A TREATISE ON NATURE AND GRACE, AGAINST PELAGIUS. BY AURELIUS AUGUSTIN, BISHOP
OF HIPPO, ADDRESSED TO TIMASIUS AND JACOBUS, A.D. 415
A TREATISE ON NATURE AND GRACE, AGAINST PELAGIUS;
BY AURELIUS AUGUSTIN, BISHOP OF HIPPO;
CONTAINED IN ONE BOOK, ADDRESSED TO TIMASIUS AND JACOBUS.
WRITTEN IN THE YEAR OF OUR LORD 415.
HE BEGINS WITH A STATEMENT OF WHAT IS TO BE INVESTIGATED CONCERNING NATURE AND
GRACE; HE SHOWS THAT NATURE, AS PROPAGATED FROM THE FLESH OF THE SINFUL ADAM,
BEING NO LONGER WHAT GOD MADE IT AT FIRST, -- FAULTLESS AND SOUND, -- REQUIRES
THE AID OF GRACE, IN ORDER THAT IT MAY BE REDEEMED FROM THE WRATH OF GOD AND
REGULATED FOR THE PERFECTION OF RIGHTEOUSNESS: THAT THE PENAL FAULT OF NATURE
LEADS TO A MOST RIGHTEOUS RETRIBUTION: WHILST GRACE ITSELF IS NOT RENDERED TO ANY
DESERTS OF OURS, BUT IS GIVEN GRATUITOUSLY; AND THEY WHO ARE NOT DELIVERED BY
IT ARE JUSTLY CONDEMNED. HE AFTERWARDS REFUTES, WITH ANSWERS ON EVERY SEVERAL
POINT, A WORK BY PELAGIUS, WHO SUPPORTS THIS SELF-SAME NATURE IN OPPOSITION TO
GRACE; AMONG OTHER THINGS ESPECIALLY, IN HIS DESIRE TO RECOMMEND THE OPINION THAT
A MAN CAN LIVE WITHOUT SIN, HE CONTENDED THAT NATURE HAD NOT BEEN WEAKENED AND
CHANGED BY SIN; FOR, OTHERWISE, THE MATTER OF SIN (WHICH HE THINKS ABSURD)
WOULD BE ITS PUNISHMENT, IF THE SINNER WERE WEAKENED TO SUCH A DEGREE THAT HE
COMMITTED MORE SIN. HE GOES ON TO ENUMERATE SUNDRY RIGHTEOUS MEN BOTH OF THE OLD
AND OF THE NEW TESTAMENTS: DEEMING THESE TO HAVE BEEN FREE FROM SIN, HE ALLEGED
THE POSSIBILITY OF NOT SINNING TO BE INHERENT IN MAN; AND THIS HE ATTRIBUTED TO
GOD'S GRACE, ON THE GROUND THAT GOD IS THE AUTHOR OF THAT NATURE IN WHICH IS
INSEPARABLY INHERENT THIS POSSIBILITY OF AVOIDING SIN. TOWARDS THE END OF THIS
TREATISE THERE IS AN EXAMINATION OF SUNDRY EXTRACTS FROM OLD WRITERS, WHICH
PELAGIUS ADDUCED IN SUPPORT OF HIS VIEWS, AND EXPRESSLY FROM HILARY, AMBROSE, AND
EVEN AUGUSTIN HIMSELF.
CHAP. 1 [I.]--THE OCCASION OF PUBLISHING THIS WORK; WHAT GOD'S RIGHTEOUSNESS
IS.
THE book which you sent to me, my beloved sons, Timasius and Jacobus, I
have read through hastily, but not indifferently, omitting only the few points
which are plain enough to everybody; and I saw in it a man inflamed with most
ardent zeal against those, who, when in their sins they ought to censure human
will, are more forward in accusing the nature of men, and thereby endeavour to
excuse themselves. He shows too great a fire against this evil, which even authors
of secular literature have severely censured with the exclamation: "The human
race falsely complains of its own nature!"(1) This same sentiment your author
also has strongly insisted upon, with all the powers of his talent. I fear,
however, that he will chiefly help those "who have a zeal for God, but not
according to knowledge," who, "being ignorant of God's righteousness, and going about
to establish their own righteousness, have not submitted themselves to the
righteousness of God."(2) Now, what the righteousness of God is, which is spoken of
here, he immediately afterwards explains by adding: "For Christ is the end of
the law for righteousness to every one that believeth."(3) This righteousness of
God, therefore, lies not in the commandment of the law, which excites fear,
but in the aid afforded by the grace of Christ, to which alone the fear of the
law, as of a schoolmaster,(1) usefully conducts. Now, the man who understands
this understands why he is a Christian. For "If righteousness came by the law,
then Christ is dead in vain."(2) If, however He did not die in vain, in Him only
is the ungodly man justified, and to him, on believing in Him who justifies the
ungodly, faith is reckoned for righteousness.(3) For all men have sinned and
come short of the glory of God, being justified freely by His blood.(4) But all
those who do not think themselves to belong to the "all who have sinned and fall
short of the glory of God," have of course no need to become Christians,
because "they that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick;"(5) whence
it is, that He came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.(6)
CHAP. 2 [II.]--FAITH IN CHRIST NOT NECESSARY TO SALVATION, IF A MAN WITHOUT IT
CAN LEAD A RIGHTEOUS LIFE.
Therefore the nature of the human race, generated from the flesh of the
one transgressor, if it is self-sufficient for fulfilling the law and for
perfecting righteousness, ought to be sure of its reward, that is, of everlasting
life, even if in any nation or at any former time faith in the blood of Christ was
unknown to it. For God is not so unjust as to defraud righteous persons of the
reward of righteousness, because there has not been announced to them the
mystery of Christ's divinity and humanity, which was manifested in the fleshy For
how could they believe what they had not heard of; or how could they hear without
a preacher?(8)' For "faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of
Christ." But I say (adds he): Have they not heard? "Yea, verily; their sound went
out into all the earth, and their words unto the ends of the world."(9) Before,
however, all this had been accomplished, before the actual preaching of the
gospel reaches the ends of all the earth--because there are some remote nations
still (although it is said they are very few) to whom the preached gospel has not
found its way,--what must human nature do, or what has it done--for it had
either not heard that all this was to take place, or has not yet learnt that it was
accomplished--but believe in God who made heaven and earth, by whom also it
perceived by nature that it had been itself created, and lead a right life, and
thus accomplish His will, uninstructed with any faith in the death and
resurrection of Christ? Well, if this could have been done, or can still be done, then
for my part I have to say what the apostle said in regard to the law: "Then
Christ died in vain."(2) For if he said this about the law, which only the nation
of the Jews received, how much more justly may it be said of the law of nature,
which the whole human race has received, "If righteousness come by nature, then
Christ died in vain." If, however, Christ did not die in vain, then human
nature cannot by any means be justified and redeemed from God's most righteous
wrath--in a word, from punishment--except by faith and the sacrament of the blood
of Christ.
CHAP. 3 [III.]--NATURE WAS CREATED SOUND AND WHOLE; IT WAS AFTERWARDS
CORRUPTED BY SIN.
Man's nature, indeed, was created at first faultless and without any sin;
but that nature of man in which every one is born from Adam, now wants the
Physician, because it is not sound. All good qualities, no doubt, which it still
possesses in its make, life, senses, intellect, it has of the Most High God, its
Creator and Maker. But the flaw, which darkens and weakens all those natural
goods, so that it has need of illumination and healing, it has not contracted
from its blameless Creator--but from that original sin, which it committed by free
will. Accordingly, criminal nature has its part in most righteous punishment.
For, if we are now newly created in Christ,(10) we were, for all that, children
of wrath, even as others,(11) "but God, who is rich in mercy, for His great
love wherewith He loved us, even when we were dead in sins, hath quickened us
together with Christ, by whose grace we were saved."(12)
CHAP. 4 [IV.]--FREE GRACE.
This grace, however, of Christ, without which neither infants nor adults
can be saved, is not rendered for any merits, but is given gratis, on account of
which it is also called grace. "Being justified," says the apostle, "freely
through His blood."(13) Whence they, who are not liberated through grace, either
because they are not yet able to hear, or because they are unwilling to obey;
or again because they did not receive, at the time when they were unable on
account of youth to hear, that bath of regeneration, which they might have received
and through which they might have been saved, are indeed justly condemned;
because they are not without sin, either that which they have derived from their
birth, or that which they have added from their own misconduct. "For all have
sinned"--whether in Adam or in themselves--"and come short of the glory of
God."(14)
CHAP. 5 [V.]--IT WAS A MATTER OF JUSTICE THAT ALL SHOULD BE CONDEMNED.
The entire mass, therefore, incurs penalty and if the deserved punishment
of condemnation were rendered to all, it would without doubt be righteously
rendered. They, therefore, who are delivered therefrom by grace are called, not
vessels of their own merits, but "vessels of mercy."(1) But of whose mercy, if
not His who sent Christ Jesus into the world to save sinners, whom He foreknew,
and foreordained, and called, and justified, and glorified?(2) Now, who could be
so madly insane as to fail to give ineffable thanks to the Mercy which
liberates whom it would? The man who correctly appreciated the whole subject could not
possibly blame the justice of God in wholly condemning all men whatsoever.
CHAP. 6 [VI.]--THE PELAGIANS HAVE VERY STRONG AND ACTIVE MINDS.
If we are simply wise according to the Scriptures, we are not compelled to
dispute against the grace of Christ, and to make statements attempting to show
that human nature both requires no Physician,--in infants, because it is whole
and sound; and in adults, because it is able to suffice for itself in
attaining righteousness, if it will. Men no doubt seem to urge acute opinions on these
points, but it is only word-wisdom,(3) by which the cross of Christ is made of
none effect. This, however, "is not the wisdom which descendeth from above."(4)
The words which follow in the apostle's statement I am unwilling to quote; for
we would rather not be thought to do an injustice to our friends, whose very
strong and active minds we should be sorry to see running in a perverse, instead
of an upright, course.
CHAP. 7 [VII.]--HE PROCEEDS TO CONFUTE THE WORK OF PELAGIUS; HE REFRAINS AS
YET FROM MENTIONING PELAGIUS' NAME.
However ardent, then, is the zeal which the author of the book you have
forwarded to me entertains against those who find a defence for their sins in the
infirmity of human nature; not less, nay even much greater, should be our
eagerness in preventing all attempts to render the cross of Christ of none effect.
Of none effect, however, it is rendered, if it be contended that by any other
means than by Christ's own sacrament it is possible to attain to righteousness
and everlasting life. This is actually done in the book to which I refer--I will
not say by its author wittingly, lest I should express the judgment that he
ought not to be accounted even a Christian, but, as I rather believe,
unconsciously. He has done it, no doubt, with much power; I only wish that the ability he
has displayed were sound and less like that which insane persons are accustomed
to exhibit.
CHAP. 8.--A DISTINCTION DRAWN BY PELAGIUS BETWEEN THE POSSIBLE AND ACTUAL.
For he first of all makes a distinction: "It is one thing," says he, "to
inquire whether a thing can be, which has respect to its possibility only; and
another thing, whether or not it is." This distinction, nobody doubts, is true
enough; for it follows that whatever is, was able to be; but it does not
therefore follow that what is able to be, also is. Our Lord, for instance, raised
Lazarus; He unquestionably was able to do so. But inasmuch as He did not raise up
Judas? must we therefore contend that He was unable to do so? He certainly was
able, but He would not. For if He had been willing, He could have effected this
too. For the Son quickeneth whomsoever He will.(6) Observe, however, what he
means by this distinction, true and manifest enough in itself, and what he
endeavours to make out of it. "We are treating," says he, "of possibility only; and
to pass from this to something else, except in the case of some certain fact, we
deem to be a very serious and extraordinary process." This idea he turns over
again and again, in many ways and at great length, so that no one would suppose
that he was inquiring about any other point than the possibility of not
committing sin. Among the many passages in which he treats of this subject, occurs
the following: "I once more repeat my position: I say that it is possible for a
man to be without sin. What do you say? That it is impossible for a man to be
without sin? But I do not say," he adds, "that there is a man without sin; nor do
you say, that there is not a man without sin. Our contention is about what is
possible, and not possible; not about what is, and is not." He then enumerates
certain passages of Scripture,(7) which are usually alleged in opposition to
them, and insists that they have nothing to do with the question, which is really
in dispute, as to the possibility or impossibility of a man's being without
sin. This is what he says: "No man indeed is clean from pollution; and, There is
no man that sinneth not; and, There is not a just man upon the earth; and,
There is none that doeth good. There are these and similar passages in Scripture,"
says he, "but they testify to the point of not being, not of not being able;
for by testimonies of this sort it is shown what kind of persons certain men were
at such and such a time, not that they were unable to be something else.
Whence they are justly found to be blameworthy. If, however, they had been of such a
character, simply because they were unable to be anything else, they are free
from blame."
CHAP. 9 [VIII.]--EVEN THEY WHO WERE NOT ABLE TO BE JUSTIFIED ARE CONDEMNED.
