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| But There Was a Limit to the Use of These Shadows or Figures; For Afterwards, When the End of the Law, Christ, Came, All Things Were Said by the Apostle to Be Pure to the Pure, and the True and Holy Meat Was a Right Faith and an Unspotted Conscience. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter V. Argument.—But There Was a Limit to
the Use of These Shadows or Figures; For Afterwards, When the End of
the Law, Christ, Came, All Things Were Said by the Apostle to Be Pure
to the Pure, and the True and Holy Meat Was a Right Faith and an
Unspotted Conscience.
And thus there was a certain ancient time, wherein
those shadows or figures were to be used, that meats should be
abstained from which had indeed been commended by their creation, but
had been prohibited by the law. But now Christ, the end of the
law, has come, disclosing all the obscurities of the law—all
those things which antiquity had covered with the clouds of
sacraments. For the illustrious Master, and the heavenly Teacher,
and the ordainer of the perfected truth, has come, under whom at length
it is rightly said: “To the pure all things are pure; but
unto them that are defiled and unbelieving is nothing pure, but even
their mind and conscience is defiled.”5322 Moreover, in another
place: “For every creature of God is good, and nothing to
be refused which is received with thanksgiving; for it is sanctified by
the Word of God and prayer.”5323 Again, in another place:
“The Spirit expressly says that in the last days some shall
depart from the faith, giving heed to seducing spirits, doctrines of
demons, speaking lies in hypocrisy, having their conscience seared with
a hot iron, forbidding to marry, and commanding to abstain from
meats which God hath created to be received with thanksgiving by them
which believe and those who know God.”5324 Moreover, in another
passage: “Everything that is sold in the market-place eat,
asking nothing.”5325 From these things it is plain
that all those things are returned to their original blessedness
now that the law is finished, and that we must not revert to the
special observances of meats, which observances were ordained for a
certain reason, but which evangelical liberty has now taken away, their
discharge being given. The apostle cries out: “The
kingdom of God is not meat and drink, but righteousness, and peace, and
joy.”5326 Also
elsewhere: “Meats for the belly, and the belly for
meats: but God shall destroy both it and them. Now the body
is not for fornication, but for the Lord; and the Lord for the
body.”5327 God
is not worshipped by the belly nor by meats, which the Lord says will
perish, and are “purged” by natural law in the
draught.5328
5328
[Or lower bowel, Mark vii. 19;
Matt. xv. 17. See
cap. i. note 7, p. 645, supra. It throws off refuse,
leaving food only to the system.] | For
he who worships the Lord by meats, is merely as one who has his belly
for his Lord. The meat, I say, true, and holy, and pure, is a
true faith, an unspotted conscience, and an innocent soul.
Whosoever is thus fed, feeds also with Christ. Such a banqueter
is God’s guest: these are the feasts that feed the angels,
these are the tables which the martyrs make. Hence is that word
of the law: “Man doth not live by bread alone, but by every
word which proceedeth out of the mouth of God.”5329 Hence, too, that saying of
Christ: “My meat is to do the will of Him that sent me, and
to finish His work.”5330 Hence, “Ye seek me not because ye saw the
miracles, but because ye did eat of my loaves and were filled.
But labour not for the meat which perisheth, but for the meat which
endureth to life eternal, which the Son of man will give you; for Him
hath the Father sealed.”5331 By righteousness, I say, and by
continency, and by the rest of the virtues, God is worshipped.
For Zecharias also tells us, saying: “If ye eat or drink,
is it not ye that eat or drink?”5332 —declaring thereby that meat or
drink attain not unto God, but unto man: for neither is God
fleshly, so as to be pleased with flesh; nor is He careful5333
5333
“Attonitus” is assumed to be rightly read
“attentus.” | for these
pleasures, so as to rejoice in our food.5334 God rejoices in our faith
alone, in our innocency alone, in our truth alone, in our virtues
alone. And these dwell not in our belly, but in our soul; and
these are acquired for us by divine awe and heavenly fear, and not by
earthly food. And such the apostle fitly rebuked, as
“obeying the superstitions of angels, puffed up by their fleshly
mind; not holding Christ the head, from whom all the body, joined
together by links, and inwoven and grown together by mutual members in
the bond of charity, increaseth to God;”5335 but observing those things:
“Touch not, taste not, handle not; which indeed seem to have a
form of religion, in that the body is not spared.”5336 Yet
there is no advantage at all of righteousness, while we are recalled by
a voluntary slavery to those elements to which by baptism we have
died.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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