LETTERS OF ST. AUGUSTIN: LETTERS CLXVI & CLXVII (TO JEROME: A TREATISE ON THE
ORIGIN OF THE HUMAN SOUL & ON JAMES II)
LETTER CLXVI. (A.D. 415.)
A TREATISE ON THE ORIGIN OF THE HUMAN SOUL, ADDRESSED TO JEROME.1
CHAP. I.-- I. Unto our God, who hath called us unto His kingdom and glory,2 I have
prayed, and pray now, that what I write to you, holy brother Jerome, asking your
opinion in regard to things of which I am ignorant, may by His good pleasure be
profitable to us both. For although in addressing you I consult one much older
than myself, nevertheless I also am becoming old; but I cannot think that it is
at anytime of life too Rate to learn what we need to know, because, although
it is more fitting that old men should be teachers than learners, it is
nevertheless more fitting for them to learn than to continue ignorant of that which
they should teach to others. I assure you that, amid the many disadvantages which
I have to submit to in studying very difficult questions, there is none which
grieves me more than the circumstance of separation from your Charity by a
distance so great that I can scarcely send a letter to you, and scarcely receive one
from you, even at intervals, not of days nor of months, but of several years;
whereas my desire would be, if it were possible, to have you daily beside me,
as one with whom I could converse on any theme. Nevertheless, although I have
not been able to do all that I wished, I am not the less bound to do all that I
can.
2. Behold, a religious young man has come to me, by name Orosius, who is
in the bond of Catholic peace a brother, in point of age a son, and in honour a
fellow presbyter, -- a man, of quick understanding, ready speech, and burning
zeal, desiring to be in the Lord's house a vessel rendering useful service in
refuting those false and pernicious doctrines, through which the souls of men in
Spain have suffered much more grievous wounds than have been inflicted on their
bodies by the sword of barbarians. For from the remote western coast of Spain
he has come with eager haste to us, having been prompted to do this by the
report that from me he could learn whatever he wished on the subjects on which he
desired information. Nor has his coming been altogether in vain. In the first
place, he has learned not to believe all that report affirmed of me: in the next
place, I have taught him all that I could, and, as for the things in which I
could not teach him, I have told him from whom he may lean them, and have
exhorted him to go on to you. As he received this counsel or rather injunction of mine
with pleasure, and with intention to comply with it, I asked him to visit us
on his way home to his own country when he comes from you. On receiving his
promise to this effect, I believed that the Lord had granted me an opportunity of
writing to you regarding certain things which I wish through you to learn. For I
was seeking some one whom I might send to you, and it was not easy to fall in
with one qualified both by trustworthiness in performing and by alacrity in
undertaking the work, as well as by experience in travelling. Therefore, when I
became acquainted with this young man, I could not doubt that he was exactly such
a person as I was asking from the Lord.
CHAP. II. -- 3. Allow me, therefore, to bring , before you a subject which I beseech
you not to ; refuse to open up and discuss with me. Many are perplexed by
questions concerning the soul, . and I confess that I myself am of this number. I
shall in this letter, in the first place, state explicitly the things regarding the
soul which I most assuredly believe, and shall, in the next , place, bring
forward the things regarding which I am still desirous of explanation.
The soul of man is in a sense proper to itself immortal. It is not
absolutely immortal, as God is, of whom it is written that He "alone hath l
immortality for Holy Scripture makes mention of deaths to which the soul was able as m
the saying, "Let the dead bury their dead;"4 but. because when alienated from the
life of God it so dies as not wholly to cease from living in its own nature,
it is found to be from a certain cause mortal, yet so as to be not without
reason called at the same time immortal. The soul is not a part of God. For if it
were, it would be absolutely immutable and incorruptible, in which case it could
neither go downward to be worse, nor go onward to be better; nor could it
either begin to have anything in itself which it had not before, or cease to have
anything which it had within the sphere of its own experience. But how
different the actual facts of the case are is a point requiring no evidence from
without, it is acknowledged by every one who consults his own consciousness. In vain,
moreover, is it pleaded by those who affirm that the soul is a part of God,
that the corruption and baseness which we see in the worst of men, and the
weakness and blemishes which we see in all men, come to it not from the soul itself,
but from the body; for what matters it whence the infirmity originates in that
which, if it were indeed immutable, could not, from any quarter whatever, be
made infirm? For that which is truly immutable and incorruptible is not liable to
mutation or corruption by any influence whatever from without, else the
invulnerability which the fable ascribed to the flesh of Achilles would be nothing
peculiar to him, but the property of every man, so long as no accident befell
him. That which is liable to be changed in any manner, by any cause, or in any
part whatever, is therefore not by nature immutable; but it were impiety to think
of God as otherwise than truly and supremely immutable: therefore the soul is
not a part of God.
4. That the soul is immaterial is a fact of which I avow myself to be
fully persuaded, although men of slow understanding are hard to be convinced that
it is so. To secure myself, however, from either unnecessarily causing to others
or unreasonably bringing upon myself a controversy about an expression, let me
say that, since the thing itself is beyond question, it is needless to contend
about mere terms. If matter be used as a term denoting everything which in any
form has a separate existence, whether it be called an essence, or a
substance, or by another name, the soul is material. Again, if you choose to apply the
epithet immaterial only to that nature which is supremely immutable and is
everywhere present in its entirety, the soul is material, for it is not at all
endowed with such qualities. But if matter be used to designate nothing but that
which, whether at rest or in motion, has some length, breadth, and height, so that
with a greater part of itself it occupies a greater part of space, and with a
smaller part a smaller space, and is in every part of it less than the whole,
then the soul is not material. For it pervades the whole body which it animates,
not by a local distribution of parts, but by a certain vital influence, being
at the same moment present in its entirety in all parts of the body, and not
less in smaller parts and greater in larger parts, but here with more energy and
there with less energy, it is in its entirety present both in the whole body
and in every part of it. For even that which the mind perceives in only a part of
the body is nevertheless not otherwise perceived than by the whole mind; for
when any part of the living flesh is touched by a fine pointed instrument,
although the place affected is not only not the whole body, but scarcely discernible
in its surface, the contact does not escape the entire mind, and yet the
contact is felt not over the whole body, but only at the one point where it takes
place. How comes it, then, that what takes place in only a part of the body is
immediately known to the whole mind, unless the whole mind is present at that
part, and at the same time not deserting all the other parts of the body in order
to be present in its entirety at this one? For all the other parts of the body
in which no such contact takes place are still living by the soul being present
with them. And ira similar contact takes place in the other parts, and the
contact occur in both parts simultaneously, it would in both cases alike be known
at the same moment, to the whole mind. Now this presence of the mind in all
parts of the body at the same moment, so that in every part of the body the whole
mind is at the same moment present, would be impossible if it were distributed
over these parts in the same way as we see matter distributed in space,
occupying less space with a smaller portion of itself, and greater space with a
greater portion. If, therefore, mind is to be called material, it is not material in
the same sense as earth, water, air, and ether are material. For all things
composed of these elements are larger in larger places, or smaller in smaller
places, and none of them is in its entirety present at any part of itself, but the
dimensions of the material substances are according to the dimensions of the
space occupied. Whence it is perceived that the soul, whether it be termed
material or immaterial, has a certain nature of its own, created from a substance
superior to the elements of this world, -- a substance which cannot be truly
conceived of by any representation of the material images perceived by the bodily
senses, but which is apprehended by the understanding and discovered to our
consciousness by its living energy. These things I am stating, not with the view of
teaching you what you already know, but in order that I may declare explicitly
what I hold as indisputably certain concerning the soul, lest any one should
think, when I come to state the questions to which I desire answers, that I hold
none of the doctrines which we have learned from science or from revelation
concerning the soul.
5. I am, moreover, fully persuaded that the soul has fallen into sin, not
through the fault of God, nor through any necessity either in the divine nature
or in its own, but by its own free will; and that it can be delivered from the
body of this death neither by the strength of its own will, as if that were in
itself sufficient to achieve this, nor by the death of the body itself, but
only by the grace of God through our Lord Jesus Christ ;, and that there is not
one soul in the human family to whose salvation the one Mediator between God and
men, the man Christ Jesus, is not absolutely necessary. Every soul, moreover,
which may at any age whatsoever depart from this life without the grace of the
Mediator and the sacrament of this grace, departs to future punishment, and
shall receive again its own body at the last judgment as a partner in punishment.