See what he has said. I, however, affirm that an infant born in a place
where it was not possible for him to be admitted to the baptism of Christ, and
being overtaken by death, was placed in such circumstances, that is to say, died
without the bath of regeneration, because it was not possible for him to be
otherwise. He would therefore absolve him, and, in spite of the Lord's sentence,
open to him the kingdom of heaven. The apostle, however, does not absolve him,
when he says: "By one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; by which
death passed upon all men, for that all have sinned."(1) Rightly, therefore,
by virtue of that condemnation which runs throughout the mass, is he not
admitted into the kingdom of heaven, although he was not only not a Christian, but was
unable to become one.
CHAP. 10 [IX.]--HE COULD NOT BE JUSTIFIED, WHO HAD NOT HEARD OF THE NAME OF
CHRIST; RENDERING THE CROSS OF CHRIST OF NONE EFFECT.
But they say: "He is not condemned; because the statement that all sinned
in Adam, was not made because of the sin which is derived from one's birth, but
because of imitation of him." If, therefore, Adam is said to be the author of
all the sins which followed his own, because he was the first sinner of the
human race, then how is it that Abel, rather than Christ, is not placed at the
head of all the righteous, because he was the first righteous man? But I am not
speaking of the case of an infant. I take the instance of a young man, or an old
man, who has died in a region where he could not hear of the name of Christ.
Well, could such a man have become righteous by nature and free will; or could he
not? If they contend that he could, then see what it is to render the cross of
Christ of none effect,(2) to contend that any man without it, can be justified
by the law of nature and the power of his will. We may here also say, then is
Christ dead in vain? forasmuch as all might accomplish so much as this, even if
He had never died; and if they should be unrighteous, they would be so because
they wished to be, not because they were unable to be righteous. But even
though a man could not be justified at all without the grace of Christ, he would
absolve him, if he dared, in accordance with his words, to the effect that, "if a
man were of such a character, because he could not possibly have been of any
other, he would be free from all blame."
CHAP. 11 [X.]--GRACE SUBTLY ACKNOWLEDGED BY PELAGIUS.
He then starts an objection to his own position, as if, indeed, another
person had raised it, and says: "'A man,' you will say, 'may possibly be [without
sin]; but it is by the grace of God.'" He then at once subjoins the following,
as if in answer to his own suggestion: "I thank you for your kindness, because
you are not merely content to withdraw your opposition to my statement, which
you just now opposed, or barely to acknowledge it; but you actually go so far
as to approve it. For to say, 'A man may possibly, but by this or by that,' is
in fact nothing else than not only to assent to its possibility, but also to
show the mode and condition of its possibility. Nobody, therefore, gives a better
assent to the possibility of anything than the man who allows the condition
thereof; because, without the thing itself, it is not possible for a condition to
be." After this he raises another objection against. himself: "'But, you will
say, 'you here seem to reject the grace of God, inasmuch as you do not even
mention it;"' and he then answers the objection: "Now, is it I that reject grace,
who by acknowledging the thing must needs also confess the means by which it may
be effected, or you, who by denying the thing do undoubtedly also deny
whatever may be the means through which the thing is accomplished?" He forgot that he
was now answering one who does not deny the thing, and whose objection he had
just before set forth in these words: "A than may possibly be [without sin]; but
it is by the grace of God." How then does that man deny the possibility, in
defence of which his opponent earnestly contends, when he makes the admission to
that opponent that "the thing is possible, but only by the grace of God?" That,
however, after he is dismissed who already acknowledges the essential thing,
he still has a question against those who maintain the impossibility of a man's
being without sin, what is it to us? Let him ply his questions against any
opponents he pleases, provided he only confesses this, which cannot be denied
without the most criminal impiety, that without the grace of God a man cannot be
without sin. He says, indeed: "Whether he confesses it to be by grace, or by aid,
or by mercy, whatever that be by which a man can be without sin,--every one
acknowledges the thing itself."
CHAP. 12 [XI.]--IN OUR DISCUSSIONS ABOUT GRACE, WE DO NOT SPEAK OF THAT WHICH
RELATES TO THE CONSTITUTION OF OUR NATURE, BUT TO ITS RESTORATION.
I confess to your love, that when I read those words I was filled with a
sudden joy, because he did not deny the grace of God by which alone a man can be
justified; for it is this which I mainly detest and dread in discussions of
this kind But when I went on to read the rest, I began to have my suspicions,
first of all, from the similes he employs. For he says: "If I were to say, man is
able to dispute; a bird is able to fly; a hare is able to run; without
mentioning at the same time the instruments by which these acts can be
accomplished--that is, the tongue, the wings, and the legs; should I then have denied the
conditions of the various offices, when I acknowledged the very offices themselves?"
It is at once apparent that he has here instanced such things as are by nature
efficient; for the members of the bodily structure which are here mentioned
are created with natures of such a kind--the tongue, the wings, the legs. He has
not here posited any such thing as we wish to have understood by grace, without
which no man is justified; for this is a topic which is concerned about the
cure, not the constitution, of natural. functions. Entertaining, then, some
apprehensions, I proceeded to read all the rest, and I soon found that my suspicions
had not been unfounded.
CHAP. 13 [XII.]--THE SCOPE AND PURPOSE OF THE LAW'S THREATENINGS; "PERFECT
WAYFARERS."
But before I proceed further, see what he has said. When treating the
question about the difference of sins, and starting as an objection to himself,
what certain persons allege, "that some sins are light by their very frequency,
their constant irruption making it impossible that they should be all of them
avoided;" he thereupon denied that it was "proper that they should be censured
even as light offences, if they cannot possibly be wholly avoided." He of course
does not notice the Scriptures of the New Testament, wherein we learn(1) that
the intention of the law in its censure is this, that, by reason of the
transgressions which men commit, they may flee for refuge to the grace of the Lord, who
has pity upon them--"the schoolmaster"(2) "shutting them up unto the same faith
which should afterwards be revealed;"(3) that by it their transgressions may
be forgiven, and then not again be committed, by God's assisting grace. The road
indeed belongs to all who are progressing in it; although it is they who make
a good advance that are called "perfect travellers." That, however, is the
height of perfection which admits of no addition, when the goal to which men tend
has begun to be possessed.
CHAP. 14 [XIII.]--REFUTATION OF PELAGIUS.
But the truth is, the question which is proposed to him--"Are you even
yourself without sin?"--does not really belong to the subject in dispute. What,
however, he says,--that "it is rather to be imputed to his own negligence that he
is not without sin," is no doubt well spoken; but then he should deem it to be
his duty even to pray to God that this faulty negligence get not the dominion
over him,--the prayer that a certain man once put up, when he said: "Order my
steps according to Thy word, and let not any iniquity have dominion over
me,"(4)--lest, whilst relying on his own diligence as on strength of his own, he
should fail to attain to the true righteousness either by this way, or by that other
method in which, no doubt, perfect righteousness is to be desired and hoped
for.
CHAP. 15 [XIV.]--NOT EVERYTHING [OF DOCTRINAL TRUTH] IS WRITTEN IN SCRIPTURE
IN SO MANY WORDS.
That, too, which is said to him, "that it is nowhere written in so many
words, A man can be without sin," he easily refutes thus: "That the question here
is not in what precise words each doctrinal statement is made." It is perhaps
not without reason that, while in several passages of Scripture we may find it
said that men are without excuse, it is nowhere found that any man is described
as being without sin, except Him only, of whom it is plainly said, that "He
knew no sin."(5) Similarly, we read in the passage where the subject is
concerning priests: "He was in all points tempted like as we are, only without
sin,''(6)--meaning, of course, in that flesh which bore the likeness of sinful flesh,
although it was not sinful flesh; a likeness, indeed, which it would not have
borne if it had not been in every other respect the same as sinful flesh. How,
however, we are to understand this: "Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin;
neither can he sin, for his seed remaineth in him;"(7) while the Apostle John
himself, as if he had not been born of God, or else were addressing men who had
not been born of God, lays down this position: "If we say that we have no sin,
we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us,"(8)--I have already
explained, with such care as I was able, in those books which I wrote to Marcellinus on
this very subject.(9) It seems, moreover, to me to be an interpretation worthy
of acceptance to regard the clause of the above quoted passage: "Neither can
he sin," as if it meant: He ought not to commit sin. For who could be so foolish
as to say that sin ought to be committed, when, in fact, sin is sin, for no
other reason than that it ought not to be committed?
CHAP. 16 [XV.]--PELAGIUS CORRUPTS A PASSAGE OF THE APOSTLE JAMES BY ADDING A
NOTE OF INTERROGATION.
Now that passage, in which the Apostle James says: "But the tongue can no
man tame," does not appear to me to be capable of the interpretation which he
would put upon it, when he expounds it, "as if it were written by way of
reproach; as much as to say: Can no man then, tame the tongue? As if in a reproachful
tone, which would say: You are able to tame wild beasts; cannot you tame the
tongue? As if it were an easier thing to tame the tongue than to subjugate wild
beasts." I do not think that this is the meaning of the passage. For, if he had
meant such an opinion as this to be entertained of the facility of taming the
tongue, there would have followed in the sequel of the passage a comparison of
that member with the beasts. As it is, however, it simply goes on to say: "The
tongue is an unruly evil, full of deadly poison,"(1)--such, of course, as is
more noxious than that of beasts and creeping things. For while the one destroys
the flesh, the other kills the soul. For, "The mouth that belieth slayeth the
soul."(2) It is not, therefore, as if this is an easier achievement than the
taming of beasts that St. James pronounced the statement before us, or would have
others utter it; but he rather aims at showing what a great evil in man his
tongue is--so great, indeed, that it cannot be tamed by any man, although even
beasts are tameable by human beings. And he said this, not with a view to our
permitting, through our neglect, the continuance of so great an evil to ourselves,
but in order that we might be induced to request the help of divine grace for
the taming of the tongue. For he does not say: "None can tame the tongue;" but
"No man;" in order that, when it is tamed, we may acknowledge it to be effected
by the mercy of God, the help of God, the grace of God. The soul, therefore,
should endeavour to tame the tongue, and while endeavouring should pray for
assistance; the tongue, too, should beg for the taming of the tongue,--He being the
tamer who said to His disciples: "It is not ye that speak, but the Spirit of
your Father which speaketh in you."(3) Thus, we are warned by the precept to do
this,--namely, to make the attempt, and, failing in our own strength, to pray
for the help of God.
CHAP. 17 [XVI.]--EXPLANATION OF THIS TEXT CONTINUED.
Accordingly, after emphatically describing the evil of the tongue--saying,
among other things: "My brethren, these things ought not so to be" 4--he at
once, after finishing some remarks which arose out of his subject, goes on to add
I this advice, showing by what help those things would not happen, which (as
he said) ought not: "Who is a wise man and endowed with knowledge among you? Let
him show out of a good conversation his works with meekness of wisdom. But if
ye have bitter envying and strife in your hearts, glory not and lie not against
the truth. This wisdom descendeth not from above, but is earthly, sensual,
devilish. For where there is envying and strife, there is confusion and every evil
work. But the wisdom that is from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle,
and easy to be entreated, full of mercy and good fruits, without partiality,
and without hypocrisy."(5) This is the wisdom which tames the tongue; it
descends from above, and springs from no human heart. Will any one, then, dare to
divorce it from the grace of God, and with most arrogant vanity place it in the
power of man? Why should I pray to God that it be accorded me, if it may be had of
man? Ought we not to object to this prayer lest injury be done to free will
which is self-sufficient in the possibility of nature for discharging all the
duties of righteousness? We ought, then, to object also to the Apostle James
himself, who admonishes us in these words: "If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask
of God, that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not, and it shall be
given him; but let him ask in faith, nothing doubting."(6) This is the faith to
which the commandments drive us, in order that the law may prescribe our duty
and faith accomplish it.(7) For through the tongue, which no man can tame, but
only the wisdom which comes down from above, "in many things we all of us
offend."(8) For this truth also the same apostle pronounced in no other sense than
that in which he afterwards declares: "The tongue no man can tame."(1)
CHAP. 18 [XVII.]--WHO MAY BE SAID TO BE IN THE FLESH.
There is a passage which nobody could place against these texts with the
similar purpose of showing the impossibility of not sinning: "The wisdom of the
flesh is enmity against God; for it is not subject to the law of God, neither
indeed can be; so then they that are in the flesh cannot please God;"(1) for he
here mentions the wisdom of the flesh, not the wisdom which cometh from above:
moreover, it is manifest, that in this passage, by the phrase, "being in the
flesh," are signified, not those who have not yet quitted the body, but those who
live according to the flesh. The question, however, we are discussing does not
lie in this point. But what I want to hear from him, if I can, is about those
who live according to the Spirit, and who on this account are not, in a certain
sense, in the flesh, even while they still live here, -- whether they, by
God's grace, live according to the Spirit, or are sufficient for themselves,
natural capability having been bestowed on them when they were created, and their own
proper will besides. Whereas the fulfilling of the law is nothing else than
love;(2) and God's love is shed abroad in our hearts, not by our own selves, but
by the Holy Ghost which is given to us.(3)
CHAP. 19.--SINS OF IGNORANCE; TO WHOM WISDOM IS GIVEN BY GOD ON THEIR
REQUESTING IT.
