Friday, June 26, 2026

Update on Health//Gofundme to Support Expenses for Next 3-6 Months

Reposting this from youtube:

As some of my friends/followers know, I got diagnosed with a really serious illness earlier this year. Since then, I have often been zapped of energy at a drop of a hat, been having a lot of stomach pains and cramps, etc., and other issues (e.g., those related to cirrhosis).

Anyway, beginning in July, for two days each week, I will be undergoing treatment. This will last perhaps 3 or 6 months. As a result, I will be unable to dedicate much time to bookkeeping/accountancy (how I have been making ends meet) for said 3-6 month period. If you wish to help me on the financial “hit” I will face this period (esp. as the medicine and procedures will be very costly), I would ask you to consider either donating *or at least plugging* (whether on blogs, youtube posts, discord channels, etc) my gofundme (cf. my paypal): Gofundme: https://www.gofundme.com/f/medical-expenses-liverrelated-and-other-issues Paypal: https://www.paypal.me/irishlds/ Of course, prayers and well-wishes are more than welcome, too. I will still transcribe notes of books/articles I read while I still can and share them on the blog (and there are blog posts scheduled for each day from July 1 to October 31, which I planned for in advance). Thanks!

Examples of Patristic Commentaries on Jeremiah 31:15

  

31:15 Rachel Weeping for Her Children

 

Prophecy of Rachel’s Children. Theodoret of Cyr: Ramah belonged to the tribe of Benjamin, and the tomb of Rachel is in the hippodrome of Chaphratha on the way to Ephrath. While the prophecy had its fulfillment in the time of Herod the Great, who did away with the babies in the hope of doing away at the same time with the newborn Savior, the prophet places it here in the context of the promise of good things so as to emphasize that the birth of our Lord and Savior according to the flesh was the real good and the summit of salvation, though on account of it the babies met that unjust end. On Jeremiah 7.31.15.

 

The Lamentation of Rachel. Ephrem the Syrian: “Thus says the Lord: A voice was heard in Ramah, lamentation, sobbing and weeping. Rachel is weeping for her children.” In a historical sense this prophecy speaks about sons of Judah and Benjamin living in Jerusalem and Bethlehem. Jeremiah later on describes the fulfillment of this prophecy, saying that tribes of Judah and Benjamin were sent to Ramah, the city of Benjamin’s tribe, and then they were sent to captivity in Babylon. But in a spiritual sense, these words were fulfilled when Herod killed infants in Ephrathah and in its suburbs. It was said that Rachel was crying in Bethlehem and her voice was heard in Ramah because her body was buried in Bethlehem. But the people of Bethlehem were captured and sent to Ramah, and from there they had to go into a foreign land, to Babylon. It is why the prophet comforts mothers of killed infants when referring to Rachel. Commentary on Jeremiah 31.15.

 

Herod’s Slaughter of the Innocents. Chrysostom: Herod sought him after his birth. He was to kill all the children in that place. And the prophet revealed this, too, foretelling it long beforehand when he said, “A voice was heard in Ramah, lamentation, mourning and much weeping, of Rachel weeping for her children and refusing to be comforted, because they are not.” The Scriptures also predicted that he would come to Egypt when they said, “Out of Egypt I called my son.” Demonstration Against the Pagans 3.7.

 

Christ Brings the Living Faithful with Him. Ambrose: What need have I to study the rising and the setting of the stars, and at their rising plough up and pierce the fallow ground with hard ploughshares or at their setting cut the fruitful crop? One star means more to me than all the others, “the bright morning star” at whose rising was sown not the seed of grain but the seed of martyrs, that time when Rachel wept for her children to offer for Christ her babies washed with her tears. The setting of that star brought back in triumph from the tomb not the unfeeling relics of funeral piles but bands of the living, who had been dead. Letter 50(44).

 

God Delivered the Infants When Herod Killed. Caesarius of Arles: Today we are celebrating the feast of all those infants who, the Gospel text tells us, were killed by King Herod, and for this reason our land, the fruitful mother of heavenly soldiers and such great virtues, should rejoice with the greatest exultation. Behold, the wicked enemy could never have helped the blessed infants as much by submission as he did by his hatred. As today’s most sacred feast shows us, the grace of benediction shone forth in the blessed infants as much as cruelty against them abounded. For we heard a little while ago that when King Herod was pursuing Christ, thousands of happy boys were killed. As the prophet said, “Rachel mourns her children; she refuses to be consoled because her children are no more.” The blessed mother of the triumphant, the land of illustrious warriors, rich in children, for a short time seemed to the eyes of the foolish to be bereaved. But she never was in need of consolation, nor did she bewail the sons whom she acquired with enviable sorrows, even while she lost them. Blessed are you, Bethlehem, land of Judah, who suffered the cruelty of King Herod in the death of your sons and at the same time merited to offer to God a white-clad group of peaceable, sinless infants. Sermon 222.1.