But if the soul after its natural generation, which was derived from Adam, be
regenerated in Christ, it belongs to His fellowship,2 and shall not only have
rest after the death of the body, but also receive again its own body as a
partner in glory. These are truths concerning the soul which I hold most firmly.
CHAP. III. -- 6. Permit me now, therefore, to bring before you the question which I
desire to have solved, and do not reject me; so may He not reject you who
condescended to be rejected for our sakes!
I ask where can the soul, even of an infant snatched away by death, have
contracted the guilt which, unless the grace of Christ has come to the rescue by
that sacrament of baptism which is administered even to infants, involves it
in condemnation? I know you are not one of those who have begun of late to utter
certain new and absurd opinions, alleging that there is no guilt derived from
Adam which is removed by baptism in the case of infants. If I knew that you
held this view, or, rather, if I did not know that you reject it, I would
certainly neither address this question to you, nor think that it ought to be put to
you at all. Since, however, we hold on this subject the opinion consonant with
the immoveable Catholic faith, which you have yourself expressed when, refuting
the absurd sayings of Jovinian, you have quoted this sentence from the book of
Job: "In thy sight ,no one is clean, not even the infant, whose time of life on
earth is a single day,"3 adding, "for we are held guilty in the similitude of
Adam's transgression,"4 an opinion which your book on Jonah's prophecy declares
in a notable and lucid manner, where you affirm that the little children of
Nineveh were justly compelled to fast along with the people, because merely of
their original sin? it is not unsuitable that I should address to you the question
where has the soul contracted the guilt from which, even at that age, it must
be delivered by the sacrament of Christian grace?
7. Some years ago, when I wrote certain books concerning Free Will, which
have gone forth into the hands of many, and are now in the possession of very
many readers, after referring to these four opinions as to the manner of the
soul's incarnation, -- (1) that all other souls are derived from the one which was
given to the first man; (2) that for each individual a new soul is made; (3)
that souls already in existence somewhere are sent by divine act into the
bodies; or (4) glide into them of their own accord, I thought that it was necessary
to treat them in such a way that, whichever of them tight be true, the decision
should not hinder the object which I had in view when contending with all my
might against those who attempt to lay upon God the blame of a nature endowed
with its own principle of evil, namely, the Manichaeans;6 for at that time I had
not heard of the Priscillianists, who utter blasphemies not very dissimilar to
these. As to the fifth opinion, namely, that the soul is a part of God, -- an
opinion which, in order to omit none, you have mentioned along with the rest in
your letter to Marcellinus (a man of pious memory and very dear to us in the
grace of Christ), who had consulted you on this question I did not add it to the
others for two reasons, first, because, in examining this opinion, we discuss
not the incarnation of the soul, but its nature; secondly, because this is the
view held by those against whom I was arguing, and the main design of my argument
was to prove that the blameless and inviolable nature of the Creator has
nothing to do with the faults and blemishes of the creature, while they, on their
part, maintained that the substance of the good God itself is, in so far as it is
led captive, corrupted and oppressed and brought under a necessity of sinning
by the substance of evil, to which they ascribe a proper dominion and
principalities. Leaving, therefore, out of the question this heretical error, I desire
to know which of the other four opinions we ought to choose. For whichever of
them may justly claim our preference, far be it from us to assail this article of
:faith, about which we have no uncertainty, that l every soul, even the soul
of an infant, requires to be delivered from the binding guilt of sin, and that
there is no deliverance except through Jesus i Christ and Him crucified.
CHAP. IV. -- 8. To avoid prolixity, therefore, let me refer to the opinion which you, I
believe, entertain, viz. that God even now makes each soul for each individual
at the time of birth. To meet the objection to this view which might be taken
from the fact that God finished the whole work of creation on the sixth day and
rested on the seventh day, you quote the testimony of the words in the gospel,
"My Father worketh hitherto, and I work."1 This you have written in your
letter to Marcellinus, in which letter, moreover, you have most kindly condescended
to mention my name, saying that he had me here in Africa, who could more easily
explain to him the opinion held by you.2 But had I been able to do this, he
would not have applied for instruction to you, who were so remote from him,
though perhaps he did not write from Africa to you. For I know not when he wrote it;
I only know that he knew well my hesitation to embrace any definite view on
this subject, for which reason he preferred to write to you without consulting
me. Yet, even if he had consulted me, I would rather have encouraged him to write
to you, and would have expressed my gratitude for the benefit which might have
been conferred on us all, had you not preferred to send a brief note, instead
of a full reply, doing this, I suppose, to save yourself from unnecessary
expenditure of effort in a place where I, whom you supposed to be thoroughly
acquainted with the subject of his inquiries, was at hand. Behold, I am willing that
the opinion which you hold should be also mine; but I assure you that as yet I
have not embraced it.
9. You have sent to me scholars, to whom you wish me to impart what I have
not yet learned myself. Teach me, therefore, what I am to teach them; for many
urge me vehemently to be a teacher on this subject, and to them I confess that
of this, as well as of many other things, I am ignorant, and perhaps, though
they maintain a respectful demeanour in my presence, they say among themselves:
"Art thou a master in Israel, and knowest not these things?"3 a rebuke which
the Lord gave to one who belonged to the class of men who delighted in being
called Rabbi; which was also the reason of his coming by night to the true Teacher,
because perchance he, who had been accustomed to teach, blushed to take the
learner's place. But, for my own part, it gives me much more pleasure to hear
instruction from another, than to be myself listened to as a teacher. For I
remember what He said to those whom, above all men, He had chosen: "But be not ye
called Rabbi, for one is your master, even Christ."4 Nor was it any other teacher
who taught Moses by Jethro,5 Cornelius by Peter the earlier apostle,6 and Peter
himself by Paul the later apostle;7 for by whomsoever truth is spoken, it is
spoken by the gift of Him who is the Truth. What if the reason of our still
being ignorant of these things, and of our having failed to discover them, even
after praying, reading, thinking, and reasoning, be this: that full proof may be
made not only of the love with which we give instruction to the ignorant, but
also of the humility with which we receive instruction from the learned?
10. Teach me, therefore, I beseech you, what I may teach to others; teach
me what I ought to hold as my own opinion; and tell me this: if souls are from
day to day made for each individual separately at birth, where, in the case of
infant children, is sin committed by these souls, so that they require the
remission of sin in the sacrament of Christ, because of sinning in Adam from whom
the sinful flesh has been derived? or if they do not sin, how is it compatible
with the justice of the Creator, that, because of their being united to mortal
members derived from another, they are so brought under the bond of the sin of
that other, that unless they be rescued by the Church, perdition overtakes them,
although it is not in their own power to secure that they be rescued by the
grace of baptism? Where, therefore, is the justice of the condemnation of so many
thousands of souls, which in the deaths of infant children leave this world
without the benefit of the Christian sacrament, if being newly created they have,
not through any preceding sin of their own, but by the will of the Creator,
become severally united to the individual bodies to animate which they were
created and bestowed by Him, who certainly knew that every one of them was destined,
not through any fault of its own, to leave the body without receiving the
baptism of Christ? Seeing, therefore, that we may riot say concerning God either
that He compels them to become sinners, or that He punishes innocent souls and
seeing that, on the other hand, it is not lawful for us to deny that nothing else
than perdition is the doom of the souls, even of little children, which have
departed from the body without the sacrament of Christ, tell me, I implore you,
where anything can be found to support the opinion that souls are not all
derived from that one soul of the first man, but are each created separately for
each individual, as Adam's soul was made for him.
CHAP. V. -- 11. As for some other objections which are advanced against this opinion,
I think that I could easily dispose of them. For example, some think that they
urge a conclusive argument against this opinion when they ask, how God finished
all His works an the sixth day and rested on the seventh day,8 if He is still
creating new souls. If we meet them with the quotation from the gospel (given
by you in the letter to Marcellinus already mentioned), "My Father worketh
hitherto," they answer that He "worketh" in maintaining those natures which He has
created, not in creating new natures; otherwise, this statement would contradict
the words of Scripture in Genesis, where it is most plainly declared that God
finished all His works. Moreover, the words of Scripture, that He rested, are
unquestionably to be understood of His resting from creating new creatures not
from governing those which He had created for at that time He made things which
previously did not exist, and from making these He rested because He had
finished all the creatures which before they existed He saw necessary to be created,
so that thenceforward He did not create and make things which previously did
not exist, but made and fashioned out of things already existing whatever He did
make. Thus the statements, "He rested from His works," and, "He worketh
hitherto," are both true, for the gospel could not contradict Genesis.
