ON CONTINENCE. [DE CONTINENTIA.]
ST. AUGUSTIN speaks of his work On Continence in Ep. 231, Ad Darium
Comitem. [See vol. 1. of this edition, p. 584.--P. S.] Possidius, Ind. c. 10,
mentions it, and it is cited in the Collectanea of Bede or Florus, and by Eugypius.
Erasmus is therefore wrong in ascribing it to Hugo on the ground of the style,
which is not unlike that of the earlier discourses. It is evidently a discourse,
and probably for that reason unnoticed in the Retractations. The Manichaean
heresy is impugned after the manner of his early works.--(Abridged from
Benedictine ed. vol. vi.)
1. IT is difficult to treat of the virtue of the soul, which is called
Continence, in a manner fully suitable and worthy; but He, whose great gift this
virtue is, will help our littleness under the burden of so great a weight. For
He, who bestows it upon His faithful ones when they are continent, Himself gives
discourse of it to His ministers when they speak. Lastly, of so great a matter
purposing to speak what Himself shall grant, in the first place we say and
prove that Continence is the gift of God.(1) We have it written in the Book of
Wisdom, that no one can be continent, unless God grant it. But the Lord,
concerning that greater and more glorious Continence itself, whereby there is continence
from the marriage bond, says, "Not all can receive this saying, but they to
whom it is given."(2) And since marriage chastity also itself cannot be guarded,
unless there be Continence from unlawful intercourse, the Apostle declared both
to be the gift of God, when He spake of both lives, that is, both that of
marriage and that without marriage, saying, "I would that all men were so as
myself; but each. hath his own gift from God; one in this manner, another in that
manner."(3)
2. And lest it should seem that necessary Continence was to be hoped for
from the Lord only in respect of the lust of the lower parts of the flesh, it is
also sung in the Psalm; "Set, O Lord, a watch to my mouth, and a door of
Continence around my lips."(4) But in this witness of the divine speech, if we
understand "mouth" as we ought to understand it, we perceive how great a gift of God
Continence there set is. Forsooth it is little to contain the mouth of the
body, lest any thing burst forth thence, which is not for the better, through the
sound of the voice. For there is, within, the mouth of the heart, where he, who
spake these words, and wrote them for us to speak, desired of the Lord that
the watch and door of Continence should be set for him. For many things we say
not with the mouth of the body, and cry aloud with the heart: but there goes
forth from the mouth of the body no word of any thing, whereof there is silence in
the heart. Therefore what flows not forth thence, sounds not abroad: but what
flows forth thence, if it be evil, although it move not the tongue, defiles the
soul. Therefore Continence must be set there, where the conscience even of them
who are silent speaks. For it is brought to pass by means of the door of
Continence, that there go not forth thence that, which, even when the lips of the
flesh are closed, pollutes the life of him that hath the thought.
3. Lastly, to show more plainly the inner mouth, which by these words he
meant, after having said, "Set a watch, O Lord, to my mouth, and a door of
Continence around my lips," he added straightway, "Cause not my heart to fall aside
into evil words."(1) The failing aside of the heart, what is it but the
consent? For he hath not yet spoken, whosoever in his heart hath with no failing aside
of the heart consented unto suggestions that meet him of each several thing
that is seen. But, if he hath consented, he hath already spoken in his heart,
although he hath not uttered sound by the mouth; although he hath not done with
hand or any part whatever of the body, yet hath he done what in his thought he
hath already determined that he is to do: guilty by the divine laws, although
hidden to human senses; the word having been spoken in the heart, no deed having
been committed through the body. But in no case would he have moved the limb
without, in a deed, the beginning of which deed had not gone before within in
word. For it is no lie that is written, that "the beginning of every work is a
word."(2) Forsooth men do many things with mouth closed, tongue quiet, voice
bridled; but yet they do nothing by work of the body, which they have not before
spoken in the heart. And through this since there are many sins in inward sayings
which are not in outward deeds, whereas there are none in outward deeds, which
do not go before in inward sayings, there will be purity of innocence from both,
if the door of Continence be set around the inward lips.
4. For which cause our Lord Himself also with His own mouth saith,
"Cleanse what are within, and what are without will be clean."(3) And, also, in
another place, when He was refuting the foolish speeches of the Jews, in that they
spake evil against His disciples, eating with unwashen hands; "Not what entereth
into the mouth," said He, "defileth the man: but what cometh forth out of the
mouth, that defileth the man."(4) Which sentence, if the whole of it be taken of
the mouth of the body, is absurd. For neither doth vomit defile him, whom food
defileth not. Forsooth food entereth into the mouth, vomit proceedeth forth
out of the mouth. But without doubt the former words relate to the mouth of the
flesh, where He says, "Not what entereth into the mouth defileth the man," but
the latter words to the mouth of the heart, where He saith, "But what proceedeth
forth out of the mouth, this defileth the man."(5) Lastly, when the Apostle
Peter sought of Him an explanation of this as of a parable, He answered, "Are ye
also yet without understanding? understand ye not, that whatsoever entereth
into the mouth, goeth into the belly, and is cast out into the draught?" Here
surely we perceive the mouth of the flesh, into which the food enters. But in what
He next adds, in order that we might recognize the mouth of the heart, the
slowness of our heart would not follow, did not the Truth deign to walk even with
the slow. For He saith, "But what things go forth from the mouth, go out of the
heart;" as though He should say, When you hear it said "from the mouth,"
understand "from the heart." I say both, but I set forth one by the other. The inner
man hath an inner mouth, and this the inner ear discerns: what things go forth
from this mouth, go out of the heart, and they defile the man. Then having left
the term mouth, which may be understood also of the body, He shows more openly
what He is saying. "For from the heart go out," saith He, "evil thoughts,
murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness, blasphemies; these are
what defile the man." There is surely no one of those evils, which can be
committed also by the members of the body, but that the evil thoughts go before and
defile the man, although something hinder the sinful and wicked deeds of the body
from following. For if, because power is not given, the hand is free from the
murder of a man, is the heart of the murderer forsooth therefore clean from
sin? Or if she be chaste, whom one unchaste wishes to commit adultery with, hath
he on that account failed to commit adultery with her in his heart? Or if the
harlot be not found in the brothel, doth he, who seeks her, on that account fail
to commit fornication in his heart? Or if time and place be wanting to one who
wishes to hurt his neighbor by a lie, hath he on that account failed already to
speak false witness with his tuner mouth? Or if any one fearing men, dare not
utter aloud blasphemy with tongue of flesh, is he on this account guiltless of
this crime, who saith in his heart, "There is no Coot."(6) Thus all the other
evil deeds of men, which no motion of the body performs, of which no sense of
the body is conscious, have their own secret criminals, who are also polluted by
consent alone in thought, that is, by evil words of the inner mouth. Into which
he (the Psalmist) fearing lest his heart should fall aside, asks of the Lord
that the door of Continence be set around the lips of this mouth, to contain the
heart, that it fall not aside into evil words: but contain it, by not
suffering thought to proceed to consent: for thus, according to the precept of the
Apostle, sin reigneth not in our mortal body, nor do we yield our members as
weapons of unrighteousness unto sin.(1) From fulfilling which precept they are surely
far removed, who on this account turn not their members to sin, because no
power is allowed them; and if this be present, straightway by the motions of their
members, as of weapons, they show, who reigneth in them within. Wherefore so
far as is in themselves, they yield their members weapons of unrighteousness
unto sin; because this is what they wish, which for this reason they yield not,
because they are not able.
