To Our Venerable Brethren, All Patriarchs, Primates, Archbishops, and Bishops
of the Catholic World, in Grace and Communion with the Apostolic See.
Venerable Brethren, Health and Apostolic Benediction.
The God of all Providence, Who in the adorable designs of His love at first
elevated the human race to the participation of the Divine nature, and
afterwards delivered it from universal guilt and ruin, restoring it to its
primitive dignity, has in consequence bestowed upon man a splendid gift and
safeguard -- making known to him, by supernatural means, the hidden mysteries of
His Divinity, His wisdom and His mercy. For although in Divine revelation there
are contained some things which are not beyond the reach of unassisted reason,
and which are made the objects of such revelation in order "that all may come to
know them with facility, certainty, and safety from error, yet not on this
account can supernatural Revelation be said to be absolutely necessary; it is
only necessary because God has ordinated man to a supernatural end."1 This
supernatural revelation, according to the belief of the universal Church, is
contained both in unwritten Tradition, and in written Books, which are therefore
called sacred and canonical because, "being written under the inspiration of the
Holy Ghost, they have God for their author and as such have been delivered to
the Church."2 This belief has been perpetually held and professed by the
Church in regard to the Books of both Testaments; and there are well-known
documents of the gravest kind, coming down to us from the earliest times, which
proclaim that God, Who spoke first by the Prophets, then by His own mouth, and
lastly by the Apostles, composed also the Canonical Scriptures,3 and that
these are His own oracles and words4 -- a Letter, written by our heavenly
Father, and transmitted by the sacred writers to the human race in its
pilgrimage so far from its heavenly country.5 If, then, such and so great is
the excellence and the dignity of the Scriptures, that God Himself has composed
them, and that they treat of God's marvelous mysteries, counsels and works, it
follows that the branch of sacred Theology which is concerned with the defense
and elucidation of these divine Books must be excellent and useful in the
highest degree.
2. Now We, who by the help of God, and not without fruit, have by frequent
Letters and exhortation endeavored to promote other branches of study which
seemed capable of advancing the glory of God and contributing to the salvation
of souls, have for a long time cherished the desire to give an impulse to the
noble science of Holy Scripture, and to impart to Scripture study a direction
suitable to the needs of the present day. The solicitude of the Apostolic office
naturally urges, and even compels us, not only to desire that this grand source
of Catholic revelation should be made safely and abundantly accessible to the
flock of Jesus Christ, but also not to suffer any attempt to defile or corrupt
it, either on the part of those who impiously and openly assail the Scriptures,
or of those who are led astray into fallacious and imprudent novelties. We are
not ignorant, indeed, Venerable Brethren, that there are not a few Catholics,
men of talent and learning, who do devote themselves with ardor to the defense
of the sacred writings and to making them better known and understood. But
whilst giving to these the commendation they deserve, We cannot but earnestly
exhort others also, from whose skill and piety and learning we have a right to
expect good results, to give themselves to the same most praiseworthy work. It
is Our wish and fervent desire to see an increase in the number of the approved
and persevering laborers in the cause of Holy Scripture; and more especially
that those whom Divine Grace has called to Holy Orders, should, day-by-day, as
their state demands, display greater diligence and industry in reading,
meditating, and explaining it.
3. Among the reasons for which the Holy Scripture is so worthy of
commendation -- in addition to its own excellence and to the homage which we owe
to God's Word -- the chief of all is, the innumerable benefits of which it is
the source; according to the infallible testimony of the Holy Ghost Himself, who
says: "All Scripture, inspired of God, is profitable to teach, to reprove, to
correct, to instruct in justice, that the man of God may be perfect, furnished
to every good work."6 That such was the purpose of God in giving the Scripture
of men is shown by the example of Christ our Lord and of His Apostles. For He
Himself Who "obtained authority by miracles, merited belief by authority, and by
belief drew to Himself the multitude"7 was accustomed in the exercise of His
Divine Mission, to appeal to the Scriptures. He uses them at times to prove that
He is sent by God, and is God Himself. From them He cites instructions for His
disciples and confirmation of His doctrine. He vindicates them from the
calumnies of objectors; he quotes them against Sadducees and Pharisees, and
retorts from them upon Satan himself when he dares to tempt Him. At the close of
His life His utterances are from Holy Scripture, and it is the Scripture that He
expounds to His disciples after His resurrection, until He ascends to the glory
of His Father. Faithful to His precepts, the Apostles, although He Himself
granted "signs and wonders to be done by their hands"8 nevertheless used with
the greatest effect the sacred writings, in order to persuade the nations
everywhere of the wisdom of Christianity, to conquer the obstinacy of the Jews,
and to suppress the outbreak of heresy. This is plainly seen in their
discourses, especially in those of St. Peter: these were often little less than
a series of citations from the Old Testament supporting in the strongest manner
the new dispensation. We find the same thing in the Gospels of St. Matthew and
St. John and in the Catholic Epistles; and most remarkably of all in the words
of him who "boasts that he learned the law at the feet of Gamaliel, in order
that, being armed with spiritual weapons, he might afterwards say with
confidence, 'The arms of our warfare are not carnal but mighty unto God'."9
Let all, therefore, especially the novices of the ecclesiastical army,
understand how deeply the sacred Books should be esteemed, and with what
eagerness and reverence they should approach this great arsenal of heavenly
arms. For those whose duty it is to handle Catholic doctrine before the learned
or the unlearned will nowhere find more ample matter or more abundant
exhortation, whether on the subject of God, the supreme Good and the all-perfect
Being, or of the works which display His Glory and His love. Nowhere is there
anything more full or more express on the subject of the Savior of the world
than is to be found in the whole range of the Bible. As St. Jerome says, "To be
ignorant of the Scripture is not to know Christ."10 In its pages His Image
stands out, living and breathing; diffusing everywhere around consolation in
trouble, encouragement to virtue and attraction to the love of God. And as to
the Church, her institutions, her nature, her office, and her gifts, we find in
Holy Scripture so many references and so many ready and convincing arguments,
that as St. Jerome again most truly says: "A man who is well grounded in the
testimonies of the Scripture is the bulwark of the Church.''11 And if we come
to morality and discipline, an apostolic man finds in the sacred writings
abundant and excellent assistance; most holy precepts, gentle and strong
exhortation, splendid examples of every virtue, and finally the promise of
eternal reward and the threat of eternal punishment, uttered in terms of solemn
import, in God's name and in God's own words.
