A TREATISE ON THE MERITS AND FORGIVENESS OF SINS, AND ON THE BAPTISM OF
INFANTS, BY AURELIUS AUGUSTIN, BISHOP OF HIPPO, ADDRESSED TO MARCELLINUS, A.D. 412
(BOOK III)
BOOK III.
IN THE SHAPE OF A LETTER ADDRESSED TO THE SAME MARCELLINUS.
IN WHICH AUGUSTIN REFUTES SOME ERRORS OF PELAGIUS ON THE QUESTION OF THE
MERITS OF SINS AND THE BAPTISM OF INFANTS--BEING SUNDRY ARGUMENTS OF HIS WHICH HE
HAD INTERSPERSED AMONG HIS EXPOSITIONS OF SAINT PAUL, IN OPPOSITION TO ORIGINAL
SIN.
To his beloved son Marcellinus, Augustin, bishop and servant of Christ and of
the servants of Christ, sendeth greeting in the Lord.
CHAP. 1 [I.]--PELAGIUS ESTEEMED A HOLY MAN; HIS EXPOSITIONS ON SAINT PAUL.
THE questions which you proposed that I should write to you about, in
opposition to those persons who say that Adam would have died even if he had not
sinned, and that nothing of his sin has passed to his posterity by natural
transmission; and especially on the subject of the baptism of infants, which the
universal Church, with most pious and maternal care, maintains in constant
celebration; and whether in this life there are, or have been, or ever will be,
children of men without any sin at all--I have already discussed in two lengthy books.
And I venture to think that if in them I have not met all the points which
perplex all men's minds on such matters (an achievement which, I apprehend,--nay,
which I have no doubt,--lies beyond the power either of myself, or of any other
person), I have at all events prepared something in the shape of a firm ground
on which those who defend the faith delivered to us by our fathers, against
the novel opinions of its opponents, may at any time take their stand, not
unarmed for the contest. However, within the last few days I have read some writings
by Pelagius,--a holy man, as I am told, who has made no small progress in the
Christian life,--containing some very brief expository notes on the epistles of
the Apostle Paul; (1) and therein I found, on coming to the passage where the
apostle says, "By one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so
it passed upon all men," (2) an argument which is used by those who say that
infants are not burdened with original sin. Now I confess that I have not refuted
this argument in my lengthy treatise, because it did not indeed once occur to
me that anybody was capable of thinking such sentiments. Being, however,
unwilling to add to that work, which I had concluded, I have thought it right to
insert in this epistle both the argument itself in the very words in which I read
it, and the answer which it seems to me proper to give to it.
CHAP. 2 [II.]--PELAGIUS' OBJECTION; INFANTS RECKONED AMONG THE NUMBER OF
BELIEVERS AND THE FAITHFUL.
In these terms, then, the argument is stated: --"But they who deny the
transmission of sin endeavour to impugn it thus: If (say they) Adam's sin injured
even those who do not sin, therefore Christ's righteousness also profits even
those who do not believe; because 'In like manner, nay, much more,' he says,
'are men saved by one, than they had previously perished by one.'" Now to this
argument, I repeat, I advanced no reply in the two books which I previously
addressed to you; nor, indeed, had I proposed to myself such a task. But now I beg
you first of all to observe, when they say, "If Adam's sin injures even those who
do not sin, then Christ's righteousness also profits even those who do not
believe," how absurd and false they judge it to be, that the righteousness of
Christ should profit even those who do not believe; and that thence they think to
put together such an argument as this: That no more could the first man's sin
possibly do injury to infants who commit no sin, than the righteousness of Christ
can benefit any who do not believe. Let them therefore tell us what is the
benefit of Christ's righteousness to baptized infants; let them by all means tell
us what they mean. For of course, since they do not forget that they are
Christians themselves, they have no doubt that there is some benefit. But whatever be
this benefit, it is incapable (as they themselves assert) of benefiting those
who do not believe. Whence they are compelled to class baptized infants in the
number of believers, and to assent to the authority of the Holy Universal
Church, which does not account those unworthy of the name of believers, to whom the
righteousness of Christ could be, according to them, of no use except as
believers. As, therefore, by the answer of those, through whose agency they are born
again, the Spirit of righteousness transfers to them that faith which, of their
own will, they could not yet have; so the sinful flesh of those, through whose
agency they are born, transfers to them that injury, which they have not yet
contracted in their own life. And even as the Spirit of life regenerates them in
Christ as believers, so also the body of death had generated them in Adam as
sinners. The one generation is carnal, the other Spiritual; the one makes
children of the flesh, the other children of the Spirit; the one children of death,
the other children of the resurrection; the one the children of the world, the
other the children of God; the one children of wrath, the other children of
mercy; and thus the one binds them under original sin, the other liberates them
from the bond of every sin.
CHAP. 3.--PELAGIUS MAKES GOD UNJUST.
