portrait
Patristic

Peter Chrysologus

c. A.D. 380–450
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“(Serm. 148.) If you are not confounded when you hear of the birth of God, let not His conception disturb you, seeing the pure virginity of the mother removes all that might shock human reverence. And what offence against our awe and reverence is there, when the Deity entered into union with purity that was always dear to Him, where an Angel is mediator, faith is bridemaid, where chastity is the giving away, virtue the gift, conscience the judge, God the cause; where the conception is inviolateness, the birth virginity, and the mother a virginq.”
Catena Aurea: Gospel of Matthew, as excerpted in the Catena Aurea on Matthew 1:18 PD · J. H. Newman (Oxford, 1841) ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“Let them approach to hear this, who ask, Who is He that Mary bare? He shall save His people; not any other man’s people; from what? from their sins. That it is God that forgives sins, if you do not believe the Christians so affirming, believe the infidels, or the Jews who say, None can forgive sins but God only. (Luke 5:1.)”
Catena Aurea: Gospel of Matthew, as excerpted in the Catena Aurea on Matthew 1:21 PD · J. H. Newman (Oxford, 1841) ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“(Serm. 50.) The Creator of all things, the Lord of the world, when He had for our sakes straitened Himself in the bonds of our flesh, began to have His own country as a man, began to be a citizen of Judæa, and to have parents, though Himself the parent of all, that affection might attach those whom fear had separated.”
Catena Aurea: Gospel of Matthew, as excerpted in the Catena Aurea on Matthew 9:1-8 PD · J. H. Newman (Oxford, 1841) ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“(ubi sup.) Of how great power with God must a man’s own faith be, when that of others here availed to heal a man both within and without. The paralytic hears his pardon pronounced, in silence uttering no thanks, for he was more anxious for the cure of his body than his soul. Christ therefore with good reason accepts the faith of those that bare him, rather than his own hardness of heart.”
Catena Aurea: Gospel of Matthew, as excerpted in the Catena Aurea on Matthew 9:1-8 PD · J. H. Newman (Oxford, 1841) ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“(Serm. 75.)g. Because the sabbath is illuminated, not taken away, by Christ, Who said, I am not come to destroy the Law, but to fulfil it. (Matt. 5:17.) It is illuminated that it may lighten into the Lord’s day, and shine forth in the Church, when it had hitherto burnt dim, and been obscured by the Jews in the Synagogue. It follows, Came Mary Magdalen, and the other Mary, &c. Late runs woman for pardon, who had run early to sin; in paradise she had taken up unbelief, from the sepulchre she hastes to take up faith; she now hastens to snatch life from death, who had before snatched death from life. And it is not, They come, but came, (in the singular,) for in mystery and not by accident, the two came under one name. She came, but altered; a woman, changed in life, not in name; in virtue, not in sex. The women go before the Apostles, bearing to the Lord’s sepulchre a type of the Churches; the two Marys, to wit. For Mary is the name of Christ’s mother; and one name is twice repeated for two women, because herein is figured the Church coming out of the two nations, the Gentiles and the Jews, and being yet one. Mary came to the sepulchre, as to the womb of the resurrection, that Christ might be the second time born out of the sepulchre of faith, who after the flesh had been born of her womb; and that as a virgin had borne Him into this life present, so a sealed sepulchre might bring Him forth into life eternal. It is proof of Deity to have left a womb virgin after birth, and no less to have come forth in the body from a closed sepulchre.”
Catena Aurea: Gospel of Matthew, as excerpted in the Catena Aurea on Matthew 28:1-7 PD · J. H. Newman (Oxford, 1841) ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“(Serm. 77 et 74.) If the earth thus quaked when the Lord rose again to the pardon of the Saints, how will it quake when He shall rise again to the punishment of the wicked? As the Prophet speaks, The earth trembled when the Lord rose again to judgment. (Ps. 76:8.) And how will it endure the Lord’s presence, when it was unable to endure the presence of His Angel? And the Angel of the Lord descended from heaven. For when Christ arose, death was destroyed, commerce with heaven is restored to things on the earth; and woman, who had of old held communication to death with the Devil, now holds communication to life with the Angel.”
