A TREATISE ON THE SPIRIT AND THE LETTER, IN ONE BOOK, ADDRESSED TO
MARCELLINUS, A.D. 412
MARCELLINUS, IN A LETTER TO AUGUSTIN, HAD EXPRESSED SOME SURPRISE AT HAVING
READ, IN THE PRECEDING WORK, OF THE POSSIBILITY BEING ALLOWED OF A MAN CONTINUING
IF HE WILLED IT, BY GOD'S HELP, WITHOUT SIN IN THE PRESENT LIFE, ALTHOUGH NOT
A SINGLE HUMAN EXAMPLE ANYWHERE OF SUCH PERFECT RIGHTEOUSNESS HAS EVER EXISTED.
AUGUSTIN TAKES THE OPPORTUNITY OF DISCUSSING, IN OPPOSITION TO THE PELAGIANS,
THE SUBJECT OF THE AID OF GOD'S GRACE; AND HE SHOWS THAT THE DIVINE HELP TO THE
WORKING OF RIGHTEOUSNESS BY US DOES NOT LIE IN THE FACT OF GOD'S HAVING GIVEN
US A LAW WHICH IS FULL OF GOOD AND HOLY PRECEPTS; BUT IN THE FACT THAT OUR WILL
ITSELF, WITHOUT WHICH WE CAN DO NOTHING GOOD, IS ASSISTED AND ELEVATED BY THE
SPIRIT OF GRACE BEING IMPARTED TO US, WITHOUT THE AID OF WHICH THE TEACHING OF
THE LAW IS "THE LETTER THAT KILLETH," BECAUSE INSTEAD OF JUSTIFYING THE
UNGODLY, IT RATHER HOLDS THEM GUILTY OF TRANSGRESSION. HE BEGINS TO TREAT OF THE
QUESTION PROPOSED TO HIM AT THE COMMENCEMENT OF THIS WORK, AND RETURNS TO IT TOWARDS
ITS CONCLUSION; HE SHOWS THAT, AS ALL ALLOW, MANY THINGS ARE POSSIBLE WITH
GOD'S HELP, OF WHICH THERE OCCURS INDEED NO EXAMPLE; AND THEN CONCLUDES THAT,
ALTHOUGH A PERFECT RIGHTEOUSNESS IS UNEXAMPLED AMONG MEN, IT IS FOR ALL THAT NOT
IMPOSSIBLE.
CHAP. 1 [I.]--THE OCCASION OF WRITING THIS WORK; A THING MAY BE CAPABLE OF
BEING DONE, AND YET MAY NEVER BE DONE.
AFTER reading the short treatises which I lately drew up for you, my
beloved son Marcellinus, about the baptism of infants, and the perfection of man's
righteousness, -- how that no one in this life seems either to have attained or
to be likely to attain to it, except only the Mediator, who bore humanity in
the likeness of sinful flesh, without any sin whatever, -- you wrote me in answer
that you were embarrassed by the point which I advanced in the second book,(1)
that it was possible for a man to be without sin, if he wanted not the will,
and was assisted by the aid of God; and yet that except One in whom "all shall
be made alive,"(2) no one has ever lived or will live by whom this perfection
has been attained whilst living here. It appeared to you absurd to say that
anything was possible of which no example ever occurred, -- although I suppose you
would not hesitate to admit that no camel ever passed through a needle's eye,(3)
and yet He said that even this was possible with God; you may read, too, that
twelve thousand legions(4) of angels could possibly have fought for Christ and
rescued Him from suffering, but in fact did not; you may read that it was
possible for the nations to be exterminated at once out of the land which was given
to the children of Israel,(1) and yet that God willed it to be gradually
effected.(2) And one may meet with a thousand other incidents, the past or the future
possibility of which we might readily admit, and yet be unable to produce any
proofs of their having ever really happened. Accordingly, it would not be
right for us to deny the possibility of a man's living without sin, on the ground
that amongst men none can be found except Him who is in His nature not man only,
but also God, in whom we could prove such perfection of character to have
existed.
CHAP. 2 [II.]--THE EXAMPLES APPOSITE.
Here, perhaps, you will say to me in answer, that the things which I have
instanced as not having been realized, although capable of realization, are
divine works; whereas a man's being without sin falls in the range of a man's own
work, -- that being indeed his very noblest work which effects a full and
perfect righteousness complete in every part; and therefore that it is incredible
that no man has ever existed, or is existing, or will exist in this life, who has
achieved such a work, if the achievement is possible for a human being. But
then you ought to reflect that, although this great work, no doubt, belongs to
human agency to accomplish, yet it is also a divine gift, and therefore, not
doubt that it is a divine work; "for it is God who worketh in you both to will and
to do of His good pleasure."(3)
CHAP. 3.--THEIRS IS COMPARATIVELY A HARMLESS ERROR, WHO SAY THAT A MAN LIVES
HERE WITHOUT SIN.
They therefore are not a very dangerous set of persons and they ought to
be urged to show, if they are able, that they are themselves such, who hold that
man lives or has lived here without any sin whatever. There are indeed
passages of Scripture, in which I apprehend it is definitely stated that no man who
lives on earth, although enjoying freedom of will, can be found without sin; as,
for instance, the place where it is written, "Enter not into judgment with Thy
servant, for in Thy sight shall no man living be justified."(4) If, however,
anybody shall have succeeded in showing that this text and the other similar ones
ought to be taken in a different sense from their obvious one, and shall have
proved that some man or men have spent a sinless life on earth, -- whoever does
not, not merely refrain from much opposing him, but also does not rejoice with
him to the full, is afflicted by extraordinary goads of envy. Moreover, if
there neither is, has been, nor will be any man endowed with such perfection of
purity (which I am more inclined to believe), and yet it is firmly set forth and
thought there is or has been, or is to be, -- so far as I can judge, no great
error is made, and certainly not a dangerous one, when a man is thus carried
away by a certain benevolent feeling; provided that he who thinks so much of
another, does not think himself to be such a being, unless he has ascertained that
he really and clearly is such.
CHAP. 4.--THEIRS IS A MUCH MORE SERIOUS ERROR, REQUIRING A VERY VIGOROUS
REFUTATION, WHO DENY GOD'S GRACE TO BE NECESSARY.
They, however, must be resisted with the utmost ardor and vigor who
suppose that without God's help, the mere power of the human will in itself, can
either perfect righteousness, or advance steadily towards it; and when they begin
to be hard pressed about their presumption in asserting that this result can be
reached without the divine assistance, they check themselves, and do not
venture to utter such an opinion, because they see how impious and insufferable it
is. But they allege that such attainments are not made without God's help on this
account, namely, because God both created man with the free choice of his
will, and, by giving him commandments, teaches him, Himself, how man ought to live;
and indeed assists him, in that He takes away his ignorance by instructing him
in the knowledge of what he ought to avoid and to desire in his actions: and
thus, by means of the free-will naturally implanted within him, he enters on the
way which is pointed out to him, and by persevering in a just and pious course
of life, deserves to attain to the blessedness of eternal life.
CHAP. 5 [III.]--TRUE GRACE IS THE GIFT OF THE HOLY GHOST, WHICH KINDLES IN THE
SOUL THE JOY AND LOVE OF GOODNESS.
We, however, on our side affirm that the human will is so divinely aided
in the pursuit of righteousness, that (in addition to man's being created with a
free-will, and in addition to the teaching by which he is instructed how he
ought to live) he receives the Holy Ghost, by whom there is formed in his mind a
delight in, and a love of, that supreme and unchangeable good which is God,
even now while he is still "walking by faith" and not yet "by sight;"(5) in order
that by this gift to him of the earnest, as it were, of the free gift, he may
conceive an ardent desire to cleave to his Maker, and may burn to enter upon the
participation in that true light, that it may go well with him from Him to
whom he owes his existence. A man's free-will, indeed, avails for nothing except
to sin, if he knows not the way of truth; and even after his duty and his proper
aim shall begin to become known to him, unless he also take delight in and
feel a love for it, he neither does his duty, nor sets about it, nor lives
rightly. Now, in order that such a course may engage our affections, God's "love is
shed abroad in our hearts," not through the free-will which arises from
ourselves, but "through the Holy Ghost, which is given to us." (1)
CHAP. 6 [iv.]--THE TEACHING OF LAW WITHOUT THE LIFE-GIVING SPIRIT IS "THE
LETTER THAT KILLETH."
For that teaching which brings to us the command to live in chastity and
righteousness is "the letter that killeth," unless accompanied with "the spirit
that giveth life." For that is not the sole meaning of the passage, "The letter
killeth, but the spirit giveth life, (2) which merely prescribes that we
should not take in the literal sense any figurative phrase which in the proper
meaning of its words would produce only nonsense, but should consider what else it
signifies, nourishing the inner man by our spiritual intelligence, since "being
carnally-minded is death, whilst to be spiritually-minded is life and peace."
(3) If, for instance, a man were to take in a literal and carnal sense much that
is written in the Song of Solomon, he would minister not to the fruit of a
luminous charity, but to the feeling of a libidinous desire. Therefore, the
apostle is not to be confined to the limited application just mentioned, when he
says, "The letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life;" (2) but this is also (and
indeed especially) equivalent to what he says elsewhere in the plainest words:
"I had not known lust, except the law had said, Thou shalt not covet;" (4) and
again, immediately after: "Sin, taking occasion by the commandment, deceived me,
and by it slew me." (5) Now from this you may see what is meant by "the letter
that killeth." There is, of course, nothing, said figuratively which is not to
be accepted in its plain sense, when it is said, "Thou shall not covet;" but
this is a very plain and salutary precept, and any man who shall fulfil it will
have I no sin at all. The apostle, indeed, purposely selected this general
precept, in which he embraced everything, as if this were the voice of the law,
prohibiting us from all sin, when he says, "Thou shalt not covet;" for there is
no sin committed except by evil concupiscence; so that the law which prohibits
this is a good and praiseworthy law. But, when the Holy Ghost withholds His
help, which inspires us with a good desire instead of this evil desire (in other
words, diffuses love in our hearts), that law, however good in itself, only
augments the evil desire by forbidding it. Just as the rush of water which flows
incessantly in a particular direction, becomes more violent when it meets with any
impediment, and when it has overcome the stoppage, falls in a greater bulk,
and with increased impetuosity hurries forward in its downward course. In some
strange way the very object which we covet becomes all the more pleasant when it
is forbidden. And this is the sin which by the commandment deceives and by it
slays, whenever transgression is actually added, which occurs not where there is
no law. (6)
CHAP. 7 [V.]--WHAT IS PROPOSED TO BE HERE TREATED.
We will, however, consider, if you please, the whole of this passage of
the apostle and thoroughly handle it, as the Lord shall enable us. For I want, if
possible, to prove that the apostle's words, "The letter killeth, but the
spirit giveth life," do not refer to figurative phrases,-although even in this
sense a suitable signification might be obtained from them,-- but rather plainly to
the law, which forbids whatever is evil. When I shall have proved this, it
will more manifestly appear that to lead a holy life is the gift of God,-- not
only because God has given a free-will to man, without which there is no living
ill or well; nor only because He has given him a commandment to teach him how he
ought to live; but because through the Holy Ghost He sheds love abroad in the
hearts (4) of those whom he foreknew, in order to predestinate them; whom He
predestinated, that He might call them; whom He called, that he might justify
them; and whom he justified, that He might glorify them. (7) When this point also
shall be cleared, you will, I think, see how vain it is to say that those things
only are unexampled possibilities, which are the works of God,-- such as the
passage of the camel through the needle's eye, which we have already referred
to, and other similar cases, which to us no doubt are impossible, but easy enough
to God; and that man's righteousness is not to be counted in this class of
things, on the ground Of its being properly man's work, not God's; although there
is no reason for supposing, without an example, that his perfection exists,
even if it is possible. That these assertions are vain will be clear enough, after
it has been also plainly shown that even man's righteousness must be
attributed to the operation of God, although not taking place without man's will; and we
therefore cannot deny that his perfection is possible even in this life,
because all things are possible with God, (1)--both those which He accomplishes of
His own sole will, and those which He appoints to be done with the cooperation
with Himself of His creature's will. Accordingly, whatever of such things He
does not effect is no doubt without an example in the way of accomplished facts,
although with God it possesses both in His power the cause of its possibility,
and in His wisdom the reason of its unreality. And should this cause be hidden
from man, let him not forget that he is a man; nor charge God with folly simply
because he cannot fully comprehend His wisdom.
CHAP. 8.--ROMANS INTERPRETS CORINTHIANS.
Attend, then, carefully, to the apostle while in his Epistle to the Romans
he explains and clearly enough shows that what he wrote to the Corinthians,
"The letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life," (2) must be understood in the
sense which we have already indicated, --that the letter of the law, which
teaches us not to commit sin, kills, if the life-giving spirit be absent, forasmuch
as it causes sin to be known rather than avoided, and therefore to be increased
rather than diminished, because to an evil concupiscense there is now added
the transgression of the law.
CHAP. 9 [VI.]--THROUGH THE LAW SIN HAS ABOUNDED.
The apostle, then, wishing to commend the grace which has come to all
nations through Jesus Christ, lest the Jews should extol themselves at the expense
of the other peoples on account of their having received the law, first says
that sin and death came on the human race through one man, and that righteousness
and eternal life came also through one, expressly mentioning Adam as the
former, and Christ as the latter; and then says that "the law, however, entered,
that the offence might abound: but where sin abounded, grace did much more abound:
that as sin hath reigned unto death, even so might grace reign through
righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord." (3) Then, proposing a
question for himself to answer, he adds, "What shall we say then? Shall we continue
in sin, that grace may abound? God forbid." (4) He saw, indeed, that a perverse
use might be made by perverse men of what he had said: "The law entered, that
the offence might abound: but where sin abounded, grace did much more
abound,"--as if he had said that sin had been of advantage by reason of the abundance
of grace. Rejecting this, he answers his question with a "God forbid!" and at
once adds: "How shall we, that are dead to sin, live any longer therein?" (5) as
much as to say, When grace has brought it to pass that we should die unto sin,
what else shall we be doing, if we continue to live in it, than showing
ourselves ungrateful to grace? The man who extols the virtue of a medicine does not
contend that the diseases and wounds of which the medicine cures him are of
advantage to him; on the contrary, in proportion to the praise lavished on the
remedy are the blame and horror which are felt of the diseases and wounds healed by
the much-extolled medicine. In like manner, the commendation and praise of
grace are vituperation and condemnation of offences. For there was need to prove to
man how corruptly weak he was, so that against his iniquity, the holy law
brought him no help towards good, but rather increased than diminished his
iniquity; seeing that the law entered, that the offence might abound; that being thus
convicted and confounded, he might see not only that he needed a physician, but
also God as his helper so to direct his steps that sin should not rule over
him, and he might be healed by betaking himself to the help of the divine mercy;
and in this way, where sin abounded grace might much more abound,-- not through
the merit of the sinner, but by the intervention of his Helper.
CHAP. 10.--CHRIST THE TRUE HEALER.
Accordingly, the apostle shows that the same medicine was mystically set
forth in the passion and resurrection of Christ, when he says, "Know ye not,
that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into His
death? Therefore we were buried with Him by baptism into death; that like as Christ
was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should
walk in newness of life. For if we have been planted together in the likeness
of His death, we shall be also in the likeness of His resurrection: knowing
this, that our old man is crucified with Him, that the body of sin might be
destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin. For he that is dead is justified
from sin. Now, if we be dead with Christ, we believe that we shall also live
with Him: knowing that Christ, being raised from the dead, dieth no more; death
hath no more dominion over Him. For in that He died, He died unto sin once; but
in that He liveth, He liveth unto God. Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be
dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ our Lord." (6)
Now it is plain enough that here by the mystery of the Lord's death and
resurrection is figured the death of our old sinful life, and the rising of the new; and
that here is shown forth the abolition of iniquity and the renewal of
righteousness. Whence then arises this vast benefit to man through the letter of the
law, except it be through the faith of Jesus Christ?
CHAP. 11 [VII.]--FROM WHAT FOUNTAIN GOOD WORKS FLOW.