He further treats of sins of ignorance, and says that "a man ought to be
very careful to avoid ignorance; and that ignorance is blame-worthy for this
reason, because it is through his own neglect that a man is ignorant of that which
he certainly must have known if he had only applied diligence;" whereas he
prefers disputing all things rather than to pray, and say: "Give me understanding,
that I may learn Thy commandments."(4) It is, indeed, one thing to have taken
no pains to know what sins of negligence were apparently expiated even through
divers sacrifices of the law; it is another thing to wish to understand, to be
unable, and then to act contrary to the law, through not understanding what it
would have done. We are accordingly enjoined to ask of God wisdom, "who giveth
to all men liberally;"(5) that is, of course, to all men who ask in such a
manner, and to such an extent, as so great a matter requires in earnestness of
petition.
CHAP. 20 [XVIII.]--WHAT PRAYER PELAGIUS WOULD ADMIT TO BE NECESSARY.
He confesses that "sins which have been committed do notwithstanding
require to be divinely expiated, and that the Lord must be entreated because of
them," -- that is, for the purpose, of course, of obtaining pardon; "because that
which has been done cannot," it is his own admission, "be undone," by that
"power of nature and will of man" which he talks about so much. From this necessity,
therefore, it follows that a man must pray to be forgiven. That a man,
however, requires to be helped not to sin, he has nowhere admitted; I read no such
admission in this passage; he keeps a strange silence on this subject altogether;
although the Lord's Prayer enjoins upon us the necessity of praying both that
our debts may be remitted to us, and that we may not be led into temptation, --
the one petition entreating that past offences may be atoned for; the other,
that future ones may be avoided. Now, although this is never done unless our will
be assistant, yet our will alone is not enough to secure its being done; the
prayer, therefore, which is offered up to God for this result is neither
superfluous nor offensive to the Lord. For what is more foolish than to pray that you
may do that which you have it in your own power to do.
CHAP. 21 [XIX.]--PELAGIUS DENIES THAT HUMAN NATURE HAS BEEN DEPRAVED OR
CORRUPTED BY SIN.
You may now see (what bears very closely on our subject) how he endeavours
to exhibit human nature, as if it were wholly without fault, and how he
struggles against the plainest of God's Scriptures with that "wisdom of word"(6)
which renders the cross of Christ of none effect. That cross, however, shall
certainly never be made of none effect; rather shall such wisdom be subverted. Now,
after we shall have demonstrated this, it may be that God's mercy may visit him,
so that he may be sorry that he ever said these things: "We have," he says,
"first of all to discuss the position which is maintained, that our nature has
been weakened and changed by sin. I think," continues he, "that before all other
things we have to inquire what sin is, -- some substance, or wholly a name
without substance, whereby is expressed not a thing, not an existence, not some
sort of a body, but the doing of a wrongful deed." He then adds: "I suppose that
this is the case; and if so," he asks, "how could that which lacks all substance
have possibly weakened or changed human nature?" Observe, I beg of you, how in
his ignorance he struggles to overthrow the most salutary words of the
remedial Scriptures: "I said, O Lord, be merciful unto me; heal my soul, for I have
sinned against Thee."(7) Now, how can a thing be healed, if it is not wounded nor
hurt, nor weakened and corrupted? But, as there is here something to be
healed, whence did it receive its injury? You hear [the Psalmist] confessing the
fact; what need is there of discussion? He says: "Heal my soul." Ask him how that
which he wants to be healed became injured, and then listen to his following
words: "Because I have sinned against Thee."Let him, however, put a question, and
ask what he deemed a suitable inquiry, and say: "0 you who exclaim, Heal my
soul, for I have sinned against Thee! pray tell me what sin is? Some substance, or
wholly a name without substance, whereby is expressed, not a thing, not an
existence, not some sort of a body, but merely the doing of a wrongful deed?" Then
the other returns for answer: "It is even as you say; sin is not some
substance; but under its name there is merely expressed the doing of a wrongful deed."
But he rejoins: "Then why cry out, Heal my soul, for I have sinned against
Thee? How could that have possibly corrupted your soul which lacks all substance?"
Then would the other, worn out with the anguish of his wound, in order to avoid
being diverted from prayer by the discussion, briefly answer and say: "Go from
me, I beseech you; rather discuss the point, if you can, with Him who said:
'They that are whole need no physician, but they that are sick; I am not come to
call the righteous, but sinners,'"(1) -- in which words, of course, He
designated the righteous as the whole, and sinners as the sick.
CHAP. 22 [XX.]--HOW OUR NATURE COULD BE VITIATED BY SIN, EVEN THOUGH IT BE NOT
A SUBSTANCE.
Now, do you not perceive the tendency and direction of this controversy?
Even to render of none effect the Scripture where it is said "Thou shalt call
His name Jesus, for He shall save His people from their sins."(2) For how is He
to save where there is no malady? For the sins, from which this gospel says
Christ's people have to be saved, are not substances, and according to this writer
are incapable of corrupting. O brother, how good a thing it is to remember that
you are a Christian! To believe, might perhaps be enough; but still, since you
persist in discussion, there is no harm, nay there is even benefit, if a firm
faith precede it; let us not suppose, then, that human nature cannot be
corrupted by sin, but rather, believing, from the inspired Scriptures, that it is
corrupted by sin, let our inquiry be how this could possibly have come about.
Since, then, we have already learnt that sin is not a substance, do we not consider,
not to mention any other example, that not to eat is also not a substance?
Because such abstinence is withdrawal from a substance, inasmuch as food is a
substance. To abstain, then, from food is not a substance; and yet the substance of
our body, if it does altogether abstain from food, so languishes, is so
impaired by broken health, is so exhausted of strength, so weakened and broken with
very weariness, that even if it be in any way able to continue alive, it is
hardly capable of being restored to the use of that food, by abstaining from which
it became so corrupted and injured. In the same way sin is not a substance; but
God is a substance, yea the height of substance and only true sustenance of
the reasonable creature. The consequence of departing from Him by disobedience,
and of inability, through infirmity, to receive what one ought really to rejoice
in, you hear from the Psalmist, when he says: "My heart is smitten and
withered like grass, since I have forgotten to eat my bread."(3)
CHAP. 23 [XXI.]--ADAM DELIVERED BY THE MERCY OF CHRIST.
But observe how, by specious arguments, he continues to oppose the truth
of Holy Scripture. The Lord Jesus, who is called Jesus because He saves His
people from their sins,(2) in accordance with this His merciful character, says:
"They that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick; I am come not
to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance."(4) Accordingly, His apostle
also says: "This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that
Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners."(5) This man, however, contrary to
the "faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation," declares that "this
sickness ought not to have been contracted by sins, lest the punishment of sin
should amount to this, that more sins should be committed." Now even for infants
the help of the Great Physician is sought. This writer asks: "Why seek Him? They
are whole for whom you seek the Physician. Not even was the first man condemned
to die for any such reason, for he did not sin afterwards." As if he had ever
heard anything of his subsequent perfection in righteousness, except so far as
the Church commends to our faith that even Adam was delivered by the mercy of
the Lord Christ. "As to his posterity also," says he, "not only are they not
more infirm than he, but they actually fulfilled more commandments than he ever
did, since he neglected to fulfil one," -- this posterity which he sees so born
(as Adam certainly was not made), not only incapable of commandment, which they
do not at all understand, but hardly capable of sucking the breast, when they
are hungry! Yet even these would He have to be saved in the bosom of Mother
Church by His grace who saves His people from their sins; but these men gainsay
such grace, and, as if they had a deeper insight into the creature than ever He
possesses who made the creature, they pronounce [these infants] sound with an
assertion which is anything but sound itself.
CHAP. 24 [XXII.] -- SIN AND THE PENALTY OF SIN THE SAME.
"The very matter," says he, "of sin is its punishment, if the sinner is so
much weakened that he commits more sins." He does not consider how justly the
light of truth forsakes the man who transgresses the law. When thus deserted he
of course becomes blinded, and necessarily offends more; and by so falling is
embarrassed and being embarrassed fails to rise, so as to hear the voice of the
law, which admonishes him to beg for the Saviour's grace. Is no punishment due
to them of whom the apostle says: "Because that, when they knew God, they
glorified Him not as God, neither were thankful; but became vain in their
imaginations, and their foolish heart was darkened?"(1) This darkening was, of course,
already their punishment and penalty; and yet by this very penalty -- that is,
by their blindness of heart, which supervenes on the withdrawal of the light of
wisdom -- they fell into more grievous sins still. "For giving themselves out
as wise, they became fools." This is a grievous penalty, if one only understands
it; and from such a penalty only see to what lengths they ran: "And they
changed," he says, "the glory of the uncorruptible God into an image made like to
corruptible man, and to birds, and four-footed beasts, and creeping things."(2)
All this they did owing to that penalty of their sin, whereby "their foolish
heart was darkened." And yet, owing to these deeds of theirs, which, although
coming in the way of punishment, were none the less sins (he goes on to say):
"Wherefore God also gave them up to uncleanness, through the lusts of their own
hearts."(3) See how severely God condemned them, giving them over to uncleanness in
the very desires of their heart. Observe also the sins they commit owing to
such condemnation: "To dishonour," says he, "their own bodies among
themselves."(3) Here is the punishment of iniquity, which is itself iniquity; a fact which
sets forth in a clearer light the words which follow: "Who changed the truth of
God into a lie, and worshipped and served the creature more than the Creator,
who is blessed for ever. Amen." "For this cause," says he, "God gave them up
unto vile affections."(4) See how often God inflicts punishment; and out of the
self-same punishment sins, more numerous and more severe, arise. "For even their
women did change the natural use into that which is against nature; and
likewise the men also, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust one
toward another; men with men working that which is unseemly."(5) Then, to show
that these things were so sins themselves, that they were also the penalties of
sins, he further says: "And receiving in themselves that recompense of their
error which was meet."(6) Observe how often it happens that the very punishment
which God inflicts begets other sins as its natural offspring. Attend still
further: "And even as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge," says
he, "God gave them over to a reprobate mind, to do those things which are not
convenient; being filled with all unrighteousness, fornication, wickedness,
covetousness, maliciousness; full of envy, murder, debate, deceit, malignity;
whisperers, backbiters, odious to God, despiteful, proud, boasters, inventors of evil
things, disobedient to parents, without understanding, covenant-breakers,
without natural affection, implacable, unmerciful."(7) Here, now, let our opponent
say: "Sin ought not so to have been punished, that the sinner, through his
punishment, should commit even more sins."
CHAP. 25 [XXIII.]--GOD FORSAKES ONLY THOSE WHO DESERVE TO BE FORSAKEN. WE ARE
SUFFICIENT OF OURSELVES TO COMMIT SIN; BUT NOT TO RETURN TO THE WAY OF
RIGHTEOUSNESS. DEATH IS THE PUNISHMENT, NOT THE CAUSE OF SIN.
Perhaps he may answer that God does not compel men to do these things, but
only forsakes those who deserve to be forsaken. If he does say this, he says
what is most true. For, as I have already remarked, those who are forsaken by
the light of righteousness, and are therefore groping in darkness, produce
nothing else than those works of darkness which I have enumerated, until such time as
it is said to them, and they obey the command: "Awake thou that sleepest, and
arise from the dead, and Christ shall give thee light."(8) The truth designates
them as dead; whence the passage: "Let the dead bury their dead." The truth,
then, designates as dead those whom this man declares to have been unable to be
damaged or corrupted by sin, on the ground, forsooth, that he has discovered
sin to be no substance! Nobody tells him that "man was so formed as to be able to
pass from righteousness to sin, and yet not able to return from sin to
righteousness." But that free will, whereby man corrupted his own self, was sufficient
for his passing into sin; but to return to righteousness, he has need of a
Physician, since he is out of health; he has need of a Vivifier, because he is
dead. Now about such grace as this he says not a word, as if he were able to cure
himself by his own will, since this alone was able to ruin him. We do not tell
him that the death of the body is of efficacy for sinning, because it is only
its punishment; for no one sins by undergoing the death of his body l but the
death of the soul is conducive to sin, forsaken as it is by its life, that is,
its God; and it must needs produce dead works, until it revives by the grace of
Christ. God forbid that we should assert that hunger and thirst and other bodily
sufferings necessarily produce sin. When exercised by such vexations, the life
of the righteous only shines out with greater lustre, and procures a greater
glory by overcoming them through patience; but then it is assisted by the grace,
it is assisted by the Spirit, it is assisted by the mercy of God; not exalting
itself in an arrogant will, but earning fortitude by a humble confession. For
it had learnt to say unto God: "Thou art my hope; Thou art my trust."(1) Now,
how it happens that concerning this grace, and help and mercy, without which we
cannot live, this man has nothing to say, I am at a loss to know; but he goes
further, and in the most open manner gainsays the grace of Christ whereby we are
justified, by insisting on the sufficiency of nature to work righteousness,
provided only the will be present. The reason, however, why, after sin has been
released to the guilty one by grace, for the exercise of faith, there should
still remain the death of the body, although it proceeds from sin, I have already
explained, according to my ability, in those books which I wrote to Marcellinus
of blessed memory.(2)
CHAP. 26 [XXIV.] -- CHRIST DIED OF HIS OWN POWER AND CHOICE.