We are driven at last to yield our assent on divine authority to that
which we are unable to investigate with even the dearest intellect. It is well that
they remind us themselves that Christ's righteousness is unable to profit any
but believers, while they yet allow that it somewhat profits infants; according
to this (as we have already said) they must, without evasion, find room for
baptized infants among the number of believers. Consequently, if they are not
baptized, they will have to rank amongst those who do not believe; and therefore
they will not even have life, but "the wrath of God abideth on them," inasmuch
as "he that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God
abideth on him;" (1) and they are under judgment, since "he that believeth not is
condemned already;" (2) and they shall be condemned, since "he that believeth,
and is baptized, shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned." (3)
Let them, now, then see to it with what justice they can hold or strive to
maintain that human beings have no part in eternal life, but in the wrath of God,
and incur the divine judgment and condemnation, who are without sin; if, that
is, as they cannot have any actual sin, so also they have within them no original
sin.
CHAP. 4.
To the other points which Pelagius makes them urge who argue against
original sin, I have already, I think, sufficiently and clearly replied in the two
former books of my lengthy treatise. Now if my reply should seem to any persons
to be brief or obscure, I beg their pardon, and request the favour of their
coming to terms with those who perhaps censure my treatise, not for being too
brief, but rather as being too long; whilst any who still do not understand the
points which I cannot help thinking I have explained as clearly as the nature of
the subject allowed me, shall certainly hear no blame or reproach from me for
indifference, or want of understanding me. (4) I would rather that they should
pray God to give them intelligence.
CHAP. 5 [III.]--PELAGIUS PRAISED BY SOME; ARGUMENTS AGAINST ORIGINAL SIN
PROPOSED BY PELAGIUS IN HIS COMMENTARY.
But we must not indeed omit to observe that this good and praiseworthy man
(as they who know him describe him to be) has not advanced this argument
against the natural transmission of sin in his own person, but has reproduced what
is alleged by those persons who disapprove of the doctrine, and this, not merely
so far as I have just quoted and confuted the allegation, but also as to those
other points on which I have now further undertaken to furnish a reply. Now,
after saying, "If (they say) Adam's sin injured even those who do not sin,
therefore Christ's righteousness also profits even those who do not believe,"--which
sentence, you will perceive from what I have said in answer to it, is not only
not repugnant to what we hold, but even reminds us what we ought to hold,--he
at once goes on to add, "Then they contend, if baptism cleanses away that old
sin, those children who are born of two baptized parents must needs be free from
this sin, for they could not have transmitted to their children what they did
not possess themselves. Besides," says he, "if the soul is not of transmission,
but only the flesh, then only the latter has the transmission of sin, and it
alone deserves punishment; for they allege that it would be unjust for the soul,
which is only now born, and comes not of the lump of Adam, to bear the burden
of so old an alien sin. They say, likewise," says Pelagius, "that it cannot by
any means be conceded that God, who remits to a man his own sins, should impute
to him another's."
CHAP. 6.--WHY PELAGIUS DOES NOT SPEAK IN HIS OWN PERSON.
Pray, don't you see how Pelagius has inserted the whole of this paragraph
in his writings, not in his own person, but in that of others, knowing so well
the novelty of this unheard-of doctrine, which is now beginning to raise its
voice against the ancient ingrafted opinion of the Church, that he was ashamed
or afraid to acknowledge it himself? And perhaps he does not himself think that
a man is born without sin for whom he confesses that baptism to be necessary by
which comes the remission of sins; or that the man is condemned without sin
who must be reckoned, when unbaptized, in the class of non-believers, since the
gospel of course cannot deceive us, when it most clearly asserts, "He that
believeth not shall be damned;" (1) or, lastly, that the image of God, when without
sin, is not admitted into the kingdom of God, forasmuch as "except a man be
born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God,"
(2)--and so must either be precipitated into eternal death without sin, or, what is
still more absurd, must have eternal life outside the kingdom of God; for the
Lord, when foretelling what He should say to His people at last,--"Come, ye
blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the beginning of the
world," (3)--also clearly indicated what the kingdom was of which He was
speaking, by concluding thus: "So these shall go away into everlasting punishment;
but the righteous into life eternal." (4) These opinions, then, and others which
spring from the central error, I believe so worthy a man, and so good a
Christian, does not at all accept, as being too perverse and repugnant to Christian
truth. But it is quite possible that he may, by the very arguments of those who
deny the transmission of sin, be still so far distressed as to be anxious to
hear or know what can be said in reply to them; and on this account he was both
unwilling to keep silent the tenets propounded by them who deny the transmission
of sin, in order that he might get the question in due time discussed, and, at
the same time, declined to report the opinions in his own person, lest he
should be supposed to entertain them himself.
CHAP. 7 [IV.]--PROOF OF ORIGINAL SIN IN INFANTS.
