SERMONS ON SELECTED LESSONS OF THE NEW TESTAMENT. SERMON I. OF THE AGREEMENT
OF THE EVANGELISTS MATTHEW AND LUKE IN THE GENERATIONS OF THE LORD.
SERMONS ON SELECTED LESSONS OF THE NEW TESTAMENT.
SERMON I.
[LI. BENEDICTINE EDITION.]
OF THE AGREEMENT OF THE EVANGELISTS MATTHEW AND LUKE IN THE GENERATIONS OF THE
LORD.
1. MAY He, beloved, fulfil your expectation who hath awakened it: for
though I feel confident that what I have to say is not my own, but God's, yet with
far more reason do I say, what the Apostle in his humility saith, "We have this
treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of the power may be of God,
and not of us."(1) I do not doubt accordingly that you remember my promise; in
Him I made it through whom I now fulfil it, for both when I made the promise,
did I ask of the Lord, and now when I fulfil it, do I receive of Him. Now you
will remember, beloved, that it was in the matins of the festival of the Lord's
Nativity, that I put off the question which I had proposed for resolution,
because many came with us to the celebration of the accustomed solemnities of that
day to whom the word of God is usually burdensome; but now I imagine that none
have come here, but they who desire to hear, and so I am not speaking to hearts
that are deaf, and to minds that will disdain the word, but this your longing
expectation is a prayer for me. There is a further consideration; for the day of
the public shows(2) has dispersed many from hence, for whose salvation I exhort
you to share my great anxiety, and do you with all earnestness of mind,
entreat God for those who are not yet intent upon the spectacles of the truth, but
are wholly given up to the spectacles of the flesh; for I know and am well
assured, that there are now among you those who have this day despised them, and have
burst the bonds of their inveterate habits; for men are changed both for the
better and the worse. By daily instances of this kind are we alternately made
joyful and sad i we joy over the reformed, are sad over the corrupted; and
therefore the Lord doth not say that he who beginneth, shall be saved, "But he that
endureth unto the end shall be saved."(3)
2. Now what more marvellous, what more magnificent thing could our Lord
Jesus Christ, the Son of God, and also the Son of man (for this also He
vouchsafed to be), grant to us, than the gathering into His fold not only of the
spectators of these foolish shows, but even some of the actors in them; for He hath
combated(4) unto salvation not only the lovers of the combats of men with beasts,
but even the combatants themselves, for He also was made a spectacle Himself.
Hear how. He hath told us Himself, and foretold it before He was made a
spectacle, and in the words of prophecy announced beforehand what was to come to pass,
as if it were already done, saying in the Psalms, "They pierced My hands and
My feet, they told all My bones."(5) Lo! how He was made a spectacle, for His
bones to be told! and this spectacle He expresseth more plainly, "they observed
and looked upon Me." He was made a spectacle and an object of derision, made a
spectacle by them who were to show Him no favour indeed in that spectacle, but
who were to be furious against Him, just as at first He made His martyrs
spectacles; as saith the Apostle, "We are made a spectacle unto the world, and to
angels, and to men."(6) Now two sorts of men are spectators of such spectacles; the
one, carnal, the other, spiritual men. The carnal look on, as thinking those
martyrs who are thrown to the beasts, or beheaded, or burnt in the flames, to be
wretched men, and they detest and abhor them; but others look on, like the
holy Angels, not regarding the laceration of their bodies, but admiring the
unimpaired purity of their faith. A grand spectacle to the eyes of the heart doth a
whole mind in a mangled body exhibit! When these things are read of in the
church, you behold them with pleasure with these eyes of the heart, for if you were
to behold nothing, you would hear nothing; so you see you have not neglected
the spectacles to-day, but have made a choice of spectacles. May God then be with
you, and give you grace with gentle persuasiveness to report your spectacles
to your friends, whom you have been pained to see this day running to the
amphitheatre, and unwilling to come to the church; that so they too may begin to
contemn those things, by the love of which themselves have become contemptible, and
may, with you, love God, of whom none who love Him can ever be ashamed, for
that they love Him who cannot be overcome: let them, as you do, love Christ, who
by that very thing wherein He seemed to be overcome, overcame the whole world.
For He hath overcome the whole world as we see, my brethren; He hath subjected
all powers, He hath subjugated kings, not with the pride of soldiery, but by
the ignominy of the Cross: not by the fury of the sword, but by hanging on the
Wood, by suffering in the body, by working in the Spirit.(1) His body was lifted
up on the Cross, and so He subdued souls to the Cross; and now what jewel in
their diadem is more precious than the Cross of Christ on the foreheads of
kings? In loving Him you will never be ashamed. Whereas from the amphitheatre how
many return conquered, because those are conquered, for whom they are so madly
interested! still more would they be conquered were they to conquer. For so would
they be enslaved to the vain joy, to the exultation of a depraved desire, who
are conquered by the very circumstance of running to these shows. For how many,
my brethren, do you think have this day been in hesitation whether they would
go here or there? And they who in this hesitation, turning their thoughts to
Christ, have run to the church, have overcome, not any man, but the devil
himself, him that hunteth(2) after the souls of the whole world. But they who in that
hesitation have chosen rather to run to the amphitheatre, have assuredly been
overcome by him whom the others overcame--overcame in Him who saith, "Be of good
cheer, I have overcome the world."(3) For the Captain suffered Himself to be
tried, only that He might teach His soldier to fight.
3. That our Lord Jesus Christ might do this He became the Son of man by
being born of a woman. But now, would He have been any less a man, if He had not
been born of the Virgin Mary" one may say. "He willed to be a man; well and
good; He might have so been, and yet not be born of a woman; for neither did He
make the first man whom He made, of a woman." Now see what answer I make to this.
You say, Why did He choose to be born of a woman? I answer, Why should He
avoid being born of a woman? Granted that I could not show that He chose to be born
of a woman; do you show why He need have avoided it. But I have already said
at other times, that if He had avoided the womb of a woman, it might have
betokened, as it were, that He could have contracted defilement from her; but by
how much He was in His own substance more incapable of defilement, by so much
less had He cause to fear the woman's womb, as though He could contract defilement
from it. But by being born of a woman, He purposed to show to us some high
mystery.(4) For of a truth, brethren, we grant too, that if the Lord had willed to
become man without being born of a woman, it were easy to His sovereign
Majesty. For as He could be born of a woman without a man, so could He also have been
born without the woman. But this hath He shown us, that mankind of neither sex
might despair of its salvation, for the human sexes are male and female. If
therefore being a man, which it behoved Him assuredly to be, He had not been born
of a woman, women might have despaired of themselves, as mindful of their
first sin, because by a woman was the first man deceived, and would have thought
that they had no hope at all in Christ. He came therefore as a man to make
special choice of that sex, and was born of a woman to console the female sex, as
though He would address them and say; "That ye may know that no creature of God is
bad, but that(5) unregulated pleasure perverteth it, when in the beginning I
made man, I made them male and female. I do not condemn the creature which I
made. See I have been born a Man, and born of a woman; it is not then the creature
which I made that I condemn, but the sins which I made not." Let each sex then
at once see its honour, and confess its iniquity, and let them both hope for
salvation. The poison to deceive man was presented him by woman, through woman
let salvation for man's recovery be presented; so let the woman make amends for
the sin by which she deceived the man, by giving birth to Christ. For the same
reason again, women were the first who announced to the Apostles the
Resurrection of God. The woman in Paradise announced death to her husband, and the women
in the Church announced salvation to the men; the Apostles were to announce to
the nations the Resurrection of Christ, the women announced it to the Apostles.