5. And on this account that, which, the parts that beget being bridled by
modesty, is most chiefly and properly to be called Continence, is violated by
no transgression, if the higher Continence, concerning which we have been some
time speaking, be preserved in the heart. For this reason the Lord, after He had
said, "For from the heart go forth evil thoughts," then went on to add what it
is that belongs to evil thoughts, "murders, adulteries," and the rest. He
spake not of all; but, having named certain by way of instance, He taught that we
are to understand others also. Of which there is no one that can take place,
unless an evil thought have gone before, whereby that is prepared within which is
done without, and going forth out of the mouth of the heart already defiles the
man, although, through no power being granted, it be not done without by means
of the members of the body. When therefore a door of Continence hath been set
in the mouth of the heart, whence go out all that defile the man, if nothing
such be permitted to go out thence, there followeth a purity, wherein now the
conscience may rejoice; although there be not as yet that perfection, wherein
Continence shall not strive with vice. But now, so long as "the flesh lusteth
against the spirit, and the spirit against the flesh,"(2) it is enough for us not to
consent unto the evils which we feel in us. But, when that consent takes
place, then there goeth out of the mouth of the heart what defileth the man. But
when through Continence consent is withheld, the evil of the lust of the flesh,
against which the lust of the spirit fights, is not suffered to harm.
6. But it is one thing to fight well, which now is, when the strife(3) of
death is resisted; another thing not to have an adversary, which will then be,
when death, "the last enemy,"(4) shall be destroyed. For Continence also
itself, when it curbs and restrains lusts, at once both seeks the good unto the
immortality of which we aim, and rejects the evil with which in this mortality we
contend. Of the one it is forsooth the lover and beholder, but of the other both
the enemy and witness: both seeking what becomes, and fleeing what misbecomes.
Assuredly Continence would not labor in curbing lusts, if we had no wishes
contrary to what is becoming, if there were no opposition on the part of evil lust
unto our good will. The Apostle cries aloud, "I know," saith he, "that there
dwelleth not in me, that is in my flesh, good. For to will lieth near to me, but
to accomplish good I find not."(5) For now good can be done, so far as that
there be no assent given unto evil lust: but good will be accomplished, when the
evil lust itself shall come to an end. And also the same teacher of the Gentiles
cries aloud, "I take pleasure together with the law of God after the inner
man: but I see another law in my members, warring against the law of my mind."(6)
7. This conflict none experience in themselves, save such as war on the
side of the virtues, and war down the vices: nor doth any thing storm the evil of
lust, save the good of Continence. But there are, who, being utterly ignorant
of the law of God, account not evil lusts among their enemies, and through
wretched blindness being slaves to them, over and above think themselves also
blessed, by satisfying them rather than taming them. But whoso through the Law have
come to know them, ("For through the Law is the knowledge of sin,"(7) and,
"Lust," saith he, "I knew not, unless the Law should say, Thou shalt not lust
after,"(8) and yet are overcome by their assault, because they live under the Law,
whereby what is good is commanded, but not also given: they live not under
Grace, which gives through the Holy Spirit what is commanded through the Law: unto
these the Law therefore entered, that in them the offense might abound. The
prohibition increased the lust, and made it unconquered:(1) that there might be
transgression also, which without the Law was not, although there was sin, "For
where there is not Law, neither is there transgression."(2) Thus the Law, Grace
not helping, forbidding sin, became over and above the strength of sin; whence
the Apostle saith, "The Law is the strength of sin."(3) Nor is it to be wondered
at, that man's weakness even from the good Law added strength to evil, whilst
it trusts to fulfill the Law itself of its own strength. Forsooth being
ignorant of the righteousness of God,(4) which He gives unto the weak, and wishing to
establish his own, of which the weak is void, he was not made subject to the
righteousness of God, reprobate and proud. But if the Law, as a schoolmaster,
lead unto Grace one made an offender, as though for this purpose more grievously
wounded, that he may desire a Physician; against the baneful sweetness, whereby
lust prevailed, the Lord gives a sweetness that worketh good, that by it
Continence may the more delight, and "our land giveth her fruit,"(5) whereby the
soldier is fed, who by the help of the Lord wars down sin.
8. Such soldiers the Apostolic trumpet enkindles for battle with that
sound, "Therefore let not," saith he, "sin reign in your mortal body to obey its
lusts; nor yield your members weapons of unrighteousness unto sin; but yield
yourselves unto God, as living in place of dead, and your members weapons of
righteousness unto God. For sin shall not rule over you. For ye are not under the
law, but under Grace."(6) And in another place, "Therefore," saith he, "brethren,
we are debtors, not to the flesh, to live after the flesh. For if ye shall live
after the flesh, ye shall die; but if by the Spirit ye shall mortify the deeds
of the flesh, ye shall live. For as many as are led by the Spirit of God,
these are sons of God."(7) This therefore is the business in hand, so long as this
our mortal life under Grace lasts, that sin, that is the lust of sin, (for this
he in this place calls by the name of sin,) reign not in this our mortal body.
But it is then shown to reign, if obedience be yielded to its desires. There
is therefore in us lust of sin, which must not be suffered to reign; there are
its desires, which we must not obey, lest obeying it reign over us. Wherefore
let not lust usurp our members, but let Continence claim them for herself; that
they be weapons of righteousness unto God, that they be not weapons of
unrighteousness unto sin; for thus sin shall not rule over us. For we are not under the
Law, which indeed commandeth what is good yet giveth it not: but we are under
Grace, which, making us to love that which the Law commands, is able to rule
over the free.
9. And also, when he exhorts us, that we live not after the flesh, lest we
die, but that by the Spirit we mortify the deeds of the flesh, that we may
live; surely the trumpet which sounds, shows the war in which we are engaged, and
enkindles us to contend keenly, and to do our enemies to death,(8) that we be
not done to death by them. But who those enemies are, it hath set forth plainly
enough. I For those are they, whom it willed should be done to death by us,
that is to say, the works of the flesh. For so it saith, "But if by the Spirit ye
shall mortify the deeds of the flesh, ye shall live." And in order that we may
know what these are, let us hear the same in like manner writing unto the
Galatians, and saying, "But the works of the flesh are manifest, which are,
fornications, uncleannesses, luxuries, idolatry, witchcrafts, hatreds, contentions,
emulations, wraths, strifes, heresies, envyings, drunkennesses, revellings, and
such like; of which I foretell to you, as I have foretold, that they who do such
things shall not possess the kingdom of God."(9) For the very war there also
was he showing, that he should speak of these, and unto the death-doing of these
enemies was he calling up the soldiers of Christ by the same heavenly and
spiritual trumpet. For he had said above, "But I say, walk in the Spirit, and
perform ye not the lusts of the flesh. For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and
the Spirit against the flesh. For these are opposed one to the other, that ye
do not what ye would. But if ye are led by the Spirit, ye are not under the
Law."(10) Therefore being set under Grace, he would have them have that conflict
against the works of the flesh. And in order to point out these works of the
flesh, he added what I have mentioned above. "But the works of the flesh are
manifest, which are, fornications," and the rest, whether what he mentioned, or
whether what he admonished were to be understood, chiefly as he added, "and such
like." Lastly, in this battle, against what is in a manner the carnal army leading
forth as it were another spiritual line, "But the fruit of the Spirit is,"
saith he, "charity, joy, peace, long-suffering, kindness, goodness,faith,
gentleness,continence; against such there is no law."(11) He saith not "against these,"
lest they should be thought to be alone: although even were he to say this, we
ought to understand all, whatever goods of the same kind we could think of:
but he saith, "against such," that is to say, both these and whatsoever are such
like. However, in that among the goods of which he made mention, he set
Continence in the last(1) place, (concerning which we have now undertaken to treat,
and on account of which we have already said much,)he willed that it should in an
especial manner cleave to our minds. Forsooth this same is of great avail in
this case, wherein the Spirit lusteth against the flesh; forasmuch as in a
certain way it crucifies the lusts of the flesh. Whence, after the Apostle had thus
spoken, he added straightway, "But they who are Jesus Christ's have crucified
their own flesh, with the passions and lusts."(2) This is the acting of
Continence: thus the works of the flesh are done to death. But they do to death those,
whom falling away from Continence lust draweth into consent to do such works.