This holy meditation preserves "the children of men, who put their trust
under the shadow of God's wings," (1) so that they are "drunken with the fatness
of His house, and drink of the full stream of His pleasure. For with Him is
the fountain of life, and in His light shall they see light. For He extendeth His
mercy to them that know Him, and His righteousness to the upright in heart."
(2) He does not, indeed, extend His mercy to them because they know Him, but
that they may know Him; nor is it because they are upright in heart, but that they
may become so, that He extends to them His righteousness, whereby He justifies
the ungodly. (3) This meditation does not elevate with pride: this sin arises
when any man has too much confidence in himself, and makes himself the chief
end of living. Impelled by this vain feeling, he departs from that fountain of
life, from the draughts of which alone is imbibed the holiness which is itself
the good life,-- and from that unchanging light, by sharing in which the
reasonable soul is in a certain sense inflamed, and becomes itself a created and
reflected luminary; even as "John was a burning and a shining light," (4) who
notwithstanding acknowledged the source of his own illumination in the words, "Of His
fulness have all we received." (5) Whose, I would ask, but His, of course, in
comparison with whom John indeed was no light a t all ? For" that was the true
light, which lighteth every man that cometh into the world." (6) Therefore, in
the same psalm, after saying, "Extend Thy mercy to them that know Thee, and Thy
righteousness to the upright in heart," (7) he adds, "Let not the foot of pride
come against me, and let not the hands of sinners move me. There have fallen
all the workers of iniquity: they are cast out, and are not able to stand."
(8) Since by that impiety which leads each i to attribute to himself the
excellence which is God's, he is cast out into his own native darkness, in which
consist the works of iniquity. For it is manifestly these works which he does, and
for the achievement of such alone is he naturally fit. The works of righteousness
he never does, except as he receives ability from that fountain and that
light, where the life is that wants for nothing, and where is "no variableness, nor
the shadow of turning." (9)
CHAP. 12.--PAUL, WHENCE SO CALLED; BRAVELY CONTENDS FOR GRACE.
Accordingly Paul, who, although he was formerly called Saul, (10) chose
this new designation, for no other reason, as it seems to me, than because he
would show himself little, (11) --the "least of the apostles," (12) -- contends
with much courage and earnestness against the proud and arrogant, and such as
plume themselves on their own works, in order that he may commend the grace of
God. This grace, indeed, appeared more obvious and manifest in his case,
inasmuch as, while he was pursuing such vehement measures of persecution against the
Church of God as made him worthy of the greatest punishment, he found mercy
instead of condemnation, and instead of punishment obtained grace. Very properly,
therefore, does he lift voice and hand in defence of grace, and care not for the
envy either of those who understood not a subject too profound and abstruse
for them, or of those who perversely misinterpreted his own sound words; whilst
at the same time he unfalteringly preaches that gift of God, whereby alone
salvation accrues to those who are the children of the promise, children of the
divine goodness, children of grace and mercy, children of the new covenant. In the
salutation with which he begins every epistle, he prays: "Grace be to you, and
peace, from God the Father, and from the Lord Jesus Christ; " (13) whilst this
forms almost the only topic discussed for the Romans, and it is plied with so
much persistence and variety of argument, as fairly to fatigue the reader's
attention, yet with a fatigue so useful and salutary, that it rather exercises than
breaks the faculties of the inner man.
CHAP. 13 [VIII.] --KEEPING THE LAW; THE JEWS' GLORYING; THE FEAR OF
PUNISHMENT; THE CIRCUMCISION OF THE HEART.
Then comes what I mentioned above; then he shows what the Jew is, and says
that he is called a Jew, but by no means fulfils what he promises to do. "But
if," says he, "thou callest thyself a Jew, and restest in the law, and makest
thy boast of God, and knowest His will, and triest the things that are
different, being instructed out of the law; and art confident that thou art thyself a
guide of the blind, a light of them that are in darkness, an instructor of the
foolish, a teacher of babes, which hast the form of knowledge and of the truth in
the law. Thou therefore who teachest another, teachest thou not thyself? thou
that preachest a man should not steal, dost thou steal? thou that sayest a man
should not commit adultery, dost thou commit adultery? thou that abhorrest
idols, dost thou commit sacrilege? thou that makest thy boast of the law, through
breaking the law dishonorest thou God? For the name of God is blasphemed among
the Gentiles through you, as it is written. Circumcision verily profiteth, if
thou keep the law; but if thou be a breaker of the law, thy circumcision is made
uncircumcision. Therefore, if the uncircumcision keep the righteousness of the
law, shall not his uncircumcision be counted for circumcision? And shall not
uncircumcision which is by nature, if it fulfil the law, judge thee, who by the
letter and circumcision dost transgress the law? For he is not a Jew who is one
outwardly; neither is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh: but he
is a Jew who is one inwardly; and circumcision is that of the heart, in the
spirit, and not in the letter; whose praise is not of men, but of God." (1) Here he
plainly showed in what sense he said, "Thou makest thy boast of God." For
undoubtedly if one who was truly a Jew made his boast of God in the way which grace
demands (which is bestowed not for merit of works, but gratuitously), then his
praise would be of God, and not of men. But they, in fact, were making their
boast of God, as if they alone had deserved to receive His law, as the Psalmist
said: "He did not the like to any nation, nor His judgments has He displayed to
them.'' (2) And yet, they thought they were fulfilling the law of God by their
righteousness, when they were rather breakers of it all the while!
Accordingly, it "wrought wrath" (3) upon them, and sin abounded, committed as it was by
them who knew the law. For whoever did even what the law commanded, without the
assistance of the Spirit of grace, acted through fear of punishment, not from
love of righteousness, and hence in the sight of God that was not in the will,
which in the sight of men appeared in the work; and such doers of the law were
held rather guilty of that which God knew they would have preferred to commit, if
only it had been possible with impunity. He calls, however, "the circumcision
of the heart" the will that is pure from all unlawful desire; which comes not
from the letter, inculcating and threatening, but from the Spirit, assisting and
healing. Such doers of the law have their praise therefore, not of men but of
God, who by His grace provides the grounds on which they receive praise, of
whom it is said, "My soul shall make her boast of the Lord;" (4) and to whom it is
said, "My praise shall be of Thee:" (5) but those are not such who would have
God praised because they are men; but themselves, because they are righteous.
CHAP. 14.--IN WHAT RESPECT THE PELAGIANS ACKNOWLEDGE GOD AS THE AUTHOR OF OUR
JUSTIFICATION.
"But," say they, "we do praise God as the Author of our righteousness, in
that He gave the law, by the teaching of which we have learned how we ought to
live." But they give no heed to what they read: "By the law there shall no
flesh be justified in the sight of God." (6) This may indeed be possible before
men, but not before Him who looks into our very heart and inmost will, where He
sees that, although the man who fears the law keeps a certain precept, he would
nevertheless rather do another thing if he were permitted. And lest any one
should suppose that, in the passage just quoted from him, the apostle had meant to
say that none are justified by that law, which contains many precepts, under
the figure of the ancient sacraments, and among them that circumcision of the
flesh itself, which infants were commanded to receive on the eighth day after
birth; he immediately adds what law he meant, and says, "For by the law is the
knowledge of sin." (6) He refers then to that law of which he afterwards declares,
"I had not known sin but by the law; for I had not known lust except the law
had said, Thou shalt not covet." (7) For what means this but that "by the law
comes the knowledge of sin?"
CHAP. 15 [IX.]--THE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF GOD MANIFESTED BY THE LAW AND THE
PROPHETS.
Here, perhaps, it may be said by that presumption of man, which is
ignorant of the righteousness of God, and wishes to establish one of its own, that the
apostle quite properly said," For by the law shall no man be justified," (6)
inasmuch as the law merely shows what one ought to do, and what one ought to
guard against, in order that what the law thus points out may be accomplished by
the will, and so man be justified, not indeed by the power of the law, but by
his free determination. But I ask your attention, O man, to what follows. "But
now the righteousness of God," says he, "without the law is manifested, being
witnessed by the law and the prophets." (8) Does this then sound a light thing in
deaf ears? He says, "The righteousness of God is manifested." Now this
righteousness they are ignorant of, who wish to establish one of their own; they will
not submit themselves to it. (9) His words are," The righteousness of God is
manifested:" he does not say, the righteousness of man, or the righteousness of
his own will, but the "righteousness of God,"--not that whereby He is Himself
righteous, but that with which He endows man when He justifies the ungodly. This
is witnessed by the law and the prophets; in other words, the law and the
prophets each afford it testimony. The law, indeed, by issuing its commands and
threats, and by justifying no man, sufficiently shows that it is by God's gift,
through the help of the Spirit, that a man is justified; and the prophets, because
it was what they predicted that Christ at His coming accomplished. Accordingly
he advances a step further, and adds, "But righteousness of God by faith of
Jesus Christ," (1) that is by the faith wherewith one believes in Christ for just
as there is not meant the faith with which Christ Himself believes, so also
there is not meant the righteousness whereby God is Himself righteous. Both no
doubt are ours, but yet they are called God's, and Christ's, because it is by
their bounty that these gifts are bestowed upon us. The righteousness of God then
is without the law, but not manifested without the law; for if it were
manifested without the law, how could it be witnessed by the law? That righteousness of
God, however, is without the law, which God by the Spirit of grace bestows on
the believer without the help of the law,--that is, when not helped by the law.
When, indeed, He by the law discovers to a man his weakness, it is in order
that by faith he may flee for refuge to His mercy, and be healed. And thus
concerning His wisdom we are told, that "she carries law and mercy upon her tongue,"
(2) -- the "law," whereby she may convict the proud, the "mercy," wherewith she
may justify the humbled. "The righteousness of God," then, "by faith of Jesus
Christ, is unto all that believe; for there is no difference, for all have
sinned, and come short of the glory of God" (3) --not of their own glory. For what
have they, which they have not received? Now if they received it, why do they
glory as if they had not received it? (4) Well, then, they come short of the
glory of God; now observe what follows: "Being justified freely by His grace." (5)
It is not, therefore, by the law, nor is it by their own will, that they are
justified; but they are justified freely by His grace, -- not that it is wrought
without our will; but our will is by the law shown to be weak, that grace may
heal its infirmity; and that our healed will may fulfil the law, not by compact
under the law, nor yet in the absence of law.
CHAP. 16 [X.]--HOW THE LAW WAS NOT MADE FOR A RIGHTEOUS MAN.
Because "for a righteous man the law was not made;" (6) and yet "the law
is good, if a man use it lawfully." (7) Now by connecting together these two
seemingly contrary statements, the apostle warns and urges his reader to sift the
question and solve it too. For how can it be that "the law is good, if a man
use it lawfully," if what follows is also true: "Knowing this, that the law is
not made for a righteous man?" (7) For who but a righteous man lawfully uses the
law? Yet it is not for him that it is made, but for the unrighteous. Must then
the unrighteous man, in order that he may be justified,-- that is, become a
righteous man,-- lawfully use the law, to lead him, as by the schoolmaster's
hand,s to that grace by which alone he can fulfil what the law commands? Now it is
freely that he is justified thereby,--that is, on account of no antecedent
merits of his own works; "otherwise grace is no more grace," (9) since it is
bestowed on us, not because we have done good works, but that we may be able to do
them,-- in other words, not because we have fulfilled the law, but in order that
we may be able to fulfil the law. Now He said, "I am not come to destroy the
law, but to fulfil it," (10) of whom it was said, "We have seen His glory, the
glory as of the only-begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth." (11) This
is the glory which is meant in the words, "All have sinned, and come short of
the glory of God;" (12) and this the grace of which he speaks in the next verse,
"Being justified freely by His grace." (5) The unrighteous man therefore
lawfully uses the law, that he may become righteous; but when he has become so, he
must no longer use it as a chariot, for he has arrived at his journey's end,-- or
rather (that I may employ the apostle's own simile, which has been already
mentioned) as a schoolmaster, seeing that he is now fully learned. How then is the
law not made for a righteous man, if it is necessary for the righteous man
too, not that he may be brought as an unrighteous man to the grace that
justifies, but that he may use it lawfully, now that he is righteous? Does not the case
perhaps stand thus, --nay, not perhaps, but rather certainly,-- that the man
who is become righteous thus lawfully uses the law, when he applies it to alarm
the unrighteous, so that whenever the disease of some unusual desire begins in
them, too, to be augmented by the incentive of the law's prohibition and an
increased amount of transgression, they may in faith flee for refuge to the grace
that justifies, and becoming delighted with the sweet pleasures of holiness, may
escape the penalty of the law's menacing letter through the spirit's soothing
gift? In this way the two statements will not be contrary, nor will they be
repugnant to each other: even the righteous man may lawfully use a good law, and
yet the law be not made for the righteous man; for it is not by the law that he
becomes righteous, but by the law of faith, which led him to believe that no
other resource was possible to his weakness for fulfilling the precepts which
"the law of works" (1) commanded, except to be assisted by the grace of God.
CHAP. 17.--THE EXCLUSION OF BOASTING.
Accordingly he says, "Where is boasting then? It is excluded. By what law?
of works? Nay; but by the law of faith." (1) He may either mean, the laudable
boasting, which is in the Lord; and that it is excluded, not in the sense that
it is driven off so as to pass away, but that it is clearly manifested so as to
stand out prominently. Whence certain artificers in silver are called
"exclusores." (2) In this sense it occurs also in that passage in the Psalms: "That
they may be excluded, who have been proved with silver," (3) --that is, that they
may stand out in prominence, who have been tried by the word of God. For in
another passage it is said: "The words of the Lord are pure words, as silver which
is tried in the fire." (4) Or if this be not his meaning, he must have wished
to mention that vicious boasting which comes of pride--that is, of those who
appear to themselves to lead righteous lives, and boast of their excellence as if
they had not received it, --and further to inform us, that by the law of
faith, not by the law of works, this boasting was excluded, in the other sense of
shut out and driven away; because by the law of faith every one learns that
whatever good life he leads he has from the grace of God, and that from no other
source whatever can he obtain the means of becoming perfect in the love of
righteousness.
CHAP. 18 [XI.] -- PIETY IS WISDOM; THAT IS CALLED THE RIGHTEOUSNESS OF GOD,
WHICH HE PRODUCES.
Now, this meditation makes a man godly, and this godliness is true wisdom.
By godliness I mean that which the Greeks designate <greek>qeosbee</greek>,
--that very virtue which is commended to than in the passage of Job, where it is
said to him, "Behold, godliness is wisdom." (5) Now if the word
<greek>qeosbee</greek> be interpreted according to its derivation, it might be called "the
worship of God; " (6) and in this worship the essential point is, that the soul be
not ungrateful to Him. Whence it is that in the most true and excellent
sacrifice we are admonished to "give thanks unto our Lord God." (7) Ungrateful
however, our soul would be, were it to attribute to itself that which it received
from God, especially the righteousness, with the works of which (the especial
property, as it were, of itself, and produced, so to speak, by the soul itself for
itself) it is not puffed up in a vulgar pride, as it might be with riches, or
beauty of limb, or eloquence, or those other accomplishments, external or
internal, bodily or mental, which wicked men too are in the habit of possessing, but,
if I may say so, in a wise complacency, as of things which constitute in an
especial manner the good works of the good. It is owing to this sin of vulgar
pride that even some great men have drifted from the sure anchorage of the divine
nature, and have floated down into the shame of idolatry. Whence the apostle
again in the same epistle, wherein he so firmly maintains the principle of grace,
after saying that he was a debtor both to the Greeks and to the Barbarians, to
the wise and to the unwise, and professing himself ready, so far as to him
pertained, to preach the gospel even to those who lived in Rome, adds: "I am not
ashamed of the Gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to
every one that believeth; to the Jew first, and also to the Greek. For therein is
the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith: as it is written, The
just shall live by faith." (8) This is the righteousness of God, which was
veiled in the Old Testament, and is revealed in the New; and it is called the
righteousness of God, because by His bestowal of it He makes us righteous, just as we
read that "salvation is the Lord's," (9) because He makes us safe. And this is
the faith "from which" and "to which" it is revealed,--from the faith of them
who preach it, to the faith of those who obey it. By this faith of Jesus Christ
-- that is, the faith which Christ has given to us --we believe it is from God
that we now have, and shall have more and more, the ability of living
righteously; wherefore we give Him thanks with that dutiful worship with which He only
is to be worshipped.