4. And it is this peculiar and singular power of Holy Scripture, arising from
the inspiration of the Holy Ghost, which gives authority to the sacred orator,
fills him with apostolic liberty of speech, and communicates force and power to
his eloquence. For those who infuse into their efforts the spirit and strength
of the Word of God, speak "not in word only but in power also, and in the Holy
Ghost, and in much fulness.''12 Hence those preachers are foolish and
improvident who, in speaking of religion and proclaiming the things of God, use
no words but those of human science and human prudence, trusting to their own reasonings
rather than to those of God. Their discourses may be brilliant and fine, but
they must be feeble and they must be cold, for they are without the fire of the
utterance of God13 and they must fall far short of that mighty
power which the speech of God possesses: "for the Word of God is living and
effectual, and more piercing than any two-edged sword; and reaching unto the
division of the soul and the spirit.''14 But, indeed, all those who have a
right to speak are agreed that there is in the Holy Scripture an eloquence that
is wonderfully varied and rich, and worthy of great themes. This St. Augustine
thoroughly understood and has abundantly set forth.15 This also is confirmed
by the best preachers of all ages, who have gratefully acknowledged that they
owed their repute chiefly to the assiduous use of the Bible, and to devout
meditation on its pages.
5. The Holy Fathers well knew all this by practical experience, and they
never cease to extol the sacred Scripture and its fruits. In innumerable
passages of their writings we find them applying to it such phrases as "an
inexhaustible treasury of heavenly doctrine,''16 or "an overflowing fountain
of salvation,''17 or putting it before us as fertile pastures and
beautiful gardens in which the flock of the Lord is marvelously refreshed and
delighted.18 Let us listen to the words of St. Jerome. in his Epistle to Nepotian: "Often read the divine Scriptures; yea, let holy reading be always in
thy hand; study that which thou thyself must preach. . . Let the speech of the
priest be ever seasoned with Scriptural reading.''19 St. Gregory the Great,
than whom no one has more admirably described the pastoral office, writes in the
same sense: "Those," he says, "who are zealous in the work of preaching must
never cease the study of the written word of God."20 St. Augustine, however,
warns us that "vainly does the preacher utter the Word of God exteriorly unless
he listens to it interiorly;''21 and St. Gregory instructs sacred orators
"first to find in Holy Scripture the knowledge of themselves, and then to carry
it to others, lest in reproving others they forget themselves."22 Admonitions
such as these had, indeed, been uttered long before by the Apostolic voice which
had learnt its lesson from Christ Himself, Who "began to do and teach." It was
not to Timothy alone, but to the whole order of the clergy, that the command was
addressed: "Take heed to thyself and to doctrine; be earnest in them. For in
doing this thou shalt both save thyself and them that hear thee."23 For the
saving and for the perfection of ourselves and of others there is at hand the
very best of help in the Holy Scriptures, as the Book of Psalms, among others,
so constantly insists; but those only will find it who bring to this divine
reading not only docility and attention, but also piety and an innocent life.
For the Sacred Scripture is not like other books. Dictated by the Holy Ghost, it
contains things of the deepest importance, which in many instances are most
difficult and obscure. To understand and explain such things there is always
required the "coming"24 of the same Holy Spirit; that is to say, His light and
His grace; and these, as the Royal Psalmist so frequently insists, are to be
sought by humble prayer and guarded by holiness of life.
6. It is in this that the watchful care of the Church shines forth
conspicuously. By admirable laws and regulations, she has always shown herself
solicitous that "the celestial treasure of the Sacred Books, so bountifully
bestowed upon man by the Holy Spirit, should not lie neglected."25 She has
prescribed that a considerable portion of them shall be read and piously
reflected upon by all her ministers in the daily office of the sacred psalmody.
She has ordered that in Cathedral Churches, in monasteries, and in other
convents in which study can conveniently be pursued, they shall be expounded and
interpreted by capable men; and she has strictly commanded that her children
shall be fed with the saving words of the Gospel at least on Sundays and solemn
feasts.26 Moreover, it is owing to the wisdom and exertions of the Church that
there has always been continued from century to century that cultivation of Holy
Scripture which has been so remarkable and has borne such ample fruit.
7. And here, in order to strengthen Our teaching and Our exhortations, it is
well to recall how, from the beginning of Christianity, all who have been
renowned for holiness of life and sacred learning have given their deep and
constant attention to Holy Scripture. If we consider the immediate disciples of
the Apostles, St. Clement of Rome, St. Ignatius of Antioch, St. Polycarp -- or
the apologists, such as St. Justin and St. Irenaeus, we find that in their
letters and their books, whether in defense of the Catholic Faith or in its
commendation, they draw faith, strength, and unction from the Word of God. When
there arose, in various Sees, Catechetical and Theological schools, of which the
most celebrated were those of Alexandria and of Antioch, there was little taught
in those schools but what was contained in the reading, the interpretation and
the defense of the divine written word. From them came forth numbers of Fathers
and writers whose laborious studies and admirable writings have justly merited
for the three following centuries the appellation of the golden age of biblical
exegesis. In the Eastern Church, the greatest name of all is Origen -- a man
remarkable alike for penetration of genius and for persevering labor; from whose
numerous works and his great Hexapla almost all have drawn that came after him.
Others who have widened the field of this science may also be named, as
especially eminent; thus, Alexandria could boast of St. Clement and St. Cyril;
Palestine, of Eusebius and the other St. Cyril; Cappadocia, of St. Basil the
Great and the two St. Gregories. of Nazianzus and Nyssa; Antioch, of St. John
Chrysostom, in whom the science of Scripture was rivaled by the splendor of his
eloquence. In the Western Church there were many names as great: Tertullian, St.
Cyprian, St. Hilary, St. Ambrose, St. Leo the Great, St. Gregory the Great; most
famous of all, St. Augustine and St. Jerome, of whom the former was so
marvelously acute in penetrating the sense of God's Word and so fertile in the
use that he made of it for the promotion of the Catholic truth, and the latter
has received from the Church, by reason of his pre-eminent knowledge of
Scripture and his labors in promoting its use, the name of the "great
Doctor."27 From this period down to the eleventh century, although Biblical
studies did not flourish with the same vigor and the same fruitfulness as
before, yet they did flourish, and principally by the instrumentality of the
clergy. It was their care and solicitude that selected the best and most useful
things that the ancients had left, arranged them in order, and published them
with additions of their own -- as did S. Isidore of Seville, Venerable Bede, and
Alcuin, among the most prominent; it was they who illustrated the sacred pages
with "glosses" or short commentaries, as we see in Walafrid Strabo and St.
