SAINT AUGUSTINE
THE ENCHIRIDION
OR ON FAITH, HOPE, AND LOVE
TRANSLATED BY PROFESSOR J. F. SHAW, LONDONDERRY
INTRODUCTORY BY THE EDITOR
The Enchiridion is among the latest books of
Augustin. It was written after the death of Jerome, which occurred Sept. 30, 420; for he
alludes in ch. 87 to Jerome "of blessed memory" (sanctoe memorioe Hieronymus
presbyter).
ST. AUGUSTIN speaks of this book in his
Retractations, 1. if. c. 63, as follows:
"I also wrote a book on Faith, Hope, and
Charity, at the request of the person to whom I addressed it, that he might have a work of
mine which should never be out of his hands, such as the Greeks call an Enchiridion
(Hand-Book). There I think I have pretty carefully treated of the manner in which God is
to be worshipped, which knowledge divine Scripture defines to be the true wisdom of man.
The book begins: 'I cannot express,'" etc.
It is addressed to Laurentius, in answer to his
questions. This person is otherwise unknown. One MS. calls him a deacon, another a notary
of the city of Rome. He was probably a layman.
The author usually calls the book "On Faith,
Hope and Love," because he treats the subject under these three heads (comp. I Cor.
xiii. 13). He follows under the first head the order of the Apostles' Creed, and refutes,
without naming them, the Manichaean, Apollinarian, Arian, and Pelagian heresies. Under the
second head he gives a brief exposition of the Lord's Prayer. The third part is a
discourse on Christian love.
The original is in the sixth volume of the
Benedictine edition. A neat edition of the Latin text, with three other small tracts of
Augustin, (De Catechizandis Rudibus; De Fide Return quae non creduntur ; De Utilitate
Credendi), is also published in C. Marriott's S. Aurelius Augustinus, 4th ed. by H. de
Romestin, Oxford and London (Parker and Comp.), 1885 (pp. 150-251.) An English edition of
the same tracts by H. de Romestin, Oxford and London, 1885 (pp. 151-251). His English
translation is based on that of C. L. Cornish, M.A., which appeared in the Oxford
"Library of the Fathers," Oxford 1847 ("Seventeen Short Treatises of St.
Aug." pp. 85-158).
The present translation by Professor Shaw was
first published in Dr. Dods's series of Augustin's works, Edinburgh, (T. and T. Clark,) 3d
ed. 1883. It is more free and idiomatic than that of Cornish. I have in a few cases
conformed it more closely to the original.
P.S.
THE ENCHIRIDION, ADDRESSED TO LAURENTIUS; BEING
A TREATISE ON FAITH, HOPE AND LOVE. ARGUMENT.
LAURENTIUS HAVING ASKED AUGUSTIN TO FURNISH HIM
WITH A HANDBOOK OF CHRISTIAN DOCTRINE, CONTAINING IN BRIEF COMPASS ANSWERS TO SEVERAL
QUESTIONS WHICH HE HAD PROPOSED, AUGUSTIN SHOWS HIM THAT THESE QUESTIONS CAN BE FULLY
ANSWERED BY ANY ONE WHO KNOWS THE PROPER OBJECTS OF FAITH, HOPE, AND LOVE. HE THEN
PROCEEDS, IN THE FIRST PART OF THE WORK (CHAP. IX.--CXIII.), TO EXPOUND THE OBJECTS OF
FAITH, TAKING AS HIS TEXT THE APOSTLES' CREED; AND IN THE COURSE OF THIS EXPOSITION,
BESIDES REFUTING DIVERS HERESIES, HE THROWS OUT MANY OBSERVATIONS ON THE CONDUCT OF LIFE.
THE SECOND PART OF THE WORK (CHAP. CXIV.--CXVI.) TREATS OF THE OBJECTS OF HOPE, AND
CONSISTS OF A VERY BRIEF EXPOSITION OF THE SEVERAL PETITIONS IN THE LORD'S PRAYER. THE
THIRD AND CONCLUDING PART (CHAP. CXVII.-CXXII.) TREATS OF THE OBJECTS OF LOVE, SHOWING THE
PRE-EMINENCE OF THIS GRACE IN THE GOSPEL SYSTEM, THAT IT IS THE END OF THE COMMANDMENT AND
THE FULFILLING OF THE LAW, AND THAT GOD HIMSELF IS LOVE.
CHAP. 1.--THE AUTHOR DESIRES THE GIFT OF TRUE
WISDOM FOR LAURENTIUS.
I CANNOT express, my beloved son Laurentius, the
delight with which I witness your progress in knowledge, and the earnest desire I have
that you should be a wise man: not one of those of whom it is said, "Where is the
wise ? where is the scribe ? where is the disputer of this world ? hath not God made
foolish the wisdom of this world?" but one of those of whom it is said, "The
multitude of the wise is the welfare of the world,"' and such as the apostles wishes
those to become, whom he tells," I would have you wise unto that which is good, and
simple concerning evil." Now, just as no one can exist of himself, so no one san
be wise of himself, but only by the enlightening influence of Him of whom it is
written," All wisdom cometh from the Lord."
CHAP. 2.--THE FEAR OF GOD IS MAN'S TRUE WISDOM.
The true wisdom of man is piety. You find this in
the book of holy Job. For we read there what wisdom itself has said to man: "Behold,
the fear of the Lord [pietas], that is wisdom." If you ask further what is meant
in that place by pietas, the Greek calls it more definitely
qeosebeia
, that is, the
worship of God. The Greeks sometimes call piety
eusebeia
, which signifies right worship,
though this, of course, refers specially to the worship of God. But when we are defining
in what man's true wisdom consists, the most convenient word to use is that which
distinctly expresses the fear of God. And can you, who are anxious that I should treat of
great matters in few words, wish for a briefer form of expression? Or perhaps you are
anxious that this expression should itself be briefly explained, and that I should unfold
in a short discourse the proper mode of worshipping God ?
CHAP. 3.--GOD IS TO BE WORSHIPPED THROUGH FAITH,
HOPE, AND LOVE.
Now if I should answer, that God is to be
worshipped with faith, hope, and love, you will at once say that this answer is too brief,
and will ask me briefly to unfold the objects of each of these three graces, viz., what we
are to believe, what we are to hope for, and what we are to love. And when I have done
this, you will have an answer to all the questions you asked in your letter. If you have
kept a copy of your letter, you can easily turn it up and read it over again: if you have
not, you will have no difficulty in recalling it when I refresh your memory.
CHAP. 4.--THE QUESTIONS PROPOUNDED BY
LAURENTIUS.
You are anxious, you say, that I should write a
sort of handbook for you, which you might always keep beside you, containing answers to
the questions you put, viz.: what ought to be man's chief end in life; what he ought, in
view of the various heresies, chiefly to avoid; to what extent religion is supported by
reason; what there is in reason that lends no support to faith, when faith stands alone;
what is the starting-point, what the goal, of religion; what is the sum of the whole body
of doctrine; what is the sure and proper foundation of the catholic faith. Now,
undoubtedly, you will know the answers to all these questions, if you know thoroughly the
proper objects of faith, hope, and love. For these must be the chief, nay, the exclusive
objects of pursuit in religion. He who speaks against these is either a total stranger to
the name of Christ, or is a heretic. These are to be defended by reason, which must have
its starting-point either in the bodily senses or in the intuitions of the mind. And what
we have neither had experience of through our bodily senses, nor have been able to reach
through the intellect, must undoubtedly be believed on the testimony of those witnesses by
whom the Scriptures, justly called divine, were written; and who by divine assistance were
enabled, either through bodily sense or intellectual perception, to see or to foresee the
things in question.
CHAP. 5.--BRIEF ANSWERS TO THESE QUESTIONS.
Moreover, when the mind has been imbued with the
first elements of that faith which worketh by love, it endeavors by purity of life to
attain unto sight, where the pure and [perfect in heart know that unspeakable beauty, the
full vision of which is supreme happiness. Here surely is an answer to your question as to
what is the starting-point, and what the goal: we begin in faith, and are made perfect by
sight. This also is the sum of the whole body of doctrine. But the sure and proper
foundation of the catholic faith is Christ. "For other foundation," says the
apostle, "can no man lay than that is laid, which is Jesus Christ." Nor are
we to deny that this is the proper foundation of the catholic faith, because it may be
supposed that some heretics hold this in common with us. For if we carefully consider the
things that pertain to Christ, we shall find that, among those heretics who call
themselves Christians, Christ is present in name only: in deed and in truth He is not
among them. But to show this would occupy us too long, for we should require to go over
all the heresies which have existed, which do exist, or which could exist, under the
Christian name, and to show that this is true in the case of each,--a discussion which
would occupy so many volumes as to be all but interminable.
CHAP. 6.--CONTROVERSY OUT OF PLACE IN A HANDBOOK
LIKE THE PRESENT.
Now you ask of me a handbook, that is, one that
can be carried in the hand, not one to load your shelves. To return, then, to the three
graces through which, as I have said, God should be worshipped--faith, hope, and love: to
state what are the true and proper objects of each of these is easy. But to defend this
true doctrine against the assaults of those who hold an opposite opinion, requires much
fuller and more elaborate instruction. And the true way to obtain this instruction is not
to have a short treatise put into one's hands, but to have a great zeal kindled in one's
heart.
CHAP. 7.--THE CREED AND THE LORD'S PRAYER DEMAND
THE EXERCISE OF FAITH, HOPE, AND LOVE.
For you have the Creed and the Lord's Prayer.
What can be briefer to hear or to read ? What easier to commit to memory? When, as the
result of sin, the human race was groaning under a heavy load of misery, and was in urgent
need of the divine compassion, one of the prophets, anticipating the time of God's grace,
declared: "And it shall come to pass, that whosoever shall call on the name of the
Lord shall be delivered." Hence the Lord's Prayer. But the apostle, when, for the
purpose of commending this very grace, he had quoted this prophetic testimony, immediately
added: "How then shall they call on Him in whom they have not believed?"
Hence the Creed. In these two you have those three graces exemplified: faith believes,
hope and love pray. But without faith the two last cannot exist, and therefore we may say
that faith also prays. Whence it is written: "How shall they call on Him in whom they
have not believed?"
CHAP. 8.--THE DISTINCTION BETWEEN FAITH AND
HOPE, AND THE MUTUAL DEPENDENCE OF FAITH, HOPE, AND LOVE.
Again, can anything be hoped for which is not an
object of faith? It is true that a thing which is not an object of hope may be believed.
What true Christian, for example, does not believe in the punishment of the wicked ? And
yet such an one does not hope for it. And the man who believes that punishment to be
hanging over himself, and who shrinks in horror from the prospect, is more properly said
to fear than to hope. And these two states of mind the poet carefully distinguishes, when
he says: "Permit the fearful to have hope." Another poet, who is usually much
superior to this one, makes a wrong use of the word, when he says: "If I have been
able to hope for so great a grief as this." And some grammarians take this case as
an example of impropriety of speech, saying, "He said sperare [to hope] instead of
timere [to fear]." Accordingly, faith may have for its object evil as well as good;
for both good and evil are believed, and the faith that believes them is not evil, but
good. Faith, moreover, is concerned with the past, the present, and the future, all three.
We believe, for example, that Christ died,--an event in the past; we believe that He is
sitting at the right hand of God,--a state of things which is present; we believe that He
will come to judge the quick and the dead,--an event of the future. Again, faith applies
both to one's own circumstances and those of others. Every one, for example, believes that
his own existence had a beginning, and was not eternal, and he believes the same both of
other men and other things. Many of our beliefs in regard to religious matters, again,
have reference not merely to other men, but to angels also. But hope has for its object
only what is good, only what is future, and only what affects the man who entertains the
hope. For these reasons, then, faith must be distinguished from hope, not merely as a
matter of verbal propriety, but because they are essentially different. The fact that we
do not see either what we believe or what we hope for, is all that is common to faith and
hope. In the Epistle to the Hebrews, for example, faith is defined (and eminent defenders
of the catholic faith have used the definition as a standard) "the evidence of things
not seen." Although, should any one say that he believes, that is, has grounded
his faith, not on words, nor on witnesses, nor on any reasoning whatever, but on the
direct evidence of his own senses, he would not be guilty of such an impropriety of speech
as to be justly liable to the criticism, "You saw,therefore you did not
believe." And hence it does not follow that an object of faith is not an object of
sight. But it is better that we should use the word "faith" as the Scriptures
have taught us, applying it to those things which are not seen. Concerning hope, again,
the apostle says: "Hope that is seen is not hope; for what a man seeth, why doth he
yet hope for? But if we hope for that we see not, then do we with patience wait for
it." When, then, we believe that good is about to come, this is nothing else but
to hope for it. Now what shall I say of love? Without it, faith profits nothing; and in
its absence, hope cannot exist. The Apostle James says: "The devils also believe, and
tremble."--that is, they, having neither hope nor love, but believing that what we
love and hope for is about to come, are in terror. And so the Apostle Paul approves and
commends the "faith that worketh by love;" and this certainly cannot exist
without hope. Wherefore there is no love without hope, no hope without love, and neither
love nor hope without faith.
CHAP. 9.--WHAT WE ARE TO BELIEVE. IN REGARD TO
NATURE IT IS NOT NECESSARY FOR THE CHRISTIAN TO KNOW MORE THAN THAT THE GOODNESS OF THE
CREATOR IS THE CAUSE OF ALL THINGS.
When, then, the question is asked what we are to
believe in regard to religion, it is not necessary to probe into the nature of things, as
was done by those whom the Greeks call physici; nor need we be in alarm lest the Christian
should be ignorant of the force and number of the elements,--the motion, and order, and
eclipses of the heavenly bodies; the form of the heavens; the species and the natures of
animals, plants, stones, fountains, rivers, mountains; about chronology and distances; the
signs of coming storms; and a thousand other things which those philosophers either have
found out, or think they have found out. For even these men themselves, endowed though
they are with so much genius, burning with zeal, abounding in leisure, tracking some
things by the aid of human conjecture, searching into others with the aids of history and
experience, have not found out all things; and even their boasted discoveries are oftener
mere guesses than certain knowledge. It is enough for the Christian to believe that the
only cause of all created things, whether heavenly or earthly, whether visible or
invisible, is the goodness of the Creator the one true God; and that nothing exists but
Himself that does not derive its existence from Him; and that He is the Trinity--to wit,
the Father, and the Son begotten of the Father, and the Holy Spirit proceeding from the
same Father, but one and the same Spirit of Father and Son.
CHAP. 10.--THE SUPREMELY GOOD CREATOR MADE ALL
THINGS GOOD.
By the Trinity, thus supremely and equally and
unchangeably good, all things were created; and these are not supremely and equally and
unchangeably good, but yet they are, good, even taken separately. Taken as a whole,
however, they are very good, because their e, ensemble constitutes the universe in all its
wonderful order and beauty.
CHAP. 11.--WHAT IS CALLED EVIL IN THE UNIVERSE
IS BUT THE ABSENCE OF GOOD.
And in the universe, even that which is called
evil, when it is regulated and put in its own place, only enhances our admiration of the
good; for we enjoy and value the good more when we compare it with the evil. For the
Almighty God, who, as even the heathen acknowledge, has supreme power over all things,
being Himself supremely good, would never permit the existence of anything evil among His
works, if He were not so omnipotent and good that He can bring good even out of evil. For
what is that which we call evil but the absence of good? In the bodies of animals, disease
and wounds mean nothing but the absence of health; for when a cure is effected, that does
not mean that the evils which were present--namely, the diseases and wounds--go away from
the body and dwell elsewhere: they altogether cease to exist; for the wound or disease is
not a substance, but a defect in the fleshly substance,--the flesh itself being a
substance, and therefore something good, of which those evils--that is, privations of the
good which we call health--are accidents. Just in the same way, what are called vices in
the soul are nothing but privations of natural good. And when they are cured, they are not
transferred elsewhere: when they cease to exist in the healthy soul, they cannot exist
anywhere else.
CHAP. 12.--ALL BEINGS WERE MADE GOOD, BUT NOT
BEING MADE PERFECTLY GOOD, ARE LIABLE TO CORRUPTION.
All things that exist, therefore, seeing that the
Creator of them all is supremely good, are themselves good. But because they are not, like
their Creator, supremely and unchangeably good, their good may be diminished and
increased. But for good to be diminished is an evil, although, however much it may be
diminished, it is necessary, if the being is to continue, that some good should remain to
constitute the being. For however small or of whatever kind the being may be, the good
which makes it a being cannot be destroyed without destroying the being itself. An
uncorrupted nature is justly held in esteem. But if, still further, it be incorruptible,
it is undoubtedly considered of still higher value. When it is corrupted, however, its
corruption is an evil, because it is deprived of some sort of good. For if it be deprived
of no good, it receives no injury; but it does receive injury, therefore it is deprived of
good. Therefore, so long as a being is in process of corruption, there is in it some good
of which it is being deprived; and if a part of the being should remain which cannot be
corrupted, this will certainly be an incorruptible being, and accordingly the process of
corruption will result in the manifestation of this great good. But if it do not cease to
be corrupted, neither can it cease to possess good of which corruption may deprive it. But
if it should be thoroughly and completely consumed by corruption, there will then be no
good left, because there will be no being. Wherefore corruption can consume the good only
by consuming the being. Every being, therefore, is a good; a great good, if it can not be
corrupted; a little good, if it can: but in any case, only the foolish or ignorant will
deny that it is a good. And if it be wholly consumed by corruption, then the corruption
itself must cease to exist, as there is no being left in which it can dwell.
CHAP. 13.--THERE CAN BE NO EVIL WHERE THERE IS
NO GOOD; AND AN EVIL MAN IS AN EVIL GOOD.
Accordingly, there is nothing of what we call
evil, if there be nothing good. But a good which is wholly without evil is a perfect good.
A good, on the other hand, which contains evil is a faulty or imperfect good; and there
can be no evil where there is no good. From all this we arrive at the curious result: that
since every being, so far as it is a being, is good, when we say that a faulty being is an
evil being, we just seem to say that what is good is evil, and that nothing but what is
good can be evil, seeing that every being is good, and that no evil can exist except in a
being. Nothing, then, can be evil except something which is good. And although this, when
stated, seems to be a contradiction, yet the strictness of reasoning leaves us no escape
from the conclusion. We must, however, beware of incurring the prophetic condemnation:
"Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil: that put. darkness for light, and
light for darkness: that put bitter for sweet, and sweet for bitter." And yet our
Lord says: "An evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart bringeth forth that
which is evil." Now, what is
evil man but an evil being? for a man is a being.
Now, if a man is a good thing because he is a being, what is an evil man but an evil good?
Yet, when we accurately distinguish these two things, we find that it is not because he is
a man that he is an evil, or because he is wicked that he is a good; but that he is a good
because he is a man, and an evil because he is wicked. Whoever, then, says, "To be a
man is an evil," or, "To be wicked is a good," falls under the prophetic
denunciation: "Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil!" For he
condemns the work of God, which is the man, and praises the defect of man, which is the
wickedness. Therefore every being, even if it be a defective one, in so far as it is a
being is good, and in so far as it is defective is evil.
CHAP. 14.--GOOD AND EVIL ARE AN EXCEPTION TO THE
RULE THAT CONTRARY ATTRIBUTES CANNOT BE PREDICATED OF THE SAME SUBJECT. EVIL SPRINGS UP IN
WHAT IS GOOD, AND CANNOT EXIST EXCEPT IN WHAT IS GOOD.