CHAP. 19 [XII]--THE KNOWLEDGED OF GOD THROUGH THE CREATION.
And then the apostle very properly turns from this point to describe with
detestation those men who, light-minded and puffed up by the sin which I have
mentioned in the preceding chapter, have been carried away of their own conceit,
as it were, through empty space where they could find no resting-place, only
to fall shattered to pieces against the vain figments of their idols, as against
stones. For, after he had commended the piety of that faith, whereby, being
justified, we must needs be pleasing to God, he proceeds to call our attention to
what we ought to abominate as the opposite. "For the wrath of God," says he,
"is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who
hold down the truth in unrighteousness; because that which may be known of God
is manifest in them: for God hath showed it unto them. For the invisible
things of Him are clearly seen from the creation of the world, being understood
through the things that are made, even His eternal power and divinity; so that they
are without excuse: because, knowing God, they yet glorified Him not as God,
neither were thankful; but became vain in their imaginations, and their foolish
heart was darkened. Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools; and
they changed the glory of the uncorruptible God into an image made like to
corruptible man, and to birds, and to four fooled beasts, and to creeping
things."(1) Observe, he does not say that they were ignorant of the truth, but that they
held down the truth in unrighteousness. For it occurred to him, that he would
inquire whence the knowledge of the truth could be obtained by those to whom
God had not given the law; and he was not silent on the source whence they
could have obtained it: for he declares that it was through the visible works of
creation that they arrived at the knowledge of the invisible attributes of the
Creator. And, in very deed, as they continued to possess great faculties for
searching, so they were able to find. Wherein then lay their impiety? Because
"when they knew God, they glorified Him not as God, nor gave Him thanks, but became
vain in their imaginations." Vanity is a disease especially of those who
mislead themselves, and "think themselves to be something, when they are
nothing."(2) Such men, indeed, darken themselves in that swelling pride, the foot of which
the holy singer prays that it may not come against him,(3) after saying, "In
Thy light shall we see light;''(4) from which very light of unchanging truth
they turn aside, and "their foolish heart is darkened."(5) For theirs was not a
wise heart, even though they knew God; but it was foolish rather, because they
did not glorify Him as God, or give Him thanks; for "He said unto man, Behold,
the fear of the Lord, that is wisdom."(6) So by this conduct, while "professing
themselves to be wise" (which can only be understood to mean that they
attributed this to themselves), "they became fools."(7)
CHAP. 20.--THE LAW WITHOUT GRACE.
Now why need I speak of what follows? For why it was that by this their
impiety those men --I mean those who could have known the Creator through the
creature--fell (since "God resisteth the proud"(8)) and whither they plunged, is
better shown in the sequel of this epistle than we can here mention. For in this
letter of mine we have not undertaken to expound this epistle, but only mainly
on its authority, to demonstrate, so far as we are able, that we are assisted
by divine aid towards the achievement of righteousness,--not merely because God
has given us a law fall of good and holy precepts, but because our very will
without which we cannot do any good thing, is assisted and elevated by the
importation of the Spirit of grace, without which help mere teaching is "the letter
that killeth,"(9) forasmuch as it rather holds them guilty of transgression,
than justifies the ungodly. Now just as those who come to know the Creator
through the creature received no benefit towards salvation, from their knowledge, --
because "though they knew God, they glorified Him not as God, nor gave Him
thanks, although professing themselves to be wise;"(5) -- so also they who know
from the law how man ought to live, are not made righteous by their knowledge,
because, "going about to establish their own righteousness, they have not
submitted themselves unto the righteousness of God."(10)
CHAP. 21 [XIII.]--THE LAW OF WORKS AND THE LAW OF FAITH.
The law, then, of deeds, that is, the law of works, whereby this boasting
is not excluded, and the law of faith, by which it is excluded, differ from
each other; and this difference it is worth our while to consider, if so be we are
able to observe and discern it. Hastily, indeed, one might say that the law of
works lay in Judaism, and the law of faith in Christianity; forasmuch as
circumcision and the other works prescribed by the law are just those which the
Christian system no longer retains. But there is a fallacy in this distinction, the
greatness of which I have for some time been endeavoring to expose; and to
such as are acute in appreciating distinctions, especially to yourself and those
like you, I have possibly succeeded in my effort. Since, however, the subject is
an important one, it will not be unsuitable, if with a view to its
illustration, we linger over the many testimonies which again and again meet our view.
Now, the apostle says that that law by which no man is justified,(1) entered in
that the offence might abound,(2) and yet in order to save it from the aspersions
of the ignorant and the accusations of the impious, he defends this very law
in such words as these: "What shall we say then? Is, the law sin? God forbid.
Nay, I had not known sin but by the law: for I had not known concupiscence,
except the law had said, Thou shall not covet. But sin, taking occasion, wrought, by
the commandment, in me all manner of concupiscence,"(3) He says also: "The law
indeed is holy, and the commandment is holy, and just, and good; but sin, that
it might appear sin, worked death in me by that which is good."(4) It is
therefore the very letter that kills which says, "Thou shalt not covet," and it is
of this that he speaks in a passage which I have before referred to: "By the law
is the knowledge of sin. But now the righteousness of God without the law is
manifested, being witnessed by the law and the prophets; even the righteousness
of God, which is by faith of Jesus Christ upon all them that believe; for there
is no difference: seeing that all have sinned, and come short of the glory of
God: being justified freely by His grace, through the redemption that is in
Christ Jesus; whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in His
blood, to declare His righteousness for the remission of sins that are past,
through the forbearance of God; to declare His righteousness at this time; that He
might be just, and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus."(5) And then
he adds the passage which is now under consideration: "Where, then, is your
boasting? It is excluded. By what law? of works? Nay; but by the law of faith."(6)
And so it is the very law of works itself which says, "Thou shalt not covet;"
because thereby comes the knowledge of sin. Now I wish to know, if anybody will
dare to tell me, whether the law of faith does not say to us, "Thou shalt not
covet"? For if it does not say so to us, what reason is there why we, who are
placed under it, should not sin in safety and with impunity? Indeed, this is
just what those people thought the apostle meant, of whom he writes: "Even as some
affirm that we say, Let us do evil, that good may come; whose damnation is
just."(7) If, on the contrary, it too says to us, "Thou shall not covet" (even as
numerous passages in the gospels and epistles so often testify and urge), then
why is not this law also called the law of works? For it by no means follows
that, because it retains not the "works" of the ancient sacraments, -- even
circumcision and the other ceremonies, -- it therefore has no "works" in its own
sacraments, which are adapted to the present age; unless, indeed, the question
was about sacramental works, when mention was made of the law, just because by it
is the knowledge of sin, and therefore nobody is justified by it, so that it
is not by it that boasting is excluded, but by the law of faith, whereby the
just man lives. But is there not by it too the knowledge of sin, when even it
says, "Thou shall not covet?"
CHAP. 22.--NO MAN JUSTIFIED BY WORKS.
What the difference between them is, I will briefly explain. What the law
of works enjoins by menace, that the law of faith secures by faith. The one
says, "Thou shalt not covet;"(8) the other says, "When I perceived that nobody
could be continent, except God gave it to him; and that this was the very point of
wisdom, to know whose gift she was; I approached unto the Lord, and I besought
Him."(9) This indeed is the very wisdom which is called piety,, in which is
worshipped "the Father of lights, from whom is every best giving and perfect
gift."(10) This worship, however, consists in the sacrifice of praise and giving
of thanks, so that the worshipper of God boasts not in himself, but in Him.(11)
Accordingly, by the law of works, God says to us, Do what I command thee; but
by the law of faith we say to God, Give me what Thou commandest. Now this is the
reason why the law gives its command, -- to admonish us what faith ought to
do, that is, that he to whom the command is given, if he is as yet unable to
perform it, may know what to ask for; but if he has at once the ability, and
complies with the command, he ought also to be aware from whose gift the ability
comes. "For we have received not the spirit of this world," says again that most
constant preacher of grace, "but the Spirit which is of God, that we might know
the things that are freely given to us of God."(12) What, however, "is the
spirit of this world," but the spirit of pride? By it their foolish heart is
darkened, who, although knowing God, glorified Him not as God, by giving Him
thanks.(1) Moreover, it is really by this same spirit that they too are deceived, who,
while ignorant of the righteousness of God, and wishing to establish their own
righteousness, have not submitted to God's righteousness.(2) It appears to me,
therefore, that he is much more "a child of faith" who has learned from what
source to hope for what he has not yet, than he who attributes to himself whatever
he has; although, no doubt, to both of these must be preferred the man who
both has, and at the same time knows from whom he has it, if nevertheless he does
not believe himself to be what he has not yet attained to. Let him not fall
into the mistake of the Pharisee, who, while thanking God for what he possessed,
yet failed to ask for any further gift, just as if he stood in, want of nothing
for the increase or perfection of his righteousness.(3) Now, having duly
considered and weighed all these circumstances and testimonies, we conclude that a
man is not justified by the precepts of a holy life, but by faith in Jesus
Christ,--in a word, not by the law of works, but by the law of faith; not by the
letter, but by the spirit; not by the merits of deeds, but by free grace.
CHAP. 23 [XIV.]--HOW THE DECALOGUE KILLS, IF GRACE BE NOT PRESENT.
Although, therefore, the apostle seems to reprove and correct those who
were being persuaded to be circumcised, in such terms as to designate by the word
"law" circumcision itself and other similar legal observances, which are now
rejected as shadows of a future substance by Christians who yet hold what those
shadows figuratively promised; he at the same time nevertheless would have it
to be clearly understood that the law, by which he says no man is justified,
lies not merely in those sacramental institutions which contained promissory
figures, but also in those works by which whosoever has done them lives holily, and
amongst which occurs this prohibition: "Thou shalt not covet." Now, to make our
statement all the clearer, let us look at the Decalogue itself. It is certain,
then, that Moses on the mount received the law, that he might deliver it to
the people, written on tables of stone by the finger of God. It is summed up in
these ten commandments, in which there is no precept about circumcision, nor
anything concerning those animal sacrifices which have ceased to be offered by
Christians. Well, now, I should like to be told what there is in these ten
commandments, except the observance of the Sabbath, which ought not to be kept by a
Christian,--whether it prohibit the making and worshipping of idols and of any
other gods than the one true God, or the taking of God's name in vain; or
prescribe honour to parents; or give warning against fornication, murder, theft, false
witness, adultery, or coveting other men's property? Which of these
commandments would any one say that the Christian ought not to keep? Is it possible to
contend that it is not the law which was written on those two tables that the
apostle describes as "the letter that killeth," but the law of circumcision and
the other sacred rites which are now abolished? But then how can we think so,
when in the law occurs this precept, "Thou shall not covet," by which very
commandment, notwithstanding its being holy, just, and good, "sin," says the apostle,
"deceived me, and by it slew me?"(4) What else can this be than "the letter"
that "killeth"?
CHAP. 24.--THE PASSAGE IN CORINTHIANS.
In the passage where he speaks to the Corinthians about the letter that
kills, and the spirit that gives life, he expresses himself more clearly, but he
does not mean even there any other "letter" to be understood than the Decalogue
itself, which was written on the two tables. For these are His words:
"Forasmuch as ye are manifestly declared to be the epistle of Christ ministered by us,
written not with ink, but with the Spirit of the living God; not in tables of
stone, but in fleshy tables of the heart. And such trust have we through Christ
to God-ward: not that we are sufficient of ourselves to think anything as of
ourselves; but our sufficiency is of God; who hath made us fit, as ministers of
the new testament; not of the letter, but of the spirit: for the letter killeth,
but the spirit giveth life. But if the ministration of death, written and
engraven in stones, was glorious, so that the children of Israel could not
stedfastly behold the face of Moses for the glory of his countenance, which was to be
done away; how shall not the ministration of the Spirit be rather glorious? For
if the ministration of condemnation be glory, much more shall the ministration
of righteousness abound in glory.(5) A good deal might be said about these
words; but perhaps we shall have a more fitting opportunity at some future time. At
present, however, I beg you to observe how he speaks of the letter that
killeth, and contrasts therewith the spirit that giveth life. Now this must certainly
be "the ministration of death written and engraven in stones," and "the
ministration of condemnation," since the law entered that sin might abound.(6) But
the commandments themselves are so useful and salutary to the doer of them, that
no one could have life unless he kept them. Well, then, is it owing to the one
precept about the Sabbath-day, which is included in it, that the Decalogue is
called "the letter that killeth?" Because, forsooth, every man that still
observes that day in its literal appointment is carnally wise, but to be carnally
wise is nothing else than death? And must the other nine commandments, which are
rightly observed in their literal form, not be regarded as belonging to the law
of works by which none is justified, but to the law of faith whereby the just
man lives? Who can possibly entertain so absurd an opinion as to suppose that
"the ministration of death, written and engraven in stones," is not said equally
of all the ten commandments, but only of the solitary one touching the
Sabbath-day? In which class do we place that which is thus spoken of: "The law worketh
wrath: for where no law is, there is no transgression?"(1) and again thus:
"Until the law sin was in the world: but sin is not imputed when there is no
law?"(2) and also that which we have already so often quoted: "By the law is the
knowledge of sin?"(3) and especially the passage in which the apostle has more
clearly expressed the question of which we are treating: "I had not known lust,
except the law had said, Thou shalt not covet?"(4)
CHAP. 25. -- THE PASSAGE IN ROMANS.
Now carefully consider this entire passage, and see whether it says
anything about circumcision, or the Sabbath, or anything else pertaining to a
foreshadowing sacrament. Does not its whole scope amount to this, that the letter
which forbids sin fails to give man life, but rather "killeth," by increasing
concupiscence, and aggravating sinfulness by transgression, unless indeed grace
liberates us by the law of faith, which is in Christ Jesus, when His love is "shed
abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost, which is given to us?"(5) The apostle
having used these words: "That we should serve in newness of spirit, and not in
the oldness of the letter,"(6) goes on to inquire, "What shall we say then? Is
the law sin? God forbid. Nay; I had not known sin, but by the law: for I had
not known lust, except the law had said, Thou shalt not covet. But sin, taking
occasion by the commandment, wrought in me all manner of concupiscence. For
without the law sin was dead. For I was alive without the law once; but when the
commandment came, sin revived, and I died. And the commandment, which was ordained
to life, I found to be unto death. For sin, taking occasion by the commandment
deceived me, and by it slew me. Wherefore the law is holy, and the commandment
holy, and just, and good. Was then that which is good made death unto me? God
forbid. But sin, that it might appear sin, worked death in me by that which is
good; that sin by the commandment might become exceeding sinful. For we know
that the law is spiritual; whereas I am carnal, sold under sin. For that which I
do I allow not: for what I would, that I do not; but what I hate, that I do. If
then I do that which I would not, I consent unto the law that it is good. But
then it is no longer I that do it, but sin that dwelleth in me. For I know that
in me (that is, in my flesh) dwelleth no good thing. To will, indeed, is
present with me; but how to perform that which is good I find not. For the good
that I would, I do not; but the evil which I would not, that I do. Now, if I do
that which I would not, it is no more I that do it, but sin that dwelleth in me.
I find then a law, that, when I would do good, evil is present with me. For I
delight in the law of God after the inward man: but I see another law in my
members warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me into captivity to the
law of sin which is in my members. O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver
me from the body of this death? The grace of God, through Jesus Christ out Lord.
So then with the mind I myself serve the law of God, but with the flesh the
law of sin."(7)
CHAP. 26.--NO FRUIT GOOD EXCEPT IT GROW FROM THE ROOT OF LOVE.
It is evident, then, that the oldness of the letter, in the absence of the
newness of the spirit, instead of freeing us from sin, rather makes us guilty
by the knowledge of sin. Whence it is written in another part of Scripture, "He
that increaseth knowledge, increaseth sorrow,"(8) not that the law is itself
evil, but because the commandment has its good in the demonstration of the
letter, not in the assistance of the spirit; and if this commandment is kept from
the fear of punishment and not from the love of righteousness, it is servilely
kept, not freely, and therefore it is not kept at all. For no fruit is good which
does not grow from the root of love. If, however, that faith be present which
worketh by love,(9) then one begins to delight in the law of God after the
inward man,(10) and this delight is the gift of the spirit, not of the letter; even
though there is another law in our members still warring against the law of
the mind, until the old state is changed, and passes into that newness which
increases from day to day in the inward man, whilst the grace of God is liberating
us from the body of this death through Jesus Christ our Lord.
