A citation from the library
Patristic A.D. 254 · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Ps 36:6 (HOMILIES ON LEVITICUS 14:4.5)

Origen, on Ps 35:6

Origen · c. A.D. 184–253
Ps 35:6 · Douay-Rheims
“O Lord, thy mercy is in heaven, and thy truth reacheth, even to the clouds.”
On this verse:
“Human beings, being ignorant of the judgments of God, which are "a great abyss," are accustomed to complain against God and to say, Why do unjust people and unjust robbers and impious and wicked ones suffer nothing adverse in this life but everything yields prosperity to them, honors, riches, power, health, and the health and strength of the body even serves them. On the contrary, innumerable tribulations come on the innocent and pious worshipers of God; they live rejected, humble, contemptible, under the blows of the powerful. Sometimes even more severe diseases dominate them in their body. But as I said, the ignorant complain about what order there is in the divine judgments. For however much more severely they want those to be punished whose power and iniquities they lament, there is that much greater necessity that the penalties be differed, that if they are not differed, … it is certain that they will be eternal and last forever. On the contrary, therefore, if they wanted good things to be given to the just and innocent in the present age, the good things themselves would also be temporal and would have to come to a quick end; but the more they are deferred into the future, by so much the more will they be perpetual and not know an end.”

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

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