CHAPTER II.
Ver. 2. Some Greek and Latin copies have, after eight days.
Ver. 4. Such
diligence ought to be used to bring sinners to Christ, by means of the sacraments, as was used to procure for this man, through
Christ, the health of his body. (Bristow)
Ver. 5. When
Jesus saw their faith. Our Lord is moved to shew mercy to sinners, by the faith and desires, and prayers of others; for
this man was not more helpless in his limbs, than in his soul. From this example, we are taught that in sickness the sacraments
and helps of the Church, which are the medicines of the soul, should be called for in the first instance; for Christ first
healed the sick man's soul, before he removed his bodily infirmity. We also learn that many diseases originate in sin, and
that we are to remove the effect by removing the cause.
Ver. 10. The
Son of man. Jesus Christ here proveth that himself as man, and not as God only, hath power to forgive sins; by this, that
he was able to do miracles, and make the sick man suddenly rise; so the apostles and their successors, though they be not
God, may in like manner have authority from God to remit sins, not as God, but as God's ministers, and acting in his name,
and vested with his delegated authority. --- On earth. This power which the Son of man hath to remit sins on earth,
was never taken from him, but is perpetuated in his sacraments and ministers, by whom he still remitteth sins in the Church,
and not in heaven only. Relative to sin, there is one court of conscience on earth, and another in heaven, and the judgment
of heaven followeth and approveth this on earth; as is plain by the words of our Saviour, to Peter first, and then to all
the apostles: Whatsoever thou shalt bind upon earth, it shall by bound also in heaven; and whatsoever thou shalt loose
upon earth, it shall be loosed also in heaven. See Matthew xvi. 19. and xviii. 18. Whereupon St. Jerome sayeth: that priests
having the keys of the kingdom of heaven, judge in some manner before the day of judgment. (Ep. v. ad Heliod; and St. Chrysostom,
more at large, lib. iii. de Sacerd.)
Ver. 12. This
paralytic is not the same as that mentioned in St. John; for that distressed man had no one to assist him, whereas this person
had four; the former was by the side of the Probatica, but the latter in a house at Capharnaum. (Theophylactus)
Ver. 14. To
follow Christ, is to imitate him; wherefore this apostle, that he might be able to follow Christ, the model of poverty, not
so much by his bodily steps, as by the inward affections of his soul, forsook all; he not only forsook his present goods,
but despised all danger, which he incurred by leaving his business abruptly, and without rendering any account of it to his
employers or governors. (Ven. Bede) --- The person to whom Christ addresses the words, follow me, was Matthew: see
Matthew ix. 9.
Ver. 17. The
Greek printed copies, and some manuscripts add to penance, as we read in Luke v. 33.
Ver. 18. See
Matthew ix. 14, and Luke v. 33.
Ver. 20. Jesus
Christ here foretelleth that fasting shall be used in his Church, no less than in the old law, or in the time of John the
Baptist. See Matthew ix. 15. --- When first we begin to be converted to God, the spiritual consolations which God infuses
into our souls, cause in us an overflowing of spiritual delights, so that we then feast, and are in the midst of delight;
but when the Bridegroom shall be taken away, when these spiritual consolations cease, then we fast, and find the commandments
difficult. It is then we must prepare ourselves for tribulation. (Ven. Bede)
Ver. 25. When
he had need. In necessity many things are done without sin, which in other circumstances it would be unlawful to do. (Bristow)
Ver. 26. Under
Abiathar. The priest from whom David had these loaves, is called Achimelech, 1 Kings xxi. The most probable
answer to this difficulty is, that the priest had both these names of Achimelech and of Abiathar, as also his
father had before him. For he that (1 Kings xxii.) is called Abiathar, the son of Achimelech, is called 2 Kings viii.
17, Achimelech, the son of Abiathar. See also 1 Paralipomenon xviii. 16. (Witham) --- Others say that Abiathar, son
of Achimelech, was present, and sanctioned the deed of his father, thus making it his own. (Denis the Carthusian)
Ver. 28. The
maker of the law may abrogate or dispense with it when and where, for just cause, it seemeth good to him: thus the Church
can dispense with, change, or abrogate, for just reasons, the discipline of the Church founded upon Church authority. This
we prove also from the action of David, (ver. 26, above) which the Scripture notices without blaming it, because the observance
of the law, prescribed for the utility of man, must yield to the necessities of man.