Anselm of Laon, or expended fresh labor in securing their integrity, as did St.
Peter Damian and Blessed Lanfranc. In the twelfth century many took up with
great success the allegorical exposition of Scripture. In this kind, St. Bernard
is pre-eminent; and his writings, it may be said, are Scripture all through.
With the age of the scholastics came fresh and welcome progress in the study of
the Bible. That the scholastics were solicitous about the genuineness of the
Latin version is evident from the Correctoria Biblica, or lists of emendations,
which they have left. But they expended their labors and industry chiefly on
interpretation and explanation. To them we owe the accurate and clear
distinction, such as had not been given before, of the various senses of the
sacred words; the assignment of the value of each "sense" in theology; the
division of books into parts, and the summaries of the various parts; the
investigation of the objects of the writers; the demonstration of the connection
of sentence with sentence, and clause with clause; all of which is calculated to
throw much light on the more obscure passages of the sacred volume. The valuable
work of the scholastics in Holy Scripture is seen in their theological treatises
and in their Scripture commentaries; and in this respect the greatest name among
them all is St. Thomas of Aquin.
8. When our predecessor, Clement V., established chairs of Oriental
literature in the Roman College and in the principal Universities of Europe,
Catholics began to make more accurate investigation on the original text of the
Bible, as well as on the Latin version. The revival amongst us of Greek
learning, and, much more, the happy invention of the art of printing, gave a
strong impetus to Biblical studies. In a brief space of time, innumerable
editions, especially of the Vulgate, poured from the press and were diffused
throughout the Catholic world; so honored and loved was Holy Scripture during
that very period against which the enemies of the Church direct their calumnies.
Nor must we forget how many learned men there were, chiefly among the religious
orders, who did excellent work for the Bible between the Council of Vienne and
that of Trent; men who, by the employment of modern means and appliances, and by
the tribute of their own genius and learning, not only added to the rich stores
of ancient times, but prepared the way for the succeeding century, the century
which followed the Council of Trent, when it almost seemed that the great age of
the Fathers had returned. For it is well known, and We recall it with pleasure,
that Our predecessors from Pius IV. to Clement VIII. caused to be prepared the
celebrated editions of the Vulgate and the Septuagint, which, having been
published by the command and authority of Sixtus V. and of the same Clement, are
now in common use. At this time, moreover, were carefully brought out various
other ancient versions of the Bible, and the Polyglots of Antwerp and of Paris,
most important for the investigation of the true meaning of the text; nor is
there any one Book of either Testament which did not find more than one
expositor, nor any grave question which did not profitably exercise the ability
of many inquirers, among whom there are not a few -- more especially of those
who made most use of the Fathers -- who have acquired great reputation. From
that time downwards the labor and solicitude of Catholics has never been
wanting; for, as time went on, eminent scholars have carried on Biblical study
with success, and have defended Holy Scripture against rationalism with the same
weapons of philology and kindred sciences with which it had been attacked. The
calm and fair consideration of what has been said will clearly show that the
Church has never failed in taking due measures to bring the Scriptures within
reach of her children, and that she has ever held fast and exercised profitably
that guardianship conferred upon her by Almighty God for the protection and
glory of His Holy Word; so that she has never required, nor does she now
require, any stimulation from without.
9. We must now, Venerable Brethren, as our purpose demands, impart to you
such counsels as seem best suited for carrying on successfully the study of
Biblical science.
10. But first it must be clearly understood whom we have to oppose and
contend against, and what are their tactics and their arms. In earlier times the
contest was chiefly with those who, relying on private judgment and repudiating
the divine traditions and teaching office of the Church, held the Scriptures to
be the one source of revelation and the final appeal in matters of Faith. Now,
we have to meet the Rationalists, true children and inheritors of the older
heretics, who, trusting in their turn to their own way of thinking, have
rejected even the scraps and remnants of Christian belief which had been handed
down to them. They deny that there is any such thing as revelation or
inspiration, or Holy Scripture at all; they see, instead, only the forgeries and
the falsehoods of men; they set down the Scripture narratives as stupid fables
and Iying stories: the prophecies and the oracles of God are to them either
predictions made up after the event or forecasts formed by the light of nature;
the miracles and the wonders of God's power are not what they are said to be,
but the startling effects of natural law, or else mere tricks and myths; and the
Apostolic Gospels and writings are not the work of the Apostles at all. These
detestable errors, whereby they think they destroy the truth of the divine
Books, are obtruded on the world as the peremptory pronouncements of a certain
newly-invented "free science;" a science, however, which is so far from final
that they are perpetually modifying and supplementing it. And there are some of
them who, notwithstanding their impious opinions and utterances about God, and
Christ, the Gospels and the rest of Holy Scripture, would fain be considered
both theologians and Christians and men of the Gospel, and who attempt to
disguise by such honorable names their rashness and their pride. To them we must
add not a few professors of other sciences who approve their views and give them
assistance, and are urged to attack the Bible by a similar intolerance of
revelation. And it is deplorable to see these attacks growing every day more
numerous and more severe. It is sometimes men of learning and judgment who are
assailed; but these have little difficulty in defending themselves from evil
consequences. The efforts and the arts of the enemy are chiefly directed against
the more ignorant masses of the people. They diffuse their deadly poison by
means of books, pamphlets, and newspapers; they spread it by addresses and by
conversation; they are found everywhere; and they are in possession of numerous
schools, taken by violence from the Church, in which, by ridicule and scurrilous
jesting, they pervert the credulous and unformed minds of the young to the
contempt of Holy Scripture. Should not these things, Venerable Brethren, stir up
and set on fire the heart of every Pastor, so that to this "knowledge, falsely
so called,"28 may be opposed the ancient and true science which the Church,
through the Apostles, has received from Christ, and that Holy Scripture may find
the champions that are needed in so momentous a battle?
11. Let our first care, then be to see that in Seminaries and Academical
institutions the study of Holy Scripture be placed on such a footing as its own
importance and the circumstances of the time demand. With this view, the first
thing which requires attention is the wise choice of Professors. Teachers of
Sacred Scripture are not to be appointed at hap-hazard out of the crowd; but
they must be men whose character and fitness are proved by their love of, and
their long familiarity with, the Bible, and by suitable learning and study.
