_Then Jesus, &c. Jesus thus spoke to the multitude a few days previous
to his passion. It is here observable that our Saviour, after he had
tried all possible remedies, after he had taught and confirmed his
doctrines by innumerable miracles, after he had secretly by his
parables reprehended them for... [ Continue Reading ]
The Scribes. They, who professed the greatest zeal for the law of
Moses, and gloried in being the interpreters of it, sat upon the chair
of Moses, succeeded to his authority of governing the people of God,
of instructing them in his law, and of disclosing to them his will.
Such, therefore, as did no... [ Continue Reading ]
All therefore whatsoever they shall say. St. Augustine, in his defence
of the Apostolic See, thus argues, contra lit. Petil. "Why dost thou
call the apostolic chair the chair of pestilence? If, for the men that
sit therein, I ask: did our Lord Jesus Christ, on account of the
Pharisees, reflect upon... [ Continue Reading ]
_Heavy and insupportable burdens. Some understand in general the
ceremonies of the law of Moses; but Christ seems rather here to mean
the vain customs, tradition, and additions, introduced by the Jewish
doctors, and by their Scribes and Pharisees. (Witham) --- They thus
greatly increase the burden o... [ Continue Reading ]
Phylacteries. [1] These were pieces or scrolls of parchment, on which
were written the ten commandments, or some sentences of the law, which
the Jews were accustomed to fasten to their foreheads, or their arms,
to put them in mind of their duty. Thus they interpreted those words.
(Deuteronomy vi. 8.... [ Continue Reading ]
_Rabbi. A title like that of master or doctor. Judas gave it to our
Saviour. (Matthew xxvi. 49.) And the disciples of St. John the Baptist
call him so. (John iii. 26.) --- Christ blames their pride, and vanity
in affecting such titles, rather than the titles themselves. (Witham)
--- Greek: Didaskalo... [ Continue Reading ]
_One is your master, or teacher, who is the Christ, and under him one
vicar, the successor of St. Peter, with whom all Catholic teachers are
one, because they all teach one and the same doctrine in every part of
the Christian world; whereas in the multiplicity of modern sects,
which are every day di... [ Continue Reading ]
Call none your father... Neither be ye called masters, &c. The meaning
is, that our Father in heaven is incomparably more to be regarded,
than any father upon earth: and no master is to be followed, who would
lead us away from Christ. But this does not hinder but that we are by
the law of God to hav... [ Continue Reading ]
_You shut the kingdom of heaven. This is here taken for eternal
happiness, which can be obtained only by faith in Christ, since he
calls himself the gate. (St. John chap. x) --- Now the Pharisees, by
refusing to believe in him, and conspiring against him, deterred
those, who would otherwise have bel... [ Continue Reading ]
_You devour the houses of widows. Here our blessed Saviour severely
reprehends the hypocrisy and other vices of the Scribes and Pharisees,
a little before his death, to make them enter into themselves, and to
hinder them from seducing others. (Witham) ---The Pharisees, by every
means in their power,... [ Continue Reading ]
Because whilst a Gentile he sinned without a perfect knowledge of the
evil, and was not then a two-fold child of hell; but after his
conversion, seeing the vices of his masters, and perceiving that they
acted in direct opposition to the doctrines they taught, he returns to
the vomit, and renders him... [ Continue Reading ]
Wo to you blind guides. Avarice seems to have been the chief motive of
the Pharisees in teaching this doctrine, since they taught that those
who swore by the temple were guilty of no sin, nor under any
obligation at all; whereas they who swore by the gold of the temple,
were bound to pay a certain s... [ Continue Reading ]
_Sanctifieth. The altar is sanctified by our Lord's body thereon.
Theophylactus, the close follower of St. John Chrysostom, writeth thus
upon this text: "In the old law, Christ will not allow the gift to be
greater than the altar; but with us the altar is sanctified by the
gift: for the bread, by th... [ Continue Reading ]
_By him that dwelleth in it. Here we see that swearing by creatures,
as by the gospel and by the saints, is all referred to the honour of
God, whose gospel it is, whose saints they are. (Bristow)_... [ Continue Reading ]
_You... who pay tithe, &c. The tithes of these small things are not
found in the law. Nor yet doth Christ blame them so much for this, as
for neglecting more weighty matters; and tells them by a proverb, that
they strain out a gnat, and swallow a camel. (Witham) --- The
Pharisees pretended the great... [ Continue Reading ]
Woe to you. Jesus Christ here condemns, in forcible language, the
principal vices of the Pharisees, viz. their hypocrisy, false
devotion, boundless ambition, insatiable avarice, false zeal, and
ignorance in deciding upon cases of conscience. St. Luke represents
our Saviour as saying this to the Phar... [ Continue Reading ]
_Thou blind Pharisee. The vices of the Scribes and Pharisees are not
frequently to be found in Christians. The genuine characters of the
pharisaical and hypocritical spirit, are: 1. to be punctiliously exact
in trifles; 2. to be fond of distinction and esteem; 3. to be content
with external piety; 4... [ Continue Reading ]
_Whitened sepulchres. The Jews, lest they should be defiled with
touching the sepuchres, whitened them on the outside, in order to
distinguish them. But this exterior whiteness, covering interior
corruption, was a genuine picture of the pharisaical character. But
these men, says St. Gregory, can hav... [ Continue Reading ]
Jesus Christ so often and so boldly condemns the Pharisees, because he
reads their hearts and intentions; but we, who can only judge of overt
actions, who cannot dive into the secrets of the heart, must never
presume to call men's exterior good actions hypocrisy; but judge of
men according as we see... [ Continue Reading ]
_Build the sepulchres, &c. This is not blamed, as if it were in itself
evil to build or adorn the monuments of the prophets; but the
hypocrisy of the Pharisees is here taxed; who, whilst they pretended
to honour the memory of the prophets, were persecuting even unto death
the Lord of the prophets. ... [ Continue Reading ]
Jesus Christ does not here persuade the Jews to continue on in their
wicked ways, as if praising and sanctioning their conduct; but only
predicts his own death, which they were about to compass, and which
crime would greatly exceed that of their fathers: as he was the
greatest, and even the Lord of... [ Continue Reading ]
From the blood of Abel, &c. Not that the Jews, to whom Christ spoke,
should be punished for crimes which they themselves did not commit nor
be more severely punished than they themselves deserved; but he speaks
of the Jewish people which, by putting to death their Messias, should
shortly fill up the... [ Continue Reading ]
_Amen, I say to you. More severe punishments were inflicted on these
Jews, on account of their more grievous and heinous transgressions;
for nothing had been able to recall them from their wickedness. They
had the example of their ancestors before their eyes, continually
irritating the wrath of God;... [ Continue Reading ]
_And thou wouldst not. Three truths may be gathered from these words
of our Saviour: 1. They, who perish, perish by their own fault,
because they refuse to listen to the voice of God calling them to
salvation; 2. that man's will is free, and that it is an error in man
to lay all his wickedness to th... [ Continue Reading ]
_Behold, your house. Their house shall be deprived of the protection
of the God of heaven. He it was that had hitherto preserved them, and
he also would inflict upon them those very severe judgments they so
much dreaded. (St. John Chrysostom, hom. lxxv.)_... [ Continue Reading ]
_Till you say, blessed is he that cometh. Hereafter you shall own me
for your Messias, and the world's Redeemer, at least at the day of
judgment. (Witham) --- The time here foretold, when they should say:
Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord, is the day of
general judgment. When our Sav... [ Continue Reading ]