 

God Hates the Death of the Faithful. Bede: According to the oracle of Jeremiah, “A voice was heard in Ramah,” that is, “on high,” “of lamentation and great wailing.” This clearly denotes that holy church’s mourning, by which it grieves for the violent death of its members, does not, as our enemies foolishly claim, pass away into a void, but it ascends right to the throne of the heavenly judge. Homilies on the Gospels 1.10. (Jeremiah, Lamentations, ed. Dean O. Wenthe [Ancient Christian Commentary on Scripture; Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsity Press, 2009], 207-9)

 

 

31:15: Thus says the Lord: “A voice is heard on high of lamentation, wailing and mourning, Rachel weeping for her sons; she refuses to be comforted for her sons, because they are not.” lxx: The Lord said thus: “A voice was heard in Ramah, of lamentation, wailing and mourning; Rachel weeping for her sons; she refuses to cease, because they are not.”

 

Matthew cites this testimony neither according to the Hebrew nor according to the lxx. For we read in Matthew after the description of the death of the infants: “Then was fulfilled what was spoken by the prophet Jeremiah: ‘A voice was heard in Ramah, wailing and much crying; Rachel weeping for her children; she refused to be consoled, because they are not.’ ”110 From this it is clear that the evangelists and apostles did not follow any particular person’s interpretation of the Hebrew, but as Hebrews born of Hebrews they expressed in their own words what they read in Hebrew.

 

When Joseph’s mother, Rachel, came to Bethlehem she went into labor suddenly, and seized with pain she gave birth to a son. Since the mother was dying, the midwife called him Ben-oni, that is, “son of my sorrow.” But his father, Jacob, changed the word and called his name Benjamin, that is, “son of the right hand.” So the question is asked: How could the Evangelist Matthew transfer the testimony of the prophet to the slaying of the infants, when this testimony was clearly written with regard to the ten tribes (the chief of which was Ephrathah), and the slaying of the infants was not in the tribe of Ephraim but in the tribe of Judah? In fact, Ephrathah and Bethlehem are dyonymous; thus, even the names of both of them are in agreement: Bethlehem means “house of bread,” and Ephrathah means karpophoria, which we can translate as “richness.” Since therefore Rachel was laid to rest in Ephrathah, that is, in Bethlehem just as holy Scripture and the inscription on her tomb even today testify—it is said that she weeps for her sons who were killed near her and in her territory.

 

Certain of the Jews interpret this passage thus: when Jerusalem was captured under Vespasian, countless thousands of captives were led through this way by Gaza and Alexandria to Rome. But others say that in the final captivity under Hadrian when the city of Jerusalem was overthrown, innumerable people of diverse ages and both sexes were sold at the marketplace of Terebinthus.119 For this reason, it is an accursed thing among the Jews to visit this acclaimed marketplace. Let these people say what they want. We say that the Evangelist Matthew has rightly taken up this testimony because it is the place where Rachel was buried, and she wept for the sons of those nearby in the surrounding houses as if she were weeping for her own sons. (Jerome, Commentary on Jeremiah [trans. Michael Graves; Ancient Christian Texts; Downers Grove, Ill.: IVP Academic, 2011], 194-95)

 

The Jewish Study Bible on Jeremiah 31:15

  

15: The portrayal of Israel as Rachel weeping for her lost children draws upon the tragic tradition of Rachel, Jacob’s beloved wife, who died while giving birth to Benjamin. Although Gen. 35:16–21 places her tomb on the road to Bethlehem, where the current structure stands, 1 Sam. 10:2 suggests that her tomb was on the road to Ramah, near modern Ramallah. The present text portrays Rachel weeping not for herself, but for her lost children who have gone into exile. According to 40:1, 4, the Babylonians assembled Judeans destined for exile to Babylon at Ramah. The portrayal of Rachel weeping and bereft of children is reversed in Isa. ch 54, which employs the metaphor of a mother whose children are restored. According to Rab. Gen. 82:10, Jacob deliberately buried Rachel by the road because he knew that his descendants would pass by as they went into exile. She would then weep and intercede for their return. (The Jewish Study Bible, ed. Adele Berlin, Marc Zvi Brettler, and Michael Fishbane [New York: Oxford University Press, 2004], 989)