12. It is a matter of equal importance to provide in time for a continuous
succession of such teachers; and it will be well, wherever this can be done, to
select young men of good promise who have successfully accomplished their
theological course, and to set them apart exclusively for Holy Scripture,
affording them facilities for full and complete studies. Professors thus chosen
and thus prepared may enter with confidence on the task that is appointed for
them; and that they may carry out their work well and profitably, let them take
heed to the instructions We now proceed to give.
13. At the commencement of a course of Holy Scripture let the Professor
strive earnestly to form the judgment of the young beginners so as to train them
equally to defend the sacred writings and to penetrate their meaning. This is
the object of the treatise which is called "Introduction." Here the student is
taught how to prove the integrity and authority of the Bible, how to investigate
and ascertain its true sense, and how to meet and refute objections. It is
needless to insist upon the importance of making these preliminary studies in an
orderly and thorough fashion, with the accompaniment and assistance of Theology;
for the whole subsequent course must rest on the foundation thus laid and make
use of the light thus acquired. Next, the teacher will turn his earnest
attention to that more fruitful division of Scripture science which has to do
with Interpretation; wherein is imparted the method of using the word of God for
the advantage of religion and piety. We recognize without hesitation that
neither the extent of the matter nor the time at disposal allows each single
Book of the Bible to be separately gone through. But the teaching should result
in a definite and ascertained method of interpretation -- and therefore the
Professor should equally avoid the mistake of giving a mere taste of every Book,
and of dwelling at too great length on a part of one Book. If most schools
cannot do what is done in the large institutions -- that is, take the students
through the whole of one or two Books continuously and with a certain
development -- yet at least those parts which are selected should be treated
with suitable fullness; in such a way that the students may learn from the
sample that is thus put before them to love and use the remainder of the sacred
Book during the whole of their lives. The Professor, following the tradition of
antiquity, will make use of the Vulgate as his text; for the Council of Trent
decreed that "in public lectures, disputations, preaching, and exposition,"29
the Vulgate is the "authentic" version; and this is the existing custom of the
Church. At the same time, the other versions which Christian antiquity has
approved, should not be neglected, more especially the more ancient MSS. For
although the meaning of the Hebrew and Greek is substantially rendered by the
Vulgate, nevertheless wherever there may be ambiguity or want of clearness, the
"examination of older tongues,"30 to quote St. Augustine,
will be useful and advantageous. But in this matter we need hardly say that the
greatest prudence is required, for the "office of a commentator," as St. Jerome
says, "is to set forth not what he himself would prefer, but what his author
says."31 The
question of "readings" having been, when necessary, carefully discussed, the
next thing is to investigate and expound the meaning. And the first counsel to
be given is this: That the more our adversaries contend to the contrary, so much
the more solicitously should we adhere to the received and approved canons of
interpretation. Hence, whilst weighing the meanings of words, the connection of
ideas, the parallelism of passages, and the like, we should by all means make
use of such illustrations as can be drawn from apposite erudition of an external
sort; but this should be done with caution, so as not to bestow on questions of
this kind more labor and time than are spent on the Sacred Books themselves, and
not to overload the minds of the students with a mass of information that will
be rather a hindrance than a help.
14. The Professor may now safely pass on to the use of Scripture in matters
of Theology. On this head it must be observed that in addition to the usual
reasons which make ancient writings more or less difficult to understand, there
are some which are peculiar to the Bible. For the language of the Bible is
employed to express, under the inspiration of the Holy Ghost, many things which
are beyond the power and scope of the reason of man -- that is to say, divine
mysteries and all that is related to them. There is sometimes in such passages a
fullness and a hidden depth of meaning which the letter hardly expresses and
which the laws of interpretation hardly warrant. Moreover, the literal sense
itself frequently admits other senses, adapted to illustrate dogma or to confirm
morality. Wherefore it must be recognized that the sacred writings are wrapt in
a certain religious obscurity, and that no one can enter into their interior
without a guide32; God so disposing, as the Holy Fathers commonly teach, in
order that men may investigate them with greater ardor and earnestness, and that
what is attained with difficulty may sink more deeply into the mind and heart;
and, most of all, that they may understand that God has delivered the Holy
Scriptures to the Church, and that in reading and making use of His Word, they
must follow the Church as their guide and their teacher. St. Irenaeus long since
laid down, that where the charismata of God were, there the truth was to be
learnt, and that Holy Scripture was safely interpreted by those who had the
Apostolic succession.33 His teaching, and that of other Holy Fathers, is taken
up by the Council of the Vatican, which, in renewing the decree of Trent
declares its "mind" to be this -- that "in things of faith and morals, belonging
to the building up of Christian doctrine, that is to be considered the true
sense of Holy Scripture which has been held and is held by our Holy Mother the
Church, whose place it is to judge of the true sense and interpretation of the
Scriptures; and therefore that it is permitted to no one to interpret Holy
Scripture against such sense or also against the unanimous agreement of the
Fathers."34 By this most wise decree the Church by no means prevents or
restrains the pursuit of Biblical science, but rather protects it from error,
and largely assists its real progress. A wide field is still left open to the
private student, in which his hermeneutical skill may display itself with signal
effect and to the advantage of the Church. On the one hand, in those passages of
Holy Scripture which have not as yet received a certain and definitive
interpretation, such labors may, in the benignant providence of God, prepare for
and bring to maturity the judgment of the Church; on the other, in passages
already defined, the private student may do work equally valuable, either by
setting them forth more clearly to the flock and more skillfully to scholars, or
by defending them more powerfully from hostile attack. Wherefore the first and
dearest object of the Catholic commentator should be to interpret those passages
which have received an authentic interpretation either from the sacred writers
themselves, under the inspiration of the Holy Ghost (as in many places of the
New Testament), or from the Church, under the assistance of the same Holy
Spirit, whether by her solemn judgment or her ordinary and universal
magisterium35 -- to interpret these passages in that identical sense, and to
prove, by all the resources of science, that sound hermeneutical laws admit of
no other interpretation. In the other passages, the analogy of faith should be
followed, and Catholic doctrine, as authoritatively proposed by the Church,
should be held as the supreme law; for, seeing that the same God is the author
both of the Sacred Books and of the doctrine committed to the Church, it is
clearly impossible that any teaching can by legitimate means be extracted from
the former, which shall in any respect be at variance with the latter. Hence it
follows that all interpretation is foolish and false which either makes the
sacred writers disagree one with another, or is opposed to the doctrine of the
Church. The Professor of Holy Scripture, therefore, amongst other
recommendations, must be well acquainted with the whole circle of Theology and
deeply read in the commentaries of the Holy Fathers and Doctors, and other
interpreters of mark.36 This is inculcated by St. Jerome, and still more
frequently by St. Augustine, who thus justly complains: "If there is no branch
of teaching, however humble and easy to learn, which does not require a master,
what can be a greater sign of rashness and pride than to refuse to study the
Books of the divine mysteries by the help of those who have interpreted
them?"37 The other Fathers have said the same, and have confirmed it by their
example, for they "endeavored to acquire the understanding of the Holy
Scriptures not by their own lights and ideas, but from the writings and
authority of the ancients, who in their turn, as we know, received the rule of
interpretation in direct line from the Apostles."38 The Holy Fathers "to whom,
after the Apostles, the Church owes its growth -- who have planted, watered,
built, governed, and cherished it,"39 the Holy Fathers, We say, are of supreme
authority, whenever they all interpret in one and the same manner any text of
the Bible, as pertaining to the doctrine of faith or morals; for their unanimity
clearly evinces that such interpretation has come down from the Apostles as a
matter of Catholic faith. The opinion of the Fathers is also of very great
weight when they treat of these matters in their capacity of doctors,
unofficially; not only because they excel in their knowledge of revealed
doctrine and in their acquaintance with many things which are useful in
understanding the apostolic Books, but because they are men of eminent sanctity
and of ardent zeal for the truth, on whom God has bestowed a more ample measure
of His light. Wherefore the expositor should make it his duty to follow their
footsteps with all reverence, and to use their labors with intelligent
appreciation.