Let no one then reproach Christ with His birth of a woman, by which sex the
Deliverer could not be defiled, and to which it was in the purpose(6) of the
Creator to do honour.(7)
4. But, say they, "how are we to believe that Christ was born of a woman?"
I would answer, by the Gospel which hath been preached and is still preached
to all the world. But these men, blind themselves, and aiming to blind others,
seeing not what they ought to see, whilst they try to shake what ought to be
believed, endeavour to obtrude a question on a matter which is now believed
through all the earth. For they answer and say: "Do not think to overwhelm us with
the authority of the whole world--let us look to Scripture itself, urge not
arguments of mere(1) numbers against us, for the seduced multitude favours you." To
this I answer, in the first place, "Does the seduced multitude favour me?" This
multitude was once a scantling. Whence grew this multitude, which in this
increase was announced so long before? For this which hath been seen to increase,
is none other than the same which was seen beforehand. I need not have said, it
was a scantling; once it was Abraham only. Consider, brethren; it was Abraham
alone throughout all the world at that time; throughout the whole world, among
all men, and all nations; Abraham alone to whom it was said, "In thy seed shall
all nations be blessed;"(2) and what he alone believed of his own(3) single
person, is exhibited as present now to many in the multitude of his seed. Then it
was not seen, and was believed; now it is seen, and it is contested; and what
was then said to one man, and was by that one believed, is disputed now by some
few, when in many it is made good. He who made His disciples fishers of men,
inclosed within His nets every kind of authority. If great numbers are to be
believed, what more widely diffused over the whole world than the Church? If the
rich are to be believed, let them consider how many rich He hath taken; if the
poor, let them consider the thousands of poor; if nobles, almost all the nobility
are within the Church; if kings, let them see all of them subjected to Christ;
if the more eloquent, and wise, and learned, let them see how many orators,
and scientific(4) men, and philosophers of this world, have been caught by those
fishermen, to be drawn from the depth to salvation let them think of Him who,
coming down to heal by the example of His own humility that great evil of maws
soul, pride, "chose the weak things of the world to confound the things which
are mighty, and the foolish things of the world to confound the wise" (not the
really wise, but who seemed so to be), "and chose the base things of the world,
and things which are not, to bring to nought things that are."(5)
5. "Whatever you may choose to say," they say, "we find that in the place
where we read that Christ was born, the Gospels disagree with one another, and
two things which disagree cannot both be true;" for, says one, "when I have
proved this disagreement, I may rightly disallow belief in it, or, at least, do
you who accept the belief in it, shew the agreement." And what disagreement, I
ask, will you prove? "A plain one," says he, "which none can gainsay." With what
security, brethren, do you hear all this, because ye are believers! Attend,
dearly beloved, and see what wholesome advice the Apostle gives, who says, "As ye
have therefore received Christ Jesus our Lord, so walk ye in Him, rooted and
built up in Him, and established in the faith;"(6) for with this simple and
assured faith ought we to abide stedfastly in Him, that He may Himself open to the
faithful what is hidden in Him; for as the same Apostle saith, "In Him are hid
all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge;"(7) and He does not hide them to
refuse them, but to stir up desire for those hidden things. This is the advantage
of their secrecy. Honour in Him then what as yet thou understandest not, and so
much the more as the veils which thou seest are more in number: for the higher
in honour any one is, the more veils are suspended in his palace. The veils
make that which is kept secret honoured, and to those who honour it, the veils are
lifted up; but as for those who mock at the veils, they are driven away from
even approaching them. Because then we "turn unto Christ, the veil is taken
away."(8)
6. They bring forward then their cavillings,(9) and say "You allow
Matthew is an Evangelist." We answer: Yes indeed, with a godly confession, and a
heart devout, in neither having any doubt at all, we answer plainly, Matthew is an
Evangelist. "Do you believe him?" they say. Who will not answer, I do? How
clear an assent doth that your godly murmur convey! So, brethren, you believe it in
all assurance; you have no cause to blush for it. I am speaking to you, who
was once deceived, when as in my early boyhood I chose to bring to the divine
Scriptures a subtlety of criticising before the godly temper of one who was
seeking truth: by my irregular(10) life I shut the gate of my Lord against myself:
when I should have knocked for it to be opened, I went on so as to make it more I
closely shut, for I dared to search in pride for that which none but the
humble can discover. How much more blessed now are you, with what sure confidence do
you learn, and in what safety, who are still young ones in the nest of faith,
and receive the spiritual food; whereas I, wretch that I was, as thinking
myself fit to fly, left the nest, and fell down before I flew: but the Lord of mercy
raised me up, that I might not be trodden down to death by passers by, and put
me in the nest again; for those same things then troubled me, which now in
quiet security I am proposing and explaining to you in the Name of the Lord.
7. As then I had begun to say, thus do they cavil. "Matthew," say they,
"is an Evangelist, and you believe him?" Immediately that we acknowledge him to
be an Evangelist, we necessarily believe him. Attend then to the generations of
Christ, which Matthew has set down. "The book of the generation of Jesus
Christ, the Son of David, the son of Abraham."(1) How the Son of David, and the Son
of Abraham? He could not be shown to be so, but by the succession of
generations; for certain it is that when the Lord was born of the Virgin Mary, neither
Abraham nor David was in this world, and dost thou say that the same man is both
the Son of David, and the Son of Abraham? Let us, as it were, say to Matthew,
Prove thy word, for I am waiting for the succession of the generations of Christ.
"Abraham begat Isaac; and Isaac begat Jacob; and Jacob begat Judas and his
brethren; and Judas begat Phares and Zara of Thamar; and Phares begat Esrom; and
Esrom begat Aram; and Aram begat Aminadab; and Aminadab begat Naasson; and
Naasson begat Salmon; and Salmon begat Booz of Rachab; and Booz begat Obed of Ruth;
and Obed begat Jesse; and Jesse begat David the king."(2) Now observe how from
this point the genealogy is brought down from David to Christ, who is called
the Son of Abraham, and the Son of David. "And David begat Solomon, of her that
had been the wife of Urias; and Solomon begat Roboam; and Roboam begat Abia; and
Abia begat Asa; and Asa begat Josaphat; and Josaphat begat Joram; and Joram
begat Ozias; and Ozias begat Joatham; and Joatham begat Achaz; and Achaz begat
Ezekias; and Ezekias begat Manasses; and Manasses begat Amon; and Amon begat
Josias; and Josias begat Jechonias and his brethren, about the time they were
carried away to Babylon; and after the carrying away into Babylon, Jechonias begat
Salathiel; and Salathiel begat Zorobabel; and Zorobabel begat Abiud; and Abiud
begat Eliakim; and Eliakim begat Azor; and Azor begat Sadoc; and Sadoc begat
Achim; and Achim begat Eliud; and Eliud begat Eleazar; and Eleazar begat Matthan;
and Matthan begat Jacob; and Jacob begat Joseph the husband of Mary, of whom
was born Jesus, who is called Christ." Thus then by the order and succession of
fathers and forefathers, Christ is found to be the Son of David, and the Son of
Abraham.
8. Now upon this thus faithfully narrated, the first cavil they bring is,
that the same Matthew goes on to say, "All the generations from Abraham to
David are fourteen generations; and from David until the carrying away into Babylon
are fourteen generations; and from the carrying away into Babylon unto Christ
are fourteen generations." Then in order to tell us how Christ was born of the
Virgin Mary, he went on and said, "Now the birth of Jesus Christ was on this
wise;"(3) for by the line of the generations he had showed why Christ is called
the Son of David, and the Son of Abraham. But now it needed to be shown how He
was born and appeared among men: and so there follows immediately that
narrative, by means of which we believe that our Lord Jesus Christ was not only born of
the everlasting God, coeternal with Him who begat Him before all times, before
all creation, by whom all things were made; but was also now born from the Holy
Ghost, of the Virgin Mary, which we confess equally with the other; for you
remember and know (for I am speaking to Catholics, to my brethren), that this is
our faith, that this we profess and confess; for this faith thousands of
martyrs have been slain in all the world.