 

Michael A. Fishbane on Jeremiah 31:15

  

15. Rachel weeping This verse inspired a midrash on the merit of Rachel, who intercedes before God in connection with Manasseh’s sins. God responds mercifully, saying: “You defended [Israel] well; there is recompense for your labor and righteousness when you gave your [marital] tokens to your sister” (see Rashi). In this way rabbinic tradition explained the thematic conjunction of verses 15 and 16 (and the reference in v. 16 to “your labor” with the feminine suffix). (Michael A. Fishbane, Haftarot [The JPS Bible Commentary; Philadelphia: The Jewish Publication Society, 2002], 382)

 

Strack and Billerbeck on Jeremiah 32:15 (cf. Matthew 2:18)

  

2:18: Rachel weeping for her children.

 

The Midrash Jer 31:15.

 

Genesis Rabba 82 (52D): What did our father Jacob see when he buried Rachel on the road to Ephrath (cf. Gen 35:19)? He saw that the exiles would one day pass by there; therefore, he buried Rachel there so that from there she would pray for mercy for them. This is what Jer 31:15 says, “A voice is heard at Ramah.” ‖ The beginning of Midr. Lam. 24 (38A–B): R. Samuel b. Nahman (ca. 260) said, (after the fathers of Israel mourn the downfall of Jerusalem in 38B) “In that hour our mother Rachel arose before God and said, ‘Lord of the worlds, it is clear to you that Jacob your servant loved me greatly and for my sake served my father for seven years; and when those seven years were completed and the time of my marriage was near, my father made a plan to exchange me for my sister. This weighed heavily on me, for the plan had become known to me, and I communicated it to my husband and gave him signs to distinguish me from my sister so that he would not mistake me. But afterward I comforted myself, endured my desires, and took pity on my sister, that she would not go away with insults. And in the evening, they exchanged my sister for me, and I informed my sister about all the signs that I had told to my marriage partner so that he would think that she was Rachel. And moreover, I crept under the tent where he was resting with my sister, and when he spoke to her she was silent, but I answered every word he said, so that he would not recognize my sister’s voice. In this way I showed grace to her, and did not become jealous of her, nor did I let her go away insulted. And if I, who was flesh and blood, dust and ashes, did not make my rivals jealous, nor let them go away in reproach and disgrace, you who are the king of Mercy—you who lives forever, why did you get angry about idols, in which there is nothing of substance, and let my children go into captivity, that they might be killed by the sword, and their enemies treat them according to their lusts?’—Immediately the mercy of God was stirred, and he said, ‘For your sake, Rachel, I will bring Israel back to her place.’ ” This is what Jer 31:15–17 says, “Thus says Yahweh, ‘A voice is heard at Ramah … Rachel weeping for her children.’ … Thus says Yahweh, ‘Stop weeping …; your work will be rewarded.…’ ” See Rashi on Jer 31:15. ‖ Pesiqta 141B: R. Simeon b. Yohai (ca. 150) taught, “Because everything depended on Rachel (i.e., because the whole life story of Jacob revolved around her), her descendants were named after her, ‘Rachel weeping for her children’ (Jer 31:15); and not only after her name, but also after the name of her son, ‘Perhaps Yahweh, the God of hosts, will pardon the remnant of Joseph’ (Amos 5:15); and not only after the name of her son, but also after the name of her grandson, ‘A favorite son is Ephraim’ (Jer 31:20).”—The same is said in Gen. Rab. 71 (46A); Midr. Ruth 4:11 (137A). ‖ Midrash Lamentations 1:2 (50A): R. Simeon b. Yohai (ca. 150) said, “God said to Israel, ‘You weep in vain, but in the end you will truly weep.’ ” Where did Israel weep in vain? Answer: Numbers 11:10: “Moses heard the people weeping according to their families”; Num 14:1: “Then all the congregation raised their voices loudly, and the people wept that night.” And where did Israel truly weep (= where was it justified)? R. Aibo (ca. 320) and R. Judah b. Simon (ca. 320) [discuss this]. R. Aibo said, “Once in Rama and once in Babylon. In Rama, see Jer 31:15: ‘A voice is heard in Rama.’ In Babylon, see Ps 137:1: ‘By the rivers of Babylon we sat and wept.’ ” R. Judah b. Simon said, “Once in the land of Judah and once in Babylon. In the land of Judah, see Lam 1:2: ‘She weeps bitterly in the night.’ In Babylon, see Ps 137:1.” R. Aibo said, “God said unto Israel, ‘For the reward of weeping I will gather your exiles’; see Jer 31:16–17: ‘Thus says Yahweh, “Restrain your voice from weeping, and there is hope for your future.” ’ ” ‖ Rashi on Jer 31:15 mentions the following legend, “The patriarchs and the matriarchs went to appease God because Manasseh had set up an idol in the Temple. But he could not be appeased. Then Rachel went in and said before him, ‘Lord of the world, whose love (mercy) is greater, your love or the love of flesh and blood? Surely your love is greater! And have I not let my rival into my house? For all that Jacob served my father, he served only for my sake, and when I was about to enter the bridal chamber, my sister was brought in. It was not enough that I kept silent; I also told her my sign. You also, when your children brought your rival into your house, remain silent towards them.’ And he said unto her, ‘You have done well in defense: there is a reward for your deeds and your righteousness, because your informed your sister about your sign.’ ” (Hermann L. Strack and Paul Billerbeck, A Commentary on the New Testament from the Talmud and Midrash, ed. Jacob N. Cerone, 4 vols. [trans. Andrew Bowden and Joseph Longarino; Bellingham, Wash.: Lexham Press, 2022], 1:99-100)

