Your justice; [1] in the common Greek copies, your alms, which seems
to be the sense in this place. (Witham) --- Hereby it is plain that
good works are justice, and that man doing them doth justice, and is
thereby just and justified, and not by faith only. All which justice
of a christian man, our S... [ Continue Reading ]
This must be understood figuratively, that we must avoid all
ostentation in the performance of our good works. Many respectable
authors are of opinion, that it was customary with the Pharisees and
other hypocrites, to assemble the poor they designed to relieve by
sound of trumpet. (Menochius) --- Le... [ Continue Reading ]
Be content to have God for witness to your good works, who alone has
power to reward you for them. They will be disclosed soon enough to
man, when at the day of general retribution the good and the evil will
be brought to light, and every one shall be rewarded according to his
works. (Haydock)... [ Continue Reading ]
This repaying or rewarding of good works, so often mentioned here by
Jesus Christ, clearly evinces that good works are meritorious, and
that we may do them with a view to a reward, as David did, propter
retributionem. (Haydock)... [ Continue Reading ]
Hypocrisy is forbidden in all these three good works of justice, but
not the doing of them openly for the glory of God, the edification of
our neighbour, and our own salvation. Let your light so shine before
men, i.e. let your work be so done in public, that the intention
remain in secret. (St. Greg... [ Continue Reading ]
Because he who should pray in his chamber, and at the same time desire
it to be known by men, that he might thence receive vain glory, might
truly be said to pray in the street, and sound a trumpet before him:
whilst he, who though he pray in public, seeks not thence any vain
glory, acts the same as... [ Continue Reading ]
Long prayer is not here forbidden; for Christ himself spent whole
nights in prayer: and he sayeth, we must pray always; and the apostle,
that we must pray without intermission, 1 Thessalonians v.; and the
holy Church hath had from the beginning her canonical hours for
prayer, but rhetorical and elab... [ Continue Reading ]
As God is the common Father of all, we pray for all. Let none fear on
account of their lowly station here, for all are comprised in the same
heavenly nobility.... By saying, "who art in heaven," he does not mean
to insinuate that he is _there only, but he wishes to withdraw the
humble petitioner fro... [ Continue Reading ]
Those who desire to arrive at the kingdom of heaven, must endeavour so
to order their life and conversation, as if they were already
conversing in heaven. This petition is also to be understood for the
accomplishment of the divine will in every part of the world, for the
extirpation of error, and ex... [ Continue Reading ]
Our supersubstantial bread. [2] So it is at present in the Latin text:
yet the same Greek word in St. Luke, is translated daily bread, as we
say it in our Lord's prayer, and as it was used to be said in the
second or third age, as we find by Tertullian and St. Cyprian. Perhaps
the Latin word, supers... [ Continue Reading ]
Of all the petitions this alone is repeated twice. God puts our
judgment in our own hands, that none might complain, being the author
of his own sentence. He could have forgiven us our sins without this
condition, but he consulted our good, in affording us opportunities of
practising daily the virtu... [ Continue Reading ]
God is not the tempter of evil, or author of sin. (James i. 13.) He
tempteth no man: we pray that he would not suffer the devil to tempt
us above our strength: that he would remove the temptations, or enable
us to overcome them, and deliver us from evil, particularly the evil
of sin, which is the fi... [ Continue Reading ]
Here he again recommendeth the forgiving of others, as the means of
obtaining forgiveness. (Haydock)... [ Continue Reading ]
He condemns not public fasts as prescribed to the people of God,
(Judges xx. 26. 2 Esdras ix. Joel ii. 15. John iii.) but fasting
through vain glory, and for the esteem of men. (Bristow)... [ Continue Reading ]
The forty days' fast, my dear brethren, is not an observance peculiar
to ourselves; it is kept by all who unite with us in the profession of
the same faith. Nor is it without reason that the fast of Christ
should be an observance common to all Christians. What is more
reasonable, than that the diffe... [ Continue Reading ]
By doing good works, distributing your superfluities to the indigent.
(Haydock)... [ Continue Reading ]
Every action is lighted or directed by the intention. If the intention
be upright, the whole body of the action is good, provided it proceed
not from a false conscience. If the intention be bad, how bad must be
the action! Christ does not here speak of an exterior, but an interior
eye. He, therefore... [ Continue Reading ]
Behold here a fresh motive to detach you from the love of riches, or
mammon. We cannot both serve God and the world, the flesh and the
spirit, justice and sin. The ultimate end of action must be one,
either for this or for the next life. (Haydock_)_... [ Continue Reading ]
A prudent provision is not prohibited, but that over-solicitude which
draws the soul, the heart, and its affections from God, and his sweet
all-ruling providence, to sink and degrade them in empty pursuits,
which can never fill the soul. (Haydock) --- _Be not solicitous; [4]
i.e. too solicitous with... [ Continue Reading ]
Why should the children of God fear want, when we behold the very
birds of the air do not go unprovided? Moreover, what possible good
can this anxiety, this diffidence procure them? Almighty God gives
life and growth, which you cannot do with all your solicitude, however
intensely you think. Apollo... [ Continue Reading ]
It is not without reason that men are in such great fear and distress,
when they are so blind as to imagine that their happiness in this life
is ruled by fate. But such as know that they are entirely governed by
the will of God, know also that a store is laid up for them in his
hands. (St. John Chry... [ Continue Reading ]
[5] Your Father knoweth; he does not say God knoweth, but your Father,
to teach us to apply to him with greater confidence. (St. John
Chrysostom) --- He that delivers himself entirely into the hands of
God, may rest secure both in prosperity and adversity, knowing that he
is governed by a tender Fat... [ Continue Reading ]
The morrow will bring with it cares enough, to occupy you in providing
what will then be necessary for you. Christ does not prohibit all care
about temporal concerns, but only what hinders us from seeking the
kingdom of heaven in the first instance; or what makes us esteem more
the things of this wo... [ Continue Reading ]