and who had been
made Man, in order that He might seek man....
3. But now ye do what? Why these things to you do I speak? "Because in
heart iniquities ye work on earth" (ver. 2). Iniquities perchance in
heart alone? Hear what followeth: both their heart hands do follow, and
their heart hands do serve, the thing is thought of, and it is done; or
else it is not done, not because we would not, but because we could
not, Whatever thou willest and canst not, for done God doth count it.
"For in heart Iniquities ye work on earth." What next? "Iniquities your
hands knit together." What is, "knit together"? From sin, sin, and to
sin, sin, because of sin. What is this? A theft a man hath committed, a
sin it is: he hath been seen, he seeketh to slay him by whom he hath
been seen: there hath been knit together sin with sin: God hath
permitted him in His hidden judgment to slay that man whom he hath
willed to slay: he perceiveth that the thing is known, he seeketh to
slay a second also; he hath knit together a third sin: while these
things he is planning, perchance that he may not be found out, or that
he may not be convicted of having done it, he consulteth an astrologer;
there is added a fourth sin: the astrologer answereth perchance with
some hard and evil responses, he runneth to a soothsayer, that
expiation may be made; the soothsayer maketh answer that he is not able
to expiate: a magician is sought. And who could enumerate those sins
which are knit together with sins? "Iniquities your hands do knit
together." So long as thou knittest together, thou bindest sin upon
sin. Loose thyself from sins. But I am not able, thou sayest. Cry to
Him. "Unhappy man I, who shall deliver me from the body of this death?"
[2171] For there shall come the Grace of God, so that righteousness
shall be thy delight, as much as thou didst delight in iniquity; and
thou, a man that out of bonds hast been loosed, shall cry out to God,
"Thou hast broken asunder my bonds." [2172] "Thou hast broken asunder
my bonds," is what else but, "Thou hast remitted my sins"? Hear why
chains they are: the Scripture maketh answer, "with the chains of his
sins each one is bound fast." [2173] Not only bonds, but chains [2174]
also they are. Chains are those which are made by twisting in: that is,
because with sins sins thou wast knitting together....
4. "Alienated are sinners from the womb, they have gone astray from the
belly, they have spoken false things" (ver. 3). And when iniquity they
speak, false things they speak; because deceitful is iniquity: and when
justice they speak, false things they speak; because one thing with
mouth they profess, another thing in heart they conceal. "Alienated are
sinners from the womb." What is this? Let us search more diligently:
for perhaps he is saying this, because God hath foreknown men that are
to be sinners even in the wombs of their mothers. [2175] For whence
when Rebecca was yet pregnant, and in womb was bearing twins, was it
said, "Jacob I have loved, but Esau I have hated"? [2176] For it was
said, "The elder shall serve the younger." Hidden at that time was the
judgment of God: but yet from the womb, that is, from the very origin,
alienated are sinners. Whence alienated? From truth. Whence alienated?
From the blessed country, from the blessed life. Perchance alienated
they are from the very womb. And what sinners have been alienated from
the womb? For what men would have been born, if therein they had not
been held? Or what men to-day would be alive to hear these words to no
purpose, unless they were born? Perchance therefore sinners have been
alienated from a certain womb, wherein that charity was suffering
pains, which speaketh through the Apostle, "Of whom again I am in
labour, until Christ be formed in you." [2177] Expect thou therefore;
be formed: do not to thyself ascribe a judgment which perchance thou
knowest not. Carnal thou art as yet, conceived thou hast been: from
that very time when thou hast received the name of Christ, by a sort of
sacrament thou hast been born in the bowels of a mother. For not only
out of bowels a man is born, but also in bowels. First he is born in
bowels, in order that he may be able to be born of bowels. Wherefore it
hath been said even to Mary, "For that which is born in thee, is of the
Holy Spirit." [2178] Not yet of Her It had been born, but already in
Her It had been born. Therefore there are born within the bowels of the
Church certain little ones, and a good thing it is that being formed
they should go forth, so that they drop not by miscarriage. Let the
mother bear thee, not miscarry. If patient thou shalt have been, even
until thou be formed, even until in thee there be the sure doctrine of
truth, the maternal bowels ought to keep thee. But if by thy impatience
thou shalt have shaken the sides of thy mother, with pain indeed she
expelleth thee out, but more to thy loss than to hers.
5. For this reason therefore have they gone astray from the belly,
because "they have spoken false things"? Or rather have they not for
this reason spoken false things, because they have gone astray from the
belly? For in the belly of the Church truth abideth. Whosoever from
this belly of the Church separated shall have been, must needs speak
false things: must needs, I say, speak false things; whoso either
conceived would not be, or whom when conceived the mother hath
expelled. Thence heretics exclaim against the Gospel (to speak in
preference of those whom expelled we lament). We repeat to them: behold
Christ hath said, "It behoved Christ to suffer, and from the dead to
rise again the third day." [2179] I acknowledge there our Head, I
acknowledge there our bridegroom: acknowledge thou also with me the
Bride....
6. "Indignation to them after the similitude of a serpent" (ver. 4). A
great thing ye are to hear. "Indignation to them after the similitude
of a serpent." As if we had said, What is that which thou hast said?
there followeth, "As if of a deaf asp." Whence deaf? "And closing its
ears." Therefore deaf, because it closeth its ears. "And closing its
ears." "Which will not hearken to the voice of men charming, and of the
medicine medicated by the wise man" (ver. 5). As we have heard, because
even men speak who have learned it with such research as they were
able, but nevertheless it is a thing which the Spirit of God knoweth
much better than any men. For it is not to no purpose that of this he
hath spoken, but because it may chance that true is even that which we
have heard of the asp. When the asp beginneth to be affected by the
Marsian charmer, who calleth it forth with certain peculiar
incantations, hear what it doeth....Give heed what is spoken to thee
for a simile's sake, what is noted thee for avoidance. [2180] So
therefore here also there hath been given a certain simile derived from
the Marsian, who maketh incantation to bring forth the asp from the
dark cavern; surely into light he would bring it: but it loving its
darkness, wherein coiled up it hideth itself, when it will not choose
to come forth, nevertheless refusing to hear those words whereby it
feeleth itself to be constrained, is said to press one ear against the
ground, and with its tail to stop up the other, and therefore as much
as possible escaping those words, it cometh not forth to the charmer.
To this as being like, the Spirit of God hath spoken of certain persons
hearing not the Word of God, and not only not doing, but altogether,
that they may not do it, refusing to hear.
7. This thing hath been done even in the first times of the faith.
Stephen the Martyr was preaching the Truth, and to minds as though
dark, in order to bring them forth into light, was making incantation:
when he came to make mention of Christ, whom they would not hear at
all, of them the Scripture saith what? of them relateth what? "They
shut," he saith, "their ears." [2181] But what they did afterwards, the
narrative of the passion of Stephen doth publish. They were not deaf,
but they made themselves deaf....For this thing they did at the point
where Christ was named. The indignation of these men was as the
indignation of a serpent. Why your ears do ye shut? Wait, hear, and if
ye shall be able, rage. Because they chose not to do aught but rage,
they would not hear. But if they had heard, perchance they would have
ceased to rage. The indignation of them was as the indignation of a
serpent....
8. "God hath broken utterly the teeth of them in their own mouth" (ver.
6). Of whom? Of them to whom indignation is as the similitude of a
serpent, and of an asp closing up its ears, so that it heareth not the
voice of men charming, and of medicine medicated by the wise man. The
Lord hath done to them what? "Hath broken utterly the teeth of them in
their own mouth." It hath been done, this at first hath been done, and
now is being done. But it would have sufficed, my brethren, that it
should have been said, "God hath broken utterly the teeth of them." The
Pharisees would not hear the Law, would not hear the precepts of truth
from Christ, being like to that serpent and asp. For in their past sins
they took delight, and present life they would not lose, that is, joys
earthly for joys heavenly....What is, "in their own mouth"? In such
sort, that with their own mouth against themselves they should make
declaration: He hath compelled them with their mouth against themselves
to give sentence. They would have slandered Him, because of the
tribute: [2182] He said not, "It is lawful to pay tribute," or, "It is
not lawful to pay tribute." And He willed to break utterly their teeth,
wherewith they were gaping in order to bite; but in their own mouth He
would do it. If He said, Let there be paid to Caesar tribute, they
would have slandered Him, because He had spoken evil to the nation of
the Jews, by making it a tributary. For because of sin they were paying
tribute, having been humbled, as to them in the Law had been foretold.
We have Him, say they, a maligner of our nation, if He shall have
bidden us to pay tribute: but if He say, Do not pay, we have Him for
saying that we should not be under allegiance to Caesar. Such a double
noose as it were to catch the Lord they laid. But to whom had they
come? To Him that knew how to break utterly the teeth of them in their
own mouth. "Show to Me the coin," [2183] He saith. Why tempt ye Me, ye
hypocrites?" Of paying tribute do ye think? To do justice are ye
willing? the counsel of justice do ye seek? "If truly justice ye speak,
judge right things, ye sons of men." But now because in one way ye
speak, in another way judge, hypocrites ye are: "Why tempt ye Me, ye
hypocrites?" Now I will break utterly your teeth in your mouth: "show
to Me the coin." And they showed it to Him. And He saith not, it is
Caesar's: but asketh Whose it is? in order that their teeth in their
own mouth might be utterly broken. For on His inquiring, of whom it had
the image and inscription, they said, of Caesar. Even now the Lord
shall break utterly the teeth of them in their own mouth. Now ye have
made answer, now have been broken utterly your teeth in your mouth.
"Render unto Caesar the things which are of Caesar, and unto God the
things which are of God." [2184] Caesar seeketh his image; render it:
God seeketh His image; render it. Let not Caesar lose from you his
coin: let not God lose in you His coin. And they found not what they
might answer. For they had been sent to slander Him: and they went
back, saying, that no one to Him could make answer. Wherefore? Because
broken utterly had been the teeth of them in their own mouth. Of that
sort is also the following: "In what power doest Thou these things? I
also will ask of you one question, answer me." [2185] And He asked them
of John, whence was the Baptism of John, from heaven, or of men? so
that whatever they might answer might tell against themselves....
9. The Lord displeased that Pharisee, who to dinner had bidden Him,
because a woman that was a sinner drew near to His feet, and he
murmured against Him, saying, "If this man were a prophet, He would
know what woman drew near to His feet." [2186] O thou that art no
prophet, whence knowest thou that He knew not what woman drew near to
His feet? Because indeed He kept not the purifying of the Jews, which
outwardly was as it were kept in the flesh, and was afar from the
heart, this thing he suspected of the Lord. And in order that I may not
speak at length on this point, even in his mouth He willed to break
utterly the teeth of him. For He set forth to him: "A certain usurer
had two debtors, one was owing five hundred pence, the other fifty:
both had not wherewithal to pay, he forgave both. Which loved him the
more?" [2187] To this end the one asketh, that the other may answer: to
this end he answereth that the teeth of him in his mouth may be broken
utterly....
10. "The jaw-bones of lions the Lord hath broken utterly." [2188] Not
only of asps. What of asps? Asps treacherously desire to throw in their
venom, and scatter it, and hiss. Most openly raged the nations, and
roared like lions. "Wherefore have raged the nations, and the peoples
meditated empty things?" [2189] When they were lying in wait for the
Lord. Is it lawful to give tribute to Caesar, or is it not lawful?
[2190] Asps they were, serpents they were, broken utterly were the
teeth of them in their own mouth. Afterwards they cried out, "Crucify,
Crucify." [2191] Now is there no tongue of asp, but roar of lion. But
also "the jaw-bones of lions the Lord hath broken utterly." Perchance
here there is no need of that which he hath not added, namely, "in the
mouth of them." For men lying in wait with captious questions, were
forced to be conquered with their own answer: but those men that openly
were raging, were they by any means to be confuted with questions?
Nevertheless, even their jaw-bones were broken utterly: having been
crucified, He rose again, ascended into heaven, was glorified as the
Christ, is adored by all nations, adored by all kings. Let the Jews now
rage, if they are able. We have also in the case of heretics this as a
warning and precedent, because themselves also we find to be serpents
with indignation made deaf, not choosing to hear the "medicine
medicated by the wise man:" and in their own mouth the Lord hath broken
utterly the teeth of them....
11. "They shall be despised like water running down" (ver. 7). Be not
terrified, brethren, by certain streams, which are called torrents:
with winter waters they are filled up; do not fear: after a little it
passeth by, that water runneth down; for a time it roareth, soon it
will subside: they cannot hold long. Many heresies now are utterly
dead: they have run in their channels as much as they were able, have
run down, dried are the channels, scarce of them the memory is found,
or that they have been. "They shall be despised like water running
down." But not they alone; the whole of this age for a time is roaring,
and is seeking whom it may drag along. Let all ungodly men, all proud
men resounding against the rocks of their pride as it were with waters
rushing along and flowing together, not terrify you, winter waters they
are, they cannot alway flow: it must needs be that they run down unto
their place, unto their end. And nevertheless of this torrent of the
world the Lord hath drunk. For He hath suffered here, the very torrent
He hath drunk, but in the way He hath drunk, but in the passage over:
because in way of sinners He hath not stood. [2192] But of Him saith
the Scripture what? "Of the torrent in the way He shall drink,
therefore He shall lift up His Head;" [2193] that is, for this reason
glorified He hath been, because He hath died; for this reason hath
risen again, because He hath suffered....
12. "Like wax melted they shall be taken away" (ver. 8). For thou wast
about to say, all men are not so made weak, like myself, in order that
they may believe: many men do persevere in their evil, and in their
malice. And of the same fear thou nothing: "Like wax melted they shall
be taken away." Against thee they shall not stand, they shall not
continue: with a sort of fire of their own lusts they shall perish. For
there is here a kind of hidden punishment, [2194] of it the Psalm is
about to speak now, to the end of it. There are but a few verses; be
attentive. There is a certain punishment future, fire of hell, fire
everlasting. For future punishment hath two kinds: either of the lower
places it is, where was burning that rich man, who was wishing for
himself a drop of water to be dropped on his tongue off the finger of
the poor man, whom before his gate he had spurned, when he saith, "For
I am tormented in this flame." [2195] And the second is that at the
end, whereof they are to hear, that on the left hand are to be set: "Go
ye into fire everlasting, that hath been prepared for the devil and his
angels." [2196] Those punishments shall be manifest at that time, when
we shall have departed out of this life, or when at the end of the
world men shall have come to the resurrection of the dead. Now
therefore is there no punishment, and doth God suffer sins utterly
unpunished even unto that day? There is even here a sort of hidden
punishment, of the same he is treating now....We see nevertheless
sometimes with these punishments just men to be afflicted, and to these
punishments unjust men to be strangers: for which reason did totter the
feet of him that afterwards rejoicing saith, "How good is the God of
Israel to men right in heart! But my own feet have been almost shaken,
because I have been jealous in the case of sinners, beholding the peace
of sinners." [2197] For he had seen the felicity of evil men, and
well-pleased he had been to be an evil man, seeing evil men to reign,
seeing that it was well with them, that they abounded in plenty of all
things temporal, such as he too, being as yet but a babe, was desiring
from the Lord: and his feet did totter, even until he saw what at the
end is either to be hoped for or to be feared. For he saith in the same
Psalm, "This thing is a labour before me, until I enter into the
sanctuary of God, and understand unto the last things." [2198] It is
not therefore the punishments of the lower places, not the punishments
of that fire everlasting after the resurrection, not those punishments
which as yet in this world are common to just men and unjust men, and
ofttimes more heavy are those of just men than those of unjust men; but
some punishment or other of the present life the Spirit of God would
recommend to our notice. Give heed, hear ye me about to speak of that
which ye know: but a more sweet thing it is when it is declared in a
Psalm, which, before it was declared, was deemed obscure. For behold I
bring forth that which already ye knew: but because these things are
brought forth from a place where ye have never yet seen them, it cometh
to pass that even known things, as if they were new things, do delight
you. Hear ye the punishment of ungodly men: "Like wax," he saith,
"melted they shall be taken away." I have said that through their lusts
this thing to them is done. Evil lust is like a burning and a fire.