15. But he must not on that account consider that it is forbidden, when just
cause exists, to push inquiry and exposition beyond what the Fathers have done;
provided he carefully observes the rule so wisely laid down by St. Augustine --
not to depart from the literal and obvious sense, except only where reason makes
it untenable or necessity requires;40 a rule to which it is the more necessary
to adhere strictly in these times, when the thirst for novelty and unrestrained
freedom of thought make the danger of error most real and proximate. Neither
should those passages be neglected which the Fathers have understood in an
allegorical or figurative sense, more especially when such interpretation is
justified by the literal, and when it rests on the authority of many. For this
method of interpretation has been received by the Church from the Apostles, and
has been approved by her own practice, as the holy Liturgy attests; although it
is true that the holy Fathers did not thereby pretend directly to demonstrate
dogmas of faith, but used it as a means of promoting virtue and piety, such as,
by their own experience, they knew to be most valuable. The authority of other
Catholic interpreters is not so great; but the study of Scripture has always
continued to advance in the Church, and, therefore, these commentaries also have
their own honorable place, and are serviceable in many ways for the refutation
of assailants and the explanation of difficulties. But it is most unbecoming to
pass by, in ignorance or contempt, the excellent work which Catholics have left
in abundance, and to have recourse to the works of non-Catholics -- and to seek
in them, to the detriment of sound doctrine and often to the peril of faith, the
explanation of passages on which Catholics long ago have successfully employed
their talent and their labor. For although the studies of non-Catholics, used
with prudence, may sometimes be of use to the Catholic student, he should,
nevertheless, bear well in mind -- as the Fathers also teach in numerous
passages41 -- that the sense of Holy Scripture can nowhere be found incorrupt
out side of the Church, and cannot be expected to be found in writers who, being
without the true faith, only gnaw the bark of the Sacred Scripture, and never
attain its pith.
16. Most desirable is it, and most essential, that the whole teaching of
Theology should be pervaded and animated by the use of the divine Word of God.
This is what the Fathers and the greatest theologians of all ages have desired
and reduced to practice. It was chiefly out of the Sacred Writings that they
endeavored to proclaim and establish the Articles of Faith and the truths
therewith connected, and it was in them, together with divine Tradition, that
they found the refutation of heretical error, and the reasonableness, the true
meaning, and the mutual relation of the truths of Catholicism. Nor will any one
wonder at this who considers that the Sacred Books hold such an eminent position
among the sources of revelation that without their assiduous study and use,
Theology cannot be placed on its true footing, or treated as its dignity
demands. For although it is right and proper that students in academies and
schools should be chiefly exercised in acquiring a scientific knowledge of
dogma, by means of reasoning from the Articles of Faith to their consequences,
according to the rules of approved and sound philosophy -- nevertheless the
judicious and instructed theologian will by no means pass by that method of
doctrinal demonstration which draws its proof from the authority of the Bible;
"for (Theology) does not receive her first principles from any other science,
but immediately from God by revelation. And, therefore, she does not receive of
other sciences as from a superior, but uses them as her inferiors or
handmaids."42 It is this view of doctrinal teaching which is laid down and
recommended by the prince of theologians, St. Thomas of Aquinas;43 who,
moreover, shows -- such being the essential character of Christian Theology --
how she can defend her own principles against attack: "If the adversary," he
says, "do but grant any portion of the divine revelation, we have an argument
against him; thus, against a heretic we can employ Scripture authority, and
against those who deny one article, we can use another. But if our opponent
reject divine revelation entirely, there is then no way left to prove the
Article of Faith by reasoning; we can only solve the difficulties which are
raised against them."44 Care must be taken, then, that beginners approach the
study of the Bible well prepared and furnished; otherwise, just hopes will be
frustrated, or, perchance, what is worse, they will unthinkingly risk the danger
of error, falling an easy prey to the sophisms and labored erudition of the
Rationalists. The best preparation will be a conscientious application to
philosophy and theology under the guidance of St. Thomas of Aquin, and a
thorough training therein -- as We ourselves have elsewhere pointed out and
directed. By this means, both in Biblical studies and in that part of Theology
which is called positive, they will pursue the right path and make satisfactory
progress.