12. When, however, these things are brought forward by persons who advance
them as conclusive against the opinion that God now creates new souls as He
created the soul of the first man, and who hold either that He forms them from
that one soul which existed before He rested from creation, or that He now sends
them forth into bodies from some reservoir or storehouse of souls which He then
created, it is easy to turn aside their argument by answering, that even in
the six days God formed many things out of those natures which He had already
created, as, for example, the birds and fishes were formed from the waters, and
the trees, the grass, and the animals from the earth, and yet it is undeniable
that He was then making things which did not exist before. For there existed
previously no bird, no fish, no tree, no animal, and it is clearly understood that
He rested from creating those things which previously were not, and were then
created, that is to say, He ceased in this sense, that, after that, nothing was
made by Him which did not already exist. But if, rejecting the opinions of all
who believe either that God sends forth into men souls existing already in some
incomprehensible reservoir, or that He makes souls emanate like drops of dew
from Himself as particles of His own substance, or that He brings them forth
from that one soul of the first man, or that He binds them in the fetters of the
bodily members because of sins committed in a prior state of existence, if, I
say, rejecting these, we affirm that for each individual He creates separately a
new soul when he is born, we do not herein affirm that He makes anything which
tie had not already made. For He had already made man after His own image on
the sixth day; and this work of His is unquestionably to be understood with
reference to the rational soul of man. The same work He still does, not in creating
what did not exist, but in multiplying what already existed. Wherefore it is
true, on the one hand, that He rested from creating things which previously did
not exist, and equally true, on the other hand, that He continues still to work,
not only in governing what He has made, but also in making (not anything which
did not previously exist, but) a larger number of those creatures which He had
already made. Wherefore, either by such an explanation, or by any other which
may seem better, we escape from the objection advanced by those who would make
the fact that God rested from His works a conclusive argument against our
believing that new souls are still being daily created, not from the first soul, but
in the same manner as it was made.
13. Again, as for another objection, stated in the question, "Wherefore
does He create souls for those whom He knows to be destined to an early death?"
we may reply, that by the death of the children the sins of the parents are
either reproved or chastised. We may, moreover, with all propriety, leave these
things to the disposal of the Lord of all, for we know that he appoints to the
succession of events in time, and therefore to the births and deaths of living
creatures as included in these, a course which is consummate in beauty and perfect
in the arrangement of all its parts; whereas we are not capable of perceiving
those things by the perception of which, if it were attainable, we should be
soothed with an ineffable, tranquil joy. For not in vain has the prophet, taught
by divine inspiration, declared concerning God, "He bringeth forth in measured
harmonies the course of time."1 For which reason music, the science or capacity
of i correct harmony, has been given also by the kindness of God to mortals
having reasonable souls, with a view to keep them in mind of this great truth.
For if a man, when composing a song which is to suit a particular melody, knows
how to distribute the length of time allowed to each word so as to make the song
flow and pass on in most beautiful adaptation to the ever changeling notes of
the melody, how much more shall God, whose wisdom is to be esteemed as
infinitely transcending human arts, make infallible provision that not one of the
spaces of time alloted to natures that are born and die -- spaces which are like the
words and syllables of the successive epochs of the course of time -- shall
have, in what we may call the sublime psalm of the vicissitudes of this world, a
duration either more brief or more protracted than the foreknown and
predetermined harmony requires! For when I may speak thus with reference even to the
leaves of every tree, and the number of the hairs upon our heads, how much more may
I say it regarding the birth and death of men, seeing that every man's life on
earth continues for a time, which is neither longer nor shorter than God knows
to be in harmony with the plan according to which He rules the universe.
14. As to the assertion that everything which has begun to exist in time
is incapable of immortality, because all things which are born die, and all
things which have grown decay through age, and the opinion which they affirm to
follow necessarily from this, viz. that the soul of man must owe its immortality
to its having been created before time began, this does not disturb my faith;
for, passing over other examples, which conclusively dispose of this assertion, I
need only refer to the body of Christ, which now "death no more; death shall
have no more dominion over it."1
15. Moreover, as to your remark in your book against Ruffinus, that some
bring forward as against this opinion that souls are created for each individual
separately at birth the objection that it seems worthy of God that He should
give souls to the offspring of adulterers, and who accordingly attempt to build
on this a theory that souls may possibly be incarcerated, as it were, in such
bodies, to suffer for the deeds of a life spent in some prior state of being,2
-- this objection does not disturb me, as many things by which it may be
answered occur to me when I consider it. The answer which you yourself have given,
saying, that in the case of stolen wheat, there is no fault in the grain, but only
in him who stole it, and that the earth is not under obligation to refuse to
cherish the seed because the sower may have cast it in with a hand defiled by
dishonesty, is a most felicitous illustration. But even before I had read it, I
felt that to me the objection drawn from the offspring of adulterers caused no
serious difficulty when I took a general view of the fact that God brings many
good things to light, even out of our evils and our sins. Now, the creation of
any living creature compels ever), one who considers it with piety and wisdom to
give to the Creator praise which words cannot express; and if this praise is
called forth by the creation of any living creature whatsoever, how much more is
it called forth by the creation of a man! If, therefore, the cause of any act
of creative power be sought for, no shorter or better reply can be given than
that every creature of God is good. And [so far from such an act being unworthy
of God] what is more worthy of Him than that He, being good, should make those
good things which, no one else than God alone can make?
CHAP. VI. -- 16. These things, and others which I can advance, I am accustomed to
state, as well as I can, against those who attempt to overthrow by such objections
the opinion that souls are made for each individual, as the first man's soul was
made for him.
But when we come to the penal sufferings of infants, I am embarrassed,
believe me, by great difficulties, and am wholly at a loss to find an answer by
which they are solved; and I speak here not only of those punishments in the life
to come, which are involved in that perdition to which they must be drawn down
if they depart l from the body without the sacrament of Christian grace, but
also of the sufferings which are to our sorrow endured by them before our eyes
in this present life, and which are so various, that time rather than examples
would fail me if I were to attempt to enumerate them. They are liable to wasting
disease, to racking pain, to the agonies of thirst and hunger, to feebleness
of limbs, to privation of bodily senses, and to vexing assaults of unclean
spirits. Surely it is incumbent on us to show how it is compatible with justice that
infants suffer all these things without any evil of their own as the procuring
cause. For it would be impious to say, either that these things take place
without God's knowledge, or that He cannot resist those who cause them, or that He
unrighteously does these things, or permits them to be done. We are warranted
in saying that irrational animals are given by God to serve creatures
possessing a higher nature, even though they be wicked, as we see most plainly in the
gospel that the swine of the Gadarenes were given to the legion of devils at
their request; but could we ever be warranted in saying this of men? Certainly not.
Man is, indeed, an animal, but an animal endowed with reason, though mortal.
In his members dwells a reasonable soul, which in these severe afflictions is
enduring a penalty. Now God is good, God is just, God is omnipotent -- none but a
madman would doubt that he is so;let the great sufferings, therefore, which
infant children experience be accounted for by some reason compatible with
justice. When older people suffer such trials, we are accustomed, certainly, to say,
either that their worth is being proved, as in Job's case, or that their
wickedness is being punished, as in Herod's; and from some examples, which it has
pleased God to make perfectly clear, men are enabled to conjecture the nature of
others which are more obscure; but this is in regard to persons of mature age.
Tell me, therefore, what we must answer in regard to infant children; is it true
that, although they suffer so great punishments, there are no sins in them
deserving to be punished? for, of course, there is not in them at that age any
righteousness requiring to be put to the proof.
17. What shall I say, moreover, as to the [difficulty which besets the
theory of the creation of each soul separately at the birth of the individual in
connection with the] diversity of talent in different souls, and especially the
absolute privation of reason in some? This is, indeed, not apparent in the
first stages of infancy, but being developed continuously from the beginning of
life, it becomes manifest in children, of whom some are so slow and defective in
memory that they cannot learn even the letters of the alphabet, and some
(commonly called idiots) so imbecile that they differ very little, from the beasts of
the field. Perhaps I am told, in answer to this, that the bodies are the cause
of these imperfections. But surely the opinion which we wish to see vindicated
from objection does not require us to affirm that the soul chose for itself the
body which so impairs it, and, being deceived in the choice, committed a
blunder; or that the soul, when it was compelled, as a necessary consequence of
being born, to enter into some body, was hindered from finding another by crowds of
souls occupying the other bodies before it came, so that, like a man who takes
whatever seat may remain vacant for him in a theatre, the soul was guided in
taking possession of the imperfect body not by its choice, but by its
circumstances. We, of course, cannot say and ought not to believe such things. Tell us,
therefore, what we ought to believe and to say in order to vindicate from this
difficulty the theory that for each individual body a new soul is specially
created.