Doth fire consume a garment, and doth not the lust of adultery consume
the soul? Of meditated adultery when the Scripture was speaking it
saith, "Shall one bind fire in his bosom, and his garments shall he not
burn up?" [2199] Thou bearest in thy bosom live coals; burned through
is thy vest; thou bearest in thought adultery, and whole then is thy
soul? But these punishments few men do see: therefore them the Spirit
of God doth exceedingly recommend to our notice. Hear the Apostle
saying, "God hath given them up unto the lusts of their heart." [2200]
Behold, the fire from the face of which like wax they are melting. For
they loose themselves from a certain continence of chastity; therefore
even these same men, going unto their lusts, as loose and melting are
spoken of. Whence melting? whence loose? From the fire of lusts. "God
hath given them up unto the lusts of their heart, so that they do those
things which beseem not, being filled full of all iniquity."...
13. "There hath fallen upon them fire, and they have not seen the sun."
Ye see in what manner he speaketh of a certain punishment of darkening.
"Fire hath fallen upon them," fire of pride, a smoky fire, fire of
lust, fire of wrath. How great a fire is it? He upon whom it shall have
fallen, shall not see the sun. Therefore hath it been said, "Let not
the sun go down upon your wrath." [2201] Therefore, brethren, fire of
evil lust fear ye, if ye will not melt like wax, and to perish from the
face of God. For there falleth upon you that fire, and the sun ye shall
not see. What sun? Not that which together with thee see both beasts
and insects, and good men and evil men: because "He maketh His sun to
rise upon good men and evil men." [2202] But there is another sun,
whereof those men are to speak, "And the sun hath not risen to us,
passed away are all those things as it were a shadow. Therefore we have
strayed from the way of truth, and the light of righteousness hath not
shone to us, and the sun hath not risen to us." [2203] ...
14. "Before that the bramble [2204] bringeth forth your thorns: as
though living, as though in anger, it shall drink them up" (ver. 9).
What is the bramble? Of prickly plants it is a kind, upon which there
are said to be certain of the closest thorns. At first it is a herb;
and while it is a herb, soft and fair it is: but thereon there are
nevertheless thorns to come forth. Now therefore sins are pleasant, and
as it were they do not prick. A herb is the bramble; even now
nevertheless there is a thorn. "Before that the bramble bringeth forth
thorns:" is before that of miserable delights and pleasures the evident
tortures come forth. Let them question themselves that love any object,
and to it cannot attain; let them see if they are not racked with
longing: and when they have attained to that which unlawfully they long
for, let them mark if they are not racked with fear. Let them see
therefore here their punishments; before that there cometh that
resurrection, when in flesh rising again they shall not be changed.
"For all we shall rise again, but not [2205] all we shall be changed."
[2206] For they shall have the corruption of the flesh wherein to be
pained, not that wherein to die: otherwise even those pains would be
ended. Then the thorns of that bramble, that is, all pains and
piercings of tortures shall be brought forth. Such thorns as they shall
suffer that are to say, "These are they whom sometimes we had in
derision:" [2207] thorns of the piercing of repentance, but of one too
late and without fruit like the barrenness of thorns. The repentance of
this time is pain healing: repentance of that time is pain penal.
Wouldest thou not suffer those thorns? here be thou pierced with the
thorns of repentance; in such sort that thou do that which hath been
spoken of, "Turned I have been in sorrow, when the thorn was piercing:
[2208] my sin I have known, and mine iniquity I have not covered: I
have said, I will declare against me my shortcoming to the Lord, and
Thou hast remitted the ungodliness of my heart." [2209] Now do so, now
be pierced through, be there not in thee done that which hath been said
of certain execrable men, "They have been cloven asunder, and have not
been pierced through." [2210] Observe them that have been cloven
asunder and have not been pierced through. [2211] Ye see men cloven
asunder, and ye see them not pierced through. Behold beside the Church
they are, and it doth not repent them, so as they should return whence
they have been cloven asunder. The bramble hereafter shall bring forth
their thorns. They will not now have a healing piercing through, they
shall have hereafter one penal. But even now before that the bramble
produceth thorns, there hath fallen upon them fire, that suffereth them
not to see the sun, that is, the wrath of God is drinking up them while
still living: fire of evil lusts, of empty honours, of pride, of their
covetousness: and whatsoever is weighing them down, that they should
not know the truth, so that they seem not to be conquered, so that they
be not brought into subjection even by truth herself. For what is a
more glorious thing, brethren, than to be brought in subjection and to
be overcome by truth? Let truth overcome thee willing: for even
unwilling she shall of herself overcome thee....
15. As yet the punishments of the lower places have not come, as yet
fire everlasting hath not come: let him that is growing in God compare
himself now with an ungodly man, a blind heart with an enlightened
heart: compare ye two men, one seeing and one not seeing in the flesh.
And what so great thing is vision of the flesh? Did Tobias by any means
have fleshly eyes? [2212] His own son had, and he had not; and the way
of life a blind man to one seeing did show. Therefore when ye see that
punishment, rejoice, because in it ye are not.
Therefore saith the Scripture, "The just man shall rejoice when he
shall have seen vengeance" (ver. 10). Not that future punishment; for
see what followeth: "his hands he shall wash in the blood of the
sinner." What is this? Let your love attend. When man-slayers are
smitten, ought anywise innocent men to go thither and wash their hands?
But what is, "in the blood of the sinner he shall wash his hands"? When
a just man seeth the punishment of a sinner, he groweth himself; and
the death of one is the life of another. For if spiritually blood
runneth from those that within are dead, do thou, seeing such
vengeance, wash therein thy hands; for the future more cleanly live.
And how shall he wash his hands, if a just man he is? For what hath he
on his hands to be washed, if just he is? "But the just man of faith
shall live." [2213] Just men therefore he hath called believers: and
from the time that thou hast believed, at once thou beginnest to be
called just. For there hath been made a remission of sins. Even if out
of that remaining part of thy life some sins are thine, which cannot
but flow in, like water from the sea into the hold; nevertheless,
because thou hast believed, when thou shalt have seen him that
altogether is turned away from God to be slain in that blindness, there
falling upon him that fire so that he see not the sun--then do thou
that now through faith seest Christ, in order that thou mayest see in
substance (because the just man liveth of faith), observe the ungodly
man dying, and purge thyself from sins. So thou shalt wash in a manner
thy hands in the blood of the sinner.
16. "And a man shall say, If therefore there is fruit to a just man"
(ver. 10). Behold, before that there cometh that which is promised,
before that there is given life everlasting, before that ungodly men
are cast forth into fire everlasting, here in this life there is fruit
to the just man. What fruit? "In hope rejoicing, in tribulation
enduring." [2214] What fruit to the just man? "We glory in
tribulations, knowing that tribulation worketh patience, but patience
probation, but probation hope: but hope confoundeth not: because the
love of God is shed abroad in our hearts through the Holy Spirit, that
hath been given to us." [2215] Doth he rejoice that is a drunkard; and
doth he not rejoice that is just? In love there is fruit to a just man.
Miserable the one, even when he maketh himself drunken: blessed the
other, even when he hungereth and thirsteth. The one wine-bibbing doth
gorge, the other hope doth feed. Let him see therefore the punishment
of the other, his own rejoicing, and let him think of God. He that hath
given even now such joy of faith, of hope, of charity, of the truth of
His Scriptures, what manner of joy is He making ready against the end?
In the way thus He feedeth, in his home how shall He fill him? "And a
man shall say, If therefore there is fruit to the just man." Let them
that see believe, and see, and perceive. Rejoice shall the just man
when he shall have seen vengeance. But if he hath not eyes whence he
may see vengeance, he will be made sad, and will not be amended by it.
But if he seeth it, he seeth what difference there is between the
darkened eye of the heart, and the eye enlightened of the heart:
between the coolness of chastity and the flame of lust, between the
security of hope and the fear there is in crime. When he shall have
seen this, let him separate himself, and wash his hands in the blood of
the same. Let him profit by the comparison, and say, "Therefore there
is fruit to the just man: therefore there is a God judging them in the
earth." Not yet in that life, not yet in fire eternal, not yet in the
lower places, but here in earth....
17. If somewhat too prolix we have been, pardon us. We exhort you in
the name of Christ, to meditate profitably on those things which ye
have heard. Because even to preach the truth is nought, if heart from
tongue dissenteth; and to hear the truth nothing profiteth, if a man
upon the rock build not. He that buildeth upon a Rock, is the same that
heareth and doeth: [2216] but he that heareth and doeth not, buildeth
upon sand: he that neither heareth nor doeth, buildeth nothing....
__________________________________________________________________
[2162] Lat. LVII. Sermon to the Commonalty, wherein everywhere he
confuteth the Donatists.
[2163] Tob. iv. 15.
[2164] [Matt. vii. 12. The quotation from the father of Tobias shows
this maxim, negative in its form, and reflecting the Mosaic law, which
"made nothing perfect." It was probably Noahic, and was therefore known
to Gentilism, as e.g. to Confucius. The glory of "the Golden Rule" is
not merely that it gives a positive form to this law: Christ made it
the energetic and characteristic principle of His Church towards
humanity, and of all Christians towards all men.--C.]
[2165] Wisd. i. 9.
[2166] Rom. ii. 15.
[2167] Isa. xlvi. 8.
[2168] Gen. i. 26.
[2169] Matt. xii. 33, 34.
[2170] John ii. 25.
[2171] Rom. vii. 24.
[2172] Ps. cxvi. 16.
[2173] Prov. v. 22.
[2174] Criniculi.
[2175] Gen. xxv. 23. [Here foreknowledge precedes predestination. See
Clement, vol. ii. p. 497, A.N.F.--C.]
[2176] Mal. i. 2; Rom. ix. 13.
[2177] Gal. iv. 19.
[2178] Matt. i. 20; Luke i. 35.
[2179] Luke xxiv. 46.
[2180] So. p. 133.
[2181] Acts vii. 57.
[2182] Matt. xxii. 17, 18.
[2183] Matt. xxii. 19.
[2184] Matt. xxii. 21.
[2185] Matt. xxi. 23, 24; Mark xi. 28, 29.
[2186] Luke vii. 39.
[2187] Luke vii. 41, 42.
[2188] Ps. lviii. 6.
[2189] Ps. ii. 1.
[2190] Matt. xxii. 17.
[2191] Matt. xxvii. 23; John xix. 6.
[2192] Ps. i. 1.
[2193] Ps. cx. 7.
[2194] Hidden punishment of sinners.
[2195] Luke xvi. 24.
[2196] Matt. xxv. 41.
[2197] Ps. lxxiii. 1-3.
[2198] Ps. lxxiii. 16, 17.
[2199] Prov. vi. 27.
[2200] Rom. i. 24.
[2201] Eph. iv. 26.
[2202] Matt. v. 45.
[2203] Wisd. v. 6.
[2204] Rhamnus.
[2205] So several early writers and mss. But the balance of authority
as well as the sense is in favour of the received reading.
[2206] 1 Cor. xv. 51.
[2207] Wisd. v. 3.
[2208] Or, "being made to pierce."
[2209] Ps. xxxii. 5.
[2210] Ps. xxxv. 15. These words are in the Vulgate, for "they did tear
me, and ceased not;" but St. Augustin does not notice them in his
comment on the Psalm.
[2211] Against the Donatists.
[2212] Tob. iv. 3-19.
[2213] Rom. i. 17.
[2214] Rom. xii. 12.
[2215] Rom. v. 3-5.
[2216] Matt. vii. 24.
__________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm LIX. [2217]
The First Part.
1. As the Scripture is wont to set mysteries of the Psalms on the
titles, and to deck the brow of a Psalm with the high announcement of a
Mystery, [2218] in order that we that are about to go in may know (when
as it were upon the door-post we have read what within is doing) either
of whom the house is, or who is the owner of that estate: so also in
this Psalm there hath been written a title, of a title. For it hath,
"At the end, corrupt not for David himself unto the inscription of the
title." This is that which I have spoken of, title of Title. For what
the inscription of this title is, which to be corrupted he forbiddeth,
the Gospel to us doth indicate. For when the Lord was being crucified,
a title by Pilate was inscribed and set, "King of the Jews," [2219] in
three tongues, Hebrew, Greek, and Latin: [2220] which tongues in the
whole world mostly do prevail....Therefore "corrupt not" is most proper
and prophetic; since indeed even those Jews made suggestion at that
time to Pilate, and said, "Do not write King of the Jews, but write,
that Himself said that He was King of the Jews:" [2221] for this title,
say they, hath established Him King over us. And Pilate, "What I have
written, I have written." And there was fulfilled, "corrupt not."
2. Nor is this the only Psalm which hath an inscription of such sort,
that the Title be not corrupted. Several Psalms thus are marked on the
face, but however in all the Passion of the Lord is foretold. Therefore
here also let us perceive the Lord's Passion, and let there speak to us
Christ, Head and Body. So always, or nearly always, let us hear the
words of Christ from the Psalm, as that we look not only upon that
Head, the one mediator between God and man, the Man Christ Jesus.
[2222] ...But let us think of Christ, Head and whole Body, a sort of
entire Man. For to us is said, "But ye are the Body of Christ and
members," [2223] by the Apostle Paul. If therefore He is Head, we Body;
whole Christ is Head and Body. For sometimes thou findest words which
do not suit the Head, and unless thou shalt have attached them to the
Body, thy understanding will waver: again thou findest words which are
proper for the Body, and Christ nevertheless is speaking. In that place
we must have no fear lest a man be mistaken: for quickly he proceedeth
to adapt to the Head, that which he seeth is not proper for the
Body....
3. Let us hear, therefore, what followeth: "When Saul sent and guarded
his house in order that he might kill him." This though not to the
Cross of the Lord, yet to the Passion of the Lord doth belong. For
Crucified was Christ, and dead, and buried. That sepulchre was
therefore as it were the house: to guard which the government of the
Jews sent, when guards were set to the sepulchre of Christ. [2224]
There is indeed a story in the Scripture of the Reigns, of the occasion
when Saul sent to guard the house in order that he might kill David.
[2225] ...But in like manner as Saul effected not his purpose of
slaying David: so this could not the government of the Jews effect,
that the testimony of guards sleeping should avail more than that of
Apostles watching. For what were the guards instructed to say? We give
to you, they say, as much money as ye please; and say ye, that while ye
were sleeping there came His disciples, and took Him away. Behold what
sort of witnesses of falsehood against truth and the Resurrection of
Christ, His enemies, through Saul figured, did produce. Enquire, O
unbelief, of sleeping witnesses, let them reply to thee of what was
done in the tomb. Who, if they were sleeping, whence knew it? If
watching, wherefore detained they not the thieves? Let him say
therefore what followeth.
