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Catholic 1274 · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on 1Cor 11:2 (Commentary on 1 Corinthians)

Thomas Aquinas, on 1Cor 11:2

Thomas Aquinas · 1225–1274
1Cor 11:2 · Douay-Rheims
“Now I praise you, brethren, that in all things you are mindful of me: and keep my ordinances as I have delivered them to you.”
On this verse:
“Then when he says, I commend you, brethren, he shows how the Corinthians were acting in regard to the above admonition. In regard to this it should be observed that subjects follow their prelates in two ways: namely, as to their deeds and words. In regard to deeds, when they imitate the example of their prelates; hence it says in Jas (5:10): "As an example take the prophets who spoke in the name of the Lord." In regard to deeds, when they obey their precepts: "Keep my commandments and live" (Pr 4:4). But the Corinthians failed in these things and especially the greater majority; consequently, the Apostle addressed them thus: I commend you, brethren. As if to say: You should offer yourselves to be praised on this point, but you do not, because you remember me in everything, so as it imitate my example. For we cannot imitate examples of ones we do not remember. Hence it says in Heb (13:7): "Remember your leaders; consider the outcome of their life and imitate their faith." As to words he adds: You maintain the traditions even as I have delivered them to you. As if to say: You observe them in the same tenor as I delivered them to you: for he says this, because he had not departed from observing the commandments: "If they keep my word, they will also keep yours" (Jn. 15:20). But this seems to be a manner of speaking not suited to the truth of the Sacred Scripture, which contains no falsity, as it says in Pr (8:8): "All the words of my mouth are righteous; and there is nothing twisted or crooked in them." The answer is that irony is one of the figures of speech, in which one does not pay attention to the sense which the words make in order to get the truth, but what the speaker intends to express by a similar or contrary or other way. Therefore, in irony the truth is really the contrary of what the words indicate, as in a metaphor the truth consists in a similarity.”

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

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