Epistle –
Daniel ix. 15‒19
In those days Daniel prayed to
the Lord, saying: “O Lord our God, who has brought forth your
people out of the land of Egypt with a strong hand, and has made you
a name as at this day; we have sinned, we have committed iniquity, O
Lord, against all your justice. Let your wrath and indignation be
turned away, I beseech you, from your city Jerusalem, and from your
holy mountain. For, by reason of our sins and the iniquities of our
fathers, Jerusalem and your people are a reproach to all that are
round about us. Now, therefore, our God, hear the supplication of
your servant, and his prayers, and show your face on your sanctuary
which is desolate, for your own sake. Incline, my God, your ear and
hear; open your eyes and see our desolation, and the city on which
your name is called; for it is not for our justifications that we
present our prayers before your face, but for the multitude of your
tender mercies. Lord, hear; Lord, be appeased; listen, and do; delay
not for your own sake, my God; because your name is invoked on your
city and on your people, Lord our God.”
Thanks be to God.
Gospel – John
viii. 21‒29
At
that time Jesus said to the multitude of the Jews: “I go, and you
will seek me, and you will die in your sin. Where I go, you cannot
come.” The Jews, therefore said: “Will He kill himself, because
he said: ‘Where
I go, you cannot come?’
And He said to them: “You are from beneath, I am from above. You
are of this world, I am not of this world. Therefore I say to you
that you will die in your sins. For if you believe not that I am He,
you will die in your sin.” They said therefore to Him: “Who are
you?” Jesus said to them: “The beginning, who also speak to you.
Many things I have to speak, and to judge of you. But He that sent me
is true; and the things I have heard of Him, the same I speak in the
world.” Now they understood not that He called God His Father.
Jesus therefore said to them: “When you will have lifted up the Son
of man, then will you know that I am He, and that I do nothing of
myself, but as the Father has taught me, these things I speak: and He
that sent me is with me, and He has not left me alone: for I do
always the things that please Him.”
Praise be to you, O Christ.
Saint Augustine of
Hippo:
The
Lord spoke to the Jews, saying: “I go My way”—for, to the Lord
Christ, death was a departure to that place from where He had come,
and from which He had never departed. “I go My way,” says He,
“and you will seek Me"—not from love, but from hatred. Yes,
after He had withdrawn Himself from the sight of men, two classes
sought Him, even they that loved, and they that hated Him; the one
because they longed for His presence, the other because they were
fain to hunt Him down. In the Psalms the Lord Himself says by His
Prophet: “Refuge failed me, and no man cared for my soul.”
(Psalms cxli. 5) And again He says in another Psalm: “Let them be
confounded and put to shame that seek after my soul." (Psalms
xxxiv. 5)
Thus
does He blame them that seek not, and condemn such as seek. Yes, it
is a good thing to seek the soul of Christ, as the disciples sought
it; and an evil thing to seek it, as the Jews sought it; the first
sought it to possess, the second to destroy it. What then does He bid
us know will be the reward of such as seek it evilly in a perverse
heart. “You will seek Me, and”—lest you think that you will do
well so to seek Me, I tell you that you will die in your sins.” To
seek Christ with bad intent, is as much as to die in sin, for it is
to hate Him through Whom alone we can be saved.
Whereas
men whose hope is in God ought to return good even for evil, those
men returned evil for good. The Lord therefore told them beforehand,
and, because He knew it, He let them know their coming end, how that
they should die in their sins. Then He said further: “Where I go,
you cannot come.” This He said in another place (xiii. 33) to His
disciples, but He never said to them: “You will die in your sins.”
What said He? The same words as to the Jews: “Where I go, you
cannot come.” Yet, to the disciples, these words only deferred,
they cut not away hope—for they, though for a little while they
could not come where He was to go, were yet in the end to go there.
Not so they to whom He foretold and said: “You will die in your
sins.”