CHAP. VII. -- 18. In my books on Free Will, already referred to, I have said something,
not l in regard to the variety of capacities in different souls, but, at least,
in regard to the pains which I infant children suffer in this life. The nature
of the opinion which I there expressed, and the reason why it is insufficient
for the purposes of our present inquiry, I will now submit to you, and will put
into this letter a copy of the passage in the third book to which I refer. It
is as follows: -- "In connection with the bodily sufferings experienced by the
little children who, by reason of their tender age, have no sins -- if the
souls which animate them did not exist before they were born into the human family
-- a more grievous and, as it were, compassionate complaint is very commonly
made in the remark, 'What evil have they done that they should suffer these
things?' as if there could be a meritorious innocence in any one before the time at
which it is possible for him to do anything wrong I Moreover, if God
accomplishes, in any measure, the correction of the parents when they are chastised by
the sufferings or by the death of the children that are dear to them, is there
any reason why these things should not take place, seeing that, after they are
passed, :they will be, to those who experienced them, as if they had never been,
while the persons on whose account they were inflicted will either become
better, being moved by the rod of temporal afflictions to choose a better mode of
life, or be left without excuse under the punishment awarded at the coming
judgment, if, notwithstanding the sorrows of this life, they have refused to turn
their desires towards eternal life? Morever, who knows what may be given to the
little children by means of whose sufferings the parents have their obdurate
hearts subdued, or their faith exercised, or their compassion proved? Who knows
what good recompense God may, in the secret of his judgments, reserve for these
little ones? For although they have done no righteous action, nevertheless, being
free from any transgression of their own, they have suffered these trials. It
is certainly not without reason that the Church exalts to the honourable rank
of martyrs those children who were slain when Herod sought our Lord Jesus Christ
to put Him to death."1
19. These things I wrote at that time when I was endeavouring to defend
the opinion which is now under discussion. For, as I mentioned shortly before, I
was labouring to prove that whichever of these four opinions regarding the
soul's incarnation may be found true, the substance of the Creator is absolutely
free from blame, and is completely removed from all share in our sins. And,
therefore, whichever of these opinions might come to be established or demolished by
the truth, this had no bearing oft the object aimed at in the work which I was
then attempting, seeing that whichever opinion might win the victory over all
the rest, after they had been examined in a more thorough discussion, this
would take place without causing me any disquietude, because my object then was to
prove that, even admitting all these opinions, the doctrine maintained by me
remained unshaken. But now my object is, by the force of sound reasoning, to
select, if possible, one opinion out of the four; and, therefore, when I carefully
consider the words now quoted from that book, I do not see that the arguments
there used in defending the opinion which we are now discussing are valid and
conclusive.
20. For what may be called the chief prop of my defence is in the
sentence, "Moreover, who knows what may be given to the little children, by means of
whose sufferings the parents have their obdurate hearts subdued, or their faith
exercised, or their compassion proved? Who knows what good recompense God may,
in the secret of His judgments, reserve for these little ones?" I see that this
is not an unwarranted conjecture in the case of infants who, in any way, suffer
(though they know it not) for the sake of Christ and in the cause of true
religion, and of infants who have already been made partakers of the sacrament of
Christ; because, apart from union to the one Mediator, they cannot be delivered
from condemnation, and so put in a position in which it is even possible that a
recompense could be made to them for the evils which, in diverse afflictions,
they have endured in this world. But since the question cannot be fully solved,
unless the answer include also the case of those who, without having received
the sacrament of Christian fellowship, die in infancy after enduring the most
painful sufferings, what recompense can be conceived of in their case, seeing
that, besides all that they suffer in this life, perdition awaits them in the
life to come? As to the baptism of infants, I have, in the same book, given an
answer, not, indeed, fully, but so far as seemed necessary for the work which then
occupied me, proving that it profits children, even though they do not know
what it is, and have, as yet, no faith of their own; but on the subject of the
perdition of those infants who depart from this life without baptism, I did not
think it necessary to say anything then, because the question under discussion
was different from that with which we are now engaged.
21. If, however, we pass over and make no account of those sufferings
which are of brief continuance, and which, when endured, are not to be repeated, we
certainly cannot, in like manner, make no account of the fact that "by one man
death came, and by one man came also the resurrection of the dead; for as in
Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive."1 For, according to
this apostolical, divine, and perspicuous declaration, it is sufficiently plain
that no one goes to death otherwise than through Adam, and that no one goes to
life eternal otherwise; than through Christ. For this is the force of all in the
two parts of the sentence; as all men, by their first, that is, their natural
birth, belong to Adam, even so all men, whoever they be, who come to Christ come
to the second, that is, the spiritual birth. For this reason, therefore, the
word all is used in both clauses, because as all who die do not die otherwise
than in Adam, so all who shall be made alive shall not be made alive otherwise
than in Christ. Wherefore whosoever tells us that any man can be made alive in
the resurrection of the dead otherwise than in Christ, he is to be detested as a
pestilent enemy to the common faith. Likewise, whosoever says that those
children who depart out of this life without partaking of that sacrament shall be
made alive in Christ, certainly contradicts the apostolic declaration, and
condemns the universal Church, in which it is the practice to lose i no time and run
in haste to administer baptism to infant children, because it is believed, as an
i indubitable truth, that otherwise they cannot be made alive in Christ. Now
he that is not made alive in Christ must necessarily remain under the
condemnation, of which the apostle says, that "by the offence of one judgment came upon
all men to condemnation."2 That infants are born under the guilt of this offence
is believed by the whole Church. It is also a doctrine which you have most
faithfully set forth, both in your treatise against Jovinian and your exposition
of Jonah, as I mentioned above, and, if I am not mistaken, in other parts of
your works which I have not read or have at present forgotten. I therefore ask,
what is the ground of this condemnation of unbaptized infants ? For if new souls
are made for men, individually, at their birth, I do not see, on the one hand,
that they could have any sin while yet in infancy, nor do I believe, on the
other hand, that God condemns any soul which He sees to have no sin.
CHAP. VIII. -- 22. Are we perchance to say, in answer to this, that in the infant the
body alone is the cause of sin; but that for each body a new soul is made, and
that if this soul live according to the precepts of God, by the help of the grace
of Christ, the reward of being made incorruptible may be secured for the body
itself, when subdued and kept under the yoke; and that inasmuch as the soul of
an infant cannot yet do this, unless it receive the sacrament of Christ, that
which could not yet be obtained for the body by the holiness of the soul is
obtained for it by the grace of this sacrament; but if the soul of an infant depart
without the sacrament, it shall itself dwell in life eternal, from which it
could not be separated, as it had no sin, while, however, the body which it
occupied shall not rise again in Christ, because the sacrament had not been received
before its death?
23. This opinion I have never heard or read anywhere. I have, however,
certainly heard and believed the statement which led me to speak thus, namely,
"The hour is coming, in the which all that are in the graves shall hear His voice,
and shall come forth; they that have done good, unto the resurrection of
life," -- the resurrection, namely, of which it is said that "by one man came the
resurrection of the dead," and in which "all shall be made alive in Christ," --
"and they that have done evil, unto the resurrection of damnation."1 Now, what
is to be understood regarding infants which, before they could do good or evil,
have quitted the body without baptism? Nothing is said here concerning them.
