From: Wisdom 2:23-3:9
The Origin of Evil and Death
The Death of the Righteous
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Commentary:
2:21-24. The mistake of the ungodly is to think that nothing lies beyond death.
But this way of thinking stems from the wickedness of their lives which prevents
them from knowing God’s purposes and causes them to despise the way upright
people live. The inspired author takes issue with them and spells out God’s plan
for man and how death came to be (vv. 23-24). But here again “deathâ has a far-
reaching meaning: it means losing that incorruptibility which, as the author sees
it, lies beyond physical death. The death that entered the world through the de-
vil’s envy, the death experienced by those who belong to the devil’s “partyâ,
means to be reduced to nothing, to become “dishonored corpsesâ (4:18), through
losing the incorruptibility that comes from God. What the author is saying here
presupposes the Genesis account of how man was created in the image and like-
ness of God (Gen 1:26) and therefore with a seed of immortality, and how the de-
vil tempted man to commit the original sin that resulted in the loss of immortality
(cf. Gen 3-4). But the author of Wisdom goes further than that: he says that only
those who belong to the devil lose the “immortalityâ (which he terms “incorruptionâ)
of the human person as an entity made up of soul and body. On the basis of this
interpretation and in the light of the resurrection of Jesus Christ, St Paul teaches
that death, both physical and spiritual, reaches all human beings through the sin
committed by Adam; but Christ, the new Adam, redeems all from death.
The devil, in Greek “diabolos”, means “accuser, calumniatorâ and is the usual
translation given for the Hebrew “Satan”. These verses do not quote Genesis ex-
plicitly, but Genesis is in the background, for it is there we find the serpent iden-
tified as God’s enemy and man’s. The New Testament writers remind us that the
devil was a murderer from the beginning (cf. Jn 8:44); and in its account of the
battle between good and bad angels, the book of Revelation will say: “The great
dragon was thrown down, that ancient serpent, who is called the Devil and Satan,
the deceiver of the whole worldâ (Rev 12:9).
3:1-4:20. This passage describes at some length the contrasting situations of the
righteous and the ungodly in this life, in death, and beyond the grave. The author
has consoling things to say to the righteous as regards afflictions; they have eve-
ry reason to hope. But evildoers he describes as foolish; theirs is a fundamental
error which will cause them grief now; any suffering they experience will do them
no good; their death is grievous and so is what lies beyond it: “Two possibilities
are laid open to us at the same time: life and death—and each person will come
to the end that befits him. Life and death are like two types of coin, one belongs
to God and the other to this world, each with its own hallmark: unbelievers deal in
the currency of this world, and those who have remained faithful through love car-
ry the coin of God the Father, which is marked with Jesus Christ. If we are not
ready to die for him or to imitate his passion, we will not have his life within usâ
(St Ignatius of Antioch, “Ad Magnesios”, 5, 2).
3:1-9. These very poetic lines convey very well the notion of the reward that a-
waits the just in the after-life, but they are not very specific about it. The author
uses expressions that correspond to the time in history and Revelation in which
he lives, but they do enable us to get an idea of the state of the blessed: “The
souls of the righteous are in the hands of God, and no torment will ever touch
themâ (v. 1); the righteous dead are “at peaceâ (v. 3), that is, in the sphere proper
to God; they can be sure of immortality, “athanasia” (v. 4). They will abide in the
Kingdom of God forever and share in God’s power to judge and rule (v. 8; cf. Mt
19:28)—a pointer to their power of intercession. One could say that the most en-
couraging line of all is, “the faithful will abide with him in loveâ (v. 9). Still to come
is the explicit New Testament revelation which tells us that the blessed “shall
see God as he isâ (1 Jn 3:2), not as in a (dull) mirror but “face to faceâ; they will
know him as he knows them (cf. 1 Cor 13:12) and they will be with Christ forever
in heaven (cf. 1 Thess 4:17).
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Source: “The Navarre Bible: Text and Commentaries”. Biblical text from the
Revised Standard Version and New Vulgate. Commentaries by members of
the Faculty of Theology, University of Navarre, Spain.
Published by Four Courts Press, Kill Lane, Blackrock, Co. Dublin, Ireland, and
by Scepter Publishers in the United States.
From: Luke 17:7-10
Humble Service
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Commentary:
7-10. Jesus is not approving this master’s abusive and arbitrary behavior: He is
using an example very familiar to His audience to show the attitude a person
should have towards his Creator: everything, from our very existence to the eter-
nal happiness promised us, is one huge gift from God. Man is always in debt to
God; no matter what service he renders Him he can never adequately repay the
gifts God has given him. There is no sense in a creature adopting a proud atti-
tude towards God. What Jesus teaches us here we see being put into practice
by our Lady, who replied to God’s messenger (the Archangel Gabriel), “Behold,
I am the handmaid of the Lord” (Luke 1:38).
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Source: “The Navarre Bible: Text and Commentaries”. Biblical text from the
Revised Standard Version and New Vulgate. Commentaries by members of
the Faculty of Theology, University of Navarre, Spain.
Published by Four Courts Press, Kill Lane, Blackrock, Co. Dublin, Ireland, and
by Scepter Publishers in the United States.