Catena Aurea: Gospel of Matthew, as excerpted in the Catena Aurea on Matthew 28:1-7 PD · J. H. Newman (Oxford, 1841) ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“(Serm. 74.) He said not ‘rolled,’ but rolled back; because the rolling to of the stone was a proof of death; the rolling it back asserted the resurrection. The order of things is changed; The Tomb devours death, and not the dead; the house of death becomes the mansion of life; a new law is imposed upon it, it receives a dead, and renders up a living, man. It follows, And sat thereon. He sat down, who was incapable of weariness; but sat as a teacher of the faith, a master of the Resurrection; upon the stone, that the firmness of his seat might assure the sted fastness of the believers; the Angel rested the foundations of the Faith upon that rock, on which Christ was to found His Church. Or, by the stone of the sepulchre may be denoted death, under which we all lay; and by the Angel sitting thereon, is shewn that Christ hath by His might subdued death.”
Catena Aurea: Gospel of Matthew, as excerpted in the Catena Aurea on Matthew 28:1-7 PD · J. H. Newman (Oxford, 1841) ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“(Serm. 75.) The splendour of his countenance is distinct from the shining of his raiment; his countenance is compared to lightning, his raiment to snow; for the lightning is in heaven, snow on the earth; as the Prophet saith, Praise the Lord from the earth; fire and hail, snow and vapours. (Ps. 148:7.) Thus in the Angel’s countenance is preserved the splendour of his heavenly nature; in his raiment is shewn the grace of human communion. For the appearance of the Angel that talked with them is so ordered, that eyes of flesh might endure the still splendour of his robes, and by reason of his shining countenance they might tremble before the messenger of their Maker.”
Catena Aurea: Gospel of Matthew, as excerpted in the Catena Aurea on Matthew 28:1-7 PD · J. H. Newman (Oxford, 1841) ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“(Serm. 75.) For they kept watch over Him with a purpose of cruelty, not with the solicitude of affection. And no man can stand who is forsaken by his own conscience, or troubled with a sense of guilt. Hence the Angel confounds the wicked, and comforts the good.”
Catena Aurea: Gospel of Matthew, as excerpted in the Catena Aurea on Matthew 28:1-7 PD · J. H. Newman (Oxford, 1841) ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“(Serm. 77.) For their faith had been bowed by the cruel storm of His Passion, so that they sought Him yet as crucified and dead; I know that ye seek Jesus which was crucified; the weight of the trial had bent them to look for the Lord of heaven in the tomb, but, He is not here.”
Catena Aurea: Gospel of Matthew, as excerpted in the Catena Aurea on Matthew 28:1-7 PD · J. H. Newman (Oxford, 1841) ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“(Serm. 76.) Thus the Angel first announces His name, declares His Cross, and confesses His Passion; but straightway proclaims Him risen and their Lord. An Angel after such sufferings, after the grave acknowledges Him Lord; how then shall man judge that the Godhead was diminished by the flesh, or that His Might failed in His Passion. He says, Which was crucified, and points out the place where the Lord was laid, that they should not think that it was another, and not the same, who had risen from the dead. And if the Lord reappears in the same flesh, and gives evidence of His resurrection, why should man suppose that he himself shall reappear in other flesh? Or why should a slave disdain his own flesh, seeing the Lord did not change ours?”
Catena Aurea: Gospel of Matthew, as excerpted in the Catena Aurea on Matthew 28:1-7 PD · J. H. Newman (Oxford, 1841) ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“(Serm. 77.) As much as to say, Woman, now thou art healed, return to the man, and persuade him! to faith, whom thou didst once persuade to treachery. Carry to man the proof of the Resurrection, to whom thou didst once carry counsel of destruction.”
Catena Aurea: Gospel of Matthew, as excerpted in the Catena Aurea on Matthew 28:1-7 PD · J. H. Newman (Oxford, 1841) ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“(Serm. 76.) That in these women is contained a full figure of the Church is shewn hereby, that Christ convinces His disciples when in doubt concerning the Resurrection, and confirms them when in fear; and when He meets them He does not terrify them by His power, but prevents them with the ardour of love. And Christ in His Church salutes Himself, for He has taken it into His own Body.”
