MATTHEW 7:12-14; LUKE 6:31
Matthew 7:12-14 | Luke 6:31 |
12. All things, therefore, whatsoever you would wish that man should do to you, do so also to them: for this is the Law and the Prophets. 13. Enter in by the strait gate: because broad is the gate, and wide is the road, which leadeth to destruction, and there are many who enter by it. 14. Because strait is the gate, and narrow is the road, which leadeth to life, and there are few who find it. | 31. And as you wish tha tmen should do to you, do you also to them likewise. |
Matthew 7:12.
Where our own advantage is concerned, there is not one of us, who cannot explain minutely and ingeniously what ought to be done. And since every man shows himself to be a skillful teacher of justice for his own advantage, how comes it, that the same knowledge does not readily occur to him, when the profit or loss of another is at stake, but because we wish to be wise for ourselves only, and no man cares about his neighbors? What is more, we maliciously and purposely shut our eyes upon the rule of justice, which shines in our hearts. Christ therefore shows, that every man may be a rule of acting properly and justly towards his neighbors, if he do to others what he requires to be done to him. He thus refutes all the vain pretenses, which men contrive for hiding or disguising their injustice. Perfect justice would undoubtedly prevail among us, if we were as faithful in learning
13.
He expressly says, that
It is sufficiently evident from Luke's Gospel, that the instruction, which we are now considering, was uttered by Christ at a different time from that on which he delivered the paradoxes,5 which we have formerly examined, about a
1 Greek proverbs, even when exhibited in a detached form, are frequently introduced by
2 "Si nous estions aussi bons disciples a prattiquer la charite active (si ainsi faut dire) comme nous sommes subtils docteurs a prescher la charite passive."--"If we were as good scholars in practising active charity, (if I may so express it,) as we are dexterous instructors in preaching passive charity."
3 ("Comme facilement les appetits de la chair nous tirent en leurs filets;") --("as the appetites of the flesh easily draw us into their nets.")
4 "Pource que les hommes se poussent les uns les autres au chemin de damnation par mauvais exemple;"--"because men urge each other on in the road to damnation by bad example."
5 "Quand il a prononce ces sentences que nous avons veues par ci de-vant, monstrant tout au contraire de l'opinion commune;"--"when he pronounced those sentences which we have formerly seen, showing it to be altogether contrary to the common opinion."
6 "Si je n'ay pas este plus scrupuleux ou curieux en conferant les passages tendans a un mesme poinct de doctrine;"--"if I have not been more careful or exact in comparing the passages relating to the same point of doctrine."
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