CHAP. 27 [XV.]--GRACE, CONCEALED IN THE OLD TESTAMENT, IS REVEALED IN THE NEW.
This grace hid itself under a veil in the Old Testament, but it has been
revealed in the New Testament according to the most perfectly ordered
dispensation of the ages, forasmuch as God knew how to dispose all things. And perhaps it
is a part of this hiding of grace, that in the Decalogue, which was given on
Mount Sinai, only the portion which relates to the Sabbath was hidden under a
prefiguring precept. The Sabbath is a day of sanctification; and it is not
without significance that, among all the works which God accomplished, the first
sound of sanctification was heard on the day when He rested from all His labours.
On this, indeed, we must not now enlarge. But at the same time I deem it to be
enough for the point now in question, that it was not for nothing that the
nation was commanded on that day to abstain from all servile work, by which sin is
signified; but because not to commit sin belongs to sanctification, that is, to
God's gift through the Holy Spirit. And this precept alone among the others,
was placed in the law, which was written on the two tables of stone, in a
prefiguring shadow, under which the Jews observe the Sabbath, that by this very
circumstance it might be signified that it was then the time for concealing the
grace, which had to be revealed in the New Testament by the death of Christ, -- the
rending, as it were, of the veil.(1) "For when," says the apostle, "it shall
turn to the Lord, the veil shall be taken away."(2)
CHAP. 28 [XVI]--WHY THE HOLY GHOST IS CALLED THE FINGER OF GOD.!
"Now the Lord is that Spirit: and where the Spirit of the Lord is, there
is liberty."(3) Now this Spirit of God, by whose gift we are justified, whence
it comes to pass that we delight not to sin, -- in which is liberty; even as,
when we are without this Spirit, we delight to sin, -- in which is slavery, from
the works of which we must abstain; -- this Holy Spirit, through whom love is
shed abroad in our hearts, which is the fulfilment of the law, is designated in
the gospel as "the finger of God."(4) Is it not because those very tables of
the law were written by the finger of God, that the Spirit of God by whom we are
sanctified is also the finger of God, in order that, living by faith, we may do
good works through love? Who is not touched by this congruity, and at the same
time diversity? For as fifty days are reckoned from the celebration of the
Passover (which was ordered by Moses to be offered by slaying the typical lamb,(5)
to signify, indeed, the future death of the Lord) to the day when Moses
received the law written on the tables of stone by the finger of God,(6) so, in like
manner, from the death and resurrection of Him who was led as a lamb to the
slaughter,(7) there were fifty complete days up to the time when the finger of God
-- that is, the Holy Spirit--gathered together in ones perfect company those
who believed.
CHAP. 29 [XVII.]--A COMPARISON OF THE LAW OF MOSES AND OF THE NEW LAW.
Now, amidst this admirable correspondence, there is at least this very
considerable diversity in the cases, in that the people in the earlier instance
were deterred by a horrible dread from approaching the place where the law was
given; whereas in the other case the Holy Ghost came upon them who were gathered
together in expectation of His promised gift. There it was on tables of stone
that the finger of God operated; here it was on the hearts of men. There the law
was given outwardly, so that the unrighteous might be terrified;(9) here it
was given inwardly, so that they might be justified.(10) For this, "Thou shalt
not commit adultery, Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt not covet; and if there be
any other commandment,"--such, of course, as was written on those tables,-- "it
is briefly comprehended," says he, "in this saying, namely, Thou shalt love thy
neighbour as thyself. Love worketh no ill to his neighbour: therefore love is
the fulfilling of the law."(11) Now this was not written on the tables of
stone, but "is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost, which is given unto
us."(12) God's law, therefore, is love. "To it the carnal mind is not subject,
neither indeed can be;"(13) but when the works of love are written on tables to
alarm the carnal mind, there arises the law of works and "the letter which
killeth" the transgressor; but when love itself is shed abroad in the hearts of
believers, then we have the law of faith, and the spirit which gives life to him that
loves.
CHAP. 30.--THE NEW LAW WRITTEN WITHIN.
Now, observe how consonant this diversity is with those words of the
apostle which I quoted not long ago in another connection, and which I postponed for
a more careful consideration afterwards: "Forasmuch," says he, "as ye are
manifestly declared to be the epistle of Christ ministered by us, written not with
ink, but with the Spirit of the living God; not in tables of stone, but in
fleshy tables of the heart."(1) See how he shows that the one is written without
man, that it may alarm him from without; the other within man himself, that it
may justify him from within. He speaks of the "fleshy tables of the heart," not
of the carnal mind, but of a living agent possessing sensation, in comparison
with a stone, which is senseless. The assertion which he subsequently
makes,--that "the children of Israel could not look stedfastly on the end of the face of
Moses," and that he accordingly spoke to them through a veil,(2) --signifies
that the letter of the law justifies no man, but that rather a veil is placed on
the reading of the Old Testament, until it shall be turned to Christ, and the
veil be removed; -- in other words, until it shall be turned to grace, and be
understood that from Him accrues to us the justification, whereby we do what He
commands. And He commands, in order that, because we lack in ourselves, we may
flee to Him for refuge. Accordingly, after most guardedly saying, "Such trust
have we through Christ to God-ward,"(3) the apostle immediately goes on to add the
statement which underlies our subject, to prevent our confidence being
attributed to any strength of our own. He says: "Not that we are sufficient of
ourselves to think anything as of ourselves; but our sufficiency is of God; who also
hath made us fit to be ministers of the New Testament; not of the letter, but of
the spirit: for the letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life." (4)
CHAP. 31 [XVIII.]--THE OLD LAW MINISTERS DEATH; THE NEW, RIGHTEOUSNESS.
Now, since, as he says in another passage, "the law was added because of
transgression," (5) meaning the law which is written externally to man, he
therefore designates it both as "the ministration of death," (6) and "the
ministration of condemnation;" (7) but the other, that is, the law of the New Testament,
he calls "the ministration of the Spirit" (8) and "the ministration of
righteousness," (7) because through the Spirit we work righteousness, and are delivered
from the condemnation due to transgression. The one, therefore, vanishes away,
the other abides; for the terrifying schoolmaster will be dispensed with, when
love has succeeded to fear. Now "where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is
liberty." (9) But that this ministration is vouchsafed to us, not on account of
our deserving, but from His mercy, the apostle thus declares: "Seeing then that
we have this ministry, as we have received mercy, let us faint not; but let us
renounce the hidden things of dishonesty, not walking in craftiness, nor
adulterating the word of God with deceit." (10) By this "craftiness" and
"deceitfulness" he would have us understand the hypocrisy with which the arrogant would fain
be supposed to be righteous. Whence in the psalm, which the apostle cites in
testimony of this grace of God, it is said, "Blessed is the man to whom the Lord
will not impute sin, and in whose mouth is no guile." (11) This is the
confession of lowly saints, who do not boast to be what they are not. Then, in a
passage which follows not long after, the apostle writes thus: "For we preach not
ourselves, but Christ Jesus the Lord; and ourselves your servants for Jesus'
sake. For God, who commanded the light to shine out of darkness, hath shined in our
hearts, to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of
Jesus Christ." (12) This is the knowledge of His glory, whereby we know that He
is the light which illumines our darkness. And I beg you to observe how he
inculcates this very point: "We have," says he, "this treasure in earthen vessels,
that the excellency of the power may be of God, and not of us." (13) When
further on he commends in glowing terms this same grace, in the Lord Jesus Christ,
until he comes to that vestment of the righteousness of faith, "clothed with
which we cannot be found naked," and whilst longing for which "we groan, being
burdened" with mortality, "earnestly desiring to be clothed upon with our house
which is from Heaven," "that mortality might be swallowed up of life;"(14) --
observe what he says: "Now He that hath wrought us for the self-same thing is
God, who also hath given unto us the earnest of the Spirit;" (15) and after a
little he thus briefly draws the conclusion of the matter: "That we might be made
the righteousness of God in Him." (16) This is not the righteousness whereby God
is Himself righteous, but that whereby we are made righteous by Him.
CHAP. 32 [XIX.] -- THE CHRISTIAN FAITH TOUCHING THE ASSISTANCE OF GRACE.
Let no Christian then stray from this faith, which alone is the Christian
one; nor let any one, when he has been made to feel ashamed to say that we
become righteous through our own selves, without the grace of God working this in
us, -- because he sees, when such an allegation is made, how unable pious
believers are to endure it, --resort to any subterfuge on this point, by affirming
that the reason why we cannot become righteous without the operation of God's
grace is this, that He gave the law, He instituted its teaching, He commanded its
precepts of good. For there is no doubt that, without His assisting grace, the
law is "the letter which killeth;" but when the life-giving spirit is present,
the law causes that to be loved as written within, which it once caused to be
feared as written without.
CHAP. 33.--THE PROPHECY OF JEREMIAH CONCERNING THE NEW TESTAMENT.
Observe this also in that testimony which was given by the prophet on this
subject in the clearest way: "Behold, the days come, saith the Lord, that I
will consummate a new covenant with the house of Israel, and with the house of
Judah; not according to the covenant which I made with their fathers, in the day
that I took them by the hand, to bring them out of the land of Egypt. Because
they continued not in my covenant, I also have rejected them, saith the Lord.
But this shall be the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel; After
those days, saith the Lord, I will put my law in their inward parts, and write
it in their hearts; and I will be their God, and they shall be my people. And
they shall teach no more every man his neighbour, and every man his brother,
saying, Know the Lord: for they shall all know me, from the least unto the greatest
of them, saith the Lord: for I will forgive their iniquity, and I will
remember their sin no more."(1) What say we to this? One nowhere, or hardly anywhere,
except in this passage of the prophet, finds in the Old Testament Scriptures
any mention so made of the New Testament as to indicate it by its very name. It
is no doubt often referred to and foretold as about to be given, but not so
plainly as to have its very name mentioned. Consider then carefully, what
difference God has testified as existing between the two testaments -- the old covenant
and the new.
CHAP. 34.--THE LAW; GRACE.
After saying, "Not according to the covenant which I made with their
fathers in the day that I took them by the hand, to bring them out of the land of
Egypt," observe what He adds: "Because they continued not in my covenant." He
reckons it as their own fault that they did not continue in God's covenant, lest
the law, which they received at that time, should seem to be deserving of blame.
For it was the very law that Christ" came not to destroy, but to fulfil."(2)
Nevertheless, it is not by that law that the ungodly are made righteous, but by
grace; and this change is effected by the life-giving Spirit, without whom the
letter kills. "For if there had been a law given which could have given life,
verily righteousness should have been by the law. But the Scripture hath
concluded all under sin, that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to
them that believe."(3) Out of this promise, that is, out of the kindness of God,
the law is fulfilled, which without the said promise only makes men
transgressors, either by the actual commission of some sinful deed, if the flame of
concupiscence have greater power than even the restraints of fear, or at least by
their mere will, if the fear of punishment transcend the pleasure of lust. In
what he says, "The Scripture hath concluded all under sin, that the promise by
faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe," it is the benefit of
this "conclusion" itself which is asserted. For what purposes "hath it
concluded," except as it is expressed in the next sentence: "Before, indeed, faith came,
we were kept under the law, concluded for the faith which was afterwards
revealed?"(4) The law was therefore given, in order that grace might be sought;
grace was given, in order that the law might be fulfilled. Now it was not through
any fault of its own that the law was not fulfilled, but by the fault of the
carnal mind; and this fault was to be demonstrated by the law, and healed by
grace. "For what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh, God
sending His own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin
in the flesh; that the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us, who
walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit."(5) Accordingly, in the passage
which we cited from the prophet, he says, "I will consummate a new covenant
with the house of Israel, and with the house of Judah,"(6) -- and what means I
will consummate but I will fulfil? --"not, according to the covenant which I made
with their fathers, in the day that I took them by the hand, to bring them out
of the land of Egypt."(7)
CHAP. 35 [XX.]--THE OLD LAW; THE NEW LAW.
The one was therefore old, because the other is new. But whence comes it
that one is old and the other new, when the same law, which said in the Old
Testament, "Thou shalt not covet,"(1) is fulfilled by the New Testament? "Because,"
says the prophet, "they continued not in my covenant, I have also rejected
them, saith the Lord."(2) It is then on account of the offence of the old man,
which was by no means healed by the letter which commanded and threatened, that it
is called the old covenant; whereas the other is called the new covenant,
because of the newness of the spirit, which heals the new man of the fault of the
old. Then consider what follows, and see in how clear a light the fact is
placed, that men who bare faith are unwilling to trust in themselves: "Because," says
he, "this is the covenant which I will make with the house of Israel; After
those days, saith the Lord, I will put my law in their inward parts, and write it
in their hearts."(3) See how similarly the apostle states it in the passage we
have already quoted: "Not in tables of stone, but in fleshy tables of the
heart,"(4) because "not with ink, but with the Spirit of the living God."(4) And I
apprehend that the apostle in this passage had no other reason for mentioning
"the New Testament" ("who hath made us able ministers of the New Testament; not
of the letter, but of the spirit"), than because he had an eye to the words of
the prophet, when he said "Not in tables of stone, but in fleshy tables of the
heart," inasmuch as in the prophet it runs: "I will write it in their
hearts."(3)
CHAP. 36 [XXI.] --THE LAW WRITTEN IN OUR HEARTS.
What then is God's law written by God Himself in the hearts of men, but
the very presence of the Holy Spirit, who is "the finger of God," and by whose
presence is shed abroad in our hearts the love which is the fulfilling of the
law,(5) and the end of the commandment?(6) Now the promises of the Old Testament
are earthly; and yet (with the exception of the sacramental ordinances which
were the shadow of things to come, such as circumcision, the Sabbath and other
observances of days, and the ceremonies of certain meats,(7) and the complicated
ritual of sacrifices and sacred things which suited "the oldness" of the carnal
law and its slavish yoke) it contains such precepts of righteousness as we are
even now taught to observe, which were especially expressly drawn out on the
two tables without figure or shadow: for instance, "Thou shalt not commit
adultery," "Thou shalt do no murder, "Thou shalt not covet,"(8) "and whatsoever other
commandment is briefly comprehended in the saying, Thou shall love thy
neighbour as thyself."(9) Nevertheless, whereas as in the said Testament earthly and
temporal promises are, as I have said, recited, and these are goods of this
corruptible flesh (although they prefigure those heavenly and everlasting blessings
which belong to the New Testament), what is now promised is a good for the
heart itself, a good for the mind, a good of the spirit, that is, an intellectual
good; since it is said, "I will put my law in their inward parts, and in their
hearts will I write them,"(3) -- by which He signified that men would not fear
the law which alarmed them externally, but would love the very righteousness of
the law which dwelt inwardly in their hearts.
CHAP. 37 [XXII.]--THE ETERNAL REWARD.
He then went on to state the reward: "I will be their God, and they shall
be my people."(3) This corresponds to the Psalmist's words to God: "It is good
for me to hold me fast by God."(10) "I will be," says God, "their God, and they
shall be my people." What is better than this good, what happier than this
happiness, --to live to God, to live from God, with whom [is the fountain of life,
and in whose light we shall see light?(11) Of this life the Lord Himself
speaks in these words: "This is life eternal that they may know Thee the only true
God, land Jesus Christ whom Thou hast sent,"(12)-- that is, Thee and Jesus
Christ whom Thou hast sent," the one true God. For no less than this did Himself
promise to those who love Him: "He that loveth me, keepeth my commandments; and he
that loveth me shall be loved of my Father, and I will love him, and will
manifest myself unto him"(13)-- in the form, no doubt, of God, wherein He is equal
to the Father; not in the form of a servant, for in this He will display
Himself even to the wicked also. Then, however, shall that come to pass which is
written, "Let the ungodly man be taken away, that he see not the glory of the
Lord."(14) Then also shall" the wicked go into everlasting punishment, and the
righteous into life eternal."(15) Now this eternal life, as I have just mentioned,
has been defined to be, that they may know the one true God.(12) Accordingly
John again says: "Beloved, now are we the sons of God; and it doth not yet appear
what we shall be: but we know that, when He shall appear, we shall be like Him;
for we shall see Him as He is."(16) This likeness begins even now to be
reformed in us, while the inward man is being renewed from day to day, according to
the image of Him that created him. (17)
CHAP. 38 [XXIII.]--THE RE-FORMATION WHICH IS NOW BEING EFFECTED, COMPARED WITH
THE PERFECTION OF THE LIFE TO COME.
