A citation from the library
Catholic 1274 · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Rom 5:4 (Commentary on Romans)

Thomas Aquinas, on Rom 5:4

Thomas Aquinas · 1225–1274
Rom 5:4 · Douay-Rheims
“And patience trial; and trial hope;”
On this verse:
“Second, he mentions the effect of patience when he says, and patience trial: for gold is tested in the fire and acceptable men in the furnace of humiliation (Sir 2:5). For it is plain that we accept the loss of some thing easily for the sake of another thing we love more. Hence, if a person endures patiently the loss of bodily and temporal goods for the sake of obtaining eternal benefits, this is sufficient proof that such a person loves eternal blessings more than temporal. However, James seems to say the opposite: the trial of your faith produces patience (Jas 1:3). The answer is that 'trial' can be understood in two ways. In one way, as it takes place in the one tested; then the trial is the very suffering through which a man is tested. Hence, it is the same to say that tribulation produces patience and that tribulation tests patience. In another way, trial is taken for the fact of having been tested. This is the way it is taken here, because if a person endures sufferings patiently, he has been tested. Third, he mentions the third, saying, and trial hope, namely, trial brings about hope, because after a person has been tested, hope can be had by himself and by others that he will be admitted to God's inheritance: God tested them and found them worthy of himself (Wis 3:5). Therefore, from the first to the last it is clear that suffering paves the way to hope. Hence, if a person rejoices strongly in hope, it follows that he will glory in his sufferings.”

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

Read Rom 5:4 in context →