10. But in order that we fall not away from Continence, we ought to watch
specially against those snares of the suggestions of the devil, that we presume
not of our own strength. For, "Cursed is every one that setteth his hope in
man."(3) And who is he, but man? We cannot therefore truly say that he setteth
not his hope in man, who setteth it in himself. For this also, to "live after
man," what is it but to "live after the flesh?" Whoso therefore is tempted by such
a suggestion, let him hear, and, if he have any Christian feeling, let him
tremble. Let him hear, I say, "If ye shall live after the flesh, ye shall die."
11. But some one will say to me that it is one thing to live after man,
another thing to live after the flesh; because man forsooth is a rational
creature, and there is in him a rational soul, whereby he differs from the beast: but
the flesh is the lowest and earthly part of man, and thus to live after it is
faulty: and for this reason, he who lives after man, assuredly lives not after
the flesh, but rather after that part of man, whereby he is man, that is, after
the spirit of the mind whereby he excels the beasts. But this discussion is
perhaps of some force in the schools of philosophers: but we, in order to
understand the Apostle of Christ, ought to observe in what manner the Christian books
are used to speak; at any rate it is the belief of all of us, to whom to live is
Christ, that Man was taken unto Himself by the Word of God, not surely without
a rational soul, as certain heretics will have it; and yet we read, "The Word
was made flesh."(4) What is to be here understood by "flesh," but Man? "And all
flesh shall see the salvation of God."(5) What can be understood, but all men?
"Unto Thee shall all flesh come."(6) What is it, but all men? "Thou hast given
unto Him power over all flesh."(7) What is it, but all men? "Of the works of
the Law shall no flesh be justified."(8) What is it, but no man shall be
justified? And this the same Apostle in another place confessing more plainly saith,
"Man shall not be justified of the works of the Law."(9) The Corinthians also he
rebukes, saying, "Are ye not carnal, and walk after man?"(10) After he had
called them carnal, he saith not, ye walk after the flesh, but after man,
forasmuch as by this also what would he have understood, but after the flesh? For
surely if to walk, that is, to live, after the flesh deserved blame, but after man
deserved praise, he would not say by way of rebuke, "ye walk after man." Let man
recognize the reproach; let him change his purpose, let him shun destruction.
Hear thou man: walk not thou after man, but after Him Who made man. Fall not
thou away from Him Who made thee, even unto thyself. For a man said, who yet
lived not after man, "Not that we are sufficient to think any thing from ourselves,
as though of ourselves: but our sufficiency is of God."(11) Consider if he
lived after man, who spake these things with truth. Therefore the Apostle,
admonishing man not to live after man, restores man to God. But whoso liveth not after
man, but after God, assuredly liveth not even after himself, because himself
also is a man. But he is therefore said also to live after the flesh, when he so
lives; because also when the flesh alone hath been named, man is understood,
as we have already shown: just as when the soul alone hath been named, man is
understood: whence it is said, "Let every soul be subject unto the higher
powers,"(12) that is, every man; and, "Seventy-five souls went down into Egypt with
Jacob,"(13) that is, seventy-five men. Therefore live thou not after thyself, O
man: thou hadst thence perished, but thou wast sought. Live not then, I say,
after thyself, O man; thou hadst thence perished, but thou wast found. Accuse not
thou the nature of the flesh, when you hear it said, "If ye shall live after
the flesh, ye shall die."(14) For thus could it be said, and most truly could it,
If ye shall live after yourselves ye shall die. For the devil hath not flesh,
and yet, because he would live after himself, "he abode not in the, truth."(1)
What wonder therefore, if, living after himself, "when he speaketh a lie, he
speaketh of his own," which the Truth spake truly of him.
12. When, therefore, you hear it said, "Sin shall not reign over you;"(2)
have not thou confidence of thyself, that sin reign not over thee, but of Him,
unto Whom a certain Saint saith in prayer, "Direct my paths after Thy Word, and
let no iniquity have dominion over me."(3) For lest haply, after that we had
heard, "sin shall not reign over you," we should lift up ourselves, and lay this
to our own strength, straightway the Apostle saw this, and added, "For ye are
not under the Law, but under Grace." Therefore, Grace causeth that sin reign
not over you. Do not thou, therefore, have confidence of thyself, lest it thence
reign much more over thee. And, when we hear it said, "If by the Spirit ye
shall mortify the deeds of the flesh, ye shall live,"(4) let us not lay this so
great good unto our own spirit, as though of itself it can do this. For, in order
that we should not entertain that carnal sense, the spirit being dead rather
than that which putteth others to death, straightway he added, "For as many as
are led by the Spirit of God, these are sons of God."(5) Therefore that by our
spirit we may mortify the works of the flesh, we are led by the Spirit of God,
Who gives Continence, whereby to curb, tame, overcome lust.
13. In this so great conflict, wherein man under Grace lives, and when,
being aided, he fights well, rejoices in the Lord with trembling, there yet are
not wanting even to valiant warriors, and mortifiers however unconquered of the
works of the flesh, some wounds of sins, for the healing of which they may say
daily, "Forgive us our debts:"(6) against the same vices, and against the devil
the prince and king of vices, striving with much greater watchfulness and
keenness by the very prayer, that his deadly suggestions avail not aught, whereby
he further urges the sinner to excuse rather than accuse his own sins; and thus
those wounds not only be not healed, but also, although they were not deadly,
yet may be pressed home to grievous and fatal harm. And here therefore there is
need of a more cautious Continence, whereby to restrain the proud appetite of
man; whereby he is selfpleased, and unwilling to be found worthy of blame, and
disdains, when he sins, to be convicted that he himself has sinned; not with
healthful humility taking upon him to accuse himself, but rather with fatal
arrogance seeking to find an excuse. In order to restrain this pride, he, whose words
I have already set down above, and, as I could, commended, sought Continence
from the Lord. For, after that he had said, "Set, O Lord, a watch to my mouth,
and a door of Continence around my lips. Make not my heart to fall aside unto
evil words;"(7) explaining more clearly whereof he spake this, he saith, "to make
excuses in sins." For what more evil than these words, whereby the evil man
denies that he is evil, although convicted of an evil work, which he cannot deny.