But what is this change, and how great, in comparison with the perfect
eminence which is then to be realized? The apostle applies some sort of
illustration, derived from well-known things, to these indescribable things, comparing
the period of childhood with the age of manhood. "When I was a child," says he,
"I used to speak as a child, to understand as a child, to think as a child; but
when I became a man, I put aside childish things."(1) He then immediately
explains why he said this in these words "For now we see by means of a mirror,
darkly but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also
I am known." (2)
CHAP. 39 [XXIV]--THE ETERNAL REWARD WHICH IS SPECIALLY DECLARED IN THE NEW
TESTAMENT FORETOLD BY THE PROPHET.
Accordingly, in our prophet likewise, whose testimony we are dealing with,
this is added, that in God is the reward, in Him the end, in Him the
perfection of happiness, in Him the sum of the blessed and eternal life. For after
saying, "I will be their God, and they shall be my people," he at once adds, "And
they shall no more teach every man his neighbour, and every man his brother,
saying, Know the Lord: for they shall all know me, from the least even unto the
greatest of them." (3) Now, the present is certainly the time of the New
Testament, the promise of which is given by the prophet in the words which we have
quoted from his prophecy. Why then does each man still say even now to his neighbour
and his brother," Know the Lord?" Or is it not perhaps meant that this is
everywhere said when the gospel is preached, and when this is its very
proclamation? For on what ground does the apostle call himself "a teacher of the Gentiles,"
(4) if it be not that what he himself implies in the following passage
becomes realized: "How shall they call on Him in whom they have not believed? and how
shall they believe in Him of whom they have not heard? and how shall they hear
without a preacher?" (5) Since, then, this preaching is now everywhere
spreading, in what way is it the time of the New Testament of which the prophet spoke
in the words, "And they shall not every man teach his neighbour, and every man
his brother, saying, Know the Lord; for they shall all know me, from the least
of them unto the greatest of them," (3) unless it be that he has included in
his prophetic forecast the eternal reward of the said New Testament, by promising
us the most blessed contemplation of God Himself?
CHAP. 40.--HOW THAT IS TO BE THE REWARD OF ALL; THE APOSTLE EARNESTLY DEPENDS
GRACE.
What then is the import of the "All, from the least unto the greatest of
them," but all that belong spiritually to the house of Israel and to the house
of Judah,--that is, to the children of Isaac, to the seed of Abraham ? For such
is the promise, wherein it was said to him, "In Isaac shall thy seed be called;
for they which are the children of the flesh are not the children of God: but
the children of the promise are counted for the seed. For this is the word of
promise, At this time will I come, and Sarah shall have a son. And not only
this; but when Rebecca also had conceived by one, even by our father Isaac, (for
the children being not yet born, neither having done any good or evil, that the
purpose of God according to election might stand, not of works, but of Him that
calleth,) it was said unto her, "The eider shall serve the younger." (6) This
is the house of Israel, or rather the house of Judah, on account of Christ, who
came of the tribe of Judah. This is the house of the children of promise,
--not by reason of their own merits, but of the kindness of God. For God promises
what He Himself performs: He does not Himself promise, and another perform;
which would no longer be promising, but prophesying. Hence it is "not of works, but
of Him that calleth," (7) lest the result should be their own, not God's; lest
the reward should be ascribed not to His grace, but to their due; and so grace
should be no longer grace which was so earnestly defended and maintained by
him who, though the least of the apostles, laboured more abundantly than all the
rest,--yet not himself, but the grace of God that was with him.(8) "They shall
all know me,"(3) He says,--"All," the house of Israel and house of Judah.
"All," however, "are not Israel which are of Israel," (9) but they only to whom it
is said in "the psalm concerning the morning aid"(10) (that is, concerning the
new refreshing light, meaning that of the new testament), "All ye the seed of
Jacob, glorify Him; and fear Him, all ye the seed of Israel."(11) All the seed,
without exception, even the entire seed of the promise and of the called, but
only of those who are the called according to His purpose.(12) "For whom He did
predestinate, them He also called; and whom He called, them He also justified;
and whom He justified, them He also glorified." (13) "Therefore it is of faith,
that it might be by grace; to the end the promise might be sure to all the
seed: not to that only which is of the law,"--that is, which comes from the Old
Testament into the New,--"but to that also which is of faith," which was indeed
prior to the law, even "the faith of Abraham,"--meaning those who imitate the
faith of Abraham,--" who is the father of us all; as it is written, I have made
thee the father of many nations."(1) Now all these predestinated, called,
justified, glorified ones, shall know God by the grace of the new testament, from the
least to the greatest of them.
CHAP. 41.--THE LAW WRITTEN IN THE HEART, AND THE REWARD OF THE ETERNAL
CONTEMPLATION OF GOD, BELONG TO THE NEW COVENANT; WHO AMONG THE SAINTS ARE THE LEAST
AND THE GREATEST.
As then the law of works, which was written on the tables of stone, and
its reward, the land of promise, which the house of the carnal Israel after their
liberation from Egypt received, belonged to the old testament, so the law of
faith, written on the heart, and its reward, the beatific vision which the house
of the spiritual Israel, when delivered from the present world, shall
perceive, belong to the new testament. Then shall come to pass what the apostle
describes: "Whether there be prophecies, they shall fail; whether there be tongues,
they shall cease; whether there be knowledge, it shall vanish away,"(2)--even
that imperfect knowledge of "the child "(3) in which this present life is passed,
and which is but "in part," "by means of a mirror darkly." (4) Because of this,
indeed, "prophecy" is necessary, for still to the past succeeds the future;
and because of this, too, "tongues" are required,--that is, a multiplicity of
expressions, since it is by different ones that different things are suggested to
him who does not as yet contemplate with a perfectly purified mind the
everlasting light of transparent truth. "When that, however, which is perfect is come,
then that which is in part shall be done away," (5) then, what appeared to the
flesh in assumed flesh shall display Itself as It is in Itself to all who love
It; then, there shall be eternal life for us to know the one very God;(6) then
shall we be like Him, (7) because "we shall then know, even as we are
known;"(8) then "they shall teach no more every man his neighbour, and every man his
brother, saying, Know the Lord; for they shall all know me, from the least unto
the greatest of them." (9) Now this may be understood in several ways: Either,
that in that life the saints shall differ one from another in glory, as star from
star. It matters not how the expression runs,--whether (as in the passage
before us) it be, "From the least unto the greatest of them," or the other way,
From the greatest unto the least. And, in like manner, it matters not even if we
understand "the least" to mean those who simply believe, and "the greatest"
those who have been further able to understand--so far as may be in this world--the
light which is incorporeal and unchangeable. Or, "the least" may mean those
who are later in time; whilst by "the greatest" He may have intended to indicate
those who were prior in time. For they are all to receive the promised vision
of God hereafter, since it was for us that they foresaw the future which would
be better than their present, that they without us should not arrive at complete
perfection.(10) And so the earlier are found to be the lesser, because they
were less deferred in time; as in the case of the gospel "penny a day," which is
given for an illustration.(11) This penny they are the first to receive who
came last into the vineyard. Or, "the least and the greatest" ought perhaps to be
taken in some other sense, which at present does not occur to my mind.
CHAP. 42 [XXV.]--DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE OLD AND THE NEW TESTAMENTS.
I beg of you, however, carefully to observe, as far as you can, what I am
endeavouring to prove with so much effort. When the prophet promised a new
covenant, not according to the covenant which had been formerly made with the
people of Israel when liberated from Egypt, he said nothing about a change in the
sacrifices or any sacred ordinances, although such change, too, was without doubt
to follow, as we see in fact that it did follow, even as the same prophetic
scripture testifies in many other passages; but he simply called attention to
this difference, that God would impress His laws on the mind of those who belonged
to this covenant, and would write them m their hearts,(12) whence the apostle
drew his conclusion,--"not with ink, but with the Spirit of the living God; not
in tables of stone, but in fleshy tables of the heart;"(13) and that the
eternal recompense of this righteousness was not the land out of which were driven
the Amorites and Hittites, and other nations who dwelt there,(14) but God
Himself, "to whom it is good to hold fast,"(15) in order that God's good that they
love, may be the God Himself whom they love, between whom and men nothing but sin
produces separation; and this is remitted only by grace. Accordingly, after
saying, "For all shall know me, from the least to the greatest of them," He
instantly added, "For I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin
no more."(9) By the law of works, then, the Lord says, "Thou shalt not covet:
"(16) but by the law of faith He says, "Without me ye can do nothing;" (17) for
He was treating of good works, even the fruit of the vine-branches. It is
therefore apparent what difference there is between the old covenant and the
new,--that in the former the law is written on tables, while in the latter on hearts;
so that what in the one alarms from without, in the other delights from within;
and in the former man becomes a transgressor through the letter that kills, in
the other a lover through the life-giving spirit. We must therefore avoid
saying, that the way in which God assists us to work righteousness, and "works in us
both to will and to do of His good pleasure," (1) is by externally addressing
to our faculties precepts of holiness; for He gives His increase internally,(2)
by shedding love abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost, which is given to
us."(3)
CHAP. 43 [XXVI.]--A QUESTION TOUCHING THE PASSAGE IN THE APOSTLE ABOUT THE
GENTILES WHO ARE SAID TO DO BY NATURE THE LAW'S COMMANDS, WHICH THEY ARE ALSO SAID
TO HAVE WRITTEN ON THEIR HEARTS.
Now we must see in what sense it is that the apostle says, "For when the
Gentiles, which have not the law, do by nature the things contained in the law,
these, having not the law, are a law unto themselves, which show the work of
the law written in their hearts,"(4) lest there should seem to be no certain
difference in the new testament, in that the Lord promised that He would write His
laws in the hearts of His people, inasmuch as the Gentiles have this done for
them naturally. This question therefore has to be sifted, arising as it does as
one of no inconsiderable importance. For some one may say, "If God
distinguishes the new testament from the old by this circumstance, that in the old He wrote
His law on tables, but in the new He wrote them on men's hearts, by what are
the faithful of the new testament discriminated from the Gentiles, which have
the work of the law written on their hearts, whereby they do by nature the things
of the law,(5) as if, forsooth, they were better than the ancient people,
which received the law on tables, and before the new people, which has that
conferred on it by the new testament which nature has already bestowed on them?"
CHAP. 44.--THE ANSWER IS, THAT THE PASSAGE MUST BE UNDERSTOOD OF THE FAITHFUL
OF THE NEW COVENANT.
Has the apostle perhaps mentioned those Gentiles as having the law written
in their hearts who belong to the new testament? We must look at the previous
context. First, then, referring to the gospel, he says, "It is the power of God
unto salvation to every one that believeth; to the Jew first, and also to the
Greek. For therein is the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith:
as it is written, The just shall live by faith." (6) Then he goes on to speak of
the ungodly, who by reason of their pride profit not by the knowledge of God,
since they did not glorify Him as God, neither were thankful.(7) He then passes
to those who think and do the very things which they condemn, -- having in
view, no doubt, the Jews, who made their boast of God's law, but as yet not
mentioning them expressly by name; and then he says, "Indignation and wrath,
tribulation and anguish, upon every soul of man that doeth evil, of the Jew first, and
also of the Gentile: but glory, honour, and peace, to every soul that doeth
good; to the Jew first, and also to the Gentile: for there is no respect of
persons with God. For as many as have sinned without law, shall also perish without
law; and as many as have sinned in the law, shall be judged by the law; for not
the hearers of the law are just before God, but the doers of the law shall be
justified."(8) Who they are that are treated of in these words, he goes on to
tell us: "For when the Gentiles, which have not the law, do by nature the things
contained in the law," (5) and so forth in the passage which I have quoted
already. Evidently, therefore, no others are here signified under the name of
Gentiles than those whom he had before designated by the name of "Greek" when he
said, "To the Jew first, and also to the Greek." (9) Since then the gospel is "the
power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth, to the Jew first,
and, also to the Greek;" (9) and since "indignation and wrath, tribulation and
anguish, are upon every soul of man that doeth evil, of the Jew first, and also of
the Greek: but glory, honour, and peace, to every man that doeth good; to the
Jew first, and also to the Greek;" since, moreover, the Greek is indicated by
the term "Gentiles" who do by nature the things contained in the law, and which
have the work of the law written in their hearts: it follows that such Gentiles
as have the law written in their hearts belong to the gospel, since to them,
on their believing, it is the power of God unto salvation. To what Gentiles,
however, would he promise glory, and honour, and peace, in their doing good
works, if living without the grace of the gospel? Since there is no respect of
persons with God,(10) and since it is not the hearers of the law, but the doers
thereof, that are justified,(11) it follows that any man of any nation, whether Jew
or Greek, who shall believe, will equally have salvation under the gospel.
"For there is no difference," as he says afterwards; "for all have sinned, and
come short of the glory of God: being justified freely by His grace." (1) How then
could he say that any Gentile person, who was a doer of the law, was justified
without the Saviour's grace?
CHAP. 45.--IT IS NOT BY THEIR WORKS, BUT BY GRACE, THAT THE DOERS OF THE LAW
ARE JUSTIFIED; GOD'S SAINTS AND GOD'S NAME HALLOWED IN DIFFERENT SENSES.
Now he could not mean to contradict himself in saying, "The doers of the
law shall be justified,"(2) as if their justification came through their works,
and not through grace; since he declares that a man is justified freely by His
grace without the works of the law, (3) intending by the term "freely" nothing
else than that works do not precede justification. For in another passage he
expressly says, "If by grace, then is it no more of works; otherwise grace is no
longer grace." (4) But the statement that "the doers of the law shall be
justified "(2) must be so understood, as that we may know that they are not
otherwise doers of the law, unless they be justified, so that justification does not
subsequently accrue to them as doers of the law, but justification precedes them
as doers of the law. For what else does the phrase "being justified" signify
than being made righteous, -- by Him, of course, who justifies the ungodly man,
that he may become a godly one instead? For if we were to express a certain fact
by saying, "The men will be liberated," the phrase would of course be
understood as asserting that the liberation would accrue to those who were men already;
but if we were to say, The men will be created, we should certainly not be
understood as asserting that the creation would happen to those who were already
in existence, but that they became men by the creation itself. If in like manner
it were said, The doers of the law shall be honoured, we should only interpret
the statement correctly if we supposed that the honour was to accrue to those
who were already doers of the law: but when the allegation is, "The doers of
the law shall be justified," what else does it mean than that the just shall be
justified? for of course the doers of the law are just persons. And thus it
amounts to the same thing as if it were said, The doers of the law shall be
created,-- not those who were so already, but that they may become such; in order that
the Jews who were hearers of the law might hereby understand that they wanted
the grace of the Justifier, in order to be able to become its doers also. Or
else the term "They shall be justified" is used in the sense of, They shall be
deemed, or reckoned as just, as it is predicated of a certain man in the Gospel,
"But he, willing to justify himself," (5) -- meaning that he wished to be
thought and accounted just. In like manner, we attach one meaning to the statement,
"God sanctifies His saints," and another to the words, "Sanctified be Thy name;
"(6) for in the former case we suppose the words to mean that He makes those
to be saints who were not saints before, and in the latter, that the prayer
would have that which is always holy in itself be also regarded as holy by men, --
in a word, be feared with a hallowed awe.
CHAP. 46.-- HOW THE PASSAGE OF THE LAW AGREES WITH THAT OF THE PROPHET.
