Good Friday
For the First
Nocturn
The First Reading
(from the Gospel of St. John 19:1-16)
PILATE
therefore took Jesus, and scourged him. And the soldiers platted a crown of
thorns, and put it on his head, and they put on him a purple robe, and said,
Hail, King of the Jews! and they smote him with their hands. Pilate therefore
went forth again, and saith unto them, Behold, I bring him forth to you, that
ye may know that I find no fault in him. Then came Jesus forth, wearing the
crown of thorns, and the purple robe. And Pilate saith unto them, Behold the
man! When the chief priests therefore and officers saw him, they cried out,
saying, Crucify him, crucify him., Pilate saith unto them, Take ye him, and
crucify him: for I find no fault in him. The Jews answered him, We have a law,
and by our law he ought to die, because he made himself the Son of God. When
Pilate therefore heard that saying, he was the more afraid; and went again into
the judgment hall, and saith unto Jesus, Whence art thou? But Jesus gave him no
answer. Then saith Pilate unto him, Speakest thou not unto me? knowest thou not
that I have power to crucify thee, and have power to release thee? Jesus
answered, Thou couldest have no power at all against me, except it were given
thee from above: therefore he that delivered me unto thee hath the greater sin.
And from thenceforth Pilate sought to release him: but the Jews cried out,
saying, If thou let this man go, thou art not Cæsar's friend: whosoever maketh
himself a king, speaketh against Cæsar. When Pilate therefore heard that
saying, he brought Jesus forth, and sat down in the judgment seat in a place
that is called the Pavement, but in the Hebrew, Gabbatha. And it was the
preparation of the passover, and about the sixth hour: and he saith unto the
Jews, Behold your King! But they cried out, Away with him, away with him,
crucify him. Pilate saith unto them, Shall I crucify your King? The chief
priests answered, We have no king but Cæsar. Then delivered he him therefore
unto them to be crucified.
The Second Reading
(from St. Augustine’s Commentary on John 19:1-16)
1. On the Jews crying out
that they did not wish Jesus to be released unto them at the passover, but
Barabbas the robber; not the Saviour, but the murderer; not the Giver of life,
but the destroyer,-"then Pilate took Jesus and scourged Him." We must
believe that Pilate acted thus for no other reason than that the Jews, glutted
with the injuries done to Him, might consider themselves satisfied, and desist
from madly pursuing Him eve, unto death. With a similar intention was it that,
as governor, he also permitted his cohort to do what follows, or even perhaps
ordered them, although the evangelist is silent on the subject. For he tells us
what the soldiers did thereafter, but not that Pilate ordered it. "And the
soldiers," he says, "platted a crown of thorns, and put it on His
head, and they clothed Him with a purple robe. And they came to Him and said,
Hail, King of the Jews! And they smote Him with their hands." Thus were
fulfilled the very things which Christ had foretold of Himself; thus were the martyrs
moulded for the endurance of all that their persecutors should be pleased to
inflict; thus, by concealing for a time the terror of His power, He commended
to us the prior imitation of His patience; thus the kingdom which was not of
this world overcame that proud world, not by the ferocity of fighting, but by
the humility of suffering; and thus the grain of corn that was yet to be
multiplied was sown amid the horrors of shame, that it might come to fruition
amid the wonders of glory.
2. "Pilate went forth
again, and saith unto them, Behold, I bring him forth, that ye may know that I
find no fault in him. Then came Jesus forth, wearing the crown of thorns and
the purple robe. And he saith unto them, Behold the man!" Hence it is
apparent that these things were done by the soldiers not without Pilate's
knowledge, whether it was that he ordered them or only permitted them, namely,
for the reason we have stated above, that His enemies might all the more
willingly drink in the sight of such derisive treatment, and cease to thirst
further for His blood. Jesus goes forth to them wearing the crown of thorns and
the purple robe, not resplendent in kingly power, but laden with reproach; and
the words are addressed to them, Behold the man! If you hate your king, spare
him now when you see him sunk so low; he has been scourged, crowned with
thorns, clothed with the garments of derision, jeered at with the bitterest
insults, struck with the open hand; his ignominy is at the boiling point, let
your ill-will sink to zero. But there is no such cooling on the part of the
latter, but rather a further increase of heat and vehemence.
3. "When the chief
priests, therefore, and attendants saw Him, they cried out, saying, Crucify,
crucify him. Pilate saith unto them Take ye him and crucify him; for I find no
fault in him. The Jews answered him, We have a law, and by the law he ought to
die because he made himself the Son of God." Behold another and still
greater ground of hatred. The former, indeed, seemed but a small matter, as
that shown towards the usurpation, by an unlawful act of daring, of the royal
power; and yet of neither did Jesus falsely claim possession, but each of them
is truly His as both the only-begotten Son of God, and by Him appointed King
upon His holy hill of Zion; and both might He now have shown to be His, were it
not that in proportion to the greatness of His power, He preferred to manifest
the corresponding greatness of His patience.
4. "When Pilate,
therefore, heard that saying, he was the more afraid; and entered again into
the judgment hall, and saith unto Jesus, Whence art thou? But Jesus gave him no
answer." It is found, in comparing the narratives of all the evangelists,
that this silence on the part of our Lord Jesus Christ took place more than once,
both before the chief priests and before. Herod, to whom, as Luke intimates,
Pilate had sent Him for a hearing, and before Pilate himself; so that it was
not in vain that the prophecy regarding Him had preceded, "As the lamb
before its shearer was dumb, so He opened not His mouth," especially on
those occasions when He answered not His questioners. For although He
frequently replied to questions addressed to Him, yet because of those in
regard to which He declined making any reply, the metaphor of the lamb is
supplied, in order that in His silence He might be accounted not as guilty, but
innocent. When, therefore, He was passing through the process of judgment,
wherever He opened not His mouth it was in the character of a lamb that He did
so; that is, not as one with an evil conscience who was convicted of his sins,
but as one who in His meekness was sacrificed for the sins of others.
5. "Then saith Pilate
unto Him, Speakest thou not unto me knowest thou not that I have power to
crucify thee, and have power to release thee? Jesus answered: Thou wouldest
have no power against me, except it were given thee from above: therefore he
that delivered me unto thee hath the greater sin." Here, you see, He
replied; and yet wherever He replied not, it is not as one who is criminal or
cunning, but as a lamb; that is, in simplicity and innocence He opened not His
mouth. Accordingly, where He made no answer, He was silent as a sheep; where He
answered, He taught as the Shepherd. Let us therefore set ourselves to learn
what He said, what He taught also by the apostle, that "there is no power
but of God;" and that he is a greater sinner who maliciously delivereth up
to the power the innocent to be slain, than the power itself, if it slay him
through fear of another power that is greater still. Of such a sort, indeed,
was the power which God had given to Pilate, that he should also be under the
power of Caesar. Wherefore "thou wouldest have," He says, "no
power against me," that is, even the little measure thou really hast,
"except" this very measure, whatever its amount, "were given
thee from above." But knowing as I do its amount, for it is not so great
as to render thee altogether independent, "therefore he that delivered me
unto thee hath the greater sin." He, indeed, delivered me to thy power at
the bidding of envy, whilst thou art to exercise thy power upon me through the
impulse of fear. And yet not even through the impulse of fear ought one man to
slay another, especially the innocent; nevertheless to do so by an officious
zeal is a much greater evil than under the constraint of fear. And therefore
the truth-speaking Teacher saith not, "He that delivered me to thee,"
he only hath sin, as if the other had none; but He saith, "hath the
greater sin," letting him understand that he himself was not exempt from
blame. For that of the latter is not reduced to nothing because the other is
greater.