Catena Aurea: Gospel of Matthew, as excerpted in the Catena Aurea on Matthew 28:8-10 PD · J. H. Newman (Oxford, 1841) ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“(ubi sup.) They hold Christ’s feet, who in the Church present the type of Evangelic preaching, and merit this privilege by their running to Him; and by faith so detain their Saviour’s footsteps, that they may come to the honour of His perfect Godhead. She is deservedly bid to touch me not, who mourns her Lord upon earth, and so seeks Him dead in the tomb, as not to know that He reigns in heaven with the Father. This, that the same Mary, one while exalted to the summit of faith, touches Christ, and holds Him with entire and holy affection; and again, cast down in weakness of flesh, and womanly infirmity, doubts, undeserving to touch her Lord, causes us no difficulty. For that is of mystery, this of her sex; that is of divine grace, this of human nature. And so also we, when we have knowledge of divine things, live unto God; when we are wise in human things, we are blinded by our own selves.”
Catena Aurea: Gospel of Matthew, as excerpted in the Catena Aurea on Matthew 28:8-10 PD · J. H. Newman (Oxford, 1841) ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“(Serm. 80.) They held His feet to shew that the head of Christ is the man, but that the woman is in Christ’s feet, and that it was given to them through Christ, not to go before, but to follow the man. Christ also repeats what the Angel had said, that what an Angel had made sure, Christ might make yet more sure. It follows, Then saith Jesus unto them, Fear not.”
Catena Aurea: Gospel of Matthew, as excerpted in the Catena Aurea on Matthew 28:8-10 PD · J. H. Newman (Oxford, 1841) ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“(ubi sup.) Not content to have put the Master to death, they plot how they may destroy the disciples, and make the Master’s power matter of charge against His disciples. The soldiers indeed lost Him, the Jews missed Him, but the disciples crimed Him away, not by theft, but by faith; by virtue, and not by fraud; by holiness, and not by wickedness; alive, and not dead.”
Catena Aurea: Gospel of Matthew, as excerpted in the Catena Aurea on Matthew 28:11-15 PD · J. H. Newman (Oxford, 1841) ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“God seeks belief from you not death. He thirsts for self-dedication, not blood. He is placated by good will, not by slaughter. God gave proof of this when he asked holy Abraham for his son as a victim. For what else than his own body was Abraham immolating in his son? What else than faith was God requiring in the father, since he ordered the son to be offered but did not allow him to be killed?”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Gen 22:18 (SERMON 108) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“This is why he summons Moses by his fatherly voice, addresses him with paternal love and invites him to be the liberator of his people. Why should I say more? He makes him a god; he sets him up as a god before Pharaoh. He makes him a god, fortifies him with signs, arms him with virtues, wins wars through mere commands, grants to him as a soldier victory gained by a mere word. By his orders he concedes him a triumph and leads him through all the crowns of virtues to his own friendship, gives him an opportunity to share in his heavenly kingdom and allows him to be a legislator. However, Moses received all this that he might love—that at length he might be so inflamed with the love of God that he would burn with it himself and encourage others to have it too.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Exod 3:4 (SERMON 147) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“Hence it is that through the influence of these three things Moses is made a god: for the sake of his military triumphs he brings all the elements under his control. He bids the sea to withdraw, its waves to solidify, its bottom to become dry and the sky to drop its rain. He supplies food, compels the winds to scatter meats, illumines the night with the splendor of the sun, tempers the sun by the veil of the cloud. He strikes the rock to make it yield from its fresh wound cool streams of water for those who thirst. He first gives to the earth heaven's law, writes down the norms of living, sets the terms of disciplinary control.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Exod 7:1 (SERMON 43) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“At one time he appears all aglow in a bush. For you are cold with the perfidy of infidelity, and he wants to enkindle you with the heat of faith. At another time he glows like fire in a pillar extending toward heaven, that the darkness of your ignorance may be removed and that you can follow the way of saving knowledge through the wilderness of this world. At yet another time he is changed for you into a pillar of cloud, in order to restrain the burning ebullience of your passions.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Exod 13:21 (SERMON 170) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“This name is related to prophecy and salutary to those reborn. It is the badge of virginity, the glory of purity, the indication of chastity, the sacrificial gift of God, the height of hospitality, the sum total of sanctity. Rightly therefore is this motherly name that of the mother of Christ.