If therefore the apostle, when he mentioned that the Gentiles do by nature
the things contained in the law, and have the work of the law written in their
hearts, (7) intended those to be understood who believed in Christ, -- who do
not come to the faith like the Jews, through a precedent law,--there is no good
reason why we should endeavour to distinguish them from those to whom the Lord
by the prophet promises the new covenant, telling them that He will write His
laws in their hearts,(8) inasmuch as they too, by the grafting which he says
had been made of the wild olive, belong to the self-same olive-tree,(9)--in other
words, to the same people of God. There is therefore a good agreement of this
passage of the apostle with the words of the prophet so that belonging to the
new testament means having the law of God not written on tables, but on the
heart,-- that is, embracing the righteousness of the law with innermost affection,
where faith works by love.(10) Because it is by faith that God justifies the
Gentiles;" and the Scripture foreseeing this, preached the gospel before to
Abraham, saying, "In thy seed shall all nations be blessed,"(11) in order that by
this grace of promise the wild olive might be grafted into the good olive, and
believing Gentiles might be made children of Abraham, "in Abraham's seed, which
is Christ," (12) by following the faith of him who, without receiving the law
written on tables, and not yet possessing even circumcision, "believed God, and
it was counted to him for righteousness."(13) Now what the apostle attributed
to Gentiles of this character,--how that "they have the work of the law written
in their hearts;"(14) must be some such thing as what he says to the
Corinthians: "not in tables of stone, but in fleshy tables of the heart." (15) For thus
do they become of the house of Israel, when their uncircumcision is accounted
circumcision, by the fact that they do not exhibit the righteousness of the law
by the excision of the flesh, but keep it by the charity of the heart. "If,"
says he, "the uncircumcision keep the righteousness of the law, shall not his
uncircumcision be counted for circumcision?"(1) And therefore in the house of the
true Israel, in which is no guile,(2) they are partakers of the new testament,
since God puts His laws into their mind, and writes them in their hearts with
his own finger, the Holy Ghost, by whom is shed abroad in them the love (3) which
is the" fulfilling of the law." (4)
CHAP. 47 [XXVII.]--THE LAW "BEING DONE BY NATURE" MEANS, DONE BY NATURE AS
RESTORED BY GRACE.
Nor ought it to disturb us that the apostle described them as doing that
which is contained in the law "by nature,"--not by the Spirit of God, not by
faith, not by grace. For it is the Spirit of grace that does it, in order to
restore in us the image of God, in which we were naturally created.(5) Sin, indeed,
is contrary to nature, and it is grace that heals it,--on which account the
prayer is offered to God, "Be merciful unto me: heal my soul; for I have sinned
against Thee."(6) Therefore it is by nature that men do the things which are
contained in the law; (7) for they who do not, fail to do so by reason of their
sinful defect. In consequence of this sinfulness, the law of God is erased out of
their hearts; and therefore, when, the sin being healed, it is written there,
the prescriptions of the law are done "by nature,"--not that by nature grace is
denied, but rather by grace nature is repaired. For "by one man sin entered
into the world, and death by sin, and so death passed upon all men; in which all
have sinned;" (8) wherefore "there is no difference: they all come short of the
glory of God, being justified freely by His grace." (9) By this grace there is
written on the renewed inner man that righteousness which sin had blotted out;
and this mercy comes upon the human race through our Lord Jesus Christ. "For
there is one God, and one Mediator between God and men, the Man Christ Jesus."
(10)
CHAP. 48.--THE IMAGE OF GOD IS NOT WHOLLY BLOTTED OUT IN THESE UNBELIEVERS;
VENIAL SINS.
According to some, however, they who do by nature the things contained in
the law must not be regarded as yet in the number of those whom Christ's grace
justifies, but rather as among those some of whose actions (although they are
those of ungodly men, who do not truly and rightly worship the true God) we not
only cannot blame, but even justly and rightly praise, since they have been
done--so far as we read, or know, or hear--according to the rule of righteousness;
though at the same time, were we to discuss the question with what motive they
are done, they would hardly be found to be such as [deserve the praise and
defence which are due to righteous conduct. [XXVIII.] Still, since God's image
has not been so completely erased in the soul of man by the stain of earthly
affections, as to have left remaining there not even the merest lineaments of it
whence it might be justly said that man, even in the ungodliness of his life,
does, or appreciates, some things contained in the law; if this is what is meant
by the statement that "the Gentiles, which have not the law" (that is, the law
of God), "do by nature the things contained in the law," (7) and that men of
this character" are a law to themselves," and "show the work of the law written in
their hearts,"--that is to say, what was impressed on their hearts when they
were created in the image of God has not been wholly blotted out:--even in this
view of the subject, that wide difference will not be disturbed, which
separates the new covenant from the old, and which lies in the fact that by the new
covenant the law of God is written in the hearts of believers, whereas in the old
it was inscribed on tables of stone. For this writing in the heart is effected
by renovation, although it had not been completely blotted out by the old
nature. For just as that image of God is renewed in the mind of believers by the new
testament, which impiety had not quite abolished (for there had remained
undoubtedly that which the soul of man cannot be except it be rational), so also the
law of God, which had not been wholly blotted out there by unrighteousness, is
certainly written thereon, renewed by grace. Now in the Jews the law which was
written on tables could not effect this new inscription, which is
justification, but only transgression. For they too were men, and there was inherent in
them that power of nature, which enables the rational soul both to perceive and do
what is lawful; but the godliness which transfers to another life happy and
immortal has "a spotless law, converting souls,"(11) so that by the light thereof
they may be renewed, and that be accomplished in them which is written, "There
has been manifested over us, O Lord, the light of Thy countenance." (12)
Turned away from which, they have deserved to grow old, whilst they are incapable of
renovation except by the grace of Christ,--in other words, without the
intercession of the Mediator; there being "one God and one Mediator between God and
men, the Man Christ Jesus, who gave Himself a ransom for all."(1) Should those be
strangers to His grace of whom we are treating, and who (after the manner of
which we have spoken with sufficient fulness already) "do by nature the things
contained in the law,'' (2) of what use will be their "excusing thoughts" to
them "in the day when God shall judge the secrets of men," (3) unless it be
perhaps to procure for them a milder punishment? For as, on the one hand, there are
certain venial sins which do not hinder the righteous man from the attainment of
eternal life, and which are unavoidable in this life, so, on the other hand,
there are some good works which are of no avail to an ungodly man towards the
attainment of everlasting life, although it would be very difficult to find the
life of any very bad man whatever entirely without them. But inasmuch as in the
kingdom of God the saints differ in glory as one star does from another,(4) so
likewise, in the condemnation of everlasting punishment, it will be more
tolerable for Sodom than for that other city;(5) whilst some men will be twofold more
the children of hell than others.(6) Thus in the judgment of God not even this
fact will be without its influence,--that one man will have sinned more, or
less, than another, even when both are involved in the ungodliness that is worthy
of damnation.
CHAP. 49.--THE GRACE PROMISED BY THE PROPHET FOR THE NEW COVENANT.
What then could the apostle have meant to imply by,--after checking the
boasting of the Jews, by telling them that "not the hearers of the law are just
before God, but the doers of the law shall be justified,"(7)--immediately
afterwards speaking of them "which, having not the law, do by nature the things
contained in the law,"(2) if in this description not they are to be understood who
belong to the Mediator's grace, but rather they who, while not worshipping the
true God with true godliness, do yet exhibit some good works in the general
course of their ungodly lives? Or did the apostle perhaps deem it probable, because
he had previously said that "with God there is no respect of persons," (8) and
had afterwards said that "God is not the God of the Jews only, but also of the
Gentiles," (9)--that even such scanty little works of the law, as are
suggested by nature, were not discovered in such as received not the law, except as the
result of the remains of the image of God; which He does not disdain when they
believe in Him, with whom there is no respect of persons? But whichever of
these views is accepted, it is evident that the grace of God was promised to the
new testament even by the prophet, and that this grace was definitively
announced to take this shape,--God's laws were to be written in men's hearts; and they
were to arrive at such a knowledge of God, that they were not each one to teach
his neighbour and brother, saying, Know the Lord; for all were to know Him,
from the least to the greatest of them.(10) This is the gift of the Holy Ghost,
by which love is shed abroad in our hearts,(11) --not, indeed, any kind of love,
but the love of God, "out of a pure heart, and a good conscience, and an
unfeigned faith," (12) by means of which the just man, while living in this pilgrim
state, is led on, after the stages of "the glass," and "the enigma," and "what
is in part," to the actual vision, that, face to face, he may know even as he
is known.(13) For one thing has he required of the Lord, and that he still seeks
after, that he may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of his life, in
order to behold the pleasantness of the Lord.(14)
CHAP. 50 [XXIX.]--RIGHTEOUSNESS IS THE GIFT OF GOD.
Let no man therefore boast of that which he seems to possess, as if he had
not received it;(15) nor let him think that he has received it merely because
the external letter of the law has been either exhibited to him to read, or
sounded in his ear for him to hear. For "if righteousness is by the law, then
Christ has died in vain." (16) Seeing, however, that if He has not died in vain, He
has ascended up on high, and has led captivity captive, and has given gifts to
men,(17) it follows that whosoever has, has from this source. But whosoever
denies that he has from Him, either has not, or is in great danger of being
deprived of what he has.(18) "For it is one God which justifies the circumcision by
faith, and the uncircum-cision through faith;" (19) in which clauses there is
no real difference in the sense, as if the phrase "by faith" meant one thing,
and "through faith" another, but only a variety of expression. For in one
passage, when speaking of the Gentiles,--that is, of the uncircumcision,--he says,
"The Scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the heathen by faith;"(20) and
again, in another, when speaking of the circumcision, to which he himself
belonged, he says, "We who are Jews by nature, and not sinners of the Gentiles,
knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the law, but through faith in
Jesus Christ, even we believed in Jesus Christ."(21) Observe, he says that both
the uncircumcision are justified by faith, and the circumcision through faith,
if, indeed, the circumcision keep the righteousness of faith. For the Gentiles,
which followed not after righteousness, have attained to righteousness, even
the righteousness which is by faith,(1)--by obtaining it of God, not by assuming
it of themselves. But Israel, which followed after the law of righteousness,
hath not attained to the law of righteousness. And why? Because they sought it
not by faith, but as it were by works (2)--in other words, working it out as it
were by themselves, not believing that it is God who works within them. "For it
is God which worketh in us both to will and to do of His own good pleasure."
(3) And hereby "they stumbled at the stumbling-stone." (4) For what he said, "not
by faith, but as it were by works," (4) he most clearly explained in the
following words: "They, being ignorant of God's righteousness, and going about to
establish their own righteousness, have not submitted themselves unto the
righteousness of God. For Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to every one
that believeth."(5) Then are we still in doubt what are those works of the law
by which a man is not justified, if he believes them to be his own works, as it
were, without the help and gift of God, which is "by the faith of Jesus
Christ?" And do we suppose that they are circumcision and the other like ordinances,
because some such things in other passages are read concerning these
sacramental rites too? In this place, however, it is certainly not circumcision which
they wanted to establish as their own righteousness, because God established this
by prescribing it Himself. Nor is it possible for us to understand this
statement, of those works concerning which the Lord says to them, "Ye reject the
commandment of God, that ye may keep your own tradition;"(6) because, as the apostle
says, Israel, which followed after the law of righteousness, hath not attained
to the law of righteousness." (7) He did not say, Which followed after their
own traditions, framing them and relying on them. This then is the sole
distinction, that the very precept, "Thou shalt not covet," (8) and God's other good
and holy commandments, they attributed to themselves; whereas, that man may keep
them, God must work in him through faith in Jesus Christ, who is "the end of
the law for righteousness to every one that believeth."(9) That is to say, every
one who is incorporated into Him and made a member of His body, is able, by His
giving the increase within, to work righteousness. It is of such a man's works
that Christ Himself has said, "Without me ye can do nothing." (10)
CHAP. 51.--FAITH THE GROUND OF AlL RIGHTEOUSNESS.
The righteousness of the law is proposed in these terms,--that whosoever
shall do it shall live in it; and the purpose is, that when each has discovered
his own weakness, he may not by his own strength, nor by the letter of the law
(which cannot be done), but by faith, conciliating the Justifier, attain, and
do, and live in it. For the work in which he who does it shall live, is not done
except by one who is justified. His justification, however, is obtained by
faith; and concerning faith it is written, "Say not in thine heart, Who shall
ascend into heaven? (that is, to bring down Christ therefrom;) or, Who shall
descend into the deep? (that is, to bring up Christ again from the dead.) But what
saith it? The word is nigh thee, even in thy mouth, and in thy heart: that is
(says he), the word of faith which we preach: That if thou shalt confess with thy
mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised Him
from the dead, thou shalt be saved." (11) As far as he is saved, so far is he
righteous. For by this faith we believe that God will raise even us from the
dead,--even now in the spirit, that we may in this present world live soberly,
righteously, and godly in the renewal of His grace; and by and by in our flesh,
which shall rise again to immortality, which indeed is the reward of the Spirit,
who precedes it by a resurrection which is appropriate to Himself,--that is,
by justification. "For we are buried with Christ by baptism unto death, that
like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we
also should walk in newness of life." (12) By faith, therefore, in Jesus
Christ we obtain salvation,--both in so far as it is begun within us in reality,
and in so far as its perfection is waited for in hope; "for whosoever shall call
on the name of the Lord shall be saved." (13) "How abundant," says the
Psalmist, "is the multitude of Thy goodness, O Lord, which Thou hast laid up for them
that fear Thee, and hast perfected for them that hope in Thee!" (14) By the law
we fear God; by faith we hope in God: but from those who fear punishment grace
is hidden. And the soul which labours under this fear, since it has not
conquered its evil concupiscence, and from which this fear, like a harsh master, has
not departed,--let it flee by faith for refuge to the mercy of God, that He may
give it what He commands, and may, by inspiring into it the sweetness of His
grace through His Holy Spirit, cause the soul to delight more in what He teaches
it, than it delights in what opposes His instruction. In this manner it is
that the great abundance of His sweetness,--that is, the law of faith,--His love
which is in our hearts, and shed abroad, is perfected in them that hope in Him,
that good may be wrought by the soul, healed not by the fear of punishment, but
by the love of righteousness.
CHAP. 52 [XXX.]--GRACE ESTABLISHES FREE WILL.
Do we then by grace make void free will? God forbid! Nay, rather we
establish free will. For even as the law by faith, so free will by grace, is not made
void, but established.(1) For neither is the law fulfilled except by free will
but by the law is the knowledge of sin, by faith the acquisition of grace
against sin, by grace the healing of the soul from the disease of sin, by the
health of the soul freedom of will, by free will the love of righteousness, by love
of righteousness the accomplishment of the law. Accordingly, as the law is not
made void, but is established through faith, since faith procures grace whereby
the law is fulfilled; so free will is not made void through grace, but is
established, since grace cures the will whereby righteousness is freely loved. Now
all the stages which I have here connected together in their successive links,
have severally their proper voices in the sacred Scriptures. The law says:
"Thou shall not covet." (2) Faith says: "Heal my soul, for I have sinned against
Thee." (3) Grace says: "Behold, thou art made whole: sin no more, lest a worse
thing come unto thee."(4) Health says: "O Lord my God, I cried unto Thee, and
Thou hast healed me." (5) Free will says: "I will freely sacrifice unto Thee." (6)
Love of righteousness says: "Transgressors told me pleasant tales, but not
according to Thy law, O Lord." (7) How is it then that miserable men dare to be
proud, either of their free will, before they are freed, or of their own
strength, if they have been freed ? They do not observe that in the very mention of
free will they pronounce the name of liberty. But "where the Spirit of the Lord
is, there is liberty." (8) If, therefore, they are the slaves of sin, why do they
boast of free will? For by what a man is overcome, to the same is he delivered
as a slave.(9) But if they have been freed, why do they vaunt themselves as if
it were by their own doing, and boast, as if they had not received? Or are
they free in such sort that they do not choose to have Him for their Lord who says
to them: "Without me ye can do nothing;"(10) and "If the Son shall make you
free, ye shall be free indeed?
CHAP. 53 [XXXI.]--VOLITION AND ABILITY.