6. "Hence Pilate sought
to release Him." What is to be understood by the word here used,
"hence," as if he had not been seeking to do so before? Read what
precedes, and thou wilt find that he had already for some time been seeking to
release Jesus. By the original word, therefore, we are to understand, on this
account, that is, for this reason, that he might not contract sin by slaying an
innocent man who had been delivered into his hands, even though his sin would
be less than that of the Jews, who delivered Him to him to be put to death.
"From thence," therefore, that is, for this reason, that he might not
commit such a sin, "he sought" not now for the first time, but from
the beginning, "to release Him."
7. "But the Jews cried
out, saying, If thou let this man go, thou art not Caesar's friend: whosoever
maketh himself a king, speaketh against Caesar." They thought to inspire
Pilate with greater fear by terrifying him about Caesar, in order that he might
put Christ to death, than formerly when they said, "We have the law, and
by the law he ought to die, because he made himself the Son of God." It
was not their law, indeed, that impelled him through fear to the deed of
murder, but rather it was his fear of the Son of God that held him back from
the crime. But now he could not set Caesar, who was the author of his own
power, at nought, in the same way as the law of another nation.
8. As yet, however, the
evangelist proceeds to say: "But when Pilate heard these sayings, he
brought Jesus forth, and sat down before the tribunal, in a place that is
called the Pavement, but in the Hebrew, Gabbatha. And it was the preparation of
the passover, and about the sixth hour." The question, at what hour the
Lord was crucified, because of the testimony supplied by another evangelist,
who says, "And it was the third hour, and they crucified Him," we
shall consider as we can, if the Lord please, when we are come to the passage
itself where His crucifixion is recorded. When Pilate, therefore, had sat down
before the tribunal, "he saith unto the Jews, Behold your king! But they
cried out, Away with him, away with him, crucify him. Pilate said unto them,
Shall I crucify your king?" As yet he tries to overcome the terror with
which they had inspired him about Caesar, by seeking to break them from their
purpose on the ground of the ignominy it brought on themselves, with the words,
"Shall I crucify your king?" when he failed to soften them on the
ground of the ignominy done to Christ; but by and by he is overcome by
fear.
9. For "the chief
priests answered, We have no king but Caesar. Then delivered he Him therefore
unto them to be crucified." For he would have every appearance of acting
against Caesar if, on their declaration that they had no king but Caesar, he
were wishing to impose on them another king by releasing without punishment one
whom for these very attempts they had delivered unto him to be put to death.
"Therefore he delivered Him unto them to be crucified." But was it,
then, anything different that he had previously desired when he said,
"Take ye him, and crucify him;" or even earlier still, "Take ye
him, and judge him according to your law?" And why did they show so great
reluctance, when they said, "It is not lawful for us to put any man to
death," and were in every way urgent to have Him slain not by themselves,
but by the governor, and therefore refused to receive Him for the purpose of
putting Him to death, if now for the same purpose they actually do receive Him?
Or if such be not the case, why was it said, "Then delivered he Him
therefore unto them to be crucified?" Or is it of any importance? Plainly
it is. For it was not said, "Then delivered he Him therefore unto
them" that they might crucify Him, but "that He might be
crucified," that is, that He might be crucified by the judicial sentence
and power of the governor. But it is for this reason that the evangelist has
said that He was delivered to them, that he might show that they were
implicated in the crime from which they tried to hold themselves aloof; for
Pilate would have done no such thing, save to implement what he perceived to be
their fixed desire. The words, however, that follow, "And they took Jesus,
and led Him away," may now refer to the soldiers, the attendants of the
governor. For it is more clearly stated afterwards, "When the soldiers
therefore had crucified Him," although the evangelist properly does so
even when he attributes the whole to the Jews, for they it was that received
what they had with the utmost greediness demanded, and they it was that did all
that they compelled to be done. But the events that follow must be made the
subject of consideration in another discourse.
The Third Reading
(from Bishop Methodius Fragments on the Cross and Passion)
I.
METHODIUS, Bishop, to those
who say: What doth it profit us that the Son of God was crucified upon earth,
and made man? And wherefore did He endure to suffer in the manner of the
cross, and not by some other punishment? And what was the advantage of the cross?
Christ, the Son of God, by
the command of the Father, became conversant with the visible creature, in
order that, by overturning the dominion of the tyrants, the demons, that is, He
might deliver our souls from their dreadful bondage, by reason of which our
whole nature, intoxicated by the draughts of iniquity, had become full of
tumult and disorder, and could by no means return to the remembrance of good
and useful things. Wherefore, also, it was the more easily carried away to
idols, inasmuch as evil had overwhelmed it entirely, and had spread over all
generations, on account of the change which had come over our fleshy
tabernacles in consequence of disobedience; until Christ, the Lord, by the
flesh in which He lived and appeared, weakened the force of Pleasure's
onslaughts, by means of which the infernal powers that were in arms against us
reduced our minds to slavery, and freed mankind from all their evils. For with
this end the Lord Jesus both wore our flesh, and became man, and by the divine
dispensation was nailed to the cross; in order that by the flesh in which the
demons had proudly and falsely feigned themselves gods, having carried our
souls captive unto death by deceitful wiles, even by this they might be
overturned, and discovered to be no gods. For he prevented their arrogance from
raising itself higher, by becoming man; in order that by the body in which the
race possessed of reason had become estranged from the worship of the true God,
and had suffered injury, even by the same receiving into itself in an ineffable
manner the Word of Wisdom, the enemy might be discovered to be the destroyers
and not the benefactors of our souls. For it had not been wonderful if Christ,
by the terror of His divinity, and the greatness of His invincible power, had
reduced to weakness the adverse nature of the demons. But since this was to
cause them greater grief and torment, for they would have preferred to be
overcome by one stronger than themselves, therefore it was that by a man He
procured the safety of the rac; in order that men, after that very Life and
Truth had entered into them in bodily form, might be able to return to the form
and light of the Word, overcoming the power of the enticements of sin; and that
the demons, being conquered by one weaker than they, and thus brought into
contempt, might desist from their over-bold confidence, their hellish wrath
being repressed. It was for this mainly that the cross was brought in, being
erected as a trophy against iniquity, and a deterrent from it, that henceforth
man might be no longer subject to wrath, after that he had made up for the
defeat which, by his disobedience, be had received, and had lawfully conquered
the infernal powers, and by the gift of God had been set free from every debt.