And since he cannot hide the deed, or say that it is well done, and still sees
that it is clear that it was done by him, he seeks to refer to another what he
hath done, as though he could remove thence what he hath deserved. Being
unwilling that himself be guilty, he rather adds to his guilt, and by excusing, not
accusing, his own sins, he knows not that he is putting from him, not
punishment, but pardon. For before human judges, forasmuch as they may be deceived, it
seems to profit somewhat for the time, to cleanse as it were what hath been done
amiss by any deceit whatever; but before God, Who cannot be deceived, we are
to use, not a deceitful defense, but a true confession of sins.
14. And some indeed, who are used to excuse their own sins, complain that
they are driven to sin by fate, as though the stars had decreed this, and
heaven had first sinned by decreeing such, in order that man should after sin by
committing such, and thus had rather impute their sin to fortune: who think that
all things are driven to and fro by chance accidents, and yet contend that this
their wisdom and assertion is not of chance rashness, but of ascertained
reason. What madness then is it, to lay to reason their discussions, and to make
their actions subject to accidents! Others refer to the devil the whole of what
they do ill: and will not have even a share with him, whereas they may suspect
whether he by hidden suggestions hath persuaded them to evil, and on the other
hand cannot doubt that they have consented to those suggestions, from whatever
source they have come. There are also they who extend their defense of self unto
an accusation of God, wretched by the divine judgment, but blasphemers by their
own madness. For against Him they bring in from a contrary principle a
substance of evil rebelling, which He could not have resisted, had He not blended with
that same that was rebelling a portion of His own Substance and Nature, for it
to contaminate and corrupt; and they say that they then sin when the nature of
evil prevails over the nature of God. This is that most unclean madness of the
Manichaeans, whose devilish devices the undoubted truth most easily overthrows;
which confesses that the nature of God is incapable of contamination and
corruption. But what wicked contamination and corruption do they not deserve to have
believed of them, by whom God, Who is good in the very highest degree, and in
a way that admits not of comparison, is believed to be capable of contamination
and corruption?
15. And there are also they who in excuse of their sins so accuse God, as
to say that sins are pleasing to Him. For, if they were displeasing, say they,
surely by His most Almighty power He would by no means suffer them to take
place. As though indeed God suffered sins to be unpunished, even in the case of
those whom by remission of sins He frees from eternal punishment! No one forsooth
receives pardon of more grievous punishment due, unless he hath suffered some
punishment, be it what it may, although far less than what was due: and the
fullness of mercy is so conveyed, as that the justice also of discipline is not
abandoned. For also sin, which seems unavenged, hath its own attendant punishment,
so that there is no one but by reason of what he hath done either suffers pain
from bitterness, or suffers not through blindness. As therefore you say, Why
doth He permit those things, if they are displeasing? so I say, Why doth He
punish them, if they are pleasing? And thus, as I confess that those things would
not take place at all, unless they were permitted by the Almighty, so confess
thou that what are punished by the Just One ought not to be done; in order that,
by not doing what He punishes, we may deserve to learn of Him, why He permits
to exist what He punishes. For, as it is written, " solid food is for the
perfect,"(1) wherein they who have made good progress already understand, that it
pertained rather unto the Almighty power of God, to allow the existence of evils
coming from the free choice of the will So great forsooth is His Almighty
goodness, as that even of evil He can make good, either by pardoning, or by healing,
or by fitting and turning unto the profit of the pious, or even by most justly
taking vengeance. For all these are good, and most worthy a good and Almighty
God: and yet they are not made save of evils. What therefore better, what more
Almighty, than He, Who, whereas He maketh no evil, even of evils maketh well?
They who have done ill cry unto Him, "Forgive us our debts;"(2) He hears, He
pardons. Their own evils have hurt the sinners; He helps and heals their
sicknesses. The enemies of His people rage; of their rage He makes martyrs. Lastly, also,
He condemns those, whom He judges worthy of condemnation; although they suffer
their own evils, yet He doeth what is good. For what is just cannot but be
good, and assuredly as sin is unjust, so the punishment of sin is just.
16. But God wanted not power to make man such as that he should not be
able to sin: but He chose rather to make him such, as that it should lie in his
power(3) to sin, if he would; not to sin, if he would not; forbidding the one,
enjoining the other; that it might be to him first a good desert not to sin, and
after a just reward not to be able to sin. For such also at the last will He
makes His Saints, as to be without all power to sin. Such forsooth even now hath
He His angels, whom in Him we so love, as to have no fear for any of them, lest
by sinning he become a devil. And this we presume not of any just man in this
mortal life. But we trust that all will be such in that immortal life. For
Almighty God Who worketh good even of our evils, what good will He give, when He
shall have set us free from all evils? Much may be said more fully and more
subtilely on the good use of evil; but this is not what we have undertaken in our
present discourse, and we must avoid in it excess of length.
17. Now therefore let us return to that, wherefore we have said what we
have. We have need of Continence, and we know it to be a divine gift, that our
heart fall not away unto evil words, to make excuses in sins. But what sin is
there but that we have need of Continence, to restrain it from being committed,
since it is this very Continence which, in case it have been committed, restrains
it from being defended by wicked pride? Universally therefore we have need of
Continence, in order to turn away from evil. But to do good seems to pertain to
another virtue, that is, to righteousness.(4) This the sacred Psalm admonishes
us, where we read, "Turn away from evil, and do good." But with what end we do
this, it adds bye and bye, saying, "Seek peace, and ensue it."(1) For we shall
then have perfect peace, when, our nature cleaving inseparably to its Creator,
we shall have nothing of ourselves opposed to ourselves. This our Saviour also
Himself would have us to understand, so far as seems to me when He said, "Let
your loins be girt, and your lamps burning."(2) What is it, to gird the loins?
To restrain lusts, which is the work of continence. But to have lamps burning
is to shine and glow with good works, which is the work of righteousness. Nor
was He here silent with what end we do these things, adding and saying, "And you
like unto men waiting for their Lord, when He cometh from the marriage."(3)
But, when He shall have come, He will reward us, who have kept ourselves from
those things which lust, and have done those things which charity hath bidden us:
that we may reign in His perfect and eternal peace, without any strife of evil,
and with the highest delight of good.
18. All we therefore, who believe in the Living and True God, Whose
Nature, being in the highest sense good and incapable of change, neither doth any
evil, nor suffers any evil, from Whom is every good, even that which admits of
decrease, and Who admits not at all of decrease in His own Good, Which is Himself,
when we hear the Apostle saying, "Walk in the Spirit, and perform ye not the
lusts of the flesh. For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit
against the flesh: For these are opposed one to another, that ye do not what ye
would."(4) Far be it from us to believe, what the madness of the Manichees
believes, that there are here shown two natures or principles contrary one to another
at strife, the one nature of good, the other of evil. Altogether these two are
both good; both the Spirit is a good, and the flesh a good: and man, who is
composed of both, one ruling, the other obeying, is assuredly a good, but a good
capable of change, which yet could not be made save by a Good incapable of
change, by Whom was created every good, whether small or great; but how small
soever, yet made by What is Great; and how great soever, yet no way to be compared
with the greatness of the Maker. But in this nature of man, that is good, and
well formed and ordered by One That is Good, there is now war, since there is not
yet health. Let the sickness be healed, there is peace. But that sickness
fault hath deserved, not nature hath had. And this fault indeed through the layer
of regeneration the grace of God hath already remitted unto the faithful; but
under the hands of the same Physician nature as yet striveth with its sickness.
