FRAGMENTS ON THE EPISTLE TO THE HEBREWS 2.6-9
Why does he bring up the quote, “what are human beings that you are mindful of them?” He purports to prove, from the contrary, the following statement, that Christ is far superior to the angels. “A little while lower than the angels,” he brings … up in order to disprove the opposite proposition. He means that he was made lower through the suffering of death, “we saw him, but he had no form nor beauty.” Therefore, it was appropriate to say that about the Lord, because he was exalted; again, it was appropriate to exhort them [angels] to “put everything in subjection under his feet.”
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Commentary on Hebrews
He does not name the one spoken of, since he is speaking with people well-versed in the Scriptures. All of this is said about humanity in general, but preeminently, however, it may refer to Christ according to the flesh. For He, the Son of God, visited the insignificant human nature and, having assumed it and united it with Himself, became above all.
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Commentary on Hebrews
104. – Then he proves by an authority, when he says, it has been testified somewhere. Here he does three things: first, he commends the value of the testimony to be adduced; secondly, he adduces it (v. 6b); thirdly, he explains the meaning of the testimony (v. 8b).
105. – In regard to the testimony he states first that the words of the Old Testament are witnesses to Christ: 'Search the Scriptures: the same are they that give testimony of me' (Jn. 5:39). Therefore, he says, for it has been testified somewhere. Secondly, because among the Jews there were some writings less known and some better known, the Scriptures of the Psalms are of greater value than those they used in all their sacrifices; hence, he says, somewhere, known and manifest. Thirdly, he gives the authority of the speaker, namely, David, who enjoyed the greatest authority: 'The man to whom it was appointed concerning the Christ of the God of Jacob, the excellent Psalmist of Israel said' (2 Sam. 23:1).
106. – Then he adduces the authority (v. 6b). Here he does three things: first, he hints at the mystery of the Incarnation; secondly, of the Passion (v. 7); thirdly, the mystery of the exaltation (v. 7b). In regard to the first he touches on two things: first, the cause of the Incarnation; secondly, the Incarnation itself (v. 6c).
107. – But the cause of the Incarnation is God's care of man. Therefore, he says: What is man? as though in contempt. As if to say: Man is so unimportant when compared to God: 'All nations are before him as if they had no being at all, and are counted to him as nothing and vanity' (Is. 40:17). For if a person loves another and leaves him in wretchedness for a long time, he seems to have forgotten. But God loved the human race, both because He made it according to His own image and because He placed man in the midst of paradise. But after sin, because He did not come to his aid immediately, He seems to have forgotten. But later he seems to have become mindful of him, when He sends a Redeemer: 'Remember us, O Lord, in the favor of your people; visit us with your salvation' (Ps. 105:4). Therefore, he says, What is man that you are mindful of him? As if to say: If we consider man's vileness, it is strange that You should be mindful of him who is so vile and so small. I say vile and small in nature, especially in regard to his substance: 'God formed man from the slime of the earth (Gen. 2:7); 'And now, O Lord, you are our Father and we are clay' (Is. 64:8). Vile in his sins; hence, Augustine says on John: 'Men accomplish nothing when they sin;' 'Behold, I have made you small among the nations, you are exceedingly contemptible' (Ob 1:2). Vile and weak in his punishment: 'Man born of a woman, living for a time is filled with many miseries' (Jb. 14:1); 'Who shall raise up Jacob, for he is very little' (Am 7:5).
108. – Secondly, he mentions the Incarnation when he says, the son of man. Here it should be noted that in Sacred Scripture Christ is called the Son of man, as is clear from Daniel and from the Gospel. The reason for this is that others are sons of men: 'O you sons of men, how long will you be dull of heart?' (Ps. 4:3); but Christ alone is the son of man, namely, of the Blessed Virgin, and He is visited by God. Sometimes in Scripture a visitation refers to a benefit, as when 'the Lord visited Sarah as He had promised and fulfilled what He spoke' (Gen. 21:1). Sometimes it refers to a punishment: 'I will visit their iniquities with a rod' (Ps. 88:33). But here it refers to the benefit: You care for [visit] i.e., confer a most excellent gift on man, because you make him a son of God, when His humanity is assumed by the Word. Or he says this because of Christ's fullness: 'Full of grace and truth' (Jn. 1:14). Or both can be referred to Christ, so that the sense is this: You were mindful of him in the Incarnation, when humanity was assumed by Christ, but you visit him in the resurrection. Or both should be referred to the human race. But every son of man is a man, although not every man is a son of a man. For Adam was not a son of man. A man, therefore, is one who bears the image of the earthly man, namely, of Adam; and this man is called a sinner; but a son of man is one who bears the image of the heavenly man, namely Christ, Who is called the Son of man: 'Therefore, as we have borne the image of the earthly, let us bear also the image of the heavenly' (1 Cor. 15:49). Man, therefore, is called a sinner; and because he is far from God, 'for salvation is far from sinners' (Ps. 118:155), God is said to be mindful of him, as a man is mindful of one far away. But when he is changed from sinner to just, the son of man is visited by grace: 'Your visitation has guarded my spirit' (Jb. 10:12).
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