As to his statement, indeed, that "the Lord was able to die without sin;"
His being born also was of the ability of His mercy, not the demand of His
nature: so, likewise, did He undergo death of His own power; and this is our price
which He paid to redeem us from death. Now, this truth their contention labours
hard to make of none effect; for human nature is maintained by them to be
such, that with free will it wants no such ransom in order to be translated from
the power of darkness and of him who has the power of death,(3) into the kingdom
of Christ the Lord.(4) And yet, when the Lord drew near His passion, He said,
"Behold, the prince of this world cometh and shall find nothing in me,"(5) --
and therefore no sin, of course, on account of which he might exercise dominion
over Him, so as to destroy Him. "But," added He, "that the world may know that I
do the will of my Father, arise, let us go hence;"(6) as much as to say, I am
going to die, not through the necessity of sin, but in voluntariness of
obedience.
CHAP. 27.--EVEN EVILS, THROUGH GOD'S MERCY, ARE OF USE.
He asserts that "no evil is the cause of anything good;" as if punishment,
forsooth, were good, although thereby many have been reformed. There are,
then, evils which are of use by the wondrous mercy of God. Did that man experience
some good thing, when he said, "Thou didst hide Thy face from me, and I was
troubled?"(7) Certainly not; and yet this very trouble was to him in a certain
manner a remedy against his pride. For he had said in his prosperity, "I shall
never be moved;"(8) and so was ascribing to himself what he was receiving from the
Lord. "For what had he that he did not receive?"(9) It had, therefore, become
necessary to show him whence he had received, that he might receive in humility
what he had lost in pride. Accordingly, he says, "In Thy good pleasure, O
Lord, Thou didst add strength to my beauty."(7) In this abundance of mine I once
used to say, "I shall not be moved;" whereas it all came from Thee, not from
myself. Then at last Thou didst turn away Thy face from me, and I became troubled.
CHAP. 28 [XXV.]--THE DISPOSITION OF NEARLY ALL WHO GO ASTRAY. WITH SOME
HERETICS OUR BUSINESS OUGHT NOT TO BE DISPUTATION, BUT PRAYER.
Man's proud mind has no relish at all for this; God, however, is great, in
persuading even it how to find it all out. We are, indeed, more inclined to
seek how best to reply to such arguments as oppose our error, than to experience
how salutary would be our condition if we were free from error. We ought,
therefore, to encounter all such, not by discussions, but rather by prayers both for
them and for ourselves. For we never say to them, what this opponent has
opposed to himself, that "sin was necessary in order that there might be a cause for
God's mercy." Would there had never been misery to render that mercy
necessary! But the iniquity of sin, -- which is so much the greater in proportion to the
ease wherewith man might have avoided sin, whilst no infirmity did as yet
beset him, -- has been followed closely up by a most righteous punishment; even
that [offending man] should receive in himself a reward in kind of his sin, losing
that obedience of his body which had been in some degree put under his own
control, which he had despised when it was the right of his Lord. And, inasmuch as
we are now born with the self-same law of sin, which in our members resists
the law of our mind, we ought never to murmur against God, nor to dispute in
opposition to the clearest fact, but to seek and pray for His mercy instead of our
punishment.
CHAP. 29 [XXVI.]--A SIMILE TO SHOW THAT GOD'S GRACE IS NECESSARY FOR DOING
ANY] GOOD WORK WHATEVER. GOD NEVER FORSAKES THE JUSTIFIED MAN IF HE BE NOT HIMSELF
FORSAKEN.(1)
Observe, indeed, how cautiously he expresses himself: "God, no doubt,
applies His mercy even to this office, whenever it is necessary because man after
sin requires help in this way, not because God wished there should be a cause
for such necessity." Do you not see how he does not say that God's grace is
necessary to prevent us from sinning, but because we have sinned? Then he adds: "But
just in the same way it is the duty of a physician to be ready to cure a man
who is already wounded; although he ought not to wish for a man who is sound to
be wounded." Now, if this simile suits the subject of which we are treating,
human nature is certainly incapable of receiving a wound from sin, inasmuch as
sin is not a substance. As therefore, for example's sake, a man who is lamed by a
wound is cured in order that his step for the future may be direct and strong,
its past infirmity being healed, so does the Heavenly Physician cure our
maladies, not only that they may cease any longer to exist, but in order that we may
ever afterwards be able to walk aright, -- to which we should be unequal, even
after our healing, except by His continued help. For after a medical man has
administered a cure, in order that the patient may be afterwards duly nourished
with bodily elements and ailments, for the completion and continuance of the
said cure by suitable means and help, he commends him to God's good care, who
bestows these aids on all who live in the flesh, and from whom proceeded even
those means which [the physician] applied during the process of the cure. For it is
not out of any resources which he has himself created that the medical man
effects any cure, but out of the resources of Him who creates all things which are
required by the whole and by the sick. God, however, whenever He -- through
"the one mediator between God and men, the man Christ Jesus" -- spiritually heals
the sick or raises the dead, that is, justifies the ungodly, and when He has
brought him to perfect health, in other words, to the fulness of life and
righteousness, does not forsake, if He is not forsaken, in order that life may be
passed in constant piety and righteousness. For, just as the eye of the body, even
when completely sound, is unable to see unless aided by the brightness of
light, so also man, even when most fully justified, is unable to lead a holy life,
if he be not divinely assisted by the eternal light of righteousness. God,
therefore, heals us not only that He may blot out the sin which we have committed,
but, furthermore, that He may enable us even to avoid sinning.
CHAP. 30 [XXVII.]--SIN IS REMOVED BY SIN.
He no doubt shows some acuteness in handling, and turning over and
exposing, as he likes, and refuting a certain statement, which is made to this effect,
that "it was really necessary to man, in order to take from him all occasion
for pride and boasting, that he should be unable to exist without sin." He
supposes it to be "the height of absurdity and folly, that there should have been
sin in order that sin might not be; inasmuch as pride is itself, of course, a
sin." As if a sore were not attended with pain, and an operation did not produce
pain, that pain might be taken away by pain. If we had not experienced any such
treatment, but were only to hear about it in some parts of the world where
these things had never happened, we might perhaps use this man's words, and say, It
is the height of absurdity that pain should have been necessary in order that
a sore should have no pain.
CHAP. 31.--THE ORDER AND PROCESS OF HEALING OUR HEAVENLY PHYSICIAN DOES NOT
ADOPT FROM THE SICK PATIENT, BUT DERIVES FROM HIMSELF. WHAT CAUSE THE RIGHTEOUS
HAVE FOR FEARING.
"But God," they say, "is able to heal all things." Of course His purpose
in acting is to heal all things; but He acts on His own judgment, and does not
take His procedure in healing from the sick man. For undoubtedly it was His wish
to endow His apostle with very great power and strength, and yet He said to
him: "My strength is made perfect in weakness;"(2) nor did He remove from him,
though he so often entreated Him to do so, that mysterious "thorn in the flesh,"
which He told him had been given to him" test he should be unduly exalted
through the abundance of the revelation."(3) For all other sins only prevail in evil
deeds; pride only has to be guarded against in things that are rightly done.
Whence it happens that those persons are admonished not to attribute to their
own power the gifts of God, nor to plume themselves thereon, lest by so doing
they should perish with a heavier perdition than if they had done no good at all,
to whom it is said: "Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling, for
it is God which worketh in you, both to will and to do of His good
pleasure."(1) Why, then, must it be with fear and trembling, and not rather with security,
since God is working; except it be because there so quickly steals over our
human soul, by reason of our will (without which we can do nothing well), the
inclination to esteem simply as our own accomplishment whatever good we do; and so
each one of us says in his prosperity: "I shall never be moved?"(2) Therefore,
He who in His good pleasure had added strength to our beauty, turns away His
face, and the man who had made his boast becomes troubled, because it is by
actual sorrows that the swelling pride must be remedied.
CHAP. 32 [XXVIII.]--GOD FORSAKES US TO SOME EXTENT THAT WE MAY NOT GROW PROUD.
Therefore it is not said to a man: "It necessary for you to sin that you
may not sin;" but it is said to a man: "God in some degree forsakes you, in
consequence of which you grow proud, that you may know that you are 'not your
own,' but are His,(3) and learn not to be proud." Now even that incident in the
apostle's life, of this kind, is so wonderful, that were it not for the fact that
he himself is the voucher for it whose truth it is impious to contradict, would
it not be incredible? For what believer is there who is ignorant that the
first incentive to sin came from Satan, and that he is the first author of all
sins? And yet, for all that, some are "delivered over unto Satan, that they may
learn not to blaspheme."(4) How comes it to pass, then, that Satan's work is
prevented by the work of Satan? These and such like questions let a man regard in
such a light that they seem not to him to be too acute; they have somewhat of the
sound of acuteness, and yet when discussed are found to be obtuse. What must
we say also to our author's use of similes whereby he rather suggests to us the
answer which we should give to him? "What" (asks he) "shall I say more than
this, that we may believe that fires are quenched by fires, if we may believe that
sins are cured by sins?" What if one cannot put out fires by fires: but yet
pains can, for all that, as I have shown, be cured by pains? Poisons can also, if
one only inquire and learn the fact, be expelled by poisons. Now, if he
observes that the heats of fevers are sometimes subdued by certain medicinal warmths,
he will perhaps also allow that fires may be extinguished by fires.
CHAP. 33 [XXIX.]--NOT EVERY SIN IS PRIDE. HOW PRIDE IS THE COMMENCEMENT OF
EVERY SIN.
"But how," asks he, "shall we separate pride itself from sin?" Now, why
does he raise such a question, when it is manifest that even pride itself is a
sin? "To sin," says he, "is quite as much to be proud, as to be proud is to sin;
for only ask what every sin is, and see whether you can find any sin without
the designation of pride." Then he thus pursues this opinion, and endear-ours to
prove it thus: "Every sin," says he, "if I mistake not, is a contempt of God,
and every contempt of God is pride. For what is so proud as to despise God? All
sin, then, is also pride, even as Scripture says, Pride is the beginning of all
sin."(5) Let him seek diligently, and he will find in the law that the sin of
pride is quite distinguished from all other sins. For many sins are committed
through pride; but yet not all things which are wrongly done are done proudly,
-- at any rate, not by the ignorant, not by the infirm, and not, generally
speaking, by the weeping and sorrowful. And indeed pride, although it be in itself a
great sin, is of such sort in itself alone apart from others, that, as I have
already remarked, it for the most part follows after and steals with more rapid
foot, not so much upon sins as upon things which are actually well done.
However, that which he has understood in another sense, is after all most truly
said: "Pride is the commencement of all sin;" because it was this which overthrew
the devil, from whom arose the origin of sin; and afterwards, when his malice
and envy pursued man, who was yet standing in his uprightness, it subverted him
in the same way in which he himself fell. For the serpent, in fact, only sought
for the door of pride whereby to enter when he said, "Ye shall be as gods."(6)
Truly then is it said, "Pride is the commencement of all sin;"(5) and, "The
beginning of pride is when a man departeth from God."(7)
CHAP. 34 [XXX.] -- A MAN'S SIN IS HIS OWN, BUT HE NEEDS GRACE FOR HIS CURE.
Well, but what does he mean when he says: "Then again, how can one be
subjected to God for the guilt of that sin, which he knows is not his own? For,"
says he, "his own it is not, if it is necessary. Or, if it is his own, it is
voluntary: and if it is voluntary, it can be avoided." We reply: It is
unquestionably his own. But the fault by which sin is committed is not yet in every respect
healed, and the fact of its becoming permanently fixed in us arises from our
not rightly using the healing virtue; and so out of this faulty condition the
man who is now growing strong in depravity commits many sins, either through
infirmity or blindness. Prayer must therefore be made for him, that he may be
healed, and that he may thenceforward attain to a life of uninterrupted soundness of
health; nor must pride be indulged in, as if any man were healed by the
self-same power whereby he became corrupted.
CHAP. 35 [XXXI.]--WHY GOD DOES NOT IMMEDIATELY CURE PRIDE ITSELF. THE SECRET
AND INSIDIOUS GROWTH OF PRIDE. PREVENTING AND SUBSEQUENT GRACE.
But I would indeed so treat these topics, as to confess myself ignorant of
God's deeper counsel, why He does not at once heal the very principle of
pride, which lies in wait for man's heart even in deeds rightly done; and for the
cure of which pious souls, with tears and strong crying, beseech Him that He
would stretch forth His right hand and help their endeavours to overcome it, and
somehow tread and crush it under foot. Now when a man has felt glad that he has
even by some good work overcome pride, from the very joy he lifts up his head
and says: "Behold, I live; why do you triumph? Nay, I live because you triumph."
