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*H Then Judith sung this canticle to the Lord, saying:
Ver. 1. Sung. Gr. "Gave out this confession, in all Israel: and all the people echoed this praise;" (H.) either repeating the whole after her, or singing the first verse as a chorus. Ex. xv. 20. 1 K. xviii. 6. 1 Par. xvi. 8. C. — Saying. Gr. "And Judith said: Begin ye to my Lord." H. — It is time for us to break silence, and to sound forth the praises of God. C.
*H The Lord putteth an end to wars, the Lord is his name.
Ver. 3. Wars, or destroys armies. H. — God is often represented as a mighty warrior. Isai. i. 24. Jer. ii. 20. Rom. ix. 29. C. — This passage is quoted by S. Ephrem (ser. de 2. Adv.) as a part of Scripture. W. — Lord is. Gr. "For he has drawn me from the hands of my persecutors, into his camp, in the midst of the people." H.
*H The Assyrian came out of the mountains from the north in the multitude of his strength: his multitude stopped up the torrents, and their horses covered the valleys.
Ver. 5. Mountains of Cilicia, and through the defiles of Libanus and Hermon, on the north of Palestine, by which road they were forced to come. The desert Arabia was impassable for a large army. C. — North, inclining to the east. H. Isai. xiv. 13. Jer. i. 13. Ezec. i. 4. — Torrents, drinking them up, as Sennacherib boasted; (4 K. xix. 24.) and the Greeks assert the same of the army of Xerxes. Herod. vii. 108.
*H He bragged that he would set my borders on fire, and kill my young men with the sword, to make my infants a prey, and my virgins captives.
Ver. 6. To make. Gr. "that he would throw my children at the breast, on the pavement, and make," &c. H.
*H But the almighty Lord hath struck him, and hath delivered him into the hands of a woman, and hath slain him.
Ver. 7. Stuck. Lit. "hurt him, overturning all his projects, (C.) as the Greek ( ηθετησεν ) intimates. M. — Him. Gr. "them, by the hand of a woman: For," &c.
*H For their mighty one did not fall by young men, neither did the sons of Titan strike him, nor tall giants oppose themselves to him, but Judith the daughter of Merari weakened him with the beauty of her face.
Ver. 8. Men; soldiers. C. xiv. 6. Gen. xiv. 24. — Titan. So the Sept. render Raphaim. 2 K. v. 18. The Greek translator of this work seems to have read the poets, who pretend that the Titans attempted to take heaven by storm. C. — Neither such giants as those who lived before the flood, (Gen. vi.) nor such as were seen after, (Num. xiii. W.) attacked Holofernes. H. — Neither does the Vulg. give any authority to poetic fictions, but only adopts terms which are best understood. T. S. Jer. in Amos v. 8.
*H For she put off her the garments of widowhood, and put on her the garments of joy, to give joy to the children of Israel.
Ver. 9. And put. Gr. "for the exaltation of those who laboured in Israel."
*H She anointed her face with ointment, and bound up her locks with a crown, she took a new robe to deceive him.
Ver. 10. Crown. Gr. "mitre," or ribband, ornamented with jewels. C. x. 3. Syr. "net-work." — New. Gr. "linen stole," which was a long robe, usually of linen, and worn both by men and women. C. — Deceived him; as he would make love to her, and thus give her an opportunity to perform what she had designed. H. — She was not actuated by the desire of being admired, but sought to deliver her people, v. 9. M.
*H Her sandals ravished his eyes, her beauty made his soul her captive, with a sword she cut off his head.
Ver. 11. Sandals. The bandages which tied the shoe-soles (H.) to the feet, were most ornamental. Isai. iii. The city of Antylla was assigned to furnish sandals for the queens of Egypt. Herod. xii. 98. C. — With. Gr. "a sword (acinace) passed through his neck."
*H The Persians quaked at her constancy, and the Medes at her boldness.
Ver. 12. Medes. This is the first mention of these two nations, who afterwards became so famous. Nabuchodonosor had overcome Phraortes. C. i. C.
*H Then the camp of the Assyrians howled, when my lowly ones appeared, parched with thirst.
Ver. 13. Then. Gr. "Than my lowly ones (H. she speaks thus contemptuously of the Assyrians. C.) howled, my weak ones cried out through fear; they raised their voice, and were overthrown." H. — Others think that she is speaking of her fellow-citizens, (T.) or both. H.
*H The sons of the damsels have pierced them through, and they have killed them like children fleeing away: they perished in battle before the face of the Lord my God.
