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| Certain Other Divine Precepts. The Apostolic Description of Charity. Their Connection with Patience. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
XII.—Certain Other Divine Precepts. The Apostolic Description of
Charity. Their Connection with Patience.
As regards the rule of peace, which9132 is so pleasing to God, who in the world that
is prone to impatience9133
9133 Impatientiæ
natus: lit. “born for impatience.” Comp. de
Pæniten. 12, ad fin. “nec ulli rei
nisi pænitentiæ natus.” | will even
once forgive his brother, I will not say “seven
times,” or9134
9134 Oehler reads
“sed,” but the “vel” adopted in the text is a
conjecture of Latinius, which Oehler mentions. |
“seventy-seven times?”9135
9135 Septuagies septies.
The reference is to Matt.
xviii. 21, 22. Compare de
Orat. vii. ad fin. and the note there. | Who that is
contemplating a suit against his adversary will compose the matter by
agreement,9136 unless he first
begin by lopping off chagrin, hardheartedness, and bitterness, which
are in fact the poisonous outgrowths of impatience? How will you
“remit, and remission shall be granted” you9137 if the absence of patience makes you
tenacious of a wrong? No one who is at variance with his brother in his
mind, will finish offering his “duteous gift at the altar,”
unless he first, with intent to “reconciliate his brother,”
return to patience.9138 If “the sun
go down over our wrath,” we are in jeopardy:9139 we are not allowed to remain one day without
patience. But, however, since Patience takes the lead in9140 every species of salutary discipline,
what wonder that she
likewise ministers to Repentance, (accustomed as Repentance is to come
to the rescue of such as have fallen,) when, on a disjunction of
wedlock (for that cause, I mean, which makes it lawful, whether for
husband or wife, to persist in the perpetual observance of
widowhood),9141
9141 What the cause
is is disputed. Opinions are divided as to whether Tertullian
means by it “marriage with a heathen” (which as Mr. Dodgson
reminds us, Tertullian—de Uxor. ii. 3—calls
“adultery”), or the case in which our Lord allowed
divorce. See Matt. xix.
9. | she9142 waits for, she yearns for, she persuades by
her entreaties, repentance in all who are one day to enter salvation?
How great a blessing she confers on each! The one she prevents
from becoming an adulterer; the other she amends. So, too, she is found
in those holy examples touching patience in the Lord’s parables.
The shepherd’s patience seeks and finds the straying
ewe:9143 for Impatience would easily despise
one ewe; but Patience undertakes the labour of the quest, and
the patient burden-bearer carries home on his shoulders the forsaken
sinner.9144
9144 Peccatricem,
i.e. the ewe. | That prodigal son
also the father’s patience receives, and clothes, and feeds, and
makes excuses for, in the presence of the angry brother’s
impatience.9145 He, therefore, who
“had perished” is saved, because he entered on the way
of repentance. Repentance perishes not, because it finds Patience
(to welcome it). For by whose teachings but those of Patience is
Charity9146
9146 Dilectio = ἀγάπη. See Trench, New
Testament Syn., s. v. ἀγάπη; and with the rest of this
chapter compare carefully, in the Greek, 1 Cor. xiii. [Neander points out the different view
our author takes of the same parable, in the de Pudicit. cap. 9,
Vol. IV. this series.] | —the highest
sacrament of the faith, the treasure-house of the Christian name, which
the apostle commends with the whole strength of the Holy
Spirit—trained? “Charity,” he says, “is long
suffering;” thus she applies patience: “is
beneficent;” Patience does no evil: “is not emulous;”
that certainly is a peculiar mark of patience: “savours not
of violence:”9147
9147 Protervum = Greek
περπερεύεται. | she has drawn her
self-restraint from patience: “is not puffed up; is not
violent;”9148
9148 Proterit = Greek
ἀσχημονεῖ. | for that pertains
not unto patience: “nor does she seek her own” if,
she offers her own, provided she may benefit her neighbours:
“nor is irritable;” if she were, what would she have left
to Impatience? Accordingly he says, “Charity endures all
things; tolerates all things;” of course because she is patient.
Justly, then, “will she never fail;”9149 for all other things will be cancelled, will
have their consummation. “Tongues, sciences, prophecies, become
exhausted; faith, hope, charity, are permanent:” Faith, which
Christ’s patience introduced; hope, which man’s patience
waits for; charity, which Patience accompanies, with God as
Master.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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