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*H Praise of a canticle for David himself. COME let us praise the Lord with joy: let us joyfully sing to God our saviour.
Ver. 1. Himself, as David wrote it by inspiration. W. — Sept. Comp. "It is without a title in Heb." S. Paul (Heb. iv. 7.) quotes it as the work of David. But this is only done incidentally, and it may have been written by the descendants of Moses, (Ps. lxxxix. C.) as the apostle only says, in David, (H.) referring to the psalter, which the common opinion attributed to him. C. — This opinion, it must be owned, acquires hereby great authority, (H.) as an inspired writer could not mistake; and Calmet himself, on the epistle to the Heb. doubts not but as the drift of the apostle requires, he attributed this psalm to David. Bert. T. vi. — It might be used in the removal of the ark (Muis.) and contains an exhortation to the Jews to return to the service of God, under king Josias, (Theod.) or after the captivity, (C.) or at the preaching of the gospel. Euseb. — The Church adopts the version of the Roman psalter in her office books, as they were corrected by S. Pius V. and this psalm was considered as a hymn at the beginning of matins, though the Vulg. is retained in other parts. C. — The variations are not material. H. — But this shews that the Church does not condemn every deviation from the Vulgate. Bell. Diss. — Saviour. S. Jer. "to the rock, our Jesus." H. — He who created us, has also been our Saviour. W.
*H Let us come before his presence with thanksgiving; and make a joyful noise to him with psalms.
Ver. 2. Come. Earlier than usual, (M.) before the day be far spent; præoccupemus, to shew our diligence in prayer, (H.) and to obtain God's favour, as Aman was first at the palace of Assuerus. Est. vi. 4. — This sentence has probably determined the Church to place it at the beginning of matins. C. — Let not others get before us in performing this duty. H. — We cannot prevent God's grace by an good works, since without it we can do nothing (W.) as we ought. Con. Trid. — Thanksgiving. S. Jer. lit. "in confession." H. — The same word, εξομολογησει, is used for sacramental confession; (Bert.) and this, or at least contrition, (H.) ought to go before our expressions of praise. Eccli. xv. 9. Theod. S. Jer. — The prophet exhorts us both to lament and to praise. S. Aug. Bert. — Psalms and music. W.
*H For the Lord is a great God, and a great King above all gods.
Ver. 3. Gods. Sept. Comp. "the earth." But the best editions agree with us, and God must be acknowledged superior to all angels, &c. Some copies of the Sept. S. Aug. &c. add, "for the Lord will not cast off his people," (C.) which seems to be taken from Ps. xciii. 14. Bert.
* Summa
*S Part 3, Ques 81, Article 7
[II-II, Q. 81, Art. 7]
Whether Religion Has an External Act?
Objection 1: It would seem that religion has not an external act. It is written (John 4:24): "God is a spirit, and they that adore Him, must adore Him in spirit and in truth." Now external acts pertain, not to the spirit but to the body. Therefore religion, to which adoration belongs, has acts that are not external but internal.
Obj. 2: Further, the end of religion is to pay God reverence and honor. Now it would savor of irreverence towards a superior, if one were to offer him that which properly belongs to his inferior. Since then whatever man offers by bodily actions, seems to be directed properly to the relief of human needs, or to the reverence of inferior creatures, it would seem unbecoming to employ them in showing reverence to God.
Obj. 3: Further, Augustine (De Civ. Dei vi, 10) commends Seneca for finding fault with those who offered to idols those things that are wont to be offered to men, because, to wit, that which befits mortals is unbecoming to immortals. But such things are much less becoming to the true God, Who is "exalted above all gods" [*Ps. 94:3]. Therefore it would seem wrong to worship God with bodily actions. Therefore religion has no bodily actions.
_On the contrary,_ It is written (Ps. 83:3): "My heart and my flesh have rejoiced in the living God." Now just as internal actions belong to the heart, so do external actions belong to the members of the flesh. Therefore it seems that God ought to be worshiped not only by internal but also by external actions.
