Tractate XLV.
Chapter X. 1–10
1. Our Lord’s discourse to the Jews began in connection with the man who was born blind and was restored to sight. Your Charity therefore ought to know and be advised that today’s lesson is interwoven with that one. For when the Lord had said, “For judgment I am come into this world; that they who see not might see, and they who see might be made blind,”—which, on the occasion of its reading, we expounded according to our ability,—some of the Pharisees said, “Are we blind also?” To whom He replied, “If ye were blind, ye should have no sin: but now ye say, We see; [therefore] your sin remaineth.”844 Chap. ix. 39–41. To these words He added what we have been hearing today when the lesson was read.
TRACTATUS XLV. Ab eo quod scriptum est, Amen, amen dico vobis; qui non intrat per ostium in ovile ovium, sed ascendit aliunde, ille fur est et latro; usque ad id, Ego veni ut vitam habeant, et abundantius habeant. Cap. X, V\. 1-10.
1. De illuminato illo qui natus est caecus, sermo ad Judaeos Domini exortus est. Huic itaque lectioni hodiernam esse contextam, scire debuit et commoneri Charitas vestra. Cum enim Dominus dixisset, In judicium ego veni in hunc mundum, ut qui non vident, videant; et qui vident, caeci fiant; quod eo tempore, quando lectum est, ut potuimus exposuimus: quidam 1720 ex Pharisaeis dixerunt, Numquid et nos caeci sumus? Quibus respondit: Si caeci essetis, non haberetis peccatum; nunc autem dicitis, Quia videmus: peccatum vestrum manet (Joan. IX, 39-41). His verbis subjunxit ea quae hodie cum recitarentur, audivimus.