A citation from the library
Patristic A.D. 420 · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Ps 72:6 (SERMON 97:3)

Maximus of Turin, on Ps 71:6

Maximus of Turin · d. c. A.D. 420
Ps 71:6 · Douay-Rheims
“He shall come down like rain upon the fleece; and as showers falling gently upon the earth.”
On this verse:
“Therefore, today the Lord was born according to the flesh in such secret silence that his generation was thoroughly ignorant of his birth. For the world did not know that he was born outside the knowledge of his father and that he was conceived outside the order of nature. For Joseph took as his son him whom he did not beget, and Mary gave birth to him whom she did not create in the ordinary manner of sexual intercourse. Thus the Lord was born in such a way that nobody would suspect or believe or perceive what his origin would be. How would they believe that this would happen when they scarcely believe what happened afterwards? As to the fact that the Savior would descend hiddenly and secretly into the virgin, the prophet David had already previously attested to that when he said, "He came down like rain on the fleece." For what takes place so silently, without a sound, as when rain is poured onto a fleece of wool? It doesn't strike anybody's ears with its sound; it doesn't splash anyone's body with the wetness of the dew bouncing off the flece, but without disturbing anyone, the fleece draws into itself in its entire body all the rain being poured through its many parts because it does not know any division into one channel, but rather offers many channels owing to its dense softness. It seems to be closed owing to its density, but is in truth absorbent owing to its fineness.”

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

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