Accordingly, in the case of these contraries
which we call good and evil, the rule of the logicians, that two contraries cannot be
predicated at the same time of the same thing, does not hold. No weather is at the same
time dark and bright: no food or drink is at the same time sweet and bitter: no body is at
the same time and in the same place black and white: none is at the same time and in the
same place deformed and beautiful. And this rue is found to hold in regard to many, indeed
nearly all, contraries, that they cannot exist at the same time in any one thing. But
although no one can doubt that good and evil are contraries, not only can they exist at
the same time, but evil cannot exist without good. or in anything that is not good. Good,
however, can exist without evil. For a man or an angel can exist without being wicked; but
nothing can be wicked except a man or an angel: and so far as he is a man or an angel, he
is good; so far as he is wicked, he is an evil. And these two contraries are so far
co-existent, that if good did not exist in what is evil, neither could evil exist; because
corruption could not have either a place to dwell in, or a source to spring from, if there
were nothing that could be corrupted; and nothing can be corrupted except what is good,
for corruption is nothing else but the destruction of good. From what is good, then, evils
arose, and except in what is good they do not exist; nor was there any other source from
which any evil nature could arise. For if there were, then, in so far as this was a being,
it was certainly a good: and a being which was incorruptible would be a great good; and
even one which was corruptible must be to some extent a good, for only by corrupting what
was good in it could corruption do it harm.
CHAP. 15.--THE PRECEDING ARGUMENT IS IN NO WISE
INCONSISTENT WITH THE SAYING OF OUR LORD: "A GOOD TREE CANNOT BRING FORTH EVIL
FRUIT."
But when we say that evil springs out of good,
let it not be thought that this contradicts our Lord's saying: "A good tree cannot
bring forth evil fruit." For, as He who is the Truth says, you cannot gather
grapes of thorns, because grapes do not grow on thorns. But we see that on good soil
both vines and thorns may be grown. And in the same way, just as an evil tree cannot bring
forth good fruit, so an evil will cannot produce good works. But from the nature of man,
which is good, may spring either a good or an evil will. And certainly there was at first
no source from which an evil will could spring, except the nature of angel or of man,
which was good. And our Lord Himself clearly shows this in the very same place where He
speaks about the tree and its fruit. For He says: "Either make the tree good, and his
fruit good; or else make the tree corrupt, and his fruit corrupt,"--clearly enough
warning us that evil fruits do not grow on a good tree, nor good fruits on an evil tree;
but that nevertheless the ground itself, by which He meant those whom He was then
addressing, might grow either kind of trees.
CHAP. 16.--IT IS NOT ESSENTIAL TO MAN'S
HAPPINESS THAT HE SHOULD KNOW THE CAUSES OF PHYSICAL CONVULSIONS; BUT IT IS, THAT HE
SHOULD KNOW THE CAUSES OF GOOD AND EVIL.
Now, in view of these considerations, when we are
pleased with that line of Maro, "Happy the man who has attained to the knowledge of
the causes of things," we should not suppose that it is necessary to happiness to
know the causes of the great physical convulsions, causes which lie hid in the most secret
recesses of nature's kingdom, "whence comes the earthquake whose force makes the deep
seas to swell and burst their barriers, and again to return upon themselves and settle
down." But we ought to know the causes of good and evil as far as man may in this
life know them, in order to avoid the mistakes and troubles of which this life is so full.
For our aim must always be to reach that state of happiness in which no trouble shall
distress us, and no error mislead us. If we must know the causes of physical convulsions,
there are none which it concerns us more to know than those which affect our own health.
But seeing that, in our ignorance of these, we are fain to resort to physicians, it would
seem that we might bear with considerable patience our ignorance of the secrets that lie
hid in the earth and heavens.
CHAP. 17.--THE NATURE OF ERROR. ALL ERROR IS NOT
HURTFUL, THOUGH IT IS MAN'S DUTY AS FAR AS POSSIBLE TO AVOID IT.
For although we ought with the greatest possible
care to avoid error, not only in great but even in little things, and although we cannot
err except through ignorance, it does not follow that, if a man is ignorant of a thing, he
must forthwith fall into error. That is rather the fate of the man who thinks he knows
what he does not know. For he accepts what is false as if it were true, and that is the
essence of error. But it is a point of very great importance what the subject is in regard
to which a man makes a mistake. For on one and the same subject we rightly prefer an
instructed man to an ignorant one, and a man who is not in error to one who is. In the
case of different subjects, however,--that is, when one man knows one thing, and another a
different thing, and when what the former knows is useful, and what the latter knows is
not so useful, or is actually hurtful,--who would not, in regard to the things the latter
knows, prefer the ignorance of the former to the knowledge of the latter? For there are
points on which ignorance is better than knowledge. And in the same way, it has sometimes
been an advantage to depart from the right way,--in travelling, however, not in morals. It
has happened to myself to take the wrong road where two ways met, so that I did not pass
by the place where an armed band of Donatists lay in wait for me. Yet I arrived at the
place whither I was bent, though by a roundabout route; and when I heard of the ambush, I
congratulated myself on my mistake, and gave thanks to God for it. Now, who would not
rather be the traveller who made a mistake like this, than the highwayman who made no
mistake? And hence, perhaps, it is that the prince of poets puts these words into the
mouth of a lover in misery: "How I am undone. how I have been carried away by an
evil error!" for there is an error which is good, as it not merely does no harm, hut
produces some actual advantage. But when we look more closely into the nature of truth,
and consider that to err is just to take the false for the true, and the true for the
false, or to hold what is certain as uncertain, and what is uncertain as certain, and that
error in the soul is hideous and repulsive just in proportion as it appears fair and
plausible when we utter it, or assent to it, saying, "Yea, yea; Nay,
nay,"--surely this life that we live is wretched indeed, if only on this account,
that sometimes, in order to preserve it, it is necessary to fall into error. God forbid
that such should be that other life, where truth itself is the life of the soul, where no
one deceives, and no one is deceived. But here men deceive and are deceived, and they are
more to be pitied when they lead others astray than when they are themselves led astray by
putting trust in liars. Yet so much does a rational soul shrink from what is false, and so
earnestly does it struggle against error, that even those who love to deceive are most
unwilling to be deceived. For the liar does not think that he errs, but that he leads
another who trusts him into error. And certainly he does not err in regard to the matter
about which he lies, if he himself knows the truth; but he is deceived in this, that he
thinks his lie does him no harm, whereas every sin is more hurtful to the sinner than to
the sinned against.
CHAP. 18.--IT IS NEVER ALLOWABLE TO TELL A LIE;
BUT LIES DIFFER VERY MUCH IN GUILT, ACCORDING TO THE INTENTION AND THE SUBJECT.
But here arises a very difficult and very
intricate question, about which I once wrote a large book, finding it necessary to give it
an answer. The question is this: whether at any time it can become the duty of a good man
to tell a lie? For some go so far as to contend that there are occasions on which it is a
good and pious work to commit perjury even, and to say what is false about matters that
relate to the worship of God, and about the very nature of God Himself. To me, however, it
seems certain that every lie is a sin, though it makes a great difference with what
intention and on what subject one lies. For the sin of the man who tells a lie to help
another is not so heinous as that of the man who tells a lie to injure another; and the
man who by his lying puts a traveller on the wrong road, does not do so much harm as the
man who by false or misleading representations distorts the whole course of a life. No
one, of course, is to be condemned as a liar who says what is false, believing it to be
true, because such an one does not consciously deceive, but rather is himself deceived.
And, on the same principle, a man is not to be accused of lying, though he may sometimes
be open to the charge of rashness, if through carelessness he takes up what is false and
holds it as true; but, on the other hand, the man who says what is true, believing it to
be false, is, so far as his own consciousness is concerned, a liar. For in saying what he
does not believe, he says what to his own conscience is false, even though it should in
fact be true; nor is the man in any sense free from lying who with his mouth speaks the
truth without knowing it, but in his heart wills to tell a lie. And, therefore, not
looking at the matter spoken of, but solely at the intention of the speaker, the man who
unwittingly says what is false, thinking all the time that it is true, is a better man
than the one who unwittingly says what is true, but in his conscience intends to deceive.
For the former does not think one thing and say another; but the latter, though his
statements may be true in fact, has one thought in his heart and another on his lips: and
that is the very essence of lying. But when we come to consider truth and falsehood in
respect to the subjects spoken of, the point on which one deceives or is deceived becomes
a matter of the utmost importance. For although, as far as a man's own conscience is
concerned, it is a greater evil to deceive than to be deceived, nevertheless it is a far
less evil to tell a lie in regard to matters that do not relate to religion, than to be
led into error in regard to matters the knowledge and belief of which are essential to the
right worship of God. To illustrate this by example: suppose that one man should say of
some one who is dead that he is still alive, knowing this to be untrue; and that another
man should, being deceived, believe that Christ shall at the end of some time (make the
time as long as you please) die; would it not be incomparably better to lie like the
former, than to be deceived like the latter? and would it not be a much less evil to lead
some man into the former error, than to be led by any man into the latter?
CHAP. 19.--MEN'S ERRORS VARY VERY MUCH IN THE
MAGNITUDE OF THE EVILS THEY PRODUCE; BUT YET EVERY ERROR IS IN ITSELF AN EVIL.
In some things, then, it is a great evil to be
deceived; in some it is a small evil; in some no evil at all; and in some it is an actual
advantage. It is to his grievous injury that a man is deceived when he does not believe
what leads to eternal life, or believes what leads to eternal death. It is a small evil
for a man to be deceived, when, by taking falsehood for truth, he brings upon himself
temporal annoyances; for the patience of the believer will turn even these to a good use,
as when, for example, taking a bad man for a good, he receives injury from him. But one
who believes a bad man to be good, and yet suffers no injury, is nothing the worse for
being deceived, nor does he fall under the prophetic denunciation: "Woe to those who
call evil good!" For we are to understand that this is spoken not about evil men,
but about the things that make men evil. Hence the man who calls adultery good, falls
justly under that prophetic denunciation. But the man who calls the adulterer good,
thinking him to be chaste, and not knowing him to be an adulterer, falls into no error in
regard to the nature of good and evil, but only makes a mistake as to the secrets of human
conduct. He calls the man good on the ground of believing him to be what is undoubtedly
good; he calls the adulterer evil, and the pure man good; and he calls this man good, not
knowing him to be an adulterer, but believing him to be pure. Further, if by making a
mistake one escape death, as I have said above once happened to me, one even derives some
advantage from one's mistake. But when I assert that in certain cases a man may be
deceived without any injury to himself, or even with some advantage to himself, I do not
mean that the mistake in itself is no evil, or is in any sense a good; I refer only to the
evil that is avoided, or the advantage that is gained, through making the mistake. For the
mistake, considered in itself, is an evil: a great evil if it concern a great matter, a
small evil if it concern a small matter, but yet always an evil. For who that is of sound
mind can deny that it is an evil to receive what is false as if it were true, and to
reject what is true as if it were false, or to hold what is uncertain as certain, and what
is certain as uncertain? But it is one thing to think a man good when he is really bad,
which is a mistake; it is another thing to suffer no ulterior injury in consequence of the
mistake, supposing that the bad man whom we think good inflicts no damage upon us. In the
same way, it is one thing to think that we are on the right road when we are not; it is
another thing when this mistake of ours, which is an evil, leads to some good, such as
saving us from an ambush of wicked men.
CHAP. 20.--EVERY ERROR IS NOT A SIN. AN
EXAMINATION OF THE OPINION OF THE ACADEMIC PHILOSOPHERS, THAT TO AVOID ERROR WE SHOULD IN
ALL CASES SUSPEND BELIEF.
I am not sure whether mistakes such as the
following,--when one forms a good opinion of a bad man, not knowing what sort of man he
is; or when, instead of the ordinary perceptions through the bodily senses, other
appearances of a similar kind present themselves, which we perceive in the spirit, but
think we perceive in the body, or perceive in the body, but think we perceive in the
spirit (such a mistake as the Apostle Peter made when the angel suddenly freed him from
his chains and imprisonment, and he thought he saw a vision); or when, in the case of
sensible objects themselves, we mistake rough for smooth, or bitter for sweet, or think
that putrid matter has a good smell; or when we mistake the passing of a carriage for
thunder; or mistake one man for another, the two being very much alike, as often happens
in the case of twins (hence our great poet calls it "a mistake pleasing to
parents"),--whether these, and other mistakes of this kind, ought to be called
sins. Nor do I now undertake to solve a very knotty question, which perplexed those very
acute thinkers, the Academic philosophers: whether a wise man ought to give his assent to
anything, seeing that he may fall into error by assenting to falsehood: for all things, as
they assert, are either unknown or uncertain. Now I wrote three volumes shortly after my
conversion, to remove out of my way the objections which lie, as it were, on the very
threshold of faith. And assuredly it was necessary at the very outset to remove this utter
despair of reaching truth, which seems to be strengthened by the arguments of these
philosophers. Now in their eyes every error is regarded as a sin, and they think that
error can only be avoided by entirely suspending belief. For they say that the man who
assents to what is uncertain falls into error; and they strive by the most acute, but most
audacious arguments, to show that, even though a man's opinion should by chance be true,
yet that there is no certainty of its truth, owing to the impossibility of distinguishing
truth from falsehood. But with us, "the just shall live by faith." Now, if
assent be taken away, faith goes too; for without assent there can be no belief. And there
are truths, whether we know them or not, which must be believed if we would attain to a
happy life, that is, to eternal life. But I am not sure whether one ought to argue with
men who not only do not know that there is an eternal life before them, but do not know
whether they are living at the present moment; nay, say that they do not know what it is
impossible they can be ignorant of. For it is impossible that any one should be ignorant
that he is alive, seeing that if he be not alive it is impossible for him to be ignorant;
for not knowledge merely, but ignorance too, can be an attribute only of the living. But,
forsooth, they think that by not acknowledging that they are alive they avoid error, when
even their very error proves that they are alive, since one who is not alive cannot err.
As, then, it is not only true, but certain, that we are alive, so there are many other
things both true and certain; and God forbid that it should ever be called wisdom, and not
the height of folly, to refuse assent to these.
CHAP. 21.--ERROR, THOUGH NOT ALWAYS A SIN, IS
ALWAYS AN EVIL.
But as to those matters in regard to which our
belief or disbelief, and indeed their truth or supposed truth or falsity, are of no
importance whatever, so far as attaining the kingdom of God is concerned: to make a
mistake in such matters is not to be looked on as a sin, or at least as a very small and
trifling sin. In short, a mistake in matters of this kind, whatever its nature and
magnitude, does not relate to the way of approach to God, which is the faith of Christ
that "worketh by love." For the "mistake pleasing to parents" in
the case of the twin children was no deviation from this way; nor did the Apostle Peter
deviate from this way, when, thinking that he saw a vision, he so mistook one thing for
another, that, till the angel who delivered him had departed from him, he did not
distinguish the real objects among which he was moving from the visionary objects of a
dream; nor did the patriarch Jacob deviate from this way, when he believed that his
son, who was really alive, had been slain by a beast. In the case of these and other
false impressions of the same kind, we are indeed deceived, but our faith in God remains
secure. We go astray, but we do not leave the way that leads us to Him. But yet these
errors, though they are not sinful, are to be reckoned among the evils of this life which
is so far made subject to vanity, that we receive what is false as if it were true, reject
what is true as if it were false, and cling to what is uncertain as if it were certain.
And although they do not trench upon that true and certain faith through which we reach
eternal blessedness, yet they have much to do with that misery in which we are now living.
And assuredly, if we were now in the enjoyment of the true and perfect happiness that lies
before us, we should not be subject to any deception through any sense, whether of body or
of mind.
CHAP. 22.--A LIE IS NOT
ALLOWABLE, EVEN TO SAVE
ANOTHER FROM INJURY.
But every lie must be called a sin, because not
only when a man knows the truth, but even when, as a man may be, he is mistaken and
deceived, it is his duty to say what he thinks in his heart, whether it be true, or
whether he only think it to be true. But every liar says the opposite of what he thinks in
his heart, with purpose to deceive. Now it is Ê evident that speech was given to man, not
that men might therewith deceive one another, but that one man might make known his
thoughts to another. To use speech, then, for the purpose of deception, and not for its
appointed end, is a sin. Nor are we to suppose that there is any lie that is not a sin,
because it is sometimes possible, by telling a lie, to do service to another. For it is
possible to do this by theft also, as when we steal from a rich man who never feels the
loss, to give to a poor man who is sensibly benefited by what he gets. And the same can be
said of adultery also, when, for instance, some woman appears likely to die of love unless
we consent to her wishes, while if she lived she might purify herself by repentance; but
yet no one will assert that on this account such an adultery is not a sin. And if we
justly place so high a value upon chastity, what offense have we taken at truth, that,
while no prospect of advantage to another will lead us to violate the former by adultery,
we should be ready to violate the latter by lying? It cannot be denied that they have
attained a very high standard of goodness who never lie except to save a man from injury;
but in the case of men who have reached this standard, it is not the deceit, but their
good intention, that is justly praised, and sometimes even rewarded. It is quite enough
that the deception should be pardoned, without its being made an object of laudation,
especially among the heirs of the new covenant, to whom it is said: "Let your
communication be, Yea, yea; Nay, nay: for whatsoever is more than these cometh of
evil." And it is on account of this evil, which never ceases to creep in while we
retain this mortal vesture, that the co-heirs of Christ themselves say, "Forgive us
our debts."
CHAP. 23.--SUMMARY OF THE RESULTS OF THE
PRECEDING DISCUSSION.
As it is right that we should know the causes of
good and evil, so much of them at least as will suffice for the way that leads us to the
kingdom, where there will be life without the shadow of death, truth without any alloy of
error, and happiness unbroken by any sorrow, I have discussed these subjects with the
brevity which my limited space demanded. And I think there cannot now be any doubt, that
the only cause of any good that we enjoy is the goodness of God, and that the only cause
of evil is the failing away from the unchangeable good of a being made good but
changeable, first in the case of an angel, and afterwards in the case of man.
CHAP. 24.--THE SECONDARY CAUSES OF EVIL ARE
IGNORANCE AND LUST.
This is the first evil that befell the
intelligent creation--that is, its first privation of good. Following upon this crept in,
and now even in opposition to man's will, ignorance of duty, and lust after what is
hurtful: and these brought in their train error and suffering, which, when they are felt
to be imminent, produce that shrinking of the mind which is called fear. Further, when the
mind attains the objects of its desire, however hurtful or empty they may be, error
prevents it from perceiving their true nature, or its perceptions are overborne by a
diseased appetite, and so it is puffed up with a foolish joy. From these fountains of
evil, which spring out of defect rather than superfluity, flows every form of misery that
besets a rational nature.
CHAP. 25.--GOD'S JUDGMENTS UPON FALLEN MEN AND
ANGELS. THE DEATH OF THE BODY IS MAN'S PECULIAR PUNISHMENT.
And yet such a nature, in the midst of all its
evils, could not lose the craving after happiness. Now the evils I have mentioned are
common to all who for their wickedness have been justly condemned by God, whether they be
men or angels. But there is one form of punishment peculiar to man--the death of the body.
God had threatened him with this punishment of death if he should sin, leaving him
indeed to the freedom of his own will, but yet commanding his obedience under pain of
death; and He placed him amid the happiness of Eden, as it were in a protected nook of
life, with the intention that, if he preserved his righteousness, he should thence ascend
to a better place.
CHAP. 26.--THROUGH ADAM'S SIN HIS WHOLE
POSTERITY WERE CORRUPTED, AND WERE BORN UNDER THE PENALTY OF DEATH, WHICH HE HAD INCURRED.
