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Job 24:19

Drought and heat consume the snow waters: so does the grave those who have sinned.
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George Leo Haydock

AD 1849
Let. Hebrew, "Drought and heat consume the snow waters; so doth the grave those which have sinned. "(Protestants) (Chaldean) (Haydock) The wicked die quickly, and without a lingering illness. (Piscator) What foundation, therefore, has the hell of cold as well as of fire? says Amama. St. Jerome (in Matthew x.) observes, "We read very plainly in the Book of Job that there is a double gehenna, both of too much heat and of too much cold "the latter occasions the gnashing of teeth, Matthew viii. (Denis the Carthusian) "In this world people pass through a medium or temperate state. But in hell, they pass from the excess of tormenting cold to that of burning fire; they will know no medium, because in this life they proceeded from one vice to another, even to the heat of lust. (Albertus Magnus.) (Haydock) Therefore they are punished with torments of a contrary nature. (Worthington) They go from the coldness of infidelity to the heat of heresy; (St. Gregory) from one calamity to another. (...

Gregory The Dialogist

AD 604
81. Iniquity is on this account likened to cold, because the mind that sins it binds up with insensibility. Hence it is written; As a fountain has made her waters cold, so she has made her wickedness cold. Contrariwise charity is ‘heat,’ in this respect that it fires the soul it fills. Of which ‘heat’ is written, Because iniquity shall abound, the love of many shall wax cold. And there are some who while they shun the cold or their wickednesses come to true faith or to the wearing of sanctity, but because they presume on their own faculties for perceiving more than should be, oftentimes in the faith which they receive they are minded to pry curiously into the things that they do not take in, so as to be held fast in God rather by reason than by faith. But because the mind of man has not power to dive into the mysteries of God; all that they cannot get to the bottom of by reason, they care not to believe, and by overmuch investigation they fall into error. So these, when they did...

Gregory The Dialogist

AD 604
82. For sin is ‘brought even to hell,’ which before the end of the present life is not by chastening reformed unto repentance. Of which same sin it is said by John, There is a sin unto death, I do not say that he shall pray for it. For ‘a sin unto death’ is a sin even until death in this way, that the pardon of that sin is sought in vain which is not corrected here.

Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the scripture is of any private interpretation - 2 Peter 1:20

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