17. To prove, to expound, to illustrate Catholic Doctrine by the legitimate
and skillful interpretation of the Bible, is much; but there is a second part of
the subject of equal importance and equal difficulty -- the maintenance in the
strongest possible way of its full authority. This cannot be done completely or
satisfactorily except by means of the living and proper magisterium of the
Church. The Church, "by reason of her wonderful propagation, her distinguished
sanctity and inexhaustible fecundity in good, her Catholic unity, and her
unshaken stability, is herself a great and perpetual motive of credibility, and
an unassailable testimony to her own Divine mission."45 But since the divine
and infallible magisterium of the Church rests also on the authority of Holy
Scripture, the first thing to be done is to vindicate the trustworthiness of the
sacred records at least as human documents, from which can be clearly proved, as
from primitive and authentic testimony, the Divinity and the mission of Christ
our Lord, the institution of a hierarchical Church and the primacy of Peter and
his successors. It is most desirable, therefore, that there should be numerous
members of the clergy well prepared to enter upon a contest of this nature, and
to repulse hostile assaults, chiefly trusting in that armor of God recommended
by the Apostle,46 but also not unaccustomed to modern methods of attack. This
is beautifully alluded to by St. John Chrysostom, when describing the duties of
priests: "We must use every endeavor that the 'Word of God may dwell in us
abundantly'47 and not merely for one kind of fight must we be prepared -- for
the contest is many-sided and the enemy is of every sort; and they do not all
use the same weapons nor make their onset in the same way. Wherefore it is
needful that the man who has to contend against all should be acquainted with
the engines and the arts of all -- that he should be at once archer and slinger,
commandant and officer, general and private soldier, foot-soldier and horseman,
skilled in sea-fight and in siege; for unless he knows every trick and turn of
war, the devil is well able, if only a single door be left open, to get in his
fierce bands and carry off the sheep."48 The sophisms of the enemy and his
manifold arts of attack we have already touched upon. Let us now say a word of
advice on the means of defense. The first means is the study of the Oriental
languages and of the art of criticism. These two acquirements are in these days
held in high estimation, and therefore the clergy, by making themselves more or
less fully acquainted with them as time and place may demand, will the better be
able to discharge their office with becoming credit; for they must make
themselves "all to all,"49 always "ready to satisfy every one that asketh them
a reason for the hope that is in them."50 Hence it is most proper that
Professors of Sacred Scripture and theologians should master those tongues in
which the sacred Books were originally written; and it would be well that Church
students also should cultivate them, more especially those who aspire to
academic degrees. And endeavors should be made to establish in all academic
institutions -- as has already been laudably done in many -- chairs of the other
ancient languages, especially the Semitic, and of subjects connected therewith,
for the benefit principally of those who are intended to profess sacred
literature. These latter, with a similar object in view, should make themselves
well and thoroughly acquainted with the art of true criticism. There has arisen,
to the great detriment of religion, an inept method, dignified by the name of
the "higher criticism," which pretends to judge of the origin, integrity and
authority of each Book from internal indications alone. It is clear, on the
other hand, that in historical questions, such as the origin and the handing
down of writings, the witness of history is of primary importance, and that
historical investigation should be made with the utmost care; and that in this
matter internal evidence is seldom of great value, except as confirmation. To
look upon it in any other light will be to open the door to many evil
consequences. It will make the enemies of religion much more bold and confident
in attacking and mangling the Sacred Books; and this vaunted "higher criticism"
will resolve itself into the reflection of the bias and the prejudice of the
critics. It will not throw on the Scripture the light which is sought, or prove
of any advantage to doctrine; it will only give rise to disagreement and
dissension, those sure notes of error, which the critics in question so
plentifully exhibit in their own persons; and seeing that most of them are
tainted with false philosophy and rationalism, it must lead to the elimination
from the sacred writings of all prophecy and miracle, and of everything else
that is outside the natural order.
18. In the second place, we have to contend against those who, making an evil
use of physical science, minutely scrutinize the Sacred Book in order to detect
the writers in a mistake, and to take occasion to vilify its contents. Attacks
of this kind, bearing as they do on matters of sensible experience, are
peculiarly dangerous to the masses, and also to the young who are beginning
their literary studies; for the young, if they lose their reverence for the Holy
Scripture on one or more points, are easily led to give up believing in it
altogether. It need not be pointed out how the nature of science, just as it is
so admirably adapted to show forth the glory of the Great Creator, provided it
be taught as it should be, so if it be perversely imparted to the youthful
intelligence, it may prove most fatal in destroying the principles of true
philosophy and in the corruption of morality. Hence to the Professor of Sacred
Scripture a knowledge of natural science will be of very great assistance in
detecting such attacks on the Sacred Books, and in refuting them. There can
never, indeed, be any real discrepancy between the theologian and the physicist,
as long as each confines himself within his own lines, and both are careful, as
St. Augustine warns us, "not to make rash assertions, or to assert what is not
known as known.''51 If dissension should arise between them, here is the rule
also laid down by St. Augustine, for the theologian: "Whatever they can really
demonstrate to be true of physical nature, we must show to be capable of
reconciliation with our Scriptures; and whatever they assert in their treatises
which is contrary to these Scriptures of ours, that is to Catholic faith, we
must either prove it as well as we can to be entirely false, or at all events we
must, without the smallest hesitation, believe it to be so."52 To understand
how just is the rule here formulated we must remember, first, that the sacred
writers, or to speak more accurately, the Holy Ghost "Who spoke by them, did not
intend to teach men these things (that is to say, the essential nature of the
things of the visible universe), things in no way profitable unto
salvation."53 Hence they did not seek to penetrate the secrets of nature, but
rather described and dealt with things in more or less figurative language, or
in terms which were commonly used at the time and which in many instances are in
daily use at this day, even by the most eminent men of science. Ordinary speech
primarily and properly describes what comes under the senses; and somewhat in
the same way the sacred writers -- as the Angelic Doctor also reminds us --
"went by what sensibly appeared,"54 or put down what God, speaking to men,
signified, in the way men could understand and were accustomed to.
19. The unshrinking defense of the Holy Scripture, however, does not require
that we should equally uphold all the opinions which each of the Fathers or the
more recent interpreters have put forth in explaining it; for it may be that, in
commenting on passages where physical matters occur, they have sometimes
expressed the ideas of their own times, and thus made statements which in these
days have been abandoned as incorrect. Hence, in their interpretations, we must
carefully note what they lay down as belonging to faith, or as intimately
connected with faith -- what they are unanimous in. For "in those things which
do not come under the obligation of faith, the Saints were at liberty to hold
divergent opinions, just as we ourselves are,"55 according to the saying of
St. Thomas. And in another place he says most admirably: "When philosophers are
agreed upon a point, and it is not contrary to our faith, it is safer, in my
opinion, neither to lay down such a point as a dogma of faith, even though it is
perhaps so presented by the philosophers, nor to reject it as against faith,
lest we thus give to the wise of this world an occasion of despising our
faith."56 The Catholic interpreter, although he should show that those facts
of natural science which investigators affirm to be now quite certain are not
contrary to the Scripture rightly explained, must nevertheless always bear in
mind, that much which has been held and proved as certain has afterwards been
called in question and rejected. And if writers on physics travel outside the
boundaries of their own branch, and carry their erroneous teaching into the
domain of philosophy, let them be handed over to philosophers for refutation.
