Origen's Commentary on Matthew.

 From the First Book of the Commentary on Matthew.

 From the Second Book of the Commentary on the Gospel According to Matthew.

 Book X.

 Book X.

 2. Exposition of the Parable.

 3. The Shining of the Righteous. Its Interpretation.

 4. Concerning the Parable of the Treasure Hidden in the Field. The Parable Distinguished from the Similitude.

 5. The Field and the Treasure Interpreted.

 6. The Exposition Continued.

 7. The Parable of the Pearl of Great Price. The Formation and Difference of Pearls.

 8. The Parable Interpreted is the Light of These Views.

 9. Christ the Pearl of Great Price.

 10. The Pearl of the Gospel in Relation to the Old Testament.

 11. The Parable of the Drag-Net.

 12. The Divine Scriptures Compared to a Net.

 13. Relation of Men to Angels.

 14. The Disciples as Scribes.

 15. The Householder and His Treasury.

 16. Parables in Relation to Similitudes. Jesus in His Own Country.

 17. The Brethren of Jesus.

 18. Prophets in Their Country.

 19. Relation of Faith and Unbelief to the Supernatural Powers of Jesus.

 20. Different Conceptions of John the Baptist.

 21. Herod and the Baptist.

 22. The Dancing of Herodias. The Keeping of Oaths.

 23. The Withdrawal of Jesus.

 24. The Diverse Forms of Spiritual Sickness.

 25. Healing Precedes Participation in the Loaves of Jesus.

 Book XI.

 Book XI.

 2. Exposition of the Details of the Miracle.

 3. The Exposition of Details Continued. The Sitting Down on the Grass. The Division into Companies.

 4. The Multitudes and the Disciples Contrasted.

 5. The Disciples in Conflict. Jesus Walks Upon the Waters.

 6. Interpretation of the Details in the Narrative. Application Thereof to All Disciples.

 7. The Healing of the Sick on the Other Side. The Method of Healing.

 8. Concerning the Pharisees and Scribes Who Came and Inquired, Why Do Thy Disciples Transgress the Tradition of the Elders?

 9. Explanation of “Corban.”

 10. The Traditions of the Elders in Collision with Divine Law.

 11. Exposition of the Prophecy of Isaiah Quoted by Jesus.

 12. Things Clean and Unclean According to the Law and the Gospel.

 13. The Offence of the Pharisees.

 14. Why the Pharisees Were Not a Plant of God. Teaching of Origen on the “Bread of the Lord.”

 15. Eating with Unwashed Heart Defiles the Man.

 16. Concerning the Canaanitish Woman. Meaning of the “Borders of Tyre and Sidon.”

 17. Exposition of the Details in the Narrative.

 18. Concerning the Multitudes Who Were Healed. Comparison of the Mountain Where Jesus Sat to the Church.

 19. Concerning the Seven Loaves. The Narrative of the Feeding of the Four Thousand Compared with that of the Five Thousand.

 Book XII.

 Book XII.

 2. Why the Pharisees Asked a Sign from Heaven.

 3. The Answer of Jesus to Their Request.

 4. Why Jesus Called Them an Adulterous Generation. The Law as Husband.

 5. Concerning the Leaven of the Pharisees.

 6. The Meaning of Leaven. Jesus’ Knowledge of the Heart.

 7. Relative Magnitude of Sins of the Heart and Actual Sins.

 8. The Leaven Figurative Like the Water Spoken of by Jesus to the Woman of Samaria.

 9. Concerning the Question of Jesus in Cæsarea, Who Do Men Say that I Am? Different Conceptions of Jesus.

 10. The Answer of Peter.

 11. The Promise Given to Peter Not Restricted to Him, But Applicable to All Disciples Like Him.

 12. Every Sin—Every False Doctrine is a “Gate of Hades.”

 13. The “Gates of Hades” And the “Gates of Zion” Contrasted.

 14. In What Sense the “Keys” Are Given to Peter, and Every Peter. Limitations of This Power.

 15. Relation of the Former Commission Given by Jesus to the Disciples, to His Present Injunction of Silence. Belief and Knowledge Contrasted.

