ST. AUGUSTIN ON THE PSALMS. PSALMS LXXVI TO LXXVIII.
PSALM LXXVI.[1]
1. The Jews are wont to glory in this Psalm which we have sung, saying,
"Known in Judaea is God, in Israel great is the name of Him :" and to revile the
Gentiles to whom God is not known, and to say that to themselves alone God is
known; seeing that the Prophet saith," Known in Judaea is God." In other places
therefore He is unknown. But God is known in very deed in Judaea, if they
understand what is Judaea. For indeed God is not known except in Judaea. Behold even
we say this, that except a person shall have been in Judaea, known to him God
cannot be. But what saith the Apostle? He that in secret is a Jew, he that is
so in circumcision of the heart, not in letter but in spirit.[2] There are
therefore Jews in circumcision of the flesh, and there are Jews in circumcision of
the heart. Many of our holy fathers[3] had both the circumcision of the flesh,
for a seal of the faith, and circumcision of the heart, for the faith itself.
From these fathers these men degenerating, who now in the name do glory, and have
lost their deeds; from these fathers, I say, degenerating, they have
remained Jews in flesh, in heart Heathens. For these are Jews, who are out of
Abraham, from whom Isaac was born, and out of him Jacob, and out of Jacob the twelve
Patriarchs, and out of the twelve Patriarchs the whole people of the Jews.[4]
But they were generally called Jews for this reason, that Judah was one of the
twelve sons of Jacob, a Patriarch among the twelve, and from his stock the
Royalty came among the Jews. For all this people after the number of the twelve sons
of Jacob, had twelve tribes. What we call tribes are as it were distinct houses
and congregations of people. That people, I say, had twelve tribes, out of
which twelve tribes one tribe was Judah, out of which were the kings; and there
was another tribe, Levi, out of which were the priests. But because to the
priests serving the temple no land was allotted,[5] but it was necessary that among
twelve tribes all the Land of promise should be shared: there having been
therefore taken out one tribe of higher dignity, the tribe of Levi, which was of the
priests, there would have remained eleven, unless by the adoption of the two
sons of Joseph the number twelve were completed.
What this is, observe. One of the twelve sons of Jacob was Joseph. ...
This Joseph had two sons, Ephraim and Manasse. Jacob, dying, as though by will,
received those his grandsons into the number of sons, and said to his son Joseph,
"The rest that are born shall be to thee; but these to me, and they shall
divide the land with their brethren."[6] As yet there had not been given nor
divided the land of promise, but he was speaking in the Spirit, prophesying. The two
sons therefore of Joseph being added, there were made up nevertheless twelve
tribes, since now there are thirteen. For instead of one tribe of Joseph, two
were added, and there were made thirteen. There being taken out then the tribe of
Levi, that tribe of priests which did serve the Temple, and lived by the tithes
of all the rest unto whom the land was divided, there remain twelve. In these
twelve was the tribe of Judah, whence the kings were. For at first from another
tribe was given King Saul,[7] and he was rejected as being an evil king; after
there was given from the tribe of Judah King David, and out of him from the
tribe of Judah were the Kings.[8] But Jacob had spoken of this, when he blessed
his sons, "there shall not fail a prince out of Judah, nor a leader from his
thighs, until there come He to whom the promise hath been made."[9] But from the
tribe of Judah there came Our Lord Jesus Christ. For He is, as the Scripture
saith, and as ye have but now heard, out of the seed of David born of Mary,[10]
But as regardeth the Divinity of our Lord Jesus Christ, wherein He is equal with
the Father, He is not only before the Jews, but also before Abraham
himself;[11] nor only before Abraham, but also before Adam; nor only before Adam, but also
before Heaven and earth and before ages: for all things by Himself were made,
and without Him there was made nothing? Because therefore in prophecy hath been
said, "there shall not fail a prince out of Judah," etc.:[9] former times are
examined, and we find that the Jews always had their kings of the tribe of
Judah, and had no foreign king before that Herod who was king when the Lord was
born. Thence began foreign kings, from Herod.[13] Before Herod all were of the
tribe of Judah, but only until there should come He to whom the promise had been
made. Therefore when the Lord Himself came, the kingdom of the Jews was
overthrown, and removed from the Jews. Now they have no king; because they will not
acknowledge the true King. See now whether they must be called Jews. Now ye do
see that they must not be called Jews. They have themselves with their own voice
resigned that name, so that they are not worthy to be called Jews, except only
in the flesh. When did they sever themselves from the name? They said, "We
have no king but Caesar."[1] O ye who are called Jews and are not, if ye have no
king but Caesar, there hath failed a Prince of Judah: there hath come then He to
whom the promise hath been made. They then are more truly Jews, who have been
made Christians out of Jews: the rest of the Jews, who in Christ have not
believed, have deserved to lose even the very name. The true Judaea, then, is the
Church of Christ, believing in that King, who hath come out of the tribe of Judah
through the Virgin Mary; believing in Him of whom the Apostle was just now
speaking, in writing to Timothy, "Be thou mindful that Jesus Christ hath risen
from the dead, of the seed of David, after my Gospel."[2] For of Judah is David,
and out of David is the Lord Jesus Christ. We believing in Christ do belong to
Judah: and we acknowledge Christ. We, that with eyes have not seen, in faith do
keep Him. Let not therefore the Jews revile, who are no longer Jews. They said
themselves, "We have no king but Caesar."[1] For better were it for them that
their king should be Christ, of the seed of David, of the tribe of Judah.
Nevertheless because Christ Himself is of the seed of David after the flesh, but God
above all things blessed for ever? He is Himself our King and our God; our
King, inasmuch as born of the tribe of Judah, after the flesh, was Christ the Lord,
the Saviour; but our God, who is before Judah, and before Heaven and earth, by
whom were made all things,[4] both spiritual and corporal. For if all things
by Himself were made; even Mary herself, out of whom He was born, by Himself was
made. ...
2. "Known in Judaea is God, in Israel great is the Name of Him" (ver. 1).
Concerning Israel also we ought so to take it as we have concerning Judaea: as
they were not the true Jews, so neither was that the true Israel. For what is
Israel said to be? One seeing God. And how have they seen God, among whom He
walked in the flesh; and while they supposed Him to be man, they slew Him? ... "In
Israel great is His Name." Wilt thou be Israel? Observe that man concerning
whom the Lord saith, "Behold an Israelite indeed, in whom guile is not."[5] If a
true Israelite is he in whom guile is not, the guileful and lying are not true
Israelites. Let them not say then, that with them is God, and great is His name
in Israel. Let them prove themselves Israelites, and I grant that "in Israel
great is His Name."
3. "And there hath been made in peace a place for Him, and His habitation
is in Sion" (ver. 2). Again, Sion is as it were the country of the Jews; the
true Sion is the Church of Christians. But the intrepretation of the Hebrew names
is thus handed down to us: Judaea is interpreted confession, Israel, one
seeing God. After Judaea is Israel. Wilt thou see God? First do thou confess, and
then in thyself there is made a place for God; because "there hath been made in
peace a place for Him." So long as then thou confessest not thy sins, in a
manner thou art quarrelling with God. For how art thou not disputing with Him, who
art praising that which displeaseth Him? He punisheth a thief, thou dost praise
theft: He doth punish a drunken man, thou dost praise drunkenness. Thou art
disputing with God, thou hast not made for Him a place in thy heart: because in
peace is His place. And how dost thou begin to have peace with God? Thou
beginnest with Him in confession. There is a voice of a Psalm, saying, "Begin ye to the
Lord in confession."[6] What is, "Begin ye to the Lord in confession"? Begin
ye to be joined to the Lord. In what manner? So that the same thing may
displease you as displeaseth Him. There displeaseth Him thy evil life; if it please
thyself, thou art disunited from Him; if it displease thee, through confession to
Him thou art united. ...
4. "There He hath broken the strength of bows, and the shield, and the
sword, and the battle" (ver. 3). Where hath He broken? In that eternal peace, in
that perfect peace. And now, my brethren, they that have rightly believed see
that they ought not to rely on themselves: and all the might of their own
menaces, and whatsoever is in them whetted for mischief, this they break in pieces;
and whatsoever they deem of great virtue wherewith to protect themselves
temporally, and the war which they were waging against God by defending their sins, all
these things He hath broken there.
5. "Thou enlightening marvellously from the eternal mountains" (ver. 4).
What are the eternal mountains? Those which He hath Himself made eternal; which
are the great mountains, the preachers of truth. Thou dost enlighten, but from
the eternal mountains: the great mountains are first to receive Thy light, and
from Thy light which the mountains receive, the earth also is clothed. But
those great mountains the Apostles have received, the Apostles have received as it
were the first streaks of the rising light. ... Wherefore also, in another
place, a Psalm saith what? "I have lifted up mine eyes unto the mountains, whence
there shall come help to me."[7] What then, in the mountains is thy hope, and
from thence to thee shall there come help? Hast thou stayed at the mountains?
Take heed what thou doest. There is something above the mountains: above the
mountains is He at whom the mountains tremble. "I have lifted up," he saith, "mine
eyes unto the mountains, whence there shall come help to me." But what
followeth? "My help," he saith, "is from the Lord, who hath made Heaven and earth."[1]
Unto the mountains indeed I have lifted up eyes, because through the mountains
to me the Scriptures were displayed: but I have my heart in Him that doth
enlighten all mountains. ...
6. "There have been troubled all the unwise in heart" (ver. 5). ... How
have they been troubled? When the Gospel is preached. And what is life eternal?
And who is He that hath risen from the dead? The Athenians wondered, when the
Apostle Paul spake of the resurrection of the dead, and thought that he spake but
fables.[2] But because he said that there was another life which neither eye
hath seen, nor ear heard, nor hath it gone up into the heart of man? therefore
the unwise in heart were troubled. But what hath befallen them? "They have slept
their sleep, and all men of riches have found nothing in their hands." They
have loved things present, and have gone to sleep in the midst of things present:
and so these very present things have become to them delightful: just as he
that seeth in a dream himself to have found treasure, is so long rich as he
waketh not. The dream hath made him rich, waking hath made him poor. Sleep perchance
hath held him slumbering on the earth, and lying on the hard ground, poor and
perchance a beggar; in sleep he hath seen himself to lie on an ivory or golden
bed, and on feathers heaped up; so long as he is sleeping, he is sleeping well,
waking he hath found himself on the hard ground, whereon sleep had taken him.
Such men also are these too: they have come into this life, and through
temporal desires, they have as it were slumbered here; and them riches, and vain pomps
that fly away, have taken, and they have passed away: they have not understood
how much of good might be done therewith. For if they had known of another
life, there they would have laid up unto themselves the treasure which here was
doomed to perish: like as Zacchaeus, the chief of the Publicans, saw that good[4]
when he received the Lord Jesus in his house, and he saith, "The half of my
goods I give to the poor, and if to any man I have done any wrong, fourfold I
restore."[5] This man was not in the emptiness of men dreaming, but in the faith
of men awake. ...
7. "By Thy chiding, O God of Jacob, there have slept all men that have
mounted horses" (ver. 6). Who are they that have mounted horses? They that would
not be humble. To sit on horseback is no sin; but it is a sin to lift up the
neck of power against God, and to deem one's self to be in some distinction.
Because thou art rich, thou hast mounted; God doth chide, and thou sleepest. Great
is the anger of Him chiding, great the anger. Let your Love observe the terrible
thing. Chiding hath noise, the noise is wont to make men wake. So great is the
force of God chiding, that he said, "By Thy chiding, O God of Jacob, there
have slept all men that have mounted horses." Behold what a sleep that Pharaoh
slept who mounted horses. For he was not awake in heart, because against chiding
he had his heart hardened.[6] For hardness of heart is slumber. I ask you, my
brethren, how they sleep, who, while the Gospel is sounding, and the Amen, and
the Hallelujah, throughout the whole world, yet will not condemn their old life,
and wake up unto a new life. There was the Scripture of God in Judaea only, now
throughout the whole world it is sung. In that one nation one God who made all
things was spoken of, as to be adored and worshipped; now where is He unsaid?
Christ hath risen again, though derided on the Cross; that very Cross whereon
He was derided, He hath now imprinted on the brows of kings: and men yet sleep.
...
8. "Thou art terrible, and who shall withstand Thee at that time by Thine
anger?" (ver. 7). Now they sleep, and perceive not Thee angry; but for cause
that they should sleep, He was angry. Now that which sleeping they perceived not,
at the end they shall perceive. For there shall appear the Judge of quick and
dead. "And who shall withstand Thee at that time by Thine anger?" For now they
speak that which they will, and they dispute against God and say, who are the
Christians? or who is Christ? or what fools are they that believe that which
they see not, and relinquish the pleasures which they see, and follow the faith of
things which are not displayed to their eyes! Ye sleep and snore,[7] ye speak
against God, as much as ye are able. "How long shall sinners, O Lord, how long
shall sinners glory, they answer and will speak iniquity?"[8] But when doth no
one answer and no one speak, except when he turneth himself[9] against himself?
...