Now, although I may not be able myself to refute the arguments of these
men, I yet see how necessary it is to adhere closely to the clearest statements
of the Scriptures, in order that the obscure passages may be explained by help
of these, or, if the mind be as yet unequal to either perceiving them when
explained, or investigating them whilst abstruse, let them be believed without
misgiving. But what can be plainer than the many weighty testimonies of the divine
declarations, which afford to us the dearest proof possible that without union
with Christ there is no man who can attain to eternal life and salvation; and
that no man can unjustly be damned,--that is, separated from that life and
salvation,--by the judgment of God? The inevitable conclusion from these truths is
this, that, as nothing else is effected when infants are baptized except that
they are incorporated into the church, in other words, that they are united with
the body and members of Christ, unless this benefit has been bestowed upon them,
they are manifestly in danger of (5) damnation. Damned, however, they could
not be if they really had no sin. Now, since their tender age could not possibly
have contracted sin in its own life, it remains for us, even if we are as yet
unable to understand, at least to believe that infants inherit original sin.
CHAP. 8.--JESUS IS THE SAVIOUR EVEN OF INFANTS.
And therefore, if there is an ambiguity in the apostle's words when he
says, "By one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so it passed
upon all men;" (6) and if it is possible for them to be drawn aside, and applied
to some other sense,--is there anything ambiguous in this statement: "Except a
man be born again of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom
of God?" (2) Is this, again, ambiguous: "Thou shalt call His name Jesus, for
He shall save His people from their sins?" (7) Is there any doubt of what this
means: "The whole need not a physician, but they that are sick?" (8)--that is,
Jesus is not needed by those who have no sin, but by those who are to be saved
from sin. Is there anything, again, ambiguous in this: "Except men eat the flesh
of the Son of man," that is, become partakers of His body, "they shall not
have life?" (9) By these and similar statements, which I now pass over,
--absolutely clear in the light of God, and absolutely certain by His authority,--does
not truth proclaim without ambiguity, that unbaptized infants not only cannot
enter into the kingdom of God, but cannot have everlasting life, except in the
body of Christ, in order that they may be incorporated into which they are washed
in the sacrament of baptism? Does not truth, without any dubiety, testify that
for no other reason are they carried by pious hands to Jesus (that is, to
Christ, the Saviour and Physician), than that they may be healed of the plague of
their sin by the medicine of His sacraments? Why then do we delay so to
understand the apostle's very words, of which we perhaps used to have some doubt, that
they may agree with these statements of which we can have no manner of doubt?
CHAP. 9.--THE AMBIGUITY OF "ADAM IS THE FIGURE OF HIM TO COME."
To me, however, no doubt presents itself about the whole of this passage,
in which the apostle speaks of the condemnation of many through the sin of one,
and the justification of many through the righteousness of One, except as to
the words, "Adam is the figure of Him that was to come." (1) For this phrase in
reality not only suits the sense which understands that Adam's posterity were
to be born of the same form as himself along with sin, but the words are also
capable of being drawn out into several distinct meanings. For we have ourselves
perhaps actually contended for various senses from the words in question at
different times, (2) and very likely we shall propound yet another view, which,
however, will not be incompatible with the sense here mentioned; and even
Pelagius has not always expounded the passage in one way. All the rest, however, of
the passage in which these doubtful words occur, if its statements are carefully
examined and treated, as I have tried my best to do in the first book of this
treatise, will not (in spite of the obscurity of style necessarily engendered by
the subject itself) fail to show the incompatibility of any other meaning than
that which has secured the adhesion of the universal Church from the earliest
times--that believing infants have obtained through the baptism of Christ the
remission of original sin.
CHAP. 10 [V.]--HE SHOWS THAT CYPRIAN HAD NOT DOUBTED THE ORIGINAL SIN OF
INFANTS.
Accordingly, it is not without reason that the blessed Cyprian a carefully
shows how from the very first the Church has held this as a well understood
article of faith. When he was asserting the fitness of infants only just born to
receive Christ's baptism, on a certain occasion when he was consulted whether
this ought to be administered before the eighth day, he endeavoured, as far as
he could, to prove that they were perfect, (4) lest any one should suppose, from
the number of the days (because it was on the eighth day that infants were
before circumcised), that they so far lacked perfection. However, after bestowing
upon them the full support of his argument, he still confessed that they were
not free from original sin; because if he had denied this, he would have removed
all reason for the very baptism which he was maintaining their fitness to
receive. You can, if you wish, read for yourself the epistle of the illustrious
martyr On the Baptism of Little Children; for it cannot fail to be within reach at
Carthage. But I have deemed it right to transcribe some few statements of it
into this letter of mine, so far as applies to the question before us; and I
pray you to mark them carefully. "Now with respect," says he, "to the case of
infants, whom you declared it would be improper to baptize if presented within the
second and third day after their birth, since that due regard ought to be paid
to the law of circumcision of old, so that you thought that the infant should
not be baptized and sanctified before the eighth day after its birth,--a far
different view has been formed of the question in our council. Not a man there
assented to what you thought ought to be done; but the whole of us rather
determined that to no one born of men ought God's mercy and grace to be denied. For
since the Lord in His gospel says, "The Son of man is not come to destroy men's
lives, but to save them,' (5) so far as in us lies, not a soul ought, if
possible, to be lost." You observe how in these words he supposes that it is fraught
with ruin and death, not only to the flesh, but also to the soul, for one to
depart this life without that saving sacrament. Wherefore, if he said nothing
else, it was competent to us to conclude from his words that without sin the soul
could not perish. See, however, what (when he shortly afterwards maintains the
innocence of infants) he at the same time allows concerning them in the plainest
terms: "But if," says he, "anything could hinder men from the attainment of
grace, then their heavier sins might rather hinder those who have reached the
stages of adults, and advanced life, and old age. Since, however, remission of
sins is given even to the greatest sinners after they have believed, however much
they have previously sinned against God, and since nobody is forbidden baptism
and grace, how much more ought an infant not to be forbidden who newborn has
done no sin, except that from having been born cam ally after Adam he has
contracted from his very birth the contagion of the primeval death! How, too, does
this fact contribute in itself the more easily to their reception of the
forgiveness of sins, that the remission which they have is not of their own sins, but
of those of another!"