 16. Gradual Growth in Knowledge of the Disciples.

 17. Reasons for that Gradual Knowledge.

 18. Jesus Was at First Proclaimed by the Twelve as a Worker and a Teacher Only.

 19. Importance of the Proclamation of Jesus as the Crucified.

 20. Why Jesus Had to Go to Jerusalem.

 21. The Rebuke of Peter and the Answer of Jesus.

 22. Importance of the Expressions “Behind” And “Turned.”

 23. Peter as a Stumbling-Block to Jesus.

 24. Self-Denial and Cross-Bearing.

 25. Reference to the Saying of Paul About Crucifixion with Christ.

 26. The Less of Life And the Saving of It.

 27. Life Lost to the World is Saved.

 28. The Exchange for One’s Life.

 29. The Coming of the Son of Man in Glory.

 30. The Word Appears in Different Forms The Time of His Coming in Glory.

 31. The Simpler Interpretation of the Promise About Not Tasting of Death.

 32. Standing by the Saviour.

 33. Interpretation of “Tasting of Death.”

 34. Meaning of “Until.” No Limitation of Promise.

 35. Scriptural References to Death.

 36. Concerning the Transfiguration of the Saviour.

 37. Force of the Words “Before Them.”

 38. The Garments White as the Light.

 39. Jesus Was Transfigured—“As He Was Praying.”

 40. Discussion of the Saying of Peter.

 41. Figurative Interpretation of the Same.

 42. The Meaning of the “Bright Cloud.”

 43. Relation of Moses and Elijah to Jesus. The Injunction of Silence.

 Book XIII.

 Book XIII.

 2. “The Spirit and Power of Elijah”—Not the Soul—Were in the Baptist.

 3. Concerning the Epileptic.

 4. Spiritual Epileptics.

 5. The Deaf and Dumb Spirit.

 6. Influence of the Moon and Stars on Men.

 7. The Power of Faith.

 8. Jesus’ Prediction of His “Delivery” Into the Hands of Men.

 9. Satan and the “Delivery” Of Jesus.

 10. Concerning Those Who Demanded the Half-Shekel.

 11. The Freedom of Sons.

 12. The Stater Allegorized.

 13. The Sacred Half-Shekel.

 14. Concerning Those Who Said, Who is the Greatest? and Concerning the Child that Was Called by Jesus.

 15. Greatness Varies in Degree.

 16. Why the Great are Compared to Little Children.

 17. The Little Ones and Their Stumbling-Blocks.

 18. Who Was the Little Child Called by Jesus.

 19. The Parallel Passages in Mark and Luke.

 20. The World and Offences. Various Meanings of World.

 21. The “Woe” Does Not Apply to the Disciples of Jesus.

 22. What the “Occasions of Stumbling” Are.

 23. In What Sense “Necessary.”

 24. The Offending Hand, or Foot, or Eye.

 25. The Eye or Hand Allegorized.

 26. The Little Ones and Their Angels.

 27. When the Little Ones are Assigned to Angels.

 28. Close Relationship of Angels to Their “Little Ones.”

 29. The Little Ones and the Perfect.

 30. The Sinning Brother.

 31. The Power to Bind on Earth and in Heaven.

 Book XIV.

 Book XIV.

 2. The Harmony of Husband and Wife.

 3. The Harmony of Body, Soul, and Spirit.

 4. Harmony of the Old and New Covenants.

 5. The Limit of Forgiveness.

 6. Concerning the King Who Made a Reckoning with His Own Servants, to Whom Was Brought a Man Who Owed Ten Thousand Talents.

 7. Exposition Continued: the King and the Servants.

 8. The Principle of the Reckoning.

 9. The Time Occupied by the Reckoning.

 10. The Man Who Owed Many Talents.

 11. The Servant Who Owed a Hundred Pence.

 12. The Time of the Reckoning.

 13. No Forgiveness to the Unforgiving.

 14. How Jesus Finished His Words.

 15. How Men Followed Jesus.

 16. Concerning the Pharisees and Scribes Tempting Jesus (by Asking) Whether Was Lawful for a Man to Put Away His Wife for Every Cause.

 17. Union of Christ and the Church.

 18. The Bill of Divorcement.

 19. The Divorce of Israel.

 20. Christ and the Gentiles.

 21. Union of Angels and the Souls of Men.

 22. The Marriage of Church Dignitaries.

 23. Some Laws Given by Concession to Human Weakness.

 24. Jewish Criticism of the Law of Christ.

 25. Chastity and Prayer.

19. Concerning the Seven Loaves. The Narrative of the Feeding of the Four Thousand Compared with that of the Five Thousand.