9. "From Heaven Thou hast hurled judgment: the earth hath trembled, and
hath rested" (ver. 8). She which now doth trouble herself, she which now
speaketh, hath to fear at the end and to rest. Better had she now rested, that at the
end she might have rejoiced. Rested? When? "When God arose unto judgment, that
He might save all the meek in heart" (ver. 9). Who are the meek in heart? They
that on snorting horses have not mounted, but in their humility have confessed
their own sins. "For the thought of a man shall confess to Thee, and the
remnants of the thought shall celebrate solemnities to Thee" (ver. 10). The first is
the thought, the latter are the remnants of the thought. What is the first
thought? That from whence we begin, that good thought whence thou wilt begin to
confess. Confession uniteth us to Christ. But now the confession itself, that is,
the first thought, doth produce in us the remnants of the thought: and those
very "remnants of thought shall celebrate solemnities to Thee." What is the
thought which shall confess? That which condemneth the former life, that where-unto
that which it was is displeasing, in order that it may be that which it was not,
is itself the first thought. But because thus thou oughtest to withdraw from
sins, with the first thought after having confessed to God, that it may not
escape thy memory that thou hast been a sinner; in that thou hast been a sinner,
thou dost celebrate solemnities to God. Furthermore it is to be understood as
followeth. The first thought hath confession, and departure from the old life. But
if thou shalt have forgotten from what sins thou hast been delivered, thou
dost not render thanks to the Deliverer, and dost not celebrate solemnities to thy
God. Behold the first confessing thought of Saul the Apostle, now Paul, who at
first was Saul, when he heard a voice from Heaven! ... He put forth the first
thought of obedience: when he heard, "I am Jesus of Nazareth, whom thou
persecutest," "O Lord," he saith, "what dost Thou bid me to do?"[1] This is a thought
confessing: now he is calling upon the Lord, whom he persecuted. In what manner
the remnants of the thought shall celebrate solemnities, in the case of Paul
ye have heard, when the Apostle himself was being read: "Be thou mindful that
Christ Jesus hath risen from the dead, of the seed of David, after my Gospel."[2]
What is, be thou mindful? Though effaced from thy memory be the thought,
whereby at first thou hast confessed: be the remnant of the thought in the memory.
...
10. Even once was Christ sacrificed for[3] us, when we believed; then was
thought; but now there are the remnants of thought, when we remember Who hath
come to us, and what He hath forgiven us; by means of those very remnants of
thought, that is, by means of the memory herself, He is daily so sacrificed for
us,[4] as if He were daily renewing us, that hath renewed us by His first grace.
For now the Lord hath renewed us in Baptism, and we have become new men, in
hope indeed rejoicing, in order that in tribulation we may be patient[5]
nevertheless, there ought not to escape from our memory that which hath been bestowed
upon us. And if now thy thought is not what it was,--for the first thought was to
depart from sin: but now thou dost not depart, but at that time didst
depart,--be there remnants of thought, test He who hath made whole escape from memory.
...
11. "Vow ye, and pay to the Lord our God" (ver. 11). Let each man vow what
he is able, and pay it. Do not vow and not pay: but let every man vow, and pay
what he can. Be ye not slow to vow: for ye will accomplish the vows by powers
not your own. Ye will fail, if on yourselves ye rely: but if on Him to whom ye
vow ye rely, ye will be safe to pay. "Vow ye, and pay to the Lord our God."
What ought we all in common to vow? To believe in Him, to hope from Him for life
eternal, to live godly according to a measure common to all. For there is a
certain measure common to all men. To commit no theft is not a thing enjoined
merely upon one devoted to continence,[6] and not enjoined upon the married woman:
to commit no adultery is enjoined upon all men: not to love wine-bibbing,
whereby the soul is swallowed up, and doth corrupt in herself the Temple of God, is
enjoined to all alike: not to be proud, is enjoined to all men alike: not to
slay man, not to hate a brother, not to lay a plot to destroy any one, is
enjoined to all in common. The whole of this we all ought to vow. There are also vows
proper for individuals: one voweth to God conjugal chastity, that he will know
no other woman besides his wife:[7] so also the woman, that she will know no
other man besides her husband. Other men also vow, even though they have used
such a marriage, that beyond this they will have no such thing, that they will
neither desire nor admit the like: and these men have vowed a greater vow than
the former. Others vow even virginity from the beginning of life, that they will
even know no such thing as those who having experienced have relinquished: and
these men have vowed the greatest vow. Others vow that their house shall be a
place of entertainment for all the Saints that may come: a great vow they vow.
Another voweth to relinquish all his goods to be distributed to the poor, and go
into a community, into a society of the Saints: a great vow he doth vow. "Vow
ye, and pay to the Lord our God." Let each one vow what he shall have willed to
vow; let him give heed to this, that he pay what he hath vowed. If any man
doth look back with regard to what he hath vowed to God, it is an evil. Some woman
or other devoted to continence hath willed to marry: what hath she willed? The
same as any virgin. What hath she willed? The same as her own mother. Hath she
willed any evil thing? Evil certainly. Why? Because already she had vowed to
the Lord her God. For what hath the apostle Paul said concerning such? Though he
saith that young widows may marry if they will:[1] nevertheless he saith in a
certain passage, "but more blessed she will be, if so she shall have remained,
after my judgment."[2] He showeth that she is more blessed, if so she shall
have remained; but nevertheless that she is not to be condemned, if she shall have
willed to marry. But what saith he concerning certain who have vowed and have
not paid? "Having," he saith, "judgment, because the first faith they have made
void."[3] What is, "the first faith they have made void"? They have vowed, and
have not paid. Let no brother therefore, when placed in a monastery, say, I
shall depart from the monastery: for neither are they only that are in a
monastery to attain unto the kingdom of Heaven, nor do those that are not there not
belong unto God. We answer him, but they have not vowed; thou hast vowed, thou
hast looked back. When the Lord was threatening them with the day of judgment, He
saith what? "Remember Lot's wife."[4] To all men He spake. For what did Lot's
wife? She was delivered from Sodom, and being in the way she looked back. In the
place where she looked back, there she remained. For she became a statue of
salt,[5] in order that by considering her men might be seasoned, might have
sense, might not be infatuated, might not look back, lest by giving a bad example
they should themselves remain and season others. For even now we are saying this
to certain of our brethren, whom perchance we may have seen as it were weak in
the good they have purposed. And wilt thou be such an one as he was? We put
before them certain who have looked back. They are savourless[6] in themselves,
but they season others, inasmuch as they are mentioned, in order that fearing
their example they may not look back. "Vow ye, and pay." For that wife of Lot to
all doth belong. A married woman hath had the will to commit adultery; from her
place whither she had arrived she looked back. A widow who had vowed so to
remain hath willed to marry, she hath willed the thing which was lawful to her who
hath married, but to herself was not lawful, because from her place she hath
looked back. There is a virgin devoted to continence, already dedicated to God;
let her have[7] also the other gifts which truly do adorn virginity itself, and
without which that virginity is unclean. For what if she be uncorrupt in body
and corrupt in mind? What is it that he hath said? What if no one hath touched
the body, but if perchance she be drunken, be proud, be contentious, be
talkative? All these things God doth condemn. If before she had vowed, she had married,
she would not have been condemned: she hath chosen something better, hath
overcome that which was lawful for her; she is proud, and doth commit so many
things unlawful. This I say, it is lawful for her to marry before that she voweth,
to be proud is never lawful. O thou virgin of God, thou hast willed not to
marry, which is lawful: thou dost exalt thyself, which is not lawful. Better is a
virgin humble, than a married woman humble: but better is a married woman humble,
than a virgin proud. But she that looked back upon marriage is condemned, not
because she hath willed to marry; but because she had already gone before, and
is become the wife of Lot by looking back. Be ye not slow, that are able, whom
God doth inspire to seize upon higher callings: for we do not say these things
in order that ye may not vow, but in order that ye may vow and may pay. Now
because we have treated of these matters, thou perchance wast willing to vow, and
now art not willing to vow. But observe what the Psalm hath said to thee. It
hath not said, "Vow not;" but, "Vow and pay." Because thou hast heard, "pay,"
wilt thou not vow? Therefore wast thou willing to vow, and not to pay? Nay, do
both. One thing is done by thy profession, another thing will be perfected by the
aid of God. Look to Him who doth guide thee, and thou wilt not look back to the
place whence He is leading thee forth. He that guideth thee is walking before
thee; the place from whence He is guiding thee is behind thee. Love Him
guiding, and He doth not condemn thee looking back)
12. "All they that are in the circuit of Him shall offer gifts." Who are
in the circuit of Him? ... Whatever is common to all is in the midst. Why is it
said to be in the midst? Because it is at the same distance from all, and at
the same proximity to all. That which is not in the middle, is as it were
private. That which is public is set in the middle, in order that all they that come
may use the same, may be enlightened. Let no one say, it is mine: test he should
be wanting to make his own share of that which is in the midst for all. What
then is, "All they that are in the circuit of Him shall offer gifts"? All they
that understand truth to be common to all, and who do not make it as it were
their own by being proud concerning it, they shall offer gifts; because they have
humility: but they that make as it were their own that which is common to all,
as though it were set in the middle, are endeavouring to lead men astray to a
party, these shall not offer gifts. ... "To Him terrible." Let therefore all men
fear that are in the circuit of Him. For therefore they shall fear, and with
trembling they shall praise; because they are in the circuit of Him, to the end
that all men may attain unto Him, and He may openly meet all, and openly
enlighten all. This is, to stand in awe with others.[1] When thou hast made him as it
were thine own, and no longer common, thou art exalted unto pride; though it
is written, "Serve ye the Lord in fear, and exult unto Him with trembling."[2]
Therefore they shall offer gifts, who are in the circuit of Him. For they are
humble who know truth to be common to all.
13. To whom shall they offer gifts? "To Him terrible, and to Him that
taketh away the spirit of princes" (ver. 12). For the spirits of princes are proud
spirits. They then are not His Spirits; for if they know anything, their own
they will it to be, not public; but, that which setteth Himself forth as equal
toward all men, that setteth Himself in the midst, in order that all men may take
as much as they can, whatever they can; not of what is any man's, but of what
is God's, and therefore of their own because they have become His. Therefore
they must needs be humble: they have lost their own spirit, and they have the
Spirit of God. ... For if thou shalt have confessed thyself dust, God out of dust
doth make[3] man. All they that are in the circuit of Him do offer gifts. All
humble men do confess to Him, and do adore Him. "To Him terrible they offer
gifts." Whence to Him terrible exult ye with trembling:[2] "and to Him that taketh
away the spirit of princes:" that is, that taketh away the haughtiness of
proud men. "To Him terrible among the kings of the earth." Terrible are the kings
of the earth, but He is above all, that doth terrify the kings of the earth. Be
thou a king of the earth, and God will be to thee terrible. How, wilt thou say,
shall I be a king of the earth? Rule the earth, and thou wilt be a king of the
earth. Do not therefore with desire of empire set before thine eyes exceeding
wide provinces, where thou mayest spread abroad thy kingdoms; rule thou the
earth which thou bearest. Hear the Apostle ruling the earth: "I do not so fight as
if beating air, but I chasten my body, and bring it into captivity, lest
perchance preaching to other men, I myself become a reprobate."[4] ...
PSALM LXXVII.[5]
1. This Psalm's lintel is thus inscribed: "Unto the end, for Idithun, a
Psalm to Asaph himself." What "Unto the end" is, ye know. Idithun is interpreted
"leaping over those men," Asaph is interpreted "a congregation." Here therefore
there is speaking "a congregation that leapeth over," in order that it may
reach the End, which is Christ Jesus.[6] ...
2. "With my voice," he saith, "to the Lord I have cried" (ver. 1). But
many men cry unto the Lord for the sake of getting riches and avoiding losses, for
the safety of their friends, for the security of their house, for temporal
felicity, for secular dignity, lastly, even for mere soundness of body, which is
the inheritance[7] of the poor man. For such and such like things many men do
cry unto the Lord; scarce one for the sake of the Lord Himself. For an easy thing
it is for a man to desire anything of the Lord, and not to desire the Lord
Himself; as if forsooth that which He giveth could be sweeter than Himself that
giveth. Whosoever therefore cloth cry unto the Lord for the sake of any other
thing, is not yet one that leapeth over. ... He doth indeed hearken to thee at the
time when thou dost seek Himself, not when through Himself thou dost seek any
other thing. It hath been said of some men, "They cried, and there was no one
to save them; to the Lord, and He hearkened not unto them."[8] For why? Because
the voice of them was not unto the Lord. This the Scripture doth express in
another place, where it saith of such men, "On the Lord they have not called."[9]
Unto Him they have not ceased to cry, and yet upon the Lord they have not
called. What is, upon the Lord they have not called? They have not called the Lord
unto themselves:[10] they have not invited the Lord to their heart, they would
not have themselves inhabited by the Lord. And therefore what hath befallen
them? "They have trembled with fear where fear was not." They have trembled about
the loss of things present, for the reason that they were not full of Him, upon
whom they have not called. They have not loved gratis, so that after the loss
of temporal things they could say, "As it hath pleased the Lord, so hath been
done, be the name of the Lord blessed."[11] Therefore this man saith, "My voice
is unto the Lord, and He doth hearken unto me." Let him show us how this cometh
to pass.
3. "In the day of tribulation I have sought out God" (ver. 2). Who art
thou that doest this thing? In the day of thy tribulation take heed what thou
seekest out. If a jail be the cause of tribulation, thou seekest to get forth from
jail: if fever be the cause of tribulation, thou seekest health: if hunger be
the cause of tribulation, thou seekest fulness: if losses be the cause of
tribulation, thou seekest gain: if expatriation be the cause of tribulation, thou
seekest the home of thy flesh. And why should I name all things, or when could I
name all things? Dost thou wish to be one leaping over? In the day of thy
tribulation seek out God: not through God some other thing, but out of tribulation
God, that to this end God may take away tribulation, that thou mayest without
anxiety cleave unto God. "In the day of my tribulation, I have sought out God:"
not any other thing, but "God I have sought out." And how hast thou sought out?
"With my hands in the night before Him." ...
