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Chapter XXII. ---- Holy Scripture in the New Testament, Even in Its Very First Verse, Testifies to Christ's True Flesh. In Virtue of Which He is Incorporated in the Human Stock of David, and Abraham, and Adam. |
Chapter XXII. ---- Holy Scripture in the New Testament, Even in Its Very First Verse, Testifies to Christ's True Flesh. In Virtue of Which He is Incorporated in the Human Stock of David, and Abraham, and Adam.
[1] They
may, then, obliterate the testimony of the devils which proclaimed Jesus the
son of David; but whatever unworthiness there be in this testimony, that of the
apostles they will never be able to efface, There is, first of all, Matthew,
that most faithful chronicler of the Gospel, because the
companion of the Lord; for no other reason in the world than to show us clearly
the fleshly original
of Christ, he thus begins his
Gospel: "The book of the generation of Jesus Christ, the son of David,
the son of Abraham."
[2] With a nature issuing from
such fountal sources, and an order gradually descending to the birth of Christ,
what else have we here described than the very flesh of Abraham and of David
conveying itself down, step after step, to the very virgin, and at last
introducing Christ, ---- nay, producing Christ Himself of the virgin? [3] Then, again, there is Paul,
who was at once both a disciple, and a master, and a witness of the selfsame
Gospel; as an apostle of the same Christ, also, he affirms that Christ
"was made of the seed of David, according to the flesh,"
---- which, therefore, was His own likewise.
Christ's flesh, then, is of David's seed. Since He is of the seed of David in
consequence of Mary's flesh, He is therefore of Mary's flesh because of the
seed of David. [4] In what way
so ever you torture the statement, He is either of the flesh of Mary because of
the seed of David, or He is of the seed of David because of the flesh of Mary.
The whole discussion is terminated by the same apostle, when he declares Christ
to be "the seed of Abraham." And if of Abraham, how much more, to be
sure, of David, as a more recent progenitor! [5] For, unfolding the promised blessing upon all
nations in the person
of Abraham, "And in thy seed
shall all nations of the earth be blessed," he adds, "He saith not,
And to seeds, as of many; but as of one, And to thy seed, which is
Christ."
[6] When we read and believe
these things, what sort of flesh ought we, and can we, acknowledge in Christ?
Surely none other than Abraham's, since Christ is "the seed of Abraham;
"none other than Jesse's, since Christ is the blossom of "the stem of
Jesse; "none other than David's, since Christ is "the fruit of
David's loins; "none other than Mary's, since Christ came from Mary's
womb; and, higher still, none other than Adam's, since Christ is "the
second Adam." The consequence, therefore, is that they must either
maintain, that those (ancestors) had a spiritual flesh, that so there might be
derived to Christ the same condition of substance, or else allow that the flesh
of Christ was not a spiritual one, since it is not traced from the origin
of a spiritual stock.