_I answer that,_ We pay God honor and reverence, not for His sake (because He is of Himself full of glory to which no creature can add anything), but for our own sake, because by the very fact that we revere and honor God, our mind is subjected to Him; wherein its perfection consists, since a thing is perfected by being subjected to its superior, for instance the body is perfected by being quickened by the soul, and the air by being enlightened by the sun. Now the human mind, in order to be united to God, needs to be guided by the sensible world, since "invisible things . . . are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made," as the Apostle says (Rom. 1:20). Wherefore in the Divine worship it is necessary to make use of corporeal things, that man's mind may be aroused thereby, as by signs, to the spiritual acts by means of which he is united to God. Therefore the internal acts of religion take precedence of the others and belong to religion essentially, while its external acts are secondary, and subordinate to the internal acts.
Reply Obj. 1: Our Lord is speaking of that which is most important and directly intended in the worship of God.
Reply Obj. 2: These external things are offered to God, not as though He stood in need of them, according to Ps. 49:13, "Shall I eat the flesh of bullocks? or shall I drink the blood of goats?" but as signs of the internal and spiritual works, which are of themselves acceptable to God. Hence Augustine says (De Civ. Dei x, 5): "The visible sacrifice is the sacrament or sacred sign of the invisible sacrifice."
Reply Obj. 3: Idolaters are ridiculed for offering to idols things pertaining to men, not as signs arousing them to certain spiritual things, but as though they were of themselves acceptable to the idols; and still more because they were foolish and wicked. _______________________
EIGHTH
*H For in his hand are all the ends of the earth: and the heights of the mountains are his.
Ver. 4. Ends. Heb. "depths." — Are his. This is grandeur, that "he beholds," as in the Rom. psalter. Bert. Is. xl. 15. and xlv. 18. — Virgil (Geor. 4.) says:
*H For the sea is his, and he made it: and his hands formed the dry land.
Ver. 5. Formed. Like a potter, plasmaverunt, (S. Jer. C.) or "have laid the foundations of the dry land." S. Aug. Brev. Rom. H.
* Summa
*S Part 1, Ques 91, Article 4
[I, Q. 91, Art. 4]
Whether the Production of the Human Body Is Fittingly Described in Scripture?
Objection 1: It would seem that the production of the human body is not fittingly described in Scripture. For, as the human body was made by God, so also were the other works of the six days. But in the other works it is written, "God said; Let it be made, and it was made." Therefore the same should have been said of man.
Obj. 2: Further, the human body was made by God immediately, as explained above (A. 2). Therefore it was not fittingly said, "Let us make man."
Obj. 3: Further, the form of the human body is the soul itself which is the breath of life. Therefore, having said, "God made man of the slime of the earth," he should not have added: "And He breathed into him the breath of life."
Obj. 4: Further, the soul, which is the breath of life, is in the whole body, and chiefly in the heart. Therefore it was not fittingly said: "He breathed into his face the breath of life."
Obj. 5: Further, the male and female sex belong to the body, while the image of God belongs to the soul. But the soul, according to Augustine (Gen. ad lit. vii, 24), was made before the body. Therefore having said: "To His image He made them," he should not have added, "male and female He created them."
_On the contrary,_ Is the authority of Scripture.
Reply Obj. 1: As Augustine observes (Gen. ad lit. vi, 12), man surpasses other things, not in the fact that God Himself made man, as though He did not make other things; since it is written (Ps. 101:26), "The work of Thy hands is the heaven," and elsewhere (Ps. 94:5), "His hands laid down the dry land"; but in this, that man is made to God's image. Yet in describing man's production, Scripture uses a special way of speaking, to show that other things were made for man's sake. For we are accustomed to do with more deliberation and care what we have chiefly in mind.
Reply Obj. 2: We must not imagine that when God said "Let us make man," He spoke to the angels, as some were perverse enough to think. But by these words is signified the plurality of the Divine Person, Whose image is more clearly expressed in man.
Reply Obj. 3: Some have thought that man's body was formed first in priority of time, and that afterwards the soul was infused into the formed body. But it is inconsistent with the perfection of the production of things, that God should have made either the body without the soul, or the soul without the body, since each is a part of human nature. This is especially unfitting as regards the body, for the body depends on the soul, and not the soul on the body.
To remove the difficulty some have said that the words, "God made man," must be understood of the production of the body with the soul; and that the subsequent words, "and He breathed into his face the breath of life," should be understood of the Holy Ghost; as the Lord breathed on His Apostles, saying, "Receive ye the Holy Ghost" (John 20:22). But this explanation, as Augustine says (De Civ. Dei xiii, 24), is excluded by the very words of Scripture. For we read farther on, "And man was made a living soul"; which words the Apostle (1 Cor. 15:45) refers not to spiritual life, but to animal life. Therefore, by breath of life we must understand the soul, so that the words, "He breathed into his face the breath of life," are a sort of exposition of what goes before; for the soul is the form of the body.
