The works of Richard Hurd, volume 6 (of 8)
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SATIS ME VIXISSE ARBITRABOR, ET OFFICIUM HOMINIS IMPLESSE, SI LABOR MEUS ALIQUOS HOMINES, AB ERRORIBUS LIBERATOS, AD ITER CŒLESTE DIREXERIT. Lactantius.
Jesus saith unto them, Have ye understood all these things? They say unto him, Yea, Lord. Then said he unto them, Therefore every scribe which is instructed unto the kingdom of heaven, is like unto a man that is an householder, which bringeth forth out of his treasure things new and old.
If there be any difficulty in these words, it will be removed by considering the manners of that time, in which Jesus lived, and the ideas of those persons, to whom he addressed himself.
The Israelites were a plain, frugal people; abundantly supplied with all things needful to the convenient support of life, but very sparingly with such as come under the notion of ornaments or superfluities. They drew their means of subsistence chiefly from pasturage, agriculture, and other rural occupations. Gold and Silver was scarce among the ancient Jews; and the less necessary to them, as they had little traffic among themselves, and still less with their pagan neighbours; the wisdom of their Law having purposely restrained, and, upon the matter, prohibited, all the gainful ways of commerce.
Now, to a people, thus circumstanced, unfurnished, in a good degree, with arts and manufactures, and but slenderly provided with the means of exchange for the commodities they produce; management, thrift, and what we call good husbandry , must have been a capital virtue. Householders were especially concerned to hoard up, and keep by them, in readiness, all such things as might be requisite either to cloath or feed their respective families. And therefore, as they were continually making fresh additions to their stock, so they carefully preserved what things they had, provided they were of a nature to be preserved, although time and use had impaired the grace, or diminished the value, of them. Thus, they had things new and old laid up in their store-house, or treasury (for these provisions were indeed their treasure ), which, as the text says, they could bring forth , on any emergency that called for them.
Richard Hurd
Transcriber’s Note:
St. Matth. xiii. 51, 52.
1 Cor. x. 15.
Rom. ii. 14, 15.
Gal. iii. 19.
Heb. ii. 3.
St. John, xiv. 8.
St. James, iv. 1.
1 Tim. i. 5.
Rom. xii. 10.
John xiii. 8.
Mark ix. 49.
Gal. vi. 3.
2 Cor. x. 12.
Rom. xvi. 19.
Rom. xvi. 19.
John v. 44.
John, ix. 41.
1 Cor. viii. 1.
Acts of the Apostles, xxvi. 9.
St. Luke, vi. 26.
St. John viii. 9.
St. Matthew, xi. 29.
Luke xvi. 14.
Ecclesiastes v. 10.
1 Cor. vi. 20.
Job xxiii. 26.
Ecclesiastes vii. 21, 22.
THE END OF THE SIXTH VOLUME.
FOOTNOTES:
Transcriber’s Note: