Part IV (Tertia Pars) Part 62 (2/2)
On the contrary is the authority of Scripture, in which it is written (Luke 2:21): ”After eight days were accomplished, that the child should be circ.u.mcised, His name was called Jesus.”
_I answer that,_ A name should answer to the nature of a thing. This is clear in the names of genera and species, as stated _Metaph._ iv: ”Since a name is but an expression of the definition” which designates a thing's proper nature.
Now, the names of individual men are always taken from some property of the men to whom they are given. Either in regard to time; thus men are named after the Saints on whose feasts they are born: or in respect of some blood relation; thus a son is named after his father or some other relation; and thus the kinsfolk of John the Baptist wished to call him ”by his father's name Zachary,” not by the name John, because ”there” was ”none of” his ”kindred that” was ”called by this name,” as related Luke 1:59-61. Or, again, from some occurrence; thus Joseph ”called the name of” the ”first-born Mana.s.ses, saying: G.o.d hath made me to forget all my labors” (Gen. 41:51). Or, again, from some quality of the person who receives the name; thus it is written (Gen. 25:25) that ”he that came forth first was red and hairy like a skin; and his name was called Esau,” which is interpreted ”red.”
But names given to men by G.o.d always signify some gratuitous gift bestowed on them by Him; thus it was said to Abraham (Gen. 17:5): ”Thou shalt be called Abraham; because I have made thee a father of many nations”: and it was said to Peter (Matt. 16:18): ”Thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build My Church.” Since, therefore, this prerogative of grace was bestowed on the Man Christ that through Him all men might be saved, therefore He was becomingly named Jesus, i.e. Saviour: the angel having foretold this name not only to His Mother, but also to Joseph, who was to be his foster-father.
Reply Obj. 1: All these names in some way mean the same as Jesus, which means ”salvation.” For the name ”Emmanuel, which being interpreted is 'G.o.d with us,'” designates the cause of salvation, which is the union of the Divine and human natures in the Person of the Son of G.o.d, the result of which union was that ”G.o.d is with us.”
When it was said, ”Call his name, Hasten to take away,” etc., these words indicate from what He saved us, viz. from the devil, whose spoils He took away, according to Col. 2:15: ”Despoiling the princ.i.p.alities and powers, He hath exposed them confidently.”
When it was said, ”His name shall be called Wonderful,” etc., the way and term of our salvation are pointed out: inasmuch as ”by the wonderful counsel and might of the G.o.dhead we are brought to the inheritance of the life to come,” in which the children of G.o.d will enjoy ”perfect peace” under ”G.o.d their Prince.”
When it was said, ”Behold a Man, the Orient is His name,” reference is made to the same, as in the first, viz. to the mystery of the Incarnation, by reason of which ”to the righteous a light is risen up in darkness” (Ps. 111:4).
Reply Obj. 2: The name Jesus could be suitable for some other reason to those who lived before Christ--for instance, because they were saviours in a particular and temporal sense. But in the sense of spiritual and universal salvation, this name is proper to Christ, and thus it is called a ”new” name.
Reply Obj. 3: As is related Gen. 17, Abraham received from G.o.d and at the same time both his name and the commandment of circ.u.mcision. For this reason it was customary among the Jews to name children on the very day of circ.u.mcision, as though before being circ.u.mcised they had not as yet perfect existence: just as now also children receive their names in Baptism. Wherefore on Prov. 4:3, ”I was my father's son, tender, and as an only son in the sight of my mother,” the gloss says: ”Why does Solomon call himself an only son in the sight of his mother, when Scripture testifies that he had an elder brother of the same mother, unless it be that the latter died unnamed soon after birth?” Therefore it was that Christ received His name at the time of His circ.u.mcision.
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THIRD ARTICLE [III, Q. 37, Art. 3]
Whether Christ Was Becomingly Presented in the Temple?
Objection 1: It would seem that Christ was unbecomingly presented in the Temple. For it is written (Ex. 13:2): ”Sanctify unto Me every first-born that openeth the womb among the children of Israel.” But Christ came forth from the closed womb of the Virgin; and thus He did not open His Mother's womb. Therefore Christ was not bound by this law to be presented in the Temple.