4. Tribulation must not be thought to be this or that in particular. For
every individual that doth not yet leap over, thinketh that as yet to be no
tribulation, unless it be a thing which may have befallen this life of some sad
occasion: but this man, that leapeth over, doth count this whole life to be his
tribulation. For so much doth he love his supernal country, that the earthly
pilgrimage is of itself the greatest tribulation. For how can this life be
otherwise than a tribulation, I pray you? how can that not be a tribulation, the whole
whereof hath been called temptation?[1] Thou hast it written in the book of
Job,[2] is not human life a temptation upon earth? Hath he said, human life is
tempted upon earth? Nay, but life itself is a temptation. If therefore temptation,
it must surely be a tribulation. In this tribulation therefore, that is to say
in this life, this man that leapeth over hath sought out God. How? "With my
hands," he saith. What is, "with my hands"? With my works. For he was not seeking
any thing corporeal, so that he might find and handle something which he had
lost, so that he might seek with hands coin, gold, silver, vesture, in short
everything which can be held in the hands. Howbeit, even our Lord Jesus Christ
Himself willed Himself to be sought after with hands, when to His doubting
disciple He showed the scars.[3] ... What then, to us belongeth not the seeking with
hands? It belongeth to us, as I have said, to seek with works. When so? "In the
night." What is, "in the night"? In this age. For it is night until there shine
forth day in the glorified advent of our Lord Jesus Christ. For would ye see
how it is night? Unless we had here had a lantern, we should have remained in
darkness. For Peter saith," We too have more sure the prophetic discourse,
whereunto ye do well to give heed, as to a lantern shining in a dark place, until day
shine, and the day-star arise in your hearts."[4] There is therefore to come
day after this night, meanwhile in this night a lantern is not lacking. And this
is perchance what we are now doing: by explaining these passages, we are
bringing in a lantern, in order that we may rejoice in this night. Which indeed
ought alway to be burning in your houses. For to such men is said, "The Spirit
quench ye not."[5] And as though explaining what he was saying, he continueth and
saith, "Prophecy despise ye not:" that is, let the lantern alway shine in you.
And even this light by comparison with a sort of ineffable day is called night.
For the very life of believers by comparison with the life of unbelievers is
day. ... Night and day--day in comparison with unbelievers, night in comparison
with the Angels. For the Angels have a day, which we have not yet. Already we
have one that unbelievers have not: but not yet have believers that which Angels
have: but they will have, at the time when they will be equal to the Angels of
God, that which hath been promised to them in the Resurrection.[6] In this then
which is now day and yet night; night in comparison with the future day for
which we yearn, day in comparison with the past night which we have renounced: in
this night then, I say, let us seek God with our hands. Let not works cease,
let us seek God, be there no idle yearning. If we are in the way, let us expend
our means in order that we may be able to reach the end. With hands let us seek
God. ... "With my hands in the night before Him, and I have not been deceived."
5. ... "My soul hath refused to be comforted" (ver. 2). So great weariness
did here possess me, that my soul did close the door against all comfort.
Whence such weariness to him? It may be that his vineyard hath been hailed on, or
his olive hath yielded no fruit, or the vintage hath been interrupted by rain.
Whence the weariness to him? Hear this out of another Psalm. For therein is the
voice of the same: "weariness hath bowed me down, because of sinners forsaking
Thy law."[7] He saith then that he was overcome with so great weariness because
of this sort of evil thing; so as that his soul refused to be comforted.
Weariness had well nigh swallowed him up, and sorrow had ingulfed him altogether
beyond remedy, he refuseth to be comforted. What then remained? In the first
place, see whence he is comforted. Had he not waited for one who might condole with
him?[1] ... "I have been mindful of God, and I have been delighted" (ver. 3).
My hands had not wrought in vain, they had found a great comforter. While not
being idle, "I have been mindful of God, and I have been delighted." God must
therefore be praised, of whom this man being mindful, hath been delighted, and
hath been comforted in sorrowful case, and refreshed when safety was in a manner
despaired of: God must therefore be praised. In fine, because he hath been
comforted, in continuation he saith, "I have babbled." In that same comfort being
made mindful of God, I have been delighted, and have "babbled." What is, "I have
babbled"? I have rejoiced, I have exulted in speaking. For babblers they are
properly called, that by the common people are named talkative, who at the
approach of joy are neither able nor willing to be silent. This man hath become such
an one. And again he sixth what? "And my spirit hath fainted."
6. With weariness he had pined away; by calling to mind God, he had been
delighted, again in babbling he had fainted: what followeth? "All mine enemies
have anticipated watches" (ver. 4). All mine enemies have kept watch over me;
they have exceeded in keeping watch over me; in watching they have been
beforehand with me. Where do they not lay traps? Have not mine enemies anticipated all
watches? For who are these enemies, but they of whom the Apostle saith, "Ye have
not wrestling against flesh and blood."[2] ... Against the devil and his
angels we are waging hostilities. Rulers of the world he hath called them, because
they do themselves rule the lovers of the world. For they do not rule the world,
as if they were rulers of heaven and earth: but he is calling sinners the
world. ... With the devil and his angels there is no concord. They do themselves
grudge us the kingdom of Heaven. They cannot at all be appeased towards us:
because "all mine enemies have anticipated watches." They have watched more to
deceive than I to guard myself. For how can they have done otherwise than anticipate
watches, that have set everywhere scandals, everywhere traps? Weariness doth
invest the heart, we have to fear lest sorrow swallow us up: in joy to fear lest
the spirit faint in babbling: "all mine enemies have anticipated watches." In
fine, in the midst of that same babbling, whiles thou art speaking, and art
speaking without fear, how much is oft-times found which enemies would lay hold of
and censure, whereon they would even found accusation and slander--" he said
so, he thought so, he spake so!" What should man do, save that which followeth?
"I have been troubled, and I spake not." Therefore when he was troubled, lest
in his babbling enemies anticipating watches should seek and find slanders, he
spake not. ...
7. "I have thought on ancient days" (ver. 5). Now he, as if he were one
who had been beaten out of doors, hath taken refuge within: he is conversing in
the secret place of his own heart. And let him declare to us what he is doing
there. It is well with him. Observe what things he is thinking of, I pray you. He
is within, in his own house he is thinking of ancient days. No one saith to
him, thou hast spoken ill: no one saith to him, thou hast spoken much: no one
saith to him, thou hast thought perversely. Thus may it be well with him, may God
aid him: let him think of the ancient days, and let him tell us what he hath
done in his very inner chamber, whereunto he hath arrived, over what he hath
leaped, where he hath abode. "I have thought on ancient days; and of eternal years
I have been mindful." What are eternal years? It is a mighty thought. See
whether this thought requireth anything but great silence. Apart from all noise
without, from all tumult of things human let him remain quiet within, that would
think of those eternal years. Are the years wherein we are eternal, or those
wherein our ancestors have been, or those wherein our posterity are to be? Far be
it that they should be esteemed eternal. For what part of these years doth
remain? Behold we speak and say, "in this year:" and what have we got of this year,
save the one day wherein we are. For the former days of this year have already
gone by, and are not to be had; but the future days have not yet come. In one
day we are, and we say, in this year: nay rather say thou, to-day, if thou
desirest to speak of anything present. For of the whole year what hast thou got that
is present? Whatsoever thereof is past, is no longer; whatsoever thereof is
future, is not yet: how then, "this year"? Amend the expression: say, to-day.
Thou speakest truth, henceforth I will say, "to-day." Again observe this too, how
to-day the morning hours have already past, the future hours have not yet come.
This too therefore amend: say, in this hour. And of this hour what hast thou
got? Some moments thereof have already gone by, those that are future have not
yet come. Say, in this moment. In what moment? While I am uttering syllables, if
I shall speak two syllables, the latter doth not sound until the former hath
gone by: in a word, in that same one syllable, if it chance to have two letters,
the latter letter doth not sound, until the former hath gone by. What then
have we got of these years? These years are changeable: the eternal years must be
thought on, years that stand, that are not made up of days that come and
depart; years whereof in another place the Scripture saith to God, "But Thou art the
Self-same, and Thy years shall not fail."[1] On these years this man that
leapeth over, not in babbling without, but in silence[2] hath thought.
8. "And I have meditated in the night with my heart" (ver. 6). No
slanderous person seeketh for snares in his words, in his heart he hath meditated. "I
babbled." Behold there is the former babbling. Watch again, that thy spirit
faint not. I did not, he saith, I did not so babble as if it were abroad: in
another way now. How now? "I did babble, and did search out my spirit." If he were
searching the earth to find veins of gold, no one would say that he was foolish;
nay, many men would call him wise, for desiring to come at gold: how great
treasures hath a man within, and he diggeth not! This man was examining his spirit,
and was speaking with that same his spirit, and in the very speaking he was
babbling. He was questioning himself, was examining himself, was judge over
himself. And he continueth; "I did search my spirit." He had to fear lest he should
stay within his own spirit: for he had babbled without; and because all his
enemies had anticipated watches, he found there sorrow, and his spirit fainted. He
that did babble without, lo, now doth begin to babble within in safety, where
being alone in secret, he is thinking on eternal years. ...
9. And thou hast found what? "God will not repel for everlasting" (ver.
7). Weariness he had found in this life; in no place a trustworthy, in no place a
fearless comfort. Unto whatsoever men he betook himself, in them he found
scandal, or feared it. In no place therefore was he free from care. An evil thing
it was for him to hold his peace, lest perchance he should keep silence from
good words; to speak and babble without was painful to him, lest all his enemies,
anticipating watches, should seek slanders in his words. Being exceedingly
straitened in this life, he thought much of another life, where there is not this
trial. And when is he to arrive thither? For it cannot but be evident that our
suffering here is the anger of God. This thing is spoken of in Isaiah, "I will
not be an avenger unto you for everlasting, nor will I be angry with you at all
times."[3] ... Will this anger of God alway abide? This man hath not found this
in silence. For he saith what? "God will not repel for everlasting, and He
will not add any more that it should be well-pleasing to Him still." That is, that
it should be well-pleasing to Him still to repel, and He will not add the
repelling for everlasting. He must needs recall to Himself His servants, He must
needs receive fugitives returning to the Lord, He must needs hearken to the voice
of them that are in fetters. "Or unto the end will He cut off mercy from
generation to generation?" (ver. 8).
10. "Or will God forget to be merciful?" (ver. 9). In thee, from thee unto
another there is no mercy unless God bestow it on thee: and shall God Himself
forget mercy? The stream runneth: shall the spring itself be dried up? "Or
shall God forget to be merciful: or shall He keep back in anger His mercies?" That
is, shall He be so angry, as that He will not have mercy? He will more easily
keep back anger than mercy.
11. "And I said." Now leaping over himself he hath said what? "Now I have
begun:" (ver. 10), when I had gone out even from myself. Here henceforth there
is no danger: for even to remain in myself, was danger. "And I said, Now I have
begun: this is the changing of the right hand of the Lofty One." Now the Lofty
One hath begun to change me: now I have begun something wherein I am secure:
now I have entered a certain palace[4] of joys, wherein no enemy is to be
feared: now I have begun to be in that region, where all mine enemies do not
anticipate watches. "Now I have begun: this is the changing of the right hand of the
Lofty One."
12. "I have been mindful of the works of the Lord" (ver. 11). Now behold
him roaming among the works of the Lord. For he was babbling without, and being
made sorrowful thereby his spirit fainted: he babbled within with his own
heart, and with his spirit, and having searched out that same spirit he was mindful
of the eternal years, was mindful of the mercy of the Lord, how God will not
repel him for everlasting; and he began now fearlessly to rejoice in His works,
fearlessly to exult in the same. Let us hear now those very works, and let us
too exult. But let even us leap over in our affections, and not rejoice in things
temporal. For we too have our bed. Why do we not enter therein? Why do we not
abide in silence? Why do we not search out our spirit? Why do we not think on
the eternal years? Why do we not rejoice in the works of God? In such sort now
let us hear, and let us take delight in Himself speaking, in order that when we
shall have departed hence, we may do that which we used to do while He spake;
if only we are making the beginning of Him whereof he spake in," Now I have
begun." To rejoice in the works of God, is to forget even thyself, if thou canst
delight in Him alone. For what is a better thing than He? Dost thou not see that,
when thou returnest to thyself, thou returnest to a worse thing? "for I shall
be mindful from the beginning of Thy wonderful works.
13. "And I will meditate on all Thy works, and on Thy affections I will
babble" (ver. 12). Behold the third babbling! He babbled without, when he hinted;
he babbled in his spirit within, when he advanced: he babbled on the works of
God, when he arrived at the place toward which he advanced. "And on Thy
affections:" not on any affections. What man doth live without affections? And do ye
suppose, brethren, that they who fear God, worship God, love God, have not any
affections? Wilt thou indeed suppose and dare to suppose, that painting, the
theatre, hunting, hawking, fishing, engage the affections, and the meditation on
God doth not engage certain interior affections of its own, while we contemplate
the universe, and place before our eyes the spectacle of the natural world,
and therein labour to discover the Maker, and find Him nowhere unpleasing, but
pleasing above[1] all things?
14. "0 God, Thy way is in the Holy One" (ver. 13). He is contemplating now
the works of the mercy of God around us, out of these he is babbling, and in
these affections he is exulting. At first he is beginning from thence, "Thy way
is in the Holy One?" What is that way of Thine which is in the Holy One? "I
am," He saith," the Way, the Truth, and the Life."[2] Return therefore, ye men,
from your affections. ... "Who is a great God, like our God?"[3] Gentiles have
their affections regarding their gods, they adore idols, they have eyes and they
see not; ears they have and they hear not; feet they have and they walk not.
Why dost thou walk to a God that walketh not? I do not, he saith, worship such
things, and what dost thou worship? The divinity which is there. Thou dost then
worship that whereof hath been said elsewhere, "for the Gods of the nations are
demons."[4] Thou dost either worship idols, or devils. Neither idols, nor
devils, he saith. And what dost thou worship? The stars, sun, moon, those things
celestial. How much better Him that hath made both things earthly and things
celestial. "Who is a great God like our God?"