But in such a conflict victory will be entire soundness; and that, soundness not
for a time, but for ever: wherein not only this sickness is to come to an end,
but also none to arise after it. Wherefore the just man addresseth his soul
and saith, "Bless the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all His returns: Who
becometh propitious to all thy iniquities, Who healeth all thy sicknesses."(5) He
becometh propitious to our iniquities, when He pardons sins: He heals sicknesses
when He restrains evil desires. He becometh propitious unto iniquities by the
grant of forgiveness: He heals sicknesses, by the grant of continence. The one
was done in Baptism to persons confessing; the other is done in the strife to
persons contending; wherein through His help we are to overcome our disease. Even
now the one is done, when we are heard, saying, "Forgive us our debts;"(6) but
the other, when we are heard, saying, "Lead us not into temptation. For every
one is tempted," saith the Apostle James, "being drawn away and enticed by his
own lust."(7) And against this fault there is sought the help of medicine from
Him, Who can heal all such sicknesses, not by the removal of a nature that is
alien from us, but in the renewal of our own nature. Whence also the
above-mentioned Apostle saith not, "Every one is tempted" by lust, but added, "by his own:"
that he who hears this may understand, how he ought to cry, "I said, Lord,
have mercy upon me, heal my soul, for I have sinned against Thee."(8) For it would
not have needed healing, had it not corrupted(9) itself by sinning, so that
its own flesh should lust against it, that is, itself should be opposed to
itself, on that side, wherein in the flesh it was made sick.
19. For the flesh lusts after nothing save through the soul, but the flesh
is said to lust against the spirit, when the soul with fleshly lust wrestles
against the spirit. This whole are we: and the flesh itself, which on the
departure of the soul dies, the lowest part of us is not put away as what we are to
flee from, but is laid aside as what we are to receive again, and, after having
received it, never again to leave. But "there is sown an animal body, there
shall rise again a spiritual body."(10) Then from that time the flesh will not
lust after any thing against the spirit, when as itself also shall be called
spiritual, forasmuch as not only without any opposition, but also without any need
of bodily aliment, it shall be for ever made subject unto the spirit, to be
quickened by Christ. Therefore these two things, which are now opposed the one to
the other within us, since we exist in both, let us pray and endeavor that they
may agree. For we ought not to think the one of them an enemy, but the fault,
whereby the flesh lusteth against the spirit: and this, when healed, will itself
cease to exist, and either substance will be safe, and no strife between
either. Let us hear the Apostle; "I know," saith he, "that there dwelleth not in me,
that is, in my flesh, any good."(1) This certainly he saith; that the fault of
the flesh, in a good thing, is not good; and, when this shall have ceased to
exist, it will be flesh, but it will not be now corrupted or faulty(2) flesh.
And yet that this pertains to our nature the same teacher shows, by saying,
first, "I know that there dwelleth not in me," in order to expound which, he added,
"that is, in my flesh, any good." Therefore he saith that his flesh is himself.
It is not then itself that is our enemy: and when its faults are resisted,
itself is loved, because itself is cared for; "For no one ever hated his own
flesh,"(3) as the Apostle himself saith. And in another place he saith, "So then I
myself with the mind serve the Law of God, but with the flesh the Law of sin."
Let them hear that have ears. "So then I myself;" I with the mind, I with the
flesh, but "with the mind I serve the Law of God, but with the flesh the law of
sin."(4) How "with the flesh the law of sin?" was it at all by consenting unto
fleshly lust? Far be it! but by having there motions of desires which he would
not have, and yet had. But, by not consenting to them, with the mind he served
the Law of God, and kept his members from becoming weapons of sins.
20. There are therefore in us evil desires, by consenting not unto which
we live not ill: there are in us lusts of sins, by obeying not which we perfect
not evil, but by having them do not as yet perfect good. The Apostle shows
both, that neither is good here perfected, where evil is so lusted after, nor evil
here perfected, whereas such lust is not obeyed. The one forsooth he shows,
where he says, "To will is present with me, but to perfect good is not;"(5) the
other, where he says, "Walk in the Spirit, and perfect not the lusts of the
flesh."(6) For neither in the former place doth he say that to do good is not with
him, but "to perfect," nor here doth he say, Have not "lusts of the flesh," but
"perfect not." Therefore there take place in us evil lusts, when that pleases
which is not lawful; but they are not perfected, when evil lusts are restrained
by the mind serving the Law of God. And good takes place, when that, which
wrongly pleases, takes not place through the good delight prevailing. But the
perfection of good is not fulfilled, so long as by the flesh serving the law of sin,
evil lust entices, and, although it be restrained, is yet moved. For there
would be no need for it to be restrained, were it not moved. There will be at some
time also the perfection of good, when the destruction of evil: the one will
be highest, the other will be no more. And if we think that this is to be hoped
for in this mortal state, we are deceived. For it shall be then, when death
shall not be; and it shall be there, where shall be life eternal. For in that
world,(7) and in that kingdom, there shall be highest good, no evil: when there
shall be, and where there shall be, highest love of wisdom, no labor of
continence. Therefore the flesh is not evil, if it be void of evil, that is, of fault,
whereby man was rendered faulty, not made ill, but himself making. For on either
part, that is, both soul and body, being made good by the good God, himself
made the evil, whereby he was made evil. From the guilt of which evil being
already also set free through forgiveness,(8) that he may not think what he hath done
to be light, he yet wars with his own fault through continence. But far be it
that there be any faults in such as reign in that peace which shall be
hereafter; since in this state of war there are lessened daily in such as make
progress, not sins only, but the very lusts also, with which, by not consenting, we
strive, and by consenting unto which we sin.
21. That, therefore, the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, that there
dwelleth not in our flesh good, that the law in our members is opposed to the law
of the mind, is not a mingling of two natures caused of contrary principles, but
a division of one against itself caused through desert of sin. We were not so
in Adam, before that nature, having listened to and followed its deceiver, had
despised and offended its Creator: that is, not the former life of man created,
but the latter punishment of man condemned. From which condemnation when set
free by Grace, through Jesus Christ, being free they contend with their
punishment, having received not as yet full salvation, but already a pledge of
salvation: but when not set free, they are both guilty by reason of sins, and involved
in punishments. But after this life for the guilty there will remain for ever
punishment for their crime: for the free there will no more remain for ever
either crime or punishment: but the good substances, spirit and flesh, will
continue for ever, which God, Who is good, and incapable of change, created good
although capable of change. But they will continue having been changed for the
better, never from this time to be changed for the worse: all evil being utterly
destroyed, both what man hath unjustly done, and what he hath justly suffered.
And, these two kinds of evil perishing utterly, whereof the one is of iniquity
going before, the other of unhappiness following after, the will of man will be
upright without any depravity. There it will be clear and plain to all, what now
many of the faithful believe, few understand, that evil is not a substance: but
that, as a wound in a body, so in a substance, which hath made itself faulty,
it hath begun to exist, when the disease hath commenced, and ceaseth to exist
in it, when the healing hath been perfected. Therefore, all evil having arisen
from us, and having been destroyed in us, our good also having been increased
and perfected unto the height of most happy incorruption and immortality, of what
kind shall either of our substances be? forasmuch as now, in this corruption
and mortality, when as yet "the corruptible body weigheth down the soul;"(1)
and, what the Apostle saith, "the body is dead by reason of sin;"(2) yet the same
himself beareth such witness unto our flesh, that is, to our lowest and earthly
part, as to say, what I made mention of a little above, "No one ever hated his
own flesh."(3) And to add straightway, "but nourisheth and cherisheth it, as
also Christ the Church."
