Exposition on the Psalms of David
"Day." Here he excludes the impediment to teaching, and he excludes a threefold impediment. Sometimes teaching is impeded so that it cannot be learned because of time; sometimes because of the variety of languages; sometimes because of diversity of places. The first impediment concerns nighttime, for it is not a time for reading, since it is a time for resting; and according to different times it is fitting to teach and to learn. And first we must speak of material days that are caused according to nature from the motion of the heavens. And therefore it is necessary to consider not only the substance of the heavens but also the motion of the firmament; and thus wisdom must be understood in this alternation: Eccl. 33: "Why does one day surpass another day, and one light another light, and one year another year, from the sun? By the knowledge of the Lord they were distinguished," that is, disposed above. And therefore he says, "Day," succeeding, "to day utters speech," that is, the day of wisdom, that is, it manifests the order and goodness of divine wisdom, insofar as one day is greater than another, and so on. On one day the heat is greater than on another, and so with each. "And night." Above he showed divine wisdom and the order of divine disposition, because night succeeds night in an ordered way. And he says that day "utters," because the time of day is the time of speaking; and therefore it is the time of the word. For this reason he says, "utters speech." But nighttime is the time of meditation, because of quiet; and therefore in the quiet of the night a man meditates and discovers many things by which he becomes knowledgeable; and therefore it is the time of knowledge. And therefore he says, "And night," succeeding, "to night declares knowledge," that is, of God; because in one night there is a different disposition of time than in another; and all of this comes from the knowledge of God who disposes it. According to the truth, the apostles are called days. And this is what he says: "Day," that is, the apostles, "utters speech" of divine wisdom "to day," that is, to the perfect: 1 Cor. 2: "We speak wisdom among the perfect"; for not all things are preached to all, but clear things to the clear, holy things to the holy, great things to the great. Likewise the apostle, insofar as he is night, that is, living in the flesh and mortal, condescending to the weakness and ignorance of the unlearned, as night "declares knowledge to night," that is, to the perfect, but about human things: 1 Cor. 3: "I could not speak to you as to spiritual persons, but as to carnal. As little ones in Christ, I gave you milk to drink, not solid food." Or "day," that is, Gabriel, "utters speech to day," that is, proposes the word of the Savior to the Blessed Virgin; but "night," that is, the Devil, "declares knowledge to night," that is, to Eve: Gen. 3: "You shall be as gods, knowing good and evil."
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