9. This also which follows they like to laugh at, whose wish it is to
destroy the authority of the Evangelical books, that they may show as it were that
we have without any good reason believed what is said, "When as His mother Mary
was espoused to Joseph, before they came together, she was found with Child of
the Holy Ghost. Then Joseph her husband being a just man, and not willing to
make her a public example, was minded to put her away privily;"(4) for because
he knew that she was not with child by him, he thought that she was so to say(5)
necessarily an adulteress. "Being a just man," as the Scripture saith," and
not willing to make her a public example," (that is, to divulge the matter, for
so it is in many copies), "he was minded to put her away privily." The husband
indeed was in trouble, but as being a just man he deals not severely; for so
great justice is ascribed to this man, as that he neither wished to keep an
adulterous wife, nor could bring himself(6) to punish and expose her. "He was minded
to put her away privily," because he was not only unwilling to punish, but
even to betray her; and mark his genuine justice; for he did not wish to spare
her, because he had a desire to keep her; for many spare their adulterous wives
through a carnal love, choosing to keep them even though adulterous, that they
may enjoy them through a carnal desire. But this just man has no wish to keep
her, and so does not love in any carnal sort; and yet he does not wish to punish
her; and so in his mercy he spares her. How truly just a man is this! He would
neither keep an adulteress, lest he should seem to spare her because of an
impure affection, and yet he would not punish or betray her. Deservedly indeed was
he chosen for the witness of his wife's virginity: and so he who was in trouble
through human infirmity, was assured by Divine authority.
10. For the Evangelist goes on to say, "While he thought on these things,
behold, the angel of the Lord appeared unto him in sleep, saying, Joseph, fear
not to take unto thee Mary thy wife; for That which is conceived in her is of
the Holy Ghost.(1) And she shall bring forth a Son, and thou shalt call His name
Jesus." Why Jesus? "for He shall save His people from their sins."(2) It is
well known then, that "Jesus" in the Hebrew tongue is in Latin interpreted
"Saviour," which we see from this very explanation of the name; for as if it had been
asked, "Why Jesus?" he subjoined immediately as explaining the reason of the
word, "for He shall save His people from their sins." This then we religiously
believe, this most firmly hold fast, that Christ was born by the Holy Ghost of
the Virgin Mary.
11. What then do our adversaries say? "If," says one, "I shall discover a
lie, surely you will not then believe it all; and such I have discovered." Let
us see: I will reckon up the generations; for by their slanderous cavillings
they invite and bring us to this. Yes, if we live religiously, if we believe
Christ, if we do not desire to fly out of the nest before the time, they only bring
us to this--to the knowledge of mysteries. Mark then, holy brethren,(3) the
usefulness of heretics; their usefulness, that is, in respect of the designs of
God, who makes a good use even of those that are bad; whereas, as regards
themselves, the fruit of their own designs is rendered to them, and not that good
which God brings out of them. Just as in the case of Judas; what great good did
he! By the Lord's Passion all nations are saved; but that the Lord might suffer,
Judas betrayed Him. God then both delivers the nations by the Pussion of His
Son, and punishes Judas for his own wickedness. For the mysteries which lie hid
in Scripture, no one who is content with the simplicity of the faith would
curiously sift them, and therefore as no one would sift them, no one would discover
them but for cavillers who force us. For when heretics cavil, the little ones
are disturbed; when disturbed, they make search, and their search is, so to say,
a beating of the head at the mother's breasts, that they may yield as much
milk as is sufficient for these little ones. They search then, because they are
troubled; but they who know and have learnt these things, because they have
investigated them, and God hath opened to their knocking, they in their turn open
to those who are in trouble. And so it happens that heretics serve usefully for
the discovery of the truth, whilst they cavil to seduce men into error. For
with less carefulness would truth be sought out, if it had not lying adversaries;
"For there must be also heresies among you," and as though we should enquire
the cause, he immediately subjoined, "that they which are approved may be made
manifest among you."(4)
12. What then is it that they say? "See; Matthew enumerates the
generations, and says, that "from Abraham to David are fourteen generations, and from
David until the carrying away into Babylon are fourteen generations, and from the
carrying away into Babylon unto Christ are fourteen generations." Now three
times fourteen make forty-two; yet they number them, and find them forty-one
generations, and immediately they bring up their cavilling and their insulting
mockery, and say, "What means it, when in the Gospel it is said that there are
three times fourteen generations, yet when they are numbered all together, they are
found to be not forty-two, but forty-one?" Doubtless there is a great
mystery(5) here: and glad are we, and we give thanks unto the Lord, that by the
occasion of cavillers we have discovered something which gives us in the discovery the
more pleasure, in proportion to its obscurity when it was the object of
search; for, as I have said before, we are exhibiting a spectacle to your minds. From
Abraham then to David are fourteen generations: after that, the enumeration
begins with Solomon, for David begat Solomon; the enumeration, I say, begins with
Solomon, and reaches to Jechonias, during whose life the carrying away into
Babylon took place; and so are there other fourteen generations, by reckoning in
Solomon at the head of the second division, and Jechonias also, with whom that
enumeration closes to fill up the number fourteen; and the third division
begins with this same Jechonias.
13. Give attention, holy brethren, to this circumstance, at once
mysterious and pleasant; for I confess to you the feeling(6) of my own heart, whereby I
believe that when I have brought it forth, and you have got taste of it, you
will give the same report of it. Attend then. In the third division, beginning
from this Jechonias unto the Lord Jesus Christ, are found fourteen generations;
for this Jechonias is reckoned twice, as the last of the former, and the first
of the following division. "But why is Jechonias," one may say, "reckoned
twice?" Nothing took place of old among the people of Israel, which was not a
mysterious figure of things to come: and indeed it is not without good reason that
Jechonias is reckoned twice, because if there be a boundary between two fields, be
it a stone, or any dividing wall, both he who is on the one side measures up
to that same wall, and he who is on the other takes the beginning of his
measurement again from the same. But why this was not done in the first connecting
link of the divisions, when we number from Abraham to David fourteen generations,
and begin to reckon the fourteen others, not from David over again, but from
Solomon, a reason must be given which contains an important mystery.(1) Attend
then. The carrying away into Babylon took place when Jechonias was appointed king
in the room of his deceased father. The kingdom was taken from him, and
another appointed in his room; still the carrying away unto the Gentiles took place
during the lifetime of Jechonias, for no fault of Jechonias is mentioned for
which he was deprived of the kingdom; but the sins rather of those who succeeded
him are marked out. So then there follows the Captivity and the passing away
into Babylon; and the wicked do not go alone, but the saints also go with them:
for in that Captivity were the prophets Ezekiel and Daniel, and the Three
Children who were cast into the flames, and so made famous. They all went according to
the prophecy of the prophet Jeremiah.