Ver. 14. Damsels; young boys. Syr. "they run them through, as if they had been damsels." — Children, or "slaves." Syr. Being thus overtaken, what could they do but sue for pardon? C. — Before. Gr. "of the Lord," &c.
*H Let us sing a hymn to the Lord, let us sing a new hymn to our God.
Ver. 15. Let. Gr. "I will sing a new hymn to the Lord. Lord, thou art great." H.
* Footnotes
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Psalms
32:9
For he spoke and they were made: he commanded and they were created.
*H Let all thy creatures serve thee: because thou hast spoken, and they were made: thou didst send forth thy spirit, and they were created, and there is no one that can resist thy voice.
Ver. 17. Spirit, and they. Gr. "he built" the world. Gen. i. 8. Ps. xxxii. 9. C.
* Summa
*S Part 4, Ques 20, Article 1
[III, Q. 20, Art. 1]
Whether We May Say That Christ Is Subject to the Father?
Objection 1: It would seem that we may not say that Christ was subject to the Father. For everything subject to the Father is a creature, since, as is said in _De Eccles. Dogm._ iv, "in the Trinity there is no dependence or subjection." But we cannot say simply that Christ is a creature, as was stated above (Q. 16, A. 8). Therefore we cannot say simply that Christ is subject to God the Father.
Obj. 2: Further, a thing is said to be subject to God when it is subservient to His dominion. But we cannot attribute subservience to the human nature of Christ; for Damascene says (De Fide Orth. iii, 21): "We must bear in mind that we may not call it" (i.e. Christ's human nature) "a servant; for the words 'subservience' and 'domination' are not names of the nature, but of relations, as the words 'paternity' and 'filiation.'" Hence Christ in His human nature is not subject to God the Father.
Obj. 3: Further, it is written (1 Cor. 15:28): "And when all things shall be subdued unto Him, then the Son also Himself shall be subject unto Him that put all things under Him." But, as is written (Heb. 2:8): "We see not as yet all things subject to Him." Hence He is not yet subject to the Father, Who has subjected all things to Him.
_On the contrary,_ Our Lord says (John 14:28), "The Father is greater than I"; and Augustine says (De Trin. i, 7): "It is not without reason that the Scripture mentions both, that the Son is equal to the Father and the Father greater than the Son, for the first is said on account of the form of God, and the second on account of the form of a servant, without any confusion." Now the less is subject to the greater. Therefore in the form of a servant Christ is subject to the Father.
_I answer that,_ Whoever has a nature is competent to have what is proper to that nature. Now human nature from its beginning has a threefold subjection to God. The first regards the degree of goodness, inasmuch as the Divine Nature is the very essence of goodness as is clear from Dionysius (Div. Nom. i) while a created nature has a participation of the Divine goodness, being subject, so to say, to the rays of this goodness. Secondly, human nature is subject to God, as regards God's power, inasmuch as human nature, even as every creature, is subject to the operation of the Divine ordinance. Thirdly, human nature is especially subject to God through its proper act, inasmuch as by its own will it obeys His command. This triple subjection to God Christ professes of Himself. The first (Matt. 19:17): "Why askest thou Me concerning good? One is good, God." And on this Jerome remarks: "He who had called Him a good master, and had not confessed Him to be God or the Son of God, learns that no man, however holy, is good in comparison with God." And hereby He gave us to understand that He Himself, in His human nature, did not attain to the height of Divine goodness. And because "in such things as are great, but not in bulk, to be great is the same as to be good," as Augustine says (De Trin. vi, 8), for this reason the Father is said to be greater than Christ in His human nature. The second subjection is attributed to Christ, inasmuch as all that befell Christ is believed to have happened by Divine appointment; hence Dionysius says (Coel. Hier. iv) that Christ "is subject to the ordinance of God the Father." And this is the subjection of subservience, whereby "every creature serves God" (Judith 16:17), being subject to His ordinance, according to Wis. 16:24: "The creature serving Thee the Creator." And in this way the Son of God (Phil. 2:7) is said to have taken "the form of a servant." The third subjection He attributes to Himself, saying (John 8:29): "I do always the things that please Him." And this is the subjection to the Father, of obedience unto death. Hence it is written (Phil. 2:8) that he became "obedient" to the Father "unto death."