Premature, however, this forwardness of his to triumph over pride may perhaps
be, as if it were now vanquished, whereas its last shadow is to be swallowed up,
as I suppose, in that noontide which is promised in the scripture which says,
"He shall bring forth thy righteousness as the light, and thy judgment as the
noonday;" 'provided that be done which was written in the preceding! verse:
"Commit thy way unto the Lord; trust also in Him, and He shall bring it to
pass,"(2) -- not, as some suppose, that they themselves bring it to pass. Now, when he
said, "And He shall bring it to pass," he evidently had none other in mind but
those who say, We ourselves bring it to pass; that is to say, we ourselves
justify our own selves. In this matter, no doubt, we do ourselves, too, work; but
we are fellow-workers with Him who does the work, because His mercy anticipates
us. He anticipates us, however, that we may be healed; but then He will also
follow us, that being healed we may grow healthy and strong. He anticipates us
that we may be called; He will follow us that we may be glorified. He
anticipates us that we may lead godly lives; He will follow us that we may always live
with Him, because without Him we can do nothing.(3) Now the Scriptures refer to
both these operations of grace. There is both this: "The God of my mercy shall
anticipate me,"(4) and again this: "Thy mercy shall follow me all the days of my
life."(5) Let us therefore unveil to Him our life by confession, not praise it
with a vindication. For if it is not His way, but our own, beyond doubt it is
not the right one. Let us therefore reveal this by making our confession to
Him; for however much we may endeavour to conceal it, it is not hid from Him. It
is a good thing to confess unto the Lord.
CHAP. 36 [XXXII.]--PRIDE EVEN IN SUCH THINGS AS ARE DONE ARIGHT MUST BE
AVOIDED. FREE WILL IS NOT TAKEN AWAY WHEN GRACE IS PREACHED.
So will He bestow on us whatever pleases Him, that if there be anything
displeasing to Him in us, it will also be displeasing to us. "He will," as the
Scripture has said, "turn aside our paths from His own way,"(6) and will make
that which is His own to be our way; because it is by Himself that the favour is
bestowed on such as believe in Him and hope in Him that we will do it. For there
is a way of righteousness of which they are ignorant "who have a zeal for God,
but not according to knowledge,"(7) and who, wishing to frame a righteousness
of their own, "have not submitted themselves to the righteousness of God."(8)
"For Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to every one that
believeth;"(9) and He has said, "I am the way."(10) Yet God's voice has alarmed those who
have already begun to walk in this way, lest they should be lifted up, as if
it were by their own energies that they were walking therein. For the same
persons to whom the apostle, on account of this danger, says, "Work out your own
salvation with fear and trembling, for it is God that worketh in you, both to will
and to do of His good pleasure,"(11) are likewise for the self-same reason
admonished in the psalm: "Serve the Lord with fear, and rejoice in Him with
trembling. Accept correction, lest at any time the Lord be angry, and ye perish from
the righteous way, when His wrath shall be suddenly kindled upon you."(12) He
does not say, "Lest at any time the Lord be angry and refuse to show you the
righteous way," or, "refuse to lead you into the way of righteousness;" but even
after you are walking therein, he was able so to terrify as to say, "Lest ye
perish from the righteous way." Now, whence could this arise if not from pride,
which (as I have so often said, and must repeat again and again) has to be
guarded against even in things which are rightly done, that is, in the very way of
righteousness, lest a man, by regarding as his own that which is really God's,
lose what is God's and be reduced merely to what is his own? Let us then carry
out the concluding injunction of this same psalm, "Blessed are all they that
trust in Him,"(1) so that He may Himself indeed effect and Himself show His own way
in us, to whom it is said, "Show us Thy mercy, O Lord;"(2) and Himself bestow
on us the pathway of safety that we may walk therein, to whom the prayer is
offered, "And grant us Thy salvation;"(2) and Himself lead us in the self-same
way, to whom again it is said, "Guide me, O Lord, in Thy way, and in Thy truth
will I walk;"(3) Himself, too, conduct us to those promises whither His way leads,
to whom it is said, "Even there shall Thy hand lead me and Thy right hand
shall hold me;"(4) Himself pasture therein those who sit down with Abraham, Isaac,
and Jacob, of whom it is said, "He shall make them sit down to meat, and will
come forth and serve them."(5) Now we do not, when we make mention of these
things, take away freedom of will, but we preach the grace of God. For to whom are
those gracious gifts of use, but to the man who uses, but humbly uses, his own
will, and makes no boast of the power and energy thereof, as if it alone were
sufficient for perfecting him in righteousness?
CHAP. 37 [XXXIII.]--BEING WHOLLY WITHOUT SIN DOES NOT PUT MAN ON AN EQUALITY
WITH GOD.
But God forbid that we should meet him with such an assertion as he says
certain persons advance against him: "That man is placed on an equality with
God, if he is described as being without sin;" as if indeed an angel, because he
is without sin, is put in such an equality. For my own part, I am of this
opinion that the creature will never become equal with God, even when so perfect a
holiness shall be accomplished in us, that it shall be quite incapable of
receiving any addition. No; all who maintain that our progress is to be so complete
that we shall be changed into the substance of God, and that we shall thus become
what He is, should look well to it how they build up their opinion; for myself
I must confess that I am not persuaded of this.
CHAP. 38 [XXXIV.]--WE MUST NOT LIE, EVEN FOR THE SAKE OF MODERATION. THE
PRAISE OF HUMILITY MUST NOT BE PLACED TO THE ACCOUNT OF FALSEHOOD.
I am favourably disposed, indeed, to the view of our author, when he
resists those who say to him, "What you assert seems indeed to be reasonable, but it
is an arrogant thing to allege that any man can be without sin," with this
answer, that if it is at all true, it must not on any account be called an
arrogant statement; for with very great truth and acuteness he asks, "On what side
must humility be placed? No doubt on the side of falsehood, if you prove arrogance
to exist on the side of truth." And so he decides, and rightly decides, that
humility should rather be ranged on the side of truth, not of falsehood. Whence
it follows that he who said, "If we say that we have no sin, we deceive
ourselves, and the truth is not in us,"(6) must without hesitation be held to have
spoken the truth, and not be thought to have spoken falsehood for the sake of
humility. Therefore he added the words, "And the truth is not in us;" whereas it
might perhaps have been enough if he merely said, "We deceive ourselves," if he
had not observed that some were capable of supposing that the clause "we deceive
ourselves" is here employed on the ground that the man who praises himself is
even extolled for a really good action. So that, by the addition of "the truth
is not in us," he clearly shows (even as our author most correctly observes)
that it is not at all true if we say that we have no sin, lest humility, if
placed on the side of falsehood, should lose the reward of truth.
CHAP. 39.--PELAGIUS GLORIFIES GOD AS CREATOR AT THE EXPENSE OF GOD AS SAVIOUR.
Beyond this, however, although he flatters himself that he vindicates the
cause of God by defending nature, he forgets that by predicating soundness of
the said nature, he rejects the Physician's mercy. He, however, who created him
is also his Saviour. We ought not, therefore, so to magnify the Creator as to
be compelled to say, nay, rather as to be convicted of saying, that the Saviour
is superfluous. Man's nature indeed we may honour with worthy praise, and
attribute the praise to the Creator's glory; but at the same time, while we show our
gratitude to Him for having created us, let us not be ungrateful to Him for
healing us. Our sins which He heals we must undoubtedly attribute not to God's
operation, but to the wilfulness of man, and submit them to His righteous
punishment; as, however, we acknowledge that it was in our power that they should not
be committed, so let us confess that it lies in His mercy rather than in our
own power that they should be healed. But this mercy and remedial help of the
Saviour, according to this writer, consists only in this, that He forgives the
transgressions that are past, not that He helps us to avoid such as are to come.
Here he is most fatally mistaken; here, however unwittingly -- here he hinders
us from being watchful, and from praying that "we enter not into temptation,"
since he maintains that it lies entirely in our own control that this should not
happen to us.
CHAP. 40 [XXXV.]--WHY THERE IS A RECORD IN SCRIPTURE OF CERTAIN MEN'S SINS,
RECKLESSNESS IN SIN ACCOUNTS IT TO BE SO MUCH LOSS WHENEVER IT FALLS SHORT IN
GRATIFYING LUST.
He who has a sound judgment says soundly, "that the examples of certain
persons, of whose sinning we read in Scripture, are not recorded for this
purpose, that they may encourage despair of not sinning, and seem somehow to afford
security in committing sin," -- but that we may learn the humility of repentance,
or else discover that even in such falls salvation ought not to be despaired
of. For there are some who, when they have fallen into sin, perish rather from
the recklessness of despair, and not only neglect the remedy of repentance, but
become the slaves of lusts and wicked desires, so far as to run all lengths in
gratifying these depraved and abandoned dispositions, -- as if it were a loss
to them if they failed to accomplish what their lust impelled them to, whereas
all the while there awaits them a certain condemnation. To oppose this morbid
recklessness, which is only too full of danger and ruin, there is great force in
the record of those sins into which even just and holy men have before now
fallen.
CHAP. 41.--WHETHER HOLY MEN HAVE DIED WITHOUT SIN.
But there is clearly much acuteness in the question put by our author,"
How must we suppose that those holy men quitted this life, -- with sin, or
without sin?" For if we answer, "With sin," condemnation will be supposed to have
been their destiny, which it is shocking to imagine; but if it be said that they
departed this life "without sin," then it would be a proof that man had been
without sin in his present life, at all events, when death was approaching. But,
with all his acuteness, he overlooks the circumstance that even righteous
persons not without good reason offer up this prayer: "Forgive us our debts, as we
forgive our debtors;"(1) and that the Lord Christ, after explaining the prayer in
His teaching, most truly added: "For if ye forgive men their trespasses, your
Father will also forgive you your trespasses."(2) Here, indeed, we have the
daily incense, so to speak, of the Spirit, which is offered to God on the altar of
the heart, which we are bidden "to lift up," -- implying that, even if we
cannot live here without sin, we may yet die without sin, when in merciful
forgiveness the sin is blotted out which is committed in ignorance or infirmity.
CHAP. 42 [XXXVI.]--THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY MAY HAVE LIVED WITHOUT SIN. NONE OF
THE SAINTS BESIDES HER WITHOUT SIN.
He then enumerates those "who not only lived without sin, but are
described as having led holy lives, -- Abel, Enoch, Melchizedek, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob,
Joshua the son of Nun, Phinehas, Samuel, Nathan, Elijah, Joseph, Elisha,
Micaiah, Daniel, Hananiah, Azariah, Mishael, Mordecai, Simeon, Joseph to whom the
Virgin Mary was espoused, John." And he adds the names of some women, --
"Deborah, Anna the mother of Samuel, Judith, Esther, the other Anna, daughter of
Phanuel, Elisabeth, and also the mother of our Lord and Saviour, for of her," he
says, "we must needs allow that her piety had no sin in it." We must except the
holy Virgin Mary, concerning whom I wish to raise no question when it touches the
subject of sins, out of honour to the Lord; for from Him we know what
abundance of grace for overcoming sin in every particular was conferred upon her who
had the merit to conceive and bear Him who undoubtedly had no sin.(3) Well, then,
if, with this exception of the Virgin, we could only assemble together all the
forementioned holy men and women, and ask them whether they lived without sin
whilst they were in this life, what can we suppose would be their answer? Would
it be in the language of our author, or in the words of the Apostle John? I
put it to you, whether, on having such a question submitted to them, however
excellent might have been their sanctity in this body, they would not have
exclaimed with one voice: "If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the
truth is not in us?"(4) But perhaps this their answer would have been more humble
than true! Well, but our author has already determined, and rightly determined,
"not to place the praise of humility on the side of falsehood." If, therefore,
they spoke the truth in giving such an answer, they would have sin, and since
they humbly acknowledged it, the truth would be in them; but if they lied in
their answer, they would still have sin, because the truth would not be in them.
CHAP. 43 [XXXVII.]--WHY SCRIPTURE HAS NOT MENTIONED THE SINS OF ALL.
"But perhaps," says he, "they will ask me: Could not the Scripture have
mentioned sins of all of these?" And surely they would say the truth, whoever
should put such a question to him; and I do not discover that he has anywhere
given a sound reply to them, although I perceive that he was unwilling to be
silent. What he has said, I beg of you to observe: "This," says he, "might be rightly
asked of those whom Scripture mentions neither as good nor as bad; but of
those whose holiness it commemorates, it would also without doubt have commemorated
the sins likewise, if it had perceived that they had sinned in anything." Let
him say, then, that their great faith did not attain to righteousness in the
case of those who comprised "the multitudes that went before and that followed"
the colt on which the Lord rode, when "they shouted and said, Hosanna to the Son
of David: Blessed is He that cometh in the name of the Lord,"(1) even amidst
the malignant men who with murmurs asked why they were doing all this! Let him
then boldly tell us, if he can, that there was not a man in all that vast crowd
who had any sin at all. Now, if it is most absurd to make such a statement as
this, why has not the Scripture mentioned any sins in the persons to whom
reference has been made, especially when it has carefully recorded the eminent
goodness of their faith?
CHAP. 44.--PELAGIUS ARGUES THAT ABEL WAS SINLESS.