CHAP. 11.--THE ANCIENTS ASSUMED ORIGINAL SIN.
You see with what confidence this great man expresses himself after the
ancient and undoubted rule of faith. In advancing such very certain statements,
his object was by help of these firm conclusions to prove the uncertain point
which had been submitted to him by his correspondent, and concerning which he
informs him that a decree of a council had been passed, to the effect that, if an
infant were brought even before the eighth day after his birth, no one should
hesitate to baptize him. Now it was not then determined or confirmed by the
council that infants were held bound by original sin as if it were new, or as if it
were attacked by the opposition of some one; but when another controversy was
being conducted, and the question was discussed, in reference to the law of the
circumcision of the flesh, whether they ought to be baptized before the eighth
day. None agreed with the person who denied this; because it was not an open
question admitting of discussion, but was fixed and unassailable, that the soul
would forfeit eternal salvation if it ended this life without obtaining the
sacrament of baptism: but at the same time infants fresh from the womb were held
to be affected only by the guilt of original sin. On this account, although
remission of sins was easier in their case, because the sins were derived from
another, it was nevertheless indispensable. It was on sure grounds like these that
the uncertain question of the eighth day was solved, and the council decided
that after a man was born, not a day ought to be lost in rendering him that
succour which should prevent his perishing for ever. When also a reason was given
for the circumcision of the flesh as being itself a shadow of what was to be, its
purport was not that we should understand that baptism ought to be
administered on the eighth day after birth, but rather that we are spiritually circumcised
in the resurrection of Christ, who rose from the dead on the third day,
indeed, after His passion, but among the days of the week, by which time is
counted, on the eighth, that is, on the first day after the Sabbath.
CHAP. 12 [VI.]--THE UNIVERSAL CONSENSUS RESPECTING ORIGINAL SIN.
And now, again, with a strange boldness in new controversy, certain
persons are endeavouring to make us uncertain on a point which our forefathers used
to bring forward as most certainly fixed, whenever they would solve such
questions as seemed uncertain to some. When this controversy, indeed, first began, I
am unable to say; but one thing I know, that even the holy Jerome, who is in our
own day renowned for great industry and learning in ecclesiastical literature,
for the solution of sundry questions treated in his writings, makes use of the
same most certain assumption without exhibition of proofs. For instance, in
his commentary on the prophet Jonah, when he comes to the passage where the
infants were mentioned as chastened by the fast, he says:(1) "The greatest age comes
first, and then all the rest is pervaded down to the least.(2) For there is no
man without sin, whether the span of his age be but that of a single day, or
he reckon many years to his life. For if the very stars are unclean in the sight
of God,(3) how much more is a worm and corruption, such as are they who are
held subject to the sin of the offending Adam?" If, indeed, we could readily
interrogate this most learned man, how many authors who have treated of the divine
Scriptures. in both languages,(4) and have written on Christian controversies,
would he mention to us, who have never held any other opinion since the Church
of Christ was rounded,-- who neither received any other from their forefathers,
nor handed down any other to their posterity? My own reading, indeed, has been
far more limited, but yet I do not recollect ever having heard of any other
doctrine on this point from Christians, who accept the two Testaments, whether
established in the Catholic Church, or in any heretical or schismatic body
whatever. I do not remember, I say, that I have at any time found any other doctrine
in such writers as have contributed anything to literature of this kind,
whether they have followed the canonical Scriptures, or have supposed that they have
followed them, or had wished to be so supposed. From what quarter this question
has suddenly come upon us I know not. A short time ago,(5) in a passing
conversation with certain persons while we were at Carthage, my ears were suddenly
offended with such a proposition as this: "That infants are not baptized for the
purpose of receiving remission of sin, but that they may be sanctified in
Christ." Although I was much disturbed by so novel an opinion, still, as there was
no opportunity afforded me for gainsaying it, and as its propounders were not
persons whose influence gave me anxiety, I readily let the subject slip into
neglect and oblivion. And lo! it is now maintained with burn-ins zeal against the
Church; lo! it is committed to our permanent notice by writing; nay, the matter
is brought to such a pitch of distracting influence, that we are even consulted
on it by our brethren; and we are actually obliged to oppose its progress both
by disputation and by writing.