4. "Deliver me from mine enemies, my God, and from men rising up upon
me, redeem Thou me" (ver. 1). There hath been done this thing in the
flesh of Christ, it is being done in us also. For our enemies, to wit
the devil and his angels, cease not to rise up upon us every day, and
to wish to make sport of our weakness and our frailness, by deceptions,
by suggestions, by temptations, and by snares of whatsoever sort to
entangle us, while on earth we are still living. But let our voice
watch unto God, and cry out in the members of Christ, under the Head
that is in heaven, "Deliver me from mine enemies, my God, and from men
rising up upon me, redeem Thou me."
5. "Deliver me from men working iniquity, and from men of bloods, save
Thou me" (ver. 2). They indeed were men of bloods, who slew the Just
One, in whom no guilt they found: they were men of bloods, because when
the foreigner washed his hands, and would have let go Christ, they
cried, "Crucify, Crucify:" [2226] they were men of bloods, on whom when
there was being charged the crime of the blood of Christ, they made
answer, giving it to their posterity to drink, "His blood be upon us
and upon our sons." [2227] But neither against His Body did men of
bloods cease to rise up; for even after the Resurrection and Ascension
of Christ, the Church suffered persecutions, and she indeed first that
grew out of the Jewish people, of which also our Apostles were. There
at first Stephen was stoned, [2228] and received that of which he had
his name. For Stephanus doth signify a crown. Lowly stoned but highly
crowned. Secondly, among the Gentiles rose up kingdoms of Gentiles,
before that in them was fulfilled that which had been foretold, "There
shall adore Him all the kings of the earth, all nations shall serve
Him:" [2229] and there roared the fierceness of that kingdom against
the witnesses of Christ: there was shed largely and frequently the
blood of Martyrs: wherewith when it had been shed, being as it were
sown, the field of the Church more productively put forth, and filled
the whole world as we now behold. From these therefore, men of bloods,
is delivered Christ, not only Head, but also Body. From men of bloods
is delivered Christ, both from them that have been, and from them that
are, and from them that are to be; there is delivered Christ, both He
that hath gone before, and He that is, and He that is to come. For
Christ is the whole Body of Christ; and whatsoever good Christians that
now are, and that have been before us, and that after us are to be, are
an whole Christ, who is delivered from men of bloods; nor is this voice
void, "And from men of bloods save Thou me."
6. "For behold they have hunted my soul....There have rushed upon me
strong men" (ver. 3). We must not however pass on from these strong
men: diligently we must trace who are the strong men rising up. Strong
men, upon whom but upon weak men, upon powerless men, upon men not
strong? And praised nevertheless are the weak men, and condemned are
the strong men. If it would be perceived who are strong men, at first
the devil himself the Lord hath called a strong man: "No one," He
saith, "is able to go into the house of a strong man, and to carry off
his vessels, unless first he shall have bound the strong man." [2230]
He hath bound therefore the strong man with the chains of His dominion:
and his vessels He hath carried off, and His own vessels hath made
them. For all unrighteous men were vessels of the devil....But there
are among mankind certain strong men of a blameable and damnable
strength, that are confident indeed, but on temporal felicity. That man
doth not [2231] seem to you to have been strong, of whom now from the
Gospel [2232] hath been read: how his estate brought forth abundance of
fruits, and he being troubled, hit upon the design of rebuilding, so
that, having pulled down his old barns, he should construct new ones
more capacious, and, these having been finished, should say to his
soul, "Thou hast many good things, soul, feast, be merry, be
filled."...There are also other men strong, not because of riches, not
because of the powers of the body, not because of any temporally
pre-eminent power of station, but relying on their righteousness. This
sort of strong men must be guarded against, feared, repulsed, not
imitated: of men relying, I say, not on body, not on means, not on
descent, not on honour; for all such things who would not see to be
temporal, fleeting, falling, flying? but relying on their own
righteousness...."Wherefore," say they, doth your Master eat with
publicans and sinners? [2233] O ye strong men, to whom a Physician is
not needful! This strength to soundness belongeth not, but to insanity.
For even than men frenzied nothing can be stronger, more mighty they
are than whole men: but by how much greater their powers are, by so
much nearer is their death. May God therefore turn away from our
imitation these strong men....The same are therefore the strong men,
that assailed Christ, commending their own justice. Hear ye these
strong men: when certain men of Jerusalem were speaking, having been
sent by them to take Christ, and not daring to take Him (because when
he would, then was He taken, that truly was strong): Why therefore, say
they, "could ye not take Him?" And they made answer, "No one of men did
ever so speak as He." And these strong men, "Hath by any means any one
of the Pharisees believed on Him, or any one of the Scribes, but this
people knowing not the Law?" [2234] They preferred themselves to the
sick multitude, that was running to the Physician: whence but because
they were themselves strong? and what is worse, by their strength, all
the multitude also they brought over unto themselves, and slew the
Physician of all....
7. What next? "Neither iniquity is mine, nor sin mine, O Lord" (ver.
4). There have rushed on indeed strong men on their own righteousness
relying, they have rushed on, but sin in me they have not found. For
truly those strong men, that is, as it were righteous men, on what
account would they be able to persecute Christ, unless it were as if a
sinner? But, however, let them look to it how strong they be, in the
raging of fever not in the vigour of soundness: let them look to it how
strong they be, and how as though just against an unrighteous man they
have raged. [2235] But, however, "neither iniquity is mine, nor sin
mine, O Lord. Without iniquity I did run, and I was guided." Those
strong men therefore could not follow me running: therefore a sinner
they have deemed me, because my steps they have not seen.
8. "Without iniquity I did run, and was guided; rise up to meet me, and
see." To God is said this. But why? If He meet not, is He unable to
see? It is just as if thou wast walking in a road, and from afar by
some one thou couldest not be recognised, thou wouldest call to him and
wouldest say, Meet me, and see how I am walking; for when from afar
thou espiest me, my steps thou art not able to see. So also unless God
were to meet, would He not see how without iniquity he was guided, and
how without sin he was running? This interpretation indeed we can also
accept, namely, "Rise up to meet me," as if "help me." But that which
he hath added, "and see," must be understood as, make it to be seen
that I run, make it to be seen that I am guided: according to that
figure wherein this also hath been said to Abraham, "Now I know that
thou fearest God." [2236] God saith, "Now I know:" whence, but because
I have made thee to know? For unknown to himself every one is before
the questioning of temptation: just as of himself Peter [2237] in his
confidence was ignorant, and by denying learned what kind of powers he
had, in his very stumbling he perceived that it was falsely he had been
confident: he wept, and in weeping he earned profitably to know what he
was, and to be what he was not. Therefore Abraham when tried, became
known to himself: and it was said by God, "Now I know," that is, now I
have made thee to know. In like manner as glad is the day because it
maketh men glad; and sad is bitterness because it maketh sad one
tasting thereof: so God's seeing is making to see. "Rise up,
therefore," he saith, "to meet me, and see" (ver. 5). What is, "and
see"? And help me, that is, in those men, in order that they may see my
course, may follow me; let not that seem to them to be crooked which is
straight, let not that seem to them to be curved which keepeth the rule
of truth.
9. Something else I am admonished to say in this place of the loftiness
of our Head Himself: for He was made weak even unto death, and He took
on Him the weakness of flesh, in order that the chickens of Jerusalem
He might gather under His wings, like a hen showing herself weak with
her little ones. [2238] For have we not observed this thing in some
bird at some time or other, even in those which build nests before our
eyes, as the house-sparrows, as swallows, so to speak, our annual
guests, as storks, as various sorts of birds, which before our eyes
build nests, and hatch eggs, feed chickens, as the very doves which
daily we see; and some bird to become weak with her chickens, have we
not known, have we not looked upon, have we not seen? In what way doth
a hen experience this weakness? Surely a known fact I am speaking of,
which in our sight is daily taking place. How her voice groweth hoarse,
how her whole body is made languid? The wings droop, the feathers are
loosened, and thou seest around the chickens some sick thing, and this
is maternal love which is found as weakness. Why was it therefore, but
for this reason, that the Lord willed to be as a Hen, saying in the
Holy Scripture, "Jerusalem, Jerusalem, how often have I willed to
gather thy sons, even as a hen her chickens under her wings, and thou
hast not been willing." But He hath gathered all nations, like as a hen
her chickens....
10. "And Thou, Lord God of virtues, God of Israel." Thou God of Israel,
that art thought to be but God of one nation, which worshippeth Thee,
when all nations worship idols, Thou God of Israel, "Give heed unto the
visiting all nations." Fulfilled be that prophecy wherein Isaiah in Thy
person speaketh to Thy Church, Thy holy City, that barren one of whom
many more are the sons of Her forsaken than of her that hath a husband.
To Her indeed hath been said, "Rejoice, thou barren, that bearest not,"
[2239] etc., more than of the Jewish nation which hath a Husband, which
hath received the Law, more than of that nation which had a visible
king. For thy king is hidden, and more sons to thee there are by a
hidden Bridegroom....The Prophet addeth, "Enlarge the place of Thy
tabernacle, and Thy [2240] courts fix thou: there is no cause for thee
to spare, extend further thy cords, and strong stakes set thou again
and again on the right and on the left." [2241] Upon the right keep
good men, on the left keep evil men, [2242] until there come the fan:
[2243] occupy nevertheless all nations; bidden to the marriage be good
men and evil men, filled be the marriage with guests; [2244] it is the
office of servants to bid, of the Lord to sever. "Cities which had been
forsaken Thou shall inhabit:" [2245] forsaken of God, forsaken of
Prophets, forsaken of Apostles, forsaken of the Gospel, full of demons.
For Thou shalt prevail; and blush not because abominable Thou hast
been. Therefore though there have risen up upon thee strong men, blush
not: when against the name of Christ laws were enacted, when ignominy
and infamy it was to be a Christian. "Blush not because abominable Thou
hast been: for confusion for everlasting Thou shalt forget, of the
ignominy of Thy widowhood Thou shall not be mindful."...
11. "Have not pity upon all men that work iniquity." Here evidently He
is terrifying. Whom would He not terrify? What man falling back upon
his own conscience would not tremble? Which even if to itself it is
conscious of godliness, strange if it be not in some sort conscious of
iniquity. For whosoever doeth sin, also doeth iniquity. [2246] "For if
Thou shalt have marked iniquities, O Lord, what man shall abide it?"
[2247] And nevertheless a true saying it is, and not said to no
purpose, and neither is nor will it be possible to be void, "Have not
pity upon all men that work iniquity." But He had pity even upon Paul,
who at first as Saul wrought iniquity. For what good thing did he,
whence he might deserve of God? Did he not hate His Saints unto death?
[2248] did he not bear letters from the chief of the priests, to the
end that wheresoever he might find Christians, to punishment he should
hurry them? When bent upon this, when thither proceeding, breathing and
panting slaughter, as the Scripture testified of him, was he not from
Heaven with a mighty voice summoned, thrown down, raised up; blinded,
lightened; slain, made alive; destroyed, restored? In return for what
merit? Let us say nothing; himself rather let us hear: "I that before
have been," he saith, "a blasphemer, and persecutor; and injurious, but
mercy I have obtained." [2249] Surely "Thou wouldest not have pity upon
all men that work iniquity:" this in two ways may be understood: either
that in fact not any sins doth God leave unpunished; or that there is a
sort of iniquity, on the workers whereof God hath indeed no pity.
12. All iniquity, be it little or great, punished must needs be, either
by man himself repenting, or by God avenging. For even he that
repenteth punisheth himself. Therefore, brethren, let us punish our own
sins, if we seek the mercy of God. God cannot have mercy on all men
working iniquity as if pandering to sins, or not rooting out sins. In a
word, either thou punishest, or He punisheth....
13. But let us see now another way in which this sentence may be
understood. There is a certain iniquity, on the worker whereof it
cannot be that God have mercy. Ye enquire, perchance, what that is? It
is the defending of sins. When a man defendeth his sins, great iniquity
he worketh: that thing he is defending which God hateth. And see how
perversely, how iniquitously. Whatever of good he hath done, to himself
he would have it to be ascribed; whatever of evil, to God. For in this
manner men defend sins in the person of God, which is a worse
sin....Therefore thou defendest thy sin in such sort, that thou layest
blame on God. So the guilty is excused, so that the Judge may be
charged. However on men working iniquity God hath no pity at all.
14. "Let them be converted at the evening" (ver. 6). Of certain men he
is speaking that were once workers of iniquity, and once darkness,
being converted in the evening. What is, "in the evening"? Afterward.
What is "at the evening"? Later. For before, before that they crucified
Christ, they ought to have acknowledged their Physician. Wherefore,
when He had been crucified--rising again, into Heaven ascending--after
that He sent His Holy Spirit, wherewith were fulfilled they that were
in one house, and they began to speak with the tongues of all nations,
there feared the crucifiers of Christ; they were pricked through with
their consciences, they besought counsel of safety from the Apostles,
they heard, "Repent, and be baptized each one of you in the name of our
Lord Jesus Christ, and your sins shall be remitted unto you." [2250]
After the slaying of Christ, after the shedding of the blood of Christ,
remitted are your sins...."Let these be converted," therefore, they
also "at evening." Let them yearn for the grace of God, perceive
themselves to be sinners; let those strong men be made weak, those rich
men be made poor, those just men acknowledge themselves sinners, those
lions be made dogs. "Let them be converted at evening, and suffer
hunger as dogs. And they shall go around the city." What city? That
world, which in certain places the Scripture calleth "the city of
standing round:" [2251] that is, because in all nations everywhere the
world had encompassed the one nation of Jews, where such words were
being spoken, and it was called "the city of standing round." Around
this city shall go those men, now having become hungry dogs. In what
manner shall they go around? By preaching. Saul out of a wolf was made
a dog at evening, that is, being late converted by the crumbs of his
Lord, in His grace he ran, and went around the city. [2252]
15. "Behold, themselves shall speak in their mouth, and a sword is on
the lips of them" (ver. 7). Here is that sword twice whetted, whereof
the Apostle saith, "And the sword of the Spirit, which is the Word of
God." [2253] Wherefore twice whetted? Wherefore, but because smiting
out of both Testaments? With this sword were slain those whereof it was
said to Peter, "Slay, and eat." [2254] "And a sword is on the lips of
them. For who hath heard?" They all speak in their mouth, "Who hath
heard?" That is, they shall be wroth with men that are slow to believe.
They that a little before were even themselves unwilling to believe, do
feel disgust from men not believing. And truly, brethren, so it is.
Thou seest a man slow before he is made a Christian; thou criest to him
daily, hardly he is converted: suppose him to be converted, and then he
would have all men to be Christians, and wondereth that not yet they
are. It hath chanced out to him at evening to have been converted: but
because he hath been made hungering like a dog, he hath also on his
lips a sword; he saith, "Who hath heard?" What is, "Who hath heard?"
"Who hath believed our hearing, and to whom hath the arm of the Lord
been revealed?" [2255] "For who hath heard?" The Jews believe not: they
have turned them to the nations, and have preached. The Jews did not
believe; and nevertheless through believing Jews the Gospel went around
the city, and they said, "For who hath heard?" "And Thou, Lord, shall
deride them" (ver. 8). All nations are to be Christian, and ye say,
"Who hath heard?" What is, "shall deride them"? "As nothing Thou shalt
esteem all nations." Nothing for Thee it shall be; because a most easy
thing it will be for all nations to believe in Thee.