Reply Obj. 1: As we are not to understand that Christ is a creature simply, but only in His human nature, whether this qualification be added or not, as stated above (Q. 16, A. 8), so also we are to understand that Christ is subject to the Father not simply but in His human nature, even if this qualification be not added; and yet it is better to add this qualification in order to avoid the error of Arius, who held the Son to be less than the Father.
Reply Obj. 2: The relation of subservience and dominion is based upon action and passion, inasmuch as it belongs to a servant to be moved by the will of his master. Now to act is not attributed to the nature as agent, but to the person, since "acts belong to supposita and to singulars," according to the Philosopher (Metaph. i, 1). Nevertheless action is attributed to the nature as to that whereby the person or hypostasis acts. Hence, although the nature is not properly said to rule or serve, yet every hypostasis or person may be properly said to be ruling or serving in this or that nature. And in this way nothing prevents Christ being subject or servant to the Father in human nature.
Reply Obj. 3: As Augustine says (De Trin. i, 8): "Christ will give the kingdom to God and the Father, when He has brought the faithful, over whom He now reigns by faith, to the vision," i.e. to see the essence common to the Father and the Son: and then He will be totally subject to the Father not only in Himself, but also in His members by the full participation of the Godhead. And then all things will be fully subject to Him by the final accomplishment of His will concerning them; although even now all things are subject to Him as regards His power, according to Matt. 28:18: "All power is given to Me in heaven and in earth." _______________________
SECOND
*H The mountains shall be moved from the foundations with the waters: the rocks shall melt as wax before thy face.
Ver. 18. Waters, by earthquakes and storms. Job ix. 5. Isai. v. 25. Ps. xvii. 8.
*H But they that fear thee, shall be great with thee in all things.
Ver. 19. Great. Gr. "treated mercifully by thee: for little with thee is all sacrifice, for the odour of sweetness; and all fat is but the least for thy holocausts. But he who fears the Lord, is ever great." H. — This text is remarkable, as it shews (C.) that no sacrifice can please God, without interior holiness. Outward magnificence will be otherwise rejected with contempt. W.
*H Woe be to the nation that riseth up against my people: for the Lord almighty will take revenge on them, in the day of judgment he will visit them.
Ver. 20. He will visit them, is not in Greek, and only expresses the same again. H.
*H For he will give fire, and worms into their flesh, that they may burn, and may feel for ever.
Ver. 21. Flesh, which is thus punished for ever, (S. Aug. de Civ. Dei xxv. 4.) while the soul is still more tormented with the loss of God's vision. W. — The bodies of those who persecute God's people, will not only be thrown out with ignominy, but the impenitent shall suffer eternal torments. These worms and fires do not cease. They are not merely figurative, but real, according to the Fathers. Serar. q. 1. T. Essais de Mor. — Though the damned have not yet their bodies, they are no less affected with pain; as people who have lost a member, often seem to feel pain in it. That our soul should even now suffer, when the body is hurt, depends on God's appointment. The Jews spoke of eternal torments in similar terms. Eccli. vii. 19. Isai. lxvi. 24. Mar. ix. 45.
*H And it came to pass after these things, that all the people, after the victory, came to Jerusalem to adore the Lord: and as soon as they were purified, they all offered holocausts, and vows, and their promises.
Ver. 22. And. Gr. "But as soon as they arrived at Jerusalem, they adored God; and when the people were purified, they offered their holocausts, and free gifts, and presents." H. — They stood in need of purification, as they had shed blood, and had touched so many things of the Assyrians, which were to them unclean. C. Num. xxxi. 24.
*H And Judith offered for an anathema of oblivion all the arms of Holofernes, which the people gave her, and the canopy that she had taken away out of his chamber.
Ver. 23. An anathema of oblivion. That is, a gift or offering made to God, by way of an everlasting monument, to prevent the oblivion or the forgetting of so great a benefit. Ch. — Yet some would read (C.) oblationis, instead of oblivionis. T. — Gr. and Syr. say nothing of oblivion. The Scriptures, and pagan histories, are full of such monuments of gratitude, to perpetuate the memory of benefits received from above. C. — Gr. "to the Lord, all the vessels," or furniture. C. xv. 14. H. — Joseph called one of his sons, Manasses, because God had caused him to forget his former toils. Gen. xli. 51. M. — Judith's husband had the same name; and this victory made her forget past sorrow. H.
*H And the people were joyful in the sight of the sanctuary, and for three months the joy of this victory was celebrated with Judith.
Ver. 24. Three. Syr. "one entire month." C. — Joy. Gr. "and Judith remained with them."