Reply Obj. 4: Since vital operations are more clearly seen in man's face, on account of the senses which are there expressed; therefore Scripture says that the breath of life was breathed into man's face.
Reply Obj. 5: According to Augustine (Gen. ad lit. iv, 34), the works of the six days were done all at one time; wherefore according to him man's soul, which he holds to have been made with the angels, was not made before the sixth day; but on the sixth day both the soul of the first man was made actually, and his body in its causal elements. But other doctors hold that on the sixth day both body and soul of man were actually made. _______________________
*H Come let us adore and fall down: and weep before the Lord that made us.
Ver. 6. And weep. Heb. also, "bend the knee;" though this sense would seem less proper, after he had mentioned prostration. Tears of contrition and tenderness may accompany our canticles. Bert. — Kneeling in prayer is a posture pleasing to God. Phil. ii. W.
*H For he is the Lord our God: and we are the people of his pasture and the sheep of his hand.
Ver. 7. The Lord is not in the Heb. or Sept. Bert. — The people. Rom. Psal. and Syriac, "his people, and the sheep of his pasture, taken from Ps. xcix. 3. C. — God is the only shepherd, who creates his sheep. Bert. — He feedeth us, and it is most just that we should adore him. W.
* Footnotes
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*
Hebrews
3:7
Wherefore, as the Holy Ghost saith: To-day if you shall hear his voice,
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*
Hebrews
4:7
Again he limiteth a certain day, saying in David; To day, after so long a time as it is above said: To day if you shall hear his voice, harden not your hearts.
*H To day if you shall hear his voice, harden not your hearts:
Ver. 8. To-day. S. Paul beautifully illustrates this passage, Heb. iv. H. — He follows not the present Heb. punctuation, which would join half this verse with the preceding. — His. God speaks of the Messias according to the apostle, who intimates that to-day comprises all the life of man. Heb. xxxvii. 13. Bert. — Harden not. Man is the author of his own obduracy, (Theod.) which God only permits. S. Aug. C. — We have free will, and may resist God's grace, as we may also consent to it, and thus co-operate to our first justification. Trid. Ses. vi. 5. W. — The captives (C.) and first Christians were exhorted not to imitate the depravity of the ancient Jews. H. — Though a man may have frequently resisted the Holy Ghost, he may still repent. W.
*H As in the provocation, according to the day of temptation in the wilderness: where your fathers tempted me, they proved me, and saw my works.
Ver. 9. Provocation, (irritatione.) Rom. Brev. exacerbatione. Heb. meriba, "contradiction," (S. Jer. H.) at Raphidim; (Ex. xvii. 7.) unless this be styled temptation, (Massa) and the former provocation was that at Cades. Num. xx. 13. C. — The Israelites murmured frequently. But that rebellion which took place at the return of the spies, and which causes God to swear that the guilty should never enter the land of promise, seems to be chiefly meant. Num. xiv. Bert. — They murmured on account of the desire of water and flesh-meat, though they were abundantly supplied with manna, which answered every purpose. Thus some require to communicate under both kinds, as if one did not contain as much as both. W. — Proved me; to know by experience if I were so powerful as to work miracles; and I condescended to gratify them, (C.) or I have done it already. M.
* Summa
*S Part 3, Ques 97, Article 4
[II-II, Q. 97, Art. 4]
Whether the Temptation of God Is a Graver Sin Than Superstition?
Objection 1: It would seem that the temptation of God is a graver sin than superstition. The greater sin receives the greater punishment. Now the sin of tempting God was more severely punished in the Jews than was the sin of idolatry; and yet the latter is the chief form of superstition: since for the sin of idolatry three thousand men of their number were slain, as related in Ex. 32:28 [*Septuagint version. The Vulgate has "twenty-three thousand."], whereas for the sin of temptation they all without exception perished in the desert, and entered not into the land of promise, according to Ps. 94:9, "Your fathers tempted Me," and further on, "so I swore in My wrath that they should not enter into My rest." Therefore to tempt God is a graver sin than superstition.