Thence, after his sin, he was driven into exile,
and by his sin the whole race of which he was the root was corrupted in him, and thereby
subjected to the penalty of death. And so it happens that all descended from him, and from
the woman who had led him into sin, and was condemned at the same time with him,--being
the offspring of carnal lust on which the same punishment of disobedience was
visited,--were tainted with the original sin, and were by it drawn through divers errors
and sufferings into that last and endless punishment which they suffer in common with the
fallen angels, their corrupters and masters, and the partakers of their doom. And thus
"by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon
all men, for that all have sinned." By "the world" the apostle, of
course, means in this place the whole human race.
CHAP. 27.--THE STATE OF MISERY TO WHICH ADAM'S
SIN REDUCED MANKIND, AND THE RESTORATION EFFECTED THROUGH THE MERCY OF GOD.
Thus, then, matters stood. The whole mass of the
human race was under condemnation, was lying steeped and wallowing in misery, and was
being tossed from one form of evil to another, and, having joined the faction of the
fallen angels, was paying the well-merited penalty of that impious rebellion. For whatever
the wicked freely do through blind and unbridled lust, and whatever they suffer against
their will in the way of open punishment, this all evidently pertains to the just wrath of
God. But the goodness of the Creator never fails either to supply life and vital power to
the wicked angels (without which their existence would soon come to an end); or, in the
case of mankind, who spring from a condemned and corrupt stock, to impart form and life to
their seed, to fashion their members, and through the various seasons of their life, and
in the different parts of the earth, to quicken their senses, and bestow upon them the
nourishment they need. For He judged it better to bring good out of evil, than not to
permit any evil to exist. And if He had determined that in the case. of men, as in the
case of the fallen angels, there should be no restoration to happiness, would it not have
been quite just, that the being who rebelled against God, who in the abuse of his freedom
spurned and transgressed the command of his Creator when he could so easily have kept it,
who defaced in himself the image of his Creator by stubbornly turning away from His light,
who by an evil use of his free-will broke away from his wholesome bondage to the Creator's
laws,--would it not have been just that such a being should have been wholly and to all
eternity deserted by God, and left to suffer the everlasting punishment he had so richly
earned? Certainly so God would have done, had He been only just and not also merciful, and
had He not designed that His unmerited mercy should shine forth the more brightly in
contrast with the unworthiness of its objects.
CHAP. 28.--WHEN THE REBELLIOUS ANGELS WERE CAST
OUT, THE REST REMAINED IN THE ENJOYMENT OF ETERNAL HAPPINESS WITH GOD.
Whilst some of the angels, then, in their pride
and impiety rebelled against God, and were cast down from their heavenly abode into the
lowest darkness, the remaining number dwelt with God in eternal and unchanging purity and
happiness. For all were not sprung from one angel who had fallen and been condemned, so
that they were not all, like men, involved by one original sin in the bonds of an
inherited guilt, and so made subject to the penalty which one had incurred; but when he,
who afterwards became the devil, was with his associates in crime exalted in pride, and by
that very exaltation was with them cast down, the rest remained steadfast in piety and
obedience to their Lord, and obtained, what before they had not enjoyed, a sure and
certain knowledge of their eternal safety, and freedom from the possibility of falling.
CHAP. 29.--THE RESTORED PART OF HUMANITY SHALL,
IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE PROMISES OF GOD, SUCCEED TO THE PLACE WHICH THE REBELLIOUS ANGELS
LOST.
And so it pleased God, the Creator and Governor
of the universe, that, since the whole body of the angels had not fallen into rebellion,
the part of them which had fallen should remain in perdition eternally, and that the other
part, which had in the rebellion remained steadfastly loyal, should rejoice in the sure
and certain knowledge of their eternal happiness; but that, on the other hand, mankind,
who constituted the remainder of the intelligent creation, having perished without
exception under sin, both original and actual, and the consequent punishments, should be
in part restored, and should fill up the gap which the rebellion and fall of the devils
had left in the company of the angels. For this is the promise to the saints, that at the
resurrection they shall be equal to the angels of God. And thus the Jerusalem which is
above, which is the mother of us all, the city of God, shall not be spoiled of any of the
number of her citizens, shall perhaps reign over even a more abundant population. We do
not know the number either of the saints or of the devils; but we know that the children
of the holy mother who was called barren on earth shall succeed to the place of the fallen
angels, and shall dwell for ever in that peaceful abode from which they fell. But the
number of the citizens, whether as it now is or as it shall be, is present to the thoughts
of the great Creator, who calls those things which are not as though they were, and
ordereth all things in measure, and number, and weight.
CHAP. 30.--MEN ARE NOT SAVED BY GOOD WORKS, NOR
BY THE FREE DETERMINATION OF THEIR OWN WILL, BUT BY THE GRACE OF GOD THROUGH FAITH.
But this part of the human race to which God has
promised pardon and a share in His eternal kingdom, can they be restored through the merit
of their own works? God forbid. For what good work can a lost man perform, except so far
as he has been delivered from perdition? Can they do anything by the free determination of
their own will? Again I say, God forbid. For it was by the evil use of his free-will that
man destroyed both it and himself. For, as a man who kills himself must, of course, be
alive when he kills himself, but after he has killed himself ceases to live, and cannot
restore himself to life; so, when man by his own free-will sinned, then sin being
victorious over him, the freedom of his will was lost. "For of whom a man is
overcome, of the same is he brought in bondage." This is the judgment of the
Apostle Peter. And as it is certainly true, what kind of liberty, I ask, can the
bond-slave possess, except when it pleases him to sin? For he is freely in bondage who
does with pleasure the will of his master. Accordingly, he who is the servant of sin is
free to sin. And hence he will not be free to do right, until, being freed from sin, he
shall begin to be the servant of righteousness. And this is true liberty, for he has
pleasure in the righteous deed; and it is at the same time a holy bondage, for he is
obedient to the will of God. But whence comes this liberty to do right to the man who is
in bondage and sold under sin, except he be redeemed by Him who has said, "If the Son
shall make you free, ye shall be free indeed?" And before this redemption is
wrought in a man, when he is not yet free to do what is right, how can he talk of the
freedom of his will and his good works, except he be inflated by that foolish pride of
boasting which the apostle restrains when he says, "By grace are ye saved, through
faith."
CHAP. 31.--FAITH ITSELF IS THE GIFT OF GOD; AND
GOOD WORKS WILL NOT BE WANTING IN THOSE WHO BELIEVE.
And lest men should arrogate to themselves the
merit of their own faith at least, not understanding that this too is the gift of God,
this same apostle, who says in another place that he had "obtained mercy of the Lord
to be faithful," here also adds: "and that not of yourselves; it is the gift
of God: not of works, lest any man should boast." And test it should be thought
that good works will be wanting in those who believe, he adds further: "For we are
His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath before ordained
that we should walk in them." We shall be made truly free, then, when God fashions
us, that is, forms and creases us anew, not as men--for He has done that already--but as
good men, which His grace is now doing, that we may be a new creation in Christ Jesus,
according as it is said: "Create in me a clean heart, O God." For God had
already created his heart, so far as the physical structure of the human heart is
concerned; but the psalmist prays for the renewal of the life which was still lingering in
his heart.
CHAP. 32.--THE FREEDOM OF THE WILL IS ALSO THE
GIFT OF GOD, FOR GOD WORKETH IN US BOTH TO WILL AND TO DO.
And further, should any one be inclined to boast,
not indeed of his works, but of the freedom of his will, as if the first merit belonged to
him, this very liberty of good action being given to him as a reward he had earned, let
him listen to this same preacher of grace, when he says: "For it is God which worketh
in you, both to will and to do of His own good pleasure;" and in another place:
"So, then, it is not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that
showeth mercy." Now as, undoubtedly, if a man is of the age to use his reason, he
cannot believe, hope, love, unless he will to do so, nor obtain the prize of the high
calling of God unless he voluntarily run for it; in what sense is it "not of him that
willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that showeth mercy," except that, as it
is written, "the preparation of the heart is from the Lord?" Otherwise, if it
is said, "It is not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that
showeth mercy," because it is of both, that is, both of the will of man and of the
mercy of God, so that we are to understand the saying, "It is not of him that
willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that showeth mercy," as if it meant the
will of man alone is not sufficient, if the mercy of God go not with it,--then it will
follow that the mercy of God alone is not sufficient, if the will of man go not with it;
and therefore, if we may rightly say, "it is not of man that willeth, but of God that
showeth mercy," because the will of man by itself is not enough, why may we not also
rightly put it in the converse way: "It is not of God that showeth mercy, but of man
that willeth," because the mercy of God by itself does not suffice? Surely, if no
Christian will dare to say this, "It is not of God that showeth mercy, but of man
that willeth," lest he should openly contradict the apostle, it follows that the true
interpretation of the saying, "It is not of him that willeth, nor of him that
runneth, but of God that showeth mercy," is that the whole work belongs to God, who
both makes the will of man righteous, and thus prepares it for assistance, and assists it
when it is prepared. For the man's righteousness of will precedes many of God's gifts, but
not all; and it must itself be included among those which it does not precede. We read in
Holy Scripture, both that God's mercy "shall meet me," and that His mercy
"shall follow me." It goes before the unwilling to make him willing; it
follows the willing to make his will effectual. Why are we taught to pray for our
enemies, who are plainly unwilling to lead a holy life, unless that God may work
willingness in them? And why are we ourselves taught to ask that may receive, unless
that He who has created in us the wish, may Himself satisfy the wish We pray, then, for
our enemies, that the mercy of God may prevent them, as it has prevented us: we pray for
ourselves that His mercy may follow us.
CHAP. 33.--MEN, BEING BY NATURE THE CHILDREN OF
WRATH, NEEDED A MEDIATOR. IN WHAT SENSE GOD IS SAID TO BE ANGRY.
And so the human race was lying under a just
condemnation, and all men were the children of wrath. Of which wrath it is written:
"All our days are passed away in Thy wrath; we spend our years as a tale that is
told."(11) Of which wrath also Job says: "Man that is born of a woman is of few
days, and full of trouble."(12) Of which wrath also the Lord Jesus says: "He
that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life: and he that believeth not the Son shall
not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him."(13) He does not say it will come,
but it "abideth on him." For every man is born with it; wherefore the apostle
says: "We were by nature the children of wrath, even as others."(14) Now, as men
were lying under this wrath by reason of their original sin, and as this original sin was
the more heavy and deadly in proportion to the number and magnitude of the actual sins
which were added to it, there was need for a Mediator, that is, for a reconciler, who, by
the offering of one sacrifice, of which all the sacrifices of the law and the prophets
were types, should take away this wrath. Wherefore the apostle says: "For if, when we
were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of His Son, much more, being
reconciled, we shall be saved by His life." Now when God is said to be angry, we
do not attribute to Him such a disturbed feeling as exists in the mind of an angry man;
but we call His just displeasure against sin by the name "anger," a word
transferred by analogy from human emotions. But our being reconciled to God through a
Mediator, and receiving the Holy Spirit, so that we who were enemies are made sons
("For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God"):
this is the grace of God through Jesus Christ our Lord.
CHAP. 34.--THE INEFFABLE MYSTERY OF THE BIRTH OF
CHRIST THE MEDIATOR THROUGH THE VIRGIN MARY.
Now of this Mediator it would occupy too much
space to say anything at all worthy of Him; and, indeed, to say what is worthy of Him is
not in the power of man. For who will explain in consistent words this single statement,
that "the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us," so that we may believe on
the only Son of God the Father Almighty, born of the Holy Ghost and the Virgin Mary The
meaning of the Word being made flesh, is not that the divine nature was changed into
flesh, but that the divine nature assumed our flesh. And by "flesh" we are here
to understand "man," the part being put for the whole, as when it is said:
"By the deeds of the law shall no flesh be justified," that is, no man. For
we must believe that no part was wanting in that human nature which He put on, save that
it was a nature wholly free from every taint of sin,--not such a nature as is conceived
between the two sexes through carnal lust, which is born in sin, and whose guilt is washed
away in regeneration; but such as it behoved a virgin to bring forth, when the mother's
faith, not her lust, was the condition of conception. And if her virginity had been marred
even in bringing Him forth, He would not have been born of a virgin; and it would be false
(which God forbid) that He was born of the Virgin Mary, as is believed and declared by the
whole Church, which, in imitation of His mother, daily brings forth members of His body,
and yet remains a virgin. Read, if you please, my letter on the virginity of the holy Mary
which I sent to that eminent man, whose name I mention with respect and affection,
Volusianus.
CHAP. 35.--JESUS CHRIST, BEING THE ONLY SON OF
GOD, IS AT THE SAME TIME MAN.
Wherefore Christ Jesus, the Son of God, is both
God and man; God before all worlds; man in our world: God, because the Word of God (for
"the Word was God"); and man, because in His one person the Word was joined
with a body and a rational soul. Wherefore, so far as He is God, He and the Father are
one; so far as He is man, the Father is greater than He. For when He was the only Son of
God, not by grace, but by nature, that He might be also full of grace, He became the Son
of man; and He Himself unites both natures in His own identity, and both natures
constitute one Christ; because, "being in the form of God, He thought it not robbery
to be," what He was by nature, "equal with God." But He made Himself of
no reputation, and took upon Himself the form of a servant, not losing or lessening the
form of God. And, accordingly, He was both made less and remained equal, being both in
one, as has been said: but He was one of these as Word, and the other as man. As Word, He
is equal with the Father; as man, less than the Father. One Son of God, and at the same
time Son of man; one Son of man, and at the same time Son of God; not two Sons of God, God
and man, but one Son of God: God without beginning; man with a beginning, our Lord Jesus
Christ.
CHAP. 36 .--THE GRACE OF GOD IS CLEARLY AND
REMARKABLY DISPLAYED IN RAISING THE MAN CHRIST JESUS TO THE DIGNITY OF THE SON OF GOD.
Now here the grace of God is displayed with the
greatest power and clearness. For what merit had the human nature in the man Christ
earned, that it should in this unparalleled way be taken up into the unity of the person
of the only Son of God ? What goodness of will, what goodness of desire and intention,
what good works, had gone before, which made this man worthy to become one person with
God? Had He been a man previously to this, and had He earned this unprecedented reward,
that He should be thought worthy to become God? Assuredly nay; from the very moment that
He began to be man, He was nothing else than the Son of God, the only Son of God, the Word
who was made flesh, and therefore He was God so that just as each individual man unites in
one person a body and a rational soul, so Christ in one person unites the Word and man.
Now wherefore was this unheard of glory conferred on human nature,--a glory which, as
there was no antecedent merit, was of course wholly of grace,--except that here those who
looked at the matter soberly and honestly might behold a clear manifestation of the power
of God's free grace, and might understand that they are justified from their sins by the
same grace which made the man Christ Jesus free from the possibility of sin? And so the
angel, when he announced to Christ's mother the coming birth, saluted her thus:
"Hail, thou that art full of grace;" and shortly afterwards, "Thou hast
found grace with God." Now she was said to be full of grace, and to have found
grace with God, because she was to be the mother of her Lord, nay, of the Lord of all
flesh. But, speaking of Christ Himself, the evangelist John, after saying, "The Word
was made flesh, and dwelt among us," adds, "and we beheld His glory, the glory
as of the only-begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth." When he says,
"The Word was made flesh," this is "full of grace;" when he says,
"the glory of the only-begotten of the Father," this is "full of
truth." For the Truth Himself, who was the only-begotten of the Father, not by grace,
but by nature, by grace took our humanity upon Him, and so united it with His own person
that He Himself became also the Son of man.
CHAP. 37.--THE SAME GRACE IS FURTHER CLEARLY
MANIFESTED IN THIS, THAT THE BIRTH OF CHRIST ACCORDING TO THE FLESH IS OF THE HOLY GHOST.
For the same Jesus Christ who is the
only-begotten, that is, the only Son of God, our Lord, was born of the Holy Ghost and of
the Virgin Mary. And we know that the Holy Spirit is the gift of God, the gift being
Himself indeed equal to the Giver. And therefore the Holy Spirit also is God, not inferior
to the Father and the Son. The fact, therefore, that the nativity of Christ in His human
nature was by the Holy Spirit, is another clear manifestation of grace. For when the
Virgin asked the angel how this which he had announced should be, seeing she knew not a
man, the angel answered, "The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the power of the
Highest shall overshadow thee: therefore also that holy thing which shall be born of thee
shall be called the Son of God." And when Joseph was minded to put her away,
suspecting her of adultery, as he knew she was not with child by himself, he was told by
the angel, "Fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife; for that which is conceived in
her is of the Holy Ghost:" that is, what thou suspectest to be begotten of another
man is of the Holy Ghost.
CHAP. 38.--JESUS CHRIST, ACCORDING TO THE FLESH,
WAS NOT BORN OF THE HOLY SPIRIT IN SUCH A SENSE THAT THE HOLY SPIRIT IS HIS FATHER.
Nevertheless, are we on this account to say that
the Holy Ghost is the father of the man Christ, and that as God the Father begat the Word,
so God the Holy Spirit begat the man, and that these two natures constitute the one
Christ; and that as the Word He is the Son of God the Father, and as man the Son of God
the Holy Spirit, because the Holy Spirit as His father begat Him of the Virgin Mary? Who
will dare to say so? Nor is it necessary to show by reasoning how many other absurdities
flow from this supposition, when it is itself so absurd that no believer's ears can bear
to hear it. Hence, as we confess, "Our Lord Jesus Christ, who of God is God, and as
man was born of the Holy Ghost and of the Virgin Mary, having both natures, the divine and
the human, is the only Son of God the Father Almighty, from whom proceedeth the Holy
Spirit." Now in what sense do we say that Christ was born of the Holy Spirit, if
the Holy Spirit did not beget Him? Is it that He made Him, since our Lord Jesus Christ,
though as God "all things were made by Him," yet as man was Himself made; as
the apostle says, "who was made of the seed of David according to the flesh?"
But as that created thing which the Virgin conceived and brought forth though it was
united only to the person of the Son, was made by the whole Trinity (for the works of the
Trinity are not separable), why should the Holy Spirit alone be mentioned as having made
it? Or is it that, when one of the Three is mentioned as the author of any work, the whole
Trinity is to be understood as working? That is true, and can be proved by examples. But
we need not dwell longer on this solution. For the puzzle is, in what sense it is said,
"born of the Holy Ghost," when He is in no sense the Son of the Holy Ghost? For
though God made this world, it would not be right to say that it is the Son of God, or
that it was born of God; we would say that it was created, or made, or framed, or ordered
by Him, or whatever form of expression we can properly use. Here, then, when we make
confession that Christ was born of the Holy Ghost and of the Virgin Mary, it is difficult
to explain how it is that He is not the Son of the Holy Ghost and is the Son of the Virgin
Mary, when He was born both of Him and of her. It is clear beyond a doubt that He was not
born of the Holy Spirit as His father, in the same sense that He was born of the Virgin as
His mother.
CHAP. 39.--NOT EVERYTHING THAT IS BORN OF
ANOTHER IS TO BE CALLED A SON OF THAT OTHER.
We need not therefore take for granted, that
whatever is born of a thing is forthwith to be declared the son of that thing. For, to
pass over the fact that a son is born of a man in a different sense from that in which a
hair or a louse is born of him, neither of these being a son; to pass over this, I say, as
too mean an illustration for a subject of so much importance: it is certain that those who
are born of water and of the Holy Spirit cannot with propriety be called sons of the water
though they are called sons of God the Father, and of the Church their mother. In the same
way, then, He who was born of the Holy Spirit is the Son of God the Father, not of the
Holy Spirit. For what I have said of the hair and the other things is sufficient to show
us that not everything which is born of another can be called the son of that of which it
is born, just as it does not follow that all who are called a man's sons were born of him,
for some sons are adopted. And some men are called sons of hell, not as being born of
hell, but as prepared for it, as the sons of the kingdom are prepared for the kingdom.
