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| Christ and Zacchæus. The Salvation of the Body as Denied by Marcion. The Parable of the Ten Servants Entrusted with Ten Pounds. Christ a Judge, Who is to Administer the Will of the Austere Man, I.e. The Creator. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XXXVII.—Christ and Zacchæus. The Salvation of the Body as
Denied by Marcion. The Parable of the Ten Servants Entrusted with Ten
Pounds. Christ a Judge, Who is to Administer the Will of the
Austere Man, I.e. The Creator.
“Salvation comes to the house” of
Zacchæus even.4962 For what reason? Was it because he also
believed that Christ came by Marcion? But the blind man’s cry was
still sounding in the ears of all: “Jesus, Thou Son of
David, have mercy on me.” And “all the people gave praise
unto God”—not Marcion’s, but David’s. Now,
although Zacchæus was probably a Gentile,4963
4963 The older reading,
which we here follow, is: “Enimvero Zacchæus etsi allophylus
fortasse,” etc. Oehler, however, points the passage thus:
“Enimvero Zacchæus etsi allophylus, fortasse,” etc.,
removing the doubt, and making Zacchæus “of another
race” than the Jewish, for certain. This is probably more than
Tertullian meant to say. | he
yet from his intercourse with Jews had obtained a smattering4964
4964 Aliqua notitia
afflatus. | of their Scriptures, and, more than this,
had, without knowing it, fulfilled the precepts of Isaiah: “Deal
thy bread,” said the prophet, “to the hungry, and bring the
poor that are cast out into thine house.”4965
This he did in the best possible way, by receiving the Lord, and
entertaining Him in his house. “When thou seest the naked cover
him.”4966
4966 In the same
passage. | This he promised to
do, in an equally satisfactory way, when he offered the half of his
goods for all works of mercy.4967 So also “he
loosened the bands of wickedness, undid the heavy burdens, let the
oppressed go free, and broke every yoke,”4968
when he said, “If I have taken anything from any man by false
accusation, I restore him fourfold.”4969
Therefore the Lord said, “This day is salvation come to this
house.”4970 Thus did He give
His testimony, that the precepts of the Creator spoken by the prophet
tended to salvation.4971 But when He adds,
“For the Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was
lost,”4972 my present
contention is not whether He was come to save what was lost,
to whom it had once belonged, and from whom what He came
to save had fallen away; but I approach a different question.
Man, there can be no doubt of it, is here the subject of
consideration. Now, since he consists of two parts,4973 body and soul, the point to be inquired into
is, in which of these two man would seem to have been lost? If in his
body, then it is his body, not his soul, which is lost. What, however,
is lost, the Son of man saves. The body,4974
4974 Caro: “the
flesh,” here a synonym with the corpus of the previous
clauses. |
therefore, has the salvation. If, (on the other hand,) it is in his
soul that man is lost, salvation is designed for the lost soul; and the
body which is not lost is safe. If, (to take the only other
supposition,) man is wholly lost, in both his natures, then it
necessarily follows that salvation is appointed for the entire man; and
then the opinion of the heretics is shivered to pieces,4975 who say that there is no salvation of the
flesh. And this affords a confirmation that Christ belongs to the
Creator, who followed the Creator in promising the salvation of the
whole man. The parable also of the (ten) servants, who received their
several recompenses according to the manner in which they had increased
their lord’s money by trading4976
4976 Secundum rationem
feneratæ. | proves Him to
be a God of judgment—even a God who, in strict account,4977
4977 Ex parte
severitatis. | not only bestows honour, but also takes away
what a man seems to have.4978
4978 This phrase comes not
from the present passage, but from Luke viii. 18, where the words are ὅ δοκεῖ
ἔχειν; here the
expression is ὅ
ἔχει only. | Else, if it is the
Creator whom He has here delineated as the “austere man,”
who “takes up what he laid not down, and reaps what he did not
sow,”4979 my instructor even
here is He, (whoever He may be,) to whom belongs the money He teaches
me fruitfully to expend.4980
4980 The original of this
obscure sentence is as follows: “Aut si et hic Creatorem finxerit
austerum…..hic quoque me ille instruit eujus pecuniam ut fenerem
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