22. I say not, therefore, with what error, but with what utter madness, do
the Manichees attribute our flesh to some, I know not what, fabled "race of
darkness,"(4) which they will have hath had its own nature without any beginning
ever evil: whereas the true teacher exhorts men to love their own wives by the
pattern of their own flesh, and exhorts them unto this very thing by the
pattern also of Christ and the Church. Lastly, we must call to mind the whole place
itself of the Epistle of the Apostle, relating greatly unto the matter in hand.
"Husbands," saith he, "love your wives, as Christ also loved the Church, and
delivered Himself up for it, that He might sanctify it, cleansing it by the laver
of the water in the word: that He might set forth unto Himself a glorious
Church, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing, but that it may be holy and
unspotted. So," saith he, "husbands also ought to love their own wives, as
their own bodies. Whoso loveth his own wife, loveth himself."(5) Then he added,
what we have already made mention of, "For no man ever hated his own flesh, but
nourisheth it, and cherisheth it; as also Christ the Church."(6) What saith the
madness of most impure impiety in answer to these things? What say ye in answer
to these things, ye Manichees; ye who wish to bring in upon us, as if out of
the Epistles of the Apostles, two natures without beginning, one of good, the
other of evil: and will not listen to the Epistles of the Apostles, that they may
correct you from that sacrilegious perverseness? As ye read, "The flesh
lusteth against the spirit,"(7) and, "There dwelleth not in my flesh any good;"(8) so
read ye, "No one ever hated his own flesh, but nourisheth and cherisheth it,
as also Christ the Church."(9) As ye read, "I see another law in my members,
opposed to the law of my mind;"(10) so read ye, "As Christ loved the Church, so
also ought men to love their own wives, as their own bodies." Be not ye crafty in
the former witnesses of Holy Scripture, and deaf in this latter, and ye shall
be correct in both. For, if ye receive the latter as right is, ye will endeavor
to understand the former also as truth is.
23. The Apostle has made known to us certain three unions, Christ and the
Church, husband and wife, spirit and flesh. Of these the former consult for the
good of the latter, the latter wait upon the former. All the things are good,
when, in them, certain set over by way of pre-eminence, certain made subject in
a becoming manner, observe the beauty of order. Husband and wife receive
command and pattern how they ought to be one with another. The command is, "Let
wives be subject unto their own husbands, as unto the Lord; because the husband is
the head of the wife;"(11) and, "Husbands, love your wives." But there is given
a pattern, unto wives from the Church, unto husbands from Christ: "As the
Church," saith he, "is subject unto Christ, so also wives unto their own husbands
in all things." In like manner also, having given command to husbands to love
their own wives, he added a pattern, "As Christ loved the Church." But husbands
he exhorted to it from a lower matter also, that is, from their own body: not
only from a higher, that is, from their Lord. For he not only saith, "Husbands,
love your wives, as Christ also loved the Church," which is from an higher: but
he said also, "Husbands ought to love their own wives, as their own bodies,"
which is from a lower: because both higher and lower are all good. And yet the
woman received not pattern from the body, or flesh, to be so subject to the
husband as the flesh to the spirit; but either the Apostle would have understood by
consequence, what he omitted to state: or haply because the flesh lusteth
against the spirit in the mortal and sick estate of this life, therefore he would
not set the woman a pattern of subjection from it. But the men he would for this
reason, because, although the spirit lusteth against the flesh, even in this it
consults for the good of the flesh: not like as the flesh lusting against the
spirit, by such opposition consulteth neither for the good of the spirit, nor
for its own. Yet the good spirit would not consult for its good, whether by
nourishing and cherishing its nature by forethought, or by resisting its faults by
continence, were it not that each substance showeth God to be the Creator of
each, even by the seemliness of this its order. What is it, therefore, that with
true madness ye both boast yourselves to be Christians, and with so great,
perverseness contend against the Christian Scriptures, with eyes closed, or rather
put out, asserting both that Christ hath appeared, unto mortals in false flesh,
and that the Church in the soul pertains to Christ, in the body to the devil,
and that the male and female sex are works of the devil, not of God, and that
the flesh is joined unto the spirit, as an evil substance unto a good
substance?
24. If what we have made mention of out of the Apostolic Epistles seem to
you to fall short of an answer, hear yet others, if ye have ears. What saith
the utterly mad Manichaean of the Flesh of Christ? That it was not true, but
false. What saith the blessed Apostle to this? "Remember that Christ Jesus rose
again from the dead of the seed of David, according to my Gospel."(1) And Christ
Jesus Himself saith, "Handle and see, that a spirit hath not flesh and bones, as
ye see me to have."(2) How is there truth in their doctrine, which asserts
that in the Flesh of Christ there was falsehood? How was there in Christ no evil,
in Whom was so great a lie? Because forsooth to men over-clean true flesh is an
evil, and false flesh instead of true is not an evil: it is an evil, true
flesh of one born of the seed of David, and it is no evil, false tongue of one
saying, "Handle, and see, that a spirit hath not flesh and bones, as ye see me to
have." Of the Church what saith the deceiver of men with deadly error? That on
the side of souls it pertains unto Christ, on the side of bodies unto the
devil? What to this saith the Teacher of the Gentiles in faith and truth? "Know ye
not," saith he, " that your bodies are members of Christ?"(3) Of the sex of male
and female what saith the son of perdition? That either sex is not of God, but
of the devil. What to this saith the Vessel of Election? "As," saith he, "the
woman from out the man, so also the man through the woman: but all things of
God."(4) Of the flesh what saith the unclean spirit through the Manichaean? That
it is an evil substance, and not the creation of God, but of an enemy. What to
this saith the Holy Spirit through Paul? "For as the body is one," saith he,
"and hath many members, but all the members of the body, being many, are one
body: so also is Christ."(5) And a little after; "God hath set," saith he, "the
members, each one of them in the body, as He willed."(6) Also a little after;
"God," saith he, "hath tempered the body, giving greater honor unto that to which
it was wanting, that there should be no schisms in the body, but that the
members have the self-same care one for another: and whether one member suffer, all
the members suffer with it: or one member be glorified, all the members rejoice
with it."(7) How is the flesh evil, when the souls themselves are admonished to
imitate the peace of its members? How is it the creation of the enemy, when
the souls themselves, which rule the bodies, take pattern from the members of the
body, not to have schisms of enmities among themselves, in order that, what
God hath granted unto the body by nature, this themselves also may love to have
by grace? With good cause, writing to the Romans, "I beseech you," saith he,
"brethren, by the mercy of God, that ye present your bodies a sacrifice, living,
holy, pleasing to God."(8) Without reason we contend that darkness is not light,
nor light darkness, if we present a sacrifice, living, holy, pleasing to God,
of the bodies of the "nation of darkness."
25. But, say they, how is the flesh by a certain likeness compared unto
the Church? What! doth the Church lust against Christ? whereas the same Apostle
said, "The Church is subject unto Christ."(9) Clearly the Church is subject unto
Christ; because the spirit therefore lusteth against the flesh, that on every
side the Church may be made subject to Christ; but the flesh lusteth against
the spirit, because not as yet hath the Church received that peace which was
promised perfect. And for this reason the Church is made subject unto Christ for
the pledge of salvation, and the flesh lusteth against the spirit from the
weakness of sickness. For neither were those other than members of the Church, unto
whom he thus spake, "Walk in the spirit, and fulfill not the lusts of the flesh.