This, however, even he probably observed, and therefore he went on to say:
"But, granted that it has sometimes abstained, in a numerous crowd, from
narrating the sins of all; still, in the very beginning of the world, when there
were only four persons in existence, what reason (asks he) have we to give why it
chose not to mention the sins of all? Was it in consideration of the vast
multitude, which had not yet come into existence? or because, having mentioned only
the sins of those who had transgressed, it was unable to record any of him who
had not yet committed sin?" And then he proceeds to add some words, in which he
unfolds this idea with a fuller and more explicit illustration. "It is
certain," says he, "that in the earliest age Adam and Eve, and Cain and Abel their
sons, are mentioned as being the only four persons then in being. Eve sinned, --
the Scripture distinctly says so much; Adam also transgressed, as the same
Scripture does not fail to inform us; whilst it affords us an equally clear
testimony that Cain also sinned: and of all these it not only mentions the sins, but
also indicates the character of their sins. Now if Abel had likewise sinned,
Scripture would without doubt have said so. But it has not said so, therefore he
committed no sin; nay, it even shows him to have been righteous. What we read,
therefore, let us believe; and what we do not read, let us deem it wicked to add."
CHAP. 45 [XXXVIII.]--WHY CAIN HAS BEEN BY SOME THOUGHT TO HAVE HAD CHILDREN BY
HIS MOTHER EVE. THE SINS OF RIGHTEOUS MEN. WHO CAN BE BOTH RIGHTEOUS, AND YET
NOT WITHOUT SIN.
When he says this, he forgets what he had himself said not long before:
"After the human race had multiplied, it was possible that in the crowd the
Scripture may have neglected to notice the sins of all men." If indeed he had borne
this well in mind, he would have seen that even in one man there was such a
crowd and so vast a number of slight sins, that it would have been impossible (or,
even if possible, not desirable ) to describe them. For only such are recorded
as the due bounds allowed, and as would, by few examples, serve for
instructing the reader in the many cases where he needed warning. Scripture has indeed
omitted to mention concerning the few persons who were then in existence, either
how many or who they were, -- in other words, how many sons and daughters Adam
and Eve begat, and what names they gave them; and from this circumstance some,
not considering how many things are quietly passed over in Scripture, have gone
so far as to suppose that Cain cohabited with his mother, and by her had the
children which are mentioned, thinking that Adam's sons had no sisters, because
Scripture failed to mention them in the particular place, although it
afterwards, in the way of recapitulation, implied what it had previously omitted, --
that "Adam begat sons and daughters,"(2) without, however, dropping a syllable to
intimate either their number or the time when they were born. In like manner it
was unnecessary to state whether Abel, notwithstanding that he is rightly
styled "righteous," ever indulged in immoderate laughter, or was ever jocose in
moments of relaxation, or ever looked at an object with a covetous eye, or ever
plucked fruit to extravagance, or ever suffered indigestion from too much eating,
or ever in the midst of his prayers permitted his thoughts to wander and call
him away from the purpose of his devotion; as well as how frequently these and
many other similar failings stealthily crept over his mind. And are not these
failings sins, about which the apostle's precept gives us a general admonition
that we should avoid and restrain them, when he says: "Let not sin therefore
reign in your mortal body, that ye should obey it in the lusts thereof?"(3) To
escape from such an obedience, we have to struggle in a constant and daily
conflict against unlawful and unseemly inclinations. Only let the eye be directed, or
rather abandoned, to an object which it ought to avoid, and let the mischief
strengthen and get the mastery, and adultery is consummated in the body, which is
committed in the heart only so much more quickly as thought is more rapid than
action and there is no impediment to retard and delay it. They who in a great
degree have curbed this sin, that is, this appetite of a corrupt affection, so
as not to obey its desires, nor to "yield their members to it as instruments of
unrighteousness,"(1) have fairly deserved to be called righteous persons, and
this by the help of the grace of God. Since, however, sin often stole over them
in very small matters, and when they were off their guard, they were both
righteous, and at the same time not sinless. To conclude, if there was in righteous
Abel that love of God whereby alone he is truly righteous who is righteous, to
enable him, and to lay him under a moral obligation, to advance in holiness,
still in whatever degree he fell short therein was of sin. And who indeed can
help thus falling short, until he come to that mighty power thereof, in which
man's entire infirmity shall be swallowed up?
CHAP. 46 [XXXIX.]--SHALL WE FOLLOW SCRIPTURE, OR ADD TO ITS DECLARATIONS?
It is, to be sure, a grand sentence with which he concluded this passage,
when he says: "What we read, therefore, let us believe; and what we do not
read, let us deem it wicked to add; and let it suffice to have said this of all
cases." On the contrary, I for my part say that we ought not to believe even
everything that we read, on the sanction of the apostle's advice: "Read all things;
hold fast that which is good."(2) Nor is it wicked to add something which we
have not read; for it is in our power to add something which we have bona fide
experienced as witnesses, even if it so happens that we have not read about it.
Perhaps he will say in reply: "When I said this, I was treating of the Holy
Scriptures." Oh how I wish that he were never willing to add, I will not say
anything but what he reads in the Scriptures, but in opposition to what he reads in
them; that he would only faithfully and obediently hear that which is written
there: "By one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin, and so death
passed upon all men; in which all have sinned;"(3) and that he would not weaken
the grace of the great Physician, -- all by his unwillingness to confess that
human nature is corrupted! Oh how I wish that he would, as a Christian, read the
sentence, "There is none other name under heaven given among men whereby we must
be saved;"(4) and that he would not so uphold the possibility of human nature,
as to believe that man can be saved by free will without that Name!
CHAP. 47 [XL.]--FOR WHAT PELAGIUS THOUGHT THAT CHRIST IS NECESSARY TO US.
Perhaps, however, he thinks the name of Christ to be necessary on this
account, that by His gospel we may learn how we ought to live; but not that we may
be also assisted by His grace, in order withal to lead good lives. Well, even
this consideration should lead him at least to confess that there is a
miserable darkness in the human mind, which knows how it ought to tame a lion, but
knows not how to live. To know this, too, is it enough for us to have free will and
natural law? This is that wisdom of word, whereby "the cross of Christ is
rendered of none effect."(5) He, however, who said, "I will destroy the wisdom of
the wise,"(6) since that cross cannot be made of none effect, in very deed
overthrows that wisdom by the foolishness of preaching whereby believers are
healed. For if natural capacity, by help of free will, is in itself sufficient both
for discovering how one ought to live, and also for leading a holy life, then
"Christ died in vain,"(7) and therefore also "the offence of the cross is
ceased."(8) Why also may I not myself exclaim? -- nay, I will exclaim, and chide them
with a Christian's sorrow, -- "Christ is become of no effect unto you,
whosoever of you are justified by nature; ye are fallen from grace;"(9) for, "being
ignorant of God's righteousness, and wishing to establish your own
righteousness, you have not submitted yourselves to the righteousness of God."(10) For even
as "Christ is the end of the law," so likewise is He the Saviour of man's
corrupted nature, "for righteousness to every one that believeth."(11)
CHAP. 48 [XLI.]--HOW THE TERM "ALL" IS TO BE UNDERSTOOD.
His opponents adduced the passage, "All have sinned,"(12) and he met their
statement founded on this with the remark that "the apostle was manifestly
speaking of the then existing generation, that is, the Jews and the Gentiles;" but
surely the passage which I have quoted, "By one man sin entered the world, and
death by sin, and so death passed upon all men; in which all have sinned,"(3)
embraces in its terms the generations both of old and of modern times, both
ourselves and our posterity. He adduces also this passage, whence he would prove
that we ought not to understand all without exception, when "all" is used: --
"As by the offence of one," he says, "upon all men to condemnation, even so by
the righteousness of One, upon all men unto justification of life."(13) "There
can be no doubt," he says, "that not all men are sanctified by the righteousness
of Christ, but only those who are willing to obey Him, and have been cleansed
in the washing of His baptism." Well, but he does not prove what he wants by
this quotation. For as the clause, "By the offence of one, upon all men to
condemnation," is so worded that not one is omitted in its sense, so in the
corresponding clause, "By the righteousness of One, upon all men unto justification of
life," no one is omitted in its sense, -- not, indeed, because all men have faith
and are washed in His baptism, but because no man is justified unless he
believes in Christ and is cleansed by His baptism. The term "all" is therefore used
in a way which shows that no one whatever can be supposed able to be saved by
any other means than through Christ Himself. For if in a city there be appointed
but one instructor, we are most correct in saying: That man teaches all in
that place; not meaning, indeed, that all who live in the city take lessons of
him, but that no one is instructed unless taught by him. In like manner no one is
justified unless Christ has justified him.(1)
CHAP. 49 [XLII.]--A MAN CAN BE SINLESS, BUT ONLY BY THE HELP OF GRACE. IN THE
SAINTS THIS POSSIBILITY ADVANCES AND KEEPS PACE WITH THE REALIZATION.
"Well, be it so," says he," I agree; he testifies to the fact that all
were sinners. He says, indeed, what they have been, not that they might not have
been something else. Wherefore," he adds, "if all then could be proved to be
sinners, it would not by any means prejudice our own definite position, in
insisting not so much on what men are, as on what they are able to be." He is right
for once to allow that no man living is justified in God's sight. He contends,
however, that this is not the question, but that the point lies in the
possibility of a man's not sinning, -- on which subject it is unnecessary for us to take
ground against him; for, in truth, I do not much care about expressing a
definite opinion on the question, whether in the present life there ever have been,
or now are, or ever can be, any persons who have had, or are having, or are to
have, the love of God so perfectly as to admit of no addition to it (for nothing
short of this amounts to a most true, full, and perfect righteousness). For I
ought not too sharply to contend as to when, or where, or in whom is done that
which I confess and maintain can be done by the will of man, aided by the grace
of God. Nor do I indeed contend about the actual possibility, forasmuch as the
possibility under dispute advances with the realization in the saints, their
human will being healed and helped; whilst "the love of God," as fully as our
healed and cleansed nature can possibly receive it, "is shed abroad in our hearts
by the Holy Ghost, which is given to us."(2) In a better way, therefore, is
God's cause promoted (and it is to its promotion that our author professes to
apply his warm defence of nature) when He is acknowledged as our Saviour no less
than as our Creator, than when His succour to us as Saviour is impaired and
dwarfed to nothing by the defence of the creature, as if it were sound and its
resources entire.
CHAP. 50 [XLIII.] -- GOD COMMANDS NO IMPOSSIBILITIES.
What he says, however, is true enough, "that God is as good as just, and
made man such that he was quite able to live without the evil of sin, if only he
had been willing." For who does not know that man was made whole and
faultless, and endowed with a free will and a free ability to lead a holy life? Our
present inquiry, however, is about the man whom "the thieves"(3) left half dead on
the road, and who, being disabled and pierced through with heavy wounds, is not
so able to mount up to the heights of righteousness as he was able to descend
therefrom; who, moreover, if he is now in "the inn,"(4) is in process of cure.
God therefore does not command impossibilities; but in His command He counsels
you both to do what you can for yourself, and to ask His aid in what you cannot
do. Now, we should see whence comes the possibility, and whence the
impossibility. This man says: "That proceeds not from a man's will which he can do by
nature." I say: A man is not righteous by his will if he can be by nature. He
will, however, be able to accomplish by remedial aid what he is rendered incapable
of doing by his flaw.
CHAP. 51 [XLIV.]--STATE OF THE QUESTION BETWEEN THE PELAGIANS AND THE
CATHOLICS. HOLY MEN OF OLD SAVED BY THE SELF-SAME FAITH IN CHRIST WHICH WE EXERCISE.
But why need we tarry longer on general statements? Let us go into the
core of the question, which we have to discuss with our opponents solely, or
almost entirely, on one particular point. For inasmuch as he says that "as far as
the present question is concerned, it is not pertinent to inquire whether there
have been or now are any men in this life without sin, but whether they had or
have the ability to be such persons;" so, were I even to allow that there have
been or are any such, I should not by any means therefore affirm that they had
or have the ability, unless justified by the grace of God through our Lord
"Jesus Christ and Him crucified."(5) For the same faith which healed the saints of
old now heals us, -- that is to say, faith "in the one Mediator between God and
men, the man Christ Jesus," (1) -- faith in His blood, faith in His cross,
faith in His death and resurrection. As we therefore have the same spirit of faith,
we also believe, and on that account also speak.
CHAP. 52.--THE WHOLE DISCUSSION IS ABOUT GRACE.
Let us, however, observe what our author answers, after laying before
himself the question wherein he seems indeed so intolerable to Christian hearts. He
says: "But you will tell me this is what disturbs a great many, -- that you do
not maintain that it is by the grace of God that a man is able to be without
sin." Certainly this is what causes us disturbance; this is what we object to
him. He touches the very point of the case. This is what causes us such utter
pain to endure it; this is why we cannot bear to have such points debated by
Christians, owing to the love which we feel towards others and towards themselves.
Well, let us hear how he clears himself from the objectionable character of the
question he has raised. "What blindness of ignorance," he exclaims, "what
sluggishness of an uninstructed mind, which supposes that that is maintained and
held to be without God's grace which it only hears ought to be attributed to God!"
Now, if we knew nothing of what follows this outburst of his, and formed our
opinion on simply hearing these words, we might suppose that we had been led to
a wrong view of our opponents by the spread of report and by the asseveration
of some suitable witnesses among the brethren. For how could it have been more
pointedly and truly stated that the possibility of not sinning, to whatever
extent it exists or shall exist in man, ought only to be attributed to God? This
too is our own affirmation. We may shake hands.
CHAP. 53 [XLV.]--PELAGIUS DISTINGUISHES BETWEEN A POWER AND ITS USE.