CHAP. 40.--CHRIST'S BIRTH THROUGH THE HOLY
SPIRIT MANIFESTS TO US THE GRACE OF GOD.
And, therefore, as one thing may be born of
another, and yet not in such a way as to be its son, and as not every one who is called a
son was born of him whose son he is called, it is clear that this arrangement by which
Christ was born of the Holy Spirit, but not as His son, and of the Virgin Mary as her son,
is intended as a manifestation of the grace of God. For it was by this grace that a man,
without any antecedent merit, was at the very commencement of His existence as man, so
united in one person with the Word of God, that the very person who was Son of man was at
the same time Son of God, and the very person who was Son of God was at the same time Son
of man; and in the adoption of His human nature into the divine, the grace itself became
in a way so natural to the man, as to leave no room for the entrance of sin. Wherefore
this grace is signified by the Holy Spirit; for He, though in His own nature God, may also
be called the gift of God. And to explain all this sufficiently, if indeed it could be
done at all, would require a very lengthened discussion.
CHAP. 41.--CHRIST, WHO WAS HIMSELF FREE FROM
SIN, WAS MADE SIN FOR US, THAT WE MIGHT BE RECONCILED TO GOD.
Begotten and conceived, then, without any
indulgence of carnal lust, and therefore bringing with Him no original sin, and by the
grace of God joined and united in a wonderful and unspeakable way in one person with the
Word, the Only-begotten of the Father, a son by nature, not by grace, and therefore having
no sin of His own; nevertheless, on account of the likeness of sinful flesh in which He
came, He was called sin, that He might be sacrificed to wash away sin. For, under the Old
Covenant. sacrifices for sin were called sins. And He, of whom all these sacrifices
were types and shadows, was Himself truly made sin. Hence the apostle, after saying,
"We pray you in Christ's stead, be ye reconciled to God," forthwith adds:
"for He hath made Him to be sin for us who knew no sin; that we might be made the
righteousness of God in Him." He does not say, as some incorrect copies read,
"He who knew no sin did sin for us," as if Christ had Himself sinned for our
sakes; but he says, "Him who knew no sin," that is, Christ, God, to whom we are
to be reconciled, "hath made to be sin for us," that is, hath made Him a
sacrifice for our sins, by which we might be reconciled to God. He, then, being made sin,
just as we are made righteousness (our righteousness being not our own, but God's, not in
ourselves, but in Him); He being made sin, not His own, but ours, not in Himself, but in
us, showed, by the likeness of sinful flesh in which He was crucified, that though sin was
not in Him, yet that in a certain sense He died to sin, by dying in the flesh which was
the likeness of sin; and that although He Himself had never lived the old life of sin, yet
by His resurrection He typified our new life springing up out of the old death in sin.
CHAP. 42.--THE SACRAMENT OF BAPTISM INDICATES
OUR DEATH WITH CHRIST TO SIN, AND OUR RESURRECTION WITH HIM TO NEWNESS OF LIFE.
And this is the meaning of the great sacrament of
baptism which is solemnized among us, that all who attain to this grace should die to sin,
as He is said to have died to sin, because He died in the flesh, which is the likeness of
sin; and rising from the font regenerate, as He arose alive from the grave, should begin a
new life in the Spirit, whatever may be the age of the body?
CHAP. 43.--BAPTISM AND THE GRACE WHICH IT
TYPIFIES ARE OPEN TO ALL, BOTH INFANTS AND ADULTS.
For from the infant newly born to the old man
bent with age, as there is none shut out from Baptism, so there is none who in baptism
does not die to sin. But infants die only to original sin; those who are older die also to
all the sins which their evil lives have added to the sin which they brought with them.
CHAP. 44.--IN SPEAKING OF SIN, THE SINGULAR
NUMBER IS OFTEN PUT FOR THE PLURAL, AND THE PLURAL FOR THE SINGULAR.
But even these latter are frequently said to die
to sin, though undoubtedly they die not to one sin, but to all the numerous actual sins
they have committed in thought, word, or deed: for the singular number is often put for
the plural, as when the poet says, "They fill its belly with the armed
soldier,"x though in the case here referred to there were many soldiers concerned.
And we read in our own Scriptures: "Pray to the Lord, that He take away the serpent
from us." He does not say serpent's though the people were suffering from many;
and so in other cases. When, on the other hand, the original sin is expressed in the
plural number, as when we say that infants are baptized for the remission of sins, instead
of saying for the remission of sin, this is the converse figure of speech, by which the
plural number is put in place of the singular; as in the Gospel it is said of the death of
Herod, "for they are dead which sought the young child's life," instead of
saying, "he is dead." And in Exodus: "They have made them," Moses
says, "gods of gold," though they had made only one calf, of which they said:
"These be thy gods, O Israel, which brought thee up out of the land of
Egypt,"--here, too, putting the plural in place of the singular.
CHAP. 45.--IN ADAM'S FIRST SIN, MANY KINDS OF
SIN WERE INVOLVED.
However, even in that one sin, which "by one
man entered into the world, and so passed upon all men," and on account of which
infants are baptized, a number of distinct sins may be observed, if it be analyzed as it
were into its separate elements. For there is in it pride, because man chose to be under
his own dominion, rather than under the dominion of God; and blasphemy, because he did not
believe God; and murder, for he brought death upon himself; and spiritual fornication, for
the purity of the human soul was corrupted by the seducing blandishments of the serpent;
and theft, for man turned to his own use the food he had been forbidden to touch; and
avarice, for he had a craving for more than should have been sufficient for him; and
whatever other sin can be discovered on careful reflection to be involved in this one
admitted sin.
CHAP. 46.--IT IS PROBABLE THAT CHILDREN ARE
INVOLVED IN THE GUILT NOT ONLY OF THE FIRST PAIR, BUT OF THEIR OWN IMMEDIATE PARENTS.
And it is said, with much appearance of
probability, that infants are involved in the guilt of the sins not only of the first
pair, but of their own immediate parents. For that divine judgment, "I shall visit
the iniquities of the fathers upon the children," certainly applies to them before
they come under the new covenant by regeneration. And it was this new covenant that was
prophesied of, when it was said by Ezekiel, that the sons should not bear the iniquity of
the fathers, and that it should no longer be a proverb in Israel, "The fathers have
eaten sour grapes, and the children's teeth are set on edge." Here lies the
necessity that each man should be born again, that he might be freed from the sin in which
he was born. For the sins committed afterwards can be cured by penitence, as we see is the
case after baptism. And therefore the new birth would not have been appointed only that
the first birth was sinful, so sinful that even one who was legitimately born in wedlock
says: "I was shapen in iniquities, and in sins did my mother conceive me." He
did not say in iniquity, or in sin, though he might have said so correctly; but he
preferred to say "iniquities" and "sins," because in that one sin
which passed upon all men, and which was so great that human nature was by it made subject
to inevitable death, many sins, as I showed above, may be discriminated; and further,
because there are other sins of the immediate parents, which
though they have not the same effect in producing
a change of nature, yet subject the children to guilt unless the divine grace and mercy
interpose to rescue them.
CHAP. 47.--IT IS DIFFICULT TO DECIDE WHETHER THE
SINS OF A MAN'S OTHER PROGENITORS ARE IMPUTED TO HIM.
But about the sins of the other progenitors who
intervene between Adam and a man's own parents, a question may very well be raised.
Whether every one who is born is involved in all their accumulated evil acts, in all their
multiplied original guilt, so that the later he is born, so much the worse is his
condition; or whether God threatens to visit the iniquity of the fathers upon the children
unto the third and fourth generations, because in His mercy He does not extend His wrath
against the sins of the progenitors further than that, lest those who do not obtain the
grace of regeneration might be crushed down under too heavy a burden if they were
compelled to bear as original guilt all the sins of all their progenitors from the very
beginning of the human race, and to pay the penalty due to them; or whether any other
solution of this great question may or may not be found in Scripture by a more diligent
search and a more careful interpretation, I dare not rashly affirm.
CHAP. 48.--THE GUILT OF THE FIRST SIN IS SO
GREAT THAT IT CAN BE WASHED AWAY ONLY IN THE BLOOD OF THE MEDIATOR, JESUS CHRIST.
Nevertheless, that one sin, admitted into a place
where such perfect happiness reigned, was of so heinous a character, that in one man the
whole human race was originally, and as one may say, radically, condemned; and it cannot
be pardoned and blotted out except through the one Mediator between God and men, the man
Christ Jesus, who only has had power to be so born as not to need a second birth.
CHAP. 49.--CHRIST WAS NOT REGENERATED IN THE
BAPTISM OF JOHN, BUT SUBMITTED TO IT TO GIVE US AN EXAMPLE OF HUMILITY, JUST AS HE
SUBMITTED TO DEATH, NOT AS THE PUNISHMENT OF SIN, BUT TO TAKE AWAY THE SIN OF THE WORLD.
Now, those who were baptized in the baptism of
John, by whom Christ was Himself baptized, were not regenerated; but they were prepared
through the ministry of His forerunner, who cried, "Prepare ye the way of the
Lord," for Him in whom only they could be regenerated. For His baptism is not with
water only, as was that of John, but with the Holy Ghost also; so that whoever believes
in Christ is regenerated by that Spirit, of whom Christ being generated, He did not need
regeneration. Whence that announcement of the Father which was heard after His baptism,
"This day have I begotten Thee," referred not to that one day of time on
which He was baptized, but to the one day of an unchangeable eternity, so as to show that
this man was one in person with the Only-begotten. For when a day neither begins with the
close of yesterday, nor ends with the beginning of to-morrow, it is an eternal to-day.
Therefore He asked to be baptized in water by John, not that any iniquity of His might be
washed away, but that He might manifest the depth of His humility. For baptism found in
Him nothing to wash away, as death found in Him nothing to punish; so that it was in the
strictest justice, and not by the mere violence of power, that the devil was crushed and
conquered: for, as he had most unjustly put Christ to death, though there was no sin in
Him to deserve death, it was most just that through Christ he should lose his hold of
those who by sin were justly subject to the bondage in which he held them. Both of these,
then, that is, both baptism and death, were submitted to by Him, not through a pitiable
necessity, but of His own free pity for us, and as part of an arrangement by which, as one
man brought sin into the world, that is, upon the whole human race, so one man was to take
away the sin of the world.
CHAP. 50.--CHRIST TOOK AWAY NOT ONLY THE ONE
ORIGINAL SIN, BUT ALL THE OTHER SINS THAT HAVE BEEN ADDED TO IT.
With this difference: the first man brought one
sin into the world, but this man took away not only that one sin, but all that He found
added to it. Hence the apostle says: "And not as it was by one that sinned, so is the
gift: for the judgment was by one to condemnation, but the free gift is of many offenses
unto justification." For it is evident that the one sin which we bring with us by
nature would, even if it stood alone, bring us under condemnation; but the free gift
justifies Ê man from many offenses: for each man, in addition to the one sin which, in
common with all his kind, he brings with him by nature, has committed many sins that are
strictly his own.
CHAP. 51.--ALL MEN BORN OF ADAM ARE UNDER
CONDEMNATION, AND ONLY IF NEW BORN IN CHRIST ARE FREED FROM CONDEMNATION.
But what he says a little after, "Therefore,
as by the offense of one judgment came upon all men to condemnation; even so by the
righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life,"
shows clearly enough that there is no one born of Adam but is subject to condemnation, and
that no one, unless he be new born in Christ, is freed from condemnation.
CHAP. 52.--IN BAPTISM, WHICH IS THE SIMILITUDE
OF THE DEATH AND RESURRECTION OF CHRIST, ALL, BOTH INFANTS AND ADULTS, DIE TO SIN THAT
THEY MAY WALK IN NEWNESS OF LIFE.
And after he has said as much about the
condemnation through one man, and the free gift through one man, as he deemed sufficient
for that part of his epistle, the apostle goes on to speak of the great mystery of holy
baptism in the cross of Christ, and to clearly explain to us that baptism in Christ is
nothing else than a similitude of the death of Christ, and that the death of Christ on the
cross is nothing but a similitude of the pardon of sin: so that just as real as is His
death, so real is the remission of our sins; and just as real as is His resurrection, so
real is our justification. He says: "What shall we say, then? Shall we continue in
sin, that grace may abound?" For he had said previously, "But where sin,
abounded, grace did much more abound." And therefore he proposes to himself the
question, whether it would be right to continue in sin for the sake of the consequent
abounding grace. But he answers, "God forbid;" and adds, "How shall we,
that are dead to sin, live any longer therein?" Then, to show that we are dead to
sin, "Know ye not," he says, "that so many of us as were baptized into
Jesus Christ, were baptized into His death?" If, then, the fact that we were baptized
into the death of Christ proves that we are dead to sin, it follows that even infants who
are baptized into Christ die to sin, being baptized into His death. For there is no
exception made: "So many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ, were baptized into
His death." And this is said to prove that we are dead to sin. Now, to what sin do
infants die in their regeneration but that sin which they bring with them at birth? And
therefore to these also applies what follows: "Therefore we are buried with Him by
baptism into death; that, like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the
Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life. For if we have been planted
together in the likeness of His death, we shall be also in the likeness of His
resurrection: knowing this, that our old man is crucified with Him, that the body of sin
might be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin. For he that is dead is freed
from sin. Now if we be dead with Christ, we believe that we shall also live with Him:
knowing that Christ, being raised from the dead, dieth no more; death hath no more
dominion over Him. For in that He died, He died unto sin once; but in that He liveth, He
liveth unto God. Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive
unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord." Now he had commenced with proving that we
must not continue in sin that grace may abound, and had said: "How shall we that are
dead to sin live any longer therein?" And to show that we are dead to sin, he added:
"Know ye not, that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ, were baptized
into His death?" And so he concludes this whole passage just as tie began it. For he
has brought in the death of Christ in such a way as to imply that Christ Himself also died
to sin. To what sin did He die if not to the flesh, in which there was not sin, but the
likeness of sin, and which was therefore called by the name of sin? To those who are
baptized into the death of Christ, then,--and this class includes not adults only, hut
infants as well,--he says: "Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto
sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord."
CHAP. 53.--CHRIST'S CROSS AND BURIAL,
RESURRECTION, ASCENSION, AND SITTING DOWN AT THE RIGHT HAND OF GOD, ARE IMAGES OF THE
CHRISTIAN LIFE.
All the events, then, of Christ's crucifixion, of
His burial, of His resurrection the third day, of His ascension into heaven, of His
sitting down at the right hand of the Father, were So ordered, that the life which the
Christian leads here might be modelled upon them, not merely in a mystical sense, but in
reality. For in reference to His crucifixion it is said: "They that are Christ's have
crucified the flesh, with the affections and lusts." And in reference to His
burial: "We are buried with Him by baptism into death." In reference to His
resurrection: "That, like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the
Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life. And in reference to His
ascension into heaven and sitting down at the right hand of the Father: "If ye then
be risen with Christ, seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right
hand of God. Set your affection on things above, not on things on the earth. For ye are
dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God."
CHAP. 54.--CHRIST'S SECOND COMING DOES NOT
BELONG TO THE PAST, BUT WILL TAKE PLACE AT THE END OF THE WORLD.
But what we believe as to Christ's action in the
future, when He shall come from heaven to judge the quick and the dead, has no bearing
upon the life which we now lead here; for it forms no part of what He did upon earth, but
is part of what He shall do at the end of the world. And it is to this that the apostle
refers in what immediately follows the passage quoted above: "When Christ, who is our
life, shall appear, then shall ye also appear with Him in glory."
CHAP. 55.--THE EXPRESSION, "CHRIST SHALL
JUDGE THE QUICK AND THE DEAD," MAY BE UNDERSTOOD IN EITHER OF TWO SENSES.
Now the expression, "to judge the quick and
the dead," may be interpreted in two ways: either we may understand by the
"quick" those who at His advent shall not yet have died, but whom He shall find
alive in the flesh, and by the "dead" those who have departed from the body, or
who shall have departed before His coming; or we may understand the "quick" to
mean the righteous, and the "dead" the unrighteous; for the righteous shall be
judged as well as others. Now the judgment of God is sometimes taken in a bad sense, as,
for example, "They that have done evil unto the resurrection of judgment;"
sometimes in a good sense, as, "Save me, O God, by Thy name, and judge me by Thy
strength." This is easily understood When we consider that it is the judgment of
God which separates the good from the evil, and sets the good at His right hand, that they
may be delivered from evil, and not destroyed with the wicked; and it is for this reason
that the Psalmist cried, "Judge me, O God," and then added, as if in
explanation, "and distinguish my cause from that of an ungodly nation."
CHAP. 56.--THE HOLY SPIRIT AND THE CHURCH. THE
CHURCH IS THE TEMPLE OF GOD.
And now, having spoken of Jesus Christ, the only
Son of God, our Lord, with the brevity suitable to a confession of our faith, we go on to
say that we believe also in the Holy Ghost,--thus completing the Trinity which constitutes
the Godhead. Then we mention the Holy Church. And thus we are made to understand that the
intelligent creation, which constitutes the free Jerusalem, ought to be subordinate in
the order of speech to the Creator, the Supreme Trinity: for all that is said of the man
Christ Jesus has reference, of course, to the unity of the person of the Only-begotten.
Therefore the true order of the Creed demanded that the Church should be made subordinate
to the Trinity, as the house to Him who dwells in it, the temple to God who occupies it,
and the city to its builder. And we are here to understand the whole Church, not that part
of it only which wanders as a stranger on the earth, praising the name of God from the
rising of the sun to the going down of the same, and singing a new song of deliverance
from its old captivity; but that part also which has always from its creation remained
steadfast to God in heaven, and has never experienced the misery consequent upon a fall.
This part is made up of the holy angels, who enjoy uninterrupted happiness; and (as it is
bound to do) it renders assistance to the part which is still wandering among strangers:
for these two parts shall be one in the fellowship of eternity, and now they are one in
the bonds of love, the whole having been ordained for the worship of the one God.
Wherefore, neither the whole Church, nor any part of it, has any desire to be worshipped
instead of God, nor to be God to any one who belongs to the temple of God--that temple
which is built up of the saints who were created by the uncreated God. And therefore the
Holy Spirit, if a creature, could not be the Creator, but would be a part of the
intelligent creation. He would simply be the highest creature, and therefore would not be
mentioned in the Creed before the Church; for He Himself would belong to the Church. to
that part of it which is in the heavens. And He would not have a temple, for He Himself
would be part of a temple. Now He has a temple, of which the apostle says: "Know ye
not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost, which is in you, which ye have of
God?" Of which body he says in another place: "Know ye not that your bodies
are the members of Christ?" How, then, is He not God, seeing that He has a temple?
and how can He be less than Christ, whose members are His temple? Nor has He one temple,
and God another, seeing that the same apostle says: "Know ye not that ye are the
temple of God?" and adds, as proof of this, "and that the Spirit of God
dwelleth in you." God, then, dwells in His temple: not the Holy Spirit only, but
the Father also, and the Son, who says of His own body, through which He was made Head of
the Church upon earth ("that in all things He might have the pre-eminence):"
"Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up." The temple of
God, then, that is, of the Supreme Trinity as a whole, is the Holy Church, embracing in
its full extent both heaven and earth.
CHAP. 57.--THE CONDITION OF THE CHURCH IN
HEAVEN.
But of that part of the Church which is in heaven
what can we say, except that no wicked one is found in it, and that no one has fallen from
it, or shall ever fall from it, since the time that 'God spared not the angels that
sinned," as the Apostle Peter writes, "but cast them down to hell, and delivered
them into chains of darkness, to be reserved unto judgment?"
