A citation from the library
Patristic A.D. 254 · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Josh 5:8 (HOMILIES ON JOSHUA 6.1)

Origen, on Josh 5:8

Origen · c. A.D. 184–253
Josh 5:8 · Douay-Rheims
“Now after they were all circumcised, they remained in the same place of the camp, until they were healed.”
On this verse:
“For it is not enough for us to be circumcised, but [we must] also be healed after circumcision, that is, until a scar closes up the wound of circumcision itself. When, therefore, is the scar spread over the wound of our circumcision? I myself think that to be circumcised by our Jesus is this: to be free from faults, to put aside wicked habits and vile practices, to cut off filthy and rude customs and whatever recoils at the rule of honesty and piety.But, in the beginning, when we do this we are fettered in a certain measure by the difficulty of newness and, as if with a certain labor and anguish of spirit, we change the defects of the old habit for a new practice. On that account, as I said, there is a certain distress in the beginning, and with difficulty and grief are we able to remove the first things and to receive the second. Therefore, this seems to me to be the time when we are said to tarry, just as in the pain of our circumcision, until after the scar is closed and we are healed. And we close the scar when, without difficulty, we adopt new manners and there is within us a transformation to a practice that previously seemed difficult because we were not used to it. And at that time, we are truly said to be healed when, lacking vices, we instill a virtue in our nature by its new use.”

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

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