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Exod 15:20 (SERMON 146) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“The rain of manna fed the Jewish people for forty years in the desert. It did not by its customary service cause an increase of sprouts from the earth but streamed on the earth like harvested grains. It took away all the toil of human labor and by its pleasant dew offered and spread out heavenly produce for the hungry.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Exod 16:4 (SERMON 166) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“Moses himself was so purified and freed from his body by a fast of forty days that his whole self took on a glorious appearance of divinity. Still in the darkness of our body, he gleamed with the full radiance of divinity. The eyes of mortals could not gaze upon him who, long nourished by the substance of God, had forgotten all about the aids provided by mortals' food. From this he learned that the sustenance of life does not fail those who live in God's sight and with him.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Exod 24:18 (SERMON 166) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“This is why love which longs to see God, even if it lacks judgment, does have the spirit of devotion. This is why Moses dares to say, "If I have found favor in your sight, show me your face." This is why another man says, "Show us your face." Finally, this is why the Gentiles fashioned idols. In their errors they wanted to see with their eyes what they were worshiping.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Exod 33:18 (SERMON 147) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“The soothsayer Balaam set up a scandal for the people of Israel when he went to meet their warriors, not with men in armor but with women arrayed in all their finery. He hoped to make the men drop their arms for debauchery, change their triumph into disgrace, bring the avengers of guilt into guilt themselves and—to put it briefly—to profane all their holiness into depravity. As a result of it all, when Moses was meting out punishment, he sentenced Balaam thus: "Kill Balaam the soothsayer, because he set up a stumbling block before the children of Israel."”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Num 31:8 (SERMON 27) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“The twelve patriarchs destined to become twelve tribes were arranged to be a type and pattern of the number of the apostles. So were the twelve fountains in the desert and twelve stones taken from the bed of the Jordan. We leave it to the student of the law to find deeper proof of all this.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Josh 4:3-4 (SERMON 1.0) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“Now let us talk also about the second kind of scandal, which, we said, arises from human cleverness.… Jeroboam raised up a scandal. He set up as gods for the people, golden calves—pitiful images—to keep them from seeking the living God, the true temple, God's law, the rightly appointed kings and their ancestral rites. Consequently, the whole people thus delivered over to error became a source of scandal like that given, according to the apostle, when a person eats, as harmless to his own conscience, the flesh of animals that were sacrificed to idols. He thinks that through such conduct he may well bring contempt on the inanimate stones and wooden gods that can neither sanctify nor profane anything. But what he thinks is an example of his faith becomes an occasion of error for uninstructed people, for it leads them not to contempt but to worship, and it causes the meal to appear to be a banquet of religious honor to those very inanimate gods that he is intentionally diminishing by this ridicule. Consequently, the apostle wisely concludes and explains, "And through your 'knowledge' the weak one will perish, the brother for whom Christ died."”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on 1Kgs 12:30 (SERMON 27) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“A burdened stomach drags down the heart toward vices and depresses the mind to keep it unable to experience heavenly piety. Scripture tells us, "The corruptible body is a load on the soul, and the earthly habitation presses down the mind that muses on many things." Hence, the Lord said, too, "Take heed lest your hearts be overburdened with self-indulgence and drunkenness." Therefore, the stomach should be relieved by the tempering influence of a fast, so that the mind can be unburdened and attend to higher things, rise to virtues and like a winged bird fly in its entirety to the very Author of piety. The case of Elijah proves this. Relieved of bodily weight by continuing that fast that the Lord arranged, he flew to heaven as victor over death.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on 2Kgs 2:11 (SERMON 2) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“"And he killed for him the fattened calf." About that David sang, "And it shall please God better than a young calf that has horns and hoofs." The calf was slain at this command of the Father, because the Christ, God as the Son of God, could not be slain without the command of his Father. Listen to the apostle: "He who has not spared even his own son but has delivered him for us all." He is the calf who is daily and continually immolated for our food.