A citation from the library
Thomas Aquinas, on Ps 16:11
Thomas Aquinas · 1225–1274
Ps 16:11 · Douay-Rheims
“They have cast me forth and now they have surrounded me: they have set their eyes bowing down to the earth.”
On this verse:
“Third, regarding deed. First, he shows how one proceeds to deed. Second, the cause of this, at "They have set their eyes." In the action he sets forth two things. First, the contempt. Second, the eagerness to do harm; and yet when someone despises, he is not eager to harm. And therefore he says, "casting me out," that is, despising me. Is. 33: "He has cast away cities; he has not regarded men." And yet "they surrounded me on every side with eagerness." And this the Jews did to Christ, when they cast him out of the city: Lk. 4. "And they surrounded me," gathering together for the spectacle to mock him (Acts 7). And the reason for this is that they do not look to God but to earthly things: Ps. 3: "There is no salvation for him in his God." "They set their eyes to turn them toward the earth," namely, the sinners set the intention of their heart to turn toward earthly things, with deliberation and persistence. Prov. 17: "The eyes of fools," that is, of sinners, "are on the ends of the earth." And therefore they do not receive the light of grace: Eccl. 2: "The eyes of the wise man are in his head; the fool," that is, the sinner, "walks in darkness," that is, in sins. Dan. 13: "They turned away their eyes so as not to see heaven." And this literally occurred among the Jews, when they said (Jn. 11): "Lest perhaps the Romans come and take away our place and our nation." Or "toward the earth," that is, toward the flesh of Christ, whose weakness alone they considered, and not his divinity; as if to say: they set their eyes, etc.”
Imported from an open dataset — not yet checked against the printed edition.