14. Remember then, that Jechonias, rejected without any fault of his,
ceased to reign, and passed over unto the Gentiles, when the carrying away unto
Babylon took place. Now observe the figure hereby manifested beforehand, of things
to come in the Lord Jesus Christ. For the Jews would not that our Lord Jesus
Christ should reign over them, yet found they no fault in Him. He was rejected
in His own person, and in that of His servants also, and so they passed over
unto the Gentiles as into Babylon in a figure. For this also did Jeremiah
prophesy, that the Lord commanded them to go into Babylon: and whatever other prophets
told the people not to go into Babylon, them he reproved as false prophets.(2)
Let those who read the Scriptures, remember this as we do; and let those who do
not, give us credit. Jeremiah then on the part of God threatened those who
would not go into Babylon, whereas to them who should go he promised rest there,
and a sort of happiness in the cultivation of their vines, and planting of their
gardens, and the abundance of their fruits. How then does the people of
Israel, not now in figure but in verity, pass over unto Babylon? Whence came the
Apostles? Were they not of the nation of the Jews? Whence came Paul himself? for he
saith, "I also am an Israelite, of the seed of Abraham, of the tribe of
Benjamin."(3) Many of the Jews then believed in the Lord; from them were the Apostles
chosen; of them were the more than five hundred brethren, to whom it was
vouchsafed(4) to see the Lord after His resurrection;(5) of them were the hundred
and twenty in the house,(6) when the Holy Ghost came down. But what saith the
Apostle in the Acts of the Apostles, when the Jews refused the word of truth? "We
were sent unto you, but seeing ye have rejected the word of God, lo! we turn
unto the Gentiles."(7) The true passing over then into Babylon, which was then
prefigured in the time of Jeremiah, took place in the spiritual dispensation of
the time of the Lord's Incarnation. But what saith Jeremiah of these
Babylonians, to those who were passing over to them? "For in their peace shall be your
peace."(8) When Israel then passed over also into Babylon by Christ and the
Apostles, that is, when the Gospel came unto the Gentiles, what saith the Apostle, as
though by the mouth of Jeremiah of old? "I exhort therefore, that, first of
all, supplications, prayers, intercessions, and giving of thanks be made for all
men. For kings, and for all that are in authority; that we may lead a quiet and
peaceable life in all godliness and honesty."(9) For they were not yet
Christian kings, yet he prayed for them. Israel then praying in Babylon hath been
heard; the prayers of the Church have been heard, and the kings have become
Christian, and you see now fulfilled what was then spoken in figure; "In their peace
shall be your peace," for they have received the peace of Christ, and have left
off to persecute Christians, that now in the secure quiet of peace, the
Churches might be built up, and peoples planted in the garden(10) of God, and that all
nations might bring forth fruit in faith, and hope, and love, which is in
Christ.
15. The carrying away into Babylon took place of old by Jechonias, who was
not permitted to reign in the nation of the Jews, as a type of Christ, whom
the Jews would not have reign over them. Israel passed over unto the Gentiles,
that is, the preachers of the Gospel passed over unto the people of the Gentiles.
What marvel then, that Jechonias is reckoned twice? for if he were a figure of
Christ passing over from the Jews unto the Gentiles, consider only what Christ
is between the Jews and Gentiles. Is He not that Corner-stone? In a
corner-stone you see the end of one wall, and the beginning of another; up to that stone
you measure one wall, and another from it; therefore the corner-stone which
connects both walls is reckoned twice. Jechonias then as prefiguring the Lord was,
as it were, a type of the corner-stone; and as Jechonias was not permitted to
reign over the Jews, but they went unto Babylon, so Christ, "the stone which
the builders rejected, is made the head of the corner,"(1) that the Gospel might
reach unto the Gentiles. Hesitate not then to reckon the head of the corner
twice, and you have at once the number written: and so there are fourteen in each
of the three divisions, yet altogether the generations are not forty-two, but
forty-one; for as when the order of the stones runs in a straight line, they are
all reckoned but once, but when there is a deviation from the straight line to
make an angle, that stone at which the deviation begins must be reckoned
twice, because it belongs at once to that line which is finished at it, and to that
other line which begins from it; so as long as the order of the generations
continued in the Jewish people, it made no angle in the regular division of
fourteen; but when the line was turned that the people might pass over into Babylon,
a sort of angle as it were was made at Jechonias, so that it was necessary to
reckon him twice, as the type of that adorable Corner-stone.
16. They have another cavil. "The generations of Christ," say they, "are
numbered through Joseph, and not through Mar." Attend awhile, holy brethren. "It
ought not to be," they say, "through Joseph." And why not? Was not joseph the
husband of Mary? "No," they say. Who says so? For the Scripture saith by the
authority of the Angel that he was her husband. "Fear not to take unto thee Mary
thy wife, for That which is conceived in her is of the Holy Ghost."(2) Again,
he was commanded to name the Child, though He was not born of his seed; "She
shall bring forth a Son, and thou shalt call His name Jesus."(3) Now the Scripture
is intent on showing, that He was not born of Joseph's seed, when he is told
in his trouble as to her being with child," He is of the Holy Ghost;" and yet
his paternal authority is not taken from him, forasmuch as he is commanded to
name the Child; and again the Virgin Mary herself, who was well aware that it was
not by him that she conceived Christ, yet calls him the father of Christ.
17. Consider when this was. When the Lord Jesus, as to His Human Nature,
was twelve years old(4) (for as to His Divine Nature He is before all times, and
without time), He tarried behind them in the temple, and disputed with the
elders, and they wondered at His doctrine; and His parents who were returning from
Jerusalem sought Him among their company, among those, that is, who were
journeying with them, and when they found Him not, they returned in trouble to
Jerusalem, and found Him disputing in the temple with the elders, when He was, as I
said, twelve years old. But what wonder? The Word of God is never silent,
though it is not always heard. He is found then in the temple, and His mother saith
to Him, "Why hast Thou thus dealt with us? Thy father and I have sought Thee
sorrowing;" and He said, "Wist ye not that I must be about My Father's
service?"(5) This He said for that the Son of God was in the temple of God, for that
temple was not Joseph's, but God's. See, says some one, "He did not allow that He
was the Son of Joseph." Wait, brethren, with a little patience, because of the
press of time, that it may be long enough for what I have to say. When Mary had
said, "Thy father and I have sought Thee sorrowing," He answered, "Wist ye not
that I must be about My Father's service?" for He would not be their Son in
such a sense, as not to be understood to be also the Son of God. For the Son of
God He was--ever the Son of God--Creator even of themselves who spake to Him;
but the Son of Man in time; born of a Virgin without the operation of her
husband, yet the Son of both parents. Whence prove we this? Already have we proved it
by the words of Mary, "Thy father and I have sought Thee sorrowing."
18. Now in the first place for the instruction of the women, our sisters,
such saintly modesty of the Virgin Mary must not be passed over, brethren. She
had given birth to Christ--the Angel had come to her, and said, "Behold, thou
shall conceive in thy womb, and bring forth a Son, and shalt call His name
Jesus.(6) He shall be great, and shall be called the Son of the Highest."(7) She(8)
had been thought worthy to give birth to the Son of the Highest, yet was she
most humble; nor did she put herself before her husband, even in the order of
naming him, so as to say," I and Thy father," but she saith, "Thy father and I."
She regarded not the high honour(9) of her womb, but the order of wedlock did
she regard, for Christ the humble would not have taught His mother to be proud.