Obj. 2: Further, the more a sin is opposed to virtue the graver it would seem to be. Now irreligion, of which the temptation of God is a species, is more opposed to the virtue of religion, than superstition which bears some likeness to religion. Therefore to tempt God is a graver sin than superstition.
Obj. 3: Further, it seems to be a greater sin to behave disrespectfully to one's parents, than to pay others the respect we owe to our parents. Now God should be honored by us as the Father of all (Malach. 1:6). Therefore, temptation of God whereby we behave irreverently to God, seems to be a greater sin than idolatry, whereby we give to a creature the honor we owe to God.
_On the contrary,_ A gloss on Deut. 17:2, "When there shall be found among you," etc. says: "The Law detests error and idolatry above all: for it is a very great sin to give to a creature the honor that belongs to the Creator."
_I answer that,_ Among sins opposed to religion, the more grievous is that which is the more opposed to the reverence due to God. Now it is less opposed to this reverence that one should doubt the divine excellence than that one should hold the contrary for certain. For just as a man is more of an unbeliever if he be confirmed in his error, than if he doubt the truth of faith, so, too, a man acts more against the reverence due to God, if by his deeds he professes an error contrary to the divine excellence, than if he expresses a doubt. Now the superstitious man professes an error, as shown above (Q. 94, A. 1, ad 1), whereas he who tempts God by words or deeds expresses a doubt of the divine excellence, as stated above (A. 2). Therefore the sin of superstition is graver than the sin of tempting God.
Reply Obj. 1: The sin of idolatry was not punished in the above manner, as though it were a sufficient punishment; because a more severe punishment was reserved in the future for that sin, for it is written (Ex. 32:34): "And I, in the day of revenge, will visit this sin also of theirs."
Reply Obj. 2: Superstition bears a likeness to religion, as regards the material act which it pays just as religion does. But, as regards the end, it is more contrary to religion than the temptation of God, since it implies greater irreverence for God, as stated.
Reply Obj. 3: It belongs essentially to the divine excellence that it is singular and incommunicable. Consequently to give divine reverence to another is the same as to do a thing opposed to the divine excellence. There is no comparison with the honor due to our parents, which can without sin be given to others. _______________________
* Footnotes
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*
Numbers
14:34
According to the number of the forty days, wherein you viewed the land: a year shall be counted for a day. And forty years you shall receive your iniquities, and shall know my revenge:
*H Forty years long was I offended with that generation, and I said: These always err in heart.
Ver. 10. Offended. Heb. and Sept. "disgusted." Rom. Psal. S. Aug. &c. "I was very near to;" (C.) ready to punish, and eye-witness of their infidelity. S. Paul reads προσωχθισα, infensus fui, "I was against, or disgusted with," and seems to refer the forty years to the Jews, who saw God's works. H. — But there is a variation in the Greek copies, as some omit, For which cause; and Heb. iii. 10. and v. 17, intimates, that the indignation of God was roused for forty years, at intervals, as often as the people rebelled. Bert. — The apostle also plainly shews, that this psalm was written long after that period, and consequently not by Moses, as the Jews would now assert. He limiteth a certain day, saying in David: To-day, after so long a time, &c. Heb. iv. 7. W. — Always. Heb. "a people of those who err in the heart are they." Mont. H.
* Footnotes
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*
Hebrews
4:3
For we, who have believed, shall enter into rest; as he said: As I have sworn in my wrath: If they shall enter into my rest; and this indeed when the works from the foundation of the world were finished.
*H And these men have not known my ways: so I swore in my wrath that they shall not enter into my rest.
Ver. 11. So. Psal. Rom. and Milan, "to whom." Both occur in S. Paul, and answer the Heb. asher, (Bert.) quibus. S. Jer. — Not. Lit. "if they shall." The Israelites were excluded from a settled abode in Chanaan, on account of their repeated transgressions, particularly at Cades; (Num. xiv.) and Christians, who do not continue faithful to the law of Jesus Christ, can never expect to enter heaven. Heb. iii. and iv. W. — David made the like observation to his subjects; and clearly speaks of the heavenly repose to which the virtuous alone are entitled. H. — S. Paul takes great pains to inculcate this truth, and shews that the return from captivity could not answer the import of the promises made by David in God's name. Bert. H.