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| Another Fragment. St. Hippolytus on Prov. ix. 1, “Wisdom Hath Builded Her House.” PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Another
Fragment.1263
St.
Hippolytus1264
1264
[I omit here the suffix “Pope of Rome,” for obvious
reasons. He was papa of Portus at a time when all bishops
were so called but this is a misleading absurdity, borrowed from the
Galland ms., where it could hardly have been
placed earlier. A mere mediæval blunder.] | on
Prov. ix.
1,
“Wisdom Hath Builded Her House.”
Christ, he means, the wisdom and power of God the
Father, hath builded His house, i.e., His nature in the flesh derived
from the Virgin, even as he (John) hath said beforetime, “The
Word became flesh, and dwelt among us.”1265 As likewise the wise
prophet1266 testifies:
Wisdom that was before the world, and is the source of life, the
infinite “Wisdom of God, hath builded her house” by a
mother who knew no man,—to wit, as He assumed the temple of the
body. “And hath raised1267
1267
Other reading, “hewn out.” | her seven pillars;” that is, the
fragrant grace of the all-holy Spirit, as Isaiah says: “And
the seven spirits of God shall rest upon Him.”1268 But others say that the seven
pillars are the seven divine orders which sustain the creation by His
holy and inspired teaching; to wit, the prophets, the apostles, the
martyrs, the hierarchs, the hermits, the saints, and the
righteous. And the phrase, “She hath killed her
beasts,” denotes the prophets and martyrs who in every city and
country are slain like sheep every day by the unbelieving, in behalf of
the truth, and cry aloud, “For thy sake we are killed all the day
long, we were counted as sheep for the slaughter.”1269
1269
Ps. xliv. 2; Rom. viii.
36. | And again,
“She hath mingled her wine” in the bowl, by which is meant,
that the Saviour, uniting his Godhead, like pure wine, with the flesh
in the Virgin, was born of her at once God and man without confusion of
the one in the other. “And she hath furnished her
table:” that denotes the promised knowledge of the Holy
Trinity; it also refers to His honoured and undefiled body and blood,
which day by day are administered and offered sacrificially at the
spiritual divine table, as a memorial of that first and ever-memorable
table of the spiritual divine supper. And again, “She hath
sent forth her servants:” Wisdom, that is to say, has done
so—Christ, to wit—summoning them with lofty
announcement. “Whoso is simple, Let him turn to me,”
she says, alluding manifestly to the holy apostles, who traversed the
whole world, and called the
nations to the knowledge of Him in truth, with their lofty and divine
preaching. And again, “And to those that want understanding
she said”—that is, to those who have not yet obtained the
power of the Holy Ghost—“Come, eat of my bread, and drink
of the wine which I have mingled for you;” by which is meant,
that He gave His divine flesh and honoured blood to us, to eat and to
drink it for the remission of sins.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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