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Chapter
LXIV.
Although Jesus was only a single individual, He
was nevertheless more things than one, according to the different
standpoint from which He might be regarded;3367
3367 πλείονα τῇ
ἐπινοίᾳ ἦν. |
nor was He seen in the same way by all who beheld Him. Now, that
He was more things than one, according to the varying point of view, is
clear from this statement, “I am the way, and the truth, and the
life;” and from this, “I am the bread;” and this,
“I am the door,” and innumerable others. And that
when seen He did not appear in like fashion to all those who saw Him,
but according to their several ability to receive Him, will be clear to
those who notice why, at the time when He was about to be transfigured
on the high mountain, He did not admit all His apostles (to this
sight), but only Peter, and James, and John, because they alone were
capable of beholding His glory on that occasion, and of observing the
glorified appearance of Moses and Elijah, and of listening to their
conversation, and to the voice from the heavenly cloud. I am of
opinion, too, that before He ascended the mountain where His disciples
came to Him alone, and where He taught them the beatitudes, when He was
somewhere in the lower part of the mountain, and when, as it became
late, He healed those who were brought to Him, freeing them from all
sickness and disease, He did not appear the same person to the sick,
and to those who needed His healing aid, as to those who were able by
reason of their strength to go up the mountain along with Him.
Nay, even when He interpreted privately to His own disciples the
parables which were delivered to the multitudes without, from whom the
explanation was withheld, as they who heard them explained were endowed
with higher organs of hearing than they who heard them without
explanation, so was it altogether the same with the eyes of their soul,
and, I think, also with those of their body.3368
3368 οὕτω καὶ
ταῖς ὄψεσι
πάντως μὲν
τῆς ψυχῆς,
ἐγὼ δ᾽
ἡγοῦμαι, ὅτι
καὶ τοῦ
σώματος. | And the following statement shows that
He had not always the same appearance, viz., that Judas, when about to
betray Him, said to the multitudes who were setting out with him, as
not being acquainted with Him, “Whomsoever I shall kiss, the same
is He.”3369 And I think
that the Saviour Himself indicates the same thing by the words:
“I was daily with you, teaching in the temple, and ye laid no
hold on Me.”3370 Entertaining,
then, such exalted views regarding Jesus, not only with respect to the
Deity within, and which was hidden from the view of the multitude, but
with respect to the transfiguration of His body, which took place when
and to whom He would, we say, that before Jesus had “put off the
governments and powers,”3371
3371 τὸν μὴ
ἀπεκδυσάμενον,
etc. Cf. Alford, in loco (Col. ii. 15). | and while as yet He
was not dead unto sin, all men were capable of seeing Him; but that,
when He had “put off the governments and powers,” and had
no longer anything which was capable of being seen by the multitude,
all who had formerly seen Him were not now able to behold Him.
And therefore, sparing them, He did not show Himself to all after His
resurrection from the dead.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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