But if the bodies of these infants shall not rise again, because they, have never
done either good or evil, the bodies of the infants that have died after
receiving the grace of baptism shall also: have no resurrection, because they also
were not: in this life able to do good or evil. If, however,. these are to rise
among the saints, i.e. among: those who have done good, among whom shall the
others rise again but among those who have done evil -- unless we are to believe
that some human souls shall not receive, either in the resurrection of life, or
in the resurrection of damnation, the bodies which they lost in death? This
opinion, however, is condemned, even before it is formally refuted, by its
absolute novelty; and besides this, who could bear to think that those who run with
their infant children to have them baptized, are prompted to do so by a regard
for their bodies, not for their souls? The blessed Cyprian, indeed, said, in
order to correct those who thought that an infant should not be baptized before
the eighth day, that it was not the body but the soul which behoved to be saved
from perdition -- in which statement he was not inventing any new doctrine, but
preserving the firmly established faith of the Church; and he, along with some
of his colleagues in the episcopal office, held that a child may be properly
baptized immediately after its birth.2
24. Let every man, however, believe anything which commends itself to his
own judgment, even though it run counter to some opinion of Cyprian, who may
not have seen in the matter! what should have been seen. But let no man believe
anything which runs counter to the perfectly unambiguous apostolical
declaration, that by the offence of one all are brought into condemnation, and that from
this condemnation nothing sets men free but the grace of God through our Lord
Jesus Christ, in whom alone life is given to all who are made alive. And let no
man believe anything which runs counter to the firmly grounded practice of the
Church, in which, if the sole reason for hastening the administration of baptism
were to save the children, the dead as well as the living would be brought to
be baptized.
25. These things being so, it is necessary still to investigate and to
make known the reason! why, if souls are created new for every individual at his
birth, those who die in infancy without the sacrament of Christ are doomed to
perdition; for that they are doomed to this if they so depart from the body is
testified both by Holy Scripture and by the holy Church. Wherefore, as to that
opinion of yours concerning the creation of new souls, if it does not contradict
this firmly grounded article of faith, let it be mine also; but if it does, let
it be no longer yours.
26. Let it not be said to me that we ought to receive as supporting this
opinion the words of Scripture in Zechariah, "He formeth the spirit of man
within him,"3 and in the book of Psalms, "He formeth their hearts severally."4 We
must seek for the strongest and most indisputable proof, that we may not be
compelled to believe that God is a judge who condemns any soul which has no fault.
For to create signifies either as much or, probably, more than to form
[fingere]; nevertheless it is written, "Create in me a clean heart, O God,"5 and yet it
cannot be supposed that a soul here expresses a desire to be made before it has
begun to exist. Therefore, as it is a soul already existing which is created
by being renewed in righteousness, so it is a soul already existing which is
formed by the moulding power of doctrine. Nor is ),our opinion, which I would
willingly make my own, supported by that sentence in Ecclesiastes, "Then shall the
dust return to the earth as it was: and the spirit shall return to God who gave
it."6 Nay, it rather favours those who think that all souls are derived from
one; for they say that, as the dust returns to the earth as it was, and yet the
body of which this is said returns not to the man from whom it was derived, but
to the earth from which the first man was made, the spirit in like manner,
though derived from the spirit of the first man, does not return to him but to the
Lord, by whom it was given to our first parent. Since, however, the testimony
of this passage in their favour is not so decisive as to make it appear
altogether opposed to the opinion which shall gladly see vindicated, I thought proper
to submit these remarks on it to your judgment, to prevent you from
endeavouring to deliver me from my perplexities by quoting passages such as these. For
although no man's wishes can make that true which is not true, nevertheless, were
this possible, I would wish that this opinion should be true, as I do wish
that, if it is true, it should be most clearly and unanswerably vindicated by you.
CHAP. IX. -- 27. The same difficulty attends those also who hold that souls already
existing elsewhere, and prepared from the beginning of the works of God, are sent
by Him into bodies. For to these persons also the same question may be put: If
these souls, being without any fault, go obediently to the bodies to which they
are sent, why are they subjected to punishment in the case of infants, if they
come without being baptized to the end of this life ? The same difficulty
unquestionably attaches to both opinions. Those who affirm that each soul is,
according to the deserts of its actions in an earlier state of being, united to the
body alloted to it in this life, imagine that they escape more easily from this
difficulty. For they think that to "die in Adam" means to suffer punishment in
that flesh which is derived from Adam, from which condition of guilt the grace
of Christ, they say, delivers the young as well as the old. So far, indeed,
they teach what is right, and true, and excellent, when they say that the grace
of Christ delivers the young as well as the old from the guilt of sins. But that
souls sin in another earlier life, and that for their sins in that state of
being they are cast down into bodies as prisons, I do not believe: I reject and
protest against such an opinion. I do this, in the first place, because they
affirm that this is accomplished by means of some incomprehensible revolutions, so
that after I know not how many cycles the soul must return again to the same
burden of corruptible flesh and to the endurance of punishment, -- than which
opinion I do not know that anything more horrible could be conceived. In the next
place, who is the righteous man gone from the earth about whom we should not
(if what they say is true) feel afraid lest, sinning in Abraham's bosom, he
should be cast down into the flames which tormented the rich man in the parable?1
For why may the soul not sin after leaving the body, if it can sin before
entering it ? Finally, to have sinned in Adam (in regard to which the apostle says
that in him all have sinned) is one thing, but it is a wholly different thing to
have sinned, I know not where, outside of Adam, and then because of this to be
thrust into Adam -- that is, into the body, which is derived from Adam, as into
a prison-house. As to the other opinion mentioned above, that all souls are
derived from one, I will not begin to discuss it unless I am under necessity to
do so; and my desire is, that if the opinion which we are now discussing is
true, it may be so vindicated by you that there shall be no longer any necessity
for examining the other.
28. Although, however, I desire and ask, and with fervent prayers wish and
hope, that by you the Lord may remove my ignorance on this subject, if, after
all, I am found unworthy to obtain this, I will beg the grace of patience from
the Lord our God, in whom we have such faith, that even if there be some things
which He does not open to us when we knock, we know it would be wrong to
murmur in the least against Him. remember what He said to the apostles themselves:
"I have yet many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear them now."2 Among
these things, so far at least as I am concerned, let me still reckon this, and
let me guard against being angry that I am deemed unworthy to possess this
knowledge, lest by such anger I be all the more clearly proved to be unworthy. I am
equally ignorant of many other things, yea, of more than I could name or even
number; and of this I would be more patiently ignorant, were it not that I fear
lest some one of these opinions, involving the contradiction of truth which we
most assuredly believe, should insinuate itself into the minds of the unwary.
Meanwhile, though I do not yet know which of these opinions is to be preferred,
this one thing I profess as my deliberate conviction, that the opinion which is
true does not conflict with that most firm and well grounded article in the
faith of :he Church of Christ, that infant children, even when they are newly
born, can be delivered from perdition in no other way than through the grace of
Christ's name, which He has given in His sacraments.
LETTER CLXVII. (A.D. 415.)
FROM AUGUSTIN TO JEROME ON JAMES II. 10.
CHAP. I. -- 1. My brother Jerome, esteemed worthy to be honoured in Christ by me, when
I wrote to you propounding this question concerning the human soul, -- if a
new soul be now created for each individual at birth, whence do souls contract
the bond of guilt which we assuredly believe to be removed by the sacrament of
the grace of Christ, when administered even to new-born children? -- as the
letter on that subject grew to the size of a considerable volume, I was unwilling to
impose the burden of any other question at that time; but there is a subject
which has a much stronger claim on my attention, as it presses more seriously on
my mind. I therefore ask you, and in God's name beseech you, to do something
which will, I believe, be of great service to many, namely, to explain to me (or
to direct me to any work in which you or any other commentator has already
expounded) the sense in which we are to understand these words in the Epistle of
James, "Whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one point, he is
guilty of all."3 This subject is of such importance that I very greatly regret
that I did not write to you in regard to it long ago.
2. For whereas in the question which I thought it neccessary to submit to
you concerning the soul, our inquiries were engaged with the investigation of a
life wholly past and sunk out of sight in oblivion, in this question we study
this present life, and how it must be spent if we would attain to eternal life.
