Exposition on the Psalms of David
"He shall enter." Here he sets forth the failure of spiritual goods. And first he shows the failure; second, he sets forth the order of arriving at this failure, at "Man." And first he sets forth the failure of guilt; second, of punishment. With respect to the first he says, "He shall enter," namely this sinner, so rich and whom all praise while it is well with him -- he shall enter, I say, "even to the generation of his fathers," namely by imitation, since he performs all the evils that his entire lineage committed. Mt. 23: "And you, fill up the measure of your fathers." Jer. 11: "They have returned to the iniquities of their earlier fathers." Or, "he shall enter," etc., because his fathers are wicked and are in Hell, and he shall go there. With respect to the second he says, "And even to eternity he shall not see the light." Because since here in his eternity, namely in his life, he did not wish to follow the light of reason, therefore he shall not see the light for eternity. Job 15: "He does not believe that he can return from darkness to light." Mt. 25: "Cast the unprofitable servant into the outer darkness," etc. And in what order? Because when he was endowed with the light of reason, as a man placed in honor, he did not wish to be ruled by that light; he was made like senseless beasts, and therefore, since he acts like the beasts, he must be consigned to slaughter.
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