Well, are there other things to listen to? Yes, certainly; both to listen
to, and correct and guard against. "Now, when it is said," he says, "that the
very ability is not at all of man's will, but of the Author of nature, -- that
is, God, -- how can that possibly be understood to be without the grace of God
which is deemed especially to belong to God?" Already we begin to see what he
means; but that we may not lie under any mistake, he explains himself with
greater breadth and clearness: "That this may become still plainer, we must," says
he, "enter on a somewhat fuller discussion of the point. Now we affirm that the
possibility of anything lies not so much in the ability of a man's will as in
the necessity of nature." He then proceeds to illustrate his meaning by examples
and similes. "Take," says he, "for instance, my ability to speak. That I am
able to speak is not my own; but that I do speak is my own, -- that is, of my own
will. And because the act of my speaking is my own, I have the power of
alternative action, -- that is to say, both to speak and to refrain from speaking. But
because my ability to speak is not my own, that is, is not of my own
determination and will, it is of necessity (2) that I am always able to speak; and
though I wished not to be able to speak, I am unable, nevertheless, to be unable to
speak, unless perhaps I were to deprive myself of that member whereby the
function of speaking is to be performed." Many means, indeed, might be mentioned
whereby, if he wish it, a man may deprive himself of the possibility of speaking,
without removing the organ of speech. If, for instance, anything were to happen
to a man to destroy his voice, he would be unable to speak, although the
members remained; for a man's voice is of course no member. There may, in short, be
an injury done to the member internally, short of the actual loss of it. I am,
however, unwilling to press the argument for a word; and it may be replied to
me in the contest, Why, even to injure is to lose. But yet we can so contrive
matters, by closing and shutting the mouth with bandages, as to be quite
incapable of opening it, and to put the opening of it out of our power, although it was
quite in our own power to shut it while the strength and healthy exercise of
the limbs remained.
CHAP. 54 [XLVI.]--THERE IS NO INCOMPATIBILITY BETWEEN NECESSITY AND FREE WILL.
Now how does all this apply to our subject? Let us see what he makes out
of it. "Whatever," says he, "is fettered by natural necessity is deprived of
determination of will and deliberation." Well, now, here lies a question; for it
is the height of absurdity for us to say that it does not belong to our will
that we wish to be happy, on the ground that it is absolutely, impossible for us
to be unwilling to be happy, by reason of some indescribable but amiable
coercion of our nature; nor dare we maintain that God has not the will but the
necessity of righteousness, because He cannot will to sin.
CHAP. 55 [XLVII.]--THE SAME CONTINUED.
Mark also what follows. "We may perceive," says he, "the same thing to be
true of heating, smelling, and seeing, -- that to hear, and to smell, and to
see is of our own power, while the ability to hear, and to smell, and to see is
not of our own power, but lies in a natural necessity." Either I do not
understand what he means, or he does not himself. For how is the possibility of seeing
not in our own power, if the necessity of not seeing is in our own power
because blindness is in our own power, by which we can deprive ourselves, if we will,
of this very ability to see? How, moreover, is it in our own power to see
whenever we will, when, without any loss whatever to our natural structure of body
in the organ of sight, we are unable, even though we wish, to see, -- either by
the removal of all external lights during the night, or by our being shut up
in some dark place? Likewise, if our ability or our inability to hear is not in
our own power, but lies in the necessity of nature, whereas our actual hearing
or not hearing is of our own will, how comes it that he is inattentive to the
fact that there are so many things which we hear against our will, which
penetrate our sense even when our ears are stopped, as the creaking of a saw near to
us, or the grunt of a pig? Although the said stopping of our ears shows plainly
enough that it does not lie within our own power not to hear so long as our
ears are open; perhaps, too, such a stopping of our ears as shall deprive us of
the entire sense in question proves that even the ability not to hear lies within
our own power. As to his remarks, again, concerning our sense of smell, does
he not display no little carelessness when he says "that it is not in our own
power to be able or to be unable to smell, but that it is in our own power" --
that is to say, in our free will -- "to smell or not to smell?" For let us
suppose some one to place us, with our hands firmly tied, but yet without any injury
to our olfactory members, among some bad and noxious smells; in such a case we
altogether lose the power, however strong may be our wish, not to smell,
because every time we are obliged to draw breath we also inhale the smell which we do
not wish.
CHAP. 56 [XLVIII.]--THE ASSISTANCE OF GRACE IN A PERFECT NATURE.
Not only, then, are these similes employed by our author false, but so is
the matter which he wishes them to illustrate. He goes on to say: "In like
manner, touching the possibility of our not sinning, we must understand that it is
of us not to sin, but yet that the ability to avoid sin is not of us." If he
were speaking of man's whole and perfect nature, which we do not now possess
("for we are saved by hope: but hope that is seen is not hope. But if we hope for
that we see not, then do we with patience wait for it" (1) ), his language even
in that case would not be correct to the effect that to avoid sinning would be
of us alone, although to sin would be of us, for even then there must be the
help of God, which must shed itself on those who are willing to receive it, just
as the light is given to strong and healthy eyes to assist them in their
function of sight. Inasmuch, however, as it is about this present life of ours that
he raises the question, wherein our corruptible body weighs down the soul, and
our earthly tabernacle depresses our sense with all its many thoughts, I am
astonished that he can with any heart suppose that, even without the help of our
Saviour's healing balm, it is in our own power to avoid sin, and the ability not
to sin is of nature, which gives only stronger evidence of its own corruption
by the very fact of its failing to see its taint.
CHAP. 57 [XLIX.]--IT DOES NOT DETRACT FROM GOD'S ALMIGHTY POWER, THAT HE IS
INCAPABLE OF EITHER SINNING, OR DYING, OR DESTROYING HIMSELF.
"Inasmuch," says he, "as not to sin is ours, we are able to sin and to
avoid sin." What, then, if another should say: "Inasmuch as not to wish for
unhappiness is ours, we are able both to wish for it and not to wish for it?" And yet
we are positively unable to wish for it. For who could possibly wish to be
unhappy, even though he wishes for something else from which unhappiness will
ensue to him against his will? Then again, inasmuch as, in an infinitely greater
degree, it is God's not to sin, shall we therefore venture to say that He is able
both to sin and to avoid sin? God forbid that we should ever say that He is
able to sin! For He cannot, as foolish persons suppose, therefore fail to be
almighty, because He is unable to die, or because He cannot deny Himself. What,
therefore, does he mean? by what method of speech does he try to persuade us on a
point which he is himself loth to consider? For he advances a step further, and
says: "Inasmuch as, however, it is not of us to be able to avoid sin; even if
we were to wish not to be able to avoid sin, it is not in our power to be
unable to avoid sin." It is an involved sentence, and therefore a very obscure one.
It might, however, be more plainly expressed in some such way as this:
"Inasmuch as to be able to avoid sin is not of us, then, whether we wish it or do not
wish it, we are able to avoid sin!" He does not say, "Whether we wish it or do
not wish it, we do not sin," -- for we undoubtedly do sin, if we wish; -- but
yet he asserts that, whether we will or not, we have the capacity of not
sinning, -- a capacity which he declares to be inherent in our nature. Of a man,
indeed, who has his legs strong and sound, it may be said admissibly enough,
"whether he will or not he has the capacity of walking;" but if his legs be broken,
however much he may wish, he has not the capacity. The nature of which our author
speaks is corrupted. "Why is dust and ashes proud?" (1) It is corrupted. It
implores the Physician's help. "Save me, O Lord," (2) is its cry; "Heal my soul,"
(3) it exclaims. Why does he check such cries so as to hinder future health,
by insisting, as it were, on its present capacity?
CHAP. 58 [L.]--EVEN PIOUS AND GOD-FEARING MEN RESIST GRACE.
Observe also what remark he adds, by which he thinks that his position is
confirmed: "No will," says he, "can take away that which is proved to be
inseparably implanted in nature." Whence then comes that utterance: "So then ye
cannot do the things that ye would?" (4) Whence also this: "For what good I would,
that I do not; but what evil I hate, that do I?" (5) Where is that capacity
which is proved to be inseparably implanted in nature? See, it is human beings who
do not what they will; and it is about not sinning, certainly, that he was
treating, -- not about not flying, because it was men not birds, that formed his
subject. Behold, it is man who does not the good which he would, but does the
evil which he would not: "to will is present with him, but how to perform that
which is good is not present." (6) Where is the capacity which is proved to be
inseparably implanted in nature? For whomsoever the apostle represents by himself,
if he does not speak these things of his own self, he certainly represents a
man by himself. By our author, however, it is maintained that our human nature
actually possesses an inseparable capacity of not at all sinning. Such a
statement, however, even when made by a man who knows not the effect of his words (but
this ignorance is hardly attributable to the man who suggests these statements
for unwary though God-fearing men), causes the grace of Christ to be "made of
none effect," (7) since it is pretended that human nature is sufficient for its
own holiness and justification.
CHAP. 59 [LI.]--IN WHAT SENSE PELAGIUS ATTRIBUTED TO GOD'S GRACE THE CAPACITY
OF NOT SINNING.
In order, however, to escape from the odium wherewith Christians guard
their salvation, he parries their question when they ask him, "Why do you affirm
that man without the help of God's grace is able to avoid sin?" by saying, "The
actual capacity of not sinning lies not so much in the power of will as in the
necessity of nature. Whatever is placed in the necessity of nature undoubtedly
appertains to the Author of nature, that is, God. How then," says he, "can that
be regarded as spoken without the grace of God which is shown to belong in an
especial manner to God?" Here the opinion is expressed which all along was kept
in the background; there is, in fact, no way of permanently concealing such a
doctrine. The reason why he attributes to the grace of God the capacity of not
sinning is, that God is the Author of nature, in which, he declares, this
capacity of avoiding sin is inseparably implanted. Whenever He wills a thing, no
doubt He does it; and what He wills not, that He does not. Now, wherever there is
this inseparable capacity, there cannot accrue any infirmity of the will; or
rather, there cannot be both a presence of will and a failure in "performance.''
(6) This, then, being the case, how comes it to pass that "to will is present,
but how to perform that which is good" is not present? Now, if the author of
the work we are discussing spoke of that nature of man, which was in the
beginning created faultless and perfect, in whatever sense his dictum be taken, "that
it has an inseparable capacity," -- that is, so to say, one which cannot be
lost, -- then that nature ought not to have been mentioned at all which could be
corrupted, and which could require a physician to cure the eyes of the blind, and
restore that capacity of seeing which had been lost through blindness. For I
suppose a blind man would like to see, but is unable; but, whenever a man wishes
to do a thing and cannot, there is present to him the will, but he has lost
the capacity.
CHAP. 60 [LII.]--PELAGIUS ADMITS "CONTRARY FLESH" IN THE UNBAPTIZED.
See what obstacles he still attempts to break through, if possible, in
order to introduce his own opinion. He raises a question for himself in these
terms: "But you will tell me that, according to the apostle, the flesh is contrary
(4) to us;" and then answers it in this wise: "How can it be that in the case
of any baptized person the flesh is contrary to him, when according to the same
apostle he is understood not to be in the flesh? For he says, 'But ye are not
in the flesh.' " (8) Very well; we shall soon see (9) whether it be really true
that this says that in the baptized the flesh cannot be contrary to them; at
present, however, as it was impossible for him quite to forget that he was a
Christian (although his reminiscence on the point is but slight), he has quitted
his defence of nature. Where then is that inseparable capacity of his? Are those
who are not yet baptized not a part of human nature? Well, now, here by all
means, here at this point, he might find his opportunity of awaking out of his
sleep; and he still has it if he is careful. "How can it be," he asks, "that in
the case of a baptized person the flesh is contrary to him?" Therefore to the
unbaptized the flesh can be contrary! Let him tell us how; for even in these there
is that nature which has been so stoutly defended by him. However, in these he
does certainly allow that nature is corrupted, inasmuch as it was only among
the baptized that the wounded traveller left his inn sound and well, or rather
remains sound in the inn whither the compassionate Samaritan carried him that he
might become cured. (1) Well, now, if he allows that the flesh is contrary
even in these, let him tell us what has happened to occasion this, since the
flesh and the spirit alike are the work of one and the same Creator, and are
therefore undoubtedly both of them good, because He is good, -- unless indeed it be
that damage which has been inflicted by man's own will. And that this may be
repaired in our nature, there is need of that very Saviour from whose creative
hand nature itself proceeded. Now, if we acknowledge that this Saviour, and that
healing remedy of His by which the Word was made flesh in order to dwell among
us, are required by small and great, -- by the crying infant and the
hoary-headed man alike, -- then, in fact, the whole controversy of the point between us
is settled.
CHAP. 61 [LIII.]--PAUL ASSERTS THAT THE FLESH IS CONTRARY EVEN IN THE BAPTIZED.
Now let us see whether we anywhere read about the flesh being contrary in
the baptized also. And here, I ask, to whom did the apostle say, "The flesh
lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh: and these are
contrary the one to the other; so that ye do not the things that ye would?" (2) He
wrote this, I apprehend, to the Galatians, to whom he also says, "He therefore
that ministereth to you the Spirit, and worketh miracles among you, doeth he it
by the works of the law or by the hearing of faith?" (3) It appears,
therefore, that it is to Christians that he speaks, to whom, too, God had given His
Spirit: therefore, too, to the baptized. Observe, therefore, that even in baptized
persons the flesh is found to be contrary; so that they have not that capacity
which, our author says, is inseparably implanted in nature. Where then is the
ground for his assertion, "How can it be that in the case of a baptized person
the flesh is contrary to him?" in whatever sense he understands the flesh?