16. "My strength to Thee I will keep" (ver. 9). For those strong men
have fallen for this reason; because their strength to Thee they have
not kept: that is, they that upon me have risen up and rushed, on
themselves have relied. But I "my strength to Thee will keep:" because
if I withdraw, I fall; if I draw near, stronger I am made. For see,
brethren, what there is in a human soul. It hath not of itself light,
hath not of itself powers: but all that is fair in a soul, is virtue
and wisdom: but it neither is wise for itself, nor strong for itself,
nor itself is light to itself, nor itself is virtue to itself. There is
a certain origin and fountain of virtue, there is a certain root of
wisdom, there is a certain, so to speak, if this also must be said,
region of unchangeable truth: from this the soul withdrawing is made
dark, drawing near is made light. [2256] "Draw near to Him, and be made
light:" because by withdrawing ye are made dark. Therefore, "my
strength, I will keep to Thee:" not from Thee will I withdraw, not on
myself will I rely. "My strength, to Thee I will keep: because, O God,
my lifter up [2257] Thou art." For where was I, and where am I? Whence
hast Thou taken me up? What iniquities of mine hast Thou remitted?
Where was I lying? To what have I been raised up? I ought to have
remembered these things: because in another Psalm is said, "For my
father and my mother have forsaken me, but the Lord hath taken me unto
Him." [2258]
17. "My God, the mercy of Him shall [2259] come before me" (ver. 10).
Behold what is, "My strength, to Thee I will keep:" on myself I will in
no ways at all rely. For what good thing have I brought, that thou
shouldest have mercy on me, and shouldest justify me? What in me hast
Thou found, save sins alone? Of Thine there is nothing else but the
nature which Thou hast created: the other things are mine own evil
things which Thou hast blotted out. I have not first risen up to Thee,
but to awake me Thou hast come: for "His mercy shall come before me."
Before that anything of good I shall do, "His mercy shall come before
me." What answer here shall the unhappy Pelagius make? "My God hath
shown to me among mine enemies" (ver. 11). How great mercy He hath put
forth concerning me, among mine enemies He hath showed. Let one
gathered compare himself with men forsaken, and one elect with men
rejected: let the vessel of mercy compare itself with the vessels of
wrath; and let it see how out of one lump God hath made one vessel unto
honour, another unto dishonour.
"For so God, willing to show wrath, and to manifest His power, hath
brought in, in much patience, the vessels of wrath, which have been
perfected unto perdition." [2260] And wherefore this? "In order that He
might make known His riches upon the vessels of mercy." If therefore
vessels of wrath He hath brought in, wherein He might make known His
riches upon the vessels of mercy, most rightly hath been said, "His
mercy shall come before me: My God hath showed to me among mine
enemies:" that is however great mercy He hath had concerning me, to me
He hath showed it among these men concerning whom He hath not had
mercy. For unless the debtor be in suspense, he is less grateful to him
by whom the debt hath been forgiven. "My God hath showed to me among
mine enemies."
18. But of the enemies themselves what? "Slay them not, lest sometime
they forget Thy law." He is making request for his enemies, he is
fulfilling the commandment....Slay not them of whom the sins Thou
slayest. But what is it to be slain? To forget the law of the Lord. It
is real death, to go into the pit of sin; this indeed may be also
understood of the Jews. Why of the Jews, "Slay not them, lest sometime
they forget Thy law"? Those very enemies of mine, that have slain me,
do not Thou slay. Let the nation of the Jews remain: certes conquered
it hath been by the Romans, certes effaced is the city of them, Jews
are not admitted into their city, and yet Jews there are. For all those
provinces by the Romans have been subjugated. Who now can distinguish
the nations in the Roman empire the one from the other, inasmuch as all
have become Romans and all are called Romans? The Jews nevertheless
remain with a mark; nor in such sort conquered have they been, as that
by the conquerors they have been swallowed up. Not without reason is
there that Cain, on whom, when he had slain his brother, God set a mark
in order that no one should slay him. [2261] This is the mark which the
Jews have: they hold fast by the remnant of their law, they are
circumcised, they keep Sabbaths, they sacrifice the Passover; they eat
unleavened bread. These are therefore Jews, they have not been slain,
they are necessary to believing nations. Why so? In order that He may
show to us among our enemies His mercy. "My God hath shown to me in
mine enemies." He showeth His mercy to the wild-olive grafted on
branches that have been cut off because of pride. Behold where they
lie, that were proud, behold where thou hast been grafted, that didst
lie: and be not thou proud, lest thou shouldest deserve to be cut off.
19. "Scatter them abroad in Thy virtue" (ver. 11). Now this thing hath
been done: throughout all nations there have been scattered abroad the
Jews, witnesses of their own iniquity and our truth. They have
themselves writings, out of which hath been prophesied Christ, and we
hold Christ. And if sometime perchance any heathen man shall have
doubted, when we have told him the prophecies of Christ, at the
clearness whereof he is amazed, and wondering hath supposed that they
were written by ourselves, then out of the copies of the Jews we prove,
how this thing so long time before had been foretold. See after what
sort by means of our enemies we confound other enemies. "Scatter them
abroad in Thy virtue:" take away from them "virtue," take away from
them their strength. "And bring them down, my protector, O Lord." "The
transgressions of their mouth, the discourse of their lips: and let
them be taken in their pride: and out of cursing and lying shall be
declared consummations, in the anger of consummation, and they shall
not be" (ver. 12). Obscure words these are, and I fear lest they be not
well instilled....
__________________________________________________________________
[2217] Lat. LVIII. Delivered after the discovery of the error of
Pelagius.
[2218] Sacramenti.
[2219] Matt. xxvii. 37.
[2220] John xix. 20.
[2221] John xix. 21.
[2222] 1 Tim. ii. 5.
[2223] 1 Cor. xii. 27.
[2224] Matt. xxvii. 66.
[2225] 1 Sam. xix. 11.
[2226] Matt. xxvii. 23.
[2227] Matt. xxvii. 25.
[2228] Acts vii. 58.
[2229] Ps. lxxi. 11.
[2230] Matt. xii. 29.
[2231] Perhaps "doth not that man."
[2232] Luke xii. 16.
[2233] Matt. ix. 11.
[2234] John vii. 45-49.
[2235] Oxf. mss. "and how far they were righteous and raging against
one unrighteous" (et quam justi contra iniquum saevierint). The common
reading is scarcely grammatical.
[2236] Gen. xxii. 12.
[2237] Matt. xxvi. 35-69.
[2238] Matt. xxiii. 37.
[2239] Isa. liv. 1.
[2240] "Hangings" some mss.
[2241] Isa. liv. 2.
[2242] Matt. xxv. 33.
[2243] Matt. iii. 12.
[2244] Matt. xxii. 9.
[2245] Isa. liv. 3.
[2246] 1 John iii. 4.
[2247] Ps. cxxx. 3.
[2248] Acts ix. 1.
[2249] 1 Tim. i. 13.
[2250] Acts ii. 38.
[2251] E.V. "strong city." Ps. xxxi. 21, lx. 9, cviii. 10.
[2252] Acts ix. 1, 20.
[2253] Eph. vi. 17.
[2254] Acts x. 13.
[2255] Isa. liii. 1.
[2256] Ps. xxxiv. 5.
[2257] Or, "taker up."
[2258] Ps. xxvii. 10.
[2259] Or, "prevent."
[2260] Rom. ix. 22.
[2261] Gen. iv. 15.
__________________________________________________________________
The Second Part.
1. For, behold, the Jews are enemies, whom this Psalm seemeth to imply;
the law of God they hold, and therefore of them hath been said, "Slay
not them, lest sometime they forget Thy law:" in order that the nation
of Jews might remain, and by it remaining the number of Christians
might increase. Throughout all nations they remain certainly, and Jews
they are, nor have they ceased to be what they were: that is, this
nation hath not so yielded to Roman institutions, as to have lost the
form of Jews; but hath been subjected to the Romans so as that it still
retaineth its own laws; which are the laws of God. But what in their
case hath been done? "Ye tithe mint and cummin, and have forsaken the
weightier matters of the law, mercy, and judgment, straining a gnat,
but swallowing a camel." [2262] This to them the Lord saith. And in
truth so they are; they hold the law, hold the Prophets; read all
things, sing all things: the light of the Prophets therein they see
not, which is Christ Jesus. Not only Him now they see not, when he is
sitting in Heaven: but not even at that time saw they Him, when among
them humble He was walking, and they were made guilty by shedding the
blood of the Same; but not all. This even to-day we commend to the
notice of your Love. Not all: because many of them were turned to Him
whom they slew, and by believing on Him, they obtained pardon even for
the shedding of His blood: and they have given an example for men; how
they ought not to despair that sin of whatsoever kind would be remitted
to them, since even the killing of Christ was remitted to them
confessing....
2. What in them wilt Thou slay? The Crucify, Crucify, [2263] which they
cried out, not them that cried out. For they willed to blot out, cut
off, destroy Christ: but Thou, by raising to life Christ, whom they
willed to destroy, dost slay the "transgressions of their mouth, the
discourse of their lips." For in that He whom they cried out should be
destroyed, liveth, they are taken with dread: and that He whom on earth
they despised, in heaven is adored by all nations, they wonder: thus
are there slain the transgressions of them, and the discourse of their
lips. What is, "let them be taken in their pride"? Because to no
purpose have strong men rushed on, and it hath fallen out to them as it
were to think themselves to have done somewhat, and they have prevailed
against the Lord. They were able to crucify a man, weakness might
prevail and virtue [2264] be slain; and they thought themselves
somewhat, as it were strong men, as it were mighty men, as it were
prevailing, as it were a lion prepared for prey, as it were fat bulls,
as of them in another place he maketh mention: "Fat bulls have beset
me." [2265] But what have they done in the case of Christ? Not life,
but death they have slain....And what now hath come to pass in those
men that have been converted? For it was told to them that He whom they
slew rose again. They believed Him to have risen again, because they
saw that He, being in Heaven, thence sent the Holy Spirit, and filled
those that on Him believed; and they found themselves to have condemned
nought, and to have done nought. Their doing issued in emptiness, the
sin remained. Because therefore the doing was made void, but the sin
remained upon the doers; they were taken in their pride, they saw
themselves under their iniquity. [2266] It remained therefore for them
to confess the sin, and for Him to pardon, that had given Himself up to
sinners, and to forgive His death, having been slain by men dead, and
making alive men dead. They were taken therefore in their pride.
3. "And out of cursing and lying shall be declared consummations, in
anger of consummation, and they shall not be." This too with difficulty
is understood, to what is joined the "and they shall not be." What
shall they not be? Let us therefore examine the context above: when
they shall have been taken in their pride, "there shall be declared out
of cursing and lying consummations." What are consummations?
Perfections: for to be consummated, is to be perfected. One thing it is
to be consummated, another thing to be consumed. For a thing is
consummated which is so finished as that it is perfected: a thing is
consumed which is so finished that it is not. Pride would not suffer a
man to be perfected, nothing so much hindereth perfection. For let your
Love attend a little to what I am saying; and see an evil very
pernicious, very much to be guarded against. What sort of evil do ye
think it is? How long could I enlarge upon how much evil there is in
pride? The devil on that account alone is to be punished. Certes he is
the chief of all sinners: certes he is the tempter to sin: to him is
not ascribed adultery, not wine-bibbing, not fornication, not the
robbing of others' goods: by pride alone he fell. And since pride's
companion is envy, it must needs be that a proud man should envy....In
a word, all vices in evil-doings are to be feared, pride in well-doings
is more to be feared. It is no wonder, then, that so humble is the
Apostle, as to say, "When I am made weak, then I am strong." [2267] For
lest he should himself be tempted by this sin, what sort of medicine
doth he say was applied to him against swelling by the Physician, who
knew what He was healing? "Lest by the greatness," he saith, "of the
revelations I should be exalted, there was given to me a thorn of my
flesh, the angel of Satan, to buffet me: wherefore thrice the Lord I
besought, that it should depart from me: and He said to me, My grace is
sufficient for thee, for virtue in weakness is made perfect." [2268]
See what the consummations are. An Apostle, the teacher of Gentiles,
father of the faithful through the Gospel, received a thorn of the
flesh whereby he might be buffeted. Which of us would dare to say this,
unless he had not been ashamed to confess this? For if we shall have
said that Paul had not suffered this; while to him as it were honour we
give, a liar we make him. But because truthful he is, and truth he hath
spoken; it behoveth us to believe that there was given to him an angel
of Satan, lest by the greatness of the revelations he should be
exalted. Behold how much to be feared is the serpent of pride....
4. What is, "in the anger of consummation shall be declared
consummations"? There is an anger of consummation, and there is an
anger of consuming. For every vengeance of God is called anger:
sometimes God avengeth, to the end that He may make perfect; sometimes
He avengeth, to the end that He may condemn. How doth He avenge, to the
end that He may make perfect? "He scourgeth every son whom He
receiveth." [2269] How doth He avenge, to the end that He may condemn?
When He shall have set ungodly men on the left hand, and shall have
said to them, "Go ye into fire everlasting, that hath been prepared for
the devil and his angels." [2270] This is the anger of consuming, not
that of consummation. But "there shall be declared consummations in the
anger of consummation;" it shall be preached by the Apostles, that
"where sin hath abounded, grace shall much more abound," [2271] and the
weakness of man hath belonged to the healing of humility. Those men
thinking of this, and finding out and confessing their iniquities,
"shall not be." "Shall not be" what? In their pride.
5. "And they shall know how God shall have dominion of Jacob, and of
the ends of the earth" (ver. 13). For before they thought themselves
just men, because the Jewish nation had received the Law, because it
had kept the commandments of God: it is proved to them that it hath not
kept them, since in the very commandments of God Christ it perceived
not, because "blindness in part has happened to Israel." [2272] Even
the Jews themselves see that they ought not to despise the Gentiles, of
whom they deemed as of dogs and sinners. For just as alike they have
been found in iniquity, so alike they will attain unto salvation. "Not
only to Jews," saith the Apostle, "but also even to Gentiles." [2273]
For to this end the Stone which the builders set at nought, hath even
been made for the Head of the corner, [2274] in order that two in
itself It might join: for a corner doth unite two walls. The Jews
thought themselves exalted and great: of the Gentiles they thought as
weak, as sinners, as the servants of demons, as the worshippers of
idols, and yet in both was there iniquity. Even the Jews have been
proved sinners; because "there is none that doeth good, there is not
even so much as one:" [2275] they have laid down their pride, and have
not envied the salvation of the Gentiles, because they have known their
own and their weakness to be alike: and in the Corner Stone being
united, they have together worshipped the Lord....
6. "They shall be converted at evening" (ver. 14): that is, even if
late, that is, after the slaying of our Lord Jesus Christ: "They shall
be converted at evening: and hereafter they shall suffer hunger as
dogs." But "as dogs," not as sheep or calves: "as dogs," as Gentiles,
as sinners; because they too have known their sin that thought
themselves righteous....It is a good thing therefore for a sinner to be
humbled; and no one is more incurable than he that thinketh himself
whole. "And they shall go around the city." Already we have explained
"city;" [2276] it is the "city of standing round;" all nations.
