A citation from the library
Catholic 1849 · Haydock’s Catholic Bible Commentary, Hebrews 9:26

George Leo Haydock, on Heb 9:26

George Leo Haydock · 1774–1849
Heb 9:26 · Douay-Rheims
“For then he ought to have suffered often from the beginning of the world: but now once at the end of ages, he hath appeared for the destruction of sin, by the sacrifice of himself.”
On this verse:
“He came at the end of the ages, as it were in the last age of the world, to the putting away or abrogating of sin. (Witham) — Though less, viz. a single tear, might have satisfied the justice of God, nothing less than his own precious blood could satisfy the charity of Jesus Christ. By his death, as St. Augustine observes, Christ has bound the devil in a chain, so that he can tempt us no further than we are able to resist: he may bark, he may tempt, he may solicit us; but he can bite none, except those that wilfully cast themselves within his reach. (Serm. 1. post Trin.)”

Imported from an open dataset — not yet checked against the printed edition.

Read Heb 9:26 in context →