And Jesus called unto Him His disciples and said.386 Matt. xv. 32. Above in the similar history to this about the loaves, before the loaves are spoken of, “Jesus came forth and saw a great multitude and had compassion upon them and healed their sick. And when even was come the disciples came to Him saying, The place is desert and the time is already past, send them away,”387 Matt. xiv. 15. etc. But now after the healing of the deaf and the rest, He takes compassion on the multitude which had continued with Him now three days and had nothing to eat. And there the disciples make request concerning the five thousand;388 Matt. xiv. 15. but here He speaks of His own accord about the four thousand.389 Matt. xv. 32. Those, too, are fed when it was evening after they had spent a day with Him; but these, who are testified to have continued with Him three days, partake of the loaves lest they might faint by the way. And there the disciples say to Him when He was not inquiring, that they had only five loaves and two fishes; but here to Him making inquiry, they give answer about the seven loaves and the few small fishes. And there He commands the multitudes to sit down or lie upon the grass; for Luke also wrote, “Make them sit down,”390 Luke ix. 14. and Mark says, “He commanded them all to sit down;”391 Mark vi. 39. but here He does not command but proclaims392 ὀυ κελεύει ἁλλὰ παραγγέλλει to the multitude to sit down. Again, there, the three Evangelists say in the very same words that “He took the five loaves and the two fishes and looking up to heaven He blessed;”393 Matt. xiv. 19; Mark vi. 41; Luke ix. 16. but here, as Matthew and Mark have written, “Jesus gave thanks and brake;”394 Matt. xv. 36; Mark viii. 6. there, they recline upon the grass, but here they sit down upon the ground. You will moreover investigate in the accounts in the different places the variation found in John, who wrote in regard to that transaction that Jesus said, “Make the men sit down,”395 John vi. 10. and that, having given thanks, He gave of the loaves to them that were set down, but he did not mention this miracle at all.396 Or, did not mention the occasion of this. Attending, then, to the difference of those things which are written in the various places in regard to the loaves, I think that these belong to a different order from those; wherefore these are fed in a mountain, and those in a desert place; and these after they had continued three days with Jesus, but those one day, on the evening of which they were fed. And further, unless it be the same thing for Jesus to do a thing of Himself and to act after having heard from the disciples, consider if those to whom Jesus shows kindness are not superior when He fed them on the spot with a view to showing them kindness. And, if according to John,397 John vi. 13. they were barley loaves of which the twelve baskets remained over, but nothing of this kind is said about these, how are not these superior to the former? And the sick of those He healed,398 Matt. xiv. 14. but here He heals these, along with the multitudes, who were not sick but blind, and lame, and deaf, and maimed; wherefore also in regard to these the four thousand marvel,399 Matt. xv. 31. but in regard to the sick no such thing is said. And these I think who ate of the seven loaves for which thanks were given, are superior to those who ate of the five which were blessed; and these who ate the few little fishes to those who ate of the two, and perhaps also these who sat down upon the ground to those who sat down on the grass. And those from fewer loaves leave twelve baskets, but these from a greater number leave seven baskets, inasmuch, as they were able to receive more. And perhaps these tread upon all earthly things and sit down upon them, but those upon the grass—upon their flesh only—for “all flesh is grass.”400 Isa. xl. 6. Consider also after this, that Jesus does not wish to send them away fasting lest they faint on the way, as being without the loaves of Jesus, and while they were still on the way—the way to their own concerns—might suffer injury. Take note also of the cases where Jesus is recorded to have sent any one away, that you may see the difference of those who were sent away by Him after being fed, and those who had been sent away otherwise; and, as a pattern of one who was sent away otherwise, take “Woman, thou art loosed from thine infirmity.”401 Luke xiii. 12, Literally ‘thou art sent away.’ But further the disciples who are always with Jesus are not sent away by Him; but the multitudes after they have eaten are sent away. Likewise, again, the disciples who conceive nothing great about the Canaanitish woman say, “Send her away, for she crieth after us;”402 Matt. xv. 23. but the Saviour does not at all appear to send her away; for saying unto her, “O woman, great is thy faith, be it done to thee even as thou wilt,”403 Matt. xv. 28. He healed her daughter from that hour: it is not however written that He sent her away. So far at the present time have we been able to investigate and see into the passage before us.