Chapter XIX.
63. And inasmuch as the Lord is admonishing us in this passage with respect to rash and unjust judgment,—for He wishes that whatever we do, we should do it with a heart that is single and directed toward God alone; and inasmuch as, with respect to many things, it is uncertain with what intention they are done, regarding which it is rash to judge; inasmuch, moreover, as those parties especially judge rashly respecting things that are uncertain, and readily find fault,
who love rather to censure and to condemn than to amend and to improve, which is a fault arising either from pride or from envy; therefore He has subjoined the statement: “And why beholdest thou the mote that is in thy brother’s eye, but considerest not the beam that is in thine own eye?” So that if perchance, for example, he has transgressed in anger, you should find fault in hatred; there being, as it were, as much difference between anger and hatred as between a mote and a beam. For
hatred is inveterate anger, which, as it were simply by its long duration, has acquired so great strength as to be justly called a beam. Now, it may happen that, though you are angry with a man, you wish him to be turned from his error; but if you hate a man, you cannot wish to convert him.
64. “Or how wilt437
437 The meaning is, how wilt thou have the effrontery to say, dare to say. The precept forbids all meddling, censoriousness, and captious faultfinding, and the spirit of slander, backbiting, calumny, etc.
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thou say to thy
brother, Let me pull out the mote out of thine
eye; and, behold, a beam is in thine own
eye? Thou
hypocrite, first cast out the beam out of thine own
eye; and then shalt thou see clearly to cast out the mote out of thy
brother’s
eye;”
i.e., first cast the
hatred away from thee, and then, but not before, shalt thou be able to amend him whom thou lovest.
438
And He well says, “Thou
hypocrite.” For to make complaint against vices is the
duty of good and
benevolent men; and when bad men do it, they are acting a part which does not
belong to them; just like
hypocrites, who conceal under a mask what they are, and show themselves off in a mask what they are not. Under the designation
hypocrites, therefore, you are to understand pretenders. And there is, in fact, a class of pretenders much to be
guarded against, and troublesome,
who, while they take up complaints against all kinds of faults from
hatred and spite, also wish to appear
counsellors. And therefore we must piously and cautiously watch, so that when necessity shall compel us to find fault with or
rebuke any one, we may reflect first whether the fault is such as we have never had, or one from which we have now become free; and if we have never had it, let us reflect that we are men, and might have had it; but if we have had it, and are now free from it, let
the common
infirmity touch the memory, that not
hatred but pity may go before that fault-finding or administering of
rebuke: so that whether it shall serve for the conversion of him on whose account we do it, or for his perversion (for the issue is uncertain), we at least from the singleness of our
eye may be free from care. If, however, on reflection, we find ourselves involved in the same fault as he is whom we were preparing to censure, let us not censure nor
rebuke; but yet let us
mourn
deeply over the case, and let us invite him not to obey us, but to join us in a common effort.
65. For in regard also to what the apostle says,—“Unto the Jews I became as a Jew, that I might gain the Jews; to them that are under the law, as under the law (not being under the law), that I might gain them that are under the law; to them that are without law, as without law (being not without law to God, but under the law to Christ), that I might gain them that are without law. To the weak became I as weak, that I might gain the weak: I am made
all things to all men, that I might gain all,”—he did not certainly so act in the way of pretence, as some wish it to be understood, in order that their detestable pretence may be fortified by the authority of so great an example; but he did so from love, under the influence of which he thought of the infirmity of him whom he wished to help as if it were his own. For this he also lays as the foundation beforehand, when he says: “For although I be free from all men, yet have I made myself
servant unto all, that I might gain439
439 Lucrifacerem; Vulgate, facerem salvos.
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the more.”
440
And that you may understand this as being done not in pretence, but in
love, under the influence of which we have
compassion for men who are
weak as if we were they, he thus
admonishes us in another passage, saying, “
Brethren, ye have been called unto
liberty; only use not
liberty for an occasion to the
flesh, but by
love serve one another.”
441
And this cannot be done, unless each one reckon the
infirmity of another as his own, so as to bear it with equanimity, until the party for whose welfare he is solicitous is freed from it.
66. Rarely, therefore, and in a case of great necessity, are rebukes to be administered; yet in such a way that even in these very rebukes we may make it our earnest endeavour, not that we, but that God, should be served. For He, and none else, is the end: so that we are to do nothing with a double heart, removing from our own eye the beam of envy, or malice, or pretence, in order that we may see to cast the mote out of a brother’s eye. For we shall see it with
the dove’s eyes,—such eyes as are declared to belong to the spouse of Christ,442
whom God hath chosen for Himself a glorious Church, not having spot or wrinkle,
443
i.e. pure and guileless.
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