7. "They shall be scattered abroad in order that they may eat" (ver.
15); that is, in order that they may gain others, in order that into
their Body they may change believers. "But if they shall not be filled,
they shall murmur." Because above also he had spoken of the murmur of
them, saying, "For who hath heard?" "And Thou, O Lord," he saith,
"shall deride them, saying, Who hath heard?" [2277] Wherefore? Because,
as nothing Thou shall count all nations. Let the Psalm be concluded.
See ye the Corner [2278] exulting, now with both walls rejoicing. The
Jews were proud, humbled they have been; Gentiles were despairing,
raised up they have been: let them come to the Corner, there let them
meet, there run together, there find the kiss of peace; from different
parts let them come, but with differing not come, those of
Circumcision, these of uncircumcision. Far apart were the walls, but
before that to the Corner they came: but in the Corner let them hold
themselves, and now let the whole Church from both walls, say what?
"But I will sing of Thy power, and I will exult in the morning of Thy
mercy" (ver. 16). In the morning when temptations have been overcome,
in the morning when the night of this world shall have passed away; in
the morning when no longer the lyings in wait of robbers and of the
devil and of his angels we dread, in the morning when no longer by the
lamp of prophecy we walk, but Himself the Word of God as it were a Sun
we contemplate. "And I will exult in the morning of Thy mercy." With
reason in another Psalm is said, "In the morning I will stand by Thee,
and I will meditate." [2279] With reason also of the Lord Himself the
Resurrection was at dawn, that there should be fulfilled that which
hath been said in another Psalm, "In the evening shall tarry weeping
and in the morning exultation." [2280] For at even the disciples
mourned our Lord Jesus Christ as dead, at dawn at Him rising again they
exulted. "For Thou hast become my taker up, and my refuge in the day of
my tribulation."
8. "My Helper, to Thee I will play, because Thou, O God, art my taker
up" (ver. 17). What was I, unless Thou didst succour? How much
despaired of was I, unless Thou didst heal? Where was I lying, unless
Thou didst come to me? Certes with a huge wound I was endangered, but
that wound of mine did call for an Almighty Physician. To an Almighty
Physician nothing is incurable....Lastly, thinking of all good things
whatsoever we may have, either in nature or in purpose, or in
conversion itself, in faith, in hope, in charity, in good morals, in
justice, in fear of God; all these to be only by His gifts, he hath
thus concluded: "My God is my mercy:" He being filled with the good
things of God hath not found what he might call his God, save "his
mercy." O name, under which no one must despair! If thou say, my
salvation, I perceive that He giveth salvation; if thou say, my refuge,
I perceive that thou takest refuge in Him; if thou say, my strength, I
perceive that He giveth to thee strength: "my mercy," is what? All that
I am is of Thy mercy....
__________________________________________________________________
[2262] Matt. xxiii. 23, 24.
[2263] Matt. xxvii. 23; John xix. 5.
[2264] Or, "strength."
[2265] Ps. xxii. 12.
[2266] Acts i. 9, ii. 4, 37.
[2267] 2 Cor. xii. 10.
[2268] 2 Cor. xii. 7-9.
[2269] Heb. xii. 6.
[2270] Matt. xxv. 41.
[2271] Rom. v. 20.
[2272] Rom. xi. 25.
[2273] Rom. ii. 10.
[2274] Ps. cxviii. 22.
[2275] Ps. xiv. 3.
[2276] See p. 240, note 2.
[2277] Ps. lix. 7.
[2278] Eph. ii. 20.
[2279] Ps. v. 3.
[2280] Ps. xxx. 5.
__________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm LX. [2281]
1. David the king was one man, but not one man he figured; sometimes to
wit he figured the Church of many men consisting, extended even unto
the ends of the earth: but sometimes One Man he figured, Him he figured
that is Mediator of God and men, the Man Christ Jesus. [2282] In this
Psalm therefore, or rather in this Psalm's title, certain victorious
actions of David are spoken of:..."To the end, in behalf of those men
that shall be changed unto the title's inscription, unto teaching for
David himself, when he burned up Mesopotamia in Syria, and Syria Sobal,
and turned Joab, and smote Edom, in the valley of salt-pits twelve
thousand." We read of these things in the books of the Reigns, [2283]
that all those persons whom he hath named, were defeated by David, that
is, Mesopotamia in Syria, and Syria Sobal, Joab, [2284] Edom. These
things were done, and just as they were done, so there they have been
written, so they are read: let him read that will. Nevertheless, as the
Prophetic Spirit in the Psalms' titles is wont to depart somewhat from
the expression of things done, and to say something which in history is
not found, and hence rather to admonish us that titles of this kind
have been written not that we may know things done, but that things
future may be prefigured....But here this thing is inserted for this
especial reason, that there it is not written [2285] that he burned up
Mesopotamia in Syria, and Syria Sobal. But now let us begin to examine
these things after the significations of things future, and to bring
out the dimness of shadows into the light of the word.
2. What is "to the end" ye know. For "the end of the law is Christ."
[2286] Those that are changed ye know. For who but they that do pass
from old life into new?..."For ye were sometime darkness, but now light
in the Lord." [2287] But they are changed "into the title's
inscription,"...who into the kingdom of Christ do pass over from the
kingdom of the devil. It is well that they are changed unto this
title's inscription. But they are changed, as followeth, "unto
teaching." He added, "for David himself unto teaching:" that is, are
changed not for themselves, but for David himself, and are changed unto
teaching....When therefore would Christ have changed us, unless He had
done that which He spake of, "Fire I have come to send into the world"?
[2288] If therefore Christ came to send into the world fire, to wit to
its health and profit, we must inquire not how He is to send the world
into fire, but how into the world fire. Inasmuch as therefore He came
to send fire into the world, let us inquire what is Mesopotamia which
was burned up, what is Syria Sobal? The interpretations therefore of
the names let us examine according to the Hebrew language, wherein
first this Scripture was written. Mesopotamia [2289] they say is
interpreted, "exalted calling." Now the whole world by calling hath
been exalted, Syria [2290] is interpreted "lofty." But she which was
lofty, burned up hath been and humbled. Sobal is interpreted "empty
antiquity." Thanks to Christ that hath burned her. Whenever old bushes
are burned up, green places succeed; and more speedily and more
plentifully, and more fully green, fresh ones spring out, when fire
hath gone before them to the burning up of the old. Let not therefore
the fire of Christ be feared, hay it consumeth. "For all flesh is hay,
and all the glory of man as flower of hay." [2291] He burneth up
therefore those things with that fire. "And turned Joab." Joab is
interpreted enemy. There was turned an enemy, as thou wilt understand
it. If turned unto flight, the devil it is: if converted to the faith,
a Christian it is. How unto flight? From the heart of a Christian: "The
Prince of this world," He saith, "now hath been cast out." [2292] But
how can a Christian turned to the Lord be an enemy turned? Because he
hath become a believer that had been an enemy. "Smote Edom." Edom is
interpreted "earthly." That earthly one ought to be smitten. For why
should one live earthly, that ought to live heavenly? There hath been
slain therefore life earthly, let there live life heavenly. "For as we
have borne the image of the earthly, let us bear also the image of Him
that is from Heaven." [2293] See it slain: "Mortify your members which
are upon earth." [2294] But when he had smitten Edom, he smote "twelve
thousand in the valley of salt-pits." Twelve thousand is a perfect
number, to which perfect number also the number of the twelve Apostles
is ascribed: for not to no purpose is it, but because through the whole
world was to be sent the Word. But the Word [2295] of God, which is
Christ, is in clouds, that is, in the preachers of truth. But the world
of four parts doth consist. The four parts thereof are exceeding well
known to all, and often in the Scriptures they are mentioned: they are
the same as the name of the four winds, East, West, North, and South.
To all these four parts was sent the Word, so that in the Trinity all
might be called. The number twelve four times three do make. With
reason therefore twelve thousand [2296] earthly things were smitten,
the whole world was smitten: for from the whole world was chosen out
the Church, mortified from earthly life. Why "in the valley of
salt-pits"? A valley is humility: salt-pits signify savour. For many
men are humbled, but emptily and foolishly, in empty oldness they are
humbled. One suffereth tribulation for money, suffereth tribulation for
temporal honour, suffereth tribulation for the comforts of this life;
he is to suffer tribulation and to be humbled: why not for the sake of
God? why not for the sake of Christ? why not for the savour of salt?
Knowest thou not that to thee hath been said, "Ye are the salt of
earth," and, "If the salt shall have been spoiled, for no other thing
will it be of use, but to be cast out"? [2297] A good thing it is
therefore wisely to be humbled. Behold now are not heretics being
humbled? Have not laws been made even by men to condemn them, against
whom divine laws do reign, which even before had condemned them? Behold
they are humbled, behold they are put to flight, behold persecution
they suffer, but without savour; for folly, for emptiness. For now the
salt hath been spoiled: therefore it hath been cast out, to be trodden
down of men. We have heard the title of the Psalm, let us hear also the
words of the Psalm.
3. "God, Thou hast driven us back, and hast destroyed us" (ver. 1). Is
that David speaking that smote, that burned up, that defeated, and not
they to whom He did these things, that is to say, their being smitten
and driven back, that were evil men, and again their being made alive
and returning in order that they might be good men? That destruction
indeed that David made, strong of hand, our Christ, whose figure that
man was bearing; He did those things, He made this destruction with His
sword and with His fire: for both He brought into this world. Both
"Fire I am come to send into the world," [2298] thou hast in the
Gospel: and "A sword I have come to send into the earth," [2299] thou
hast in the Gospel. He brought in fire, whereby might be burned up
Mesopotamia in Syria, and Syria Sobal: He brought in a sword whereby
might be smitten Edom. Now again this destruction was made for the sake
of "those that are changed unto the title's inscription." Hear we
therefore the voice of them: to their health smitten they were, being
raised up let them speak. Let them say, therefore, that are changed
into something better, changed unto the title's inscription, changed
unto teaching for David himself; let them say, "Thou hast had mercy
upon us." Thou hast destroyed us, in order that Thou mightest build us;
Thou hast destroyed us that were ill builded, hast destroyed empty
oldness; in order that there may be a building unto a new man, building
to abide for everlasting....
4. "Thou hast moved the earth, and hast troubled it" (ver. 2). How hath
the earth been troubled? In the conscience of sinners. Whither go we?
Whither flee we, when this sword hath been brandished, "Repent, for
near hath drawn the kingdom of Heaven"? [2300] "Heal the crushings
[2301] thereof, for moved it hath been." Unworthy it is to be healed,
if moved it hath not been: but thou speakest, preachest, threatenest us
with God, of coming judgment holdest not thy peace, of the commandment
of God thou warnest, from these things thou abstainest not; and he that
heareth, if he feareth not, if he is not moved, is not worthy to be
healed. Another heareth, is moved, is stung, smiteth the breast,
sheddeth tears....
5. The first labour is, that thou shouldest be displeasing to thyself,
that sins thou shouldest battle out, that thou shouldest be changed
into something better: the second labour, in return for thy having been
changed, is to bear the tribulations and temptations of this world, and
amid them to hold on even unto the end. Of these things therefore when
he was speaking, while pointing out such things, he addeth what? "Thou
hast shown to Thy people hard things" (ver. 3): to Thy people now, made
tributary after the victory of David. "Thou hast shown to Thy people
hard things." Wherein? In persecutions which the Church of Christ hath
endured, when so much blood of martyrs was spilled. "Thou hast given us
to drink of the wine of goading." "Of goading" is what? Not of killing.
For it was not a killing that destroyeth, but a medicine that smarteth.
[2302] "Thou hast given us to drink of the wine of goading."
6. Wherefore this? "Thou hast given to men fearing Thee, a sign that
they should flee from the face of the bow" (ver. 4). Through
tribulations temporal, he saith, Thou hast signified to Thine own to
flee from the wrath of fire everlasting. For, saith the Apostle Peter,
"Time it is that Judgment begin with the House of God." [2303] And
exhorting the Martyrs to endurance, when the world should rage, when
slaughters should be made at the hands of persecutors, when far and
wide blood of believers should be spilled, when in chains, in prisons,
in tortures, many hard things Christians should suffer, in these hard
things, I say, lest they should faint, Peter saith to them, "Time it is
that Judgment begin with the House of God," etc. [2304] What therefore
is to be in the Judgment? The bow is bended, still in menacing posture
it is, not yet in aiming. And see what there is in the bow: is there
not an arrow to be shot forward? The string however is stretched back
in a contrary direction to that in which it is going to be shot; and
the more the stretching thereof hath gone backward, with the greater
swiftness it starteth forward. What is it that I have said? The more
the Judgment is deferred, with so much the greater swiftness it is to
come. Therefore even for temporal tribulations to God let us render
thanks, because He hath given to His people a sign, "that they should
flee from the face of the bow:" in order that His faithful ones having
been exercised in tribulations temporal, may be worthy to avoid the
condemnation of fire everlasting, which is to find out all them that do
not believe these things.
7. "That Thy beloved may be delivered: save me with Thy right hand, and
hearken unto me" (ver. 5). With Thy right hand save me, Lord: so save
me as that at the right hand I may stand. Not any safety temporal I
require, in this matter Thy Will be done. For a time what is good for
us we are utterly ignorant: for "what we should pray for as we ought we
know not:" [2305] but "save me with Thy right hand," so that even if in
this time I suffer sundry tribulations, when the night of all
tribulations hath been spent, on the right hand I may be found among
the sheep, not on the left hand among the goats. [2306] "And hearken
unto me." Because now I am deserving that which Thou art willing to
give; not "with the words of my transgressions" I am crying through the
day, so that Thou hearken not, and "in the night so that Thou hearken
not," [2307] and that not for folly to me," but truly for my warning,
by adding savour from the valley of salt-pits, so that in tribulation I
may know what to ask: but I ask life everlasting; therefore hearken
unto me, because Thy right hand I ask....
8. "God hath spoken in His Holy One" (ver. 6)....In what Holy One of
His? "God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself." [2308] In
that Holy One, of whom elsewhere ye have heard, "O God, in the Holy One
is Thy way." [2309] "I will rejoice and will divide Sichima....and the
valley of tabernacles I will measure out." Sichima is interpreted
shoulders. But according to history, Jacob returning from Laban his
father-in-law with all his kindred, hid the idols in Sichima [2310]
which he had from Syria, where for a long time he had dwelled, and at
length was coming from thence. But tabernacles he made there because of
his sheep and herds, and called the place Tabernacles. [2311] And these
I will divide, saith the Church. What is this, "I will divide Sichima"?
If to the story where the idols were hidden is the reference, the
Gentiles it signifieth; I divide the Gentiles. I divide, is what? "For
not in all men is there faith." [2312] I divide, is what? Some will
believe, others will not believe....The shoulders are divided, in order
that their sins may burthen some men, while others may take up the
burden of Christ. For godly shoulders He was requiring when He said,
"For My yoke is gentle, and My burden is light." [2313] Another burden
oppresseth and loadeth thee, but Christ's burden relieveth thee:
another burden hath weight, Christ's burden hath wings. For even if
thou pull off the wings from a bird, thou dost remove a kind of weight;
and the more weight thou hast taken away, the more on earth it will
abide. She that thou hast chosen to disburden lieth there: she flieth
not, because thou hast taken off a weight: let there be given back the
weight, and she flieth. Such is Christ's burden; let men carry it, and
not be idle: let them not be heeded that will not bear it; let them
bear it that will, and they shall find how light it is, how sweet, how
pleasant, how ravishing unto Heaven, and from earth how
transporting....Perchance because of the sheep of Jacob, "the valley of
Tabernacles" is to be understood of the nation of the Jews, and the
same is divided: for they have passed from thence that have believed,
the rest have remained without.
