A citation from the library
Catholic 1849 · Haydock’s Catholic Bible Commentary, Romans 3:19

George Leo Haydock, on Rom 3:19

George Leo Haydock · 1774–1849
Rom 3:19 · Douay-Rheims
“Now we know, that what things soever the law speaketh, it speaketh to them that are in the law; that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may be made subject to God.”
On this verse:
“And all the world may be made subject to God. That is, God permitted these sins in all men, that sanctification and salvation might be from Christ only, the Redeemer of all men, so that neither Jew nor Gentile should be justified, but by the free and liberal gift of his grace. See St. Chrysostom.[2] (Witham) — That the Jews might not say that these passages were to be understood of Gentiles, the apostle here assures them that they must be understood in the first place of the Jews themselves; for what the law speaketh, it speaketh to those who are under the law. If the Jews, then, were so guilty, the guilt of the Gentiles was far more enormous. Thus is every mouth stopped, and all the world must confess itself guilty before God. Let none then glory in their good works. (Calmet)”

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

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