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| Isaiah's Prophecies Considered. The Virginity of Christ's Mother a Sign. Other Prophecies Also Signs. Metaphorical Sense of Proper Names in Sundry Passages of the Prophets. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XIII.—Isaiah’s Prophecies Considered. The Virginity of
Christ’s Mother a Sign. Other Prophecies Also Signs. Metaphorical
Sense of Proper Names in Sundry Passages of the Prophets.
You are equally led away by the sound of
names,3256
3256 Compare with this
chapter, T.’s adv. Judæos, 9. | when you so
understand the riches of Damascus, and the spoils of Samaria, and the
king of Assyria, as if they portended that the Creator’s Christ
was a warrior, not attending to the promise contained in the passage,
“For before the Child shall have knowledge to cry, My father and
My mother, He shall take away the riches of Damascus and the spoil of
Samaria before the king of Assyria.”3257
You should first examine the point of age, whether it can be taken to
represent Christ as even yet a man,3258
3258 Jam hominem, jam virum
in Adv. Judæos, “at man’s
estate.” | much less a
warrior. Although, to be sure, He might be about to call to arms by His
cry as an infant; might be about to sound the alarm of war not with a
trumpet, but with a little rattle; might be about to seek His foe, not
on horseback, or in chariot, or from parapet, but from nurse’s
neck or nursemaid’s back, and so be destined to subjugate
Damascus and Samaria from His mother’s breasts! It is a
different matter, of course, when the babes of your barbarian Pontus
spring forth to the fight. They are, I ween, taught to lance before
they lacerate;3259
3259 Lanceare ante quam
lancinare. This play on words points to the very early training of the
barbarian boys to war. Lancinare perhaps means, “to nibble
the nipple with the gum.” | swathed at first in
sunshine and ointment,3260
3260 He alludes to the
suppling of their young joints with oil, and then drying them in the
sun. | afterwards armed
with the satchel,3261 and rationed on
bread and butter!3262 Now, since nature,
certainly, nowhere grants to man to learn warfare before life, to
pillage the wealth of a Damascus before he knows his father and
mother’s name, it follows that the passage in question must be
deemed to be a figurative one. Well, but nature, says he, does not
permit “a virgin to conceive,” and still the prophet is
believed. And indeed very properly; for he has paved the way for the
incredible thing being believed, by giving a reason for its occurrence,
in that it was to be for a sign. “Therefore,” says he,
“the Lord himself shall give you a sign; behold, a virgin
shall conceive, and bear a son.”3263
Now a sign from God would not have been a sign,3264
3264 The tam dignum
of this place is “jam signum” in adv.
Judæos. |
unless it had been some novel and prodigious thing. Then, again, Jewish
cavillers, in order to disconcert us, boldly pretend that Scripture
does not hold3265 that a virgin, but
only a young woman,3266
3266 This opinion of Jews
and Judaizing heretics is mentioned by Irenæus, Adv.
Hæret. iii. 21 (Stieren’s ed. i. 532); Eusebius,
Hist. Eccles. v. 8; Jerome, Adv. Helvid. (ed. Benedict),
p. 132. Nor has the cavil ceased to be held, as is well known, to the
present day. The המָלְעַהָ
of Isa. vii. 4 is supposed by the Jewish Fuerst
to be Isaiah’s wife, and he quotes Kimchi’s
authority; while the neologian Gesenius interprets the word, a
bride, and rejects the Catholic notion of an unspotted virgin. To
make way, however, for their view, both Fuerst and Gesenius have to
reject the LXX. rendering, παρθένος. | is to conceive and
bring forth.