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Ps 69:31 (SERMON 5) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“"Sing joyfully to God, all the earth." What is it that an understanding of this great joy is likely to make clear? Why is it that, after God gave commandments so great, so terrifying and so awesome, he now invites the earth to a shout of joy? "Sing joyfully to God, all the earth," the text reads.What other reason is there than the following? The awesome God later on chose the role of a very gentle shepherd. He assumed this character in order to act as a merciful shepherd and gather together, like straggling sheep into one fold, those wandering peoples, those straying nations, those tribes scattered far and wide. Yes, more, he wanted to lead back to the use of milk and grass and restore those wild nations that were languishing after the prey of a carcass, the eating of flesh, the drinking of blood and the fury of beasts. Briefly, he desired to make them once more truly humble sheep. "All the earth sing joyfully to God," he says, and by this command he imposes his shepherdly control on all the earth. The resounding trumpet draws the soldier forth to war; just so does the sweetness of this jubilant call invite the sheep to pasture. How fitting it was to mitigate the din of fighting by shepherdly kindness, in order that such gentle grace might save the nations that their own natural wildness had long been destroying.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Ps 98:4 (SERMON 6) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“The sky that you behold, O man [a listener who is a sensible person], made completely of air, carries many waters and is not itself supported by anything else, since a mere command hung it up and the sole force of a precept supports it. The divine revelation states, "Who stretches out the heaven like a pavilion, who covers the higher rooms thereof with water." The great weight and burden of the mountains rests on the earth, which is made solid by its own mass; and that earth floats on a foundation of liquid, as the prophet testifies: "Who established the earth above the waters." Consequently, the fact that it stands arises from a commandment, not from nature. "He spoke, and they were made; he commanded, and they were created." Therefore, the fact that the world holds together is a matter of divine operation, not of human understanding. The sea rolls along with the high crest of its own waves and is raised aloft toward the clouds. Yet, light sands hem it in. Hence we see that its great might yields not to the sand but to a precept. All the beings in the sky and earth and sea move and live after they have been made by one sole command. The prophet affirms that they will be dissolved again by a mere command when he says, "In the beginning, O Lord, you founded the earth, and the heavens are the works of your hands. They shall perish, but you remain; and all of them shall all grow old like a garment, and as a garment shall you change them, and they shall be changed." How? In such a way that their great age may fail through time but not that creation will perish before the eyes of its Creator.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Ps 104:2-3 (SERMON 101) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“"And he summoned the twelve," the text says. After the long centuries of dreadful night, the eternal day, our Christ, shone forth. The world had long awaited the splendor of his dawning. In the case of his twelve apostles he desired to signify the twelve hours of this day. The blessed psalmist saw this day in spirit when he sang, "This is the day that the Lord has made; let us be glad and rejoice in it." Consequently, the apostle, too, calls the believers children of light and of faith: "You are children of the light and children of the day."”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Ps 118:24-25 (SERMON 170) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“Futile is the act of the father and mother, unless the Creator's work and will also touch the offspring. "Your hands have made me and formed me." And elsewhere it is written, "You have formed me and have laid your hand on me." Therefore, we do not owe our birth and life to ourselves, but we owe them entirely to our Creator.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Ps 119:73 (SERMON 6) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“The law was given not for one, but for all. So, too, Christ came not for one or to one but to all and for all. He desired to bring all things together into a unity that alone is good and pleasant. The prophet, aware of the future, assures us, "Behold, how good and pleasant it is for brethren to dwell together in unity." For not singularity but unity is acceptable to God. The Holy Spirit descended on the apostles with all his welling fountain when they were assembled together. This occurred after the apostles had been instructed by the Lord's own commandment to wait in a group for the Spirit's coming.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Ps 133:1 (SERMON 132) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“"I have sinned against heaven and before you. I am no longer worthy to be called your son." The son set out abroad and fled into a far country; but he did not escape from those accusing witnesses, the eyes of the heavenly Father. David explains this more clearly by his words: "Whither shall I go from your spirit? or whither shall I flee from your face? If I ascend into heaven, you are there; if I descend into hell, you are present. If I take my wings early in the morning and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea, even there shall your hand lead me, and your right hand shall hold me." David sees that throughout the world all transgressions stand exposed to the eyes of God. Neither the sky, nor the earth, nor the seas, nor a deep cavern nor night itself can hide sins from him. The psalmist perceives how lawless and evil it is to sin in the sight of God. Therefore, he cries out, "To you only have I sinned and have done evil before you."”