A citation from the library
Patristic A.D. 735 · Catena Aurea: Gospel of Mark, as excerpted in the Catena Aurea on Mark 3:31-35

Bede the Venerable, on Mark 3:31

Bede the Venerable · c. A.D. 672–735
Mark 3:31 · Douay-Rheims
“And his mother and his brethren came; and standing without, sent unto him, calling him.”
On this verse:
“(Ambr in Luc. 6, 36. Bede ubi sup.) Being asked therefore by a message to go out, He declines, not as though He refused the dutiful service of His mother, but to shew that He owes more to His Father’s mysteries than to His mother’s feelings. Nor does He rudely despise His brothers, but, preferring His spiritual work to fleshly relationship, He teaches us that religion is the bond of the heart rather than that of the body. Wherefore it goes on, And looking round about on them which sat about him, he said, Behold my mother and my brethren.”
PD · Catena Aurea: Commentary on the Four Gospels — St. Mark check against source ↗

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

Read Mark 3:31 in context →

This page is the stable address of one quotation — verbatim, dated, attributed, with its edition. Cite it freely.