 

 

Taylor Halverson on 1 Nephi 13 and the "plain and precious things taken away from the book"

Commenting on 1 Nephi 13 (cf. 1 Nephi 11-14):

 

What Was Lost, When, From Where

 

A careful reading yields three observations.

 

First, the great and abominable church is identified as a historical agent, operating after the time of the twelve apostles. Doctrine and Covenants 86, given to Joseph Smith in December 1832, describes the parable of the wheat and tares in apostasy terms. After identifying the apostles as the sowers of the seed, the revelation continues, “And after they have fallen asleep the great persecutor of the church, the apostate, the whore, even Babylon, that maketh all nations to drink of her cup, in whose heart the enemy, even Satan, sitteth to reign” (D&C 86:3). The timing is specific. After the apostles. After the gospel went forth from Jewish apostolic hands in purity. After the book left the hands that wrote it.

 

This means the great and abominable church is not an Old Testament problem. The Old Testament was already in circulation, in Hebrew and in Greek (the Septuagint), centuries before the apostles. Nephi’s vision shows the book proceeding forth from Jewish apostolic hands in purity, which means the Old Testament reached the apostolic generation intact. Whatever the great and abominable church did, the Old Testament’s textual transmission to the apostles was sound.

 

Second, what is lost is identified by content. The verses repeat two things: part of the gospel and the Lamb, and covenants of the Lord. The losses are theological and covenantal, focused on teachings and ordinances. Robert J. Matthews, the Brigham Young University scholar who spent decades on the Joseph Smith Translatoin, suggested two distinct processes at work in the Bible’s history: a deliberate corruption by agents intent on perverting the right ways of the Lord, and the ordinary gradual variants that arise from copying and translation, Matthews identified the deliberate corruption with the great and abominable church, and the gradual variants with the normal scribal and translational difficulties scholars discuss. The two processes are different in kind. Nephi’s vision is about the first.

 

Third, the process happens through hands across time. The phrase in verse 28 is “through the hands of the great and abominable church.” It describes a process, with the book moving from one set of hands to another across the post-apostolic period. Lori Driggs, in a Brigham Young University essay on the vision, has noted that the phrase suggests a process unfolding over time, through many people and influences. The vision describes a diachronic process of loss, with multiple agents acting in turn across the centuries.

 

A Latter-day Saint reader who holds these three observations together has a careful reading. The losses are post-apostolic theological in nature, and unfold across time. The vision focuses on what happened to the gospel of the Lamb after the apostles, with the Old Testament Hebrew text occupying a different position in the picture. (Taylor Halverson, The Book Jesus Trusted: Why Latter-day Saints Can Receive the Old Testament with Confidence [Line of Sigh Publishing, 2026], 105-6)

 

 

Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples (c. 1455-1536) on Matthew 16:19 and the "Rock" Being Christ and the Word of God

The following comes from Jacques Lefèvre d'Étaples, Commentarii initiatorii in quatuor Evangelia. In Evangelium secundun Matthaeum. In Evangelium secundum Marcum. In Evangelium secundum Lucam. In Evangelium secundum Johannem. Jacobo Fabro Stapulensi autore (Coloniae, 1541), 126-27

 

 










 

 

English translation:

 

 

"This blessedness is attributed to Peter, not insofar as it comes from Peter himself, but insofar as he was instructed by the heavenly Father in this matter, because the heavenly Father deigned to reveal it to him. Nor ought that blessedness to be attributed to him in any other way than through contemplation of Him from whom it proceeds. For from whom could it come except from God, who alone is blessed, and who alone is the mighty King of those who reign and the Lord of those who rule?

