Thursday, April 18, 2024

Hilary of Poitier's Low Mariology in His Commentary on Matthew 12:46-50

  

And while he was saying all these things in the power of the Father’s majesty, it was told to him that outside his mother and brothers awaited him. Extending his hand toward the disciples, he responded that they are his brothers and his mother, and whoever follows the will of the Father, that person is his brother, and his sister, and his mother. As a benefit to all people, he establishes himself as that model of action and thought as it pertains to the rights and title of all his relatives, not merely by the virtue of birth, We must not think that he felt disdain for his mother, whose experience of suffering produced in him a feeling of the greatest solicitude. There is also a figurative reason disclosed in this event: his mother and brothers stood outside although they, as others did, had the opportunity of at least coming to him. Because he came to his own people and his own did not recognize him, in his mother and brothers are prefigured the synagogue and the Israelites, who refrained from approaching and entering. (Hilary of Poitier, Commentary on Matthew, 12,24 in Hilary of Poitiers: Commentary on Matthew [trans. D. H. Williams; The Fathers of the Church 125; Washington, D.C.: The Catholic University of America Press, 2012] 151-52)

 

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