CHAP. 58.--WE HAVE NO CERTAIN KNOWLEDGE OF THE
ORGANIZATION OF THE ANGELIC SOCIETY.
Now, what the organization is of that supremely
happy society in heaven: what the differences of rank are, which explain the fact that
while all are called by the general name angels, as we read in the Epistle to the Hebrews,
"but to which of the angels said God at any time, Sit on my right hand?"
(this form of expression being evidently designed to embrace all the angels without
exception), we yet find that there are some called archangels; and whether the archangels
are the same as those called hosts, so that the expression, "Praise ye Him, all His
angels: praise ye Him, all His hosts," is the same as if it had been said,
"Praise ye Him, all His angels: praise ye Him, all His archangels;" and what are
the various significations of those four names under which the apostle seems to embrace
the whole heavenly company without exception, "whether they be thrones, or dominions,
or principalities, or powers:"--let those who are able answer these questions, if
they can also prove their answers to be true; but as for me, I confess my ignorance. I am
not even certain upon this point: whether the sun, and the moon, and all the stars, do not
form part of this same society, though many consider them merely luminous bodies, without
either sensation or intelligence.
CHAP. 59.--THE BODIES ASSUMED BY ANGELS RAISE A
VERY DIFFICULT, AND NOT VERY USEFUL, SUBJECT OF DISCUSSION.
Further, who will tell with what sort of bodies
it was that the angels appeared to men, making themselves not only visible, but tangible;
and again, how it is that, not through material bodies, but by spiritual power, they
present visions not to the bodily eyes, but to the spiritual eyes of the mind, or speak
something not into the ear from without, but from within the soul of the man, they
themselves being stationed there too, as it is written in the prophet, "And the angel
that spake in me said unto me"(11) (he does not say, "that spake to me,"
but "that spake in me"); or appear to men in sleep, and make communications
through dreams, as we read in the Gospel, "Behold, the angel of the Lord appeared
unto him in a dream, saying"?(12) For these methods of communication seem to imply
that the angels have not tangible bodies, and make it a very difficult question to solve
how the patriarchs washed their feet,(13) and how it was that Jacob wrestled with the
angel in a way so unmistakeably material.(14) To ask questions like these, and to make
such guesses as we can at the answers, is a useful exercise for the intellect, if the
discussion be kept within proper bounds, and if we avoid the error of supposing ourselves
to know what we do not know. For what is the necessity for affirming, or denying, or
defining with accuracy on these subjects, and others like them, when we may without blame
be entirely ignorant of them?
CHAP. 60.--IT IS MORE NECESSARY TO BE ABLE TO
DETECT THE WILES OF SATAN WHEN HE TRANSFORMS HIMSELF INTO AN ANGEL OF LIGHT.
It is more necessary to use all our powers of
discrimination and judgment when Satan transforms himself into an angel of light, lest
by his wiles he should lead us astray into hurtful courses. For, while he only deceives
the bodily senses, and does not pervert the mind from that true and sound judgment which
enables a man to lead a life of faith, there is no danger to religion; or if, reigning
himself to be good, he does or says the things that befit good angels, and we believe him
to be good, the error is not one that is hurtful or dangerous to Christian faith. But
when, through these means, which are alien to his nature, he goes on to lead us into
courses of his own, then great watchfulness is necessary to detect, and refuse to follow,
him. But how many men are fit to evade all his deadly wiles, unless God restrains and
watches over them? The very difficulty of the matter, however, is useful in this respect,
that it prevents men from trusting in themselves or in one another, and leads all to place
their confidence in God alone. And certainly no pious man can doubt that this is most
expedient for us.
CHAP. 61.--THE CHURCH ON EARTH HAS BEEN REDEEMED
FROM SIN BY THE BLOOD OF A MEDIATOR.
This part of the Church, then, which is made up
of the holy angels and the hosts of God, shall become known to us in its true nature,
when, at the end of the world, we shall be united with it in the common possession of
everlasting happiness. But the other part, which, separated from it, wanders as a stranger
on the earth, is better known to us, both because we belong to it, and because it is
composed of men, and we too are men. This section of the Church has been redeemed from all
sin by the blood of a Mediator who had no sin, and its song is: "If God be for us,
who can be against us? He that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us
all." Now it was not for the angels that Christ died. Yet what was done for the
redemption of man through His death was in a sense done for the angels, because the enmity
which sin had put between men and the holy angels is removed, and friendship is restored
between them, and by the redemption of man the gaps which the great apostasy left in the
angelic host are filled up.
CHAP. 62.--BY THE SACRIFICE OF CHRIST ALL THINGS
ARE RESTORED, AND PEACE IS MADE BETWEEN EARTH AND HEAVEN.
And, of course, the holy angels, taught by God,
in the eternal contemplation of whose truth their happiness consists, know how great a
number of the human race are to supplement their ranks, and fill up the full tale of their
citizenship. Wherefore the apostle says, that "all things are gathered together in
one in Christ, both which are in heaven and which are on earth."The things which
are in heaven are gathered together when what was lost therefrom in the fall of the angels
is restored from among men; and the things which are on earth are gathered together, when
those who are predestined to eternal life are redeemed from their old corruption. And
thus, through that single sacrifice in which the Mediator was offered up, the one
sacrifice of which the many victims under the law were types, heavenly things are brought
into peace with earthly things, and earthly things with heavenly. Wherefore, as the same
apostle says: "For it pleased the Father that in Him should all fullness dwell: and,
having made peace through the blood of His cross, by Him to reconcile all things to
Himself: by Him, I say, whether they be things in earth, or things in heaven."
CHAP. 63.--THE PEACE OF GOD, WHICH REIGNETH IN
HEAVEN, PASSETH ALL UNDERSTANDING.
This peace, as Scripture saith, "passeth all
understanding," and cannot be known by us until we have come into the full
possession of it. For in what sense are heavenly things reconciled, except they be
reconciled to us, viz. by coming into harmony with us? For in heaven there is unbroken
peace, both between all the intelligent creatures that exist there, and between these and
their Creator. And this peace, as is said, passeth all understanding; but this, of course,
means our understanding, not that of those who always behold the face of their Father. We
now, however great may be our human understanding, know but in part, and see through a
glass darkly. But when we shall be equal unto the angels of God then we shall see
face to face, as they do; and we shall have as great peace towards them as they have
towards us, because we shall love them as much as we are loved by them. And so their peace
shall be known to us: for our own peace shall be like to theirs, and as great as theirs,
nor shall it then pass our understanding. But the peace of God, the peace which He
cherisheth towards us, shall undoubtedly pass not our understanding only, but theirs as
well. And this must be so: for every rational creature which is happy derives its
happiness from Him; He does not derive His from it. And in this view it is better to
interpret "all" in the passage, "The peace of God passeth all
understanding," as admitting of no exception even in favor of the understanding of
the holy angels: the only exception that can be made is that of God Himself. For, of
course, His peace does not pass His own understanding.
CHAP. 64.--PARDON OF SIN EXTENDS OVER THE WHOLE
MORTAL LIFE OF THE SAINTS, WHICH, THOUGH FREE FROM CRIME, IS NOT FREE FROM SIN.
But the angels even now are at peace with us when
our sins are pardoned. Hence, in the order of the Creed, after the mention of the Holy
Church is placed the remission of sins. For it is by this that the Church on earth stands:
it is through this that what had been lost, and was found, is saved from being lost again.
For, setting aside the grace of baptism, which is given as an antidote to original sin, so
that what our birth imposes upon us, our new birth relieves us from (this grace, however,
takes away all the actual sins also that have been committed in thought, word, and deed):
setting aside, then, this great act of favor, whence commences man's restoration, and in
which all our guilt, both original and actual, is washed away, the rest of our life from
the time that we have the use of reason provides constant occasion for the remission of
sins, however great may be our advance in righteousness. For the sons of God, as long as
they live in this body of death, are in conflict with death. And although it is truly said
of them, "As many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God,"
yet they are led by the Spirit of God, and as the sons of God advance towards God under
this drawback, that they are led also by their own spirit, weighted as it is by the
corruptible body; and that, as the sons of men, under the influence of human
affections, they fall back to their old level, and so sin. There is a difference, however.
For although every crime is a sin, every sin is not a crime. And so we say that the life
of holy men, as long as they remain in this mortal body, may be found without crime; but,
as the Apostle John says, "If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and
the truth is not in us."
CHAP. 65.--GOD PARDONS SINS, BUT ON CONDITION OF
PENITENCE, CERTAIN TIMES FOR WHICH HAVE BEEN FIXED BY THE LAW OF THE CHURCH.
But even crimes themselves, however great, may be
remitted in the Holy Church; and the mercy of God is never to be despaired of by men who
truly repent, each according to the measure of his sin. And in the act of repentance,
where a crime has been committed of such a nature as to cut off the sinner from the body
of Christ, we are not to take account so much of the measure of time as of the measure of
sorrow; for a broken and a contrite heart God doth not despise. But as the grief of one
heart is frequently hid from another, and is not made known to others by words or other
signs, when it is manifest to Him of whom it is said, "My groaning is not hid from
Thee," those who govern the Church have rightly appointed times of penitence, that
the Church in which the sins are remitted may be satisfied; and outside the Church sins
are not remitted. For the Church alone has received the pledge of the Holy Spirit, without
which there is no remission of sins--such, at least, as brings the pardoned to eternal
life.
CHAP. 66.--THE PARDON OF SIN HAS REFERENCE
CHIEFLY TO THE FUTURE JUDGMENT.
Now the pardon of sin has reference chiefly to
the future judgment. For, as far as this life is concerned, the saying of Scripture holds
good: "A heavy yoke is upon the sons of Adam, from the day that they go out of their
mother's womb, till the day that they return to the mother of all things." So that
we see even infants, after baptism and regeneration, suffering from the infliction of
divers evils: and thus we are given to understand, that all that is set forth in the
sacraments of salvation refers rather to the hope of future good, than to the retaining or
attaining of present blessings. For many sins seem in this world to be overlooked and
visited with no punishment, whose punishment is reserved for the future (for it is not in
vain that the day when Christ shall come as Judge of quick and dead is peculiarly named
the day of judgment); just as, on the other hand, many sins are punished in this life,
which nevertheless are pardoned, and shall bring down no punishment in the future life.
Accordingly, in reference to certain temporal punishments, which in this life are visited
upon sinners, the apostle, addressing those whose sins are blotted out, and not reserved
for the final judgment, says: "For if we would judge ourselves, we should not be
judged. But when we are judged, we are chastened of the Lord, that we should not be
condemned with the world."
CHAP. 67.--FAITH WITHOUT WORKS IS
DEAD, AND
CANNOT SAVE A MAN.
It is believed, moreover, by some, that men who
do not abandon the name of Christ, and who have been baptized in the Church by His
baptism, and who have never been cut off from the Church by any schism or heresy, though
they should live in the grossest sin and never either wash it away in penitence nor redeem
it by almsgiving, but persevere in it persistently to the last day of their lives, shall
be saved by fire; that is, that although they shall suffer a punishment by fire, lasting
for a time proportionate to the magnitude of their crimes and misdeeds, they shall not be
punished with everlasting fire. But those who believe this, and yet are Catholics, seem to
me to be led astray by a kind of benevolent feeling natural to humanity. For Holy
Scripture, when consulted, gives a very different answer. I have written a book on this
subject, entitled Of Faith and Works, in which, to the best of my ability, God assisting
me, I have shown from Scripture, that the faith which saves us is that which the Apostle
Paul clearly enough describes when he says: "For in Jesus Christ neither circumcision
availeth anything, nor uncircumcision, but faith which worketh by love." But if it
worketh evil, and not good, then without doubt, as the Apostle James says, "it is
dead, being alone." The same apostle says again, "What doth it profit, my
brethren, though a man say he hath faith, and have not works? Can faith save him?"
And further, if a wicked man shall be saved by fire on account of his faith alone, and if
this is what the blessed Apostle Paul means when he says, "But he himself shall be
saved, yet so as by fire;" then faith without works can save a man, and what his
fellow-apostle James says must be false. And that must be false which Paul himself says in
another place: "Be not deceived: neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers,
nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with mankind, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor
drunkards, nor revilers, nor extortioners; shall inherit the kingdom of God." For
if those who persevere in these wicked courses shall nevertheless be saved on account of
their faith in Christ, how can it be true that they shall not inherit the kingdom of God?
CHAP. 68.--THE TRUE SENSE OF THE PASSAGE (I COR.
III. 11-15) ABOUT THOSE WHO ARE SAVED, YET SO AS BY FIRE,
But as these most plain and unmistakeable
declarations of the apostles cannot be false, that obscure saying about those who build
upon the foundation, Christ, not gold, silver, and precious stones, but wood, hay, and
stubble (for it is these who, it is said, shall be saved, yet so as by fire, the merit of
the foundation saving them), must be so interpreted as not to conflict with the plain
statements quoted above. Now wood, hay, and stubble may, without incongruity, be
understood to signify such an attachment to worldly things, however lawful these may be in
themselves, that they cannot be lost without grief of mind. And though this grief burns,
yet if Christ hold the place of foundation in the heart,--that is, if nothing be preferred
to Him, and if the man, though burning with grief, is yet more willing to lose the things
he loves so much than to lose Christ,--he is saved by fire. If, however, in time of
temptation, he prefer to hold by temporal and earthly things rather than by Christ, he has
not Christ as his foundation; for he puts earthly things in the first place, and in a
building nothing comes before the foundation. Again, the fire of which the apostle speaks
in this place must be such a fire as both men are made to pass through, that is, both the
man who builds upon the foundation, gold, silver, precious stones, and the man who builds
wood, hay, stubble. For he immediately adds: "The fire shall try every man's work, of
what sort it is. If any man's work abide which he hath built thereupon, he shall receive a
reward. If any man's work shall be burned, he shall suffer loss; but he himself shall be
saved, yet so as by fire." The fire then shall prove, not the work of one of them
only, but of both. Now the trial of adversity is a kind of fire which is plainly spoken of
in another place: "The furnace proverb the potter's vessels: and the furnace of
adversity just men." And this fire does in the course of this life act exactly in
the way the apostle says. If it come into contact with two believers, one "caring for
the things that belong to the Lord, how he may please the Lord," that is,
building upon Christ the foundation, gold, silver, precious stones; the other "caring
for the things that are of the world, how he may please his wife,"(11) that is,
building upon the same foundation wood, hay, stubble,--the work of the former is not
burned, because he has not given his love to things whose loss can cause him grief; but
the work of the latter is burned, because things that are enjoyed with desire cannot be
lost without pain. But since, by our supposition, even the latter prefers to lose these
things rather than to lose Christ, and since he does not desert Christ out of fear of
losing them, though he is grieved when he does lose them he is saved, but it is so as by
fire; because the grief for what he loved and has lost burns him. But it does not subvert
nor consume him; for he is protected by his immoveable and incorruptible foundation.
CHAP. 69.--IT IS NOT IMPOSSIBLE THAT SOME
BELIEVERS MAY PASS THROUGH A PURGATORIAL FIRE IN THE FUTURE LIFE.
And it is not impossible that something of the
same kind may take place even after this life. It is a matter that may be inquired into,
and either ascertained or left doubtful, whether some believers shall pass through a kind
of purgatorial fire, and in proportion as they have loved with more or less devotion the
goods that perish, be less or more quickly delivered from it. This cannot, however, be the
case of any of those of whom it is said, that they "shall not inherit the kingdom of
God," unless after suitable repentance their sins be forgiven them. When I say
"suitable," I mean that they are not to be unfruitful in almsgiving; for Holy
Scripture lays so much stress on this virtue, that our Lord tells us beforehand, that He
will ascribe no merit to those on His right hand but that they abound in it, and no defect
to those on His left hand but their want of it, when He shall say to the former,
"Come, ye blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom," and to the latter,
"Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting fire."
CHAP. 70.--ALMSGIVING WILL NOT ATONE FOR SIN
UNLESS THE LIFE BE CHANGED.
We must beware, however, lest any one should
suppose that gross sins, such as are committed by those who shall not inherit the kingdom
of God, may be daily perpetrated,and daily stoned for by almsgiving, The life must be
changed for the better; and almsgiving must be used to propitiate God for past sins, not
to purchase impunity for the commission of such sins in the future. For He has given no
man license to sin, although in His mercy He may blot out sins that are already
committed, if we do not neglect to make proper satisfaction.
CHAP. 71.--THE DAILY PRAYER OF THE BELIEVER
MAKES SATISFACTION FOR THE TRIVIAL SINS THAT DAILY STAIN HIS LIFE.
Now the daily prayer of the believer makes
satisfaction for those daily sins of a momentary and trivial kind which are necessary
incidents of this life. For he can say, "Our Father which art in heaven,"
seeing that to such a Father he is now born again of water and of the Spirit. And this
prayer certainly takes away the very small sins of daily life. It takes away also those
which at one time made the life of the believer very wicked, but which, now that he is
changed for the better by repentance, he has given up, provided that as truly as he says,
"Forgive us our debts" (for there is no want of debts to be forgiven), so truly
does he say, "as we forgive our debtors;" that is, provided he does what he
says he does: for to forgive a man who asks for pardon, is really to give alms.
CHAP. 72.--THERE ARE MANY KINDS OF ALMS, THE
GIVING OF WHICH ASSISTS TO PROCURE PARDON FOR OUR SINS.
And on this principle of interpretation, our
Lord's saying, "Give alms of such things as ye have, and, behold, all things are
clean unto you,", applies to every useful act that a man does in mercy. Not only,
then, the man who gives food to the hungry, drink to the thirsty, clothing to the naked,
hospitality to the stranger, shelter to the fugitive, who visits the sick and the
imprisoned, ransoms the captive, assists the weak, leads the blind, comforts the
sorrowful, heals the sick, puts the wanderer on the right path, gives advice to the
perplexed, and supplies the wants of the needy,--not this man only, but the man who
pardons the sinner also gives alms; and the man who corrects with blows, or restrains by
any kind of discipline one over whom he has power, and who at the same time forgives from
the heart the sin by which he was injured, or prays that it may be forgiven, is also a
giver of alms, not only in that he forgives, or prays for forgiveness for the sin, but
also in that he rebukes and corrects the sinner: for in this, too, he shows mercy. Now
much good is bestowed upon unwilling recipients, when their advantage and not their
pleasure is consulted; and they themselves frequently prove to be their own enemies, while
their true friends are those whom they take for their enemies, and to whom in their
blindness they return evil for good. (A Christian, indeed, is not permitted to return evil
even for evil.) And thus there are many kinds of alms, by giving of which we assist to
procure the pardon of our sins.
CHAP. 73.--THE GREATEST OF ALL ALMS IS TO
FORGIVE OUR DEBTORS AND TO LOVE OUR ENEMIES.
But none of those is greater than to forgive from
the heart a sin that has been committed against us. For it is a comparatively small thing
to wish well to, or even to do good to, a man who has done no evil to you. It is a much
higher thing, and is the result of the most exalted goodness, to love your enemy, and
always to wish well to, and when you have the opportunity, to do good to, the man who
wishes you ill, and, when he can does you harm. This is to obey the command of God:
"Love your enemies, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which persecute
you." But seeing that this is a frame of mind only reached by the perfect sons of
God, and that though every believer ought to strive after it, and by prayer to God and
earnest struggling with himself endeavor to bring his soul up to this standard, yet a
degree of goodness so high can hardly belong to so great a multitude as we believe are
heard when they use this petition, "Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our
debtors;" in view of all this, it cannot be doubted that the implied undertaking is
fulfilled if a man, though he has not yet attained to loving his enemy, yet, when asked by
one who has sinned against him to forgive him his sin, does forgive him from his heart.