15. "Thou art the God that doest wonderful things alone" (ver. 14). Thou
art indeed a great God, doing wonderful things in body, in soul; alone doing
them. The deaf have heard, the blind have seen, the feeble have recovered, the
dead have risen, the paralytic have been strengthened. But these miracles were at
that time performed on bodies, let us see those wrought on the soul. Sober are
those that were a little before drunken, believers are those that were a little
before worshippers of idols: their goods they bestow on the poor that did rob
before those of others. ..."Wonderful things alone." Moses too did them, but
not alone: Elias too did them, even Eliseus did them, the Apostles too did them,
but no one of them alone. That they might have power to do them, Thou wast with
them: when Thou didst them they were not with Thee. For they were not with
Thee when Thou didst them, inasmuch as Thou didst make even these very men. How
"alone"? Is it perchance the Father, and not the Son? Or the Son, and not the
Father? Nay, but Father and Son and Holy Ghost. For it is not three Gods but one
God that doeth wonderful things alone, and even in this very leaper-over. For
even his leaping over and arriving at these things was a miracle of God: when he
was babbling within with his own spirit, in order that he might leap over even
that same spirit of his, and might delight in the works of God, he then did
wonderful things himself. But God hath done what? "Thou hast made known unto the
people Thy power."[5] Thence this congregation of Asaph leaping over; because He
hath made known in the peoples His virtue. What virtue of His hath He made
known in the peoples? "But we preach Christ crucified, ... Christ the power of God
and the wisdom of God."[6] If then the virtue of God is Christ, He hath made
known Christ in the peoples. Do we not yet perceive so much as this; and are we
so unwise, are we lying so much below, do we so leap over nothing, as that we
see not this?
16. "Thou hast redeemed in Thine arm Thy people" (ver. 15). "With Thine
arm," that is, with Thy power. "And to whom hath the arm of the Lord been
revealed?"[7] "Thou hast redeemed in Thine arm Thy people, the sons of Israel and of
Joseph." How as if two peoples, "the sons of Israel and of Joseph"? Are not the
sons of Joseph among the sons of Israel? ... He hath admonished us of some
distinction to be made. Let us search out our spirit, perchance God hath placed
there something--God whom we ought even by night to seek with our hands, in order
that we may not be deceived-- perchance we shall discover even ourselves in
this distinction of "sons of Israel and of Joseph." By Joseph He hath willed
another people to be understood, hath willed that the people of the Gentiles be
understood. Why the people of the Gentiles by Joseph? Because Joseph was sold into
Egypt by his brethren.[8] That Joseph whom the brethren envied, and sold him
into Egypt, when sold into Egypt, toiled, was humbled; when made known and
exalted, flourished, reigned. And by all these things he hath signified what? What
but Christ sold by His brethren, banished from His own land, as it were into the
Egypt of the Gentiles? There at first humbled, when the Martyrs were suffering
persecutions: now exalted, as we see; inasmuch as there hath been fulfilled in
Him, "There shall adore Him all kinds of the earth, all nations shall serve
Him."(1) Therefore Joseph is the people of the Gentiles, but Israel the people of
the Hebrew nation. God hath redeemed His people, "the sons of Israel and of
Joseph." By means of what? By means of the corner stone,(2) wherein the two walls
have been joined together.
17. And he continueth how? "The waters have seen Thee, O God, and they
have feared and the abysses have been troubled" (ver. 16). What are the waters?
The peoples. What are these waters hath been asked in the Apocalypse,(3) the
answer was, the peoples. There we find most clearly waters put by a figure for
peoples. But above he had said, "Thou hast made known in the peoples Thy
virtue."(4) With reason therefore, "the waters have seen Thee, and they have feared."
They have been changed because they have feared. What are the abysses? The depths
of waters. What man among the peoples is not troubled, when the conscience is
smitten? Thou seekest the depth of the sea, what is deeper than human
conscience? That is the depth which was troubled, when God redeemed with His arm. His
people. In what manner were the abysses troubled? When all men poured forth their
consciences in confession.
18. In praises of God, in confessions of sins, in hymns and in songs, in
prayers, "There is a multitude of the sound of waters. The clouds have uttered a
voice" (ver. 17). Thence that sound of waters, thence the troubling of the
abysses, because "the clouds have uttered a voice." What clouds? The preachers of
the word of truth. What clouds? Those concerning which God doth menace a
certain vineyard, which instead of grape had brought forth thorns and He saith, "I
will command My clouds, that they rain no rain upon it."(5) In a word, the
Apostles forsaking the Jews, went to the Gentiles: in preaching Christ among all
nations, "the clouds have uttered a voice." "For Thine arrows have gone through."
Those same voices of the clouds He hath again called arrows. For the words of
the Evangelists were arrows. For these things are allegories. For properly
neither an arrow is rain, nor rain is an arrow: but yet the word of God is both an
arrow because it doth smite; and rain because it doth water. Let no one therefore
any longer wonder at the troubling of the abysses, when "Thine arrows have
gone through." What is, "have gone through"? They have not stopped in the ears,
but they have pierced the heart. "The voice of Thy thunder is in the wheel" (ver.
18). What is this? How are we to understand it? May the Lord give aid. When
boys we were wont to imagine, whenever we heard thunderings from Heaven, that
carriages were going forth as it were from the stables. For thunder doth make a
sort of rolling like carriages. Must we return to these boyish thoughts, in order
to understand," the voice of Thy thunder is in the wheel," as though God hath
certain carriages in the clouds, and the passing along of the carriages doth
raise that sound? Far be it. This is boyish, vain, trifling. What is then, "The
voice of Thy thunder is in the wheel"? Thy voice rolleth. Not even this do I
understand. What shall we do? Let us question Idithun himself, to see whether
perchance he may himself explain what he hath said: "The voice," he saith, "of Thy
thunder is in the wheel." I do not understand. I will hear what thou sayest:
"Thy lightnings have appeared to the round world." Say then, I had no
understanding. The round world is a wheel.(6) For the circuit of the round world is with
reason called also an "orb:" whence also a small wheel is called an "orbiculus."
"The voice of Thy thunder is in the wheel:" Thy "lightnings have appeared to
the round world." Those clouds in a wheel have gone about the round world, have
gone about with thundering and with lightning, they have shaken the abyss, with
commandments they have thundered, with miracles they have lightened. "Unto
every land hath gone forth the sound of them, and unto the ends of the orb the
words of them."(7) "The land hath been moved and made to tremble:" that is, all
men that dwell in the land. But by a figure the land itself is sea. Why? Because
all nations are called by the name of sea, inasmuch as human life is bitter,
and exposed to storms and tempests. Moreover if thou observe this, how men devour
one another like fishes, how the stronger doth swallow up the weaker--it is
then a sea, unto it the Evangelists went.
19. "Thy way is in the sea" (ver. 19). But now Thy way was in the Holy
One, now "Thy way is in the sea:" because the Holy One Himself is in the sea, and
with reason even did walk upon the waters of the sea.(8) "Thy way is in the
sea," that is, Thy Christ is preached among the Gentiles. ..."Thy way is in the
sea, and Thy paths in many waters," that is, in many peoples. "And Thy footsteps
will not be known." He hath touched certain, and wonder were it if it be not
those same Jews. Behold now the mercy of Christ hath been so published to the
Gentiles, that "Thy way is in the sea. Thy footsteps will not be known." How so,
by whom will they not be known, save by those who still say, Christ hath not yet
come? Why do they say, Christ hath not yet come? Because they do not yet
recognise Him walking on the sea.
20. "Thou hast led home Thy people like sheep in the hand of Moses and of
Aaron" (ver. 20). Why He hath added this is somewhat difficult to discover. ...
They banished Christ sick as they were, they would not have Him for their
Saviour; but He began to be among the Gentiles, and among all nations, among many
peoples. Nevertheless, a remnant of that people hath been saved. The ungrateful
multitude hath remained without, even the halting breadth of Jacob's thigh.(1)
For the breadth of the thigh is understood of the multitude of lineage, and
among the greater part of the Israelites a certain multitude became vain and
foolish, so as not to know the steps of Christ on the waters. "Thou hast led home Thy
people like sheep," and they have not known Thee. Though Thou hast done such
great benefits unto them, hast divided sea, hast made them pass over dry land
between waters, hast drowned in the waves pursuing enemies, in the desert hast
rained manna for their hunger, leading them home "by the hand of Moses and
Aaron:" still they thrust Thee from them, so that in the sea was Thy Way, and Thy
steps they knew not.
PSALM LXXVIII. (2)
1. This Psalm(3) doth contain the things which are said to have been done
among the old people: but the new and latter people is being admonished, to
beware that it be not ungrateful regarding the blessings of God, and provoke His
anger against it, whereas it ought to receive His grace. ... The Title thereof
doth first move and engage our attention. For it is not without reason
inscribed, "Understanding(4) of Asaph :" but it is perchance because these words require
a reader who doth perceive not the voice which the surface uttereth, but some
inward sense. Secondly, when about to narrate and mention all these things,
which seem to need a hearer more than an expounder: "I will open," he saith, "in
parables my mouth, I will declare propositions from the beginning."(5) Who would
not herein be awakened out of sleep? Who would dare to hurry over the parables
and propositions, reading them as if self-evident, while by their very names
they signify that they ought to be sought out with deeper view? For a parable
hath on the surface thereof the similitude of something: and though it be a Greek
word, it is now used as a Latin word. And it is observable, that in parables,
those which are called the similitudes of things are compared with things with
which we have to do. But propositions, which in Greek are called
<greek>problhmata</greek>, are questions having something therein which is to be solved by
disputation. What man then would read parables and propositions cursorily? What
man would not attend while hearing these words with watchful mind, in order that
by understanding he may come by the fruit thereof?
2. "Hearken ye," He saith, "My people, to My law" (ver. 1). Whom may we
suppose to be here speaking, but God? For it was Himself that gave a law to His
people, whom when delivered out of Egypt He gathered together, the which
gathering together is properly named a Synagogue, which the word Asaph is interpreted
to signify. Hath it then been said, "Understanding of Asaph," in the sense that
Asaph himself hath understood; or must it be figuratively understood, in the
sense that the same Synagogue, that is, the same people, hath understood, unto
whom is said, "Hearken, My people, unto My law"? Why is it then that He is
rebuking the same people by the mouth of the Prophet, saying, "But Israel hath not
known Me, and My people hath not understood"?(6) But, in fact, there were even
in that people they that understood, having the faith which was afterwards
revealed, not pertaining to the letter of the law, but the grace of the Spirit. For
they cannot have been without the same faith, who were able to foresee and
foretell the revelation thereof that should be in Christ, inasmuch as even those
old Sacraments were significants of those that should be. Had the prophets alone
this faith, and not the people too? Nay indeed, but even they that faithfully
heard the Prophets, were aided by the same grace in order that they might
understand what they heard. But without doubt the mystery[7] of the Kingdom of Heaven
was veiled in the Old Testament, which in the fulness of time should be
unveiled in the New.(8) "For," saith the Apostle, "they did drink of the Spiritual
Rock following them, but the Rock was Christ."(1) In a mystery therefore theirs
was the same meat and drink as ours, but in signification the same, not in
form;(2) because the same Christ was Himself figured to them in a Rock, manifested
to us in the Flesh. "But," he saith, "not in all of them God was well
pleased."(3) All indeed ate the same spiritual meat and drank the same spiritual drink,
that is to say, Signifying something spiritual: but not in all of them was God
well pleased. When; he saith," not in all:" there were evidently there some in
whom was God well pleased; and although all the Sacraments were common, grace,
which is the virtue of the Sacraments, was not common to all. Just as in our
times, now that the faith hath been revealed, which then was veiled, to all men
that have been baptized in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy
Ghost,(4) the Layer of regeneration is common; but the very grace whereof these
same are the Sacraments, whereby the members of the Body of Christ are to
reign s together with their Head, is not common to all. For even heretics have the
same Baptism, and false brethren too, in the communion of the Catholic name.
3. Nevertheless, neither then nor now without profit is the voice of him,
saying, "Hearken ye, My people, to My law." Which expression is remarkable in
all the Scriptures, how he saith not, "hearken thou," but, "hearken ye." For of
many men a people doth consist: to which many that which followeth is spoken in
the plural number. "Incline ye your ear unto the words of My mouth." "Hearken
ye," is the same as, "Incline your ear:" and what He saith there, "My law,"
this He saith here in, "the words of My mouth." For that man doth godly hearken to
the law of God, and the words of His mouth, whose ear humility doth incline:
not he whose neck pride doth lift up. For whatever is poured in is received on
the concave surface of humility, is shaken off from the convexity of swelling.