Some one will ask whether the faith itself, in which seems to be the
beginning either of salvation, or of that series leading to salvation which I have
just mentioned, is placed in our power. We shall see more easily, if we first
examine with some care what "our power" means. Since, then, there are two
things,--will and ability; it follows that not every one that has the will has
therefore the ability also, nor has every one that possesses the ability the will
also; for as we sometimes will what we cannot do, so also we sometimes can do what
we do not will. From the words themselves when sufficiently considered, we
shall detect, in the very ring of the terms, the derivation of volition from
willingness, and of ability from ableness.(12) Therefore, even as the man who wishes
has volition, so also the man who can has ability. But in order that a thing
may be done by ability, the volition must be present. For no man is usually said
to do a thing with ability if he did it unwillingly. Although, at the same
time, if we observe more precisely, even what a man is compelled to do
unwillingly, he does, if he does it, by his volition; only he is said to be an unwilling
agent, or to act against his will, because he would prefer some other thing. He
is compelled, indeed, by some unfortunate influence, to do what he does under
compulsion, wishing to escape it or to remove it out of his way. For if his
volition be so strong that he prefers not doing this to not suffering that, then
beyond doubt he resists the compelling influence, and does it not. And
accordingly, if he does it, it is not with a full and free will, but yet it is not
without will that he does it; and inasmuch as the volition is followed by its effect,
we cannot say that he lacked the ability to do it. If, indeed, he willed to do
it, yielding to compulsion, but could not, although we should allow that a
coerced will was present, we should yet say that ability was absent. But when he
did not do the thing because he was unwilling, then of course the ability was
present, but the volition was absent, since he did it not, by his resistance to
the compelling influence. Hence it is that even they who compel, or who
persuade, are accustomed to say, Why don't you do what you have in your ability, in
order to avoid this evil? While they who are utterly unable to do what they are
compelled to do, because they are supposed to be able usually answer by excusing
themselves, and say, I would do it if it were in my ability. What then do we
ask more, since we call that ability when to the volition is added the faculty of
doing? Accordingly, every one is said to have that in his ability which he
does if he likes, and does not if he dislikes.
CHAP. 54.--WHETHER FAITH BE IN A MAN'S OWN POWER.
Attend now to the point which we have laid down for discussion: whether
faith is in our own power ? We now speak of that faith which we employ when we
believe anything, not that which we give when we make a promise; for this too is
called faith.(1) We use the word in one sense when we say, "He had no faith in
me," and in another sense when we say, "He did not keep faith with me." The one
phrase means, "He did not Believe what I said;" the other, "He did not do what
he promised." According to the faith by which we believe, we are faithful to
God; but according to that whereby a thing is brought to pass which is promised,
God Himself even is faithful to us; for the apostle declares, "God is
faithful, who will not suffer you to be tempted above that ye are able." (2) Well, now,
the former is the faith about which we inquire, Whether it be in our power?
even the faith by which we believe God, or believe on God. For of this it is
written, "Abraham believed God, and it was counted unto him for righteousness." (3)
And again, "To him that believeth on Him that justifieth the ungodly, his
faith is counted for righteousness." (4) Consider now whether anybody believes, if
he be unwilling; or whether he believes not, if he shall have willed it. Such a
position, indeed, is absurd (for what is believing but consenting to the truth
of what is said ? and this consent is certainly voluntary): faith, therefore,
is in our own power. But, as the apostle says: "There is no power but comes
from God," (5) what reason then is there why it may not be said to us even of
this: "What hast thou which thou hast not received ?" (6)--for it is God who gave
us even to believe. Nowhere, however, in Holy Scripture do we find such an
assertion as, There is no volition but comes from God. And rightly is it not so
written, because it is not true: otherwise God would be the author even of sins
(which Heaven forbid !), if there were no volition except what comes from Him;
inasmuch as an evil volition alone is already a sin, even if the effect be
wanting,--in other words, if it has not ability. But when the evil volition receives
ability to accomplish its intention, this proceeds from the judgment of God,
with whom there is no unrighteousness.(7) He indeed punishes after this manner;
nor is His chastisement unjust because it is secret. The ungodly man, however, is
not aware that he is being punished, except when he unwillingly discovers by
an open penalty how much evil he has willingly committed. This is just what the
apostle says of certain men: "God hath given them up to the evil desires of
their own hearts, ... to do those things that are not convenient."(8) Accordingly,
the Lord also said to Pilate: "Thou couldest have no power at all against me,
except it were given thee from above."(9) But still, when the ability is given,
surely no necessity is imposed. Therefore, although David had received ability
to kill Saul, he preferred sparing to striking him.(10) Whence we understand
that bad men receive ability for the condemnation of their depraved will, while
good men receive ability for trying of their good will.
CHAP. 55 [XXXII.]--WHAT FAITH IS LAUDABLE.
Since faith, then, is in our power, inasmuch as every one believes when he
likes, and, when he believes, believes voluntarily; our next inquiry, which we
must conduct with care, is, What faith it is which the apostle commends with
so much earnestness? For indiscriminate faith is not good. Accordingly we find
this caution: "Brethren, believe not every spirit, but try the spirits whether
they are of God." (11) Nor must the clause in commendation of love, that it
"believeth all things," (12) be so understood as if we should detract from the love
of any one, if he refuses to believe at once what he hears. For the same love
admonishes us that we ought not readily to believe anything evil about a
brother; and when anything of the kind is said of him, does it not judge it to be
more suitable to its character not to believe? Lastly, the same love, "which
believeth all things," does not believe every spirit. Accordingly, charity believes
all things no doubt, but it believes in God. Observe, it is not said, Believes
in all things. It cannot therefore be doubted that the faith which is commended
by the apostle is the faith whereby we believe in God.(13)
CHAP. 56.--THE FAITH OF THOSE WHO ARE UNDER THE LAW DIFFERENT FROM THE FAITH
OF OTHERS.
But there is yet another distinction to be observed,--since they who are
under the law both attempt to work their own righteousness through fear of
punishment, and fail to do God's righteousness, because this is accomplished by the
love to which only what is lawful is pleasing, and never by the fear which is
forced to have in its work the thing which is lawful, although it has something
else in its will which would prefer, if it were only possible, that to be
lawful which is not lawful. These persons also believe in God; for if they had no
faith in Him at all, neither would they of course have any dread of the penalty
of His law. This, however, is not the faith which the apostle commends. He says:
"Ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear; but ye have
received the spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba, Father."(1) The fear, then, of
which we speak is slavish; and therefore, even though there be in it a belief
in the Lord, yet righteousness is not loved by it, but condemnation is feared.
God's children, however, exclaim, "Abba, Father,"--one of which words they of
the circumcision utter; the other, they of the uncircumcision,--the Jew first,
and then the Greek;(2) since there is "one God, which justifieth the circumcision
by faith, and the uncircumcision through faith." (3) When indeed they utter
this call, they seek something; and what do they seek, but that which they hunger
and thirst after? And what else is this but that which is said of them,
"Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousness, for they shall be
filled?"(4) Let, then, those who are under the law pass over hither, and become
sons instead of slaves; and yet not so as to cease to be slaves, but so as,
while they are sons, still to serve their Lord and Father freely. For even this
have they received; for the Only-begotten "gave them power to become the sons of
God, even to them that believe on His name;"(5) and He advised them to ask, to
seek, and to knock, in order to receive, to find, and to have the gate opened
to them,(6) adding by way of rebuke, the words : "If ye, being evil, know how to
give good gifts to your children, how much more shall your Father which is in
heaven give good things to them that ask Him?" (7) When, therefore, that
strength of sin, the law,(8) inflamed the sting of death, even sin, to take occasion
and by the commandment work all manner of concupiscence in them,(9) of whom
were they to ask for the gift of continence but of Him who knows how to give good
gifts to His children? Perhaps, however, a man, in his folly, is unaware that
no one can be continent except God give him the gift. To know this, indeed, he
requires Wisdom herself.(10) Why, then, does he not listen to the Spirit of his
Father, speaking through Christ's apostle, or even Christ Himself, who says in
His gospel, "Seek and ye shall find; "(11) and who also says to us, speaking by
His apostle: "If any one of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God, that giveth
to all men liberally, and upbraideth not, and it shall be given to him. Let him,
however, ask in faith, nothing wavering? "(12) This is the faith by which the
just man lives;(13) this is the faith whereby he believes on Him who justifies
the ungodly; (14) this is the faith through which boasting is excluded,(15)
either by the retreat of that with which we become self-inflated, or by the rising
of that with which we glory in the Lord. This, again, is the faith by which we
procure that largess of the Spirit, of which it is said: "We indeed through
the Spirit wait for the hope of righteousness by faith." (16) But this admits of
the further question, Whether he meant by "the hope of righteousness" that by
which righteousness hopes, or that whereby righteousness is itself hoped for?
For the just man, who lives by faith, hopes undoubtedly for eternal life; and the
faith likewise, which hungers and thirsts for righteousness, makes progress
therein by the renewal of the inward man day by day,(17) and hopes to be satiated
therewith in that eternal life, where shall be realized that which is said of
God by the psalm: "Who satisfieth thy desire with good things." (18) This,
moreover, is the faith whereby they are saved to whom it is said: "By grace are ye
saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: not of
works, lest any man should boast. For we are His workmanship, created in Christ
Jesus unto good works, which God hath before ordained that we should walk in
them." (19) This, in short, is the faith which works not by fear, but by love;
(20) not by dreading punishment, but by loving righteousness. Whence, therefore,
arises this love,--that is to say, this charity,--by which faith works, if not
from the source whence faith itself obtained it ? For it would not be within
us, to what extent soever it is in us, if it were not diffused in our hearts by
the Holy Ghost who is given to us.(21) Now "the love of God" is said to be shed
abroad in our hearts, not because He loves us, but because He makes us lovers
of Himself; just as "the righteousness of God" (22) is used in the sense of our
being made righteous by His gift; and "the salvation of the Lord," (23) in
that we are saved by Him; and "the faith of Jesus Christ," (24) because He makes
us believers in Him. This is that righteousness of God, which He not only
teaches us by the precept of His law, but also bestows upon us by the gift of His
Spirit.
CHAP. 57 [XXXIII.]--WHENCE COMES THE WILL TO BELIEVE?
But it remains for us briefly to inquire, Whether the will by which we
believe be itself the gift of God, or whether it arise from that free will which
is naturally implanted in us ? If we say that it is not the gift of God, we must
then incur the fear of supposing that we have discovered some answer to the
apostle's reproachful appeal: "What hast thou that thou didst not receive? Now,
if thou didst receive it, why dost thou glory, as if thou hadst not received it
?"(1)--even some such an answer as this: 'See, we have the will to believe,
which we did not receive. See in what we glory,--even in what we did not receive!'
If, however, we were to say that this kind of will is nothing but the gift of
God, we should then have to fear lest unbelieving and ungodly men might not
unreasonably seem to have some fair excuse for their unbelief, in the fact that
God has refused to give them this will. Now this that the apostle says, "It is
God that worketh in you both to will and to do of His own good pleasure,"(2)
belongs already to that grace which faith secures, in order that good works may be
within the reach of man,--even the good works which faith achieves through the
love which is shed abroad in the heart by the Holy Ghost which is given to us.
If we believe that we may attain this grace (and of course believe
voluntarily), then the question arises whence we have this will?--if from nature, why it
is not at everybody's command, since the same God made all men? if from God's
gift, then again, why is not the gift open to all, since "He will have all men to
be saved, and to come unto the knowledge of the truth?"(3)
CHAP. 58.--THE FREE WILL OF MAN IS AN INTERMEDIATE POWER.
Let us then, first of all, lay down this proposition, and see whether it
satisfies the question before us: that free will, naturally assigned by the
Creator to our rational soul, is such a neutral(4) power, as can either incline
towards faith, or turn towards unbelief. Consequently a man cannot be said to have
even that will with which he believes in God, without having received it;
since this rises at the call of God out of the free will which he received
naturally when he was created. God no doubt wishes all men to be saved(3) and to come
into the knowledge of the truth; but yet not so as to take away from them free.
will, for the good or the evil use of which they may be most righteously
judged. This being the case, unbelievers indeed do contrary to the will of God when
they do not believe His gospel; nevertheless they do not therefore overcome His
will, but rob their own selves of the great, nay, the very greatest, good, and
implicate themselves in penalties of punishment, destined to experience the
power of Him in punishments whose mercy in His gifts they despised. Thus God's
will is for ever invincible; but it would be vanquished, unless it devised what to
do with such as despised it, or if these despises could in any way escape from
the retribution which He has appointed for such as they. Suppose a master, for
example, who should say to his servants, I wish you to labour in my vineyard,
and, after your work is done, to feast and take your rest l but who, at the
same time, should require any who refused to work to grind in the mill ever after.
Whoever neglected such a command would evidently act contrary to the master's
will; but he would do more than that,--he would vanquish that will, if he also
escaped the mill. This, however, cannot possibly happen under the government of
God. Whence it is written, "God hath spoken once,"--that is,
irrevocably,--although the passage may refer also to His one only Word.(5) He then adds what it
is which He had irrevocably uttered, saying: "Twice have I heard this, that
power belongeth unto God. Also unto Thee, O Lord, doth mercy belong: because Thou
wilt render to every man according to his work."(6) He therefore will be guilty
unto condemnation under God's power, who shall think too contemptuously of His
mercy to believe in Him. But whosoever shall put his trust in Him, and yield
himself up to Him, for the forgiveness of all his sins, for the cure of all his
corruption, and for the kindling and illumination of his soul by His warmth and
light, shall have good works by his grace; and by them(7) he shall be even in
his body redeemed from the corruption of death, crowned, satisfied with
blessings,--not temporal, but eternal,--above what we can ask or understand.
CHAP. 59.--MERCY AND PITY IN THE JUDGMENT OF GOD.
This is the order observed in the psalm, where it is said: "Bless the
Lord, O my soul, and forget not all His recompenses; who forgiveth all thine
iniquities; who healeth all thy diseases; who redeemeth thy life from destruction;
who crowneth thee with loving-kindness and tender mercy; who satisfieth thy
desire with good things."(8) And lest by any chance these great blessings should be
despaired of under the deformity of our old, that is, mortal condition, the
Psalmist at once says, "Thy youth shall be renewed like the eagle's;"(9) as much
as to say, All that you have heard belongs to the new man and to the new
covenant. Now let us consider together briefly these things, and with delight
contemplate the praise of mercy, that is, of the grace of God. "Bless the Lord, O my
soul," he says, "and forget not all His recompenses." Observe, he does not say
blessings, but recompenses;(10) because He recompenses evil with good. "Who
forgiveth all thine iniquities:" this is done in the sacrament of baptism. "Who
healeth all thy diseases:" this is effected by the believer in the present life,
while the flesh so lusts against the spirit, and the spirit against the flesh,
that we do not the things we would;(1) whilst also another law in our members
wars against the law of our mind;(2) whilst to will is present indeed to us but
not how to perform that which is good.(3) These are the diseases of a man's old
nature which, however, if we only advance with persevering purpose, are healed
by the growth of the new nature day by day, by the faith which operates through
love.(4) "Who redeemeth thy life from destruction;" this will take place at the
resurrection of the dead in the last day. "Who crowneth thee with
loving-kindness and tender mercy;" this shall be accomplished in the day of judgment; for
when the righteous King shall sit upon His throne to render to every man
according to his works, who shall then boast of having a pure heart? or who shall
glory of being clean from sin? It was therefore necessary to mention God's
loving-kindness and tender mercy there, where one might expect debts to be demanded and
deserts recompensed so strictly as to leave no room for mercy. He crowns,
therefore, with loving-kindness and tender mercy; but even so according to works.