CHAP. 13 [VII.]--THE ERROR OF JOVINIANUS DID NOT EXTEND SO FAR.
A few years ago there lived at Rome one Jovinian,(1) who is said to have
persuaded nuns of even advanced age to marry,-- not, indeed, by seduction, as if
he wanted to make any of them his wife, but by contending that virgins who
dedicated themselves to the ascetic life had no more merit before God than
believing wives. It never entered his mind, however, along with this conceit, to
venture to affirm that children of men are born without original sin. If, indeed, he
had added such an opinion, the women might have more readily consented to
marry, to give birth to such pure offspring. When this man's writings (for he dared
to write) were by the brethren forwarded to Jerome to refute, he not only
discovered no such error in them, but, while looking out his conceits for
refutation, he found among other passages this very clear testimony to the doctrine of
man's original sin, from which Jerome indeed felt satisfied of the man's belief
of that doctrine.(2) These are his words when treating of it: "He who says that
he abides in Christ, ought himself also to walk even as He walked.(3) We give
our opponent the option to choose which alternative he likes. Does he abide in
Christ, or does he not? If he does, then, let him walk like Christ. If,
however, it is a rash thing to undertake to resemble the excellences of Christ, he
abides not in Christ, because he walks not as Christ did. He did no sin, neither
was any guile found in His mouth;(4) who, when He was reviled, reviled not
again; and as a lamb before its shearer is dumb, so He opened not His mouth;(5) to
whom the prince of this world came, and found nothing in Him;(6) whom, though He
had done no sin, God made sin for us.(7) We, however, according to the Epistle
of James, all commit many sins;(8) and none of us is pure from uncleanness,
even if his life should be but of one day.(9) For who shall boast that he has a
clean heart? Or who shall be confident that he is pure from sins? We are held
guilty according to the likeness of Adam's transgression. Accordingly David also
says: 'Behold, I was shapen in iniquity; and in sin did my mother conceive
me.'"(10)
CHAP. 14.--THE OPINIONS OF ALL CONTROVERSIALISTS WHATEVER ARE NOT, HOWEVER,
CANONICAL AUTHORITY; ORIGINAL SIN, HOW ANOTHER'S; WE WERE ALL ONE MAN IN ADAM.
I have not quoted these words as if we might rely upon the opinions of
every disputant as on canonical authority; but I have done it, that it may be seen
how, from the beginning down to the present age, which has given birth to this
novel opinion, the doctrine of original sin has been guarded with the utmost
constancy as a part of the Church's faith, so that it is usually adduced as most
certain ground whereon to refute other opinions when false, instead of being
itself exposed to refutation by any one as false. Moreover, in the sacred books
of the canon, the authority of this doctrine is vigorously asserted in the
clearest and fullest way. The apostle exclaims: "By one man sin entered into the
world, and death by sin; and so it passed upon all men, in which all have
sinned;(11) Now from these words it cannot certainly be said, that Adam's sin has
injured even those who commit no sin, for the Scripture says, "In which all have
sinned." Nor, indeed, are those sins of infancy so said to be another's, as if
they did not belong to the infants at all, inasmuch as all then sinned in Adam,
when in his nature, by virtue of that Innate power whereby he was able to
produce them, they were all as yet the one Adam; but they are called another's,(12)
because as yet they were not living their own lives, but the life of the one man
contained whatsoever was in his future posterity.
CHAP. 15 [VIII.]-- WE ALL SINNED ADAM'S SIN.
"It is," they say, "by no means conceded that God who remits to a man his
own sins imputes to him another's." He remits, indeed, but it is to those
regenerated by the Spirit, not to those generated by the flesh; but He imputes to a
man no longer the sins of another, but only his own. They were no doubt the
sins of another, whilst as yet they were not in existence who bore them when
propagated; but now the sins belong to them by carnal generation, to whom they have
not yet been remitted by spiritual regeneration.
CHAP. 16.--ORIGIN OF ERRORS; A SIMILE SOUGHT FROM THE FORESKIN OF THE
CIRCUMCISED, AND FROM THE CHAFF OF WHEAT.
"But surely," say they, "if baptism cleanses the primeval sin, they who
are born of two baptized parents ought to be free from this sin; for these could
not have transmitted to their children that thing which they did not themselves
possess." Now observe whence error usually thrives: it is when persons are
able to start subjects which they are not able to understand. For before what
audience, and in what words, can I explain how it is that sinful mortal beginnings
bring no obstacle to those who have inaugurated other, immortal, beginnings,
and at the same time prove an obstacle to those whom those very persons, against
whom it was not an obstacle, have begotten out of the self-same sinful
beginnings? How can a man understand these things, whose labouring mind is impeded both
by its own prejudiced opinions and by the chain of its own stolid obstinacy?
