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| The Success of the Apostles, and Their Sufferings in the Cause of the Gospel, Foretold. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XXII.—The Success of the Apostles, and Their Sufferings in the
Cause of the Gospel, Foretold.
You have the work of the apostles also predicted:
“How beautiful are the feet of them which preach the gospel of
peace, which bring good tidings of good,”3400
3400 Isa.
lii. 7 and Rom. x. 15. |
not of war nor evil tidings. In response to which is the psalm,
“Their sound is gone through all the earth, and their words to
the ends of the world;”3401 that is, the words
of them who carry round about the law that proceeded from Sion and the
Lord’s word from Jerusalem, in order that that might come to pass
which was written: “They who were far from my righteousness, have
come near to my righteousness and truth.”3402
3402 Pamelius regards this
as a quotation from Isa. xlvi.
12, 13, only put
narratively, in order to indicate briefly its
realization. |
When the apostles girded their loins for this business, they renounced
the elders and rulers and priests of the Jews. Well, says he, but was
it not above all things that they might preach the other god?
Rather3403 (that they might
preach) that very self-same God, whose scripture they were with all
their might fulfilling! “Depart ye, depart ye,” exclaims
Isaiah; “go ye out from thence, and touch not the unclean
thing,” that is blasphemy against Christ; “Go ye out of the
midst of her,” even of the synagogue. “Be ye separate who
bear the vessels of the Lord.”3404 For already
had the Lord, according to the preceding words (of the prophet),
revealed His Holy One with His arm, that is to say, Christ by His
mighty power, in the eyes of the nations, so that all the3405 nations and the utmost parts of the earth
have seen the salvation, which was from God. By thus departing from
Judaism itself, when they exchanged the obligations and burdens of the
law for the liberty of the gospel, they were fulfilling the psalm,
“Let us burst their bonds asunder, and cast away their yoke from
us;” and this indeed (they did) after that “the heathen
raged, and the people imagined vain devices;” after that
“the kings of the earth set themselves, and the rulers took their
counsel together against the Lord, and against His
Christ.”3406
3406 Comp. Ps. ii. 2, 3, with Acts iv.
25–30. | What did the
apostles thereupon suffer? You answer: Every sort of iniquitous
persecutions, from men that belonged indeed to that Creator who was the
adversary of Him whom they were preaching. Then why does the Creator,
if an adversary of Christ, not only predict that the apostles should
incur this suffering, but even express His displeasure3407 thereat? For He ought neither to predict the
course of the other god, whom, as you contend, He knew not, nor to have
expressed displeasure at that which He had taken care to bring about.
“See how the righteous perisheth, and no man layeth it to heart;
and how merciful men are taken away, and no man considereth. For the
righteous man has been removed from the evil person.”3408 Who is this but Christ? “Come, say
they, let us take away the righteous, because He is not for our turn,
(and He is clean contrary to our doings).”3409 Premising, therefore, and likewise
subjoining the fact that Christ suffered, He foretold that His just
ones should suffer equally with Him—both the apostles and all the
faithful in succession; and He signed them with that very seal of which
Ezekiel spake: “The Lord said unto me, Go through the gate,
through the midst of Jerusalem, and set the mark
Tau upon the foreheads of the
men.”3410
3410 Ezek. ix. 4. The ms.
which T. used seems to have agreed with the versions of Theodotion and
Aquila mentioned thus by Origen (Selecta in Ezek.):
ὁ δὲ ᾽Ακύλας
καὶ
Θεοδοτίων
φασι.
Σημείωσις
τοῦ Θαῦ ἐπὶ
τὰ μέτωπα,
κ.τ.λ.
Origen, in his own remarks, refers to the sign of the
cross, as indicated by this letter. Ed. Bened. (by Migne),
iii. 802. | Now the Greek
letter Tau and our own letter T is the very form of the
cross, which He predicted would be the sign on our foreheads in the true Catholic
Jerusalem,3411
3411 [Ambiguous, according
to Kaye, p. 304, may mean a transition from Paganism to true
Christianity.] | in which, according
to the twenty-first Psalm, the brethren of Christ or children of God
would ascribe glory to God the Father, in the person of Christ Himself
addressing His Father; “I will declare Thy name unto my brethren;
in the midst of the congregation will I sing praise unto Thee.”
For that which had to come to pass in our day in His name, and by His
Spirit, He rightly foretold would be of Him. And a little afterwards He
says: “My praise shall be of Thee in the great
congregation.”3412 In the
sixty-seventh Psalm He says again: “In the congregations bless ye
the Lord God.”3413 So that with this
agrees also the prophecy of Malachi: “I have no pleasure in you,
saith the Lord; neither will I accept your offerings: for from the
rising of the sun, even unto the going down of the same, my name shall
be great among the Gentiles; and in every place sacrifice shall be
offered unto my name, and a pure offering”3414 —such as the ascription of glory, and
blessing, and praise, and hymns. Now, inasmuch as all these things are
also found amongst you, and the sign upon the forehead,3415 and the sacraments of the church, and the
offerings of the pure sacrifice, you ought now to burst forth, and
declare that the Spirit of the Creator prophesied of your
Christ.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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