*H And after those days every man returned to his house, and Judith was made great in Bethulia, and she was most renowned in all the land of Israel.
Ver. 25. Was made. Gr. "returned also to Bethulia, and dwelt on her own possessions; and in her time, was honourable throughout all the land."
*H And chastity was joined to her virtue, so that she knew no man all the days of her life, after the death of Manasses her husband.
Ver. 26. Chastity. Gr. "many desired to have her, (H. in marriage. W.) but no man knew her," &c. H. — She again practised the same mortifications which she had done before. Suidas. C. — Husband. Gr. adds, "when he was removed to his people. And proceeding, (to the temple, or advancing in age) she was very great, and she grew old in her," &c. H. — She probably went up to Jerusalem at the great festivals. M.
*H And she abode in her husband's house a hundred and five years, and made her handmaid free, and she died, and was buried with her husband in Bethulia.
Ver. 28. Five. Suidas alone reads, "fifty." Some would suppose that Judith lived 105 years after her husband's death; so that she might have been in all 125 years old. But she would thus have survived the siege of Jerusalem under Nabuchodonosor; (C.) and the text does not require this sense. H. See Ex. xii. 40. T. — Free; as she had been her assistant in such a glorious work. M. — Died. Gr. adds, "in Bethulia; and they buried her in the cave of her husband, Manasses." See C. viii. 3.
*H And all the people mourned for seven days.
Ver. 29. Seven days. The usual term; (Eccli. xxii. 13.) but it was extra ordinary for the whole province (C.) to mourn for an individual. Gr. and Syr. add, "And she divided all her possessions, before her death, among the nearest relations of her husband, Manasses, and among her own," (H.) which was very equitable, as she had no children, (C.) we may suppose. T. H.
*H And all the time of her life there was none that troubled Israel, nor many years after her death.
Ver. 30. Years. Gr. "days." See the pref. H. — Judith was a widow near seventy years, shewing an excellent pattern to all in that state. Notwithstanding the many inducements which she might have had to marry again, she chose to abstain, for greater perfection. Mat. xix. and 1 Cor. vii. W. — From the death of Holofernes (A. 3348) to that of Josias, (A. 3394) only forty-six years of peace would occur in Juda. Hence Hardouin would suppose that the text speaks of the kingdom of Israel. But it would be hard to prove that it existed at that time, after the ten tribes had been led away. A. 3283. As the Scripture does not specify how old Judith was when she addressed Holofernes, (C.) she might be sixty-five. Vitre. — If, therefore, we should make this peace last till the coming of Nabuchodonosor, to attack Jerusalem, about forty-six years might elapse before the period here assigned. C. — It is, however, much more probable, (H.) that the peace subsisted from the 11th of Manasses to the death of Josias, 73 (Gr. 78) years; (T.) and that she was not above forty when she performed her exploit; as she was then styled a beautiful girl, (C. xii. 12.) and many desired to marry her. H. — No instance can be produced, of the Jews entering into such contracts with those who were past child-bearing. Freret, who seems afraid to allow this book the same authority as the additions to Daniel, though both are equally rejected by Protestants, supposes that Bethulia was besieged in the 11th or 12th year of Josias; and, of course, that Judith would then be about eighty-four years old! Houbigant.
*H But the day of the festivity of this victory is received by the Hebrews in the number of holy days, and is religiously observed by the Jews from that time until this day.
Ver. 31. But. This is taken from the Chaldee of S. Jerom, though omitted in the old Vulg. as well as in the Gr. and Syriac. We find no express mention of this festival in the Jews' Calendar, (C.) though no one can doubt but it once was kept. D. — It probably ceased during the captivity; as that, in memory of the victory over Nicanor, (which was kept in the days of Josephus, xii. 16.) has been long since abolished, (C.) with many others. D. — Many suppose (C.) that the feast of Judith concurred with that of the new fire, when the temple was renewed under Judas the Machabee, on the 25th of Casleu, (Salien, &c.) in December, though the victory of Judith was obtained about August. The point is not easily decided. As the festival was of human institution, it might be abrogated by the same authority. C. — In Judith we behold a widow indeed, such as the apostle commends. 1 Tim. v. 3. S. Jer. ad Furiam. — We may also raise our minds still higher, and contemplate in her a glorious figure of the Christian Church, which is spotless; and by the practice of all virtues, overcomes the power of persecutors, giving all the glory to God. After victory, she continues in silence to practise her former austerities, which render her secure in peace and terrible in war. C.