For the flesh lusteth against the spirit, and the spirit against the flesh;
for these are opposed the one to the other; that ye do not what we would."(1)
These things were assuredly spoken unto the Church, which if it were not made
subject unto Christ, the spirit would not in it lust against the flesh through
continence. By reason of which they were indeed able not to perfect the lusts of
the flesh, but through the flesh lusting against the Spirit they were not able to
do the things which they would, that is, not even to have the very lusts of
the flesh. Lastly, why should we not confess that in spiritual men the Church is
subject unto Christ, but in carnal men yet lusteth against Christ? Did not they
lust against Christ unto whom it was said, "Is Christ divided?"(2) and, "I
could not speak unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto carnal. I have given unto
yon milk to drink as unto babes in Christ, not meat, for ye were not as yet
able; but not even now are ye able: for ye are still carnal. For whereas there is
among you emulation, and strife, are ye not carnal?"(3) Against whom doth
emulation and strife lust, but against Christ? For these lusts of the flesh Christ
healeth in His own, but loveth in none. Whence the holy Church, so long as it
hath such members, is not yet without spot or wrinkle. To these are added those
other sins also, for which the daily cry of the whole Church is, "Forgive us our
debts:"(4) and, that we should not think spiritual persons exempt from these,
not any one soever of carnal persons, nor any one soever of spiritual persons
themselves, but he, who lay on the breast of the Lord,(5) and whom He loved
before others, saith, "If we shall say that we have not sin, we deceive ourselves,
and the truth is not in us."(6) But in every sin, more in what is greater, less
in what is less, there is an act of lust against righteousness. And of Christ
it is written: "Who was made unto us by God, Wisdom, and Righteousness, and
Sanctification, and Redemption."(7) In every sin therefore without doubt there is
an act of lust against Christ. But when He, Who "healeth all our
sicknesses,"(8) a shall have led His Church unto the promised healing of sickness, then in
none of its members shall there be any, even the very least spot or wrinkle. Then
in no way shall the flesh lust against the spirit, and therefore there shall
be no cause why the spirit also lust against the flesh. Then all this conflict
shall come to an end, then there shall be the highest concord of both
substances; then to such a degree shall no one there be carnal, that even the flesh
itself shall be spiritual. What therefore each one living after Christ doth with his
flesh, whereas he both lusts against its evil lust, which he restrains,
hereafter to be healed, which he holds, not yet healed; and yet nourisheth and
cherisheth its good nature, since "no one ever hated his own flesh,"(9) this also
Christ doth with the Church, so far as it is lawful to compare lesser with greater
matters. For He both represses it with rebukes, that it burst not being puffed
up with impunity; and raises it up with consolations, that it sink not being
weighed down with infirmity. Hence is that of the Apostle, "For if we would
judge ourselves, we should not be judged; but when we are judged, we are rebuked of
the Lord, that we be not condemned with this world."(10) And that in the
Psalm, "After the multitude of my griefs in my heart, Thy consolations have
gladdened my soul."(11) We are therefore then to hope for perfect soundness of our
flesh without any opposition, when there shall be sure security of the Church of
Christ without any fear.
26. Thus much will suffice to have treated on behalf of true Continence
against the Manichees deceitfully continent, lest the fruitful and glorious labor
of Continence, when it restrains and curbs the lowest part of us, that is, the
body, from immoderate and unlawful pleasures, be believed not healthfully to
chasten, but hostilely to persecute. Forsooth the body is indeed different from
the nature of the soul, yet is it not alien from the nature of man: for the
soul is not made up of body, but yet man is made up of soul and body: and
assuredly, whom God frees, He frees the whole man. Whence our Saviour Himself also took
upon Him the whole man, having deigned to free in us all that He made. They
who hold contrary to this truth, what doth it profit them to restrain lusts? if,
that is, they restrain any. What in them can be made clean through Continence,
whose such Continence is unclean? and which ought not to be called Continence.
Forsooth to hold what they hold is the poison of the devil; but Continence is
the gift of God. But as not every one who suffers any thing, or with the
greatest endurance suffers any pain whatever, possesses that virtue, which in like
manner is the gift of God, and is called Patience; for many endure many torments,
in order not to betray either such as are wickedly privy with them in their
crimes, or themselves; many in order to satiate glowing lusts, and to obtain, or
not to abandon those things, whereunto they are bound by chain of evil love;
many on behalf of different and destructive errors, whereby they are strongly
held: of all of whom far be it from us to say that they have true patience: thus
not every one, who contains in any thing, or who marvellously retrains even the
very lusts of the flesh, or mind, is to be said to possess that continence, of
the profit and beauty of which we are treating. For certain, what may seem
marvellous to say, through incontinence contain themselves: as if a woman were to
contain herself from her husband, because she hath sworn this to an adulterer.
Certain through injustice, as if spouse yield not to spouse the due of sexual
intercourse, because he or she is already able to overcome such appetite of the
body. Also certain contain deceived by false faith, and hoping what is vain, and
following after what is vain: among whom are all heretics, and whosoever under
the name of religion are deceived by any error: whose continence would be true,
if their faith also were true: but, whereas that is not to be called faith, on
this account, because it is false; without doubt that also is unworthy the
name of continence. For what? are we prepared to call continence, which we must
truly say is the gift of God, sin? Far be from our hearts so hateful madness. But
the blessed Apostle saith "Every thing that is not of faith is sin."(1) What
therefore hath not faith, is not to be called continence.
27. There are also they who, in doing open service to evil demons, contain
from pleasures of the body, that, through their means, they may satisfy
unlawful pleasures, the violence and glow whereof they contain not. Whence also, (to
name one case, and pass over the rest in silence by reason of the length of the
discourse,) certain come not near even unto their own wives, whilst, as
though clean, they essay through magic arts to gain access unto the wives of
others. O marvellous continence, nay rather, singular wickedness and uncleanness!
For, if it were true continence, the lust of the flesh ought rather to contain
from adultery, than, in order to commit adultery, from marriage. Forsooth marriage
continence is wont to ease this lust of the flesh, and to check its curb but
thus far, that neither in marriage itself it run riot by immoderate license, but
that a measure be observed, either such as is due to the weakness of the
spouse, unto whom the Apostle enjoins not this, as of command, but yields it as of
permission;(2) or such as is suited for the begetting of sons, which was
formerly the one alone occasion of sexual intercourse to both holy fathers and
mothers. But continence doing this, that is, moderating, and in a certain way limiting
in married persons the lust of the flesh, and ordering in a certain way within
fixed limits its unquiet and inordinate motion, uses well the evil of man,
whom it makes and wills to make perfect good: as God uses even evil men, for their
sake whom He perfects in goodness.
28. Far be it therefore that we say of continence, of which Scripture
saith. "And this very thing was wisdom, to know whose gift it was,"(3) that even
they possess it, who, by containing, either serve errors, or overcome any lesser
desires for this purpose, that they may fulfill others, by the greatness of
which they are overcome. But that continence which is true, coming from above,
wills not to repress some evils by other evils, but to heal all evils by goods.