9. "Mine is Galaad" (ver. 7). These names are read in the Scriptures of
God. Galaad hath the voice of an interpretation of its own and of a
great Mystery: for it is interpreted "the heap of testimony." How great
a heap of testimony in the Martyrs? "Mine is Galaad," mine is a heap of
testimony, mine are the true Martyrs....Then meanly esteemed was the
Church among men, then reproach on Her a Widow was being thrown,
because Christ's She was, because the sign of the Cross on her brow She
was wearing: not yet was there honour, censure there was then: when
therefore not honour, but censure there was, then was made a heap of
witness; and through the heap of witness was the Love of Christ
enlarged; and through the enlargement of the Love of Christ, were the
Gentiles possessed. There followeth, "And mine is Manasses;" which is
interpreted forgotten. For to Her had been said, "Confusion for
everlasting Thou shalt forget, and of the reproach of Thy widowhood
Thou shalt not be mindful." [2314] There was therefore a confusion of
the Church once, which now hath been forgotten: for of Her confusion
and of the "reproach" of Her widowhood now She is not mindful. For when
there was a sort of confusion among men, a heap of witness was made.
Now no longer doth any even remember that confusion, when it was a
reproach to be a Christian, now no one remembereth, now all have
forgotten, now "Mine is Manasses, and Ephraim the strength of My head."
Ephraim is interpreted fruitfulness. Mine, he saith, is fruitfulness,
and this fruitfulness is the strength of My Head. For My Head is
Christ. And whence is fruitfulness the strength of Him? Because unless
a grain were to fall into the earth, it would not be multiplied, alone
it would remain. [2315] Fall then to earth did Christ in His Passion,
and there followed fruit-bearing in the Resurrection. He was hanging
and was being despised: the grain was within, it had powers to draw
after it all things. How in a grain do numbers of seeds lie hid,
something abject it appeareth to the eyes, but a power [2316] turning
into itself matter and bringing forth fruit is hidden; so in Christ's
Cross virtue [2317] was hidden, there appeared weakness. O mighty
grain! Doubtless weak is He that hangeth, Doubtless before Him that
people did wag the head, Doubtless they said, "If Son of God He is, let
Him come down from the Cross." [2318] Hear the strength of Him: that
which is a weak thing of God, is stronger than men. [2319] With reason
so great fruitfulness hath followed: it is mine, saith the Church.
10. "Juda is my king: Moab the pot of my hope" (ver. 7). What Juda? He
that is of the tribe of Juda. What Juda, but He to whom Jacob himself
said, "Juda, thy brethren shall praise thee"? [2320] What therefore
should I fear, when Juda my king saith, "Fear not them that kill the
body"? [2321] "Moab the pot of my hope." Wherefore "pot"? Because
tribulation. Wherefore "of my hope"? Because there hath gone before
Juda my king....Moab is perceived in the Gentiles. For that nation was
born of sin, [2322] that nation was born of the daughters of Lot, who
lay with their father drunken, abusing a father. Better were it to have
remained barren, than thus to have become mothers. But this was a kind
of figure of them that abuse the law. For do not heed that law in the
Latin language is of the feminine gender: in Greek of the masculine
gender it is: but whether it be of the feminine gender in speaking, or
of the masculine, the expression maketh no difference to the truth. For
law hath rather a masculine force, because it ruleth, is not ruled. But
moreover, the Apostle Paul saith what? "Good is the law, if any one use
it lawfully." [2323] But those daughters of Lot unlawfully used their
father. But in the same manner as good works begin to grow when a man
useth well the law: so arise evil works, when a man ill useth the law.
Furthermore, they ill using their father, that is, ill using the law,
engendered the Moabites, by whom are signified evil works. Thence the
tribulation of the Church, thence the pot boiling up. Of this pot in a
certain place of prophecy is said, "A pot heated by the North wind."
[2324] Whence but by the quarters of the devil, who hath said, "I will
set my seat at the North"? [2325] The chiefest tribulations therefore
arise against the Church from none except from those that ill use the
law....
11. "Into Idumaea I will stretch out my shoe" (ver. 8). The Church
speaketh, "I will come through even unto Idumaea." Let tribulations
rage, let the world boil with offences, even unto those very persons
that lead an earthly life (for Idumaea is interpreted earthly), even
unto those same, "even unto Idumaea, I will stretch out my shoe." Of
what thing the shoe except of the Gospel? "How beautiful the feet of
them that tell of peace, that tell of good things," [2326] and "the
feet shod unto the preparation of the Gospel of peace." [2327] ...In
these times we see, brethren, how many earthly men do perpetrate frauds
for the sake of gain, for frauds perjuries; on account of their fears
they consult fortune-tellers, astrologers: all these men are Edomites,
earthly; and nevertheless all these men adore Christ, under His own
shoe they are; now even unto Idumaea is stretched out His shoe. "To Me
Allophyli have been made subject." Who are "Allophyli"? Men of other
race, not belonging to My race. [2328] They "have been made subject,"
because many men adore Christ, and are not to reign with Christ.
12. "Who will lead Me down into the city of standing round?" (ver. 9).
What is the city of standing round? If ye remember already, I have made
mention thereof in another Psalm, [2329] wherein hath been said, "And
they shall go around the city." For the city of standing round is the
compassing around of the Gentiles, which compassing around of the
Gentiles in the middle thereof had the one nation of the Jews,
worshipping one God: the rest of the compassing around of the Gentiles
to idols made supplication, demons they did serve. And mystically it
was called the city of standing round; because on all sides the
Gentiles had poured themselves around, and had stood around that nation
which did worship one God...."Who will lead me down even unto Idumaea?"
13. "Wilt not Thou, O God, that hast driven us back? And wilt not Thou,
O God, march forth in our powers?" (ver. 10). Wilt not Thou lead us
down, that hast driven us back? But wherefore "hast driven us back"?
Because Thou hast destroyed us. [2330] Wherefore hast destroyed us?
Because angry Thou hast been, and hast had pity on us. Thou therefore
wilt lead down, that hast driven back; Thou, O God, that wilt not march
forth in our powers, wilt lead down. What is, "wilt not march forth in
our powers"? The world is to rage, the world is to tread us down, there
is to be a heap of witnesses, builded of the spilled blood of martyrs,
and the raging heathen are to say, "Where is the God of them?" [2331]
Then "Thou wilt not march forth in our powers:" against them Thou wilt
not show Thyself, Thou wilt not show Thy power, such as Thou hast shown
in David, in Moses, in Joshua the son of Nun, when to their might the
Gentiles yielded, and when the slaughter had been ended, and the great
laying waste repaired, into the land which Thou promisedst Thou leddest
in Thy people. This thing then Thou wilt not do, "Thou wilt not march
forth in our powers," but within Thou wilt work. What is, "wilt not
march forth"? Wilt not show Thyself. For indeed when in chains the
Martyrs were being led along, when they were being shut up in prison,
when they were being led forth to be mocked, when to the beasts they
were exposed, [2332] when they were being smitten with the sword, when
with fire they were being burned, were they not despised as though
forsaken, as though without helper? In what manner was God working
within? in what manner within was He comforting? in what manner to
these men was He making sweet the hope of life everlasting? in what
manner was He not forsaking the hearts of them, where the man was
dwelling [2333] in silence, well if good, ill if evil? Was He then by
any means forsaking, because He was not marching forth in the powers
[2334] of them? By not marching forth in the powers of them, did He not
the more lead down the Church even unto Idumaea, lead down the Church
even unto the city of standing around? For if the Church chose to war
and to use the sword, She would seem to be fighting for life present:
but because she was despising life present, therefore there was made a
heap of witness for the life that shall be.
14. Thou therefore, O God, that wilt not march forth in our powers,
"Give to us aid from tribulation, and vain is the safety of man" (ver.
11). Go now they that salt have not, and desire safety temporal for
their friends, which is empty oldness. "Give to us aid:" from thence
whence Thou wast supposed to forsake, thence succour. "In God we will
do valour, [2335] and Himself to nothing shall bring down our enemies"
(ver. 12). We will not do valour with the sword, not with horses, not
with breastplates, not with shields, not in the mightiness of an army,
not abroad. But where? Within, where we are not seen. Where within? "In
God we will do virtue:" and as if abjects, and as if trodden down, men
as if of no consideration we shall be, but "Himself to nothing shall
bring down our enemies." In a word, this thing hath been done to our
enemies. Trodden down have been the Martyrs: by suffering, by enduring,
by persevering even unto the end, in God they have done valour. Himself
also hath done that which followeth: to nothing He hath brought down
the enemies of them. Where are now the enemies of the Martyrs, except
perchance that now drunken men with their cups do persecute those whom
at that time frenzied men did use with stones to persecute?
__________________________________________________________________
[2281] Lat. LIX. Sermon preached to the people a little while after the
exposition of the former Psalm.
[2282] 1 Tim. ii. 5.
[2283] Vide 2 Sam. viii.
[2284] He seems to take "Joab" as in the accusative, as though it were
not the name of David's officer, but of some conquered nation.
[2285] i.e., elsewhere.
[2286] Eis to t(TM)los, LXX. Rom. x. 4.
[2287] Eph. v. 8.
[2288] Luke xii. 49.
[2289] Aram Naharaim.
[2290] Aram.
[2291] Isa. xl. 6.
[2292] John xii. 31.
[2293] 1 Cor. xv. 49.
[2294] Col. iii. 5.
[2295] Ezek. xxxvii. 9.
[2296] [See p. 181, note 12, supra.--C.]
[2297] Matt. v. 13.
[2298] Luke xii. 49.
[2299] Matt. x. 34.
[2300] Matt. iii. 2.
[2301] Contritiones.
[2302] Lit. "burneth."
[2303] 1 Pet. iv. 17.
[2304] 1 Pet. iv. 18. He quotes the whole passage.
[2305] Rom. viii. 26.
[2306] Matt. xxv. 33.
[2307] Ps. xxii. 2.
[2308] 2 Cor. v. 19.
[2309] Ps. lxxvii. 13.
[2310] Gen. xxxv. 4.
[2311] Succoth.
[2312] 2 Thess. iii. 2.
[2313] Matt. xi. 30.
[2314] Isa. liv. 4.
[2315] John xii. 24.
[2316] Vis.
[2317] Virtus.
[2318] Matt. xxvii. 40.
[2319] 1 Cor. i. 25.
[2320] Gen. xlix. 8.
[2321] Matt. x. 28.
[2322] Gen. xix. 37.
[2323] 1 Tim. i. 8.
[2324] Jer. i. 13.
[2325] Isa. xiv. 13.
[2326] Rom. x. 15.
[2327] Eph. vi. 15.
[2328] [See Ps. lvi. p. 219, supra.--C.]
[2329] VidePs. lix. 6, p. 240, supra.
[2330] Ps. lx. 1.
[2331] Ps. lxxix. 10.
[2332] Subrigebantur.
[2333] Oxf. mss. "dwelleth."
[2334] Or, "hosts" (virtutibus).
[2335] Virtutem.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm LXI. [2336]
1. The title of it doth not detain us. For it is "Unto the end, in
hymns, to David himself. "In hymns," to wit in praises. "Unto the end,"
to wit unto Christ....But the voice in this Psalm (if we are among the
members of Him, and in the Body, even as upon His exhortation we have
the boldness to trust) we ought to acknowledge to be our own, not that
of any foreigner. But I have not so called it our own, as if it were of
those only that are now in presence; but our own, as being of us that
are throughout the whole world, that are from the East even unto the
West. And in order that ye may know it thus to be our voice, He
speaketh here as if one Man: but He is not One Man; but even as One,
the Unity is speaking. But in Christ we all are one man: because of
this One Man the Head is in Heaven, and the members are yet toiling on
earth: and because they are toiling see what He saith. [2337]
2. "Hearken, O God, to my supplication, give heed to my prayer" (ver.
1). Who saith? He, as if One. See whether one: "From the ends of the
earth to Thee I have cried, while my heart was being vexed" (ver. 2).
Now therefore not one: but for this reason one, because Christ is One,
of whom all we are the members. For what one man crieth from the ends
of the earth? There crieth not from the ends of the earth any but that
inheritance, of which hath been said to the Son Himself, "Demand of Me,
and I will give to Thee the nations for Thine inheritance, and for Thy
possession the boundaries of the earth." [2338] This therefore Christ's
possession, this Christ's inheritance, this Christ's Body, this
Christ's one Church, this the Unity which we are, is crying from the
ends of the earth....But wherefore have I cried this thing? "While my
heart was being vexed." He showeth himself to be throughout all nations
in the whole round world, in great glory, but in great tribulation. For
our life in this sojourning cannot be without temptation: because our
advance is made through our temptation, nor does a man become known to
himself unless tempted, nor can he be crowned except he shall have
conquered, nor can he conquer except he shall have striven, nor can he
strive except he shall have experienced an enemy, and temptations. This
Man therefore is being vexed, that from the ends of the earth is
crying, but nevertheless He is not forsaken. For ourselves who are His
Body He hath willed to prefigure also in that His Body wherein already
He hath both died and hath risen again, and into Heaven hath ascended,
in order that whither the Head hath gone before, thither the members
may be assured that they shall follow. Therefore us He did transfer by
a figure into Himself, when He willed to be tempted of Satan.
3. But now there was read in the Gospel, how the Lord Jesus Christ in
the wilderness was being tempted of the devil. [2339] Christ entirely
was tempted of the devil. For in Christ thou wast being tempted,
because Christ of thee had for Himself flesh, of Himself for thee
salvation; of thee for Himself death, of Himself for thee life; of thee
for Himself revilings, of Himself for thee honours; therefore of thee
for Himself temptation, of Himself for thee victory. If in Him tempted
we have been, in Him we overcome the devil...."On the Rock Thou hast
exalted me." Now therefore here we perceive who is crying from the ends
of the earth. Let us call to mind the Gospel: "Upon this Rock I will
build My Church." [2340] Therefore She crieth from the ends of the
earth, whom He hath willed to be builded upon a Rock. But in order that
the Church might be builded upon the Rock, who was made the Rock? Hear
Paul saying: "But the Rock was Christ." [2341] On Him therefore builded
we have been. For this reason that Rock whereon we have been builded,
[2342] first hath been smitten with winds, flood, rain, when Christ of
the devil was being tempted. Behold on what firmness He hath willed to
stablish thee. With reason our voice is not in vain, but is hearkened
unto: for on great hope we have been set: "On the Rock Thou hast
exalted me."...
4. "Thou hast led me down, because Thou hast been made my hope: a tower
of strength from the face of the enemy" (ver. 3). My heart is vexed,
saith that Unity from the ends of the earth, and I toil amid
temptations and offences: the heathen envy, because they have been
conquered; the heretics lie in wait, hidden in the cloak of the
Christian name: within in the Church itself the wheat suffereth
violence from the chaff: amid all these things when my heart is vexed,
I will cry from the ends of the earth. But there forsaketh me not the
Same that hath exalted me upon the Rock, in order to lead me down even
unto Himself, because even if I labour, while the devil through so many
places and times and occasions lieth in wait against me, He is to me a
tower of strength, to whom when I shall have fled for refuge, not only
I shall escape the weapons of the enemy, but even against him securely
I shall myself hurl whatever darts I shall please. For Christ Himself
is the tower, Himself for us hath been made a tower from the face of
the enemy, who is also the Rock whereon hath been builded the Church.