 

And from this solid confession of the truth—which comes from God the Father and is firmer than every rock—Simon received the surname 'Peter.' Upon this rock, namely the faith of that unshaken truth, that Christ is the Son of the living God, he founded his Church; so firmly, indeed, that against this most steadfast confession of faith the gates of hell shall not prevail, because they cannot overcome anyone who is fortified by this immovable rock and this most steadfast faith.

 

Moreover, that 'the rock' is to be understood as Christ and the Word of God, the Lord himself makes clear when he says in chapter seven of this Gospel:

 

'Everyone therefore who hears these words of mine and does them shall be compared to a wise man who built his house upon the rock.'

 

And he immediately adds:

 

'The rain descended, the floods came, the winds blew and beat upon that house, and it did not fall.'"

 

"For it had been founded upon the firm rock.

 

See, then, in what manner he calls himself and his own word the rock, indeed the firm rock, upon which the immovable house—that is, the Church—is built.

 

Lest anyone should say that Peter is the rock upon which the Church has been founded, the Lord himself afterwards made it sufficiently clear to Paul that Peter is not the rock, and much less the firm rock, when he said to him,

 

'Get behind me, Satan; you are a stumbling block to me, because you do not savor the things that are of God, but those that are of men.'

 

Paul likewise explains that Christ is the rock when he says,

 

'They drank from the spiritual rock that followed them, and the rock was Christ.'

 

And even if Peter is said (as some wish) to derive his name from the rock, just as a Christian derives his name from Christ, nevertheless a Christian is not Christ himself; therefore Peter likewise is not the Rock.

 

Furthermore, the Lord promised that he would give to Peter the keys of the kingdom of heaven, which are the keys of faith, the keys of binding and loosing:

 

'Whatever Christ handed down as things to be believed are to be believed; and whatever he commanded to be done are to be done. These he has bound upon earth, and they are bound also in heaven. Whatever, however, he declared not to be believed or not to be done, he loosed upon earth, and they are likewise loosed in heaven.

 

But these keys of faith and unbelief, of binding and loosing—or rather, whatever faith binds (for what is not of faith binds nothing)—were not Peter's, but Christ's.

 

'I will give you,' he says, 'the keys of the kingdom of heaven.'

 

Peter therefore did not bind or loose according to his own judgment, but according to the judgment of Christ, whose will is altogether perfect and can never err.

 

Nor did Peter alone receive them from the Lord; rather, all those likewise received them who, according to the will of Christ the Lord, built the Church upon Christ through faith.

 

Furthermore, we may understand that the keys of the kingdom of heaven are to be taken as the doctrine of faith, the doctrine of Christ, and the Word of God, from the eleventh chapter of Luke:

 

'Woe unto you lawyers! For you have taken away the key of knowledge. You yourselves did not enter, and those who were entering you hindered.'

 

For what is the key of knowledge except the understanding of the Law, which they had arrogated to themselves? Yet by human traditions they had obstructed that understanding, and they prevented and hindered those who sincerely desired to enter into the true understanding of the Law.

 

But the Lord did not then give these keys of understanding of the New Law to Peter, for he said, 'I will give you.' Rather, he gave them later, in spirit and in truth: partly when he said to the apostles,

 

'Receive the Holy Spirit,'

 

and partly when he opened their understanding so that they might understand the Scriptures; and then, more fully and abundantly, after his ascension, when the Holy Spirit was sent from heaven.

 

These keys, nevertheless, are the pontifical power of binding and loosing rightly understood.

 

But Christ is speaking here of this faith—that he himself is the Son of the living God—which is one of the keys of heavenly doctrine, and which he willed to be the foundational principle in his Church.

 

And what else is this, objectively considered, than Christ himself, who is the Rock itself and the immovable foundation of the whole Church? In us, however, it is the infusion of the eternal Father.

 

Indeed, we ought especially to admire that he did not yet openly declare this revelation of the Father—which is Christ himself.

 


 




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