And, briefly to comprehend its mode of action, it is the place of continence to
keep watch to restrain and heal all delights whatsoever of lust, which are
opposed to the delight of wisdom. Whence without doubt they set it within too
narrow bounds, who limit it to restraining the lusts of the body alone: certainly
they speak better, who say that it pertains to Continence to rule in general lust
or desire. Which desire is set down as a fault, nor is it only of the body,
but also of the soul. For, if the desire of the body be in fornications and
drunkennesses; hard enmities, strifes, emulations, lastly, hatreds, their exercise
in the pleasure of the body, and not rather in the motion and troubled states of
the soul? Yet the Apostle called all these "works of the flesh," whether what
pertained to the soul, or what pertained properly to the flesh, calling
forsooth the man himself by the name of the flesh.(4) Forsooth they are the works of
man, whatsoever are not called works of God; forasmuch as man, who does these,
lives after himself, not after God, so far as he does these. But there are other
works of man, which are rather to be called works of God. "For it is God,"(5)
saith the Apostle, "Who worketh in you both to will and to do, according to His
good pleasure." Whence also is that, "For as many as are led by the spirit of
God, these are sons of God."(1)
29. Thus the spirit of man, cleaving unto the Spirit of God, lusts against
the flesh, that is, against itself: but for itself, in order that those
motions, whether in the flesh or in the soul, after man, not after God, which as yet
exist through the sickness man hath gotten, may be restrained by continence,
that so health may be gotten; and man, not living after man, may now be able to
say, "But I live, now not I, but there liveth in me Christ."(2) For where not I,
there more happily I: and, when any evil motion after man arises, unto which
he, who with the mind serves the Law of God, consents not, let him say that
also, "Now it is not I that do this."(3) To such forsooth are said those words,
which we, as partners and sharers with them, ought to listen to.(4) "If ye have
risen together with Christ, seek the things that are above, where Christ is
sitting at the Right Hand of God: minds the things that are above, not what are upon
earth. For ye are dead, and your life is hid with Christ in God: when Christ
your life shall have appeared, then ye also shall appear with Him in glory." Let
us understand unto whom he is speaking, yea, rather, let us listen with more
attention. For what more plain than this? what more clear? He is certainly
speaking unto those, who had risen again with Christ, not yet surely in the flesh,
but in the mind: whom he calls dead, and on this account the more living: for
"your life," saith he, "is hid with Christ in God." Of such dead the speech is:
"But I live, now not I, but there liveth in me Christ." They therefore, whose
life was hidden in God, are admonished and exhorted to mortify their members,
which are upon the earth. For this follows, "Mortify, therefore, your members,
which are upon the earth." And, lest any through excess of dullness should think
that such are to mortify the members of the body that are seen, straightway
opening what it is he saith, "Fornication," saith he, "uncleanness, passion, evil
lust, and covetousness, which is idolatry."(6) But is it so to be believed, that
they, who were already dead, and their life hidden with Christ in God, were
still committing fornication, were still living in unclean habits and works, were
still slaves to passions of evil lust and covetousness? What madman would thus
think of such? What, therefore, would he that they mortify, save the motions
themselves still living in a certain intrusion(7) of their own, without the
consent of our mind, without the action of the members of the body? And how are
they mortified by the work of continence, save when we consent not to them with
the mind, nor are the members of the body yielded to them as weapons; and, what
is greater, and to be looked to with yet greater watchfulness of continence, our
very thought itself, although in a certain way it be touched by their
suggestion, and as it were, whisper, yet turns away from these, that it receive not
delight from them, and turns to more delightful thoughts of things above: on this
account naming them in discourse, that men abide not in them, but flee from
them. And this is brought to pass, if we listen effectually, with His help, Who,
through His Apostle gives this command, "Seek things that are above, where
Christ is sitting at the Right Hand of God. Mind the things that are above, not what
are on earth."(8)
30. But, after that he had made mention of these evils, he added and said,
"On account of which cometh the wrath of God on the sons of unbelief."(9)
Surely it was a wholesome alarm that believers might not think that they could be
saved on account of their faith alone, even although they should live in these
evils: the Apostle James with most clear speech crying out against that notion,
and saying, "If any say that he have faith, and have not works, shall his faith
be able to save him?(10) Whence also here the Teacher of the Gentiles said,
that on account of these evils the wrath of God cometh on the sons of unbelief.
But when he saith, "Wherein ye also walked sometime, when ye were living
therein;"(11) he shows sufficiently that now they were not living therein. Forsooth
unto these they had died, that their life might be hidden in God with Christ.
When then they were now not living in them, they were now bidden to mortify such.
Forsooth, themselves not living in the same, the things were living, as I have
already shown a little above, and were called their members, that is to say,
those faults which dwelt in their members; by a way of speech, that which is
contained through that which contains; as it is said, The whole Forum talks of it,
when men talk who are in the Forum. In this very way of speech it is sung in
the Psalm, "Let all the earth worship Thee:"(12)that is, all men who are in the
earth.
31. "But now do ye also," saith he, "put down all;" (13) and he makes
mention of several more evils of that sort. But what is it, that it is not enough
for him to say, "Do ye put down all," but that he added the conjunction and
said, "ye also?" save that lest they should not think that they did those evils and
lived in them with impunity on this account, because their faith set them free
from wrath, which cometh upon the sons of unbelief, doing these things, and
living in them without faith. Do ye also, saith he, put down those evils, on
account of which cometh the wrath of God on the children of unbelief; nor promise
yourselves impunity of them on account of merit of faith. But he would not say,
"put ye down," unto those who had already laid down so far as that they
consented not to such faults, nor were yielding their members to them as weapons of
sin, save that the life of Saints stands in this past deed, and is still engaged
in this work, so long as we are mortal. For, so long as the Spirit lusteth
against the flesh, this business proceeds with great earnestness, resistance is
offered unto evil delights, unclean lusts, carnal and shameful motions, by the
sweetness of holiness, by the love of chastity, by spiritual vigor, and by the
beauty of continence; thus they are laid down by them who are dead to them, and
who live not in them by consenting. Thus, I say, they are put down, whilst they
are weighed down by continued continence, that they rise not again. Whosoever,
as though secure, shall, cease from this laying aside of them, straightway they
will assault the Citadel of the mind, and will themselves put it down thence,
and will reduce it into slavery to them, captive after a base and unseemly
fashion. Then sin will reign in the mortal body of man to obey its desires; then
will it yield its members weapons of unrighteousness unto sin:(1) and the last
state of that man shall be worse than the former.(2) For it is much more tolerable
not to have begun a contest of this kind, than after one hath begun to have
left the conflict, and to have become in place of a good warrior, or even in
place of a conqueror, a captive. Whence the Lord saith not, whoso shall begin, but
"Whoso shall persevere unto the end, he shall be saved."(3)
32. But whether keenly contending, that we be not overcome, or overcoming
divers times, or even with unhoped and unlooked for ease, let us give the glory
unto Him Who giveth continence unto us. Let us remember that a certain just
man said, "I shall never be moved:" and that it was showed him how rashly he had
said this, attributing as though to his own strength, what was given to him
from above. But this we have learnt from his own confession: for soon after he
added, "Lord, in Thy will Thou hast given strength to my beauty; but Thou hast
turned away Thy Face, and I was troubled."(4) Through a remedial Providence he was
for a short time deserted by his Ruler, in order that he might not himself
through deadly pride desert his Ruler. Therefore, whether here, where we engage
with our faults in order to subdue and make them less, or there, as it shall be
in the end, where we shall be void of every enemy, because of all infection,(5)
it is for our health that we are thus dealt with, in order that, "whoso
glorieth, he may glory in the Lord."(6)