Since, therefore, the first-born Word of God thus fortified the manhood in
which He tabernacled with the armour of righteousness, He overcame, as has been
said, the powers that enslaved us by the figure of the cross, and showed forth
man, who had been oppressed by corruption, as by a tyrant power, to be free,
with unfettered hands. For the cross, if you wish to define it, is the
confirmation of the victory, the way by which God to man descended, the trophy
against material spirits, the repulsion of death, the foundation of the ascent
to the true day; and the ladder for those who are hastening to enjoy the light
that is there, the engine by which those who are fitted for the edifice of the
Church are raised up from below, like a stone four square, to be compacted on
to the divine Word. Hence it is that our kings, perceiving that the figure of
the cross is used for the dissipating of every evil, have made vexillas, as
they are called in the Latin language. Hence the sea, yielding to this figure,
makes itself navigable to men. For every creature, so to speak, has, for the
sake of liberty, been marked with this sign; for the birds which fly aloft,
form the figure of the cross by the expansion of their wings; and man himself,
also, with his hands outstretched, represents the same. Hence when the Lord had
fashioned him in this form, in which He had from the beginning flamed him, He
joined on his body to the Deity, in order that it might be henceforth an
instrument consecrated to God, freed from all discord and want of harmony. For
man cannot, after that he has been formed for the worship of God, and hath
sung, as it were, the incorruptible song of truth, and by this hath been made
capable of holding the Deity, being fitted to the lyre of life as the chords
and strings, he cannot, I say, return to discord and corruption.
II.
Some think that God also,
whom they measure with the measure of their own feelings, judges the same thing
that wicked and foolish men judge to be subjects of praise and blame, and that
He uses the opinions of men as His rule and measure, not taking into account
the fact that, by reason of the ignorance that is in them, every creature falls
short of the beauty of God. For He draws all things to life by His Word, from
their universal substance and nature. For whether He would have good, He
Himself is the Very Good, and remains in Himself; or, whether the beautiful is
pleasing to Him, since He Himself is the Only Beautiful, He beholds Himself,
holding in no estimation the things which move the admiration of men. That,
verily, is to be accounted as in reality the most beautiful and praiseworthy,
which God Himself esteems to be beautiful, even though it be contemned and
despised by all else--not that which men fancy to be beautiful. Whence it is,
that although by this figure He hath willed to deliver the soul from corrupt
affections, to the signal putting to shame of the demons, we ought to receive
it, and not to speak evil of it, as being that which was given us to deliver
us, and set us free from the chains which for our disobedience we incurred. For
the Word suffered, being in the flesh affixed to the cross, that He might bring
man, who had been deceived by error, to His supreme and godlike majesty,
restoring him to that divine life from which he had become alienated. By this
figure, in truth, the passions are blunted; the passion of the passions having
taken place by the Passion, and the death of death by the death of Christ, He
not having been subdued by death, nor overcome by the pains of the Passion. For
neither did the Passion cast Him down from His equanimity, nor did death hurt
Him, but He was in the passible remaining impassible, and in the mortal
remaining immortal, comprehending all that the air, and this middle state, and
the heaven above contained, and attempering the mortal to the immortal
divinity. Deth was vanquished entirely; the flesh being crucified to draw forth
its immortality.
III.
For since this virtue was in
Him, now it is of the essence of power to be contracted in a small space, and
to be diminished, and again to be expanded in a large space, and to be
increased. But if it is possible for Him to be with the larger extended, and to
be made equal, and yet not with the smaller to be contracted and diminished,
then power is not in Him. For if you say that this is possible to power, and
that impossible, you deny it to be power; as being infirm and incapable with
regard to the things which it cannot do. Nor again, further, will it ever
contain any excellence of divinity with respect to those things which suffer
change. For both man and the other animals, with respect to those things which
they can effect, energise; but with respect to those things which they cannot
perform, are weak, and fade away. Wherefore for this cause the Son of God was
in the manhood enclosed, because this was not impossible to Him. For with power
He suffered, remaining impassible; and He died, bestowing the gift of
immortality upon mortals. Since the body, when struck or cut by a body, is just
so far struck or cut as the striker strikes it, or he that cuts it cut it. For
according to the rebound of the thing struck, the blow reflects upon the
striker, since it is necessary that the two must suffer equally, both the agent
and the sufferer. If, in truth, that which is cut, from its small size, does
not correspond to that which cuts it, it will not be able to cut it at all. For
if the subject body does not resist the blow of the sword, but rather yields to
it, the operation will be void of effect, even as one sees in the thin and subtle
bodies of fire and air; for in such cases the impetus of the more solid bodies
is relaxed, and remains without effect. But if fire, or air, or stone, or iron,
or anything which men use against themselves for the purposes of mutual
destruction--if it is not possible to pierce or divide these, because of the
subtle nature which they possess, why should not rather Wisdom remain
invulnerable ad impassible, in nothing injured by anything, even though it were
conjoined to the body which was pierced and transfixed with nails, inasmuch as
it is purer and more excellent than any other nature, if you except only that
of God who begat Him?
For the Second
Nocturn
The Fourth Reading
(from the Gospel of St. John 19:17-27)
And they took
Jesus, and led him away. And he bearing his cross went forth into a place
called the place of a skull, which is called in the Hebrew Golgotha: where they
crucified him, and two other with him, on either side one, and Jesus in the
midst. And Pilate wrote a title and put it on the cross. And the writing was,
JESUS OF NAZARETH THE KING OF THE JEWS. This title then read many of the Jews:
for the place where Jesus was crucified was nigh to the city; and it was
written in Hebrew, and Greek, and Latin. Then said the chief priests of the Jews
to Pilate, Write not, The King of the Jews; but that he said, I am King of the
Jews. Pilate answered, What I have written I have written. Then the soldiers,
when they had crucified Jesus, took his garments, and made four parts, to every
soldier a part; and also his coat: now the coat was without seam, woven from
the top throughout. They said therefore among themselves, Let us not rend it,
but cast lots for it, whose it shall be: that the scripture might be fulfilled,
which saith, They parted my raiment among them, and for my vesture they did
cast lots. These things therefore the soldiers did. Now there stood by the
cross of Jesus his mother, add his mother's sister, Mary the wife of Cleophas,
and Mary Magdalene. When Jesus therefore saw his mother, and the disciple
standing by, whom he loved, he saith unto his mother, Woman, behold thy son!
Then saith he to the disciple, Behold thy mother! And from that hour that
disciple took her unto his own home.
