But Jesus answered them
Being convened before them, and charged by them with the
violation of the sabbath, he vindicated himself in the following
manner, saying;
my Father worketh hitherto:
he who is my Father, not by creation, or adoption, but by nature,
though he ended all his work on the seventh day, and rested from
what he had done; yet he did not cease from working at all, but
has continued to work ever since, on sabbath days, as well as on
other days; in upholding and governing the world, in continuing
the species of beings, and all creatures in their being; in
providing for them, and in dispensing the bounties of his
providence to them; in causing his sun to shine, and showers of
rain to descend on the earth; and in taking care of, and
protecting even the meanest of his creatures: and much more men;
and still more his own people:
and I work;
or "also I work"; as the Syriac and Arabic version reads; i.e. in
conjunction with him, as a co-efficient cause in the works of
providence, in the government of the world, in upholding all
things in it, in bearing up the pillars of the earth, in holding
things together, and sustaining all creatures: or I also work in
imitation of him, in doing good both to the bodies and souls of
men on the sabbath day, being the Lord of it: I do but what my
Father does, and therefore, as he is not to be blamed for his
works on that day, as none will say he is, no more am I. So Philo
the Jew says {b},
``God never ceases to work; but as it is the property of fire to burn, and of snow to cool, so of God to work.''And what most men call fortune, he calls the divine Logos, or word, to whom he ascribes all the affairs of providence F3.
F2 Leg. Ailegor. l. 1. p. 41.
F3 Quod Deus sit Immutab. p. 318.