St Augustine's commentary on psalm 109
God's promises are given to us through the Son |
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God
decreed a time for making promises and a time for the promises to be
fulfilled. The time for making promises was the time of the prophets,
ending with John the Baptist, the last prophet. From then until the end
is the time for the fulfillment of promises.
God is faithful. He has made himself our debtor, not
by receiving anything from us but by promising us so much. The promise
alone was not enough for him: he wanted it in writing, so that he could
be held to it, practically entering into a contract with us that listed
the promises he was making. In that way, when he began to fulfill his
promises, we could see the order of their fulfillment by looking in
Scripture. Therefore the time of the prophets was (as I have said so
often) the time of making promises.
He promised us eternal salvation and an unending life
of blessedness with the angels, and an imperishable inheritance, the joy
of seeing his face, a dwelling-place with him in heaven, and the fear
of death removed from us through the resurrection. This is, if you like,
his ultimate promise. We look forward to it, and when we reach it, we
will want nothing more. But as to how this final end is to be reached,
he has also told us in promises and prophecies.
He has promised to men that they will be like God; to
mortals he has promised immortality; to sinners, righteousness; to the
lowly, glory.
Indeed, brethren, because what God promised seemed
incredible to men – that from mortality, decay, weakness, lowliness,
dust and ashes they should become equals of the angels of God – he did
not only sign a contract with them to convince them. He sent, not just
any prince, not just any angel or archangel, but his only Son. The road
by which he was to lead us to the end he had promised us – through his
Son he would show us that road.
Even so, it was not enough for God to send his Son to point out the way – he made his Son the way itself, so that we can go on our journey guided by him as he walks along his own way.
So the only Son of God was to come to men, to take on
humanity, and thus to die, to ascend to heaven and sit at the right hand
of the father, and so to fulfil what he had promised among the nations.
After that promise to the nations had been fulfilled, he would fulfil
his other promise, to come, to demand the return of what he had given,
to separate the vessels of anger from the vessels of mercy, to give the
wicked what he had threatened and the righteous what he had promised.
All this had to be prophesied and foretold. It had to
have its coming announced. It could not come suddenly and unexpectedly,
causing terror and alarm: people had to be awaiting it with faith.
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