The Fifth Reading
(from Calvin’s Commentary on John 19:17-27)
17. He
went forth to a place. The circumstances which are here related contribute
greatly, not only to show the truth of the narrative, but likewise to build up
our faith. We must look for righteousness through the satisfaction made by
Christ. To prove that he is the sacrifice for our sins, he wished both to be
led out of the city, and to be hanged on a tree; for the custom was, in
compliance with the injunction of the Law, that the sacrifices, the blood of
which was shed for sin, were carried out of the camp, (Leviticus 6:30; 16:27;)
and the same Law declares that
he who hangeth on a tree is accursed, (Deuteronomy 21:23.) Both were fulfilled in Christ, that we might be fully convinced that atonement has been made for our sins by the sacrifice of his death; that he was made subject to the curse, in order that he might redeem us from the curse of the law, (Galatians 3:13;) that he was made sin, in order that we might be the righteousness of God in him, (2 Corinthians 5:21;) that he was led out of the city, in order that he might carry with him, and take away, our defilements which were laid on him, (Hebrews 12:12.) To the same purpose is the statement about the robbers, which immediately follows :—
he who hangeth on a tree is accursed, (Deuteronomy 21:23.) Both were fulfilled in Christ, that we might be fully convinced that atonement has been made for our sins by the sacrifice of his death; that he was made subject to the curse, in order that he might redeem us from the curse of the law, (Galatians 3:13;) that he was made sin, in order that we might be the righteousness of God in him, (2 Corinthians 5:21;) that he was led out of the city, in order that he might carry with him, and take away, our defilements which were laid on him, (Hebrews 12:12.) To the same purpose is the statement about the robbers, which immediately follows :—
18. And
two others with him, on either side one, and Jesus in the midst. As if the
severity of the punishment had not been sufficient of itself, he is hanged in
the midst between two robbers, as if he not only had deserved to be classed
with other robbers, but had been the most wicked and the most detestable of
them all. We ought always to remember, that the wicked executioners of Christ
did nothing but what had been determined by the hand and purpose of God; for
God did not surrender his Son to their lawless passions, but determined that,
according to his own will and good pleasure, he should be offered as a
sacrifice. And if there were the best reasons for the purpose of God in all
those things which he determined that his Son should suffer, we ought to consider,
on the one hand, the dreadful weight of his wrath against sin, and, on the
other hand, his infinite goodness towards us. In no other way could our guilt
be removed than by the Son of God becoming a curse for us. We see him driven
out into an accursed place, as if he had been polluted by a mass of all sorts
of crimes, that there he might appear to be accursed before God and men.
Assuredly we are prodigiously stupid, if we do not plainly see in this mirror
with what abhorrence God regards sin; and we are harder than stones, if we do
not tremble at such a judgment as this.
When,
on the other hand, God declares that our salvation was so dear to him, that he
did not spare his only-begotten Son, what abundant goodness and what
astonishing grace do we here behold! Whoever, then, takes a just view of the
causes of the death of Christ, together with the advantage which it yields to
us, will not, like the Greeks, regard the doctrlne of the cross as foolishness,
nor, like the Jews, will he regard it as an offense, (1 Corinthians 1:23,) but
rather as an invaluable token and pledge of the power, and wisdom, and
righteousness, and goodness of God.
When
John says, that the name of the place was Golgotha, he means that, in the
Chaldaic or Syriac language, it was called atlglg, (Gulgaltha.) The name is
derived from lglg, (Gilgel,) which signifies, to roll; because a skull is round
like a ball or globe
19. And
Pilate wrote also a title. The Evangelist relates a memorable action of
Pilate, after having pronounced the sentence. It is perhaps true that it was
customary to affix titles, when malefactors were executed, that the cause of
the punishment might be known to all, and might serve the purpose of an
example. But in Christ there is this extraordinary circumstance, that the title
which is affixed to him implies no disgrace; for Pilate’s intention was, to
avenge himself indirectly on the Jews, (who, by their obstinacy, had extorted
from him an unjust sentence of death on an innocent man,) and, in the person of
Christ, to throw blame on the whole nation. Thus he does not brand Christ with
the commission of any crime.
But
the providence of God, which guided the pen of Pilate, had a higher object in
view. It did not, indeed, occur to Pilate to celebrate Christ as the Author of
salvation, and the Nazarene of God, and the King of a chosen people; but God
dictated to him this commendation of the Gospel, though he knew not the meaning
of what he wrote. It. was the same secret guidance of the Spirit that caused
the title to be published in three languages; for it is not probable that this
was an ordinary practice, but the Lord showed, by this preparatory arrangement,
that the time was now at hand, when the name of his Son should be made known
throughout the whole earth.
21. The
chief priests of the Jews said therefore to Pilate. They feel that they are
sharply rebuked; and, therefore, they would wish that the title were changed,
so as not to involve the nation in disgrace, but to throw the whole blame on
Christ. But yet they do not conceal their deep hatred of the truth, since the
smallest spark of it is more than they are able to endure. Thus Satan always
prompts his servants to endeavor to extinguish, or, at least, to choke, by
their own darkness, the light of God, as soon as the feeblest ray of it
appears.
22. What
I have written I have written. Pilate’s firmness must be ascribed to the
providence of God; for there can be no doubt that they attempted, in various
ways, to change his resolution. Let us know, therefore, that he was held by a
Divine hand, so that he remained unmoved. Pilate did not yield to the prayers
of the priests, and did not allow himself to be corrupted by them; but God
testified, by his mouth, the firmness and stability of the kingdom of his Son.
And if, in the writing of Pilate, the kingdom of Christ was shown to be so firm
that it could not be shaken by all the attacks of its enemies, what value ought
we to attach to the testimonies of the Prophets, whose tongues and hands God
consecrated to his service?
The
example of Pilate reminds us, also, that it is our duty to remain steady in
defending the truth. A heathen refuses to retract what he has justly and
properly written concerning Christ, though he did not understand or consider
what he was doing. How great, then, will be our dishonor, if, terrified by
threatenigs or dangers, we withdraw from the profession of his doctrine, which
God hath sealed on our hearts by his Spirit! Besides, it ought to be observed
how detestable is the tyranny of the Papists, which prohibits the reading of
the Gospel, and of the whole of the Scripture, by the common people. Pilate,
though he was a reprobate man, and, in other respects, an instrument of Satan,
was nevertheless, by a secret guidance, appointed to be a herald of the Gospel,
that he might publish a short summary of it in three languages. What rank,
therefore, shall we assign to those who do all that they can to suppress the
knowledge of it, since they show that they are worse than Pilate?
23. Then
the soldiers. The other Evangelists also mention the parting of Christ’s
garments among the soldiers, (Matthew 27:35; Mark 15:24; Luke 23:34.) There
were four soldiers who parted among themselves all his garments, except the
coat, which, being without seam could not be divided, and therefore they cast
lots on it. To fix our minds on the contemplation of the purpose of God, the
Evangelists remind us that, in this occurrence also, there was a fulfillment of
Scripture. It may be thought, however, that the passage, which they quote from
Psalm 22:19, is inappropriately applied to the subject in hand; for, though
David complains in it that he was exposed as a prey to his enemies, he makes
use of the word garments to denote metaphorically all his property; as if he
had said, in a single word, that “he had been stripped naked and bare by wicked
men;” and, when the Evangelists disregard the figure, they depart from the
natural meaning of the passage. But we ought to remember, in the first place,
that the psalm ought not to be restricted to David, as is evident from many
parts of it, and especially from a clause in which it is written, I will
proclaim thy name among the Gentiles, (Psalm 22:22) which must be explained as
referring to Christ. We need not wonder, therefore, if that which was faintly
shadowed out in David is beheld in Christ with all that superior clearness
which the truth ought to have, as compared with the figurative representation
of it.