If indeed I had undertaken my cause in opposition to those who either altogether
forbid the baptism of infants, or else contend that it is superfluous to
baptize them alleging that as they are born of believing parents, they must needs
enjoy the merit of their parents; then it would have been my duty to have roused
myself perhaps to greater labour and effort for the purpose of refuting their
opinion. In that case, if I encountered a difficulty before obtuse and
contentious men in refuting error and inculcating truth, owing to the obscurity which
besets the nature of the subject, I should probably resort to such illustrations
as were palpable and at hand; and I should in my turn ask them some questions,
-- how, for instance, if they were puzzled to know in what way sin, after being
cleansed by baptism, still remained in those who were begotten of baptized
parents, they would explain how it is that the foreskin, after being removed by
circumcision, should still remain in the sons of the circumcised? or again, how
it happens that the chaff which is winnowed off so carefully by human labour
still keeps its place in the grain which springs from the winnowed wheat?
CHAP. 17 [IX.] -- CHRISTIANS DO NOT ALWAYS BEGET CHRISTIAN, NOR THE PURE, PURE
CHILDREN,
With these and such like palpable arguments, should I endeavour, as I best
could, to convince those persons who believed that sacraments of cleansing
were superfluously applied to the children of the cleansed, how right is the
judgment of baptizing the infants of baptized parents, and how it may happen that to
a man who has within him the twofold seed--of death in the flesh, and of
immortality in the spirit --that may prove no obstacle, regenerated as he is by the
Spirit, which is an obstacle to his son, who is generated by the flesh; and
that that may be cleansed in the one by remission, which in the other still
requires cleansing by like remission, just as in the case supposed of circumcision,
and as in the case of the winnowing and thrashing. But now, when we are
contending with those who allow that the children of the baptized ought to be baptized,
we may much more conveniently conduct our discussion, and can say: You who
assert that the children of such persons as have been cleansed from the pollution
of sin ought to have been born without sin, why do you not perceive that by the
same rule you might just as well say that the children of Christian parents
ought to have been born Christians? Why, therefore, do you rather maintain that
they ought to become Christians? Was there not in their parents, to whom it is
said, "Know ye not that your bodies are the members of Christ?"(1) a Christian
body? Perhaps you suppose that a Christian body may be born of Christian
parents, without having received a Christian soul? Well, this would render the case
much more wonderful still. For you would think of the soul one of two things as
you pleased, --because, of course, you hold with the apostle, that before birth
it had done nothing good or evil:(2) --either that it was derived by
transmission, and just as the body of Christians is Christian, so should also their soul
be Christian; or else that it was created by Christ, either in the Christian
body, or for the sake of the Christian body, and it ought therefore to have been
created or given in a Christian condition. Unless perchance you shall pretend
that, although Christian parents had it in their power to beget a Christian
body, yet Christ Himself was not able to produce a Christian soul. Believe then the
truth, and see that, as it has been possible (as [you yourselves admit) for
one who is not a Christian to be born of Christian parents, for one who is not a
member of Christ to be born of members of Christ, and (that we may answer all,
who, however falsely, are yet in some sense possessed with a sense of
religion) for a man who is not consecrated to be born of parents who are consecrated;
so also it is quite possible for one who is not cleansed to be born of parents
who are cleansed. Now what account will you give us, of why from Christian
parents is born one who is not a Christian, unless it be that not generation, but
regeneration makes Christians? Resolve therefore your own question with a like
reason, that cleansing from sin comes to no one by being born, but to all by
being born again. And thus any child who is born of parents who are cleansed,
because born again, must himself be born again, in order that he too may be
cleansed. For it has been quite possible for parents to transmit to their children that
which they did not possess themselves,-- thus resembling not only the wheat
which yielded the chaff, and the circumcised the foreskin, but also the instance
which you yourselves adduce, even that of believers who convey unbelief to
their posterity; which, however, does not accrue to the faithful as regenerated by
the Spirit, but it is owing to the fault of the mortal seed by which they have
been born of the flesh. For in respect of the infants whom you judge it
necessary to make believers by the sacrament of the faithful you do not deny that they
were born in unbelief although of believing parents.
CHAP. 18 [x.]--IS THE SOUL DERIVED BY NATURAL PROPAGATION?
Well, but "if the soul is not propagated, but the flesh alone, then the
latter alone has propagation of sin, and it alone deserves punishment:" this is
what they think, saying "that it is unjust that the soul which is only recently
produced, and that not out of Adam's substance, should bear the sin of another
committed so long ago." Now observe, I pray you, how the circumspect Pelagius
felt the question about the soul to be a very difficult one, and acted
accordingly,--for the words which I have just quoted are copied from his book. He does
not say absolutely, "Because the soul is not propagated," but hypothetically, If
the soul is not propagated, rightly determining on so Obscure a subject (on
which we can find in Holy Scriptures no certain and obvious testimonies, or with
very great difficulty discover any) to speak with hesitation rather than with
confidence. Wherefore I too, on my side, answer this proposition with no hasty
assertion: If the soul is not propagated, where is the justice that, what has
been but recently created and is quite free from the contagion of sin, should be
compelled in infants to endure the passions and other torments of the flesh,
and, what is more terrible still, even the attacks of evil spirits? For never
does the flesh so suffer anything of this kind that the living and feeling soul
does not rather undergo the punishment. If this, indeed, is shown to be just, it
may be shown, on the same terms, with what justice original sin comes to exist
in our sinful flesh, to be subsequently cleansed by the sacrament of baptism
and God's gracious mercy. If the former point cannot be shown, I imagine that the
latter point is equally incapable of demonstration. We must therefore either
bear with both positions in silence, and remember that we are human, or else we
must prepare, at some other time, another work on the soul, if it shall appear
necessary, discussing the whole question with caution and sobriety.