Art thou taking heed that thou be not smitten of the devil? Flee to the
Tower; never to that tower will the devil's darts follow thee: there
thou wilt stand protected and fixed. But in what manner shalt thou flee
to the Tower? Let not a man, set perchance in temptation, in body seek
that Tower, and when he shall not have found it, be wearied, or faint
in temptation. Before thee is the Tower: call to mind Christ, and go
into the Tower. [2343] ...
5. "A sojourner I will be in Thy tabernacle even unto ages" (ver. 4).
Ye see how he, of whom we have spoken, is he that crieth. Which of us
is a sojourner even unto ages? For a few days here we live, and we pass
away: for sojourners here we are, inhabitants in Heaven we shall be.
Thou art a sojourner in that place where thou art to hear the voice of
the Lord thy God, "Remove." For from that Home everlasting in the
Heavens no one will bid thee to remove. Here therefore a sojourner thou
art. Whence also is said in another Psalm, "A sojourner I am with Thee
and a stranger, as all my fathers were." [2344] Here therefore
sojourners we are; there the Lord shall give to us mansions
everlasting: "Many are," He saith, "the mansions in My Father's house."
[2345] Those mansions not as though to sojourners He will give, but as
though to citizens to abide for everlasting. Here however, brethren,
because for no small time the Church was to be on this earth, but
because here shall be the Church even unto the end of the world: [2346]
therefore here He hath said, "A dweller I will be in Thy tabernacle
even unto ages." [2347] ...Well, of a few days thou wouldest choose
that the temptations should be: but how would She gather together all
Her sons, unless for a long time She were to be here, unless even unto
the end She were to be prolonged? Do not envy the rest of mankind that
hereafter shall be: do not, because thou hast already passed over, wish
to cut down the bridge of mercy: [2348] be it here even for ever. And
what of temptations, which needs must abound, by how much the more
offences come? For Himself saith, "Because iniquity hath abounded, the
love of many shall wax cold." [2349] But that Church, which crieth from
the ends of the earth, is in these circumstances whereof he speaketh in
continuation. "But he that shall have persevered even unto the end, the
same shall be saved." But whence shalt thou persevere?..."I shall be
covered up in the veiling of Thy wings." Behold the reason why we are
in safety amid so great temptations, until there come the end of the
world, and ages everlasting receive us; namely, because we are covered
up in the veiling of His Wings. There is heat in the world, but there
is a great shade under the wings of God.
6. "For Thou, O God, hast hearkened to my prayer" (ver. 5). What
prayer? That wherewith he beginneth: "Hearken, O God, to my
supplication."..."Thou hast given inheritance to men fearing Thy name."
Let us continue therefore in the fear of God's name: the eternal Father
deceiveth us not. Sons labour, that they may receive the inheritance of
their parents, to whom when dead they are to succeed: are we not
labouring to receive an inheritance from that Father, to whom not dying
we succeed; but together with Him in the very inheritance for
everlasting are to live?
7. "Days upon days of the King Thou shalt add to the years of Him"
(ver. 6). This is therefore the King of whom we are the members. A King
Christ is, our Head, our King. Thou hast given to Him days upon days;
not only those days in that time that hath end, but days upon those
days without end. "I will dwell," he saith, "in the house of the Lord,
for length of days." [2350] Wherefore for length of days, but because
now is the shortness of days? For everything which hath an end, is
short: but of this King are days upon days, so that not only while
these days pass away, Christ reigneth in His Church, but the Saints
shall reign together with Him in those days which have no end....For
years of God have been also spoken of: "But Thou art the very Same, and
Thy years shall not fail." [2351] In the same manner as years, so days,
so one day. Whatsoever thou wilt thou sayest of eternity. Whatever thou
wilt thou sayest for this reason, because whatever thou shalt have
said, it is too little that thou hast said. For thou must needs say
somewhat, to the end that there may be something whereby thou mayest
meditate on that which cannot be told. "Even unto the day of generation
and of generation." Of this generation and of the generation that shall
be: of this generation which is compared to the moon, because as the
moon is new, waxeth, is full, waneth, and vanisheth, so are these
mortal generations; and of the generation wherein we are born anew by
rising again, and shall abide for everlasting with God, when now no
longer we are like the moon, but like that of which saith the Lord,
"Then the righteous shall shine like the sun in the kingdom of their
Father." [2352] For the moon by a figure in the Scriptures is put for
the mutability of this mortal state....
8. "He shall abide for everlasting in the sight of God" (ver. 7);
according to what, or because of what? "His mercy and truth who shall
seek for Him?" He saith also in another place, "All the ways of the
Lord are mercy and truth, to men seeking His testament and His
testimonies." [2353] Large is the discourse of truth and mercy, but
shortness we have promised. Briefly hear ye what is truth and mercy:
because no small thing is that which hath been said, "All the ways of
the Lord are mercy and truth." Mercy is spoken of, because our merits
God regarded not, but His own goodness, in order that He might forgive
us all our sins, and might promise life everlasting: but truth is
spoken of, because He faileth not to render those things which He hath
promised. Let us acknowledge it here, and let us do it; so that, just
as to us God hath shown forth His mercy and His truth, mercy in
forgiving our sins, truth in showing forth His promises; so also, I
say, let us execute mercy and truth, mercy concerning the weak,
concerning the needy, concerning even our enemies; truth in not
sinning, and in not adding sin upon sin....Who is therefore he that
doeth this, save one out of those few, of whom is said, "He that shall
have continued unto the end, the same shall be saved"? With reason here
also "His mercy and truth who shall seek for Him?" Why is there "for
Him"? "Who shall seek," would be sufficient. Why hath he added, "for
Him," but because many men seek to learn His mercy and truth in His
books? And when they have learned, for themselves they live, not for
Him; [2354] their own things they seek, not the things which are of
Jesus Christ: [2355] they preach mercy and truth, and do not mercy and
truth. But by preaching it, they know it: for they would not preach it,
unless they knew it. But he that loveth God and Christ, in preaching
the mercy and truth of the Same, doth himself seek her for Him, not for
himself: that is, not in order that himself may have by this preaching
temporal advantages, but in order that he may do good to His members,
that is, His faithful ones, by ministering with truth of that which he
knoweth: in order that he that liveth, no longer for himself may live,
but for Him that for all men hath died. [2356]
9. "So I will play music to Thy name, that I may render my vows from
day unto day" (ver. 8). If thou playest music to the name of God, play
not for a time. Wilt thou for ever play? wilt thou for everlasting
play? Render to Him thy vows from day unto day. What is, render to Him
thy vows from day unto day? From this day unto that day. Continue to
render vows in this day, until thou come to that day: that is, "He that
shall have continued even unto the end, the same shall be saved."
[2357]
__________________________________________________________________
[2336] Lat. LX. Sermon to the Commonalty.
[2337] Or, "they say," mss.
[2338] Ps. ii. 8.
[2339] Matt. iv. 1.
[2340] Matt. xvi. 18.
[2341] 1 Cor. x. 4. [Rhetorically he may say this of Cephas; but as of
Peter's confession elsewhere, so here, dogmatically he understands only
Christ. Compare p. 223, supra.--C.]
[2342] Matt. vii. 24.
[2343] [Zech. ix. 12.--C.]
[2344] Ps. xxxix. 12.
[2345] John xiv. 2.
[2346] Saeculi.
[2347] Saecula.
[2348] Many omit "of mercy."
[2349] Matt. xxiv. 12.
[2350] Ps. xxvii. 4.
[2351] Ps. cii. 27.
[2352] Matt. xiii. 43.
[2353] Ps. xxv. 10.
[2354] 2 Cor. v. 15.
[2355] Philip. ii. 21.
[2356] 2 Cor. v. 15.
[2357] Matt. xxiv. 13.
__________________________________________________________________
Psalm LXII. [2358]
1. The title of it is, "Unto the end, in behalf of Idithun, a Psalm to
David himself." I recollect that already [2359] to you hath been
explained what Idithun is....Let us see how far he hath leaped over,
and whom he hath "leaped over," and in what place, though he hath
leaped over certain men, he is situate, whence as from a kind of
spiritual and secure position he may behold what is below....He being
set, I say, in a certain fortified place, doth say, "Shall not my soul
be subject to God?" (ver. 1). For he had heard, "He that doth exalt
himself shall be humbled; and he that humbleth himself shall be
exalted:" [2360] and fearful lest by leaping over he should be proud,
not elated by those things which were below, but humble because of Him
that was above; to envious men, as it were threatening to him a fall,
who were grieved that he had leaped over, he hath made answer, "Shall
not my soul be subject to God?"..."For from Himself is my salvation."
"For Himself is my God and my salvation, my taker up, I shall not be
moved more" (ver. 2). I know who is above me, I know who stretcheth
forth His mercy to men that know Him, I know under the coverings of
whose wings I should hope: "I shall not be moved more."...
2. Therefore, down from the higher place fortified and protected, he,
to whom the Lord hath been made a refuge, he, to whom is God Himself
for a fortified place, [2361] hath regard to those whom he hath leaped
over, and looking down upon them speaketh as though from a lofty tower:
for this also hath been said of Him, "A Tower of strength from the face
of the enemy:" [2362] he giveth heed therefore to them, and saith, "How
long do ye lay upon a man?" (ver. 3). By insulting, by hurling
reproaches, by laying wait, by persecuting, ye lay upon a man burthens,
ye lay upon a man as much as a man can bear: [2363] but in order that a
man may bear, under him is He that hath made man. If to a man ye look,
"slay ye, all of you." Behold, lay upon, rage, "slay ye, all of you."
"As though a wall bowed down, and as a fence smitten against;" lean
against, smite against, as if going to throw down. And where is, "I
shall not be moved more"? But wherefore? "I shall not be moved more."
Because Himself is God my Saving One, my taker up, therefore ye men are
able to lay burdens upon a man; can ye anywise lay upon God, who
protecteth man? "Slay ye, all of you." What is that size of body in one
man so great as that he may be slain by all? But we ought to perceive
our person, the person of the Church, the person of the Body of Christ.
For one Man with His Head and Body is Jesus Christ, the Saviour of the
Body and the Members of the Body: two in one Flesh, [2364] and in one
voice, and in one passion, and, when iniquity shall have passed over,
in one rest. The sufferings therefore of Christ are not in Christ
alone; nay, there are not any save in Christ. For if Christ thou
understandest to be Head and Body, the sufferings of Christ are not,
save in Christ: but if Christ thou understand of Head alone, the
sufferings of Christ are not in Christ alone. For if the sufferings of
Christ are in Christ alone, to wit in the Head alone; whence saith a
certain member of Him, Paul the Apostle, "In order that I may supply
what are wanting of the oppressions of Christ in my flesh"? [2365] If
therefore in the members of Christ thou art, whatsoever man thou art
that art hearing these words, whosoever thou art that dost hear these
words (but however, thou dost hear, if in the members of Christ thou
art): whatsoever thing thou sufferest from those that are not in the
members of Christ, was wanting to the sufferings of Christ. Therefore
it is added because it was wanting; thou fillest up the measure, thou
causest it not to run over: thou sufferest so much as was to be
contributed out of thy sufferings to the whole suffering of Christ,
that hath suffered in our Head, and doth suffer in His members, that
is, in our own selves. Unto this our common republic, as it were each
of us according to our measure payeth that which we owe, and according
to the powers which we have, as it were a quota [2366] of sufferings we
contribute. The storehouse [2367] of all men's sufferings will not be
completely made up, save when the world shall have been ended....That
whole City therefore is speaking, from the blood of righteous Abel even
to the blood of Zacharias. [2368] Thence also hereafter from the blood
of John, through the blood of the Apostles, through the blood of
Martyrs, through the blood of the faithful ones of Christ, one City
speaketh, one man saith, "How long do ye lay upon a man? Slay ye, all
of you." Let us see if ye efface, let us see if ye extinguish, let us
see if ye remove from the earth the name thereof, let us see if ye
peoples do not meditate of empty things, [2369] saying, "When shall She
die, and when shall perish the name of Her?" [2370] "As though She were
a wall bowed down, and a fence smitten against," [2371] lean ye against
Her, smite against Her. Hear from above: [2372] "My taker up, I shall
not be moved more:" for as though a heap of sand I have been smitten
against that I might fall, and the Lord hath taken me up.
3. "Nevertheless, mine honour they have thought to drive back" (ver.
4). Conquered while they slay men yielding, by the blood of the slain
multiplying the faithful, yielding to these and no longer being able to
kill; "Nevertheless, mine honour they have thought to drive back." Now
because a Christian cannot be killed, pains are taken that a Christian
should be dishonoured. For now by the honour of Christians the hearts
of ungodly men are tortured: now that spiritual Joseph, after his
selling by his brethren, after his removal from his home into Egypt as
though into the Gentiles, after the humiliation of a prison, [2373]
after the made-up tale of a false witness, after that there had come to
pass that which of him was said, "Iron passed through the soul of him:"
[2374] now he is honoured, now he is not made subject to brethren
selling him, but corn he supplieth to them hungering. [2375] Conquered
by his humility and chastity, uncorruptness, temptations, sufferings,
now honoured they see him, and his honour they think to check....Is it
all against one man, or one man against all; or all against all, or one
against one? Meanwhile, when he saith, "ye lay upon a man," it is as it
were upon one man: and when he saith, "Slay all ye," it is as if all
men were against one man: but nevertheless it is also all against all,
because also all are Christians, but in One. But why must those divers
errors hostile to Christ be spoken of as all together? Are they also
one? Truly them also as one I dare to speak of: because there is one
City and one city, one People and one people, King and king. One City
and one city is what? Babylon one, Jerusalem one. By whatsoever other
mystical names besides She is called, yet One City there is and one
city; over this the devil is king, over that Christ is King....
4. Give heed, brethren, give heed, I entreat you. For it delighteth me
yet to speak a few words to you of this beloved City. For "most
glorious things of Thee have been spoken, City of God." [2376] And, "if
I forget Thee, O Jerusalem, let mine own right hand forget me." [2377]
For dear is the one Country, and truly but one Country, the only
Country: besides Her whatsoever we have, is a sojourning in a strange
land. I will say therefore that which ye may acknowledge, that of which
ye may approve: I will call to your minds that which ye know, I will
not teach that which ye know not. "Not first," saith the Apostle, "that
which is spiritual, but that which is natural, [2378] afterwards that
which is spiritual." [2379] Therefore the former city is greater by
age, because first was born Cain, and afterwards Abel: [2380] but in
these the elder shall serve the younger. [2381] The former greater by
age, the latter greater in dignity. Wherefore is the former greater by
age? Because "not first that which is spiritual, but that which is
natural." [2382] Wherefore is the latter greater in dignity? Because
"the elder shall serve the younger." [2383] ...Cain first builded a
city, and in that place he builded where no city was. But when
Jerusalem was being builded, it was not builded in a place where there
was not a city, but there was a city at first which was called Jebus,
whence the Jebusites. This having been captured, overcome, made
subject, there was builded a new city, as though the old were thrown
down; and it was called Jerusalem, [2384] vision of peace, City of God.