They are, however, refuted by this consideration, that nothing of the
nature of a sign can possibly come out of what is a daily
occurrence, the pregnancy and child-bearing of a young woman. A virgin
mother is justly deemed to be proposed3267 by
God as a sign, but a warlike infant has no like claim to the
distinction; for even in such a case3268 there does not
occur the character of a sign. But after the sign of the strange
and novel birth has been asserted, there is immediately afterwards
declared as a sign the subsequent course of the Infant,3269
3269 Alius ordo jam
infantis. | who was to eat butter and honey. Not that
this indeed is of the nature of a sign, nor is His “refusing the
evil;” for this, too, is only a characteristic of
infancy.3270
3270 Infantia est. Better
in adv. Judæos, “est infantiæ.” | But His destined
capture of the riches of Damascus and the spoil of Samaria before the
king of Assyria is no doubt a wonderful sign.3271
3271 The italicised words
we have added from adv. Judæos, “hoc est mirabile
signum.” | Keep to the measure of His age, and seek the
purport of the prophecy, and give back also to the truth of the gospel
what you have taken away from it in the lateness of your
heresy,3272
3272 Posterior.
Posteritas is an attribute of heresy in T.’s
view. | and the prophecy at
once becomes intelligible and declares its own accomplishment. Let
those eastern magi wait on the new-born Christ, presenting to Him,
(although) in His infancy, their gifts of gold and frankincense; and
surely an Infant will have received the riches of Damascus without a
battle, and unarmed.
For besides the generally known fact, that the
riches of the East, that is to say, its strength and resources, usually
consist of gold and spices, it is certainly true of the Creator, that
He makes gold the riches of the other3273
3273 Ceterarum, other than
the Jews, i.e., Gentiles. |
nations also. Thus He says by Zechariah: “And Judah shall also
fight at Jerusalem and shall gather together all the wealth of the
nations round about, gold and silver.”3274
Moreover, respecting that gift of gold, David also says: “And
there shall be given to Him of the gold of Arabia;”3275 and again: “The kings of Arabia and
Saba shall offer to Him gifts.”3276
For the East generally regarded the magi as kings; and Damascus was
anciently deemed to belong to Arabia, before it was transferred to
Syrophœnicia on the division of the Syrias (by Rome).3277
3277 See Otto’s
Justin Martyr, ii. 273, n. 23. [See Vol. I. p. 238,
supra.] | Its riches Christ then received, when He
received the tokens thereof in the gold and spices; while the spoils of
Samaria were the magi themselves. These having discovered Him and
honoured Him with their gifts, and on bended knee adored Him as their
God and King, through the witness of the star which led their way and
guided them, became the spoils of Samaria, that is to say, of idolatry,
because, as it is easy enough to see,3278
they believed in Christ. He designated idolatry under the name of
Samaria, as that city was shameful for its idolatry, through which it
had then revolted from God from the days of king Jeroboam. Nor is this
an unusual manner for the Creator, (in His Scriptures3279
3279 The
Creatori here answers to the Scripturis divinis of
the parallel passage in adv. Judæos. Of course there
is a special force in this use of the Creator’s name here
against Marcion. | ) figuratively to employ names of places as a
metaphor derived from the analogy of their sins. Thus He calls the
chief men of the Jews “rulers of Sodom,” and the nation
itself “people of Gomorrah.”3280
And in another passage He also says: “Thy father was an Amorite,
and thy mother an Hittite,”3281 by reason of
their kindred iniquity;3282 although He had
actually called them His sons: “I have nourished and
brought up children.”3283 So likewise by
Egypt is sometimes understood, in His sense,3284
3284 Apud illum, i.e.,
Creatorem. |
the whole world as being marked out by superstition and a
curse.3285 By a similar usage
Babylon also in our (St.) John is a figure of the city of Rome, as
being like (Babylon) great and proud in royal power, and warring down
the saints of God. Now it was in accordance with this style that He
called the magi by the name of Samaritans, because (as we have said)
they had practised idolatry as did the Samaritans. Moreover, by
the phrase “before or against the king of Assyria,”
understand “against Herod;” against whom the magi then
opposed themselves, when they refrained from carrying him back word
concerning Christ, whom he was seeking to destroy.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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