Let
us also learn that. Christ was stripped of his garments, that he might clothe
us with righteousness; that his naked body was exposed to the insults of men,
that we may appear in glory before the judgment-seat of God. As to the
allegorical meaning to which some men have tortured this passage, by making it
mean, that heretics tear Scripture in pieces, it is too far-fetched; though I
would not object to such a comparison as this, —that, as the garments of Christ
were once divided by ungodly soldiers, so, in the present day, there are
perverse men who, by foreign inventions, tear the whole of the Scripture, with
which Christ is clothed, in order that he may be manifested to us. But the
wickedness of the Papists, accompanied by shocking blasphemy against God, is
intolerable. They tell us, that Scripture is torn to pieces by heretics, but that
the coat — that is, the Church — remains entire; and thus they endeavor to
prove that, without paying any attention to the authority of Scripture, the
unity of faith consists in the mere title of the Church; as if the unity of the
Church were itself founded on any thing else than the authority of Scripture.
When, therefore, they separate faith from Scripture, so that it may continue to
be attached to the Church alone, by such a divorce they not only strip Christ
of his garments, but tear in pieces his body by shocking sacrilege. And though
we should admit what they maintain, that the coat without seam is a figure of
the Church, they will be very far from gaining their point: for it will still
remain to be proved, that the Church is placed under their authority, of which
they show no sign whatever.
25. Now
there stood by the cross of Jesus. The Evangelist here mentions
incidentally, that while Christ obeyed God the Father, he did not fail to
perform the duty which he owed, as a son, towards his mother. True, he forgot
himself, and he forgot every thing, so far as was necessary for the discharge
of obedience to his Father, but, after having performed that duty, he did not
neglect what he owed to his mother. Hence we learn in what manner we ought to
discharge our duty towards God and towards men. It often happens that, when God
calls us to the performance of any thing, our parents, or wife, or children,
draw us in a contrary direction, so that we cannot give equal satisfaction to
all. If we place men in the same rank with God, we judge amiss. We must,
therefore, give the preference to the command, the worship, and the service of
God; after which, as far as we are able, we must give to men what is their due.
And
yet the commands of the first and second table of the Law never jar with each
other, though at first sight they appear to do so; but we must begin with the
worship of God, and afterwards assign to men an inferior place. Such is the
import of the following statements:
He who loveth father or mother more than me, is not worthy of me, (Matthew 10:41;)
and, If any one hate not his father, and mother, and wife, and children, and brethren, and sisters, he cannot be my disciple, (Luke 14:26.)
He who loveth father or mother more than me, is not worthy of me, (Matthew 10:41;)
and, If any one hate not his father, and mother, and wife, and children, and brethren, and sisters, he cannot be my disciple, (Luke 14:26.)
We
ought, therefore, to devote ourselves to the interests of men, so as not in any
degree to interfere with the worship and obedience which we owe to God. When we
have obeyed God, it will then be the proper time to think about parents, and
wife, and children; as Christ attends to his mother, but it is after that he is
on the cross, to which he has been called by his Father’s decree.
Yet,
if we attend to the time and place when these things happened, Christ’s
affection for his mother was worthy of admiration. I say nothing about the
severe tortures of his body; I say nothing about the reproaches which he
suffered; but, though horrible blasphemies against God filled his mind with
inconceivable grief, and though he sustained a dreadful contest with eternal
death and with the devil, still, none of these things prevent him from being
anxious about his mother. We may also learn from this passage, what is the
honor which God, by the Law, commands us to render to parents, (Exodus 20:12.)
Christ appoints the disciple to be his substitute, and charges him to support
and take care of his mother; and hence it follows, that the honor which is due
to parents consists, not in cold ceremony, but in the discharge of all
necessary duties.
On
the other hand, we ought to consider the faith of those holy women It is true
that, in following Christ to the cross, they displayed more than ordinary
affection; but, if they had not been supported by faith they could never have
been present at this exhibition. As to John himself, we infer that, though his
faith was choked for a short time, it was not wholly extinguished. How shameful
will it be, if the dread of the cross deters us from following Christ, when the
glory of his resurrection is placed before our eyes, whereas the women beheld
in it nothing but disgrace and cursing!
Mary
of Cleophas, and Mary Magdalene. He
calls her either the wife or the daughter of Cleophas; but I prefer the latter
interpretation. He says, that she was the sister of the mother of Jesus, and,
in saying so, he adopts the phraseology of the Hebrew language, which includes cousins,
and other relatives, under the term brothers. We see that it was not in vain
that Mary Magdalene was delivered from seven devils, (Mark 16:9; Luke 8:2;)
since she showed hersclf, to the last, to be so faithful a disciple to Christ.
26. Woman,
behold thy son! As if he had said, “Henceforth I shall not be an inhabitant
of the earth, so as to have it in my power to discharge to thee the duties of a
son; and, therefore, I put this man in my room, that he may perform my office.”
The same thing is meant, when he says to John,
Behold
thy mother ! For by these words he
charges him to treat her as a mother, and to take as much care of her as if she
had been his own mother.
In
refraining from mentioning his mother’s name and in simply calling her Woman !
some think that he did so, in order not to pierce her heart with a deeper
wound. I do not object to this view; but there is another conjecture which is
equally probable, that Christ intended to show that, after having completed the
course of human life, he lays down the condition in which he had lived, and
enters into the heavenly kingdom, where he will exercise dominion over angels
and men; for we know that Christ was always accustomed to guard believers
against looking at the flesh, and it was especially necessary that this should
be done at his death.
27. The
disciple took her to his own home. It is a token of the reverence due by a
disciple to his master, that John so readily obeys the command of Christ. Hence
also it is evident, that the Apostles had their families; for John could not
have exercised hospitality towards the mother of Christ, or have taken her to
his own home, if he had not had a house and a regular way of living. Those men,
therefore, are fools, who think that the Apostles relinquished their property,
and came to Christ naked and empty; but they are worse than fools, who make
perfection to consist in beggary.