20. The principles here laid down will apply to cognate sciences, and
especially to History. It is a lamentable fact that there are many who with
great labor carry out and publish investigations on the monuments of antiquity,
the manners and institutions of nations and other illustrative subjects, and
whose chief purpose in all this is too often to find mistakes in the sacred
writings and so to shake and weaken their authority. Some of these writers
display not only extreme hostility, but the greatest unfairness; in their eyes a
profane book or ancient document is accepted without hesitation, whilst the
Scripture, if they only find in it a suspicion of error, is set down with the
slightest possible discussion as quite untrustworthy. It is true, no doubt, that
copyists have made mistakes in the text of the Bible; this question, when it
arises, should be carefully considered on its merits, and the fact not too
easily admitted, but only in those passages where the proof is clear. It may
also happen that the sense of a passage remains ambiguous, and in this case good
hermeneutical methods will greatly assist in clearing up the obscurity. But it
is absolutely wrong and forbidden, either to narrow inspiration to certain parts
only of Holy Scripture, or to admit that the sacred writer has erred. For the
system of those who, in order to rid themselves of these difficulties, do not
hesitate to concede that divine inspiration regards the things of faith and
morals, and nothing beyond, because (as they wrongly think) in a question of the
truth or falsehood of a passage, we should consider not so much what God has
said as the reason and purpose which He had in mind in saying it -- this system
cannot be tolerated. For all the books which the Church receives as sacred and
canonical, are written wholly and entirely, with all their parts, at the
dictation of the Holy Ghost; and so far is it from being possible that any error
can co-exist with inspiration, that inspiration not only is essentially
incompatible with error, but excludes and rejects it as absolutely and
necessarily as it is impossible that God Himself, the supreme Truth, can utter
that which is not true. This is the ancient and unchanging faith of the Church,
solemnly defined in the Councils of Florence and of Trent, and finally confirmed
and more expressly formulated by the Council of the Vatican. These are the words
of the last: "The Books of the Old and New Testament, whole and entire, with all
their parts, as enumerated in the decree of the same Council (Trent) and in the
ancient Latin Vulgate, are to be received as sacred and canonical. And the
Church holds them as sacred and canonical, not because, having been composed by
human industry, they were afterwards approved by her authority; nor only because
they contain revelation without error; but because, having been written under
the inspiration of the Holy Ghost, they have God for their author."57 Hence,
because the Holy Ghost employed men as His instruments, we cannot therefore say
that it was these inspired instruments who, perchance, have fallen into error,
and not the primary author. For, by supernatural power, He so moved and impelled
them to write -- He was so present to them -- that the things which He ordered,
and those only, they, first, rightly understood, then willed faithfully to write
down, and finally expressed in apt words and with infallible truth. Otherwise,
it could not be said that He was the Author of the entire Scripture. Such has
always been the persuasion of the Fathers. "Therefore," says St. Augustine,
"since they wrote the things which He showed and uttered to them, it cannot be
pretended that He is not the writer; for His members executed what their Head
dictated."58 And St. Gregory the Great thus pronounces: "Most superfluous it
is to inquire who wrote these things -- we loyally believe the Holy Ghost to be
the Author of the book. He wrote it Who dictated it for writing; He wrote it Who
inspired its execution."59
21. It follows that those who maintain that an error is possible in any
genuine passage of the sacred writings, either pervert the Catholic notion of
inspiration, or make God the author of such error. And so emphatically were all
the Fathers and Doctors agreed that the divine writings, as left by the
hagiographers, are free from all error, that they labored earnestly, with no
less skill than reverence, to reconcile with each other those numerous passages
which seem at variance -- the very passages which in great measure have been
taken up by the "higher criticism;" for they were unanimous in laying it down,
that those writings, in their entirety and in all their parts were equally from
the afflatus of Almighty God, and that God, speaking by the sacred writers,
could not set down anything but what was true. The words of St. Augustine to St.
Jerome may sum up what they taught: "On my part I confess to your charity that
it is only to those Books of Scripture which are now called canonical that I
have learned to pay such honor and reverence as to believe most firmly that none
of their writers has fallen into any error. And if in these Books I meet
anything which seems contrary to truth, I shall not hesitate to conclude either
that the text is faulty, or that the translator has not expressed the meaning of
the passage, or that I myself do not understand."60
22. But to undertake fully and perfectly, and with all the weapons of the
best science, the defense of the Holy Bible is far more than can be looked for
from the exertions of commentators and theologians alone. It is an enterprise in
which we have a right to expect the co-operation of all those Catholics who have
acquired reputation in any branch of learning whatever. As in the past, so at
the present time, the Church is never without the graceful support of her
accomplished children; may their services to the Faith grow and increase! For
there is nothing which We believe to be more needful than that truth should find
defenders more powerful and more numerous than the enemies it has to face; nor
is there anything which is better calculated to impress the masses with respect
for truth than to see it boldly proclaimed by learned and distinguished men.
Moreover, the bitter tongues of objectors will be silenced, or at least they
will not dare to insist so shamelessly that faith is the enemy of science, when
they see that scientific men of eminence in their profession show towards faith
the most marked honor and respect. Seeing, then, that those can do so much for
the advantage of religion on whom the goodness of Almighty God has bestowed,
together with the grace of the faith, great natural talent, let such men, in
this bitter conflict of which the Holy Scripture is the object, select each of
them the branch of study most suitable to his circumstances, and endeavor to
excel therein, and thus be prepared to repulse with credit and distinction the
assaults on the Word of God. And it is Our pleasing duty to give deserved praise
to a work which certain Catholics have taken up -- that is to say, the formation
of societies and the contribution of considerable sums of money, for the purpose
of supplying studious and learned men with every kind of help and assistance in
carrying out complete studies. Truly an excellent fashion of investing money,
and well-suited to the times in which we live! The less hope of public patronage
there is for Catholic study, the more ready and the more abundant should be the
liberality of private persons -- those to whom God has given riches thus
willingly making use of their means to safeguard the treasure of His revealed
doctrine.