"Thy father and I have sought Thee sorrowing." Thy father and I, she saith, "for
the husband is the head of the woman."(10) How much less then ought other
women to be proud! for Mary herself also is called a woman, not from the loss of
virginity, but by a form of expression peculiar to her country; for of the Lord
Jesus the Apostle also said, "made of a woman,"(11) yet there is no interruption
hence to the order and connection of our Creed(12) wherein we confess "that He
was born of the Holy Ghost and the Virgin Mary." For as a virgin she conceived
Him, as a virgin brought Him forth, and a virgin she continued; but all
females they called "women,"(1) by a peculiarity of the Hebrew tongue. Hear a most
plain example of this. The first woman whom God made, having taken her out of the
side of a man, was called a woman before she "knew" her husband, which we are
told was not till after they went out of Paradise, for the Scripture saith, "He
made her a woman."(2)
19. The answer then of the Lord Jesus Christ, "I must be about My Father's
service," does not in such sense declare God to be His Father, as to deny
that Joseph was His father also; And whence prove we this? By the Scripture, which
saith on this wise, "And He said unto them, Wist ye not that I must be about
My Father's service; but they understood not what He spake to them: and when He
went down with them, He came to Nazareth, and was subject to them."(3) It did
not say, "He was subject to His mother," or was "subject to her," but "He was
subject to them." To whom was He subject? was it not to His parents? It was to
both His parents that He was subject, by the same condescension by which He was
the Son of Man. A little way back women received their precepts. Now let
children receive theirs--to obey their parents, and to be subject to them. The world
was subject unto Christ, and Christ was subject to His parents.
20. You see then, brethren, that He did not say, "I must needs be about My
Father's service," in any such sense as that we should understand Him thereby
to have said, "You are not My parents." They were His parents in time, God was
His Father eternally. They were the parents of the Son of Man--"He," the
Father of His Word, and Wisdom, and Power, by whom He made all things. But if all
things were made by that Wisdom, "which reacheth from one end to another
mightily, and sweetly ordereth all things,"(4) then were they also made by the Son of
God to whom He Himself as Son of Man was afterwards to be subject; and the
Apostle says that He is the Son of David, "who was made of the seed of David
according to the flesh."(5) But yet the Lord Himself proposes a question to the Jews,
which the Apostle solves in these very words; for when he said, "who was made
of the seed of David," he added, "according to the flesh," that it might be
understood that He is not the Son of David according to His Divinity, but that the
Son of God is David's Lord; for thus in another place, when He is setting forth
the(6) privileges of the Jewish people, the Apostle saith, "Whose are the
fathers, of whom as concerning the flesh Christ came, Who is over all, God blessed
for ever."(7) As, "according to the flesh," He is David's Son; but as being
"God over all, blessed for ever," He is David's Lord. The Lord then saith to the
Jews, "Whose Son say ye that Christ is?" They answered, "The Son of David."(8)
For this they knew, as they had learnt it easily from the preaching of the
Prophets; and in truth, He was of the seed of David, "but according to the flesh,"
by the Virgin Mary, who was espoused to Joseph. When they answered then that
Christ was David's Son, Jesus said to them, "How then doth David in spirit call
Him Lord, saying, The Lord said unto my Lord, Sit Thou on My fight hand, till I
put Thine enemies under Thy feet.(9) If David then in spirit call Him Lord, how
is He his Son?"(10) And the Jews could not answer Him. So we have it in the
Gospel. He did not deny that He was David's Son, so that they could not understand
that He was also David's Lord. For they acknowledged in Christ that which He
became in time, but they did not understand in Him what He was in all eternity.
Wherefore wishing to teach them His Divinity, He proposed a question touching
His Humanity; as though He would say, "You know that Christ is David's Son,
answer Me, how He is also David's Lord?" And that they might not say, "He is not
David's Lord," He introduced the testimony of David himself. And what doth he
say? He saith indeed the truth. For you find God in the Psalms saying to David,
"Of the fruit of thy body will I set upon thy seat."(11) Here then He is the Son
of David. But how is He the Lord of David, who is David's Son? "The Lord said
unto my Lord, Sit Thou on My right hand."(9) Can you wonder that David's Son is
his Lord, when you see that Mary was the mother of her Lord? He is David's Lord
then as being God. David's Lord, as being Lord of all; and David's Son, as
being the Son of Man. At once Lord and Son. David's Lord, "who, being in the form
of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God;"(12) and David's Son, in
that "He emptied Himself, taking the form of a servant."(13)
21. Joseph then was not the less His father, because he knew not the
mother of our Lord, as though concupiscence and not conjugal affection constitutes
the marriage bond.(14) Attend, holy brethren; Christ's Apostle was some time
after this to say in the Church, "It remaineth that they that have wives be as
though they had none."(15) And we know many of our brethren bringing forth fruit
through grace, who for the Name of Christ practise an entire restraint by mutual
consent, who yet suffer no restraint of true conjugal affection. Yea, the more
the former is repressed, the more is the other strengthened and confirmed. Are
they then not married people who thus live, not requiring from each other any
carnal gratification, or exacting the satisfaction(1) of any bodily desire? And
yet the wife is subject to the husband, because it is fitting that she should
be, and so much the more in subjection is she, in proportion to her greater
chastity; and the husband for his part loveth his wife truly, as it is written,
"In honour and sanctification,"(2) as a coheir of grace: as "Christ," saith the
Apostle, "loved the Church."(3) If then this be a union, and a marriage; if it
be not the less a marriage because nothing of that kind passes between them,
which even with unmarried persons may take place, but then unlawfully; (O that all
could live so, but many have not the power!) let them at least not separate
those who have the power, and deny that the man is a husband or the woman a wife,
because there is no fleshly intercourse, but only the union of hearts between
them.
22. Hence, my brethren, understand the sense of Scripture concerning those
our ancient fathers, whose sole design in their marriage was to have children
by their wives. For those even who, according to the custom of their time and
nation, had a plurality of wives, lived in such chastity with them, as not to
approach their bed, but for the cause I have mentioned, thus treating them
indeed with honour. But he who exceeds the limits which this rule prescribes for the
fulfilment of this end of marriage, acts contrary to the very contract(4) by
which he took his wife. The contract is read, read in the presence of all the
attesting witnesses; and an express clause is there that they marry "for the
procreation of children;" and this is called the marriage contract.(5) If it was
not for this that wives were given and taken to wife, what father could without
blushing give up his daughter to the lust of any man But now, that the parents
may not blush, and that they may give their daughters in honourable marriage,
not to shame,(6) the contract is read out. And what is read from it?--the
clause, "for the sake of the procreation of children." And when this is heard, the
brow of the parent is cleared up and calmed. Let us consider again the
feelings(7) of the husband who takes his wife. The husband himself would blush to receive
her with any other view, if the father would blush with any other view to give
her. Nevertheless, if they cannot contain (as I have said on other occasions),
let them require what is due, and let them not go to any others than those
from whom it is due. Let both the woman and the man seek relief for their
infirmity in themselves. Let not the husband go to any other woman, nor the woman to
any other man, for from this adultery gets its name, as though it were "a going
to another."(8) And if they exceed the bounds of the marriage contract, let them
not at least exceed those of conjugal fidelity. Is it not a sin in married
persons to exact from one another more than this design of the "procreation of
children" renders necessary? It is doubtless a sin, though a venial one. The
Apostle saith, "But I speak this of allowance,"(9) when he was treating the matter
thus. "Defraud ye not one the other, except it be with consent for a time, that
ye may give yourselves to fasting and prayer; and come together again, that
Satan tempt you not for your incontinency."(10) What does this mean? That you do
not impose. upon yourselves any thing beyond your strength, that you do not by
your mutual continence fall into adultery. "That Satan tempt you not for your
incontinency." And that he might not seem to enjoin what he only allowed (for
it is one thing to give precepts to strength of virtue, and another to make
allowance to infirmity), he immediately subjoined; "But this I speak of allowance,
not of commandment. For I would that all men were even as I myself." As though
he would say, I do not command you to do this; but I pardon you if you do.
