A citation from the library
Patristic A.D. 395 · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Eccl 3:4

Gregory of Nyssa, on Eccl 3:4

Gregory of Nyssa · c. A.D. 335–395
Eccl 3:4 · Douay-Rheims
“A time to weep, and a time to laugh. A time to mourn, and a time to dance.”
On this verse:
“Now, therefore, is the moment for weeping, but the moment for laughing is in store for us through hope; for the present sorrow will become mother of the joy that is hoped for. Who would not spend all his life in lamentation and sadness, if he actually becomes acquainted with himself and knows his condition, what he once had and what he has lost, and the state his nature was in at the beginning and the state it is in at present? Then there was no death, disease was absent; "mine" and "yours," those wicked words, were far away from the life of the first humans. As the sun was shared, and the air was shared, and above all the grace and praise of God were shared, so too participation in everything good was freely available on equal terms, and the disease of acquisitiveness was unknown, and there was no resentment over inferiority against superiors (for there was no such thing as superiority), and there were thousands of other things besides these, which no one could describe in words, since they utterly exceed in magnificence those mentioned—I mean equality in honor with the angels, freedom to speak before God, the contemplation of the good things in the realms above, our own adornment with the unspeakable beauty of the blessed nature, when we show in ourselves the divine image, glistening with beauty of soul.”

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

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