Whence in another place, "Incline," he saith, "thine ear, and receive the words
of understanding."(6) We have been therefore sufficiently admonished to receive
even this Psalm of this understanding of Asaph,(7) to receive, I say, with
inclined ear, that is, with humble piety. And it hath not been spoken of as being
of Asaph himself, but to Asaph himself. Which thing is evident by the Greek
article, and is found in certain Latin copies. These words therefore are of
understanding, that is, of intelligence, which hath been given to Asaph himself:
which we had better understand not as to one man, but as to the congregation of the
people of God; whence we ought by no means to alienate ourselves. For although
properly we say "Synagogue" of Jews, but "Church" of Christians, because a
"Congregation"(8) is wont to be understood as rather of beasts, but a
"convocation" as rather of men: yet that too we find called a Church, and it perhaps is
more suitable for us(9) to say, "Save us, O Lord, our God, and congregate us from
the nations, in order that we may confess to Thy Holy Name."(10) Neither ought
we to disdain to be, nay we ought to render ineffable thanks, for that we are,
the sheep of His hands, which He foresaw when He was saying, "I have other
sheep which are not of this fold, them too I must lead in, that there may be one
flock and one Shepherd:"(11) that is to say, by joining the faithful people of
the Gentiles with the faithful people of the Israelites, concerning whom He had
before said, "I have not been sent but to the sheep which have strayed of the
house of Israel."(12) For also there shall be congregated before Him all
nations, and He shall sever them as a shepherd the sheep from the goats.(13) Thus then
let us hear that which hath been spoken. "Hearken ye, My people, to My law,
incline ye your ear unto the words of My mouth:" not as if addressed to Jews,
but rather as if addressed to ourselves, or at least as if these words were said
as well to ourselves (as to them(14)). For when the Apostle had said, "But not
in all them was God well pleased," thereby showing that there were those too in
whom God was well pleased: he hath forthwith added, "For they were overthrown
in the desert:"(15) secondly he hath continued, "but these things have been
made our figures."... To us therefore more particularly these words have been
sung. Whence in this Psalm among other things there hath been said, "That another
generation may know, sons who shall be born and shall arise." (16) Moreover, if
that death by serpents, and that destruction by the destroyer, and the slaying
by the sword, were figures, as the Apostle evidently doth declare, inasmuch as
it is manifest that all those things did happen: for he saith not, in a figure
they were spoken, or, in a figure they were written, but, in a figure, he
saith, they happened to them: with how much greater diligence of godliness must
those punishments be shunned whereof those were the figures? For beyond a doubt as
in good things there is much more of good in that which is signified by the
figure, than in the figure itself: so also in evil things very far worse are the
things which are signified by the figures, while so great are the evil things
which as figures do signify. For as the land of promise, whereunto that people
was being led, is nothing in comparison with the Kingdom of Heaven, whereunto the
Christian people is being led: so also those punishments which were figures,
though they were so severe, are nothing in comparison with the punishments which
they signify. But those which the Apostle hath called figures, the same this
Psalm, as far as we are able to judge, calleth parables and propositions: not
having their end in the fact of their having happened, but in those things
whereunto they are referred by a reasonable comparison. Let us therefore hearken unto
the law of God--us His people--and let us incline our ear unto the words of
His mouth.
4. "I will open," he saith, "in parables My mouth, I will declare
propositions from the beginning" (ver. 2). From what beginning he meaneth, is very
evident in the words following. For it is not from the beginning, what time the
Heaven and earth were made, nor what time mankind was created in the first man:
but what time the congregation that was led out of Egypt; in order that the sense
may belong to Asaph, which is interpreted a congregation. But O that He that
hath said, "I will open in parables My mouth," would also vouchsafe to open our
understanding unto them! For if, as He hath opened His mouth in parables, He
would in like sort open the parables themselves: and as He declareth
"propositions," He would declare in like sort the expositions thereof, we should not be
here toiling: but now so hidden and closed are all things, that even if we are
able by His aid to arrive at anything, whereon we may feed to our health, still we
must eat the bread in the sweat of our face; and pay the penalty of the
ancient sentence(1) not with the labour of the body only, but also with that of the
heart. Let him speak then, and let us hear the parables and propositions.
5. "How great things we have heard, and have known them, and our fathers
have told them to us" (ver. 3). The Lord was speaking higher up. For of what
other person could these words be thought to be, "Hearken ye, O My people, to My
law"?(2) Why is it then that now on a sudden a man is speaking, for here we have
the words of a man, "our fathers have told them to us." Without doubt God, now
about to speak by a man's ministry, as the Apostle saith, "Will ye to receive
proof of Him that is speaking in me, Christ?"(3) in His own person at first
willed the words to be uttered, lest a man speaking His words should be despised
as a man. For it is thus with the sayings of God which make their way to us
through our bodily sense. The Creator moveth the subject creature by an invisible
working; not so that the substance is changed into anything corporal and
temporal, when by means of corporal and temporal signs, whether belonging to the eyes
or to the ears, as far as men are able to receive it, He would make His will to
be known. For if an angel is able to use air, mist, cloud, fire, and any other
natural substance or corporal species;(4) and man to use face, tongue, hand,
pen, letters, or any other significants, for the purpose of intimating the
secret things of his own mind: in a word, if, though he is a man, he sendeth human
messengers, and he saith to one, "Go, and he goeth; and to another, Come, and he
cometh; and to his servant, Do this, and he doeth it;"(5) with how much
greater and more effectual power doth God, to whom as Lord all things together are
subject, use both the same angel and man, in order that He may declare whatsoever
pleaseth Him? ... For those things were heard in the Old Testament which are
known in the New: heard when they were being prophesied, known when they were
being fulfilled. Where a promise is performed, hearing is not deceived. "And our
fathers," Moses and the Prophets, "have told unto us."
6. "They have not been hidden from their sons in another generation" (ver.
4). This is our generation wherein there hath been given to us regeneration.
"Telling forth the praises of the Lord and His powers, and His wonderful works
which He hath done." The order of the words is, "and our fathers have told unto
us, telling forth the praises of the Lord." The Lord is praised, in order that
He may be loved. For what object can be loved more to our health? "And He hath
raised up a testimony in Jacob, and hath set a law in Jacob" (ver. 5). This is
the beginning whereof hath been spoken above, "I will declare propositions from
the beginning."(6) So then the beginning is the Old Testament, the end is the
New. For fear doth prevail in the law? "But the end of the law is Christ for
righteousness to every one believing;"(8) at whose bestowing "love is shed abroad
in our hearts through the Holy Spirit, which hath been given to us:"(9) and
love made perfect doth cast out fear,(10) inasmuch as now without the Law the
righteousness of God hath been made manifest. But inasmuch as He hath a testimony
by the Law and the Prophets," therefore, "He hath raised up a testimony in
Jacob." For even that Tabernacle which was set up with a work so remarkable and
full of such wondrous meanings, is named the Tabernacle of Testimony, wherein was
the veil over the Ark of the Law, like the veil over the face of the Minister
of the Law;(1) because in that dispensation there were "parables and
propositions." For those things which were being preached and were coining to pass were
hidden in veiled meanings, and were not seen in unveiled manifestations. But
"when thou shall have passed over unto Christ," saith the Apostle, "the veil shall
be taken away."(2) For "all the promises of God in Him are yea, Amen."(3)
Whosoever therefore doth cleave to Christ, hath the whole of the good which even in
the letters of the Law he perceiveth not: but whosoever is an alien from
Christ, doth neither perceive, nor hath. "He hath set a law in Israel." After his
usual custom he is making a repetition. For "He hath raised up a testimony," is
the same as, "He hath set a law," and "in Jacob," is the same as "in Israel." For
as these are two names of one man, so law and testimony are two names of one
thing. Is there any difference, saith some one, between "hath raised up" and
"hath set"? Yea indeed, the same difference as there is between "Jacob" and
"Israel:" not because they were two persons, but these same two names were bestowed
upon one man for different reasons; Jacob because of supplanting, for that he
grasped the foot of his brother at his birth:(4) but Israel because of the vision
of God.(5) So "raised up" is one thing, "set" is another. For, "He hath raised
up a testimony," as far as I can judge, hath been said because by it something
has been raised up; "For without the Law," saith the Apostle, "sin was dead:
but I lived sometime without the Law: but at the coming in of the commandment
sin revived."(6) Behold that which hath been raised up by the testimony, which is
the Law, so that what was lying hidden might appear, as he saith a little
afterwards: "But sin, that it might appear sin, through a good thing hath wrought
in me death."(7) But "He hath set a law," hath been said, as though it were a
yoke upon sinners, whence hath been said," For upon a just man law hath not been
imposed." s It is a testimony then, so far forth as it doth prove anything; but
a law so far forth as it doth command; though it is one and the same thing.
Wherefore just as Christ is a stone, but to believers for the Head of the corner,
while to unbelievers a stone of offence and a rock of scandal;(9) so the
testimony of the Law to them that use not the Law lawfully,(10) is a testimony
whereby sinners are to be convicted as deserving of punishment; but to them that use
the same lawfully, is a testimony whereby sinners are shown unto whom they
ought to flee in order to be delivered. ...
7. "How great things," he saith, "He hath commanded our fathers, to make
the same known to their sons?" (ver. 5). "That another generation may know, sons
who shall be born and shall rise up, and they may tell to their sons" (ver.
6). "That they may put their hope in God, and may not forget the works of God,
and may seek out His commandments" (ver. 7). "That they may not become, like
their fathers, a crooked and embittering generation: a generation that hath not
guided their heart, and the spirit thereof hath not been trusted with God" (ver.
8). These words do point out two peoples as it were, the one belonging to the
Old Testament, the other to the New: for in that he saith, he hath implied that
they received the commandments, "to make them known to their sons," but that
they did not know or do them: but they received them themselves, to the end "that
another generation might know," what the former knew not. "Sons who shall be
born and shall arise." For they that have been born have not arisen: because they
had not their heart above, but rather on the earth. For the arising is with
Christ: whence hath been said, "If ye have arisen with Christ, savour ye the
things which are above."[11] "And they may tell them," he saith, "to their sons, in
order that they may put their hope in God." ... "And may not forget the works
of God:" that is to say, in magnifying and vaunting their own works, as though
they did them themselves; while "God it is that worketh," in them that work
good things, "both to will and to work according to good will."(12) "And may
search out His commandments." ... The commandments which He hath commanded. How then
should they still search out, whereas they have already learned them, save
that by putting their hope in God, they do then search out His commandments, in
order that by them, with His aid, they may be fulfilled? And he saith why, by
immediately subjoining, "and its spirit hath not been trusted with God," that is,
because it had no faith, which doth obtain what the Law doth enjoin. For when
the spirit of man doth work together with the Spirit of God working, then there
is fulfilled that which God hath commanded: and this doth not come to pass,
except by believing in Him that doth justify an ungodly man.(13) Which faith the
generation crooked and embittering had not: and therefore concerning the same
hath been said, "The spirit thereof hath not been trusted with God." For this
hath been said much more exactly to point out the grace of God, which doth work
not only remission of sins, but also doth make the spirit of man to work together
therewith in the work of good deeds, as though he were saying, his spirit hath
not believed in God. For to have the spirit trusted with God, is, not to
believe that his spirit is able to do righteousness without God, but with God. For
this is to believe in God: which is surely more than to believe God. For
ofttimes we must believe even a man, though in him we must not believe. To believe in
God therefore is this, in believing to cleave unto God who worketh good works,
in order to work with Him well. ...
8. Lastly, "The sons of Ephrem bending and shooting bows, have been turned
back in the day of war" (ver. 9). Following after the law of righteousness,
unto the law of righteousness they have not attained.(1) Why? Because they were
not of faith. For they were that generation whereof the spirit hath not been
trusted with God: but they were, so to speak, of works: because they did not, as
they bended and shot their bows (which are outward actions, as of the works of
the law), so guide their heart also, wherein the just man doth live by faith,
which worketh by love; whereby men cleave to God, who worketh in man both to will
and work according to good will(2) For what else is bending the bow and
shooting, and turning back in the day of war, but heeding and purposing in the day of
hearing, and deserting in the day of temptation; flourishing arms, so to
speak, beforehand, and at the hour of the action refusing to fight? But whereas he
saith, "bending and shooting bows," when it would seem that he ought to have
said, bending bows and shooting arrows. ... Some Greek copies to be sure are said
to have "bending and shooting with bows," so that without doubt we ought to
understand arrows. But whereas by the sons of Ephrem he hath willed that there be
understood the whole of that embittering generation, it is an expression
signifying the whole by a part. And perhaps this part was chosen whereby to signify
the whole, because from these men especially some good thing was to have been
expected. ... Although set at the left hand by his father as being the younger,
Jacob nevertheless blessed with his right hand, and preferred him before his
eider brother with a benediction of hidden meaning.(3) ... For there was being
figured how they were to be last that were first, and first were to be they that
were last? through the Saviour's coming, concerning whom hath been said, "He
that is coming after me was made before me."(5) In like manner righteous Abel was
preferred before the elder brother; so to Ismael Isaac; so to Esau, though born
before him, his twin brother Jacob; so also Phares himself preceded even in
birth his twin brother, who had first thrust a hand out of the womb, and had
begun to be born: 6 so David was preferred before his elder brother:(7) and as the
reason why all these parables and others like them preceded, not only of words
but also of deeds, in like manner to the people of the Jews was preferred the
Christian people, for redeeming the which as Abel by Cain(8) so by the Jews was
slain Christ. This thing was prefigured even when Jacob stretching out his
hands cross-wise, with his right hand touched Ephrem standing on the left; and set
him before Manasse standing on the right, whom he himself touched with the left
hand.(3)
9. But what that is which he saith, "they have been turned back in the day
of war," the following words do teach, wherein he hath most clearly explained
this: "they have not kept," he saith, "the testament of God, and in His law
they would not walk" (ver. 10). Behold what is, "they have been turned back in the
day of war:" they have not kept the testament of God. When they were bending
and shooting bows, they did also utter the words of most forward promise,
saying, "Whatsoever things the Lord our God hath spoken we will do, and we will
hear."9 "They have been turned back in the day of war:" because the promise of
obedience not hearing but temptation doth prove. But he whose spirit hath been
trusted with God, keepeth hold on God, who is faithful, and "cloth not suffer him to
be tempted above that which he is able; but will make with the temptation a
way of escape also,"(10) that he may be able to endure, and may not be turned
back in the day of war. ... Therefore these men have been thus branded: "a
generation," he saith, "which hath not directed their heart."(11) It hath not been
said, works, but heart. For when the heart is directed, the works are right; but
when the heart is not directed, the works are not right, even though they seem
to be right. And how the crooked generation hath not directed the heart, hath
sufficiently been shown, when he saith, "and the spirit thereof hath not been
trusted with God."(11) For God is right: and therefore by cleaving to the right,
as to an immutable rule, the heart of a man can be made right, which in itself
was crooked. ...