The Sixth Reading
(from St. Gregory Nazianzen’s Fourth Theological Oration)
V. Take, in the next place, the
subjection by which you subject the Son to the Father. What, you say, is He not
now subject, or must He, if He is God, be subject to God?20 You are fashioning
your argument as if it concerned some robber, or some hostile deity. But look
at it in this manner: that as for my sake He was called a curse,21 Who
destroyed my curse; and sin,22 who taketh away the sin of the world; and became
a new Adam23 to take the place of the old, just so He makes my disobedience His
own as Head of the whole body. As long then as I am disobedient and rebellious,
both by denial of God and by my passions, so long Christ also is called
disobedient on my account. But when all things shall be subdued unto Him on the
one hand by acknowledgment of Him, and on the other by a reformation, then He
Himself also will have fulfilled His submission, bringing me whom He has saved
to God. For this, according to my view, is the subjection of Christ; namely,
the fulfilling of the Father's Will. But as the Son subjects all to the Father,
so does the Father to the Son; the One by His Work, the Other by His good
pleasure, as we have already said. And thus He Who subjects presents to God
that which he has subjected, making our condition His own. Of the same kind, it
appears to me, is the expression, "My God, My God, why hast Thou forsaken
Me?"24 It was not He who was forsaken either by the Father, or by His own
Godhead, as some have thought, as if It were afraid of the Passion, and
therefore withdrew Itself from Him in His Sufferings (for who compelled Him
either to be born on earth at all, or to be lifted up on the Cross?) But as I
said, He was in His own Person representing us. For we were the forsaken and
despised before, but now by the Sufferings of Him Who could not suffer, we were
taken up and saved. Similarly, He makes His own our folly and our
transgressions; and says what follows in the Psalm, for it is very evident that
the Twenty-first25 Psalm refers to Christ.
VI. The same consideration applies
to another passage, "He learnt obedience by the things which He suffered,"26
and to His "strong crying and tears," and His "Entreaties,"
and His "being heard," and His" Reverence," all of which He
wonderfully wrought out, like a drama whose plot was devised on our behalf. For
in His character of the Word He was neither obedient nor disobedient. For such
expressions belong to servants, and inferiors, and the one applies to the
better sort of them, while the other belongs to those who deserve punishment.
But, in the character of the Form of a Servant, He condescends to His fellow
servants, nay, to His servants, and takes upon Him a strange form, bearing all
me and mine in Himself, that in Himself He may exhaust the bad, as fire does
wax, or as the sun does the mists of earth; and that I may partake of His
nature by the blending. Thus He honours obedience by His action, and proves it
experimentally by His Passion. For to possess the disposition is not enough,
just as it would not be enough for us, unless we also proved it by our acts;
for action is the proof of disposition.
And perhaps it would not be wrong to
assume this also, that by the art27 of His love for man He gauges our
obedience, and measures all by comparison with His own Sufferings, so that He
may know our condition by His own, and how much is demanded of us, and how much
we yield, taking into the account, along with our environment, our weakness
also. For if the Light shining through the veil28 upon the darkness, that is
upon this life, was persecuted by the other darkness (I mean, the Evil One and
the Tempter), how much more will the darkness be persecuted, as being weaker
than it? And what marvel is it, that though He entirely escaped, we have been,
at any rate in part, overtaken? For it is a more wonderful thing that He should
have been chased than that we should have been captured;-at least to the minds
of all who reason aright on the subject. I will add yet another passage to
those I have mentioned, because I think that it clearly tends to the same
sense. I mean "In that He hath suffered being tempted, He is able to
succour them that are tempted."29 But God will be all in all in the time
of restitution; not in the sense that the Father alone will Be; and the Son be
wholly resolved into Him, like a torch into a great pyre, from which it was
reft away for a little space, and then put back (for I would not have even the
Sabellians injured30 by such an expression); but the entire Godhead when we
shall be no longer divided (as we now are by movements and passions), and
containing nothing at all of God, or very little, but shall be entirely like.
For the Third
Nocturn
The Seventh Reading
(from the Gospel of St. John 19:28-37)
After this, Jesus
knowing that all things were now accomplished, that the scripture might be
fulfilled, saith, I thirst. Now there was set a vessel full of vinegar: and
they filled a spunge with vinegar, and put it upon hyssop, and put it to his
mouth. When Jesus therefore had received the vinegar, he said, It is finished:
and he bowed his head, and gave up the ghost. The Jews therefore, because it was
the preparation, that the bodies should not remain upon the cross on the
sabbath day, (for that sabbath day was an high day,) besought Pilate that their
legs might be broken, and that they might be taken away. Then came the
soldiers, and brake the legs of the first, and of the other which was crucified
with him. But when they came to Jesus, and saw that he was dead already, the
brake not his legs: but one of the soldiers with a spear pierced his side, and
forthwith came there out blood and water. And he that saw it bare record, and
his record is true: and he knoweth that he saith true, that ye might believe.
For these things were done, that the scripture should be fulfilled, A bone of
him shall not be broken. And again another scripture saith, They shall look on
him whom they pierced.
The Eighth Reading
(from Calvin’s Comentary on John 19:28-37)
28. Jesus, knowing that all
things were now accomplished. John purposely passes by many things which
are related by the other three Evangelists. He now describes the last act,
which was an event of the greatest importance.When John says that a vessel was
placed there, he speaks of it as a thing that was customary. There has been
much controversy on this subject; but I agree with those who think (and,
indeed, the custom is proved by histories) that it was a kind of beverage
usually administered for the purpose of accelerating the death of wretched
malefactors, when they had undergone sufficient torture Now, it ought to be
remarked, that Christ does not ask any thing to drink till all things have been
accomplished; and thus he testified his infinite love towards us, and the
inconceivable earnestness of his desire to promote our salvation. No words can
fully express the bitterness of the sorrows which he endured; and yet he does
not desire to be freed from them, till the justice of God has been satisfied,
and till he has made a perfect atonement
But how does he say, that all things
were accomplished, while the most important part still remained to be
performed, that is, his death? Besides, does not his resurrection contribute to
the accomplishment of our salvation? I answer, John includes those things which
were immediately to follow. Christ had not yet died: and had not yet risen
again; but he saw that nothing now remained to hinder him from going forward to
death and resurrection. In this manner he instructs us, by his own example, to
render perfect obedience, that we may not think it hard to live according to
his good pleasure, even though we must languish in the midst of the most
excruciating pains.
That the Scripture might be
fulfilled. From what is stated by the other
Evangelists, (Matthew 27:48; Mark 15:23, 36; Luke 23:36,) it may readily be
concluded that the passage referred to is Psalm 69:21,
They gave me gall for my food, and
in my thirst they gave me vinegar to drink.
It is, undoubtedly, a metaphorical
expression, and David means by it, not only that they refused to him the
assistance which he needed, but that they cruelly aggravated his distresses.
But there is no inconsistency in saying that what had been dimly shadowed out
in David was more clearly exhibited in Christ: for thus we are enabled more
fully to perceive the difference between truth and figures, when those things
which David suffered, only in a figurative manner, are distinctly and perfectly
manifested in Christ. To show that he was the person whom David represented,
Christ chose to drink vinegar; and he did so for the purpose of strengthening
our faith.