CHAP. 19 [XI.] --SIN AND DEATH IN ADAM, RIGHTEOUSNESS AND LIFE IN CHRIST.
What the apostle says.: "By one man sin entered into the world, and death
by sin; and so it passed upon all men, in which all have sinned;"(1) we must,
however, for the present so accept as not to seem rashly and foolishly to oppose
the many great passages of Holy Scripture, which teach us that no man can
obtain eternal life without that union with Christ which is effected in Him and
with Him, when we are imbued with His sacraments and incorporated with the members
of His body. Now this statement which the apostle addresses to the Romans, "By
one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so it passed upon
all men, in which all have sinned," tallies in sense with his words to the
Corinthians: "Since by man came death, by Man came also the resurrection of the dead.
For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive."(2) For
nobody doubts that the subject here referred to is the death of the body, because
the apostle was with much earnestness dwelling on the resurrection of the body;
and he seems to be silent here about sin for this reason, namely, because the
question was not about righteousness. Both points are mentioned in the Epistle
to the Romans, and both points are, at very great length, insisted on by the
apostle,--sin in Adam, righteousness in Christ; and death in Adam, life in
Christ. However, as I have observed already, I have thoroughly examined and opened,
in the first book of this treatise, all these words of the apostle's argument,
as far as I was able, and as much as seemed necessary.
CHAP. 20.--THE STING OF DEATH, WHAT?
But even in the passage to the Corinthians, where he had been treating
fully of the resurrection, the apostle concludes his statement in such a way as
not to permit us to doubt that the death of the body is the result of sin. For
after he had said, "This corruptible must put on incorruption, and this mortal
must put on immortality: so when this corruptible shall have put on
incorruption, and this mortal immortality, then," he added, "shall be brought to pass the
saying which is written, Death is swallowed up in victory. O death, where is thy
victory? O death, where is thy sting?" and at last he subjoined these words:
"The sting of death is sin; and the strength of sin is the law."(3) Now, because
(as the apostle's words most plainly declare) death shall then be swallowed up
in victory when this corruptible and mortal shall have put on incorruption and
immortality,-that is, when "God shall quicken even our mortal bodies by His
Spirit that dwelleth in us,"--it manifestly follows that the sting of the body of
this death, which is the contrary of the resurrection of the body, is sin. The
sting, however, is that by which death was made, and not that which death
made, since it is by sin that we die, and not by death that we sin. It is therefore
called "the sting of death" on the principle which originated the phrase "the
tree of life," --not because the life of man produced it, but because by it the
life of man was made. In like manner "the tree of knowledge" was that whereby
man's knowledge was made, not that which man made by his knowledge. So also
"the sting of death" is that by which death was produced, not that which death
made. We similarly use the expression "the cup of death," since by it some one has
died, or might die, --not meaning, of course, a cup made by a dying or dead
man.(1) The sting of death is therefore sin, because by the puncture of sin the
human race has been slain. Why ask further: the death of what, -- whether of
the soul, or of the body? Whether the first which we are all of us now dying, or
the second which the wicked hereafter shall die? There is no occasion for
plying the question so curiously; there is no room for subterfuge. The words in
which the apostle expresses the case answer the questions: "When this mortal," says
he, "shall have put on immortality, then shall be brought to pass the saying
which is written, Death is swallowed up in victory. O death, where is thy
victory? O death, where is thy sting? The sting of death is sin, and the strength of
sin is the law." He was treating of the resurrection of the body, wherein death
shall be swallowed up in victory, when this mortal shall have put on
immortality. Then over death itself shall be raised the shout of triumph, when at the
resurrection of the body it shall be swallowed up in victory; then shall be said
to it, "O death, where is thy victory? O death, where is thy sting?" To the
death of the body, therefore, is this said. For victorious immortality shall
swallow it up, when this mortal shall put on immortality. I repeat it, to the death
of the body shall it be said, "Where is thy victory?" -- that victory in which
thou didst conquer all, so that even the Son of God engaged in conflict with
thee, and by not shrinking but grappling with thee overcame. In these that die
thou hast conquered; but thou art thyself conquered in these that rise again.
Thy victory was but temporal, in which thou didst swallow up the bodies of them
that die. Our victory will abide eternal, in which thou art swallowed up in the
bodies of them that rise again. "Where is thy sting? "--that is, the sin
wherewithal we are punctured and poisoned, so that thou didst fix thyself in our
very bodies, and for so long a time didst hold them in possession. "The sting of
death is sin, and the strength of sin is the law." We all sinned in one, so that
we all die in one; we received the law, not by amendment according to its
precepts to put an end to sin, but by transgression to increase it. For "the law
entered that sin might abound;"(2) and "the Scripture hath concluded all under
sin; "(3) but "thanks be to God, who hath given us the victory through our Lord
Jesus Christ,"(4) in order that "where sin abounded, grace might much more
abound; "(2) and "that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them
that believe; "(3) and that we might overcome death by a deathless resurrection,
and sin, "the sting" thereof, by a free justification.