As an apt illustration of this remark let me quote an entertaining anecdote. A
man had fallen into a well where the quantity of water was sufficient to break
his fall and save him from death, but not deep enough to cover his mouth and
deprive him of speech. Another man approached, and on seeing him cries out in
surprise: "How did you fall in here?" He answers: "I beseech you to plan how you
can get me out of this, rather than ask how I fell in." So, since we admit and
hold as an article of the Catholic faith, that the soul of even a little infant
requires to be delivered out of the guilt of sin, as out of a pit, by the
grace of Christ, it is sufficient for the soul of such a one that we know the way
in which it is saved, even though we should never know the way in which it came
into that wretched condition. But I thought it our duty to inquire into this
subject, lest we should incautiously hold any one of those opinions concerning
the manner of the soul's becoming united with the body which might contradict the
doctrine that the souls of little children require to be delivered, by denying
that they are subject to the bond of guilt. This, then, being very firmly held
by us, that the soul of every infant needs to be freed from the guilt of sin,
and can be freed in no other way except by the grace of. God through Jesus
Christ our Lord, if we can ascertain the cause and origin of the evil itself, we
are better prepared and equipped for resisting adversaries whose empty talk I
call not reasoning but quibbling; if, however, we cannot: ascertain the cause, the
fact that the origin of, this misery is hid from us is no reason for our being
slothful in the work which compassion demands from us. In our conflict,
however, with those who appear to themselves to know what they do not know, we have
an additional strength and safety in not being ignorant of our ignorance on this
subject. For there are some things which it is evil not to know; there are
other things which cannot be known, or are not necessary to be known, or have no
bearing on the life which we seek to obtain; but the question which I now submit
to you from the writings of the Apostle James is intimately connected with the
course of conduct in which we live, and in which, with a view to life eternal,
we endeavour to please God.
3. How, then, I beseech you, are we to understand the words: "Whosoever
shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one point, he is guilty of all"? Does
this affirm that the person who shall have committed theft, nay, who even
shall have said to the rich man, "Sit thou here" and to the poor man, "Stand thou
there," is guilty of homicide, and adultery, and sacrilege ? And if he is not
so, how can it be said that a person who has offended in one point has become
guilty of all? Or are the things which the apostle said concerning the rich man
and the poor man not to be reckoned among those things in one of which if any man
offend he becomes guilty of all ? But we must remember whence I that sentence
is taken, and what goes before it, and in what connection it occurs. "My
brethren," he says, "have not the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Lord of Glory,
with respect of persons. For if there come into your assembly a man with a gold
ring, in goodly apparel, and there come in also a poor man in vile raiment;
and ye have respect to him that weareth the gay clothing, and say unto him, Sit
thou here in a good place; and say to the poor, Stand thou there, or sit here
under my footstool; are ye not then partial in yourselves, and are become judges
of evil thoughts ? Hearken, my beloved brethren, Hath not God chosen the poor
of this world, rich in faith, and heirs of the kingdom which He hath promised to
them that love Him ? But ye have despised the poor,"1 -- inasmuch as you have
said to the poor man, "Stand thou there," when you would have said to a man
with a gold ring, "Sit thou here in a good place." And then there follows a
passage explaining and enlarging upon that same conclusion: "Do not rich men oppress
you by their power, and draw you before the judgment-seats? Do not they
blaspheme that worthy name by the which ye are called? If ye fulfil the royal law
according to the Scripture, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself, ye do well:
but if ye have respect to persons, ye commit sin, and are convinced of the law
as transgressors." See how the apostle calls those transgressors of the law who
say to the rich man, "Sit here," and to the poor, "Stand there." See how, lest
they should think it a trifling sin to transgress the law in this one thing, he
goes on to add: "Whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one
point, he is guilty Of all. For He that said, Do not commit adultery, said also,
Do not kill. Now if thou do not kill, yet, if thou commit adultery, thou art
become a transgressor of the law," according to that which he had said: "Ye are
convinced of the law as transgressors." Since these things are so, it seems to
follow, unless it can be shown that we are to understand it in some other way,
that he who says to the rich man, "Sit here," and to the poor, "Stand there," not
treating the one with the same respect as the other, is to be judged guilty as
an idolater, and a blasphemer, and an adulterer, and a murderer -- in short,
-- not to enumerate all, which would be tedious, -- as guilty of all crimes,
since, offending in one, he is guilt), of all."
CHAP. II. -- 4. But has he who has one virtue all virtues? and has he no virtues who
lacks one? If this be true, the sentence of the apostle is thereby confirmed. But
what I desire is to have the sentence explained, not confirmed, since of
itself it stands more sure in our esteem than all the authority of philosophers
could make it. And even if what has just been said concerning virtues and vices
were true, it would not follow that therefore all sins are equal. For as to the
inseparable co-existence of the virtues, this is a doctrine in regard to which,
if I remember rightly, what, indeed, I have almost forgotten (though perhaps I
am mistaken), all philosophers who affirm that virtues are essential to the
right conduct of life are agreed. The doctrine of the equality of sins, however,
the Stoics alone dared to maintain in opposition to the unanimous sentiments of
mankind: an absurd tenet, which in writing against Jovinianus (a Stoic in this
opinion, but an Epicurean in following after and defending pleasure) you have
most clearly refuted from the Holy Scriptures.1 In that most delightful and noble
dissertation you have made it abundantly plain that it has not been the
doctrine of our authors, or rather of the Truth Himself, who has spoken through them,
that all sins are equal. I shall now do my utmost in endeavouring, with the
help of God, to show how it can be that, although the doctrine of philosophers
concerning virtues is true, we are nevertheless not compelled to admit the
Stoics' doctrine that all sins are equal. If I succeed, I will look for your
approbation, and in whatever respect I come short, I beg you to supply my deficiencies.
5. Those who maintain that he who has one virtue has all, and that he who
lacks one lacks] all, reason correctly from the fact that prudence cannot be
cowardly, nor unjust, nor intemperate; for if it were any of these it would no
longer be prudence. Moreover, if it be prudence only when it is brave, and just,
and temperate, assuredly wherever it exists it must have the other virtues
along with it. In like manner, also, courage cannot be imprudent, or intemperate,
or unjust; temperance must of necessity be prudent, brave, and just; and justice
does not exist unless it be prudent, brave, and temperate. Thus, wherever any
one of these virtues truly exists, the others likewise exist; and where some
are absent, that which may appear in some measure to resemble virtue is not
really present.
6. There are, as you know, some vices opposed to virtues by a palpable
contrast, as imprudence is the opposite of prudence. But there are some vices
opposed to virtues simply because they are vices which, nevertheless, by a
deceitful appearance resemble virtues; as, for example, in the relation, not of
imprudence, but of craftiness to the said virtue of prudence. I speak here of that
craftiness 2 which is wont to be understood and spoken of in connection with the
evilly disposed, not in the sense in which the word is usually employed in our
Scriptures, where it is often used in a good sense, as, "Be crafty as
serpents,"3 and again, to give craftiness to the simple."4 It is true that among heathen
writers one of the most accomplished of Latin authors, speaking of Catiline,
has said: "Nor was there lacking on his part craftiness to guard against
danger,"5 using "craftiness" (astutia) in a good sense; but the use of the word in this
sense is among them very rare, among us very common. So also in regard to the
virtues classed under temperance. Extravagance is most manifestly opposite to
the virtue of frugality; but that which the common people are . wont to call
niggardliness is indeed a vice, yet one which, not in its nature, but by a very
deceitful similarity of appearance, usurps the name of frugality. In the same
manner injustice is by , a palpable contrast opposed to justice; but the desire of
avenging oneself is wont often to be a counterfeit of justice, but it is a
vice. There is an obvious contrariety between courage and cowardice; but
hardihood, though differing from courage in nature, deceives us by its resemblance to
that virtue. Firmness is a part of virtue; fickleness is a vice far removed from
and undoubtedly opposed to it; but obstinacy lays claim to the name of
firmness, yet is wholly different, because firmness is a virtue, and obstinacy is a
vice.
7. To avoid the necessity of again going over the same ground, let us take
one case as an example, from which all others may be understood. Catiline, as
those who have written concerning him had means of knowing, was capable of
enduring cold, thirst, hunger, and patient in fastings, cold, and watchings beyond
what any one could believe, and thus he appeared, both to himself and to his
followers, a man endowed , with great courage.6 But this courage was not prudent,
for he chose the evil instead of the good; was not temperate, for his life was
disgraced by the lowest dissipation; was not just, for he conspired against
his country; and therefore it was not courage, but hardihood usurping the name of
courage to deceive fools; for if it had been courage, it would not have been a
vice but a virtue, and if it had been a virtue, it would never have been
abandoned by fie other virtues, its inseparable companions.