10. "And they forgat His benefits, and the wonderful works of Him which He
showed to them; before their fathers the wonderful things which He did" (ver.
11). What this is, is not a question to be negligently passed over. Concerning
those very fathers he was speaking a little before, that they had been a
generation crooked and embittering. ... What fathers, inasmuch as these are the very
fathers, whom he would not have posterity to be like? If we shall take them to
be those out of whom the others had derived their being, for example, Abraham,
Isaac, Jacob, by this time they had long since fallen asleep, when God showed
wonderful things in Egypt. For there followeth, "in the land of Egypt, in the
plain of Thanis" (ver. 12): where it is said that God showed to them wonderful
things before their fathers. Were they perchance present in spirit? For of the
same the Lord saith in the Gospel, "for all do live to Him."(1) Or do we more
suitably understand thereby the fathers Moses and Aaron, and the other elders who
are related in the same Scripture also to have received the Spirit, of which
also Moses received, in order that they might aid him in ruling and bearing the
same people?(2) For why should they not have been called fathers? It is not in
the same manner as God is the One Father, who doth regenerate with His Spirit
those whom He doth make sons for an everlasting inheritance; but it is for the
sake of honour, because of their age and kindly carefulness: just as Paul the
elder saith, "Not to confound you I am writing these things, but as my dearly
beloved sons I am admonishing you:"(3) though he knew of a truth that it had been
said by the Lord, "Call ye no man your father on earth, for One is your Father,
even God."(4) And this was not said in order that this term of human honour
should be erased from our usual way of speaking: but lest the grace of God whereby
we are regenerated unto eternal life, should be ascribed either to the power
or even sanctity of any man. Therefore when he said," I have begotten you;" he
first said," in Christ," and "through the Gospel;" lest that might be thought to
be of him, which is of God. ... Accordingly, the land of Egypt must be
understood for a figure of this world. "The plain of Thanis" is the smooth surface of
lowly commandment. For lowly commandment is the interpretation of Thanis. In
this world therefore let us receive the commandment of humility, in order that in
another world we may merit to receive the exaltation which He hath promised,
who for our sake here became lowly.
11. For He that "did burst asunder the sea and made them go through, did
confine the waters as it were in bottles" (ver. 13), in order that the water
might stand up first as if it were shut in, is able by His grace to restrain the
flowing and ebbing tides of carnal desires, when we renounce this world, so that
all sins having been thoroughly washed away, as if they were enemies, the
people of the faithful may be made to pass through by means of the Sacrament of
Baptism. He that "led them home in the cloud of the day, and in the whole of the
night in the illumination of fire" (ver. 14), is able also spiritually to direct
goings if faith crieth to Him, "Direct Thou my goings after Thy word."[5] Of
Whom m another place(6) is said, For Himself shall make thy courses right, and
shall prolong thy goings in peace"(7) through Jesus Christ our Lord, whose
Sacrament in this world, as it were in the day, is manifest in the flesh, as if in a
cloud; but in the Judgment it will be manifest like as in a terror by night;
for then there will be a great tribulation of the world like as it were fire,
and it shall shine for the just and shall burn for the unjust. "He that burst
asunder the rock in the desert, and gave them water as in a great deep" (ver. 15);
"and brought out water from the rock, and brought down waters like rivers"
(ver. 16), is surely able upon thirsty faith to pour the gift of the Holy Spirit
(the which gift the performance of that thing did spiritually signify), to pour,
I say, from the Spiritual Rock that followed, which is Christ: who did stand
and cry, "If any is athirst, let him come to Me:"(8) and, "he that shall have
drunk of the water which I shall give, rivers of living water shall flow out of
his bosom."(9) For this He spake, as is read in the Gospel,(10) to the Spirit,
which they were to receive that believed in Him, unto whom like the rod drew
near the wood of the Passion, in order that there might flow forth grace for
believers.
12. And yet, "they," like a generation crooked and embittering, "added yet
to sin against Him" (ver. 17): that is, not to believe. For this is the sin,
whereof the Spirit doth convict the world, as the Lord saith, "Of sin indeed
because they have not believed on Me."(11) "And they exasperated the Most High in
drought," which other copies have, "in a place without water," which is a more
exact translation from the Greek, and doth signify no other thing than drought.
Was it in that drought of the desert, or rather in their own? For although
they had drank of the rock, they had not their bellies but their minds dry,
freshening with no fruitfulness of righteousness. In that drought they ought the more
faithfully to have been suppliant unto God, in order that He who had given
fulness unto their jaws, might give also equity to their manners. For unto him the
faithful soul doth cry, "Let mine eyes see equity."(12)
13. "And they tempted God in their hearts, in order that they might seek
morsels for their souls" (ver. 18). It is one thing to ask in believing, another
thing in tempting. Lastly there followeth, "And they slandered God, and said,
Shall God be able to prepare a table in the desert?" (ver. 19). "For He smote
the rock, and the waters flowed, and torrents gushed forth: will He be able to
give bread also, or to prepare a table for His people?" (ver. 20). Not believing
therefore, they sought morsels for their souls. Not so the Apostle James doth
enjoin a morsel to be asked for the mind, but doth admonish that it be sought
by believers, not by such as tempt and slander God. "But if any one of you," he
saith, "doth lack wisdom, let him ask of God, who doth give to all men
abundantly, and doth not upbraid, and it shall be given to him: but let him ask in
faith, nothing wavering."(1) This faith had not that generation which" had not
directed their heart, and the spirit thereof had not been trusted with God."
14. "Wherefore the Lord heard, and He delayed, and fire was lighted in
Jacob, and wrath went up into Israel" (ver. 21). He hath explained what he hath
called fire. He hath called anger fire: although in strict propriety fire did
also burn up many men. What is therefore this that he saith, "The Lord heard, and
He delayed"? Did He delay to conduct them into the land of promise, whither
they were being led: which might have been done in the space of a few days, but on
account of sins they must needs be wasted in the desert, where also they were
wasted during forty years? Anti if this be so, He did then delay the people,
not those very persons who tempted and slandered God: for they all perished in
the desert, and their children journeyed into the land of promise. Or did He
delay punishment, in order that He might first satisfy unbelieving concupiscence,
lest He might be supposed to be angry, because they were asking of Him what He
was not able to do? "He heard," then, "and He delayed to avenge:" and after He
had done what they supposed He was not able to do, then "anger went up upon
Israel."
15. Lastly, when both these things have been briefly touched, afterwards
he is evidently following out the order of the narrative. "Because they believed
not in God, nor hoped in His saving health" (ver. 22). For when he had told
why fire was lighted in Jacob, and anger went up upon Israel, that is to say,
"because they believed not in God, nor hoped in His saving health:" immediately
subjoining the evident blessings for which they were ungrateful, he saith, "and
He commanded the clouds above, and opened the doors of Heaven" (ver. 23). "And
He rained upon them manna to eat, and gave them bread of Heaven" (ver. 24).
"Bread of angels man did eat: dainties He sent them in abundance" (ver. 25). He
brought over the South Wind from Heaven, and in His virtue He led in the South
West Wind" (ver. 26). "And He rained upon them fleshes like dust, and winged fowls
like the sand of the sea" (ver. 27 ). "And they fell in the midst of their
camp, around their tabernacles" (ver. 28). "And they ate and were filled
exceedingly; and their desire He brought to them: they were not deprived of their
desire" (ver. 29). Behold why He had delayed. But what He had delayed let us hear.
"Yet the morsel was in their mouths, and the anger of God came down upon them"
(ver. 30). Behold what He had delayed. For before "He delayed:" and afterwards,
"fire was lighted in Jacob and anger went up upon Israel." He had delayed
therefore in order that He might first do what they had believed that He could not
do, and then might bring upon them what they deserved to suffer. For if they
placed their hope in God, not only would their desires of the flesh but also those
of the spirit have been fulfilled. For he that ... opened the doors of Heaven,
and rained upon them manna to eat," that He might fill the unbelieving, is not
without power to give to believers Himself the true Bread from Heaven, which
the manna did signify: which is indeed the food of Angels, whom being
incorruptible the Word of God doth incorruptibly feed: the which in order that man might
eat, He became flesh, and dwelled in us.(2) For Himself the Bread by means of
the Evangelical clouds is being rained over the whole world, and, the hearts of
preachers like heavenly doors, being opened, is being preached not to a
murmuring and tempting synagogue, but to a Church believing and putting hope in Him. He
is able also to feed the feeble faith of such as tempt not, but believe, with
the signs of words uttered by the flesh and speeding through the air, as though
it were fowls: not however with such as come from the north, where cold and
mist do prevail, that is to say, eloquence which is pleasing to this world, but
by bringing over the South Wind from Heaven; whither, except to the earth? In
order that they who are feeble in faith, by hearing things earthly may be
nourished up to receive things heavenly. ...
16. But as to unbelievers, being a crooked and embittering generation, as
it were, while the morsel was yet in their mouths, "the anger of God went up
upon them, and it slew among the most of them" (ver. 31): that is, the most of
them, or as some copies have it, "the fat ones of them," which however in the
Greek copies which we had, we did not find. But if this be the truer reading, what
else must be understood by "the fat ones of them," than men mighty in pride,
concerning whom is said, "their iniquity shall come forth as if out of fat"?(1)
"And the elect of Israel He lettered." Even there there were elect, with whose
faith the generation crooked and embittering was not mixed. But they were
fettered, so that they might in no sort profit them for whom they desired that they
might provide from a fatherly affection. For what is conferred by human mercy,
on those with whom God is angry? Or rather hath He willed it to be understood,
how that even the elect were fettered at the same time with them, in order that
they who were diverse both in mind and in life, might endure sufferings with
them for an example not only of righteousness, but also of patience? For we have
learned that holy men were even led captive with sinners for no other reason;
since in the Greek copies we read not <greek>enepodisen</greek>, which is
"fettered;" but <greek>sunepodisen</greek>, which is rather "fettered together with."
17. But the generation crooked and embittering, "in all these things
sinned yet more, and they believed not in His wonderful works" (ver. 32). "And in
their days failed in vanity" (ver. 33 ). Though they might, if they had believed
have had days in truth without failing, with Him to whom hath been said, "Thy
years shall not fail."(2) Therefore, "their days failed in vanity, and their
years with haste." For the whole life of mortal men is hastening, and that which
seemeth to be longer is but a vapour of somewhat longer duration.
18. Nevertheless, "when he slew them they sought Him:" not for the sake of
eternal life, but fearing to end the vapour too soon. There sought Him then,
not indeed those whom, He had slain, but they that were afraid of being slain
according to the example of them. But the Scripture hath so spoken of them as if
they sought God who were slain; because they were one people, and it is spoken
as if of one body: "and they returned, and at dawn they came to God" (ver.
34). "And they remembered that God is their Helper, and the High God is their
Redeemer" (ver. 35). But all this is for the sake of acquiring temporal good
things, and for avoiding temporal evil things. For they that did seek God for the
sake of temporal blessings, sought not God indeed, but things. Thus with those God
is worshipped with slavish fear, not free love. Thus then God is not
worshipped, for that thing is worshipped which is loved. Whence because God is found to
be greater and better than all things, He must be loved more than all things,
in order that He may be worshipped.
19. Lastly, here let us see the words following: "And they loved Him," he
saith, "in their mouth, and in their tongue they lied unto Him" (ver. 36). "But
their heart was not right with Him, and they were not counted faithful in His
Testament" (ver. 37). One thing on their tongue, another thing in their heart
He found, unto whom the secret things of men are naked, and without any
impediment He saw what they loved rather. Therefore the heart is right with God, when
it doth seek God for the sake of God. For one thing he desired of the Lord, the
same he will require, that he may dwell always in the House of the Lord, and
may meditate on the pleasantness of Him.(3) Unto Whom saith the heart of the
faithful, I will be filled, not with the flesh-pots of the Egyptians, nor with
melons and gourds, and garlick and onions, which a generation crooked and
embittering did prefer even to bread celestial,(4) nor with visible manna, and those
same winged fowls; but, "I will be filled, when Thy glory shall be made
manifest."(5) For this is the inheritance of the New Testament, wherein they were not
counted faithful; whereof however the faith even at that time, when it was veiled,
was in the elect, and now, when it hath already been revealed, it is not in
many that are called. "For many have been called, but few are elect."(6) Of such
sort therefore was the generation crooked and embittering, even when they were
seeming to seek God, loving in mouth, and in tongue lying; but in heart not
right with God, while they loved rather those things, for the sake of which they
required the help of God.
20. "But He is Himself merciful, and will become propitious to their sins,
and He will not destroy them. And He will abound to turn away His anger, and
He will not kindle all his anger" (ver. 38). By these words many men promise to
themselves impunity for their iniquity from the Divine Mercy, even if they
shall have persevered in being such, as that generation is described, "crooked and
embittering; which hath not directed their heart, and the spirit thereof hath
not been trusted with God:" with whom it is not profitable to agree. For if, to
speak in their words, God will perchance not destroy no not even bad men,
without doubt He will not destroy good men. Why then do we not rather choose that
wherein there is no doubt? For they that lie to Him in their tongue, though their
heart doth hold some other thing, do think indeed, and will, even God to be a
liar, when He doth menace upon such men eternal punishment. But whilst they do
not deceive Him with their lying, He doth not deceive them with speaking the
truth. These words therefore of divine sayings, concerning which the crooked
generation doth cajole itself, let it not make crooked like its own heart: for even
when it is made crooked, they continue right. For at first they may be
understood according to that which is written in the Gospel, "that ye may be like your
Father who is in the Heavens, who maketh His sun to rise upon good men and
evil men, and raineth upon just men and unjust men."(1) For who could not see, how
great is the long-suffering of mercy with which He is sparing evil men? But
before the Judgment, He spared then that nation in such sort, that He kindled
not(1) all His anger, utterly to root it up and bring it to an end: which thing in
His words and in the intercession for their sins of His servant Moses doth
evidently appear, where God saith, "Let Me blot them out, and make thee into a
great nation:"(3) he intercedeth, being more ready to be blotted out for them than
that they should be; knowing that he is doing this before One Merciful, who
inasmuch as by no means He would blot out him, would even spare them for his
sake. For let us see how greatly He spared, and doth still spare. ...