Each one therefore that is born of Adam, not yet doth belong to
Jerusalem: for he beareth with him the offshoot [2385] of iniquity, and
the punishment of sin, having been consigned to death, and he belongeth
in a manner to a sort of old city. But if he is to be in the people of
God; his old self will be thrown down, and he will be builded up new.
For this reason therefore Cain builded a city where there was not a
city. For from mortality and from naughtiness every one setteth out, in
order that he may be made good hereafter. "For as by the disobedience
of one man many were made sinners, so by the obedience of One Man many
shall be made just." [2386] And all we in Adam do die: [2387] and each
one of us of Adam was born. Let him pass over to Jerusalem, he shall be
thrown down old, and shall be builded new. As though to conquered
Jebusites, in order that there may be builded up Jerusalem, is said,
"Put ye off the old man, and put on the new." [2388] And now to them
builded in Jerusalem, and shining by the light of Grace, is said, "Ye
have been sometime darkness, but now light in the Lord." [2389] The
evil city therefore from the beginning even unto the end doth run on,
and the good City by the changing of evil men is builded up. And these
two cities are meanwhile mingled, at the end to be severed; against
each other mutually in conflict, the one for iniquity, the other for
the truth. And sometimes this very temporal mingling bringeth it to
pass that certain men belonging to the city Babylon, do order matters
belonging to Jerusalem, and again certain men belonging to Jerusalem,
do order matters belonging to Babylon. Something difficult I seem to
have propounded. Be ye patient, until it be proved by examples. "For
all things" in the old people, as writeth the Apostle, "in a figure
used to befall them: but they have been written for our amendment, upon
whom the end of the world hath come." [2390] Regard therefore that
people as also set to intimate an after people; and see then what I
say. There were great [2391] kings in Jerusalem: it is a known fact,
they are enumerated, are named. They all were, I say, wicked citizens
of Babylon, and they were ordering matters of Jerusalem: all men from
thence to be dissevered at the end, to no one but to the devil do
belong. Again we find citizens of Jerusalem to have ordered certain
matters belonging to Babylon. For those three children, Nabuchodonosor,
overcome by a miracle, made the ministers of his kingdom, and set them
over his Satraps; and so there were ordering the matters of Babylon
citizens of Jerusalem. [2392] Observe now how this is being fulfilled
and done in the Church, and in these times....Every earthly
commonwealth, sometime assuredly to perish, whereof the kingdom is to
pass away, when there shall come that kingdom, whereof we pray, "Thy
kingdom come;" [2393] and whereof hath been foretold, "And of His
kingdom shall be no end:" [2394] an earthly commonwealth, I say, hath
our citizens conducting the affairs of it. For how many faithful, how
many good men, are both magistrates in their cities, and are judges,
and are generals, and are counts, and are kings? All that are just and
good men, having not anything in heart but the most glorious things,
which of Thee have been said, City of God. [2395] And as if they were
doing bond-service [2396] in the city which is to pass away, even there
by the doctors of the Holy City they are bidden to keep faith with
those set over them, "whether with the king as supreme, or with
governors as though sent by God for the punishment of evil men, but for
the praise of good men: " [2397] or as servants, that to their masters
they should be subject, [2398] even Christians to Heathens, and the
better should keep faith with the worse, for a time to serve, for
everlasting to have dominion. For these things do happen until iniquity
do pass away. [2399] Servants are commanded to bear with masters unjust
and capricious: the citizens of Babylon are commanded to be endured by
the citizens of Jerusalem, showing even more attentions, than if they
were citizens of the same Babylon, as though fulfilling the precept,
"He that shall have exacted of thee a mile, go with him other twain."
[2400] ...
5. "I have run in thirst." [2401] For they were rendering evil things
for good things: [2402] for them was I thirsting: mine honour they
thought to drive back: I was thirsting to bring them over into my body.
For in drinking what do we, but send into our members liquor that is
without, and suck it into our body? Thus did Moses in that head of the
calf. [2403] The head of the calf is a great sacrament. [2404] For the
head of the calf was the body of ungodly men, in the similitude of a
calf eating hay, [2405] seeking earthly things: because all flesh is
hay. [2406] ...And what now is more evident, than that into that City
Jerusalem, of which the people Israel was a type, by Baptism men were
to be made to pass over? Therefore in water it was scattered, in order
that for drink it might be given. For this even unto the end this man
thirsteth; he runneth and thirsteth. For many men He drinketh, but
never will He be without thirst. For thence is, "I thirst, woman, give
Me to drink." [2407] That Samaritan woman at the well found the Lord
thirsting, and by Him thirsting she was filled: she first found Him
thirsting, in order that He might drink her believing. And when He was
on the Cross, "I thirst," [2408] He said, although they gave not to Him
that for which He was thirsting. For for themselves He was thirsting:
but they gave vinegar, not new wine, wherewith are filled up the new
bottles, but old wine, but old to its loss. [2409] For old vinegar also
is said of the old men, of whom hath been said, "For to them is no
changing;" [2410] namely, that the Jebusites should be overthrown, and
Jerusalem be builded. [2411]
6. So also the Head of this body even unto the end from the beginning
runneth in thirst. And as if to Him were being said, Why in thirst?
what is wanting to Thee, O Body of Christ, O Church of Christ? in so
great honour, in so great exaltation, in so great height also even in
this world established, what is wanting to Thee? There is fulfilled
that which hath been foretold of thee, "There shall adore Him all kings
of the earth, all nations shall serve Him." [2412] ...They that at
Jerusalem's festivals fill up the Churches, at Babylon's festivals fill
up the theatres: and for all they serve, honour, obey Her--not only
those very persons that bear the Sacraments of Christ, and hate the
commandments of Christ, but also they, that bear not even the mere
Sacraments, Heathen though they be, Jews though they be,--they honour,
praise, proclaim, "but with their mouths they were blessing." I heed
not the mouth, He knoweth that hath instructed me, "with their heart
they were cursing." In that place they were cursing, where "mine honour
they thought to drive back."
7. What dost Thou, O Idithun, Body of Christ, leaping over them? What
dost Thou amid all these things? What wilt Thou? wilt faint? wilt Thou
not persevere even unto the end? wilt Thou not hearken, "He that shall
have persevered even unto the end, the same shall be saved," [2413]
though for that iniquity aboundeth, the love of many shall wax cold?
[2414] And where is it that Thou hast leaped over them? where is it
that Thy conversation is in Heaven? [2415] But they cleave unto earthly
things, as though earthborn they mind the earth, and are earth, the
serpent's food. [2416] What dost thou amid these
things?..."Nevertheless, to God my soul shall be made subject" (ver.
5). And who would endure so great things, either open wars, or secret
lyings-in-wait? Who would endure so great things amid open enemies,
amid false brethren? Who would endure so great things? Would a man? and
if a man would, would a man of himself? I have not so leaped over that
I should be lifted up, and fall: "To God my soul shall be made subject:
for from Himself is my patience." What patience is there amid so great
scandals, except that "if for that which we do not see we hope, through
patience we look for it"? [2417] There cometh my pain, there will come
my rest also; there cometh my tribulation, there will come my cleansing
also. For doth gold glitter in the furnace of the refiner? In a
necklace it will glitter, in an ornament it will glitter: let it suffer
however the furnace, in order that being cleansed from dross it may
come into light. This is the furnace, there is there chaff, there gold,
there fire, into this bloweth the refiner: in the furnace burneth the
chaff, and the gold is cleansed; the one into ashes is turned, of dross
the other is cleansed. The furnace is the world, the chaff unrighteous
men, the gold just men; the fire tribulation, the refiner God: that
which therefore the refiner willeth I do; wherever the Maker setteth me
I endure it. I am commanded to endure, He knoweth how to cleanse.
Though there burn the chaff to set me on fire, and as if to consume me;
that into ashes is burned, I of dross am cleansed. Wherefore? Because
"to God my soul shall be made subject: for from Himself is my
patience."
8. "For Himself is my God and My Saving One, my Taker up, I will not
remove hence" (ver. 6). Because "Himself is my God," therefore He
calleth me: "and my Saving One," therefore He justifieth me: "and my
Taker up," therefore He glorifieth me. For here I am called and am
justified, but there I am glorified; and from thence where I am
glorified, "I will not remove." For a sojourner I am with Thee on earth
as all my fathers were. Therefore from my lodging I shall remove, from
my Heavenly home I shall not remove. "In God is my salvation and my
glory" (ver. 7). Saved I shall be in God, glorious I shall be in God:
for not only saved, but also glorious, saved, because a just man I have
been made out of an ungodly man, by Him justified; [2418] but glorious,
because not only justified, but also honoured. For "those whom He hath
predestined, those also He hath called." [2419] Calling them, what hath
He done here? "Whom He hath called, the same also He hath justified;
but whom He hath justified, the same also He hath glorified."
Justification therefore to salvation belongeth, glorifying to honour.
How glorifying to honour belongeth, it is not needful to discuss. How
justification belongeth to salvation, let us seek some proof. Behold
there cometh to mind out of the Gospel: there were some who to
themselves were seeming to be just men, and they were finding fault
with the Lord because He admitted to the feast sinners, and with
publicans and sinners was eating; to such men therefore priding
themselves, strong men of earth very much lifted up, much glorying of
their own soundness, such as they counted it, not such as they had, the
Lord answered what? "They that are whole need not a Physician, but they
that are sick." [2420] Whom calleth He whole, whom calleth He sick? He
continueth and saith, "I have not come to call just men, but sinners
unto repentance." [2421] He hath called therefore "the whole" just men,
not because the Pharisees were so, but because themselves they thought
so to be; and for this reason were proud, and grudged sick men a
physician, and being more sick than those, they slew the Physician. He
hath called whole, however, righteous men, sick, the sinners. My being
justified therefore, saith that man that leapeth over, from Himself I
have: my being glorified, from Himself I have: "For God is my salvation
and my glory." "My salvation," so that saved I am: "my glory," so that
honoured I am. This thing hereafter: now what? "God of my help, and my
hope is in God;" until I attain unto perfect justification and
salvation. "For by hope we are saved: but hope which is seen, is not
hope." [2422] ...
9. "Hope ye in Him all the council of the people" (ver. 8). Imitate ye
Idithun, leap over your enemies; men fighting against you, stopping up
your way, men hating you, leap ye over: "Hope in Him all the council of
the people: pour out before Him your hearts:"...By imploring, by
confessing, by hoping. Do not keep back your hearts within your hearts:
"Pour out before Him your hearts." That perisheth not which ye pour
out. For He is my Taker up. If He taketh up, why fearest thou to pour
out? "Cast upon the Lord thy care, and hope in Him." [2423] What fear
ye amid whisperers, slanderers hateful to God, [2424] where they are
able openly assailing, where they are unable secretly lying in wait,
falsely praising, truly at enmity, amid them what fear ye? "God is our
Helper." Do they anywise equal God? Are they anywise stronger than He?
"God is our Helper," be ye without care. "If God is for us, who is
against us?" [2425] "Pour out before Him your hearts," by leaping over
unto Him, by lifting up your souls: "God is our
helper."..."Nevertheless, vain are the sons of men, and liars are the
sons of men in the balances, in order that they may deceive, being at
one because of vanity" (ver. 9). Certainly many men there are: behold
there is that one man, that one man that was cast forth from the
multitude of guests. [2426] They conspire, they all seek things
temporal, and they that are carnal things carnal, and for the future
they hope them, whosoever do hope: even if because of variety of
opinions they are in division, nevertheless because of vanity they are
at one. Divers indeed are errors and of many forms, and the kingdom
against itself divided shall not stand: [2427] but alike in all is the
will vain and lying, belonging to one king, with whom into fire
everlasting it is to be thrown headlong [2428] --"these men because of
vanity are at one." And for them see how He thirsteth, see how He
runneth in thirst.
10. He turneth therefore Himself to them, thirsting for them: "Do not
hope in iniquity" (ver. 10). For my hope is in God. Ye that will not
draw near and pass over, "do not hope in iniquity." For I that have
leapt over, my hope is in God; and is there anywise iniquity with God?
[2429] This thing let us do, that thing let us do, of that thing let us
think, thus let us adjust our lyings in wait; "Because of vanity being
at one." Thou thirstest: they that think of those things against thee
are given up by those whom thou drinkest, "Do not hope in vanity." Vain
is iniquity, nought is iniquity, mighty is nothing save righteousness.
Truth may be hidden for a time, conquered it cannot be. Iniquity may
flourish for a time, abide it cannot. "Do not hope upon iniquity: and
for robbery be not covetous." Thou art not rich, and wilt thou rob?
What findest thou? What losest thou? O losing gains! Thou findest
money, thou losest righteousness. "For robbery be not
covetous."...Therefore, vain sons of men, lying sons of men, neither
rob, nor, if there flow riches, set heart upon them: no longer love
vanity, and seek lying. For "blessed is the man who hath the Lord God
for his hope, and who hath not had regard unto vanities, and lying
follies." [2430] Ye would deceive, ye would commit a fraud, what bring
ye in order that ye may cheat. Deceitful balances. For "lying," he
saith, "are the sons of men in the balances," in order that they may
cheat by bringing forth deceitful balances. By a false balance ye
beguile men looking on: know ye not that one is he that weigheth,
Another He that judgeth of the weight? He seeth not, for whom thou
weighest, but He seeth that weigheth thee and him. Therefore neither
fraud nor robbery covet ye any longer, nor on those things which ye
have set your hope: [2431] I have admonished, have foretold, saith this
Idithun.
11. What followeth? "Once hath God spoken, these two things I have
heard, that power is of God (ver. 11), and to Thee, O Lord, is mercy,
for Thou shalt render to each one after his works" (ver. 12)...."Once
hath God spoken." What sayest thou, Idithun? If thou that hadst leapt
over them art saying, "Once He hath spoken;" I turn to another
Scripture and it saith to me, "In many quarters and in many ways
formerly God hath spoken to the fathers in the prophets." [2432] What
is, "Once hath God spoken"? Is He not the God that in the beginning of
mankind spake to Adam? [2433] Did not the Selfsame speak to Cain, to
Noe, to Abraham, to Isaac, to Jacob, to all the Prophets, and to Moses?
[2434] One man Moses was, and how often to him spake God? Behold even
to one man, not once but ofttimes God hath spoken. Secondly, He hath
spoken to the Son when standing here, "Thou art My beloved Son." [2435]
God hath spoken to the Apostles, He hath spoken to all the Saints, even
though not with voice sounding through the cloud, nevertheless in the
heart where He is Himself Teacher. [2436] What is therefore, "Once hath
God spoken"? Much hath that man leapt over in order to arrive at that
place, where once God hath spoken. Behold briefly I have spoken to your
Love. Here among men, to men ofttimes, in many ways, in many quarters,
through creatures of many forms God hath spoken: by Himself once God
hath spoken, because One Word God hath begotten....For it could not be
but that God did Himself know that which by the Word He made: [2437]
but if that which He made He knew, in Him there was that which was made
before it was made. For if in Him was not that which was made before it
was made, how knew He that which He made? For thou canst not say that
God made things He knew not. God therefore hath known that which He
hath made. And how knew He before He made, if there cannot be k