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Ps 139:7-10 (SERMON 2) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“Let your loins be girded about. Virtue should serve as a girdle in the place where passion should be checked. One who drops off the girdle of virtue cannot overcome the vices of the body. So girded with the cincture of purity—it is the badge of membership in the Christian army—let us cut away the dissolute cowardice of the flesh. Alert while watching our king, let us have no part in the restless sleep of worldly-minded people. For the wicked, Scripture says, "cannot sleep unless they have done wrong."”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Prov 4:16 (SERMON 22) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“"Our Father." No one should be astonished that one not yet born calls God Father. With God, beings who will be born are already born; with God future beings have been made. "The things that shall be," Scripture says, "have already been." [Thus] it is that while John was still in the womb he perceived his creator, and he who was unaware of his own life served as a messenger to his mother. [Thus] too we read that Jacob waged war before he was born and triumphed before he lived. [Thus] too, those who do not yet exist themselves are existent for God, that is, those who were chosen before the foundation of the world.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Eccl 3:15 (SERMON 70) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“"And he began to send them forth two by two." He sent them two by two that no one of them, being abandoned and alone, might fall into a denial, like Peter, or flee, like John. Human frailty quickly falls if it proudly relies on itself, despises companions and is unwilling to have a colleague. As Scripture says, "Woe to him that is alone, for when he falls, he has none to lift him up." The same Scripture testifies how much one is strengthened by another's aid, when it states, "A brother that is helped by his brother is like a strong city."”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Eccl 4:10 (SERMON 170) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“If you did not recognize him soon along with the angels, do acknowledge him now, even though very late, in company with the beasts. Otherwise, while you loiter, you may be deemed less than those very animals with whom you were previously compared.… Yet you argue and quibble with the Jews who turned away from their inns their Master whom the beasts welcomed in their cribs.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Isa 1:3 (SERMON 141) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“Why does the king of the Jews lie in a manger and not repose in the temple? Why is he not resplendent in purple rather than poorly clad rags? Why does he lie hidden in a cave and not on display in the sanctuary? The beasts have received in a manger him whom you have disdained to receive in his house. As it has been written.… But you, O Israel, have not sought out your Master.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Isa 1:3 (SERMON 156) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“But let us at this time feel remorse with all the affection of our hearts. Let us admit that we are wretched in this misery of the flesh. Let us weep with holy groans because we, too, have unclean lips. Let us do all this to make that one of the seraphim bring down to us, by means of the tongs of the law of grace, a flaming sacrament of faith taken for us from the heavenly altar. Let us do this to make him touch the tip of our lips with such delicate touch as to take away our iniquities, purge away our sins and so enkindle our mouths to the full flame of complete praise that the burning will be one that results in salvation, not pain. Let us beg, too, that the heat of that coal may penetrate all the way to our hearts. Thus we may draw not only relish for our lips from the great sweetness of this mystery but also complete satisfaction for our senses and minds.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Isa 6:7 (SERMON 57) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“[In the Gospels it is said,] "And he began to send them forth two by two." He sent them two by two that no one of them, being abandoned and alone, might fall into a denial, like Peter, or flee, like John. Human frailty quickly falls if it proudly relies on itself, despises companions and is unwilling to have a colleague. As Scripture says, "Woe to him that is alone, for when he falls, he has none to lift him up." The same Scripture testifies how much one is strengthened by another's aid, when it states, "A brother that is helped by his brother is like a strong city."… This was done also to fulfill the prophecy of Isaiah, who testified that he had seen a rider of a two-horse chariot, when he heard it said to him, "What do you see?" And he replied, "I see a rider of a two-horse chariot." Because of this he cried out right away that Babylon had fallen, and all its graven gods. Who doubts, brothers, that by this two-horse chariot Christ was riding upon his saving journeys, since he sees that through the apostles' preaching temples have fallen, idols have perished, the bleating of herds has ceased and the victims, along with even the very altars with their perfume of incense, have already disappeared through all the centuries.