I thirst. Those who contrive a metaphorical meaning for the word
thirst, as if he meant that, instead of a pleasant and agreeable beverage, they
gave him bitterness, as if they intended to flay his throat,are more desirous
to be thought ingenious than to promote true edification; and, indeed, they are
expressly refuted by the Evangelist, who says that Christ asked for vinegar
when he was near death; from which it is evident that he did not desire any
luxuries,
29. And, having filled a sponge
with vinegar, they fixed it on hyssop. When he says that they fixed the
sponge on hyssop, the meaning is, that they fastened it to the end of a bunch
of hyssop, that it might be raised to Christ’s mouth; for, in that country,
hyssops grow as large as small shrubs,
30. It is finished. He
repeats the same word which he had lately employed, Now this word, which Christ
employs, well deserves our attention; for it shows that the whole
accomplishment of our salvation, and all the parts of it, are contained in his
death. We have already stated that his resurrection is not separated from his
death, but Christ only intends to keep our faith fixed on himself alone, and
not to allow it to turn aside in any direction whatever. The meaning,
therefore, is, that every thing which contributes to the salvation of men is to
be found in Christ, and ought not to be sought anywhere else; or — which
amounts to the same thing — that the perfection of salvation is contained in
him.
There is also an implied contrast;
for Christ contrasts his death with the ancient sacrifices and with all the
figures; as if he had said,” Of all that was practiced under the Law, there was
nothing that had any power in itself to make atonement for sins, to appease the
wrath of God, and to obtain justification; but now the true salvation is
exhibited and manifested to the world.” On this doctrine depends the abolition
of all the ceremonies of the Law; for it would be absurd to follow shadows,
since we have the body in Christ.
If we give our assent to this word
which Christ pronounced, we ought to be satisfied with his death alone for
salvation, and we are not at liberty to apply for assistance in any other
quarter; for he who was sent by the Heavenly Father to obtain for us a full
acquittal, and to accomplish our redemption, knew well what belonged to his
office, and did not fail in what he knew to be demanded of him. It was chiefly
for the purpose of giving peace and tranquillity to our consciences that he
pronounced this word, It is finished. Let us stop here, therefore, if we do not
choose to be deprived of the salvation which he has procured for us
But the whole religion of Popery
tends to lead men to contrive for themselves innumerable methods of seeking
salvation; and hence we infer, that it is full to overflowing with abominable
sacrileges. More especially, this word of Christ condemns the abomination of
the Mass. All the sacrifices of the Law must have ceased, for the salvation of
men has been completed by the one sacrifice of the death of Christ. What right,
then, have the Papists, or what plausible excuse can they assign for saying,
that they are authorised to prepare a new sacrifice, to reconcile God to men?
They reply that it is not a new sacrifice, but the very sacrifice which Christ
offered. But this is easily refuted; for, in the first place, they have no
command to offer it; and, secondly, Christ, having once accomplished, by a
single oblation, all that was necessary to be done, declares, from the cross,
that all is finished. They are worse than forgers, therefore, for they wickedly
corrupt and falsify the testament sealed by the precious blood of the Son of
God.
He yielded up his breath. All the Evangelists take great care to mention the death of
Christ, and most properly; for we obtain from it our confident hope of life,
and we likewise obtain from it a fearless triumph over death, because the Son
of God has endured it in our room, and, in his contest with it, has been
victorious. But we must attend to the phraseology which John employs, and which
teaches us, that all believers, who die with Christ, peacefully commit their
souls to the guardianship of God, who is faithful, and will not suffer to
perish what he hath undertaken to preserve. The children of God, as well as the
reprobate, die; but there is this difference between them, that the reprobate
give up the soul, without knowing where it goes, or what becomes of it; while
the children of God commit it, as a precious trust, to the protection of God,
who will faithfully guard it till the day of the resurrection. The word breath
is manifestly used here to denote the immortal soul.
31. For it was the preparation. This
narrative also tends to the edification of our faith; first, because it shows
that what had been foretold in the Scriptures is fulfilled in the person of
Christ; and, secondly, because it contains a mystery of no ordinary value. The
Evangelist says, that the Jews besought that the bodies might be taken down
from the crosses. This had undoubtedly been enjoined by the Law of God; but the
Jews, as is usually the case with hypocrites, direct their whole attention to
small matters, and yet pass by the greatest crimes without any hesitation; for,
in order to a strict observance of their Sabbath, they are careful to avoid
outward pollution; and yet they do not consider how shocking a crime it is to
take away the life of an innocent man. Thus we saw a little before, that
they did not enter into the governor’s hall, that they might not be defiled, (John 18:28,)
while the whole country was polluted by their wickedness. Yet, by their agency, the Lord carries into effect what was of the greatest importance for our salvation, that, by a wonderful arrangement, the body of Christ remains uninjured, and blood and water low out of his side.
they did not enter into the governor’s hall, that they might not be defiled, (John 18:28,)
while the whole country was polluted by their wickedness. Yet, by their agency, the Lord carries into effect what was of the greatest importance for our salvation, that, by a wonderful arrangement, the body of Christ remains uninjured, and blood and water low out of his side.
And it was the great day of that
Sabbath Another reading more generally approved is, and that Sabbath-day was
great; but the reading which I have adopted is supported by many manuscripts
that are ancient and of great authority. Let the reader choose for himself. If
we read ejkei>nou in the genitive case, (ejkei>nou tou~ sabba>tou of
that Sabbath) the word Sabbath must be understood to denote the week; as if the
Evangelist had said, that the festival of that week was very solemn, on account
of the Passover. Note, the Evangelist speaks of the following day, which began
at sunset. But, if we choose rather to read ejkei>nh, in the nominative
case, h+n galh hJ hJme>ra ejkei>nh tou~ sabba>tou, and That was the
great day of the Sabbath, the meaning will be nearly the same in substance;
only there would be this difference in the words, that the Passover, which was
to take place on the following day, would render that Sabbath more solemn.
33. But when they came to Jesus,
and saw that he was already dead. That they break the legs of the two
robbers, and after having done so, find that Christ is already dead, and
therefore do not touch his body, appears to be a very extraordinary work of the
providence of God. Ungodly men will, no doubt, say that it happens naturally
that one man dies sooner than another; but, if we examine carefully the whole
course of the narrative, we shall be constrained to ascribe it to the secret
purpose of God, that the death of Christ was brought on much more rapidly than
men could have at all expected, and that this prevented his legs from being
broken.
34. But one of the soldiers
pierced his side with a spear. When the soldier pierced Christ’s side with
his spear, he did so for the purpose of ascertaining if he was dead; but God
had a higher object in view, as we shall immediately see. It was a childish
contrivance of the Papists, when, out of the Greek word lo>gce, which means
a spear, they manufactured the proper name of a man, and called this soldier
Longinus, and, to give an air of plausibility to their story, foolishly alleged
that he had been formerly blind, and that, after having received his sight, he
was converted to the faith. Thus they have placed him in the catalogue of the
saints. Since their prayers, whenever they call on God, rest on such
intercessors, what, I ask, will they ever be able to obtain? But they who
despise Christ, and seek the intercessions of the dead, deserve that the devil
should drive them to ghosts and phantoms.