23. So then, my brethren, give heed. Those famous men who marry wives only
for the procreation of children, such as we read the Patriarchs to have been,
and know it, by many proofs, by the clear and unequivocal testimony of the
sacred books; whoever, I say, they are who marry wives for this purpose only, if
the means could be given them of having children without intercourse with their
wives, would they not with joy unspeakable embrace so great a blessing? would
they not with great delight accept it? For there are two carnal operations by
which mankind is preserved, to both of which the wise and holy descend as matter
of duty, but the unwise rush headlong into them through lust; and these are very
different things. Now what are these two things by which mankind is preserved?
The first which is confined to ourselves and relates to taking nourishment
(which cannot of course be taken without some gratification of the flesh), is
eating and drinking; if you do not this you will die. By this one support then of
eating and drinking does the race of man subsist, by a(11) law of its nature.
But by this men are only supported as far as themselves are concerned; for they
do not provide for any succession by eating and drinking, but by marrying wives.
For so is the race of man preserved; first, by the means of life; but because
whatever care they exercise they cannot of course live for ever, there is a
second provision made, that those who are newly born may replace those who die.
For the race of man is, as it is written, like the leaves on a tree, or an olive,
that is, or a laurel, or some tree of this sort, which is never without
foliage, yet whose leaves are not always the same.(1) For, as it is written, "it
shooteth forth some, and casteth others," because those which sprout afresh replace
the others as they fall, for the tree is ever casting its leaves, yet is ever
clothed with leaves. So also the race of man feels not the loss of those who
die day by day, because of the supply of those who are newly born; and thus the
whole race of mankind is according to its own laws sustained, and as leaves are
ever seen on the trees, so is the earth seen to be full of men. Whereas if they
were only to die, and no fresh ones be born, the earth would be stripped of
all its inhabitants, as certain trees are of all their leaves.
24. Seeing then that the human race subsists in such sort, as that those
two supports, of which enough has now been said, are necessary to it, the wise,
and understanding, and the faithful man descends to both as matter of duty, and
does not fall into them through lust. But how many are there who rush greedily
to their eating and drinking, and make their whole life to consist in them, as
if they were the very reason for living. For whereas men really eat to live,
they think that they live to eat. These will every wise man condemn, and holy
Scripture especially, all gluttons, drunkards, gormandizers, "whose god is their
belly."(2) Nothing but the lust of the flesh, and not the need of refreshment,
carries them to the table. These then fall upon their meat and drink. But
they who descend to them from the duty of maintaining life, do not live to eat,
but eat to live. Accordingly, if the offer were made to these wise and temperate
persons that they should live without food or drink, with what great joy would
they embrace the boon! that now they might not even be forced to descend to
that into which it had never been their custom to fall, but that they might be
lifted up always in the Lord, and no necessity of repairing the wastings of their
body might make them lay aside their fixed attention towards Him. How think ye
that the holy Elias received the cruse of water, and the cake of bread, to
satisfy him for forty days?(3) With great joy no doubt, because he eat and drank
to live, and not to serve his lust. But try to bring this about, if you could,
for a man who, like the beast in his stall, places his whole blessedness and
happiness in the table. He would hate your boon, and thrust it from him, and look
upon it as a punishment. And so in that other duty of marriage, sensual men
seek for wives only to satisfy their sensuality, and therefore at length are
scarce contented even with their wives. And oh! I would that if they cannot or will
not cure their sensuality, they would not suffer it to go beyond that limit
which conjugal duty prescribes, I mean even that which is granted to infirmity.
Nevertheless, if you were to say to such a man, "why do you marry?" he would
answer perhaps for very shame, "for the sake of children." But if any one in whom
he could have unhesitating credit were to say to him, "God is able to give, and
yea, and will give you children without your having any intercourse with your
wife;" he would assuredly be driven to confess that it was not for the sake of
children that he was seeking for a wife. Let him then acknowledge his infirmity,
and so receive that which he pretended to receive only as matter of duty.
25. It was thus those holy men of former times, those men of God sought
and wished for children. For this one end--the procreation of children, was their
intercourse and union with their wives. It is for this reason that they were
allowed to have a plurality of wives. For if immoderateness in these desires
could be well-pleasing to God, it would have been as much allowed at that time for
one woman to have many husbands, as one husband many wives. Why then had all
chaste women no more than one husband, but one man had many wives, except that
for one man to have many wives is a means to the multiplication of a family,
whereas a woman would not give birth to more children, how many soever more
husbands she might have. Wherefore, brethren, if our fathers(1) union and intercourse
with their wives, was for no other end but the procreation of children, it had
been great matter of joy to them, if they could have had children without that
intercourse, since for the sake of having them they descended to that
intercourse only through duty, and did not rush into it through lust. So then was
Joseph not a father because he had gotten a son without any lust of the flesh? God
forbid that Christian chastity should entertain a thought, which even Jewish
chastity entertained not! Love your wives then, but love them chastely. In your
intercourse with them keep yourselves within the bounds necessary for the
procreation of children. And inasmuch as you cannot otherwise have them, descend to it
with regret. For this necessity is the punishment of that Adam from whom we
are sprung. Let us not make a pride of our punishment. It is his punishment who
because he was made mortal by sin, was condemned(4) to bring forth only a mortal
posterity. This punishment God has not withdrawn, that man might remember from
what state he is called away, and to what state he is called, and might seek
for that union, in which there can be no corruption.
26. Among that people then, because it was necessary that there should be
an abundant increase until Christ came, by the multiplication of that people in
whom were to be prefigured all that was to be prefigured as instruction for
the Church, it was a duty to marry wives, by means of whom that people in whom
the Church should be foreshown might increase. But when the King of all nations
Himself was born, then began the honour of virginity with the mother of the
Lord, who had the privilege(1) of bearing a Son without any loss of her virgin
purity. As that then was a true marriage, and a marriage free from all corruption,
so why should not the husband chastely receive what his wife had chastely
brought forth? For as she was a wife in chastity, so was he in chastity a husband;
and as she was in chastity a mother, so was he in chastity a father. Whoso then
says that he ought not to be called father, because he did not beget his Son
in the usual(2) way, looks rather to the satisfaction of passion in the
procreation of children, and not the natural feeling of affection. What others desire
to fulfil in the flesh, he in a more excellent way fulfilled in the spirit. For
thus they who adopt children, beget them by the heart in greater chastity, whom
they cannot by the flesh beget. Consider, brethren, the laws of adoption; how
a man comes to be the son of another, of whom he was not born, so that the
choice of the person who adopts has more right in him than the nature of him who
begets him has. Not only then must Joseph be a father, but in a most excellent
manner a father. For men beget children of women also who are not their wives,
and they are called natural children, and the children of the lawful marriage are
placed above them. Now as to the manner of their birth, they are born alike;
why then are the latter set above the other, but because the love of a wife, of
whom children are born, is the more pure. The union of the sexes is not
regarded in this case, for this is the same in both women. Where has the wife the
pre-eminence but in her fidelity, her wedded love, her more true and pure
affection? If then a man could have children by his wife without this intercourse,
should he not have so much the more joy thereby, in proportion to the greater
chastity of her whom he loves the most?