For he certainly desires to be himself forgiven when he prays, "as we forgive our
debtors," that is, Forgive us our debts when we beg forgiveness, as we forgive our
debtors when they beg forgiveness from us.
CHAP. 74.--GOD DOES NOT PARDON THE SINS OF THOSE
WHO DO NOT FROM THE HEART FORGIVE OTHERS.
Now, he who asks forgiveness of the man against
whom he has sinned, being moved by his sin to ask forgiveness, cannot be counted an enemy
in such a sense that it should be as difficult to love him now as it was when he was
engaged in active hostility. And the man who does not from his heart forgive him who
repents of his sin, and asks forgiveness, need not suppose that his own sins are forgiven
of God. For the Truth cannot lie. And what reader or hearer of the Gospel can have failed
to notice, that the same person who said, "I am the Truth," taught us also
this form of prayer; and in order to impress this particular petition deeply upon our
minds, said, "For if ye forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also
forgive you; but if ye forgive not men their trespasses, neither will your. Father forgive
your trespasses"? The man whom the thunder of this warning does not awaken is not
asleep, but dead; and yet so powerful is that voice, that it can awaken even the dead.
CHAP. 75.--THE WICKED AND THE UNBELIEVING ARE
NOT MADE CLEAN BY THE GIVING OF ALMS, EXCEPT THEY BE BORN AGAIN.
Assuredly, then, those who live in gross
wickedness, and take no care to reform their lives and manners, and yet amid all their
crimes and vices do not cease to give frequent alms, in vain take comfort to themselves
from the saying of our Lord: "Give alms of such things as ye have; and, behold, all
things are Clean unto you." For they do not understand how far this saying
reaches. But that they may understand this, let them hear what He says. For we read in the
Gospel as follows: "And as He spake, a certain Pharisee besought Him to dine with
him; and He went in, and sat down to meat. And when the Pharisee saw it, he marvelled that
He had not first washed before dinner. And the Lord said unto him, Now do ye Pharisees
make clean the outside of the cup and the platter; but your inward part is full of
ravening and wickedness. Ye fools, did not he that made that which is without, make that
which is within also? But rather give alms of such things as ye have; and, behold, all
things are clean unto you." Are we to understand this as meaning that to the
Pharisees who have not the faith of Christ all things are clean, if only they give alms in
the way these men count almsgiving, even though they have never believed in Christ, nor
been born again of water and of the Spirit? But the fact is, that all are unclean who are
not made clean by the faith of Christ, according to the expression, "purifying their
hearts by faith;" and that the apostle says, "Unto them that are defiled and
unbelieving is nothing pure; but even their mind and conscience is defiled." How,
then, could all things be clean to the Pharisees, even though they gave alms, if they were
not believers? And how could they be believers if they were not willing to have faith in
Christ, and to be born again of His grace? And yet what they heard is true: "Give
alms of such things as ye have; and, behold, all things are clean unto you."
CHAP. 76.--TO GIVE ALMS ARIGHT, WE SHOULD BEGIN
WITH OURSELVES, AND HAVE PITY UPON OUR OWN SOULS.
For the man who wishes to give aims as he ought,
should begin with himself, and give to himself first. For almsgiving is a work of mercy;
and most truly is it said, "To have mercy on thy soul is pleasing to God."
And for this end are we born again, that we should be pleasing to God, who is justly
displeased with that which we brought with us when we were born. This is our first alms,
which we give to ourselves when, through the mercy of a pitying God, we find that we are
ourselves wretched, and confess the justice of His judgment by which we are made wretched,
of which the apostle says, "The judgment was by one to condemnation;" and
praise the greatness of His love, of which the same preacher of grace says, "God
commendeth His love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for
us:" and thus judging truly of our own misery, and loving God with the love which
He has Himself bestowed, we lead a holy and virtuous life. But the Pharisees, while they
gave as alms the tithe of all their fruits, even the most insignificant, passed over
judgment and the love of God, and so did not commence their alms-giving at home, and
extend their pity to themselves in the first instance. And it is in reference to this
order of love that it is said, "Love thy neighbor as thyself." When, then,
our Lord had rebuked them because they made themselves clean on the outside, but within
were full of ravening and wickedness, He advised them, in the exercise of that charity
which each man owes to himself in the first instance, to make clean the inward parts.
"But rather," He says, " give alms of such things as ye have; and, behold,
all things are clean unto you." Then, to show what it was that He advised, and
what they took no pains to do, and to show that He did not overlook or forget their
almsgiving, "But woe unto you, Pharisees!" He says; as if He meant to say: I
indeed advise you to give alms which shall make all things clean unto you; "but woe
unto you! for ye tithe mint, and rue, and all manner of herbs;" as if He meant to
say: I know these alms of yours, and ye need not think that I am now admonishing you in
respect of such things; "and pass over judgment and the love of God," an alms by
which ye might have been made clean from all inward impurity, so that even the bodies
which ye are now washing would have been clean to you. For this is the import of all
things," both inward and outward things, as we read in another place: "Cleanse
first that which is within, that the outside may be clean also." But lest He might
appear to despise the alms which they were giving out of the fruits of the earth, He says:
"These ought ye to have done," referring to judgment and the love of God,
"and not to leave the other undone," referring to the giving of the tithes.
CHAP. 77.--IF WE WOULD GIVE ALMS TO OURSELVES,
WE MUST FLEE INIQUITY; FOR HE WHO LOVETH INIQUITY HATETH HIS SOUL.
Those, then, who think that they can by giving
alms, however profuse, whether in money or in kind, purchase for themselves the privilege
of persisting with impunity in their monstrous crimes and hideous vices, need not thus
deceive themselves. For not only do they commit these sins, but they love. them so much
that they would like to go on. forever committing them, if only they could do so with
impunity. Now, he who loveth iniquity hateth his own soul; and he who hateth his own
soul is not merciful but cruel towards it. For in loving it according to the. world, he
hateth it according to God. But if he desired to give alms to it which should make all
things clean unto him, he would hate it according to the world, and love it according to
God. Now no one gives alms unless he receive what he gives from one who is not in want of
it. Therefore it is said, His mercy shall meet me."
CHAP. 78.--WHAT SINS ARE TRIVIAL AND WHAT
HEINOUS IS A MATTER FOR GOD'S JUDGMENT.
Now, what sins are trivial and what heinous. is
not a matter to be decided by man's judgment, but by the judgment of God. For it is plain
that the apostles themselves have given an indulgence in the case of certain sins: take,
for example, what the Apostle Paul says to those who are married: "Defraud ye not one
the other, except it be with consent for a time, that ye may give yourselves to fasting
and prayer: and come together again, that Satan tempt you not for your
incontinency." Now it is possible that it might not have been considered a sin to
have intercourse with a spouse, not with a view to the procreation of children, which is
the great blessing of marriage, but for the sake of carnal pleasure, and to save the
incontinent from being led by their weakness into the deadly sin of fornication, or
adultery, or another form of uncleanness which it is shameful even to name, and into which
it is possible that they might be drawn by lust under the temptation of Satan. It is
possible, I say, that this might not have been considered a sin, had the apostle not
added: "But I speak this by permission, and not of commandment." Who, then,
can deny that it is a sin, when confessedly it is only by apostolic authority that
permission is granted to those who do it ? Another case of the same kind is where he says:
"Dare any of you, having a matter against another, go to law before the unjust, and
not before the saints ?" And shortly afterwards: "If then ye have judgments
of things-pertaining to this life, set them to judge who are least esteemed in the Church.
I speak to your shame. Is it so, that there is not a wise man among you? no, not one that
shall be able to judge between his brethren? But brother goeth to law with brother, and
that before the unbelievers." Now it might have been supposed in this case that it
is not a sin to have a quarrel with another, that the only sin is in wishing to have it
adjudicated upon outside the Church, had not the apostle immediately added: "Now
therefore there is utterly a fault among you, because ye go to law with one
another." And lest any one should excuse himself by saying that he had a just
cause, and was suffering wrong, and that he only wished the sentence of the judges to
remove his wrong, the apostle immediately anticipates such thoughts and excuses, and says:
"Why do ye not rather take wrong? Why do ye not rather suffer yourselves to be
defrauded?" Thus bringing us back to our Lord's saying, "If any man will sue
thee at the law, and take away thy coat, let him have thy cloak also;" and again,
"Of him that taketh away thy goods, ask them not again." Therefore our Lord
has forbidden His followers to go to law with other men about worldly affairs. And
carrying out this principle, the apostle here declares that to do so is "altogether a
fault." But when, notwithstanding, he grants his permission to have Such cases
between brethren decided in the Church, other brethren adjudicating, and only sternly
forbids them to be carried outside the Church, it is manifest that here again an
indulgence is extended to the infirmities of the weak. It is in view, then, of these sins,
and others of the same sort, and of others again more trifling still, which consist of
offenses in words and thought (as the Apostle James confesses, "In many things we
offend all" that we need to pray every day and often to the Lord, saying,
"Forgive us our debts," and to add in truth and sincerity, "as we forgive
our debtors."
CHAP. 79.--SINS WHICH APPEAR VERY TRIFLING, ARE
SOMETIMES IN REALITY VERY SERIOUS.
Again, there are some sins which would be
considered very trifling, if the Scriptures did not show that they are really very
serious. For who would suppose that the man who says to his brother, "Thou
fool," is in danger of hell-fire, did not He who is the Truth say so? To the wound,
however, He immediately applies the cure, giving a rule for reconciliation with one's
offended brother: "Therefore, if thou bring thy gift to the altar, and there
rememberest that thy brother hath ought against thee; leave there thy gift before the
altar, and go thy way: first be reconciled to thy brother, and then come and offer thy
gift." Again, who would suppose that it was so great a sin to observe days, and
months, and times, and years, as those do who are anxious or unwilling to begin anything
on certain days, or in certain months or years, because the vain doctrines of men lead
them to think such times lucky or unlucky, had we not the means of estimating the
greatness of the evil from the fear expressed by the apostle, who says to such men,
"I am afraid of you, lest I have bestowed upon you labor in vain"?
CHAP. 80.--SINS, HOWEVER GREAT AND DETESTABLE,
SEEM TRIVIAL WHEN WE ARE ACCUSTOMED TO THEM.
Add to this, that sins, however great and
detestable they may be, are looked upon as trivial, or as not sins at all, when men get
accustomed to them; and so far does this go, that such sins are not only not concealed,
but are boasted of, and published far and wide; and thus, as it is written, "The
wicked boasteth of his heart's desire, and blesseth the covetous, whom the Lord
abhorreth."(11) Iniquity of this kind is in Scripture called a cry. You have an
instance in the prophet Isaiah, in the case of the evil vineyard: "He looked for
judgment, but behold oppression; for righteousness, but behold a cry." Whence also
the expression in Genesis: "The cry of Sodom and Gomorrah is great,"' because in
these cities crimes were not only not punished, but were openly committed, as if under the
protection of the law. And so in our own times: many forms of sin, though not just the
sameas those of Sodom and Gomorrah, are now so openly and habitually practised, that not
only dare we not excommunicate a layman, we dare not even degrade a clergyman, for the
commission of them. So that when, a few years ago, I was expounding the Epistle to the
Galatians, in commenting on that very place where the apostle says, "I am afraid of
you, lest I have bestowed labor upon you in vain," I was compelled to exclaim,
"Woe to the sins of men! for it is only when we are not accustomed to them that we
shrink from them: when once we are accustomed to them, though the blood of the Son of God
was poured out to wash them away, though they are so great that the kingdom of God is
wholly shut against them, constant familiarity leads to the toleration of them all, and
habitual toleration leads to the practice of many of them. And grant, O Lord, that we may
not come to practise all that we have not the power to hinder." But I shall see
whether the extravagance of grief did not betray me into rashness of speech.
CHAP. 81.--THERE ARE TWO CAUSES OF SIN,
IGNORANCE AND WEAKNESS; AND WE NEED DIVINE HELP TO OVERCOME BOTH.
I shall now say this, which I have often said
before in other places of my works. There are two causes that lead to sin: either we do
not yet know our duty, or we do not perform the duty that we know. The former is the sin
of ignorance, the latter of weakness. Now against these it is our duty to struggle; but we
shall certainly be beaten in the fight, unless we are helped by God, not only to see our
duty, but also, when we clearly see it, to make the love of righteousness stronger in us
than the love of earthly things, the eager longing after which, or the fear of losing
which, leads us with our eyes open into known sin. In the latter case we are not only
sinners, for we are so even when we err through ignorance, but we are also transgressors
of the law; for we leave undone what we know we ought to do, and we do what we know we
ought not to do. Wherefore not only ought we to pray for pardon when we have sinned,
saying, "Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors;" but we ought to pray
for guidance, that we may be kept from sinning, saying, "and lead us not into
temptation." And we are to pray to Him of whom the Psalmist says, "The Lord is
my light and my salvation:" my light, for He removes my ignorance; my salvation,
for He takes away my infirmity.
CHAP. 82.--THE MERCY OF GOD IS NECESSARY TO TRUE
REPENTANCE.
Now even penance itself, when by the law of the
Church there is sufficient reason for its being gone through, is frequently evaded through
infirmity; for shame is the fear of losing pleasure when the good opinion of men gives
more pleasure than the righteousness which leads a man to humble himself in penitence.
Wherefore the mercy of God is necessary not only when a man repents, but even to lead him
to repent. How else explain what the apostle says of certain persons: "if God
peradventure will give them repentance"? And before Peter wept bitterly, we are
told by the evangelist, "The Lord turned, and looked upon him."
CHAP. 83.--THE MAN WHO DESPISES THE MERCY OF GOD
IS GUILTY OF THE SIN AGAINST THE HOLY GHOST.
Now the man who, not believing that sins are
remitted in the Church, despises this great gift of God's mercy, anti persists to the last
day of his life in his obstinacy of heart, is guilty of the unpardonable sin against the
Holy Ghost, in whom Christ forgives sins But this difficult question I have discussed
as clearly as I could in a book devoted exclusively to this one point.
CHAP. 84.--THE RESURRECTION OF THE BODY GIVES
RISE TO NUMEROUS QUESTIONS.
Now, as to the resurrection of the body, --not a
resurrection such as some have had, who came back to life for a time and died again, but a
resurrection to eternal life, as the body of Christ Himself rose again,--I do not see how
I can discuss the matter briefly, and at the same time give a satisfactory answer to all
the questions that are ordinarily raised about it. Yet that the bodies of all men--both
those who have been born and those who shall be born, both those who have died and those
who shall die--shall be raised again, no Christian ought to have the shadow of a doubt.
CHAP. 85.--THE CASE OF ABORTIVE CONCEPTIONS.
Hence in the first place arises a question about
abortive conceptions, which have indeed been born in the mother's womb, but not so born
that they could be born again. For if we shall decide that these are to rise again, we
cannot object to any conclusion that may be drawn in regard to those which are fully
formed. Now who is there that is not rather disposed to think that unformed abortions
perish, like seeds that have never fructified? But who will dare to deny, though he may
not dare to affirm, that at the resurrection every defect in the form shall be supplied,
and that thus the perfection which time would have brought shall not be wanting, any more
than the blemishes which time did bring shall be present: so that the nature shall neither
want anything suitable and in harmony with it that length of days would have added, nor be
debased by the presence of anything of an opposite kind that length of days has added; but
that what is not yet complete shall be completed, just as what has been injured shall be
renewed.
CHAP. 86.--IF THEY HAVE EVER LIVED, THEY MUST OF
COURSE HAVE DIED, AND THEREFORE SHALL HAVE A SHARE IN THE RESURRECTION OF THE DEAD.
And therefore the following question may be very
carefully inquired into and discussed by learned men, though I do not know whether it is
in man's power to resolve it: At what time the infant begins to live in the womb: whether
life exists in a latent form before it manifests itself in the motions of the living
being. To deny that the young who are cut out limb by limb from the womb, lest if they
were left there dead the mother should die too, have never been alive, seems too
audacious. Now, from the time that a man begins to live, from that time it is possible for
him to die. And if he die, wheresoever death may overtake him, I cannot discover on what
principle he can be denied an interest in the resurrection of the dead.
CHAP. 87.--THE CASE OF MONSTROUS BIRTHS.
We are not justified in affirming even of
monstrosities, which are born and live, however quickly they may die, that they shall not
rise again, nor that they shall rise again in their deformity, and not rather with an
amended and perfected body. God forbid that the double limbed man who was lately born in
the East, of whom an account was brought by most trustworthy brethren who had seen
him,--an account which the presbyter Jerome, of blessed memory, left in writing;--God
forbid, I say, that we should think that at the resurrection there shall be one man with
double limbs, and not two distinct men, as would have been the case had twins been born.
And so other births, which, because they have either a superfluity or a defect, or because
they are very much deformed, are called monstrosities, shall at the resurrection be
restored to the normal shape of man; and so each single soul shall possess its own body;
and no bodies shall cohere together even though they were born in cohesion, but each
separately shall possess all the members which constitute a complete human body.
CHAP. 88.--THE MATERIAL OF THE BODY NEVER
PERISHES.
Nor does the earthly material out of which men's
mortal bodies are created ever perish; but though it may crumble into dust and ashes, or
be dissolved into vapors and exhalations, though it may be transformed into the substance
of other bodies, or dispersed into the elements, though it should become food for beasts
or men, and be changed into their flesh, it returns in a moment of time to that human soul
which animated it at the first, and which caused it to become man, and to live and grow.
CHAP. 89.--BUT THIS MATERIAL MAY BE DIFFERENTLY
ARRANGED IN THE RESURRECTION BODY.
And this earthly material, which when the soul
leaves it becomes a corpse, shall not at the resurrection be so restored as that the parts
into which it is separated, and which under various forms and appearances become parts of
other things (though they shall all return to the same body from which they were
separated), must necessarily return to the same parts of the body in which they were
originally situated. For otherwise, to suppose that the hair recovers all that our
frequent clippings and shavings have taken away from it, and the nails all that we have so
often pared off, presents to the imagination such a picture of ugliness and deformity, as
to make the resurrection of the body all but incredible. But just as if a statue of some
soluble metal were either melted by fire, or broken into dust, or reduced to a shapeless
mass, and a sculptor wished to restore it from the same quantity of metal, it would make
no difference to the completeness of the work what part of the statue any given particle
of the material was put into, as long as the restored statue contained all the material of
the original one; so God, the Artificer of marvellous and unspeakable power, shall with
marvellous and unspeakable rapidity restore our body, using up the whole material of which
it originally consisted. Nor will it affect the completeness of its restoration whether
hairs return to hairs, and nails to nails, or whether the part of these that had perished
be changed into flesh, and called to take its place in another part of the body, the great
Artist taking careful heed that nothing shall be unbecoming or out of place.
CHAP. 90.--IF THERE BE DIFFERENCES AND
INEQUALITIES AMONG THE BODIES OF THOSE WHO RISE AGAIN, THERE SHALL BE NOTHING OFFENSIVE OR
DISPROPORTIONATE IN ANY.
Nor does it necessarily follow that there shall
be differences of stature among those who rise again, because they were of different
statures during life; nor is it certain that the lean shall rise again in their former
leanness, and the fat in their former fatness. But if it is part of the Creator's design
that each should preserve his own peculiarities of feature, and retain a recognizable
likeness to his former self, while in regard to other bodily advantages all should be
equal, then the material of which each is composed may be so modified that none of it
shall be lost, and that any defect may be supplied by Him who can create at His will out
of nothing. But if in the bodies of those who rise again there shall be a well-ordered
inequality, such as there is in the voices that make up a full harmony, then the material
of each man's body shall be so dealt with that it shall form a man fit for the assemblies
of the angels, and one who shall bring nothing among them to jar upon their sensibilities.
