State super vias et videte et interrogate de semitis antiquis quae sit via bona et ambulate in ea et invenietis refrigerium animabus vestris

29 Dec 2023

Hope For The Future

Et promissa ipsius exspectamus, in quibus justitia habitat.

Justitia habitat in futuro saeculo, quia tunc cuique fidelium pro modo sui certaminis reddetur corona justitiae, quod in hac vita nequaquam fieri potest, juxta illud Salomonis: Vidi sub sole in loco judicii impietatem, et in loco justitiae iniquitatem. Et dixi in corde meo: Justum et impium judicabit Deus, et tempus omni rei tunc erit. Et iterum: Vidi, inquit, calumnias quae sub sole geruntur, et lacrymas innocentium, et consolatorem neminem, nec posse resistere eorum violentiae cunctorum auxilio destitutos, et laudavi magis mortuos quam viventes. Ideo namque magis mortuos innocentes quam viventes laudavit, quia illi adhuc in certamine positi, isti autem perpetuae beatitudinis sunt mercede donati. Ideo autem sub sole calumnias se vidisse querebatur, quia supra solem noverat Judicem esse justum, qui in altis habitat, et humilia respicit, supra solem mansiones in quibus justi debita justitiae suae praemia percipiant. Potest hoc quod ait: in quibus justitia habitat, etiam juxta illud Psalmistae intelligi: Haec porta Domini, justi intrabunt per eam. Et in Apocalypsi, de civitate superna Joannes: Nec intrabit in eam, inquit, aliquid coinquinatum et faciens abominationem et mendacium, nisi qui scripti sunt in libro vitae Agni.

Sancta Beda, In II Epistolam Sancti Petri, Caput III

Source: Migne PL 93.82d-83b
And let us hope for His promises, in which justice dwells. 1

Justice dwells in the future age, because then shall be given to each of the faithful a crown of righteousness because of his struggle, which is not at all possible in this life. As Solomon says: 'I saw beneath the sun wickedness in the place of judgement, and in the place of righteousness iniquity, and I said in my heart, God shall judge the just man and the impious man, and then shall be the time of every thing.' 2 And again he says, 'I saw wrongs done beneath the sun, and the tears of the innocent, and they had no one to comfort them, nor could they resist the violence of them, utterly destitute of help, and I praised the dead more than the living.' 3 Thus he praised the innocent dead more than the living because the latter are still involved in the struggle and the former have received the reward of eternal beatitude. Therefore, having looked on wrongs beneath the sun, he complains to himself because he knows that above the sun there is a righteous judge, who dwells in the heights, 'who looks down on the humble,' 4 and there are those resting places above the the sun where the righteous receive the fitting reward of righteousness. 5 It is possible that when he says, 'in which justice dwells,' that it may be understood in the manner of Psalmist: 'This is the gate of the Lord, the righteous shall enter through it.' 6 And John says in the Apocalypse, concerning the heavenly city, 'They shall not enter into it who are defiled, and who make abominations, and who lie, but only those who are written in the book of life of the Lamb.' 7

Saint Bede, Commentary on the Second Letter of Peter, Chapter 3

1 2 Pet 3.13
2 Eccle 3.17
3 Eccle 4.2
4 Ps 112.5-6
5 Jn 14.1-2
6 Ps 117.20
7 Apoc 21.27

No comments:

Post a Comment