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3 Jun 2026

Bread And The Word

Non in solo pane vivit homo, sed in omni verbo quod procedit de ore Dei.

Ubi non quasi Deus sua utitur potestate, sed quasi homo, ut homo disceret admodum pugnare Scipturarum potitur auctoritate. Et docet quod altera pars coeli sit, atque altera terrae. Idcirco non in solo pane, per quem non nisi exterior homo in commune cum pecoribus vivit, sed in omni verbo per quos interius angelis coaequaretur. Omne quippe verbum Deus charitas jure accipitur, in qua legis et prophetarum omnia pendent verba, sine qua nemo in Deo unquam vel cum Deo vivit. Quod bene Paulus insinuat: Et si quod est aliud mandatum, inquiens, in hoc verbo instauratur. Diliges proximum tuum tanquam teipsum. Ac si diceret, etiam est cibus alius quo pascatur interior homo, habeat aliquis charitatem, et omnibus abundavit bonis, quia fruitur illo verbo ad quod concurrunt universa. Nam in Christo Jesu Deus et homo erat; quisquis illo utitur verbo, charitate pascitur Dei et hominis, quia omnes in Christo diligit et veneratur ut membra Christi; et qui necdum sunt in Christo, curat ut ad eum perveniant, et compleantur omnia membra Christi. Alioquin si habeat omnia rerum verba, et compleat etiam reliqua quasi virtutum opera, factus est omnium reus, si non vixerit hoc omni verbo. Est autem hoc verbum generale omnium verborum, in quo pendent omnia verba, non qualiacunque, sed quae procedunt de ore Dei. Caeterum verba haereticorum et poetarum ac philosophorum, extra hoc verbum sunt, quia non sunt in charitate, neque Christo fruuntur, Patris videlicet Verbo, et ideo quae in Christo sunt omnino diligere nequeunt. Huic sane verbo Moyses intentus panem desiderare non potuit, illoque pastus Elias famem prolixioris inediae omnino non sensit. Non enim qui hoc verbo vescitur panem terrenum, deliciis angelorum satiatus, inquirit. Sed et omnia Scripturarum sanctarum verba, cujuscunque enuntientur officio, sic quasi ex ore Dei sumantur, quia non ejus sunt a quo ex ministerio debite narrantur, sed Dei ex cujus ore procedunt. Quod si quidpiam doctor aliud voluerit interserere, quam quod in hoc omni verbo invenitur, quia non ex ore Dei profertur, neque ex charitate subsistit, tanquam venenum, tanquam virus lethiferum respuatur. Quandoquidem non humanis divina ministrantur officiis, sed inimica, sed fraudulenta diabolicis suggeruntur officiis. Et notandum quod ait: Non in solo pane vivit homo. Ex quo datur indicium quia non deitas, sed homo tentatur, ita ut quomodo praemisi, tota haec tentatio exterius facta credatur.

Sanctus Paschasius Radbertus Corbeiensis, Expositio In Evangelium Matthaei, Liber III, Caput IV

Source: Migne PL 120.192b-193a
A man does not live on bread alone but on every word that comes forth from the mouth of God. 1

Where He uses His power as a man, not as God, so that man might learn how a man might fight by the authority of the Scriptures. He teaches that there is one part which is heaven and another of earth. Therefore it is not on bread alone, on which the exterior man alone lives, in the manner of beasts, but on every word by which the interior is made equal to angels. Certainly every word is rightly received as 'God is love,' on which all the words of the Law and the Prophets hang, 2 and without which no one lives in God or with God. Which Paul well suggests, saying, 'And as for any other commandment, with these words it is summed up, 'Love your neighbour as yourself.' 3 As if He had said, even if there is some other bread on which the interior man may feed, let a man have love, and he has abounded with every good, because he enjoys that Word to which everything hastens. Because in Christ Jesus was God and man, whoever makes use of that word is fed with the love of God and man, for all in Christ love and revere as members of Christ, and those who are not yet in Christ, have care that they might come to Him and complete the members of Christ. Besides if someone has every word and he fulfills all the rest as works of virtue, he is made guilty of all if he has not lived with these words for all. 4 For these words are the general word of all words, from which hangs all words, and it is not just any word, but what comes forth from the mouth of God. There are other words of heretics and poets and philosophers which are outside these words, because they are not spoken in love, nor are they fruitful in Christ, He who is the Word of the Father, and therefore they cannot love at all what is in Christ. Certainly, being intent on this Moses had no desire for bread, and when Elijah was fed on them he did not feel the starvation of a long famine. For he who feeds on this word does not seek the bread of the earth, but he is satiated with the delights of angels. And whoever has the duty of proclaiming all the words of Scripture, he takes them as from the mouth of God, for he should not tell them as if they were something of his own work, but as proceeding from the mouth of God. So if some teacher should wish to insert something other than what is found in these words, then because it does not proceed from the mouth of God, nor is it founded on love, so it is a poison and it is spat forth as a fatal venom. Whenever men do not minister to human affairs with Divine things, but with things that are harmful and deceitful, so they are brought under the devil's service. And it must be noted that He says, 'Man does not live on bread alone,' by which a sign is given that it is not Godhood that is tested here but man, so that, as we have said, this whole trial should be thought to be a matter of the exterior.

Saint Paschasius Radbertus, Commentary On The Gospel of Saint Matthew, Book 3, Chapter 4

1 Mt 4.4
2 1 Jn 4.8, Mt 22.40
3 Rom 13.9
4 James 2.10

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