From the treatise Against Heresies by Saint Irenaeus, bishop
The covenant of the Lord |
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In the book of Deuteronomy Moses says to the people: The Lord your God made a covenant on Horeb; he made this covenant, not with your fathers but with you. Why did God not make this covenant with their fathers? Because the law is not aimed at the righteous.
Their fathers were righteous: they had the power of the Decalogue
implanted in their hearts and in their souls. That is, they loved the
God who made them and did nothing unjust against their neighbor. For
this reason they did not need to be admonished by written rebukes: they
had the righteousness of the law in their hearts.
When this righteousness and love for God had passed
into oblivion and had been extinguished in Egypt, God had necessarily to
reveal himself through his own voice, out of his great love for men. He
led the people out of Egypt in power, so that man might once again
become God’s disciple and follower. He made them afraid as they
listened, to warn them not to hold their Creator in contempt.
He fed them with manna, that they might receive spiritual food. In the book of Deuteronomy Moses says: He
fed you with manna, which your fathers did not know, that you might
understand that man will not live by bread alone but by every word of
God coming from the mouth of God.
He commanded them to love himself and trained them to practice righteousness toward their neighbor, so that man might not be
unrighteous or unworthy of God. Through the Decalogue he prepared man
for friendship with himself and for harmony with his neighbor. This was
to man’s advantage, though God needed nothing from man.
This raised man to glory, for it gave him what he did
not have, friendship with God. But it brought no advantage to God, for
God did not need man’s love. Man did not possess the glory of God, nor
could he attain it by any other means than through obedience to God.
This is why Moses said to the people: Choose life, that you may live
and your descendants too; love the Lord your God, hear his voice and
hold fast to him, for this is life for you and length of days.
This was the life that the Lord was preparing man to
receive when he spoke in person and gave the words of the Decalogue for
all alike to hear. These words remain with us as well; they were
extended and amplified through his coming in the flesh, but not
annulled.
God gave to the people separately through Moses the
commandments that enslave: these were precepts suited to their
instruction or their condemnation. As Moses said: The Lord commanded me at that time to teach you precepts of righteousness and of judgement.
The precepts that were given them to enslave and to serve as a warning
have been cancelled by the new covenant of freedom. The precepts that
belong to man’s nature and to freedom and to all alike have been
enlarged and broadened. Through the adoption of sons God had enabled man
so generously and bountifully to know him as Father, to love him with
his whole heart, and to follow his Word unfailingly.
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