And the remnant took his servants, and treated them shamefully, and slew them.
Read Chapter 22
George Leo Haydock
AD 1849
Put them to death. Thus the Jews had many times treated the prophets. (Witham)
These were by far the most impious and the most ungrateful; tenue runt Servos ejus, as is related in the Acts, with regard to the death of James, and Stephen, and Paul. (Menochius)
And to me they seem moreover to make use of these excuses, putting forward these things as cloke for their negligence. And not this only is the grievous thing, that they came not, but also that which is a far more violent and furious act, to have even beaten them that came, and to have used them despitefully, and to have slain them; this is worse than the former. For those others came, demanding produce and fruits, and were slain; but these, bidding them to the marriage of Him that had been slain by them, and these again are murdered.
What is equal to this madness? This Paul also was laying to their charge, when he said, Who both killed the Lord, and their own prophets, and have persecuted us.
Moreover, that they may not say, He is an adversary of God, and therefore we do not come, hear what they say who are bidding them; that it is the father who is making the marriage, and that it is He who is bidding them.