8. On this account, when it is asked also concerning vices, whether where
one exists all in like manner exist, or where one does not exist none exist, it
would be a difficult matter to show this, because two vices are wont to be
opposed to one virtue, one that is evidently opposed, and another that bears an
apparent likeness. Hence the hardihood of Catiline is the more easily seen not to
have been courage, since it had not along with it other virtues; but it may be
difficult to convince men that his hardihood was cowardice, since he was in
the habit of enduring and patiently submitting to the severest hardships to a
degree almost incredible. But perhaps, on examining the matter more closely, this
hardihood itself is seen to be cowardice, because he shrunk from the toil of
those liberal studies by which true courage is acquired. Nevertheless, as there
are rash men who are not guilty of cowardice, and there are cowardly men who are
not guilty of rashness, and since.in both there is vice, for the truly brave
man neither ventures rashly nor fears without reason, we are forced to admit
that vices are more numerous than virtues.
9. Accordingly, it happens sometimes that one vice is supplanted by
another, as the love of money by the love of praise. Occasionally, one vice quits the
field that more may take its place, as in the case of the drunkard, who, after
becoming temperate m the use of drink, may come under the power of
niggardliness and ambition. It is possible, therefore, that vices may give place to vices,
not to virtues, as their successors, and thus they are more numerous. When one
virtue, however, has entered, there will infallibly be (since it brings all
the other virtues along with it) a retreat of all vices whatsoever that were in
the man; for all vices were not in him, but at one time so many, at another a
greater or smaller number might occupy their place.
CHAP. III. -- 10. We must inquire more carefully whether these things are so; for the
statement that "he who has one virtue has all, and that all virtues are awanting
to him who lacks one," is not given by inspiration, but is the view held by
many men, ingenious, indeed, and studious, but still men. But I must avow that, in
the case -- I shall not say of one of those from whose name the word virtue is
said to be derived,1 but even of a woman who is faithful to her husband, and
who is so from a regard to the commandments and promises of God, and, first of
all, is faithful to Him, I do not know how I could say of her that she is
unchaste, or that chastity is no virtue or a trifling one. I should feel the same in
regard to a husband who is faithful to his wife; and yet there are many such,
none of whom I could affirm to be without any sins, and doubtless the sin which
is in them, whatever it be, proceeds from some Vice. Whence it follows that
though conjugal fidelity in religious men and women is undoubtedly a virtue, for
it is neither a nonentity nor a vice, yet it does not bring along with it all
virtues, for if all virtues were there, there would be no vice, and if there were
no vice, there would be no sin; but where is the man who is altogether without
sin ? Where, therefore, is the man who is without any vice, that is, fuel or
root, as it were, of sin, when he who reclined on the breast of the Lord says,
"If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in
us"?2 It is not necessary for us to urge this at greater length in writing to
you, but I make the statement for the sake of others who perhaps shall read this.
For you, indeed, in that same splendid work against Jovinianus, have carefully
proved this from the Holy Scriptures; in which work also you have quoted the
words, "in many things we all offend,"3 from this very epistle in which occur the
words whose meaning we are now investigating. For though it is an apostle of
Christ who is speaking, he does not say, "ye offend," but, "we offend;" and
although in the passage under consideration he says, "Whosoever shall keep the
whole law, and yet offend in one point, he is guilty of all," 4 in the words just
quoted he affirms that we offend not in one i thing but in many, and not that
some offend but that we all offend.
11. Far be it, however, from any believer to think that so many thousands
of the servants of Christ, who, lest they should deceive themselves, and the
truth should not be in them, sincerely confess themselves to have sin, are
altogether without virtues For wisdom is a great virtue, and wisdom herself has said
to man, "Behold the fear of the Lord, that is wisdom."5 Far be it from us,
then, to say that so many and so great believing and pious men have not the fear of
the Lord, which the Greeks call <greek>eusebeia</greek>, or more literally and
fully, <greek>qeosebeia</greek> And what is the fear of the Lord but His
worship ? and whence is He truly worshipped except from love? Love, then, out of a
pure heart, and a good conscience, and faith unfeigned, is the great and true
virtue, because it is "the end of the commandment."1 Deservedly is love said to
be "strong as death,"2 because, like death, it is vanquished by none; or because
the measure of love in this life is even unto death, as the Lord says,
"Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends;"3
or, rather, because, as death forcibly separates the soul from the senses of the
body, so love separates it from fleshly lusts. Knowledge, when it is of the
right kind, is the handmaid to love, for without love "knowledge puffeth up,"4
but where love, by edifying, has filled the heart, there knowledge will find
nothing empty i which it can puff up. Moreover, Job has shown, what is that useful
knowledge by defining it where, after saying, "The fear of the Lord, that is
wisdom" he adds "and to depart from evil, I that is understanding."5 Why do we
not then say that the man who has this virtue has all virtues, since "love is the
fulfilling of the law?"6. Is it not true that, the more love exists in a man
the more he is endowed with virtue, and the less love he has the less virtue is
in him, for love is itself virtue; and the less virtue there is in a man so
much the more vice will there be in him ?: Therefore, where love is full and
perfect, no vice will remain.
12. The Stoics, therefore, appear to me to be mistaken in refusing to
admit that a man who is advancing in wisdom has any wisdom at all, and in affirming
that he alone has it who has become altogether perfect in wisdom. They do not,
! indeed, deny that he has made progress, but they say that he is in no degree
entitled to be called wise, unless, by emerging, so to speak, from the depths,
he suddenly springs forth into the free air of wisdom. For, as it matters not
when a man is drowning whether the depth of water above him be many stadia or
only the breadth of a hand or finger, so they say in regard to the progress of
those who are advancing towards wisdom, that they are like men rising from the
bottom of a whirlpool towards the air, but that unless they by their progress,
so escape as to emerge wholly from folly as from an overwhelming flood, they
have not virtue and are not wise; but that, when they have so escaped, they
immediately have wisdom in perfection, and not a vestige of folly whence any sin
could be originated remains.
13. This simile, in which folly is compared to water and wisdom to air, so
that the mind emerging, as it were, from the stifling influence of folly
breathes suddenly the free air of wisdom, does not appear to me to harmonize
sufficiently with the authoritative statement of our Scriptures; a better simile, so
far, at least, as illustration of spiritual things can be borrowed from material
things, is that which compares vice or folly to darkness, and virtue or wisdom
to light. The way to wisdom is therefore not like that of a man rising from
the water into the air, in which, in the moment of rising above the surface of
the water, he suddenly breathes freely, but, like that of a man proceeding from
darkness into light, on whom more light gradually shines as he advances. So
long, therefore, as this is not fully accomplished, we speak of the man as of one
going from the dark recesses of a vast cavern towards its entrance, who is more
and more influenced by the proximity of the light as he comes nearer to the
entrance of the cavern; so that whatever light he has proceeds from the light to
which he is advancing, and whatever darkness still remains in him proceeds from
the darkness out of which he is emerging. Therefore it is true that in the
sight of God "shall no man living be justified,"7 and yet that "the just shall live
by his faith."8 On the one hand, "the saints are clothed with righteousness,"9
one more, another less; on the other hand, no one lives here wholly without
sin -- one sins more, another less, and the best is the man who sins least.
CHAP. IV. -- 14. But why have I, as if forgetting to whom I address myself, assumed the
tone of a teacher in stating the question regarding which I wish to be
instructed by you ? Nevertheless, as I had resolved to submit to your examination my
opinion regarding the equality of sins (a subject involving a question closely
bearing on the matter on which I was writing), let me now at last bring my
statement to a conclusion. Even though it were true that he who has one virtue has
all virtues, and that he who lacks one virtue has none, this would not involve
the consequence that all sins are equal; for although it is true that where
there is no virtue there is nothing right, it by no means follows that among bad
actions one cannot be worse than another, or that divergence from that which is
right does not admit of degrees. I think, however, that it is more agreeable to
truth and consistent with the Holy Scriptures to say, that what is true of the
members of the body is true i of the different dispositions of the soul (which,
though not seen occupying different places, are by their distinctive workings
perceived as plainly as the members of the body), namely, that as in the same
body one member is more fully shone upon by the light, another is less shone
upon, and a third is altogether without light, and remains in the dark under some
impervious covering, something similar takes place in regard to the various
dispositions of the soul. If this be so, then according to the manner in which
every man is shone upon by the light of holy love, he may be said to have one
virtue and to lack another virtue, or to have one virtue in larger and another in
smaller measure. For in reference to that love which is the fear of God, we may
correctly say both that it is greater in one man than in another, and tim there
is some of it in one man, and none of it in another; we may also correctly say
as to an individual that he has greater chastity than patience, and that he
has either virtue in a higher degree than he had yesterday, if he is making
progress, or tim he still lacks self-control, but possesses, at the same time, a
large measure of compassion.