Obj. 2: Further, that which is always in one's presence cannot be presented to one. But Christ's humanity was always in G.o.d's presence in the highest degree, as being always united to Him in unity of person. Therefore there was no need for Him to be presented to the Lord.
Obj. 3: Further, Christ is the princ.i.p.al victim, to whom all the victims of the old Law are referred, as the figure to the reality.
But a victim should not be offered up for a victim. Therefore it was not fitting that another victim should be offered up for Christ.
Obj. 4: Further, among the legal victims the princ.i.p.al was the lamb, which was a ”continual sacrifice” [Vulg.: 'holocaust'], as is stated Num. 28:6: for which reason Christ is also called ”the Lamb--Behold the Lamb of G.o.d” (John 1: 29). It was therefore more fitting that a lamb should be offered for Christ than ”a pair of turtle doves or two young pigeons.”
On the contrary is the authority of Scripture which relates this as having taken place (Luke 2:22).
_I answer that,_ As stated above (A. 1), Christ wished to be ”made under the Law, that He might redeem them who were under the Law”
(Gal. 4:4, 5), and that the ”justification of the Law might be”
spiritually ”fulfilled” in His members. Now, the Law contained a twofold precept touching the children born. One was a general precept which affected all--namely, that ”when the days of the mother's purification were expired,” a sacrifice was to be offered either ”for a son or for a daughter,” as laid down Lev. 12:6. And this sacrifice was for the expiation of the sin in which the child was conceived and born; and also for a certain consecration of the child, because it was then presented in the Temple for the first time. Wherefore one offering was made as a holocaust and another for sin.
The other was a special precept in the law concerning the first-born of ”both man and beast”: for the Lord claimed for Himself all the first-born in Israel, because, in order to deliver the Israelites, He ”slew every first-born in the land of Egypt, both men and cattle”
(Ex. 12:12, 13, 29), the first-born of Israel being saved; which law is set down Ex. 13. Here also was Christ foreshadowed, who is ”the First-born amongst many brethren” (Rom. 8:29).
Therefore, since Christ was born of a woman and was her first-born, and since He wished to be ”made under the Law,” the Evangelist Luke shows that both these precepts were fulfilled in His regard. First, as to that which concerns the first-born, when he says (Luke 2:22, 23): ”They carried Him to Jerusalem to present Him to the Lord: as it is written in the law of the Lord, 'Every male opening the womb shall be called holy to the Lord.'” Secondly, as to the general precept which concerned all, when he says (Luke 2:24): ”And to offer a sacrifice according as it is written in the law of the Lord, a pair of turtle doves or two young pigeons.”
Reply Obj. 1: As Gregory of Nyssa says (De Occursu Dom.): ”It seems that this precept of the Law was fulfilled in G.o.d incarnate alone in a special manner exclusively proper to Him. For He alone, whose conception was ineffable, and whose birth was incomprehensible, opened the virginal womb which had been closed to s.e.xual union, in such a way that after birth the seal of chast.i.ty remained inviolate.”
Consequently the words ”opening the womb” imply that nothing hitherto had entered or gone forth therefrom. Again, for a special reason is it written ”'a male,' because He contracted nothing of the woman's sin”: and in a singular way ”is He called 'holy,' because He felt no contagion of earthly corruption, whose birth was wondrously immaculate” (Ambrose, on Luke 2:23).
Reply Obj. 2: As the Son of G.o.d ”became man, and was circ.u.mcised in the flesh, not for His own sake, but that He might make us to be G.o.d's through grace, and that we might be circ.u.mcised in the spirit; so, again, for our sake He was presented to the Lord, that we may learn to offer ourselves to G.o.d” [*Athanasius, on Luke 2:23]. And this was done after His circ.u.mcision, in order to show that ”no one who is not circ.u.mcised from vice is worthy of Divine regard” [*Bede, on Luke 2:23].
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