CHAP. 21 [XII.] -- THE PRECEPT ABOUT TOUCH ING THE MENSTRUOUS WOMAN NOT TO BE
FIGURATIVELY UNDERSTOOD ; THE NECESSITY OF THE SACRAMENTS.
Let no one, then, on this subject be either deceived or a deceiver. The
manifest sense of Holy Scripture which we have considered, removes all
obscurities. Even as death is in this our mortal body derived from the beginning, so from
the beginning has sin been drawn into this sinful flesh of ours, for the cure
of which, both as it is derived by propagation and augmented by wilful
transgression, as well as for the quickening of our flesh itself, our Physician came in
the likeness of sinful flesh, who is not needed by the sound, but only by the
sick,-- and who came not to call the righteous, but sinners.(5) Therefore the
saying of the apostle, when advising believers not to separate themselves from
unbelieving partners: "For the unbelieving husband is sanctified by the wife,
and the unbelieving wife is sanctified by the husband: else were your children
unclean; but now are they holy,"(6) must be either so understood as both we
ourselves elsewhere,(7) and as Pelagius in his notes on this same Epistle to the
Corinthians,(8) has expounded it, according to the purport of the passages already
mentioned, that sometimes wives gained husbands to Christ, and sometimes
husbands converted wives, whilst the Christian will of even one of the parents
prevailed towards making their children Christians; or else (as the apostle's words
seem rather to indicate, and to a certain degree compel us) some particular
sanctification is to be here understood, by which an unbelieving husband or wife
was sanctified by the believing partner, and by which the children of the
believing parents were sanctified,-whether it was that the husband or the wife,
during the woman's menstruation, abstained from cohabiting, having learned that duty
in the law (for Ezekiel classes this amongst the precepts which were not to be
taken in a metaphorical sense(1)), or on account of some other voluntary
sanctification which is not there expressly prescribed, -- a sprinkling of holiness
arising out of the close ties of married life and children. Nevertheless,
whatever be the sanctification meant, this must be steadily held: that there is no
other valid means of making Christians and remitting sins, except by men
becoming believers through the sacrament according to the institution of Christ and
the Church. For neither are unbelieving husbands and wives, notwithstanding their
intimate union with holy and righteous spouses, cleansed of the sin which
separates men from the kingdom of God and drives them into condemnation, nor are
the children who are born of parents, however just and holy, absolved from the
guilt of original sin, unless they have been baptized into Christ; and in behalf
of these our plea should be the more earnest, the less able they are to urge
one themselves.
CHAP. 22 [XIII.]--WE OUGHT TO BE ANXIOUS TO SECURE THE BAPTISM OF INFANTS.
For this is the point aimed at by the controversy, against the novelty of
which we have to struggle by the aid of ancient truth: that it is clearly
altogether superfluous for infants to be baptized. Not that this opinion is avowed
in so many words, lest so firmly established a custom of the Church should be
unable to endure its assailants. But if we are taught to render help to orphans,
how much more ought we to labour in behalf of those children who, though under
the protection of parents, will still be left more destitute and wretched than
orphans, should that grace of Christ be denied them, which they are all unable
to demand for themselves?
CHAP. 23.--EPILOGUE.
As for what they say, that some men, by the use of their reason, have
lived, and do live, in this world without sin, we should wish that it were true, we
should strive to make it true, we should pray that it be true; but, at the
same time, we should confess that it is not yet true. For to those who wish and
strive and worthily pray for this result, whatever sins remain in them are daily
remitted because we sincerely pray, "Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our
debtors."(2) Whosoever shall deny that this prayer is in this life necessary for
every righteous man who knows and does the will of God, except the one Saint of
saints, greatly errs, and is utterly incapable of pleasing Him whom he
praises. Moreover, if he supposes himself to be such a character, "he deceives
himself, and the truth is not in him,"(3) -- for no other reason than that he thinks
what is false. That Physician, then, who is not needed by the sound, but by the
sick, knows how to heal us, and by healing to perfect us unto eternal life; and
He does not in this world take away death, although inflicted because of sin,
from those whose sins He remits, in order that they may enter on their
conflict, and overcome the fear of death with full sincerity of faith. In some cases,
too, He declines to help even His righteous servants, so long as they are
capable of still higher elevation, to the attainment of a perfect righteousness, in
order that (while in His sight no man living is justified (4)) we may always
feel it to be our duty to give Him thanks for mercifully bearing with us, and so,
by holy humility, be healed of that first cause of all our failings, even the
swellings of pride. This letter, as my intention first sketched it, was to have
been a short one; it has grown into a lengthy book. Would that it were as
perfect as it has at last become complete!