27. See too by this how it may happen, that one man may have not two sons
only, but two fathers also. For by the mention of adoption, it may occur to
your thoughts that so it may be. For it is said; A man can have two sons, but two
fathers he cannot have. But the truth is, it is found that he can have two
fathers also, if one have begotten him of his body, and another adopted him in
love. If one man then can have two fathers, Joseph could have two fathers also;
might be begotten by one, and adopted by another. And if this be so, what do their
cavillings mean, who insist that Matthew has followed one set of generations,
and Luke another? And in fact we find that so it is, for Matthew has given
Jacob as the father of Joseph, and Luke Heli. Now it is true it might seem, as if
one and the same man, whose son Joseph was, had two names. But inasmuch as the
grandfathers, and all the other progenitors which they enumerate, are different,
and in the very number of the generations, the one has more, and the other
fewer, Joseph is plainly shown hereby to have had two fathers. Now having disposed
of the cavil of this question, forasmuch as clear reason has shown that it may
happen that he who has begotten a child may be one father, and he who has
adopted him another: supposing two fathers, it is nothing strange if the
grandfathers and the great grandfathers, and the rest in the line upwards which are
enumerated, should be different as coming from different fathers.
28. And let not the law of adoption seem to you to be foreign to our
Scriptures, and that, as if it were recognised(3) only in the practice of I human
laws, it cannot fall in with the authority of the divine books. For it is a thing
established of old time, and frequently heard of in the Ecclesiastical
books(4)--that not only the natural way of birth, but the free choice s of the will
also, should give birth to a child. For women, if they had no children of their
own, used to adopt children born of their husbands by their hand-maids, and even
oblige their husbands to give them children in this way; as Sarah, Rachel, and
Leah.(6) And in doing this the husbands did not commit adultery, in that they
obeyed their wives in that matter which had regard to conjugal duty, according
to what the Apostle saith: "The wife hath not power of her own body, but the
husband; and likewise also the husband hath not power of his own body, but the
wife."(7) Moses too, who was born of a Hebrew mother and was exposed, was adopted
by Pharaoh's daughter.(8) There were not then indeed the same forms of law as
now, but the choice of the will was taken for the rule of law, as the Apostle
saith also in another place, "The Gentiles which have not the law, do by nature
the things contained in the law."(9) But if it is permitted to women to make
those their children to whom they have not given birth, why should it not be
allowed men to do so too with those whom they have not begotten of their body, but
of the love of adoption. For we read that the patriarch Jacob even, the father
of so many children, made his grandchildren, the sons of Joseph, his own
children, in these words: "These too shall be mine, and they shall receive the land
with their brethren, and those which thou begettest after them shall be
thine."(1) But it will be said, perhaps, that this word "adoption" is not found in the
Holy Scriptures. As though it were of any importance by what name it is
called, when the thing itself is there--for a woman to have a child to whom she has
not given birth, or a man a child whom he has not begotten. And he may, without
any opposition from me, refuse to call Joseph adopted, provided he grant that
he may have been the son of a man of whose body he was not born. Yet the Apostle
Paul does continually use this very word "adoption," and(2) that to express a
great mystery. For though Scripture testifies that our Lord Jesus Christ is the
only Son of God, it says, that the brethren and coheirs whom He hath
vouchsafed to have, are made so by a kind of adoption through Divine grace. "When,"
saith he, "the fulness of time was come, God sent forth His Son, made of a woman,
made under the law, to redeem them that were under the law, that we might
receive the adoption of sons."(3) And in another place: "We groan within ourselves,
waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body."(4) And again,
when he was speaking of the Jews, "I could wish that myself were accursed from
Christ for my brethren, my kinsmen according to the flesh; who are Israelites, to
whom pertaineth the adoption, and the glory, and the testaments, and the giving
of the law; whose are the fathers, and of whom as concerning the flesh Christ
came, Who is over all, God blessed for ever."(5) Where he shows, that the word
"adoption," or at least the thing which it signifies, was of ancient use among
the Jews, just as was the Testament and the giving of the Law, which he
mentions together with it.
29. Added to this; there is another way peculiar to the Jews, in which a
man might be the son of another of whom he was not born according to the flesh.
For kinsmen used to marry the wives of their next of kin, who died without
children, to raise up seed to him that was deceased.(6) So then he who was thus
born was both his son of whom he was born, and his in whose line of succession he
was born. All this has been said, lest any one, thinking it impossible for two
fathers to be mentioned properly for one man, should imagine that either of the
Evangelists who have narrated the generations of the Lord are to be, by an
impious calumny, charged so to say with a lie; especially when we may see that we
are warned against this by their very words. For Matthew, who is understood to
make mention of that father of whom Joseph was born, enumerates the generations
thus: "This one begat the other," so as to come to what he says at the end,
"Jacob begat Joseph." But Luke--because he cannot properly be said to be begotten
who is made a child either by adoption, or who is born in the succession of
the deceased, of her who was his wife--did not say, "Heli begat Joseph," or
"Joseph whom Hell begat," but "Who was the son of Heli," whether by adoption, or as
being born of the next of kin in the succession of one deceased.(7)
30. Enough has now been said to show that the question, why the
generations are reckoned through Joseph and not through Mary, ought not to perplex us;
for as she was a mother without carnal desire, so was he a father without any
carnal intercourse. Let then the generations ascend and descend through him. And
let us not exclude him from being a father, because he had none of this carnal
desire. Let his greater purity only confirm rather his relationship of father,
lest the holy Mary herself reproach us. For she would not put her own name
before her husband; but said, "Thy father and I have sought Thee sorrowing."(8) Let
not then these perverse murmurers do that which the chaste spouse of Joseph
did not. Let us reckon then through Joseph, because as he is in chastity a
husband, so is he in chastity a father. And let us put the man before the woman,
according to the order of nature and the law of God For if we should cast him
aside and leave her, he would say, and say with reason, "Why have you excluded me?
Why do not the generations ascend and descend through me?" Shall we say to him,
"Because thou didst not beget Him by the operation of thy flesh?" Surely he
will answer, "And is it by the operation of the flesh that the Virgin bare Him?
What the Holy Spirit wrought, He wrought for both." "Being a just man,"(1)
saith the Gospel. The husband then was just and the woman just. The Holy Spirit
reposing in the justice of them both, gave to both a Son. In that sex which is by
nature fitted to give birth, He wrought that birth which was for the husband
also. And therefore doth the Angel bid them both give the Child a name, and
hereby is the authority of both parents established. For when Zacharias was yet
dumb, the mother gave a name to her newborn son. And when they who were present
"made signs to his father what he would have him called, he took a
writing-table and wrote"(2)) the name which she had already pronounced. So to Mary too the
Angel saith, "Behold, thou shalt conceive a Son, and shalt call His name
Jesus."(3) And to Joseph also he saith, "Joseph, thou son of David, fear not to take
unto thee Mary thy wife; for That which is conceived in her is of the Holy
Ghost. And she shall bring forth a Son, and thou shalt call His name Jesus, for He
shall save His people from their sins."(4) Again it is said, "And she brought
forth a Son to him," s by which he is established to be a father, not in the
flesh indeed, but in love. Let us then acknowledge him to be a father, as in truth
he is. For most advisedly and most wisely do the Evangelists reckon through
him, whether Matthew in descending from Abraham down to Christ, or Luke in
ascending from Christ through Abraham up to God. The one reckons in a descending, the
other in an ascending order; but both through Joseph. And why? Because he is
the father. How the father? Because he is the more undeniably(6) a father in
proportion as he is more chastely so. He was thought, it is true, to be the father
of our Lord Jesus Christ in another way: that is, as other parents are
according to a fleshly birth, and not through the fruitfulness of a wholly spiritual
love. For Luke said, "Who was supposed to be the father of Jesus."(7) Why
supposed? Because men's thoughts and suppositions were directed to what is usually
the case with men. The Lord then was not of the seed of Joseph, though He was
supposed to be; yet nevertheless the Son of the Virgin Mary, who is also the Son
of God, was born to Joseph, the fruit of his piety and love.