And immediately there came out blood
and water. Some men have deceived themselves by
imagining that this was a miracle; for it is natural that the blood, when it is
congealed, should lose its red color, and come to resemble water. It is well
known also that water is contained in the membrane which immediately adjoins
the intestines. What has led them astray is, that the Evangelist takes so much
pains to explain that blood flowed along with the water, as if he were relating
something unusual and contrary to the order of nature. But he had quite a
different intention; namely, to accommodate his narrative to the passages of
Scripture which he immediately subjoins, and more especially that believers
might infer from it what he states elsewhere, that Christ came with water and
blood, (1 John 5:6.) By these words he means that Christ brought the true
atonement and the true washing; for, on the one hand, forgiveness of sins and
justification, and, on the other hand, the sanctification of the soul, were
prefigured in the Law by those two symbols, sacrifices and washings. In
sacrifices, blood atoned for sins, and was the ransom for appeasing the wrath
of God. Washings were the tokens of true holiness, and the remedies for taking
away uncleanness and removing the pollutions of the flesh.
That faith may no longer rest on
these elements, John declares that the fulfillment of both of these graces is
in Christ; and here he presents to us a visible token of the same fact. The
sacraments which Christ has left to his Church have the same design; for the
purification and sanctification of the soul, which consists in newness of life,
(Romans 6:4,) is pointed out to us in Baptism, and the Lord’s Supper is the
pledge of a perfect atonement. But they differ widely from the ancient figures
of the Law; for they exhibit Christ as being present, whereas the figures of
the Law pointed out that he was still at a distance. For this reason I do not
object to what Augustine says, that our sacraments have flowed from Christ’s
side; for, when Baptism and the Lord’s Supper lead us to Christ’s side, that by
faith we may draw from it, as from a fbuntain, what they represent, then are we
truly washed from our pollutions, and renewed to a holy life, and then do we
truly live before God, redeemed from death, and delivered from condemnation.
36. A bone of him shall not be
broken. This citation is made from Exodus 12:46, and Numbers 9:12, where
Moses treats of the paschal lamb. Note, Moses takes for granted that that lamb
was a figure of the true and only sacrifice, by which the Church was to be
redeemed. Nor is this inconsistent with the fact, that it was sacrificed as the
memorial of a redemption which had been already made; for, while God intended
that it should celebrate the former favor, he also intended that it should
exhibit the spiritual deliverance of the Church, which was still future. On
that account Paul, without any hesitation, applies to Christ the rule which
Moses lays down about eating the lamb:
for even Christ, our Passover, is
sacred for us. Therefore let us keep the feast, not with old leaven, neither
with, the leaven of malice and wickedness, but with the unleavened bread of
sincerity and truth, (1 Corinthians 5:7, 8.)
From this analogy, or
resemblance,faith derives no ordinary advantage, for, in all the ceremonies of
the Law, it beholds the salvation which has been manifested in Christ. Such is
also the design of the Evangelist John, when he says that Christ was not only
the pledge of our redemption, but also the price of it, because in him we see
accomplished what was formerly exhibited to the ancient people under the figure
of the passover. Thus also the Jews are reminded that they ought to seek in
Christ the substance of all those things which the Law prefigured, but did not
actually accomplish.
37. They shall look on him whom
they pierced. This passage is violently tortured by those who endeavor to
explain it literally as referring to Christ. Nor is this the purpose for which
the;Evangelist quotes ib but rather to show that Christ is that God who
formerly complained, by Zechariah, that the Jews had pierced his heart,
(Zechariah 12:10) Now, God speaks there after the manner of men, declaring that
He is wounded by the sins of his people, and especially by their obstinate
contempt of his word, in the same manner as a mortal man receives a deadly
wound, when his heart is pierced; as he says, elsewhere, that his Spirit was
deeply grieved, Now, as Christ is God manifested in the flesh (1 Timothy 3:16,)
John says that in his visible flesh was plainly accomplished what his Divine
Majesty had endured from the Jews, so far as it was capable of enduring; not
that God can be at all affected by the outrages of men, or that the reproaches
which are cast at him from the earth ever reach him, but because by this mode
of expression he intended to declare with what enormous sacrilege the
wickedness of men is chargeable, when it rises in rebellion against heaven.
What was done by the hand of a Roman soldier the ]Evangelist John justly
imputes to the Jews; as they are elsewhere said to have crucified the Son of
God, (Acts 2:36,) though they did not lay a finger on his body.
A question now arises as to this
passage taken from the prophet, Does God promise to the Jews repentance to
salvation, or, does he threaten that he will come as an avenger? For my own
part, when I closely examine the passage, I think that it includes both;
namely, that out of a worthless and unprincipled nation God will gather a
remnant for salvation, and that, by his dreadful vengeance, he will show to
despisers who it is with whom they have to do; for we know that they were wont
to treat the prophets as insolently as if the prophets had told nothing but
fables, and had received no commission from God. God declares that they will
not pass unpunished, for he will at length maintain his cause.
The Ninth Reading
(from the Christian Year by the Blessed John Keble)
IS it not strange, the darkest hour That ever dawn’d on sinful earth
Should touch the heart with softer power
For comfort, than an angel’s mirth?
That to the Cross the mourner’s eye should turn
Sooner than where the stars of Christmas burn?
Sooner than where the Easter sun
Shines glorious on you open grave,
And to and fro the tidings run,
"Who died to heal, is ris’n to save."
Sooner than where upon the Saviour’s friends
The very Comforter in light and love descends.
Yet so it is: for duly there
The bitter herbs of earth are set,
Till temper’d by the Saviour’s prayer,
And with the Saviour’s life-blood wet,
They turn to sweetness, and drop holy balm,
Soft as imprison’d martyr’s deathbed calm.
All turn to sweet—but most of all
That bitterest to the lip of pride,
When hopes presumptuous fade and fall,
Or Friendship scorns us, duly tried,
Or Love, the flower that closes up for fear
When rude and selfish spirits breathe too near.
Then like a long-forgotten strain
Comes sweeping o’er the heart forlorn
What sunshine hours had taught in vain
Of JESUS suffering shame and scorn,
As in all lowly hearts he suffers still,
While we triumphant ride and have the world at will.
His pierced hands in vain would hide
His face from rude reproachful gaze,
His ears are open to abide
The wildest storm the tongue can raise,
He who with one rough word, some early day,
Their idol world and them shall sweep for aye away.
But we by Fancy may assuage
The festering sore by Fancy made,
Down in some lonely hermitage
Like wounded pilgrims safely laid.
Where gentlest breezes whisper souls distress’d,
That Love yet lives, and Patience shall find rest.
O shame beyond the bitterest thought
That evil spirit ever fram’d,
That sinners know what Jesus wrought,
Yet feel their haughty hearts untam’d—
That souls in refuge, holding by the Cross,
Should wince and fret at this world’s little loss.
Lord of my heart, by thy last cry,
Let not thy blood on earth be spent—
Lo, at thy feet I fainting lie,
Mine eyes upon thy wounds are bent,
Upon thy streaming wounds my weary eyes
Wait like the parched earth on April skies.
Wash me, and dry these bitter tears,
O let my heart no further roam,
‘Tis thine by vows, and hopes, and fears,
Long since—O call thy wanderer home;
To that dear home, safe in thy wounded side,
Where only broken hearts their sin and shame may hide.
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