15. To sum up generally and briefly the view which, so far as relates to
holy living, I entertain concerning virtue, -- virtue is tile love with which
that which ought to be loved is loved. This is in some greater, in others less,
and there are men in whom it does not exist at all; but in the absolute fulness
which admits of no increase, it exists in no man while living on this earth; so
long, however, as it admits of being increased there can be no doubt that, in
so far as it is less than it ought to be, the shortcoming proceeds from vice.
Because of this vice there is "not a just man upon earth that doeth good and
sinneth not;"1 because of this vice, "in God's sight shall no man living be
justified."2 On account of this vice, "if we say that we have no sin, we deceive
ourselves, and the truth is not in us."3 On account of this also, whatever progress
we may have made, we must say, "Forgive us our debts,"4 although all debts in
word, deed, and thought were washed away in baptism. He, then, who sees aright,
sees whence, and when, and where he must hope for that perfection to which
nothing can be added. Moreover, if there had been no commandments, there would
have been no means whereby a man might certainly examine himself and see from what
things he ought to turn aside, whither he should aspire, and in what things he
should find occasion for thanksgiving or for prayer. Great, therefore, is the
benefit of commandments, if to free will so much liberty be granted that the
grace of God may be more abundantly honoured.
CHAP. V. -- 16. If these things be so, how shall a man who shall keep the whole law,
and yet offend in one point, be guilty of all ? May it not be, that since the
fulfilling of the law is that love wherewith we love God and our neighbour, on
which commandments of love "hang all the law and the prophets,"5 he is justly
held to be guilty of all who violates that on which all hang? Now, no one sins
without violating this love; "for this, thou shalt not commit adultery; thou shall
do no murder; thou shall not steal; thou shalt not covet; and if there be any
other commandment, it is briefly comprehended in this saying, Thou shall love
thy neighbour as thyself. Love worketh no ill to his neighbour: therefore love
is the fulfilling of the law."6 No one, however, loves his neighbour who does
not out of his love to God do all in his power to bring his neighbour also, whom
he loves as himself, to love God, whom if he does not love, he neither loves
himself nor his neighbour. Hence it is true that if a man shall keep the whole
law, and yet offend in one point, he becomes guilty of all, because he does what
is contrary to the love on which hangs the whole law. A man, therefore, becomes
guilty of all by doing what is contrary to that on which all hang.
17. Why, then, may not all sins be said to be equal ? May not the reason
be, that the transgression of the law of love is greater in him who commits a
more grievous sin, and is less in him who commits a less grievous sin? And in the
mere fact of his committing any sin whatever, he becomes guilty of all; but in
committing a more grievous sin, or in sinning in more respects than one, he
becomes more guilty; committing a less grievous sin, or sinning in fewer
respects, he becomes less guilty, -- his guilt being thus so much the greater the more
he has sinned, the less the less he has sinned. Nevertheless, even though it be
only in one point that he offend, he is guilty of all, because he violates
that love on which all hang. If these things be true, an explanation is by this
means found, clearing up that saying of the man of apostolic grace, "In many
things we offend all."7 For we all offend, but one more grievously, another more
slightly, according as each may have committed a more grievous or a less grievous
sin .; every one being great in the practice of sin in proportion as he is
deficient in loving God and his neighbour, and, on the other hand, decreasing in
the practice of sin in proportion as he increases in the ;love of God and of his
neighbour. The more, therefore, that a man is deficient in love, the more is
he full of sin. And perfection in love i is reached when nothing of sinful
infirmity remains in us.
18. Nor, indeed, in my opinion, are we to esteem it a trifling sin "to
have the faith of our Lord Jesus Christ with respect of persons," if we take the
difference between sitting and standing, of which mention is made in the
context, to refer to ecclesiastical honours; for who can bear to see a rich man chosen
to a place of honour in the Church, while a poor man, of superior
qualifications and of greater holiness. is despised? If, however, the apostle speaks there
of our daily assemblies, who does not offend in the matter? At the same time,
only those really offend here who cherish in their hearts the opinion that a
man's worth is to be estimated according to his wealth; for this seems to be the
meaning of the expression, "Are ye not then partial in yourselves, and are
become judges of evil thoughts?"
19. The law of liberty, therefore, the law of love, is that of which he
says: "If ye fulfil the royal law according to the Scripture, Thou shalt love thy
neighbour as thyself, ye do well: but if ye have respect to persons, ye commit
sin, and are convinced of the law as transgressors.1 And then (after the
difficult sentence, "Whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one
point, he is guilty of all," concerning which I have with sufficient fulness stated
my opinion), making mention of the same law of liberty, he says: "So speak ye,
and so do, as they that shall be judged by the law of liberty." And as he knew
by experience what he had said a little before, "in many things we offend all,"
he suggests a sovereign remedy, to be applied, as it l were day by day, to
those less serious but real] wounds which the soul suffers day by day, for he
says: "He shall have judgment without mercy that hath showed no mercy."2 For with
the same purpose the Lord says: "Forgive, and ye shall be forgiven: give, and it
shall be given unto you."3 After which the apostle says: "But mercy rejoiceth
over judgment: it's not said that mercy prevails over judgment, for it is not
an adversary of judgment, but it "rejoiceth" over judgment, because a greater
number are gathered in by mercy; but they are those who have shown mercy, for,
"Blessed are the merciful, for God shall have mercy on them."4
20. It is, therefore, by all means just that they be forgiven, because
they have forgiven others, and that what they need be given to them, because they
have given to others. For God uses mercy when He judgeth, and uses judgment
when He showeth mercy. Hence the Psalmist says: "I will sing of mercy and of
judgment unto Thee, O Lord."5 For if any man, thinking himself too righteous to
require mercy, presumes, as if he had no reason for anxiety, to wait for judgment
without mercy, he provokes that most righteous indignation through fear of which
the Psalmist said: "Enter not into judgment with Thy servant."6 For this
reason the Lord says to a disobedient people: "Wherefore will ye contend with me in
judgment? 7 For when the righteous King shall sit upon His throne, who shall
boast that he has a pure heart, or who shall boast that he is clean from sin ?
What hope is there then unless mercy shall "rejoice over" judgment? But this it
will do only in the case of those who have showed mercy, saying with sincerity,
"Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors," and who have given without
murmuring, for "the Lord loveth a cheerful giver."8 To conclude, St. James is
led to speak thus concerning works of mercy in this passage, in order that he may
console those whom the statements immediately foregoing might have greatly
alarmed, his purpose being to admonish us ]low those daily sins from which our
life is never free here below may also be expiated by daily remedies; lest any
man, becoming guilty of all when he offends in even one point, be brought, by
offending in many points (since "in many things we all offend"), to appear before
the bar of the Supreme Judge under the enormous amount of guilt which has
accumulated by degrees, and find at that tribunal no mercy, because he showed no
mercy to others, instead of rather meriting the forgiveness of his own sins, and
the enjoyment of the gifts promised in Scripture, by his extending forgiveness
and bounty to others.
21. I have written at great length, which may perhaps have been tedious to
you, as you, although approving of tile statements now made, do not expect to
be addressed as if you were but learning truths which you have been accustomed
to teach to others. If, however, there be anything in these statements -- not
in the style of language in which they are expounded, for I am not much
concerned as to mere phrases, but in the substance of the statements -- which your
erudite judgment condemns, I beseech you to point this out to me in your reply, and
do not hesitate to correct my error. For I pity the man who, in view of the
unwearied labour and sacred character of your studies, does not on account of
them both render to you the honour which you deserve, and give thanks unto our
Lord God by whose grace you are what you are. Wherefore, since I ought to be more
willing to learn from any teacher the things of which to my disadvantage I am
ignorant, than prompt to teach any others what I know, with how much greater
reason do I claim the payment of this debt of love from you, by whose learning
ecclesiastical literature in the latin tongue has been, in the Lord's name, and by
His help, advanced to an extent which had been previously unattainable.
Especially, however, I ask attention to the sentence: "Whosoever shall keep the whole
law, and offend in one point, is guilty of all." If you know any better way,
my beloved brother, in which it can be explained, I beseech you by the Lord to
favour us by communicating to us your exposition.