And assuredly nothing that is unseemly shall be there; but whatever shall be there shall
be graceful and becoming: for if anything is not seemly, neither shall it be.
CHAP. 91.--THE BODIES OF THE SAINTS SHALL AT
TItlE RESURRECTION BE SPIRITUAL BODIES.
The bodies of the saints, then, shall rise again
free from every defect, from every blemish, as from all corruption, weight, and
impediment. For their ease of movement shall be as complete as their happiness. Whence
their bodies have been called spiritual, though undoubtedly they shall be bodies and not
spirits. For just as now the body is called animate, though it is a body, and not a soul
[anima], so then the body shall be called spiritual, though it shall be a body, not a
spirit. Hence, as far as regards the corruption which now weighs down the soul, and the
vices which urge the flesh to lust against the spirit, it shall not then be flesh, but
body; for there are bodies which are called celestial. Wherefore it is said, "Flesh
and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God;" and, as if in explanation of this,
"neither doth corruption inherit incorruption." What the apostle first called
"flesh and blood," he afterwards calls "corruption;" and what he first
called "the kingdom of God," he afterwards calls "incorruption." But
as far as regards the substance, even then it shall be flesh. For even after the
resurrection the body of Christ was called flesh. The apostle, however, says: "It
is sown a natural body; it is raised a spiritual body;" because so perfect shah
then be the harmony between flesh and spirit, the spirit keeping alive the subjugated
flesh without the need of any nourishment, that no part of our nature shall be in discord
with another; but as we shall be free from enemies without, so we shall not have ourselves
for enemies within.
CHAP. 92.--THE RESURRECTION OF THE LOST.
But as for those who, out of the mass of
perdition caused by the first man's sin, are not redeemed through the one Mediator between
God and man, they too shall rise again, each with his own body, but only to be punished
with the devil and his angels. Now, whether they shall rise again with all their diseases
and deformities of body, bringing with them the diseased and deformed limbs which they
possessed here, it would be labor lost to inquire. For we need not weary ourselves
speculating about their health or their beauty, which are matters uncertain, when their
eternal damnation is a matter of certainty. Nor need we inquire in what sense their body
shall be incorruptible, if it be susceptible of pain; or in what sense corruptible, if it
be free from the possibility of death. For there is no true life except where there is
happiness in life, and no true incorruption except where health is unbroken by any pain.
When, however, the unhappy are not permitted to die, then, if I may so speak, death itself
dies not; and where pain without intermission afflicts the soul, and never comes to an
end, corruption itself is not completed. This is called in Holy Scripture "the second
death."
CHAP. 93.--BOTH THE FIRST AND THE SECOND DEATHS
ARE THE CONSEQUENCE OF SIN. PUNISHMENT IS PROPORTIONED TO GUILT.
And neither the first death, which takes place
when the soul is compelled to leave the body, nor the second death, which takes place when
the soul is not permitted to leave the suffering body, would have been inflicted on man
had no one sinned. And, of course, the mildest punishment of all will fall upon those who
have added no actual sin, to the original sin they brought with them; and as for the rest
who have added such actual sins, the punishment of each will be the more tolerable in the
next world, according as his iniquity has been less in this world.
CHAP. 94.--THE SAINTS SHALL KNOW MORE FULLY IN
THE NEXT WORLD THE BENEFITS THEY HAVE RECEIVED BY GRACE.
Thus, when reprobate angels and men are left to
endure everlasting punishment, the saints shall know more fully the benefits they have
received by grace. Then, in contemplation of the actual facts, they shall see more clearly
the meaning of the expression in the psalms," I will sing of mercy and
judgment;" for it is only of unmerited mercy that any is redeemed, and only in
well-merited judgment that any is condemned.
CHAP. 95.--GOD'S JUDGMENTS SHALL THEN BE
EXPLAINED.
Then shall be made clear much that is now dark.
For example, when of two infants, whose cases seem in all respects alike, one by the mercy
of God chosen to Himself, and the other is by His justice abandoned (where, in the one who
is chosen may recognize what was of justice due to himself, had not mercy intervened);
why, of these two, the one should have been chosen rather than the other, is to, us an
insoluble problem. And again, why miracles were not wrought in the presence of men who
would have repented at the working of the miracles, while they were wrought in the
presence of others who, it was known, would not repent. For our Lord says most distinctly:
"Woe unto thee, Chorazin ! woe unto thee, Bethsaida ! for if the mighty works, which
were done in you, had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago in
sackcloth and ashes." And assuredly there was no injustice in God's not willing
that they should be saved, though they could have been saved had He so willed it. Then
shall be seen in the clearest light of wisdom what with the pious is now a faith, though
it is not yet a matter of certain knowledge, how sure, how unchangeable, and how effectual
is the will of God; how many things He can do which He does not will to do, though willing
nothing which He cannot perform; and how true is the song of the psalmist, "But our
God is in the heavens; He hath done whatsoever He hath pleased." And this
certainly is not true, if God has ever willed anything that He has not performed; and,
still worse, if it was the will of man that hindered the Omnipotent from doing what He
pleased. Nothing, therefore, happens but by the will of the Omnipotent, He either
permitting it to be done, or Himself doing it.
CHAP. 96.--THE OMNIPOTENT GOD DOES WELL EVEN IN
THE PERMISSION OF EVIL.
Nor can we doubt that God does well even in the
permission of what is evil. For He permits it only in the justice of His judgment. And
surely all that is just is good. Although, therefore, evil, in so far as it is evil, is
not a good; yet the fact that evil as well as good exists, is a good. For if it were not a
good that evil should exist, its existence would not be permitted by the omnipotent Good,
who without doubt can as easily refuse to permit what He does not wish, as bring about
what He does wish. And if we do not believe this, the very first sentence of our creed is
endangered, wherein we profess to believe in God the Father Almighty. For He is not truly
called Almighty if He cannot do whatsoever He pleases, or if the power of His almighty
will is hindered by the will of any creature whatsoever.
CHAP. 97.--IN WHAT SENSE DOES THE APOSTLE SAY
THAT "GOD WILL HAVE ALL MEN TO BE SAVED," WHEN, AS A MATTER OF FACT, ALL ARE NOT
SAVED?
Hence we must inquire in what sense is said of
God what the apostle has mostly truly said: "Who will have all men to be
saved." For, as a matter of fact, not all, nor even a majority, are saved: so that
it would seem that what God wills is not done, man's will interfering with, and hindering
the will of God. When we ask the reason why all men are not saved, the ordinary answer is:
"Because men themselves are not willing." This, indeed cannot be said of
infants, for it is not in their power either to will or not to will. But if we could
attribute to their will the childish movements they make at baptism, when they make all
the resistance they can, we should say that even they are not willing to be saved. Our
Lord says plainly, however, in the Gospel, when upbraiding the impious city: "How
often would I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens
under her wings, and ye would not !" as if the will of God had been overcome by
the will of men, and when the weakest stood in the way with their want of will, the will
of the strongest could not be carried out. And where is that omnipotence which hath done
all that it pleased on earth and in heaven, if God willed to gather together the children
of Jerusalem, and did not accomplish it? or rather, Jerusalem was not willing that her
children should be gathered together? But even though she was unwilling, He gathered
together as many of her children as He wished: for He does not will some things and do
them, and will others and do them not; but "He hath done all that He pleased in
heaven and in earth."
CHAP. 98.--PREDESTINATION TO ETERNAL LIFE IS
WHOLLY OF GOD'S FREE GRACE.
And, moreover, who will be so foolish and
blasphemous as to say that God cannot change the evil wills of men, whichever, whenever,
and wheresoever He chooses, and direct them to what is good? But when He does this He does
it of mercy; when He does it not, it is of justice that He does it not for "lie hath
mercy on whom He will have mercy, and whom He will He hardeneth." And when the
apostle said this, he was illustrating the grace of God, in connection with which he had
just spoken of the twins in the womb of Rebecca, "who being not yet born, neither
having done any good or evil that the purpose of God according to election might stand,
not of works, but of Him that calleth, it was said unto her, The elder shall serve the
younger." And in reference to this matter he quotes another prophetic testimony:
"Jacob have I loved, but Esau have I hated." But perceiving how what he had
said might affect those who could not penetrate by their understanding the depth of this
grace: "What shall we say then?" he says: "Is there unrighteousness with
God? God forbid." For it seems unjust that, in the absence of any merit or
demerit, from good or evil works, God should love the one and hate the other. Now, if the
apostle had wished us to understand that there were future good works of the one, and evil
works of the other, which of course God foreknew, he would never have said, "not of
works," but, "of future works," and in that way would have solved the
difficulty, or rather there would then have been no difficulty to solve. As it is,
however, after answering, "God forbid;" that is, God forbid that there should be
unrighteousness with God; he goes on to prove that there is no unrighteousness in God's
doing this, and says: "For He saith to Moses, I will have mercy on whom I will have
mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I will have compassion." Now, who but a
fool would think that God was unrighteous, either in inflicting penal justice on those who
had earned it, or in extending mercy to the unworthy? Then he draws his conclusion:
"So then it is not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that
showeth mercy." Thus both the twins were born children of wrath, not on account of
any works of their own, but because they were bound in the fetters of that original
condemnation which came through Adam. But He who said, "I will have mercy on whom I
will have mercy," loved Jacob of His undeserved grace, and hated Esau of His deserved
judgment. And as this judgment was due to both, the former learnt from the case of the
latter that the fact of the same punishment not falling upon himself gave him no room to
glory in any merit of his own, but only in the riches of the divine grace; because
"it is not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that showeth
mercy." And indeeed the whole face, and, if I may use the expression, every lineament
of the countenance of Scripture conveys by a very profound analogy this wholesome warning
to every one who looks carefully into it, that he who glories should glory in the Lord.
CHAP. 99.--AS GOD'S MERCY IS FREE, SO HIS
JUDGMENTS ARE JUST, AND CANNOT BE GAINSAID.
Now after commending the mercy of God, saying,
"So it is not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that showeth
mercy," that he might commend His justice also (for the man who does not obtain mercy
finds, not iniquity, but justice, there being no iniquity with God), he immediately adds:
"For the scripture saith unto Pharoah, Even for this same purpose have I raised thee
up, that I might show my power in thee, and that my name might be declared throughout all
the earth." And then he draws a conclusion that applies to both, that is, both to
His mercy and His justice: "Therefore hath He mercy on whom He will have mercy, and
whom He will He hardeneth." "He hath mercy" of His great goodness,
"He hardeneth" without any injustice; so that neither can he that is pardoned
glory in any merit of his own, nor he that is condemned complain of anything but his own
demerit. For it is grace alone that separates the redeemed from the lost, all having been
involved in one common perdition through their common origin. Now if any one, on hearing
this, should say, "Why doth He yet find fault? for who hath resisted His
will?" as if a man ought not to be blamed for being bad, because God hath mercy on
whom He will have mercy, and whom He will He hardeneth, God forbid that we should be
ashamed to answer as we see the apostle answered: "Nay, but, O man, who art thou that
repliest against God? Shall the thing formed say to Him that formed it, Why hast Thou made
me thus? Hath not the potter power over the clay, of the same lump to make one vessel unto
honor, and another unto dishonor?" Now some foolish people, think that in this
place the apostle had no answer to give; and for want of a reason to render, rebuked the
presumption of his interrogator. But there is great weight in this saying: "Nay, but,
O man, who art thou?" and in such a matter as this it suggests to a man in a single
word the limits of his capacity, and at the same time does in reality convey an important
reason. For if a man does not understand these matters, who is he that he should reply
against God? And if he does understand them, he finds no further room for reply. For then
he perceives that the whole human race was condemned in its rebellious head by a divine
judgment so just, that if not a single member of the race had been redeemed, no one could
justly have questioned the justice of God; and that it was right that those who are
redeemed should be redeemed in such a way as to show, by the greater number who are
unredeemed and left in their just condemnation, what the whole race deserved, and whither
the deserved judgment of God would lead even the redeemed, did not His undeserved mercy
interpose, so that every mouth might be stopped of those who wish to glory in their own
merits, and that he that glorieth might glory in the Lord.
CHAP. 100.--THE WILL OF GOD IS NEVER DEFEATED,
THOUGH MUCH IS DONE THAT IS CONTRARY TO HIS WILL.
These are the great works of the Lord, sought out
according to all His pleasure, and so wisely sought out, that when the intelligent
creation, both angelic and human, sinned, doing not His will but their own, He used the
very will of the creature which was working in opposition to the Creator's will as an
instrument for carrying out His will, the supremely Good thus turning to good account even
what is evil, to the condemnation of those whom in His justice He has predestined to
punishment, and to the salvation of those whom in His mercy He has predestined to grace.
For, as far as relates to their own consciousness, these creatures did what God wished not
to be done: but in view of God's omnipotence, they could in no wise effect their purpose.
For in the very fact that they acted in opposition to His will, His will concerning them
was fulfilled. And hence it is that "the works of the Lord are great, sought out
according to all His pleasure," because in a way unspeakably strange and wonderful,
even what is done in opposition to His will does not defeat His will. For it would not be
done did He not permit it (and of course His permission is not unwilling, but willing);
nor would a Good Being permit evil to be done only that in His omnipotence He can turn
evil into good.
CHAP. 101.--THE WILL OF GOD, WHICH IS ALWAYS
GOOD, IS SOMETIMES FULFILLED THROUGH THE EVIL WILL OF MAN.
Sometimes, however, a man in the goodness of his
will desires something that God does not desire, even though God's will is also good, nay,
much more fully and more surely good (for His will never can be evil): for example, if a
good son is anxious that his father should live, when it is God's good will that he should
die. Again, it is possible for a man with evil will to desire what God wills in His
goodness: for example, if a bad son wishes his father to die, when this is also the will
of God. It is plain that the former wishes what God does not wish, and that the latter
wishes what God does wish; and yet the filial love of the former is more in harmony with
the good will of God, though its desire is different from God's, than the wart of filial
affection of the latter, though its desire is the same as God's. So necessary is it, in
determining whether a man's desire is one to be approved or disapproved, to consider what
it is proper for man, and what it is proper for God, to desire, and what is in each case
the real motive of the will. For God accomplishes some of His purposes, which of course
are all good, through the evil desires of wicked men: for example, it was through the
wicked designs of the Jews, working out the good purpose of the Father, that Christ was
slain and this event was so truly good, that when the Apostle Peter expressed his
unwillingness that it should take place, he was designated Satan by Him who had come to be
slain. How good seemed the intentions of the pious believers who were unwilling that
Paul should go up to Jerusalem lest the evils which Agabus had foretold should there
befall him! And yet it was God's purpose that he should suffer these evils for
preaching the faith of Christ, and thereby become a witness for Christ. And this purpose
of His, which was good, God did not fulfill through the good counsels of the Christians,
but through the evil counsels of the Jews; so that those who opposed His purpose were more
truly His servants than those who were the willing instruments of its accomplishment.
CHAP. 102.--THE WILL OF THE OMNIPOTENT GOD IS
NEVER DEFEATED, AND IS NEVER EVIL
But however strong may be the purposes either of
angels or of men, whether of good or bad, whether these purposes fall in with the will of
God or run counter to it, the will of the Omnipotent is never defeated; and His will never
can be evil; because even when it inflicts evil it is just, and what is just is certainly
not evil. The omnipotent God, then, whether in mercy He pitieth whom He will, or in
judgment hardeneth whom He will, is never unjust in what He does, never does anything
except of His own free-will, and never wills anything that He does not perform.
CHAP. 103.--INTERPRETATION OF THE EXPRESSION IN
I TIM. II. 4: "WHO WILL HAVE. ALL MEN TO BE SAVED."
Accordingly, when we hear and read in Scripture
that He "will have all men to be saved," although we know well that all men
are not saved, we are not on that account to restrict the omnipotence of God, but are
rather to understand the Scripture, "Who will have all men to be saved," as
meaning that no man is saved unless God wills his salvation: not that there is no man
whose salvation He does not will, but that no man is saved apart from His will; and that,
therefore, we should pray Him to will our salvation, because if He will it, it must
necessarily be accomplished. And it was of prayer to God that the apostle was speaking
when he used this expression. And on the same principle we interpret the expression in the
Gospel: "The true light which lighteth every man that cometh into the world:"
not that there is no man who is not enlightened, but that no man is enlightened except by
Him. Or, it is said, "Who will have all men to be saved;" not that there is no
man whose salvation He does not will (for how, then, explain the fact that He was
unwilling to work miracles in the presence of some who, He said, would have repented if He
had worked them?), but that we are to understand by "all men," the human race in
all its varieties of rank and circumstances,--kings, subjects; noble, plebeian, high, low,
learned, and unlearned; the sound in body, the feeble, the clever, the dull, the foolish,
the rich, the poor, and those of middling circumstances; males, females, infants, boys,
youths; young, middle-aged, and old men; of every tongue, of every fashion, of all arts,
of all professions, with all the innumerable differences of will and conscience, and
whatever else there is that makes a distinction among men. For which of all these classes
is there out of which God does not will that men should be saved in all nations through
His only-begotten Son, our Lord, and therefore does save them; for the Omnipotent cannot
will in vain, whatsoever He may will? Now the apostle had enjoined that prayers should be
made for all men, and had especially added, "For kings, and for all that are in
authority," who might be supposed, in the pride and pomp of worldly station, to
shrink from the humility of the Christian faith. Then saying, "For this is good and
acceptable in the sight of God our Saviour," that is, that prayers should be made for
such as these, he immediately adds, as if to remove any ground of despair, "Who will
have all men to be saved, and to come unto the knowledge of the truth." God, then,
in His great condescension has judged it good to grant to the prayers of the humble the
salvation of the exalted; and assuredly we have many examples of this. Our Lord, too,
makes use of the same mode of speech in the Gospel, when He says to the Pharisees:
"Ye tithe mint, and rue, and every herb." For the Pharisees did not tithe
what belonged to others, nor all the herbs of all the inhabitants of other lands. As,
then, in this place we must understand by "every herb," every kind of herbs, so
in the former passage we may understand by "all men," every sort of men. And we
may interpret it in any other way we please, so long as we are not compelled to believe
that the omnipotent God has willed anything to be done which was not done: for setting
aside all ambiguities, if "He hath done all that He pleased in heaven and in
earth," as the psalmist sings of Him, He certainly did not will to do anything
that He hath not done.
CHAP. 104.--GOD, FOREKNOWING THE SIN OF THE
FIRST MAN, ORDERED HIS OWN PURPOSES ACCORDINGLY.
Wherefore, God would have been willing to
preserve even the first man in that state of salvation in which he was created, and after
he had begotten sons to remove him at a fit time, without the intervention of death, to a
better place, where he should have been not only free from sin, but free even from the
desire of sinning, if He had foreseen that man would have the steadfast will to persist in
the state of innocence in which he was created. But as He foresaw that man would make a
bad use of his free-will, that is, would sin, God arranged His own designs rather with a
view to do good to man even in his sinfulness, that thus the good will of the Omnipotent
might not be made void by the evil will of man, but might be fulfilled in spite of it.
CHAP. 105.--MAN WAS SO CREATED AS TO BE ABLE TO
CHOOSE EITHER GOOD OR EVIL: IN THE FUTURE LIFE, THE CHOICE OF EVIL WILL BE IMPOSSIBLE.