For he shall be separated to the right hand, to whom, it is said, "I was an
hungered, and ye gave me meat."(5) There will, however, be also "judgment without
mercy;" but it will be for him" that hath not showed mercy."(6) But "blessed are
the merciful: for they shall obtain mercy"(7) of God. Then, as soon as those
on the left hand shall have gone into eternal fire, the righteous, too, shall go
into everlasting life,(8) because He says: "This is life eternal, that they
may know Thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom Thou hast sent."(9) And
with this knowledge, this vision, this contemplation, shall the desire of their
soul be satisfied; for it shall be enough for it to have this and nothing
else,--there being nothing more for it to desire, to aspire to, or to require. It was
with a craving after this full joy that his heart glowed who said to the Lord
Christ, "Show us the Father, and it sufficeth us;" and to whom the answer was
returned," He that hath seen me hath seen the Father."(10) Because He is Himself
the eternal life, in order that men may know the one true God, Thee and whom
Thou hast sent, Jesus Christ. If, however, he that has seen the Son has also
seen the Father, then assuredly he who sees the Father and the Son sees also the
Holy Spirit of the Father and the Son. So we do not take away free will, whilst
our soul blesses the Lord and forgets not all His recompenses;'(1) nor does it,
in ignorance of God's righteousness, wish to set up one of its own;(12) but it
believes in Him who justifies the ungodly,(13) and until it arrives at sight,
it lives by faith,--even the faith which works by love.(4) And this love is
shed abroad in our hearts, not by the sufficiency of our own will, nor by the
letter of the law, but by the Holy Ghost who has been given to us.(14)
CHAP. 60 [XXXIV.]--THE WILL TO BELIEVE IS FROM GOD.
Let this discussion suffice, if it satisfactorily meets the question we
had to solve. It may be, however, objected in reply, that we must take heed lest
some one should suppose that the sin would have to be imputed to God which is
committed by free will, if in the passage where it is asked, "What hast thou
which thou didst not receive?"(15) the very will by which we believe is reckoned
as a gift of God, because it arises out of the free will which we received at
our creation. Let the objector, however, attentively observe that this will is to
be ascribed to the divine gift, not merely because it arises from our free
will, which was created naturally with us; but also because God acts upon us by
the incentives of our perceptions, to will and to believe, either externally by
evangelical exhortations, where even the commands of the law also do something,
if they so far admonish a man of his infirmity that he betakes himself to the
grace that justifies by believing; or internally, where no man has in his own
control what shall enter into his thoughts, although it appertains to his own
will to consent or to dissent. Since God, therefore, in such ways acts upon the
reasonable soul in order that it may believe in Him (and certainly there is no
ability whatever in free will to believe, unless there be persuasion or summons
towards some one in whom to believe), it surely follows that it is God who both
works in man the willing to believe, and in all things prevents us with His
mercy. To yield our consent, indeed, to God's summons, or to withhold it, is (as I
have said) the function of our own will. And this not only does not invalidate
what is said, "For what hast thou that thou didst not receive?"(15) but it
really confirms it. For the soul cannot receive and possess these gifts, which are
here referred to, except by yielding its consent. And thus whatever it
possesses, and whatever it receives, is from God; and yet the act of receiving and
having belongs, of course, to the receiver and possessor. Now, should any man be
for constraining us to examine into this profound mystery, why this person is so
persuaded as to yield, and that person is not, there are only two things
occurring to me, which I should like to advance as my answer: "O the depth of the
riches!" (1) and "Is there unrighteousness with God?" (2) If the man is
displeased with such an answer, he must seek more learned disputants; but let him beware
lest he find presumptuous ones.
CHAP. 61 [XXXV.]--CONCLUSION OF THE WORK.
Let us at last bring our book to an end. I hardly know whether we have
accomplished our purpose at all by our great prolixity. It is not in respect of
you, [my Marcellinus,] that I have this misgiving, for I know your faith; but
with reference to the minds of those for whose sake you wished me to write,--who
so much in opposition to my opinion, but (to speak mildly, and not to mention
Him who spoke in His apostles) certainly against not only the opinion of the
great Apostle Paul, but also his strong, earnest, and vigilant conflict, prefer
maintaining their own views with tenacity to listening to him, when he "beseeches
them by the mercies of God," and tells them, "through the grace of God which
was given to him, not to think of themselves more highly than they ought to
think, but to think soberly, according as God had dealt to every man the measure of
faith." (3)
CHAP.62.--HE RETURNS TO THE QUESTION WHICH MARCELLINUS HAD PROPOSED TO HIM.
But I beg of you to advert to the question which you proposed to me, and
to what we have made out of it in the lengthy process of this discussion. You
were perplexed how I could have said that it was possible for a man to be without
sin, if his will were not wanting, by the help of God's aid, although no man
in the present life had ever lived, was living, or would live, of such perfect
righteousness. Now, in the books which I formerly addressed to you, I set forth
this very question. I said: "If I were asked whether it be possible for a man
to be without sin in this life, I should allow the possibility, by the grace of
God, and his own free will; for I should have no doubt that the free will
itself is of God's grace,--that is, has its place among the gifts of God,--not only
as to its existence, but also in respect of its goodness; that is, that it
applies itself to doing the commandments of God. And so, God's grace not only shows
what ought to be done, but also helps to the possibility of doing what it
shows."(4) You seemed to think it absurd, that a thing which was possible should be
unexampled. Hence arose the subject treated of in this book; and thus did it
devolve on me to show that a thing was possible although no example of it could
be found. We accordingly adduced certain cases out of the gospel and of the
law, at the beginning of this work,--such as the passing of a camel through the
eye of a needle;(5) and the twelve thousand legions of angels, who could fight
for Christ, if He pleased;(6) and those nations which God said He could have
exterminated at once from the face of His people,(7)--none of which possibilities
were ever reduced to fact. To these instances may be added those which are
referred to in the Book of Wisdom,(8) suggesting how many are the strange torments
and troubles which God was able to employ against ungodly men, by using the
creature which was obedient to His beck, which, however, He did not employ. One
might also allude to that mountain, which faith could remove into the sea,(9)
although, nevertheless, it was never done, so far as we have ever read(10) or
heard. Now you see how thoughtless and foolish would be the man who should say that
any one of these things is impossible with God, and how opposed to the sense of
Scripture would be his assertion. Many other cases of this kind may occur to
anybody who reads or thinks, the possibility of which with God we cannot deny,
although an example of them be lacking.
CHAP. 63.--AN OBJECTION.
But inasmuch as it may be said that the instances which I have been
quoting are divine works, whereas to live righteously is a work that belongs to
ourselves, I undertook to show that even this too is a divine work. This I have done
in the present book, with perhaps a fuller statement than is necessary,
although I seem to myself to have said too little against the opponents of the grace
of God. And I am never so much delighted in my treatment of a subject as when
Scripture comes most copiously to my aid; and when the question to be discussed
requires that "he that glorieth should glory in the Lord;"(11) and that we
should in all things lift up our hearts and give thanks to the Lord our God, from
whom, "as the Father of lights, every good and every perfect gift cometh
down."(12) Now if a gift is not God's gift, because it is wrought by us, or because we
act by His gift, then it is not a work of God that "a mountain should be
removed into the sea," inasmuch as, according to the Lord's statement, it is by the
faith of men that this is possible. Moreover, He attributes the deed to their
actual operation: "If ye have faith in yourselves as a grain of mustard-seed, ye
shall say unto this mountain, "Be thou removed, and be thou cast into the sea;
and it shall be done, and nothing shall be impossible to you."(1) Observe how
He said "to you," not "to Me" or "to the Father;" and yet it is certain that no
man does such a thing without God's gift and operation. See how an instance of
perfect righteousness is unexampled among men, and yet is not impossible. For
it might be achieved if there were only applied so much of will as suffices for
so great a thing. There would, however, be so much will, if there were hidden
from us none of those conditions which pertain to righteousness; and at the
same time these so delighted our mind, that whatever hindrance of pleasure or pain
might else occur, this delight in holiness would prevail over every rival
affection. And that this is not realized, is not owing to any intrinsic
impossibility, but to God's judicial act. For who can be ignorant, that what he should
know is not in man's power; nor does it follow that what he has discovered to be a
desirable object is actually desired, unless he also feel a delight in that
object, commensurate with its claims on his affection? For this belongs to health
of soul.
CHAP. 64 [XXXVI.]--WHEN THE COMMANDMENT TO LOVE IS FULFILLED.
But somebody will perhaps think that we lack nothing for the knowledge of
righteousness, since the Lord, when He summarily and briefly expounded His word
on earth, informed us that the whole law and the prophets depend on two
commandments;(2) nor was He silent as to what these were, but declared them in the
plainest words: "Thou shall love," said He, "the Lord thy God, with all thy
heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind;" and "Thou shalt love thy
neighbour as thyself."(3) What is more surely true than that, if these be fulfilled,
all righteousness is fulfilled? But the man who sets his mind on this truth
must also carefully attend to another,--in how many things we all of us
offend,(4) while we suppose that what we do is pleasant, or, at all events, not
unpleasing, to God whom we love; and afterwards, having (through His inspired word, or
else by being warned in some clear and certain way) learned what is not
pleasing to Him, we pray to Him that He would forgive us on our repentance. The life
of man is full of examples of this. But whence comes it that we fall short of
knowing what is pleasing to Him, if it be not that He is to that extent unknown
to us? "For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face."(5) Who,
however, can make so bold, on arriving far enough, to say: "Then shall I know
even as also I am known,"(5) as to think that they who shall see God will have
no greater love towards Him than they have who now believe in Him? or that the
one ought to be compared to the other, as if they were very near to each other?
Now, if love increases just in proportion as our knowledge of its object
becomes more intimate, of course we ought to believe that there is as much wanting
now to the fulfilment of righteousness as there is defective in our love of it.
A thing may indeed be known or believed, and yet not loved; but it is an
impossibility that a thing can be loved which is neither known nor believed. But if
the saints, in the exercise of their faith, could arrive at that great love,
than which (as the Lord Himself testified) no greater can possibly be exhibited in
the present life,--even to lay down their lives for the faith, or for their
brethren,(6)--then after their pilgrimage here, in which their walk is by
"faith," when they shall have reached the "sight" of that final happiness(7) which we
hope for, though as yet we see it not, and wait for in patience,(8) then
undoubtedly love itself shall be not only greater than that which we here experience,
but far higher than all which we ask or think;(9) and yet it cannot be
possibly more than "with all our heart, and with all our soul, and with all our mind."
For there remains in us nothing which can be added to the whole; since, if
anything did remain, there would not be the whole. Therefore the first commandment
about righteousness, which bids us love the Lord with all our heart, and soul,
and mind(10) (the next to which is, that we love our neighbour as ourselves),
we shall completely fulfil in that life when we shall see face to face.(5) But
even now this commandment is enjoined upon us, that we may be reminded what we
ought by faith to require, and what we should in our hope look forward to, and,
"forgetting the things which are behind, reach forth to the things which are
before."(11) And thus, as it appears to me, that man has made a far advance,
even in the present life, in the righteousness which is to be perfected hereafter,
who has discovered by this very advance how very far removed he is from the
completion of righteousness.
CHAP. 65.--IN WHAT SENSE A SINLESS RIGHTEOUSNESS IN THIS LIFE CAN BE ASSERTED.
Forasmuch, however, as an inferior righteousness may be said to be
competent to this life, whereby the just man lives by faith(12) although absent from
the Lord, and, therefore, walking by faith and not yet by sight,(1)--it may be
without absurdity said, no doubt, in respect of it, that it is free from sin;
for it ought not to be attributed to it as a fault, that it is not as yet
sufficient for so great a love to God as is due to the final, complete, and perfect
condition thereof. It is one thing to fail at present in attaining to the fulness
of love, and another thing to be swayed by no lust. A man ought therefore to
abstain from every unlawful desire, although he loves God now far less than it
is possible to love Him when He becomes an object of sight; just as in matters
connected with the bodily senses, the eye can receive no pleasure from any kind
of darkness, although it may be unable to look with a firm sight amidst
refulgent light. Only let us see to it that we so constitute the soul of man in this
corruptible body, that, although it has not yet swallowed up and consumed the
motions of earthly lust in that super-eminent perfection of the love of God, it
nevertheless, in that inferior righteousness to which we have referred, gives no
consent to the aforesaid lust for the purpose of effecting any unlawful thing.
In respect, therefore, of that immortal life, the commandment is even now
applicable: "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart, and with all
thy soul, and with all thy might;"(2) but in reference to the present life the
following: "Let not sin reign in your mortal body, that ye should obey it in the
lusts thereof."(3) To the one, again, belongs, "Thou shalt not covet;" to the
other, "Thou shalt not go after thy lusts."(5) To the one it appertains to seek
for nothing more than to continue in its perfect state; to the other it belongs
actively to do the duty committed to it, and to hope as its reward for the
perfection of the future life,--so that in the one the just man may live
forevermore in the sight of that happiness which in this life was his object of desire;
in the other, he may live by that faith whereon rests his desire for the
ultimate blessedness as its certain end. (These things being so, it will be sin in
the man who lives by faith ever to consent to an unlawful delight,--by committing
not only frightful deeds and crimes, but even trifling faults; sinful, if he
lend an ear to a word that ought not to be listened to, or a tongue to a phrase
which should not be uttered; sinful, if he entertains a thought in his heart
in such a way as to wish that an evil pleasure were a lawful one, although known
to be unlawful by the commandment,--for this amounts to a consent to sin,
which would certainly be carried out in act, unless fear of punishment
deterred.)(6) Have such just men, while living by faith, no need to say: "Forgive us our
debts, as we forgive our debtors?"(7) And do they prove this to be wrong which is
written, "In Thy sight shall no man living be justified?"(8) and this: "If we
say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us?"(9)
and, "There is no man that sinneth not;"(10) and again, "There is not on the
earth a righteous man, who doeth good and sinneth not"(11) (for both these
statements are expressed in a general future sense,--"sinneth not," "will not
sin,"--not in the past time, "has not sinned")?--and all other places of this purport
contained in the Holy Scripture? Since, however, these passages cannot
possibly be false, it plainly follows, to my mind, that whatever be the quality or
extent of the righteousness which we may definitely ascribe to the present life,
there is not a man living in it who is absolutely free from all sin; and that it
is necessary for every one to give, that it may be given to him;(12) and to
forgive, that it may be forgiven him;(13) and whatever righteousness he has, not
to presume that he has it of himself, but from the grace of God, who justifies
him, and still to go on hungering and thirsting for righteousness(14) from Him
who is the living bread,(15) and with whom is the fountain of life;(16) who
works in His saints, whilst labouring-amidst temptation in this life, their
justification in such manner that He may still have somewhat to impart to them
liberally when they ask, and something mercifully to forgive them when they confess.
CHAP. 66.--ALTHOUGH PERFECT RIGHTEOUSNESS BE NOT FOUND HERE ON EARTH, IT IS
STILL NOT IMPOSSIBLE.
But let objectors find, if they can, any man, while living under the
weight of this corruption, in whom God has no longer anything to forgive; unless
nevertheless they acknowledge that such an individual has been aided in the
attainment of his good character not merely by the teaching of the law which God
gave, but also by the infusion of the Spirit of grace--they will incur the charge
of ungodliness itself, not of this or that particular sin. Of course they are
not at all able to discover such a man, if they receive in a becoming manner the
testimony of the divine writings. Still, for all that, it must not by any means
be said that the possibility is lacking to God whereby the will of man can be
so assisted, that there can be accomplished in every respect even now in a man,
not that righteousness only which is of faith,(17) but that also in accordance
with which we shall by and by have to live for ever in the very vision of God.
For if he should now wish even that this corruptible in any particular man
should put on incorruption,(1) and to command him so to live among mortal men (not
destined himself to die) that his old nature should be wholly and entirely
withdrawn, and there should be no law in his members warring against the law of
his mind,(2)--moreover, that he should discover God to be everywhere present, as
the saints shall hereafter know and behold Him,--who will madly venture to
affirm that this is impossible? Men, however, ask why He does not do this; but they
who raise the question consider not duly the fact that they are human. I am
quite certain that, as nothing is impossible with God? so also there is no
iniquity with Him.(4) Equally sure am I that He resists the proud, and gives grace to
the humble.(5) I know also that to him who had a thorn in the flesh, the
messenger of Satan to buffet him, lest he should be exalted above measure, it was
said, when he besought God for its removal once, twice, nay thrice: "My grace is
sufficient for thee; for my strength is made perfect in weakness."(6) There is,
therefore, in the hidden depths of God's judgments, a certain reason why every
mouth even of the righteous should be shut in its own praise, and only opened
for the praise of God. But what this certain reason is, who can search, who
investigate, who know? So "unsearchable are His judgments, and His ways past
finding out! For who hath known the mind of the Lord? or who hath been his
counsellor? or who hath first given to Him, and it shall be recompensed unto him again?
For of Him, and through Him, and to Him, are all things: to whom be glory for
ever. Amen."(7)