21. In the second place, that we may not seem to do violence to divine
words, and lest in the place where there was said, "He will not destroy them,"(4)
we should say, "But hereafter He will destroy them: "concerning this very
present Psalm let us turn to a very common phrase of the Scripture, whereby this
question may be more diligently and more truly solved. Speaking of these same
persons a little lower down, when He had made mention of the things which the
Egyptians because of them had endured, He saith, ... "And He led them unto the mount
of His sanctification, the mount which His fight hand won. And He cast out
from their face the nations, and by lot distributed to them the land in the cord
of distribution."(5) If any one at these words should press a question upon us,
and should say, How doth he make mention of all these things as having been
bestowed upon them, when the same persons were not led into the land of promise,
as were delivered from Egypt, inasmuch as they were dead? What shall we reply
but that they were spoken of, because they were the self-same people by means of
a succession of sons? ...
22. "And He remembered that they are flesh, a spirit(6) going and not
returning" (ver. 39). Therefore calling them and pitying them through His grace, He
called them back Himself, because of themselves they could not return. For how
doth flesh return, "a spirit walking and not turning back,"(7) while a weight
of evil deserts doth weigh it down unto the lowest and far places of evil, save
through the election of grace? ... For thus also is solved this no unimportant
question, how it is written in the Proverbs, when the Scripture was speaking
of the way of iniquity, "all they that walk in her shall not return."(8) For it
hath been so spoken as if all ungodly men were to be despaired of: but the
Scripture did only commend grace; for of himself man is able to walk in that way,
but is not able of himself to return, except when called back by grace.
23. I say then of these crooked and embittering persons, "How often they
exasperated Him in the desert, and provoked Him to wrath in the waterless
place!" (ver. 40). "And they turned themselves and tempted God, and exasperated the
Holy One of Israel" (ver. 41). He is repeating that same unbelief of theirs, of
which He had made mention above. But the reason of the repetition is, in order
that there may be mentioned also the plagues which He inflicted on the
Egyptians for their sakes: all which things they certainly ought to have remembered,
and not to be ungrateful. Lastly, there followeth what? "They remembered not His
hands, in the day when He redeemed them from the hand of the troubler" (ver.
42). And he beginneth to speak of what things He did to the Egyptians: "He set in
Egypt His signs, and His prodigies in the plain of Thanis" (ver. 43): "and He
turned their rivers into blood, and their showers lest they should drink" (ver.
44), or rather, "the flowings of waters," as some do better understand by what
is written in Greek, <greek>ta</greek> <greek>ombrhmata</greek>, which in
Latin we call scaturigines, waters bubbling from beneath. "He sent upon them the
dog-fly, and it ate them up; and the frog, and it destroyed them" (ver. 45). "And
He gave their fruit to the mildew, and their labours to the locust" (ver. 46).
"And He slew with hail their vineyards, and their mulberry trees with frost"
(ver. 47). "And He gave over to the hail their beasts of burden, and their
possessions to the fire" (ver. 48). "He sent upon them the anger of His indignation,
indignation and anger and tribulation, a visitation through evil angels" (ver.
49). He made a way to the course of His anger, and their beasts of burden He
shut up in death" (ver. 50). "And He smote every first-born thing in the land of
Egypt, the first-fruits of their labours in the tabernacles of Cham" (ver. 51).
24. All these punishments of the Egyptians may be explained by an
allegorical interpretation, according as one shall have chosen to understand them, and
to compare them to the things whereunto they must be referred. Which we too
will endeavour to do; and shall do it the more properly, the more we shall have
been divinely aided. For to do this, those words of this Psalm do constrain us,
wherein it was said, "I will open in parables my mouth, I will declare
propositions from the beginning."(1) For for this cause even some things have been here
spoken of, which that they befell the Egyptians at all we read not, although
all their plagues are most carefully related in Exodus according to their order,
so that while that which is not there mentioned we are sure hath not been
mentioned in the Psalm to no purpose, and we can interpret the same only
figuratively, we may at the same time understand that even the rest of the things which it
is evident did happen, were done or described for the sake of some figurative
meaning. For the Scripture doth so do in many passages of the prophetic
sayings. ...In the plagues therefore of the Egyptians, which are in the book which is
called Exodus, where the Scripture hath been especially careful, that those
things whereby they were afflicted should be all related in order, there is not
found what this Psalm hath, "and He gave to the mildew their fruits." This also
wherein, when he had said, "and He gave over to the hail their beasts," he
hath added, "and their possession to the fire :" of the beasts slain with hail is
read in Exodus;(2) but how their possession was burned with fire, is not read
at all. Although voices and fires do come together with hail, just as
thunderings do commonly accompany lightnings; nevertheless, it is not written that
anything was given over to the fire that it should be burned. Lastly, the soft
things which the hail could not hurt, are said not to have been smitten, that is,
hurt with hard blows; which things the locust devoured afterwards. Also that
which is here spoken of, "and their mulberry trees with hoar-frost," is not in
Exodus. For hoar-frost doth differ much from hail; for in the clear winter nights
the earth is made white with hoar-frost.
25. What then those things do signify, let the interpreter say as he can,
let reader and hearer judge as is just. The water turned into blood seemeth to
me to signify a carnal view of the causes of things. Dog-fly, are the manners
of dogs? who see not even their parents when first they are born. The frog is
very talkative vanity. Mildew doth hurt secretly, which also some have
interpreted by rust, others black mould: which evil thing to what vice is it more
appropriately compared, than to what doth show itself least readily, like the trusting
much in one's self? For it is a blighting air which doth work this secretly
among fruits: just like in morals, secret pride, when a man thinketh himself to
be something, though he is nothing.(4) The locust is malice hurting with the
mouth, that is, with unfaithful testimony. The hail is iniquity taking away the
goods of others; whence theft, robberies, and depredations do spring: but more by
his wickedness the plunderer himself is plundered. The hoar-frost doth signify
the fault wherein the love of one's neighbour by the darkness of foolishness,
like as it were by the cold of night, is frozen up. But the fire, if here it is
not that which is mentioned which was in the hail out of the lightning clouds,
forasmuch as he hath said here, "He gave over their possession to the fire,"
where he implieth that a thing was burned, which by that fire we read not to
have been done,--it seemeth to me, I say, to signify the savageness of wrath,
whereby even man-slaying may be committed. But by the death of beasts was figured,
as far as I judge, the loss of chastity. For concupiscence, whereby offspring
do arise, we have in common with beasts. To have this therefore tamed and
ordered, is the virtue of chastity. The death of the first-born things, is the
putting off of the very justice whereby a man doth associate with mankind. But
whether the figurative significations of these things be so, or whether they are
better understood in another way, whom would it not move, that with ten plagues the
Egyptians are smitten, and with ten commandments the tables are inscribed,(5)
that thereby the people of God should be ruled? Concerning the comparing of
which one with the other, inasmuch as we have spoken elsewhere, there is no need
to load the exposition of this Psalm therewith: thus much we remind you, that
here too, though not in the same order, yet ten plagues of the Egyptians are
commemorated, forasmuch as in the place of three which are in Exodus and are not
here, to wit, lice, boils, darkness; other three are commemorated, which are not
there, that is to say, mildew, hoarfrost, and fire; not of lightning, but that
where-unto their possession was given over, which is not read of in that place.
26. But it hath been clearly enough intimated, that by the judgment of God
these things befell them through the instrumentality of evil angels, in this
wicked world, as though it were in Egypt and in the plain of Thanis, where we
ought to be humble, until there come that world, wherein we may earn to be
exalted out of this humiliation. For even Egypt in the Hebrew tongue doth signify
darkness or tribulations, in which tongue, Thanis,(6) as I have observed, is
understood to be humble commandment. Concerning the evil angels therefore in this
Psalm, while he was speaking of those very plagues, there hath been something
inserted, which must not be passed over cursorily: "He sent upon them," he saith,
"an infliction through evil angels." Now that the devil and his angels are so
very evil, that for them everlasting fire is prepared, no believer is ignorant:
but that there should be sent by means of them an infliction from the Lord God
upon certain whom He judgeth to be deserving of this punishment, seemeth to be
a hard thing to those who are little prone to consider, how the perfect justice
of God doth use well even evil things. For these indeed, as far as regardeth
their substance, what other person but Himself hath made? But evil He hath not
made them: yet He doth use them, inasmuch as He is good, well, that is,
conveniently and justly: just as on the other hand unrighteous men do use His good
creatures in evil manner. God therefore doth use evil angels not only to punish
evil men, as in the case of all those concerning whom the Psalm doth speak, as in
the case of king Achab, whom a spirit of lying by the will of God did beguile,
in order that he might fall in war:(1) but also to prove and make manifest good
men, as He did in the case of Job. But as far as regardeth that corporal
matter of visible elements, I suppose that thereof angels both good and evil are
able to make use, according to the power given to each: just as also men good and
evil do use such things, as far as they are able, according to the measure of
human infirmity. For we use both earth and water, and air, and fire, not only in
things necessary for our support, but also in many operations superfluous and
playful, and marvellously artificial. For countless things, which are called
<greek>mhcanhmata</greek>, are moulded out of these elements scientifically
employed. But over these things angels have a far more extended power, both the good
and the evil, though greater is that which the good have;(2) but only so far
as is commanded or permitted by the will and providence of God; on which terms
also we have it. For not even in these cases are we able to do all that we will.
But in a book the most unerring we read that the devil was able even to send
fire from Heaven, to burn up with wonderful and awful fierceness so great a
number of the cattle of a holy man:(3) which thing no one of the faithful would
dare perchance to ascribe to the devil, except it were read on the authority of
Holy Scripture. But that man, being by the gift of God just and firm, and of
godly knowledge, saith not, The Lord hath given, the devil hath taken away: but,
"The Lord hath given, the Lord hath taken away:"(4) very well knowing that even
what the devil was able to do with these elements, he would still not have done
to a servant of God, except at his Lord's will and permission; he did confound
the malice of the devil, forasmuch as he knew who it was that was making use
thereof to prove him. In the sons then of unbelief like as it were in his own
slaves, he doth work,(5) like men with their beasts, and even therewith only so
far as is permitted by the just judgment of God. But it is one thing when his
power is restrained from treating even his own as he pleases, by a greater power;
another thing when to him power is given even over those who are alien from
him. Just as a man with his beast, as men understand it, doeth what he will, and
yet doth not indeed, if he be restrained by a greater power: but with another
man's beast to do something, he doth wait until power be given from him unto whom
it belongeth. In the former case the power which there was is restrained, in
the latter that which there was not is conceded.
27. And if such be the case, if through evil angels God did inflict those
plagues upon the Egyptians, shall we dare to say that the water also was turned
into blood by means of those same angels, and that frogs were created by means
of the same, the like whereunto even the magicians of Pharaoh were able to
make by their enchantments;(6) so as that evil angels stood on both sides, on the
one side afflicting them, on the other side deceiving them, according to the
judgment and dispensation(7) of the most just and most omnipotent God, who doth
justly make use of even the naughtiness of unrighteous men? I dare not to say
so. For whence was it that the magicians of Pharaoh could by no means make
lice?(8) Was it not because even these same evil angels were not suffered to do this?
Or, to speak more truly, is not the cause hidden, and it doth exceed our
powers of inquiry? For if we shall have supposed that God wrought those things by
means of evil angels, because punishments were being inflicted, and not blessings
being bestowed, as though God doth inflict punishments upon no one by means of
good angels, but by means of those executioners as it were of the heavenly
wrath; the consequence will be that we must believe that even Sodom was overthrown
by means of evil angels, and that Abraham and Lot would seem to have
entertained under their roof evil angels;(9) the which, as being contrary to the most
evident Scriptures, far be it that we should think. It is clear then that these
things might have been done to men by means of good and evil angels. What should
be done or when it should be done doth escape me: but Him that doeth it, it
escapeth not, and him unto whom He shall have willed to reveal it. Nevertheless,
as far as divine Scripture doth yield to our application thereto, on evil men
that punishments are inflicted both by means of good angels, as upon the
Sodomites, and by means of evil angels, as upon the Egyptians, we read: but that just
men with corporal penances by means of good angels are tried and proved, doth
not occur to me.
28. But as far as regardeth the present passage of this Psalm, if we dare
not ascribe those things which were marvellously formed out of creatures, to
evil angels; we have a thing which without doubt we can ascribe to them; the
dyings of the beasts, the dyings of the first-born, and this especially whence all
these things proceeded, namely, the hardening of heart, so that they would not
let go the people of God.(1) For when God is said to make this most iniquitous
and malignant obstinacy, He maketh it not by suggesting and inspiring, but by
forsaking, so that they work in the sons of unbelief that which God doth duly
and justly permit.(2) ... Moreover, those evil manners which we said were
signified by these corporal plagues, on account of that which was said before, "I will
open in parables my mouth,"(3) are most appropriately believed by means of
evil angels to have been wrought in those that are made subject to them by Divine
justice. For neither when that cometh to pass of which the apostle speaketh,
"God gave them over into the lusts of their heart, that they should do things
which are not convenient,"(4) can it be but that those evil angels dwell and
rejoice therein, as in the matter of their own work: unto whom most justly is human
haughtiness made subject, in all save those whom grace doth deliver. "And for
these things who is sufficient?" (5) Whence when he had said, "He sent unto them
the anger of His indignation, indignation and anger and tribulation, an
infliction through evil angels;" for this which he hath added, "a way He hath made
for the path of His anger "(ver. 50), whose eye, I pray, is sufficient to
penetrate, so that it may understand and take in the sense lying hidden in so great a
profundity? For the path of the anger of God was that whereby He punished the
ungodliness of the Egyptians with hidden justice: but for that same path He made
a way, so that drawing them forth as it were from secret places by means of
evil angels unto manifest offences, He most evidently inflicted punishment upon
those that were most evidently ungodly. From this power of evil angels nothing
doth deliver man but the grace of God, whereof the Apostle speaketh, "Who hath
delivered us from the power of darkness, and l hath translated us into the
kingdom of the Son of His love:"(6) of which things that people did bear the
figure, when they were delivered from the power of the Egyptians, and translated
into the kingdom of the land of promise flowing with milk and honey, which doth
signify the sweetness of grace.
