A citation from the library
Gregory the Great, on Ezek 2:6
Gregory the Great · c. A.D. 540–604
Ezek 2:6 · Douay-Rheims
“And thou, O son of man, fear not, neither be thou afraid of their words: for thou art among unbelievers and destroyers, and thou dwellest with scorpions. Fear not their words, neither be thou dismayed at their looks: for they are a provoking house.”
On this verse:
“Concerning these matters, however, it should be known that they never reveal their good deeds unless, as I said, either the benefit of their neighbors or certainly extreme necessity compels them. Hence the Apostle Paul, when he had enumerated his virtues to the Corinthians, added: "I have become foolish; you compelled me." But it sometimes happens that when compelled by necessity, in the good things they report about themselves, they seek not the benefit of others but their own, just as blessed Job enumerates his deeds, saying: "I was an eye to the blind and a foot to the lame; I was a father to the poor, and the case I did not know I investigated most diligently." And many other things which he recalls having often done. But because, placed in the wound of his suffering, he was said by his reproaching friends to have acted impiously and to have been violent toward his neighbors and an oppressor of the poor, the holy man, caught between the scourges of God and the words of human reproach, saw his mind severely shaken and driven toward the pit of despair; he could have fallen at any moment had he not recalled to memory his good deeds, so that his spirit might be led back to hope, lest, overwhelmed by words and wounds, he perish in despair. Therefore, when he enumerates his good deeds, he does not desire to become known to others as if seeking praise, but he restores his spirit to hope.”
Imported from an open dataset — not yet checked against the printed edition.