2 entries
1 Paralipomenon 12:1-22 1 entry

THE FOLLOWERS OF DAVID

WHEN GOD WINS, YOU PREVAIL.

St. Augustine of Hippo (354–430)

The Lord shall give the Word to them that preach good tidings, with great power.[1] Of you, also, I venture to make this prayer, that, in this struggle of ours, truth may prevail. For you are not seeking your own glory but Christ’s,[2] and when you win the victory, I also shall win it if I recognize my own error, and, contrarily, you prevail when I win, for neither ought the children to lay up for the parents, but the parents for the children.[3] And in the book of Paralipomenon we read that the sons of Israel went out to fight with peaceful heart, in the very midst of swords and blood shedding and the bodies of the slain, because they were thinking of the victory of peace, not their own.

Letter 75

1 Paralipomenon 12:23-40 1 entry

DAVID KING OF ALL ISRAEL

MY OWN IS MY ENEMY.

St. Jerome (c. 347–420) verse 38

O Lord, deliver me from lying lip, from treacherous tongue: not from another’s tongue but from my own. Another’s tongue does not injure me; my own is my enemy. Deliver me; deliver me from my own tongue. My tongue is a sword, and it is slaying my soul. I think that I am harming my enemy; I do not realize that I am killing myself. My adversaries may contradict me when I speak to them, but I shall speak peace. Their spirit may be hostile, but let our spirit be that of peacemakers. It is written in Paralipomenon: The sons of Israel came to fight with peaceful heart.

Homilies on the Psalms 41 (ps 119[120])