29. The Psalm proceedeth then after the commemoration of the plagues of
the Egyptians (ver. 51) and saith, "And He took away like sheep His people, and
He led them through like a flock in the desert" (ver. 52). "And He led them down
in hope, and they feared not, and their enemies the sea covered" (Ver, 53).
This cometh to pass to so much the greater good, as it is a more inward thing,
wherein being delivered from the power of darkness, we are in mind translated
into the Kingdom of God, and with respect to spiritual pastures we are made to
become sheep of God, walking in this world as it were in a desert, inasmuch as to
no one is our faith observable: whence saith the Apostle, "Your life is hidden
with Christ in God."(7) But we are being led home in hope, "For by hope we are
saved."(8) Nor ought we to fear. For, "If God be for us, who can be against
us"(9) And our enemies the sea hath covered, He hath effaced them in baptism by
the remission of sins.
30. In the next place there followeth, "And He led them into the mountain
of His sanctification" (ver. 54). How much better into Holy Church! "The
mountain which His right hand hath gotten." How much higher is the Church which
Christ hath gotten, concerning whom has been said, "And to whom has the arm of the
Lord been revealed?(10) (ver. 55). "And He cast forth from the face of them the
nations." And(11) from the face of His faithful. For nations in a manner are
the evil spirits of Gentile errors. "And by lot He divided unto them the land in
the cord of distribution." And in us "all things one and the same Spirit doth
work, dividing severally to every one as He willeth."(12)
31. "And He made to dwell in their tabernacles the tribes of Israel." In
the tabernacles, he saith, of the Gentiles He made the tribes of Israel to
dwell, which I think can better be explained spiritually, inasmuch as unto celestial
glory, whence sinning angels have been cast forth and cast down, by Christ's
grace we are being uplifted. For that generation crooked and embittering,
inasmuch as for these corporal blessings they put not off the coat of oldness, "Did
tempt" yet, "and provoked the high God, and His testimonies they kept not (ver.
56): and they turned them away, and they kept not the covenant, like their
fathers" (ver. 57). For under a sort of covenant and decree they said, "All things
which our Lord God hath spoken we will do, and we will hear."(13) It is a
remarkable thing indeed which he saith, "like their fathers:" while throughout the
whole text of the Psalm he was seeming to speak of the same men as it were, yet
now it appeareth that the words did concern those who were already in the land
of promise, and that the fathers spoken of were of those who did provoke in the
desert. "They were turned," he saith, "into a crooked," or, as some copies
have it, "into a perverse bow" (ver. 58). But what this is doth better appear in
that which followeth, where he saith, "And unto wrath they provoked Him with
their hills" (ver. 59). It doth signify that they leaped into idolatry. The bow
then was perverted, not for the name of the Lord, but against the name of the
Lord: who said to the same people, "Thou shalt have none other Gods but Me."(1)
But by the bow He doth signify the mind's intention. This same idea, lastly, more
clearly working out, "And in their graven idols," he saith, "they provoked Him
to indignation."
32. "God heard, and He despised:" that is, He gave heed and took
vengeance. "And unto nothing He brought Israel exceedingly" (ver. 60). For when God
despised, what were they who by God's help were what they were? But doubtless he is
commemorating the doing of that thing, when they were conquered by the
Philistines in the time of Heli the priest, and the Ark of the Lord was taken, and
with great slaughter they were laid low.(2) This it is that he speaketh of. "And
He rejected the tabernacle of Selom, His tabernacle, where He dwelled among men"
(ver. 61). He hath elegantly explained why He rejected His tabernacle, when he
saith, "where He dwelled among men." When therefore they were not worthy for
Him to dwell among, why should He not reject the tabernacle, which indeed not
for Himself He had established, but for their sakes, whom now He judged unworthy
for Him to dwell among. "And He gave over unto captivity their strength, and
their beauty unto the hands of the enemy." The very Ark whereby they thought
themselves invincible, and whereon they plumed themselves, he calleth their
"virtue" and "beauty." Lastly, also afterward, when they were living ill, and boasting
of the temple of the Lord, He doth terrify them by a Prophet, saying, "See ye
what I have done to Selom, where was My tabernacle."(3) "And He ended with the
sword His people, and His inheritance He despised" (ver. 62). "Their young men
the fire devoured:" that is, wrath. "And their virgins mourned not" (ver. 63).
For not even for this was there leisure, in fear of the foe. "Their priests
fell by the sword, and their widows were not lamented" (ver. 64). For there fell
by the sword the sons of Heli, of one of whom the wife being widowed, and
presently dying in child-birth,(4) because of the same confusion could not be mourned
with the distinction of a funeral. "And the Lord was awakened as one sleeping"
(ver. 65). For He seemeth to sleep, when He giveth His people into the hands
of those whom He hateth, when there is said to them, "Where is thy God?"(5) "He
was awakened, then, like one sleeping, like a mighty man drunken with wine." No
one would dare to say this of God, save His Spirit. For he hath spoken, as it
seemeth to ungodly men reviling; as if like a drunken man He sleepeth long,
when He succoureth not so speedily as men think.(6)
33. "And He smote His enemies in the hinder parts" (ver. 66): those, to
wit, who were rejoicing that they were able to take His Ark: for they were
smitten in their back-parts.(7) Which seemeth to me to be a sign of that punishment,
wherewith a man will be tortured, if he shall have looked back upon things
behind; which, as saith the Apostle, he ought to value as dung.(8) For they that do
so receive the Testament of God, as that they put not off from them the old
vanity, are like the hostile nations, who did place the captured Ark of the
Testament beside their own idols. And yet those old things even though these be
unwilling do fall: for "all flesh is hay, and the glory of man as the flower of
hay. The hay hath dried up, and the flower hath fallen off:"(9) but the Ark of the
Lord "abideth for everlasting," to wit, the secret testament of the kingdom of
Heaven, where is the eternal Word of God. But they that have loved things
behind, because of these very things most justly shall be tormented. For
"everlasting reproach He hath given to them." (ver. 67).
34. "And He rejected," he saith," the tabernacle of Joseph, and the tribe
of Ephraim(10) He chose not" (ver. 68). "And He chose the tribe of Judah" (ver.
69). He hath not said, He rejected the tabernacle of Reuben, who was the
first-born son of Jacob;(11) nor them that follow, and precede Judah in order of
birth; so that they being rejected and not chosen, the tribe of Judah was chosen.
For it might have been said that they were deservedly rejected; because even in
the blessing of Jacob wherewith he blessed his sons, he mentioneth their
sins,(12) and deeply abhorreth them; though among them the tribe of Levi merited to
be the priestly tribe, whence also Moses was.(1) Nor hath he said, He rejected
the tabernacle of Benjamin, or the tribe of Benjamin He chose not, out of which
a king already had begun to be; for thence there had been chosen Saul;(2)
whence because of the very proximity of the time, when he had been rejected and
refused, and David chosen,(3) this might conveniently have been said; but yet was
not said: but he hath named those especially who seemed to excel for more
surpassing merits. For Joseph fed in Egypt his father and his brethren, and having
been impiously sold, because of his piety, chastity, wisdom, he was most justly
exalted;(4) and Ephraim by the blessing of his grandfather Jacob was preferred
before his eider brother:(5) and yet God "rejected the tabernacle of Joseph,
and the tribe of Ephraim He chose not." In which place by these names of renowned
merit, what else do we understand but that whole people with old cupidity
requiring of the Lord earthly rewards, rejected and refused, but the tribe of Judah
chosen not for the sake of the merits of that same Judah? For far greater are
the merits of Joseph, but by the tribe of Judah, inasmuch as thence arose
Christ according to the flesh, the Scripture doth testify of the new people of
Christ preferred before that old people, the Lord opening in parables His mouth.
Moreover, thence also in that which followeth, "the Mount Sion which He chose," we
do better understand the Church of Christ, not worshipping God for the sake of
the carnal blessings of the present time, but from afar looking for future and
eternal rewards with the eyes of faith: for Sion too is interpreted a "looking
out."
35. Lastly there followeth, "and He builded like as of unicorns His
sanctification" (ver. 70): or, as some interpreters have made thereof a new word,
"His sanctifying.:"(6) The unicorns are rightly understood to be those, whose firm
hope is uplifted unto that one thing, concerning which another Psalm saith,
"One thing I have sought of the Lord, this I will require."(7) But the
sanctifying of God, according to the Apostle Peter, is understood to be a holy people and
a royal priesthood.(8) But that which followeth, "in the land which He founded
for everlasting:" which the Greek copies have <greek>eis</greek>
<greek>ton</greek> <greek>aipna</greek>, whether it be called by us "for everlasting," or
"for an age," is at the pleasure of the Latin translators; forasmuch as it doth
signify either: and therefore the latter is found in some Latin copies, the
former in others. Some also have it in the plural, that is, "for ages:" which in
the Greek copies which we have had we have not found. But which of the faithful
would doubt, that the Church, even though, some going, others coming, she doth
pass out of this life in mortal manner, is yet founded for everlasting?
36. "And He chose David His servant" (yet. 71). The tribe, I say, of
Judah, for the sake of David: but David for the sake of Christ: the tribe then of
Judah for the sake of Christ. At whose passing by blind men cried out," Have pity
on us, Son of David:"(9) and forthwith by His pity they received light,
because true was the thing which they cried out. This then the Apostle doth not
cursorily speak of, but doth heedfully notice, writing to Timothy, "Be thou
mindful, that Christ Jesus hath risen from the dead, of the seed of David," etc.(10)
Therefore the Saviour Himself, made according to the flesh of the seed of David,
is figured in this passage under the name of David, the Lord opening in
parables His mouth. And let it not move us, that when he had said, "and hie chose
David," under which name he signified Christ, he hath added, "His servant," not
His Son. Yea even hence we may perceive, that not the substance of the
Only-Begotten coeternal with the Father, but the "form of a servant" was taken of the
seed of David.
37. "And He took him from the flocks of sheep, from behind the teeming
sheep He received him: to feed Jacob His servant, and Israel His inheritance"
(ver. 72). This David indeed, of whose seed the flesh of Christ is, from the
pastoral care of cattle was translated to the kingdom of men: but our David, Jesus
Himself, from men to men, from Jews to Gentiles, was yet according to the parable
from sheep to sheep taken away and translated. For there are not now in that
land "Churches of Judaea in Christ," which belonged to them of the circumcision
after the recent Passion and Resurrection of our Lord, of whom saith the
Apostle," But I was unknown by face to the Churches of Judaea, which are in Christ,"
etc.(11) Already from hence those Churches of the circumcised people have
passed away: and thus in Judaea, which now doth exist on the earth, there is not now
Christ.(12) He hath been removed thence, now He doth feed flocks of Gentiles.
Truly from behind teeming sheep He hath been taken thence. For those former
Churches were of such sort, as that of them it is said in the Song of Songs, "Thy
teeth--are like a flock of shorn ewes going up from the washing, (13) all of
which do bear twins, and a barren one is not among them." (14) For they then laid
aside like as it were fleeces the burdens of the world,(15) when before the
feet of the Apostles they laid the prices of their sold goods,(16) going up from
that Layer, concerning which the apostle Peter doth admonish them, when they
were troubled because they had shed the blood of Christ, and he saith, "Repent
ye, and let each one of you be baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ, and
your sins shall be forgiven you."(1) But twins they begat, the works, to wit,
of the two commandments of twin love, love of God, and love of one's neighbour:
whence a barren one there was not among them. From behind these teeming sheep
our David having been taken, doth now feed other flocks among the Gentiles, and
those too "Jacob" and "Israel." For thus hath been said, "to feed Jacob His
servant, and Israel His inheritance." ... Unless perchance any one be willing to
make such a distinction as this; viz. that in this time Jacob serveth; but he
will be the eternal inheritance of God, at that time when he shall see God face
to face, whence he hath received the name Israel.(2)
38. "And He fed them," he saith, "in the innocence of His heart" (ver.
73). What can be more innocent than He, who not only had not any sin whereby to be
conquered, but even not any to conquer? "And in the understanding of His hands
He led them home:" or, as some copies have it, "in the understandings of His
hands." Any other man might suppose that it would have been better had it been
said thus, "in innocence of hands and understanding of heart;" but He who knew
better than others what He spake, preferred to join with the heart innocence,
and with the hands understanding. It is for this reason, as far as I judge;
because many men think themselves innocent, who do not evil things because they fear
lest they should suffer if they shall have done them; but they have the will
to do them, if they could with impunity. Such men may seem to have innocence of
hands, but yet not that of heart. And what, I pray, or of what sort is that
innocence, if of heart it is not, where man was made after the image of God?(3)
But in this which he saith, "in understanding (or intelligence) of His hands He
led them home," he seemeth to me to have spoken of that intelligence which He
doth Himself make in believers: and so "of His hands:" for making cloth belong to
the hands, but in the sense wherein the hands of God may be understood; for
even Christ was a Man in such sort, that He was also God. ...