_Jesus answered, and spoke to them again in parables, and concludes
his discourse with again describing, 1st. the reprobation of the Jews;
2d. the calling of the Gentiles to the true faith; and 3d. the final
judgment of both the one and the other. In this parable of the
marriage feast, says St. John... [ Continue Reading ]
Is like to a man being a king, &c. This parable seems different from
that of Luke xiv. 16. See St. Augustine, lib. ii. de Cons. Evang.
chap. lxx. The main design in this parable, is to shew the Jews that
they were all invited to believe in Christ; though so few of them
believed. The king is God; his... [ Continue Reading ]
His servants. John the Baptist and Christ himself, who took the form
of a servant, to call such as had been formerly invited to the
nuptials that were to be celebrated in his time. The Jews were invited
by Moses and the prophets, and were instructed to believe that the
Messias would celebrate the ha... [ Continue Reading ]
_One to his farm. After they had put to death the Son of God, still
did the Almighty invite them to the marriage-feast; but they with
futile excuses declined and slighted the proffered favour, wholly
taken up with their temporal concerns and sensual enjoyments, their
oxen, lands and wives. From the... [ Continue Reading ]
_Put them to death. Thus the Jews had many times treated the prophets.
(Witham) --- These were by far the most impious and the most
ungrateful; tenuerunt Servos ejus, as is related in the Acts, with
regard to the death of James, and Stephen, and Paul. (Menochius)_... [ Continue Reading ]
_Sending his armies. Here our Redeemer predicts the destruction of
Jerusalem, by the armies of Vespasian and Titus, sent against them by
the Almighty, in punishment of their incredulity and impiety. (St.
John Chrysostom, hom. lxx.) --- Thus the king destroyed those
murderers, and burnt their city; f... [ Continue Reading ]
_Were not worthy. The Almighty knew full well that they were not
worthy; he still sent them these frequently repeated invitations, that
they might be left without any excuse. (St. John Chrysostom, hom.
lxx.) --- More is signified here than the bare letter conveys; they
were not only less worthy of t... [ Continue Reading ]
_ Go ye therefore into the highways. The apostles first kept
themselves within the precincts of Judea, but the Jews continually
sought their destruction. Therefore St. Paul said to them, (Acts xiii.
46.) to you it behoved us first to speak the word of God, but seeing
you reject it, and judge yoursel... [ Continue Reading ]
_Both bad and good. Christ had before told the Jews that harlots and
publicans should, in preference to them, inherit the kingdom of
heaven, and that the first should be last, and the last first, which
preference of the Gentiles, tormented the Jews more than even the
destruction of their city. (St.... [ Continue Reading ]
Wedding garment, which Calvin erroneously understands of faith, for he
came by faith to the nuptials. St. Augustine says it is the honour and
glory of the spouse, which each one should seek, and not his own; and
he shews this, in a sermon on the marriage feast, to be charity. This
is the sentiment o... [ Continue Reading ]
_Not having a wedding garment. By this one person, are represented all
sinner void of the grace of God. (Witham) --- To enter with unclean
garments, is to depart out of this life in the guilt of sin. For those
are no less guilty of manifesting a contempt for the Deity, who
presume to sit down in the... [ Continue Reading ]
This is the third conference which Jesus Christ had with the Jews. It
relates to the civil conduct of mankind, as directed and influenced by
religion.... [ Continue Reading ]
The Herodians. That is, some that belonged to Herod, and that joined
with him in standing up for the necessity of paying tribute to Cæsar;
that is, to the Roman emperor. Some are of opinion that there was a
sect among the Jews called Herodians, from their maintaining that
Herod was the Messias. (Cha... [ Continue Reading ]
Is it lawful, reasonable and just, to give tribute to Cæsar? It was
at that time a question much agitated among the Jews, whether they,
being the peculiar people of God, ought to be subject and pay taxes to
Cæsar, or to any prince whatsoever, or be exempt from them. (Witham)
--- Judas Galilæus, abou... [ Continue Reading ]
_Ye hypocrites? Our divine Saviour knowing their malice, and that it
was their wish in proposing this question, to render him odious to the
people, or a suspicious character to the prince, answers them in these
severe words.... Another motive was, to let them see that the secrets
of their inmost hea... [ Continue Reading ]
Render therefore to Cæsar the things that are Cæsar's. He neither
directly decided the question, nor offended the Herodians. They
admired his wisdom, were quite disappointed, and retired with
confusion. (Witham) --- The reasoning of Christ appears to be this: As
you are the subjects of Cæsar, which... [ Continue Reading ]
_Raise up issue to his brother, to be heirs of his name and of his
effects, as we read in Ruth, chap. iv, ver. 10: suscitare nomen
defuncti, &c. to raise up the name of the deceased in his inheritance,
lest his name be cut off from among his family, and his brethren, and
his people. (Haydock)_... [ Continue Reading ]
_You err. The Sadducees erred in supposing that there would be no
resurrection, or if there was, that the future state would be like the
present. Unable to conceive any thing else, they thought themselves
justified in concluding that the soul would not survive the body. Had
they known the Scriptures... [ Continue Reading ]
_As the angels. Not in every respect, for the body shall be likewise
raised with the soul, whilst the angels are pure spirits: but in this
we shall be like unto angels, we shall be endowed with immortality,
and impassibility; and our joys, like those of the angels, shall be
wholly spiritual. (Jansen... [ Continue Reading ]
He is not the God of the dead. Jesus Christ here proves the
resurrection of the body by the immortality of the soul; because in
effect these two tenets are inseparable. The soul being immortal,
ought necessarily to be one day reunited to the body, to receive
therein the recompense or punishment whic... [ Continue Reading ]
_The Pharisees heard that he had silenced their adversaries, the
Sadducees, &c. Some of them, says St. Luke, (xx. 39.) applauded him,
saying, Master, thou hast said well. (Witham) --- The Pharisees
assembled themselves together, that they might confound him by their
numbers, whom they could not by t... [ Continue Reading ]
_On these two, &c. Whereby it is evident that all dependeth not upon
faith only, though faith be the first, but much more upon charity,
which is the love of God and of our neighbour, and which is the sum of
all the law and the prophets; because he that hath this double
charity, expressed here by the... [ Continue Reading ]
If David then call him Lord, how is he his son? It was allowed of a
certain truth, that the Messias was to be the son of David. Christ
shews them by David's own words, that he was the Lord as well as the
son of David: and this is what they could not answer to. (Witham) ---
Jesus Christ here inculcat... [ Continue Reading ]