23. In order that all these endeavors and exertions may really prove
advantageous to the cause of the Bible, let scholars keep steadfastly to the
principles which We have in this Letter laid down. Let them loyally hold that
God, the Creator and Ruler of all things, is also the Author of the Scriptures
-- and that therefore nothing can be proved either by physical science or
archaeology which can really contradict the Scriptures. If, then, apparent
contradiction be met with, every effort should be made to remove it. Judicious
theologians and commentators should be consulted as to what is the true or most
probable meaning of the passage in discussion, and the hostile arguments should
be carefully weighed. Even if the difficulty is after all not cleared up and the
discrepancy seems to remain, the contest must not be abandoned; truth cannot
contradict truth, and we may be sure that some mistake has been made either in
the interpretation of the sacred words, or in the polemical discussion itself;
and if no such mistake can be detected, we must then suspend judgment for the
time being. There have been objections without number perseveringly directed
against the Scripture for many a long year, which have been proved to be futile
and are now never heard of; and not unfrequently interpretations have been
placed on certain passages of Scripture (not belonging to the rule of faith or
morals) which have been rectified by more careful investigations. As time goes
on, mistaken views die and disappear; but "truth remaineth and groweth stronger
for ever and ever."61 Wherefore, as no one should be so presumptuous as to
think that he understands the whole of the Scripture, in which St. Augustine
himself confessed that there was more that he did not know, than that he
knew,62 so, if he should come upon anything that seems incapable of solution,
he must take to heart the cautious rule of the same holy Doctor: "It is better
even to be oppressed by unknown but useful signs, than to interpret them
uselessly and thus to throw off the yoke only to be caught in the trap of
error."63
25. Such, Venerable Brethren, are the admonitions and the instructions which,
by the help of God, We have thought it well, at the present moment, to offer to
you on the study of Holy Scripture. It will now be your province to see that
what we have said be observed and put in practice with all due reverence and
exactness; that so, we may prove our gratitude to God for the communication to
man of the Words of his Wisdom, and that all the good results so much to be
desired may be realized, especially as they affect the training of the students
of the Church, which is our own great solicitude and the Church's hope. Exert
yourselves with willing alacrity, and use your authority and your persuasion in
order that these studies may be held in just regard and may flourish, in
Seminaries and in the educational Institutions which are under your
jurisdiction. Let them flourish in completeness and in happy success, under the
direction of the Church, in accordance with the salutary teaching and example of
the Holy Fathers and the laudable traditions of antiquity; and, as time goes on,
let them be widened and extended as the interests and glory of truth may require
-- the interest of that Catholic Truth which comes from above, the never-failing
source of man's salvation. Finally, We admonish with paternal love all students
and ministers of the Church always to approach the Sacred Writings with
reverence and piety; for it is impossible to attain to the profitable
understanding thereof unless the arrogance of "earthly" science be laid aside,
and there be excited in the heart the holy desire for that wisdom "which is from
above." In this way the intelligence which is once admitted to these sacred
studies, and thereby illuminated and strengthened, will acquire a marvelous
facility in detecting and avoiding the fallacies of human science, and in
gathering and using for eternal salvation all that is valuable and precious;
whilst at the same time the heart will grow warm, and will strive with ardent
longing to advance in virtue and in divine love. "Blessed are they who examine
His testimonies; they shall seek Him with their whole heart."64
26. And now, filled with hope in the divine assistance, and trusting to your
pastoral solicitude -- as a pledge of heavenly grace and a sign of Our special
goodwill -- to you all, and to the Clergy and the whole flock entrusted to you,
We lovingly impart in Our Lord the Apostolic Benediction.
Given at St. Peter's, at Rome, the 18th day of November, 1893, the eighteenth
year of Our Pontificate.
REFERENCES:
1. Conc. Vat. sess. iii. cap. ii. de revel.
2. Ibid.
3. S. Aug. de civ. dei xi., 3.
4. S. Clem. Rom. I ad. Cor. 45; S. Polycarp. ad Phil. 7; S. Iren. c haer.
ii. 28, 2.
5. S. Chrys. in Gen. hom. 2, 2; S. Aug. in Ps. xxx., serm., 2, I; S. Greg.
M. ad Theod. ep. iv., 31.
6. 2 Tim. iii., 16-17.
7. S. Aug. de util. cred. xiv. 32.
8. Act xiv., 3.
9. St. Hieron. de stud. Script. ad. Paulin. ep. Iiii. 3.
10. In Isiam Prol.
11. ln Isaiam liv., 12.
12. i Thess. i., 5.
13. Jerem.xxiii.,29.
14. Hebr. iv., 12.
15. De doctr. Chr. iv., 6, 7.
16. S. Chrys. in Gen. Hom. xxi., 2; Hom. Ix., 3; S. Aug. de Disc. Christ.,
ii.
17. S. Athan. ep. fest. xxxix.
18. S. Aug. serm. xxvi., 24; S. Ambr. in Ps. cxviii., serm. xix, 2.
19. S. Hier. de vita cleric. ad Nepot.
20. S. Greg. M., Regul. past. ii., 11 (al. 22); Moral. xviii., 26 (al . 1
4).
21. S. Aug. serm. clxxix., 1.
22. S. Greg. M. Regul. past., iii., 24 (al. 48).
23. i Tim.iv.,16.
24. S. Hier. in Mic. i., 10.
25. Conc. Trid. sess. v. decret. de reform, 1.
26. Ibid. 1-2.
27. See the Collect on his feast, September 30.
28. I Tim. vi., 20.
29. Sess. iv., decr. de edit. et usu sacr. libror.
30. De doctr. chr. iii., 4.
31. Ad Pammachium.
32. S. Hier. ad Paulin. de studio Script. ep. Iiii., 4.
33. C. haer. iv., 26, S.
34. Sess. iii., cap. ii., de revel.; cf Conc. Trid. sess. iv. decret de
edit. et usu sacr. Iibror.
35. Conc. Vat. sess. iii., cap. ii., de fide.
36. Ibid. 6, 7.
37. Ad Honorat. de util. cred. xvii., 35.
38. Rufinus Hist eccl. ii., 9.
39. S. Aug. c. Julian. ii, 10, 37.
40. De Gen. ad litt. 1, viii., c. 7, 13.
41. Cfr. Clem. Alex. Strom. vii., 16; Orig. de princ. iv., 8; in Levit. hom.
4, 8; Tertull. de praescr. 15, seqq.; S. Hilar. Pict. in Matth. 13, 1.