31. But why does St Matthew reckon in a descending, and Luke in an
ascending order? I pray you give attentive ear to what the Lord may help me to say on
this matter; with your minds now at ease, and disembarrassed from all the
perplexity of these cavillings. Matthew descends through his generations, to
signify our Lord Jesus Christ descending to bear our sins, that in the seed of
Abraham all nations might be blessed. Wherefore, he does not begin with Adam, for
from him is the whole race of mankind. Nor with Noe, because from his family
again, after the flood, descended the whole human race. Nor could the man Christ
Jesus, as descended from Adam, from whom all men are descended, bear(8) upon the
fulfilment of prophecy; nor, again, as descended from Noe, from whom also all
men are descended; but only as descended from Abraham, who at that time was
chosen, that all nations should be blessed in his seed, when the earth was now full
of nations. But Luke reckons in an ascending order, and does not begin to
enumerate the generations from the beginning of the account of our Lord's birth, but
from that place, where he relates His Baptism by John. Now, as in the
incarnation of the Lord, the sins of the human race are taken upon Him to be borne, so
in the consecration of His Baptism are they taken on Him to be expiated.
Accordingly, St. Matthew, as representing His descent to bear our sins, enumerates
the generations in a descending order; but the other, as representing the
expiation of sins, not His own, of course, but our sins, enumerates them in an
ascending order. Again, St. Matthew descends through Solomon, by whose mother David
sinned; St. Luke ascends through Nathan(9) another son of the same David, through
whom he was purged from his sin.(10) For we read, that Nathan was sent to him
to reprove him, and that he might through repentance be healed. Both
Evangelists meet together in David; the one in descending, the other in ascending; and
from David to Abraham, or from Abraham to David, there is no difference in any
one generation. And so Christ, both the Son of David and the Son of Abraham,
comes up to God. For to God must we be brought back, when renewed in Baptism, from
the abolition of sins.
32. Now, in the generations which Matthew enumerates, the predominant"
number is forty. For it is a custom of the Holy Scriptures, not to reckon what is
over and above certain round numbers.(12) For thus it is said to be four
hundred years, after which the people of Israel went out of Egypt, whereas it is four
hundred and thirty.(13) And so here the one generation, which exceeds the
fortieth, does not take away the predominance of that number. Now this number
signifies the life wherein we labour in this world, as long as we are absent from
the Lord, during which the temporal dispensation of the preaching of the truth is
necessary. For the number ten, by which the perfection of blessedness is
signified, multiplied four times, because of the fourfold divisions of the seasons,
and the fourfold divisions of the world, will make the number forty.(1)
Wherefore Moses and Elias, and the Mediator Himself, our Lord Jesus Christ, fasted
forty days, because in the time of this life, continence from the enticements of
the body is necessary. Forty years also did the people wander in the
wilderness.(2) Forty days the waters of the flood lasted.(3) Forty days after His
resurrection did the Lord converse with the disciples, persuading them of the
reality(4) of His risen body,(5) whereby He showed that in this life, "wherein we are
absent from the Lord"(6) (which the number forty, as has been already said,
mystically figures), we have need to celebrate the memory of the Lord's Body, which
we do in the Church, till He come.(7) Forasmuch, then as our Lord descended to
this life, and "the Word was made flesh, that He might be delivered for our
sins, and rise again for our justification,"(8) Matthew followed the number forty;
so that the one generation which there exceeds that number, either does not
hinder its predominance--just as those thirty years do not hinder the perfect
number of four hundred--or that it even has this further meaning, that the Lord
Himself, by the addition of whom the forty-one is made up, so descended to this
life to bear our sins, as yet, by a peculiar and especial excellency, whereby He
is in such sense man, as to be also God, to be found to be excepted from this
life. For of Him only is that said, which never has been or shall be able to be
said of any holy man, however perfected in wisdom and righteousness, "The Word
was made Flesh."(9)
33. But Luke, who ascends up through the generations from the baptism of
the Lord, makes up the number seventy-seven, beginning to ascend from our Lord
Jesus Christ Himself through Joseph, and coming through Adam up to God. And that
is, because by this number is signified the abolition of all sins, which takes
place in Baptism. Not that the Lord Himself had any thing to be forgiven Him
in baptism, but that by His humility He set forth its usefulness to us. And
though that was only the baptism of John, yet there appeared in it to outward
sense the Trinity of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost; and hereby was
consecrated the Baptism of Christ Himself, whereby Christians were to be baptized.
The Father in the voice which came from heaven, the Son in the person of the
Mediator Himself, the Holy Ghost in the dove.(10)
34. Now, why the number seventy-seven should contain all sins which are
remitted in Baptism, there occurs this probable reason, for that the number ten
implies the perfection of all righteousness, and blessedness, when the creature
denoted by seven(11) cleaves to the Trinity of the Creator; whence also the
Decalogue of the Law was consecrated in ten precepts. Now the "transgression" of
the number ten is signified by the number eleven; and sin is known to be
transgression, when a man, in seeking something "more," exceeds the rule of justice.
And hence the Apostle calls avarice "the root of all evils."(12) And to the soul
which goes a-whoring from God, it is said, in the Person of the same Lord,
"Thou wast in hope, if thou didst depart from Me, that thou wouldest have
something more." Because the sinner then has in his transgression, that is, in his sin,
regard to himself alone--in that he wishes to gratify himself by some private
good of his own (whence they are blamed "who seek their own, not the things
which are Jesus Christ's;"(13) and charity is commended, "which seeketh not her
own"(14)); therefore, this number eleven, by which transgression is signified,
is multiplied, not ten times, but seven, and so makes up seventy-seven. For
transgression looks(15) not to the Trinity of the Creator, but to the creature,
that is, to the man himself, which creature the number seven denotes. Three,
because of the soul, in which there(16) is a kind of image of the Trinity of the
Creator (for it is in the soul that man has been made after the image of God); and
four, because of the body. For the four elements(17) of which the body is made
up are known by all. And if any one know them not, he may easily remember,
that this body of the world, in which our bodies move along, has, so to say, four
principal parts, which even Holy Scripture is constantly making mention of,
East, and West, and North, and South. And forasmuch as sins are committed either
by the mind, as in the will only, or by the works of the body also, and so
visibly; therefore the Prophet Amos continually introduces(18) God as threatening,
and saying, "For three and four iniquities I will not turn away," that is," I
will not dissemble My wrath."(19) Three, because of the nature of the soul; four,
because of that of the body; of which two, man consists.
35. So, then, seven times eleven, that is, as has been explained, the
transgression of righteousness, which has regard only to the sinner himself, make
up the number seventy-seven, in which it is signified, that all sins which are
remitted in Baptism are contained. And hence it, is that Luke ascends up through
seventy-seven generations unto God, as showing that man is reconciled unto God
by the abolition of all sin. Hence the Lord Himself saith to Peter, who asked
Him how oft he ought to forgive a brother, "I say not unto thee(1) seven times,
but until seventy times and seven."(2) Now, whatever else can be drawn out of
these recesses and treasures of God's mysteries by those who are more diligent
and more worthy than I, receive. Yet have I spoken according to my poor
ability, as the Lord hath aided and given me power, and as I best could, considering
also the little time I had. If any one of you be capable of anything further,
let him knock at Him from whom I too receive what I am able to receive and speak.
But, above all things, remember this; not to be disturbed by the Scriptures,
which you do not yet understand, nor be puffed up by what you do understand; but
what you do not understand, with submissions wait for, and what you do
understand, hold fast with charity.