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Isa 21:7-9 (SERMON 170) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“Therefore, brothers, we should be careful neither to give scandal to others nor to take it ourselves when another gives it. It is scandal that troubles the senses, perturbs the mind, confuses our judgment otherwise sharp. It is a scandal that changed an angel into the devil, an apostle into a traitor; that brought sin into the world and allured humankind to death.… Scandal tempts the saints, fatigues the cautious, throws down the incautious, disturbs all things, confuses all people.… He uttered a warning to keep anyone else from coming to this, by saying, "It is impossible that scandals should not come; but woe to him through whom they come! It would be better for him if a millstone were hung about his neck and he were thrown into the sea, rather than that he should cause one of these little ones to sin."Why a millstone and not an ordinary stone? Because, while a millstone is grinding the grain, and pouring out the flour and separating the bran from the meal, it is simultaneously furnishing bread to those who are dutifully toiling. Rightly, therefore, is a millstone tied to the neck of the person who chooses to be a minister of scandal rather than of peace; the very same thing that should have drawn him to life may drag him down to death. For [such a person] has changed those senses given to aid him toward life into a stumbling block bringing death. Then they persuaded him to see something else, and hear, feel and relish something else than was in Christ and in his saving knowledge. In this way he has encompassed the cornerstone, the stone symbolizing help, the stone cut out without hands, that is, Christ, and he has turned it into a stumbling for the weak.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Isa 28:16 (SERMON 27) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“These Gentile peoples through their desire of worldly eloquence, through the brothels of the schools, through senseless disputation at the meeting places of the philosophical sects, dissipated the property of God the Father. By their conjectures they exhausted everything there was in the line of speech, knowledge, reason and judgment. But, even after that, these poor wretches still suffered the greatest need and most intense hunger to know the truth. Philosophy enjoined the task of seeking God, but of that truth to be learned it gathered no fruit.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Ezek 16:31 (SERMON 5) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“The psalmist instructs us to allot three periods a day to God when he says, "At evening, at morning and at midday I shall speak what I have to say, and you will hearken to my voice." For those three periods while Daniel diligently beseeched God, not only did they obtain foreknowledge of the future, but he also merited the freedom of his people held captive for so long.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Dan 6:10 (SERMON 21:6) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“A betrothed woman was chosen, so that Christ's church might already be symbolically indicated as bride, according to the words of the prophet Hosea: "I will make you my bride in justice and right; I will make you my bride in mercy and benevolence, and I will espouse you in fidelity." Thus John says, "He who has a bride is the bridegroom." And blessed Paul: "I have promised you to one bridegroom, to present you to Christ as a chaste virgin." She is truly a bride who regenerates the new infancy of Christ by a virginal birth.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Hos 2:19-20 (SERMON 146) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“"How many of my father's servants have bread in abundance, while here I am dying of hunger!" Hunger calls back those whom surfeit had scattered. Hunger made him recognize the father, whom abundance had led to see only the parent. And if involuntary hunger bore such fruit, find out for yourselves what voluntary fasting can produce. A full belly spurs the heart to vice, oppressing the mind so that it cannot taste heavenly piety. "The body," it says, "which decays, weighs down the soul and burdens the mind, which harbors many thoughts." Thus also the Lord says, "Do not let your hearts be weighed down with carousing and drunkenness." The stomach must therefore be kept empty with the temperance of fasting. The lightened soul can then tend upward, rising to virtues and freeing itself, winging toward the author of piety. This is confirmed by Elijah, who, purified by continual fasting, rose from the weight of the flesh toward heaven, conquering death.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on Wis 9:15 (SERMONS 2:1) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗
Peter Chrysologus · c. A.D. 380–450 A.D. 450
“Paul introduces a new kind of admonition by exhorting others "by the mercy of God." Why does he not exhort through God's might, or majesty, or glory? Why by his mercy? Because it was through that mercy alone that Paul escaped from the criminal state of a persecutor and obtained the dignity of his great apostolate. He himself tells us this, "For I formerly was a blasphemer, a persecutor and a bitter adversary; but I obtained the mercy of God." … "I exhort you by the mercy of God." Paul asks—rather, God himself is asking through Paul—for God has greater desire to be loved than feared. God is asking because he wants to be not so much a Lord as a Father.”
Historical Christian Faith commentaries database, on 1Tim 1:13 (SERMONS 108) PD · Historical Christian Faith commentaries database ↗

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