Whose blood Pilate had mingled with their sacrifices. These seem to
have been some of the seditious followers of Judas, the Galilean, or
Gaulonite, who denied that God's people were to pay taxes; and it is
thought that some of them, coming to offer up sacrifices in the
temple, Pilate caused them to... [ Continue Reading ]
Sinners, &c. People are naturally inclined to believe, that those who
are unfortunate, and afflicted with calamities, must likewise be
culpable and impious. The Jews were very much given to these
sentiments, as we see in many places in Scripture; John ix. 2 and 3.
Our Saviour wishes to do away with... [ Continue Reading ]
This prediction of our Saviour upon the impenitent was afterwards
completely verified; for Josephus informs us, that under the
government of Cumanus, 20,000 of them were destroyed about the temple.
(Jewish Antiquities, lib. xx, chap. 4.) That upon the admission of the
Idumeans into the city, 8,500 o... [ Continue Reading ]
_Or those eighteen, &c. The Almighty permitted these people to be thus
chastised, that the others might be filled with fear and apprehension
at the sight of another's dangers, and thus become the heirs of the
kingdom of heaven. But then you will say, is another punished that I
may become better? No;... [ Continue Reading ]
_Unless you do penance, &c. The Jews did not penance; and therefore,
forty years after our Lord's Passion, the Romans came, and beginning
with Galilee, destroyed this impious nation to its roots, and polluted
not only the court of the temple, whither the sacrifices were carried,
but the inner sanctu... [ Continue Reading ]
_A certain man, &c. Each one, inasmuch as he holds a place in life, if
he produce not the fruit of good works, like a barren tree encumbers
the ground; because the place he holds, were it occupied by others,
might be a place of fertility. (St. Gregory)_... [ Continue Reading ]
_And if happily it bear fruit. It is a way of speaking, when a
sentence is left imperfect; yet what is not expressed, may be easily
understood; as here we may understand, well and good, or the like.
(Witham)_... [ Continue Reading ]
The president of the synagogue, when he saw the woman, who before
crept on the ground, now raised by the touch of Christ, and hearing
the mandate of God, was filled with envy, and decried the miracle,
apparently through solicitude for keeping the sabbath. But the truth
is, he would rather see the po... [ Continue Reading ]
Our Lord was this mustard-seed, when he was buried in the earth; and
He became a tree, when he ascended into heaven; but a tree that
overshadowed the whole creation, in the branches of which the birds of
heaven rested; that is, the powers of heaven, and all such as by good
works have raised themselv... [ Continue Reading ]
The flour represents us Christians, who receive the Lord Jesus into
the inner parts of our soul, till we are all inflamed with the fire of
his heavenly wisdom. (St. Ambrose)... [ Continue Reading ]
_Shall seek, &c. Shall desire to be saved; but for want of taking
sufficient pains, and not being thoroughly in earnest, shall not
attain to it. (Challoner) --- Our Lord answers here in the
affirmative: viz. that the number of those who are saved, is very
small, for a few only can enter by the narro... [ Continue Reading ]
When the Almighty casts any off, he is said not to know them: in the
same manner as a lover of truth may be said not to know how to tell a
falsehood, being withheld powerfully from it by his love of truth.
(St. Gregory, mor. chap. 8.)... [ Continue Reading ]
These words are addressed particularly to the Jews, because Christ was
born of them according to the flesh, eat and drank with them, and
taught publicly in their streets; but they apply to us Christians
also, for we eat the body of Christ, and drink his blood, when each
day we approach the mystical... [ Continue Reading ]
It is rather surprising that Christ should make use of these
opprobrious words, which could be of no service to himself, but which
would only serve to irritate king Herod, should they come to his ears.
But Christ, by these words, probably wished to shew that he was not
the least afraid of him whom t... [ Continue Reading ]
_Nevertheless I must walk, (i.e. labour in the mission, teaching, &c.)
to-day, and to-morrow, &c. i.e. for a while. --- It cannot be that a
prophet, [1] &c. Not that all of the prophets suffered in Jerusalem,
though many did; and it is rather to prophesy, that he himself, the
great Prophet, and thei... [ Continue Reading ]