Now it was expedient that man should be at first
so created, as to have it in his power both to will what was right and to will what was
wrong; not without reward if he willed the former, and not without punishment if he willed
the latter. But in the future life it shall not be in his power to will evil; and yet this
will constitute no restriction on the freedom of his will. On the contrary, his will shall
be much freer when it shall be wholly impossible for him to be the slave of sin. We should
never think of blaming the will, or saying that it was no will, or that it was not to be
called free, when we so desire happiness, that not only do we shrink from misery, but find
it utterly impossible to do otherwise. As, then, the soul even now finds it impossible to
desire unhappiness, so in future it shall be wholly impossible for it to desire sin. But
God's arrangement was not to be broken, according to which He willed to show how good is a
rational being who is able even to refrain from sin, and yet how much better is one who
cannot sin at all; just as that was an inferior sort of immortality, and yet it was
immortality, when it was possible for man to avoid death, although there is reserved for
the future a more perfect immortality, when it shall be impossible for man to die.
CHAP. 106.--THE GRACE OF GOD WAS NECESSARY TO
MAN'S SALVATION BEFORE THE FALL AS WELL AS AFTER IT.
The former immortality man lost through the
exercise of his free-will; the latter he shall obtain through grace, whereas, if he had
not sinned, he should have obtained it by desert. Even in that case, however, there could
have been no merit without grace; because, although the mere exercise of man's free-will
was sufficient to bring in sin, his free-will would not have sufficed for his maintenance
in righteousness, unless God had assisted it by imparting a portion of His unchangeable
goodness. Just as it is in man's power to die whenever he will (for, not to speak of other
means, any one can put an end to himself by simple abstinence from food), but the mere
will cannot preserve life in the absence of food and the other means of life; so man in
paradise was able of his mere will, simply by abandoning righteousness, to destroy
himself; but to have maintained a life of righteousness would have been too much for his
will, unless it had been sustained by the Creator's power. After the fall, however, a more
abundant exercise of God's mercy was required, because the will itself had to be freed
from the bondage in which it was held by sin and death. And the will owes its freedom in
no degree to itself, but solely to the grace of God which comes by faith in Jesus Christ;
so that the very will, through which we accept all the other gifts of God which lead us on
to His eternal gift, is itself prepared of the Lord, as the Scripture says.
CHAP. 107.--ETERNAL LIFE, THOUGH THE REWARD OF
GOOD WORKS, IS ITSELF THE GIFT OF GOD.
Wherefore, even eternal life itself, which is
surely the reward of good works, the apostle calls the gift of God. "For the wages of
sin," he says, "is death; but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus
Christ our Lord." Wages. (stipendium) is paid as a recompense for military
service; it is not a gift: wherefore he says, "the wages of sin is death," to
show that death was not inflicted undeservedly, but as the due recompense of sin. But a
gift, unless it is wholly unearned, is not a gift at all. We are to understand, then,
that man's good deserts are themselves the gift of God, so that when these obtain the
recompense of eternal life, it is simply grace given for grace. Man, therefore, was thus
made upright that, though unable to remain in his uprightness without divine help, he
could of his own mere will depart from it. And whichever of these courses he had chosen,
God's will would have been done, either by him, or concerning him. Therefore, as he chose
to do his own will rather than God's, the will of God is fulfilled concerning him; for
God, out of one and the same heap of perdition which constitutes the race of man, makes
one vessel to honor, another to dishonor; to honor in mercy, to dishonor in judgment;
that no one may glory in man, and consequently not in himself.
CHAP. 108.--A MEDIATOR WAS NECESSARY TO
RECONCILE US TO GOD; AND UNLESS THIS MEDIATOR HAD BEEN GOD, HE COULD NOT HAVE BEEN OUR
REDEEMER.
For we could not be redeemed, even through the
one Mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, if He were not also God. Now when
Adam was created, he, being a righteous man, had no need of a mediator. But when sin had
placed a wide gulf between God and the human race, it was expedient that a Mediator, who
alone of the human race was born, lived, and died without sin, should reconcile us to God,
and procure even for our bodies a resurrection to eternal life, in order that the pride of
man might be exposed and cured through the humility of God; that man might be shown how
far he had departed from God, when God became incarnate to bring him back; that an example
might be set to disobedient man in the life of obedience of the God-Man; that the fountain
of grace might be opened by the Only-begotten taking upon Himself the form of a servant, a
form which had no antecedent merit; that an earnest of that resurrection of the body which
is promised to the redeemed might be given in the resurrection of the Redeemer; that the
devil might be subdued by the same nature which it was his boast to have deceived, and yet
man not glorified, lest pride should again spring up; and, in fine, with a view to all the
advantages which the thoughtful can perceive and describe, or perceive without being able
to describe, as flowing from the transcendent mystery of the person of the Mediator.
CHAP. 109.--THE STATE OF THE SOUL DURING THE
INTERVAL BETWEEN DEATH AND THE RESURRECTION.
During the time, moreover, which intervenes
between a man's death and the final resurrection, the soul dwells in a hidden retreat,
where it enjoys rest or suffers affliction just in proportion to the merit it has earned
by the life which it led on earth.
CHAP. 110.--THE BENEFIT TO THE SOULS OF THE DEAD
FROM THE SACRAMENTS AND ALMS OF THEIR LIVING FRIENDS.
Nor can it be denied that the souls of the dead
are benefited by the piety of their living friends, who offer the sacrifice of the
Mediator, or give alms in the church on their behalf. But these services are of advantage
only to those who during their lives have earned such merit, that services of this kind
can help them. For there is a manner of life which is neither so good as not to require
these services after death, nor so bad that such services are of no avail after death;
there is, on the other hand, a kind of life so good as not to require them; and again, one
so bad that when life is over they render no help. Therefore, it is in this life that all
the merit or demerit is acquired, which can either relieve or aggravate a man's sufferings
after this life. No one, then, need hope that after he is dead he shall obtain merit with
God which he has neglected to secure here. And accordingly it is plain that the services
which the church celebrates for the dead are in no way opposed to the apostle's words:
"For we must all appear before the judgment-seat of Christ; that every one may
receive the things done in his body, according to that he hath done, whether it be good or
bad;" for the merit which renders such services as I speak of profitable to a man,
is earned while he lives in the body. It is not to every one that these services are
profitable. And why are they not profitable to all, except because of the different kinds
of lives that men lead in the body? When, then, sacrifices either of the altar or of alms
are offered on behalf of all the baptized dead, they are thank-offerings for the very
good, they are propitiatory offerings for the not very bad, and in the case of the very
bad, even though they do not assist the dead, they are a species of consolation to the
living. And where they are profitable, their benefit consists either in obtaining a full
remission of sins, or at least in making the condemnation more tolerable.
CHAP. 111.--AFTER THE RESURRECTION THERE SHALL
BE TWO DISTINCT KINGDOMS, ONE OF ETERNAL HAPPINESS, THE OTHER OF ETERNAL MISERY.
After the resurrection, however, when the final,
universal judgment has been completed, there shall be two kingdoms, each with its own
distinct boundaries, the one Christ's, the other the devil's; the one consisting of the
good, the other of the bad,--both, however, consisting of angels and men. The former shall
have no will, the latter no power, to sin, and neither shall have any power to choose
death; but the former shall live truly and happily in eternal life, the latter shall drag
a miserable existence in eternal death without the power of dying; for the life and the
death shall both be without end. But among the former there shall be degrees of happiness,
one being more pre-eminently happy than another; and among the latter there shall be
degrees of misery, one being more endurably miserable than another.
CHAP. 112.--THERE IS NO GROUND IN SCRIPTURE FOR
THE OPINION OF THOSE WHO DENY THE ETERNITY OF FUTURE PUNISHMENTS.
It is in vain, then, that some, indeed very many,
make moan over the eternal punishment, and perpetual, unintermitted torments of the lost,
and say they do not believe it shall be so; not, indeed, that they directly oppose
themselves to Holy Scripture, but, at the suggestion of their own feelings, they soften
down everything that seems hard, and give a milder turn to statements which they think are
rather designed to terrify than to be received as literally true For "Hath God"
they say, forgotten to be gracious? hath He in anger shut up His tender mercies?"
Now, they read this in one of the holy psalms. But without doubt we are to understand it
as spoken of those who are elsewhere called "vessels of mercy," because even
they are freed from misery not on account of any merit of their own, but solely through
the pity of God. Or, if the men we speak of insist that this passage applies to all
mankind, there is no reason why they should therefore suppose that there will be an end to
the punishment of those of whom it is said, "These shall go away into everlasting
punishment;" for this shall end in the same manner and at the same time as the
happiness of those of whom it is said, "but the righteous unto life eternal. But
let them suppose, if the thought gives them pleasure, that the pains of the damned are, at
certain intervals, in some degree assuaged. For even in this case the wrath of God, that
is, their condemnation (for it is this, and not any disturbed feeling in the mind of God
that is called His wrath), abideth upon them; that is, His wrath, though it still
remains, does not shut up His tender mercies; though His tender mercies are exhibited, not
in putting an end to their eternal punishment, but in mitigating, or in granting them a
respite from, their torments; for the psalm does not say, "to put an end to His
anger," or, "when His anger is passed by," but "in His anger."
Now, if this anger stood alone, or if it existed in the smallest conceivable degree, yet
to be lost out of the kingdom of God, to be an exile from the city of God, to be alienated
from the life of God, to have no share in that great goodness which God hath laid up for
them that fear Him, and hath wrought out for them that trust in Him, would be a
punishment so great, that, supposing it to be eternal, no torments that we know of,
continued through as many ages as man's imagination can conceive, could be compared with
it.
CHAP. 113.--THE DEATH OF THE WICKED SHALL BE
ETERNAL IN THE SAME SENSE AS THE LIFE OF THE SAINTS.
This perpetual death of the wicked, then, that
is, their alienation from the life of God, shall abide for ever, and shall be common to
them all, whatever men, prompted by their human affections, may conjecture as to a variety
of punishments, or as to a mitigation or intermission of their woes; just as the eternal
life of the saints shall abide for ever, and shall be common to them all, whatever grades
of rank and honor there may be among those who shine with an harmonious effulgence.
CHAP. 114.--HAVING DEALT WITH FAITH, WE NOW COME
TO SPEAK OF HOPE. EVERYTHING THAT PERTAINS TO HOPE IS EMBRACED IN THE LORD'S PRAYER.
Out of this confession of faith, which is briefly
comprehended in the Creed, and which, carnally understood, is milk for babes, but,
spiritually apprehended and studied, is meat for strong men, springs the good hope of
believers; and this is accompanied by a holy love. But of these matters, all of which are
true objects of faith, those only pertain to hope which are embraced in the Lord's Prayer.
For, "Cursed is the man that trusteth in man" is the testimony of holy writ;
and, consequently, this curse attaches also to the man who trusteth in himself. Therefore,
except from God the Lord we ought to ask for nothing either that we hope to do well, or
hope to obtain as a reward of our good works.
CHAP. 115.--THE SEVEN PETITIONS OF THE LORD'S
PRAYER, ACCORDING TO MATTHEW.
Accordingly, in the Gospel according to Matthew
the Lord's Prayer seems to embrace seven petitions, three of which ask for eternal
blessings, and the remaining four for temporal; these latter, however, being necessary
antecedents to the attainment of the eternal. For when we say, "Hallowed be Thy name:
Thy kingdom come: Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven" (which some have
interpreted, not unfairly, in body as well as in spirit), we ask for blessings that are to
be enjoyed for ever; which are indeed begun in this world, and grow in us as we grow in
grace, but in their perfect state, which is to be looked for in another life, shall be a
possession for evermore. But when we say, "Give us this day our daily bread: and
forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors: and lead us not into temptation, but
deliver us from evil," who does not see that we ask for blessings that have
reference to the wants of this present life? In that eternal life, where we hope to live
for ever, the hallowing of God's name, and His kingdom, and His will in our spirit and
body, shall be brought to perfection, and shall endure to everlasting. But our daily bread
is so called because there is here constant need for as much nourishment as the spirit and
the flesh demand, whether we understand the expression spiritually, or carnally, or in
both senses. it is here too that we need the forgiveness that we ask, for it is here that
we commit the sins; here are the temptations which allure or drive us into sin; here, in a
word, is the evil from which we desire deliverance: but in that other world there shall be
none of these things.
CHAP. 116.--LUKE EXPRESSES THE SUBSTANCE OF
THESE SEVEN PETITIONS MORE BRIEFLY IN FIVE.
But the Evangelist Luke in his version of the
Lord's prayer embraces not seven, but five petitions: not, of course, that there is any
discrepancy between the two evangelists, but that Luke indicates by his very brevity the
mode in which the seven petitions of Matthew are to be understood. For God's name is
hallowed in the spirit; and God's kingdom shall come in the resurrection of the body.
Luke, therefore, intending to show that the third petition is a sort of repetition of the
first two, has chosen to indicate that by omitting the third altogether. Then he adds
three others: one for daily bread, another for pardon of sin, another for immunity from
temptation. And what Matthew puts as the last petition, "but deliver us from
evil," Luke has omitted, to show us that it is embraced in the previous petition
about temptation. Matthew, indeed, himself says, "but deliver," not "anti
deliver," as if to show that the petitions are virtually one: do not this, but this;
so that every man is to understand that he is delivered from evil in the very fact of his
not being led into temptation.
CHAP. 117.--LOVE, WHICH IS GREATER THAN FAITH
AND HOPE, IS SHED ABROAD IN OUR HEARTS BY THE HOLY GHOST.
And now as to love, which the apostle declares to
be greater than the other two graces, that is, than faith and hope, the greater the
measure in which it dwells in a man, the better is the man in whom it dwells. For when
there is a question as to whether a man is good, one does not ask what he believes, or
what he hopes, but what he loves. For the man who loves aright no doubt believes and hopes
aright; whereas the man who has not love believes in vain, even though his beliefs are
true; and hopes in vain, even though the objects of his hope are a real part of true
happiness; unless, indeed, he believes and hopes for this, that he may obtain by prayer
the blessing of love. For, although it is not possible to hope without love, it may yet
happen that a man does not love that which is necessary to the attainment of his hope; as,
for example, if he hopes for eternal life (and who is there that does not desire this?)
and yet does not love righteousness, without which no one can attain to eternal life. Now
this is the true faith of Christ which the apostle speaks of, "which worketh by
love;" and if there is anything that it does not yet embrace in its love, asks
that it may receive, seeks that it may find, and knocks that it may be opened unto it.
For faith obtains through prayer that which the law commands. For without the gift of God,
that is, without the Holy Spirit, through whom love is shed abroad in our hearts, the
law can command, but it cannot assist; and, moreover, it makes a man a transgressor, for
he can no longer excuse himself on the plea of ignorance. Now carnal lust reigns where
there is not the love of God.
CHAP. 118.--THE FOUR STAGES OF THE CHRISTAIN'S
LIFE, AND THE FOUR CORRESPONDING STAGES OF THE CHURCH'S HISTORY.
When, sunk in the darkest depths of ignorance,
man lives according to the flesh undisturbed by any struggle of reason or conscience, this
is his first state. Afterwards, when through the law has come the knowledge of sin, and
the Spirit of God has not yet interposed His aid, man, striving to live according to the
law, is thwarted in his efforts and falls into conscious sin, and so, being overcome of
sin, becomes its slave ("for of whom a man is overcome, of the same is he brought in
bondage"); and thus the effect produced by the knowledge of the commandment is
this, that sin worketh in man all manner of concupiscence, and he is involved in the
additional guilt of willful transgression, and that is fulfilled which is written:
"The, law entered that the Offense might abound." This is man's second state.
But if God has regard to him, and inspires him with faith in God's help, and the Spirit of
God begins to work in him, then the mightier power of love strives against the power of
the flesh; and although there is still in the man's own nature a power that fights against
him (for his disease is not completely cured), yet he lives the life of the just by faith,
and lives in righteousness so far as he does not yield to evil lust, but conquers it by
the love of holiness. This is the third state of a man of good hope; and he who by
steadfast piety advances in this course, shall attain at last to peace, that peace which,
after this life is over, shall be perfected in the repose of the spirit, and finally in
the resurrection of the body. Of these four different stages the first is before the law,
the second is under the law, the third is under grace, and the fourth is in full and
perfect peace. Thus, too, has the history of God's people been ordered according to His
pleasure who disposeth all things in number, and measure, and weight. For the church
existed at first before the law; then under the law, which was given by Moses; then under
grace, which was first made manifest in the coming of the Mediator. Not, indeed, that this
grace was absent previously, but, in harmony with the arrangements of the time, it was
veiled and hidden. For none, even of the just men of old, could find salvation apart from
the faith of Christ; nor unless He had been known to them could their ministry have been
used to convey prophecies concerning Him to us, some more plain, and some more obscure.
CHAP. 119.--THE GRACE OF REGENERATION WASHES
AWAY ALL PAST SIN AND ALL ORIGINAL GUILT.
Now in whichever of these four stages (as we may
call them) the grace of regeneration finds any particular man, all his past sins are there
and then pardoned, and the guilt which he contracted in his birth is removed in his new
birth; and so true is it that "the wind bloweth where it listeth," that some
have never known the second stage, that of slavery under the law, but have received the
divine assistance as soon as they received the commandment.
CHAP. 120.--DEATH CANNOT INJURE THOSE WHO HAVE
RECEIVED THE GRACE OF REGENERATION.
But before a man can receive the commandment, it
is necessary that he should live according to the flesh. But if once he has received the
grace of regeneration, death shall not injure him, even if he should forthwith depart from
this life; "for to this end Christ both died, and rose, and revived, that He might be
Lord both of the dead and the living;" nor shall death retain dominion over him
for whom Christ freely died.
CHAP. 121.--LOVE IS THE END OF ALL THE
COMMANDMENTS, AND GOD HIMSELF IS LOVE.
All the commandments of God, then, are embraced
in love, of which the apostle says: "Now the end of the commandment is charity, out
of a pure heart, and of a good conscience, and of faith unfeigned." Thus the end
of every commandment is charity, that is, every commandment has love for its aim. But
whatever is done either through fear of punishment or from some other carnal motive, and
has not for its principle that love which the Spirit of God sheds abroad in the heart, is
not done as it ought to be done, however it may appear to men. For this love embraces both
the love of God and the love of our neighbor, and "on these two commandments hang all
the law and the prophets," we may add the Gospel and the apostles. For it is from
these that we hear this voice: The end of the commandment is charity, and God is love.
Wherefore, all God's commandments, one of which is, "Thou shalt not commit
adultery," and all those precepts which are not commandments but special counsels,
one of which is, "It is good for a man not to touch a woman," are rightly
carried out only when the motive principle of action is the love of God, and the love of
our neighbor in God. And this applies both to the present and the future life. We love God
now by faith, then we shall love Him through sight. Now we love even our neighbor by
faith; for we who are ourselves mortal know not the hearts of mortal men. But in the
future life, the Lord "both will bring to light the hidden things of darkness, and
will make manifest the counsels of the hearts, and then shall every man have praise of
God;" for every man shall love and praise in his neighbor the virtue which, that
it may not be hid, the Lord Himself shall bring to light. Moreover, lust diminishes as
love grows, till the latter grows to such a height that it can grow no higher here. For
"greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his
friends." Who then can tell how great love shall be in the future world, when
there shall be no lust for it to restrain and conquer? for that will be the perfection of
health when there shall be no struggle with death.
CHAP. 122.--CONCLUSION.
But now there must be an end at last to this
volume. And it is for yourself to judge whether you should call it a hand-book, or should
use it as such. I, however, thinking that your zeal in Christ ought not to be despised,
and believing and hoping all good of you in dependence on our Redeemer's help, and loving
you very much as one of the members of His body, have, to the best of my ability, written
this book for you on Faith, Hope, and Love. May its value be equal to its length.
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