Because in very deed it is not its nature that is good, but it is the carnal defects
of the flesh which are expressly named in the passage before us. (4) Yet
observe, even in the baptized, how contrary is the flesh. And in what way contrary?
So that, "They do not the things which they would." Take notice that the will
is present in a man; but where is that "capacity of nature?" Let us confess that
grace is necessary to us; let us cry out, "O wretched man that I am! who shall
deliver me from the body of this death?" And let our answer be, "The grace of
God, through Jesus Christ our Lord!" (5)
CHAP. 62.--CONCERNING WHAT GRACE OF GOD IS HERE UNDER DISCUSSION. THE UNGODLY
MAN, WHEN DYING, IS NOT DELIVERED FROM CONCUPISCENCE.
Now, whereas it is most correctly asked in those words put to him, "Why do
you affirm that man without the help of God's grace is able to avoid sin?" yet
the inquiry did not concern that grace by which man was created, but only that
whereby he is saved through Jesus Christ our Lord. Faithful men say in their
prayer, "Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil." (6) But if they
already have capacity, why do they pray? Or, what is the evil which they pray
to be delivered from, but, above all else, "the body of this death?" And from
this nothing but God's grace alone delivers them, through our Lord Jesus Christ.
Not of course from the substance of the body, which is good; but from its
carnal offences, from which a man is not liberated except by the grace of the
Saviour, -- not even when he quits the body by the death of the body. If it was this
that the apostle meant to declare, why had he previously said, "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?" (7) Behold what damage the
disobedience of the will has inflicted on man's nature! Let him be permitted to
pray that he may be healed! Why need he presume so much on the capacity of his
nature? It is wounded, hurt, damaged, destroyed. It is a true confession of its
weakness, not a false defence of its capacity, that it stands in need of. It
requires the grace of God, not that it may be made, but that it may be re-made.
And this is the only grace which by our author is proclaimed to be unnecessary;
because of this he is silent! If, indeed, he had said nothing at all about
God's grace, and had not proposed to himself that question for solution, for the
purpose of removing from himself the odium of this matter, (1) it might have been
thought that his view of the subject was consistent with the truth, only that
he had refrained from mentioning it, on the ground that not on all occasions
need we say all we think. He proposed the question of grace, and answered it in
the way that he had in his heart; the question has been defined, -- not in the
way we wished, but according to the doubt we entertained as to what was his
meaning.
CHAP. 63 [LIV.]--DOES GOD CREATE CONTRARIES?
He next endeavours, by much quotation from the apostle, about which there
is no controversy, to show "that the flesh is often mentioned by him in such a
manner as proves him to mean not the substance, but the works of the flesh."
What is this to the point? The defects of the flesh are contrary to the will of
man; his nature is not accused; but a Physician is wanted for its defects. What
signifies his question, "Who made man's spirit?" and his own answer thereto,
"God, without a doubt?" Again he asks, "Who created the flesh?" and again
answers, "The same God, I suppose." And yet a third question, "Is the God good who
created both?" and the third answer, "Nobody doubts it." Once more a question,
"Are not both good, since the good Creator made them?" and its answer, "It must be
confessed that they are." And then follows his conclusion: "If, therefore,
both the spirit is good, and the flesh is good, as made by the good Creator, how
can it be that the two good things should be contrary to one another?" I need
not say that the whole of this reasoning would be upset if one were to ask him,
"Who made heat and cold?" and he were to say in answer, "God, without a doubt."
I do not ask the string of questions. Let him determine himself whether these
conditions of climate may either be said to be not good, or else whether they do
not seem to be contrary to each other. Here he will probably object, "These
are not substances, but the qualities of substances." Very true, it is so. But
still they are natural qualities, and undoubtedly belong to God's creation; and
substances, indeed, are not said to be contrary to each other in themselves, but
in their qualities, as water and fire. What if it be so too with flesh and
spirit? We do not affirm it to be so; but, in order to show that his argument
terminates in a conclusion which does not necessarily follow, we have said so much
as this. For it is quite possible for contraries not to be reciprocally opposed
to each other, but rather by mutual action to temper health and render it
good; just as, in our body, dryness and moisture, cold and heat, -- in the
tempering of which altogether consists our bodily health. The fact, however, that "the
flesh is contrary to the Spirit, so that we cannot do the things that we
would," (2) is a defect, not nature. The Physician's grace must be sought, and their
controversy must end.
CHAP. 64.--PELAGIUS' ADMISSION AS REGARDS THE UNBAPTIZED, FATAL.
Now, as touching these two good substances which the good God created,
how, against the reasoning of this man, in the case of unbaptized persons, can
they be contrary the one to the other? Will he be sorry to have said this too,
which he admitted out of some regard to the Christians' faith? For when he asked,
"How, in the case of any person who is already baptized, can it be that his
flesh is contrary to him?" he intimated, of course, that in the case of
un-baptized persons it is possible for the flesh to be contrary. For why insert the
clause, "who is already baptized," when without such an addition he might have put
his question thus: "How in the case of any person can the flesh be contrary?"
and when, in order to prove this, he might have subjoined that argument of his,
that as both body and spirit are good (made as they are by the good Creator),
they therefore cannot be contrary to each other? Now, suppose unbaptized persons
(in whom, at any rate, he confesses that the flesh is contrary) were to ply him
with his own arguments, and say to him, Who made man's spirit? he must answer,
God. Suppose they asked him again, Who created the flesh? and he answers, The
same God, I believe. Suppose their third question to be, Is the God good who
created both? and his reply to be, Nobody doubts it. Suppose once more they put
to him his yet remaining inquiry, Are not both good, since the good Creator made
them? and he confesses it. Then surely they will cut his throat with his own
sword, when they force home his conclusion on him, and say: Since therefore the
spirit of man is good, and his flesh good, as made by the good Creator, how can
it be that the two being good should be contrary to one another? Here,
perhaps, he will reply: I beg your pardon, I ought not to have said that the flesh
cannot be contrary to the spirit in any baptized person, as if I meant to imply
that it is contrary in the unbaptized; but I ought to have made my statement
general, to the effect that the flesh in no man's case is contrary. Now see into
what a corner he drives himself. See what a man will say, who is unwilling to cry
out with the apostle, "Who shall deliver me from the body of this death? The
grace of God, through Jesus Christ our Lord. (1) "But why," he asks, "should I
so exclaim, who am already baptized in Christ? It is for them to cry out thus
who have not yet received so great a benefit, whose words the apostle in a figure
transferred to himself, -- if indeed even they say so much." Well, this
defence of nature does not permit even these to utter this exclamation! For in the
baptized, there is no nature; and in the unbaptized, nature is not! Or if even in
the one class it is allowed to be corrupted, so that it is not without reason
that men exclaim, "O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from this
body of death?" to the other, too, help is brought in what follows: "The grace of
God, through Jesus Christ our Lord;" then let it at last be granted that human
nature stands in need of Christ for its Physician.
CHAP. 65 [LV.]--"THIS BODY OF DEATH," SO CALLED FROM ITS DEFECT, NOT FROM ITS
SUBSTANCE.
Now, I ask, when did our nature lose that liberty, which he craves to be
given to him when he says: "Who shall liberate me?" (2) For even he finds no
fault with the substance of the flesh when he expresses his desire to be liberated
from the body of this death, since the nature of the body, as well as of the
soul, must be attributed to the good God as the author thereof. But what he
speaks of undoubtedly concerns the offences of the body. Now from the body the
death of the body separates us; Whereas the offences contracted from the body
remain, and their just punishment awaits them, as the rich man found in held From
these it was that he was unable to liberate himself, who said: "Who shall
liberate me from the body of this death?" (2) But whensoever it was that he lost this
liberty, at least there remains that "inseparable capacity" of nature, -- he
has the ability from natural resources, -- he has the volition from free will.
Why does he seek the sacrament of baptism? Is it because of past sins, in order
that they may be forgiven, since they cannot be undone? Well, suppose you acquit
and release a man on these terms, he must still utter the old cry; for he not
only wants to be mercifully let off from punishment for past offences, but to
be strengthened and fortified against sinning for the time to come. For he
"delights in the law of God, after the inward man; but then he sees another law in
his members, warring against the law of his mind." (4) Observe, he sees that
there is, not recollects that there was. It is a present pressure, not a past
memory. And he sees the other law not only "warring," but even "bringing him into
captivity to the law of sin, which is" (not which was) "in his
members."Hence comes that cry of his: "O wretched man that I am! who shall liberate me
from the body of this death?" (2) Let him pray, let him entreat for the help of
the mighty Physician. Why gainsay that prayer? Why cry down that entreaty? Why
shall the unhappy suitor be hindered from begging for the mercy of Christ, --
and that too by Christians? For, it was even they who were accompanying Christ
that tried to prevent the blind man, by clamouring him down, from begging for
light; but even amidst the din and throng of the gainsayers He hears the
suppliant; (6) whence the response: "The grace of God, through Jesus Christ out Lord."
(7)
CHAP. 66.--THE WORKS, NOT THE SUBSTANCE, OF THE "FLESH" OPPOSED TO THE
"SPIRIT."
Now if we secure even this concession from them, that unbaptized persons
may implore the assistance of the Saviour's grace, this is indeed no slight
point against that fallacious assertion of the self-sufficiency of nature and of
the power of free will. For he is not sufficient to himself who says, "O wretched
man that I am! who shall liberate me?" Nor can he be said to have full liberty
who still asks for liberation. [LVI.] But let us, moreover, see to this point
also, whether they who are baptized do the good which they would, without any
resistance from the lust of the flesh. That, however, which we have to say on
this subject, our author himself mentions, when concluding this topic he says:
"As we remarked, the passage in which occur the words, 'The flesh lusteth against
the Spirit,' (8) must needs have reference not to the substance, but to the
works of the flesh." We too allege that this is spoken not of the substance of
the flesh, but of its works, which proceed from carnal concupiscence, -- in a
word, from sin, concerning which we have this precept: "Not to let it reign in our
mortal body, that we should obey it in the lusts thereof." (9)
CHAP. 67 [LVII.]--WHO MAY BE SAID TO BE UNDER THE LAW.
But even our author should observe that it is to persons who have been
already baptized that it was said: "The flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the
Spirit against the flesh, so that ye cannot do the things that ye would." (8)
And lest he should make them slothful for the actual conflict, and should seem
by this statement to have given them laxity in sinning, he goes on to tell them:
"If ye be led of the Spirit, ye are no longer under the law." (10) For that
man is under the law, who, from fear of the punishment which the law threatens,
and not from any love for righteousness, obliges himself to abstain from the
work of sin, without being as yet free and removed from the desire of sinning. For
it is in his very will that he is guilty, whereby he would prefer, if it were
possible, that what he dreads should not exist, in order that be might freely
do what he secretly desires. Therefore he says, "If ye be led of the Spirit, ye
are not under the law,"--even the law which inspires fear, but gives not love.
For this "love is shed abroad in our hearts," not by the letter of the law, but
"by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us." (1) This is the law of liberty,
not of bondage; being the law of love, not of fear; and concerning it the Apostle
James says: "Whoso looketh into the perfect law of liberty." (2) Whence he,
too, no longer indeed felt terrified by God's law as a slave, but delighted in it
in the inward man, although still seeing another law in his members warring
against the law of his mind. Accordingly he here says: "If ye be led of the
Spirit, he is not under the law; because, so far he rejoices in the law of God, he
lives not in far of the law, since fear has torment," (3) not joy and delight.
CHAP. 68 [LVIII.]--DESPITE THE DEVIL, MAN MAY, BY GOD'S HELP, BE PERFECTED.
If, therefore, we feel rightly on this matter, it is our duty at once to
be thankful for what is already healed within us, and to pray for such further
healing as shall enable us to enjoy full liberty, in that most absolute state of
health which is incapable of addition, the perfect pleasure of God. (4) For we
do not deny that human nature can be without sin; nor ought we by any means to
refuse to it the ability to become perfect, since we admit its capacity for
progress,--by God's grace, however, through our Lord Jesus Christ. By His
assistance we aver that it becomes holy and happy, by whom it was created in order to
be so. There is accordingly an easy refutation of the objection which our
author says is alleged by some against him: "The devil opposes us." This objection
we also meet in entirely identical language with that which he uses in reply:
"We must resist him, and he will flee. 'Resist the devil,' says the blessed
apostle, 'and he will flee from you.' (5) From which it may be observed, what his
harming amounts to against those whom he tees; or what power he is to be
understood as possessing, when he prevails only against those who do not resist him."
Such language is my own also; for it is impossible to employ truer words. There
is, however, this difference between us and them, that we, whenever the devil
has to be resisted, not only do not deny, but actually teach, that God's help
must be sought; whereas they attribute so much power to will as to take away
prayer from religious duty. Now it is certainly with a view to resisting the devil
and his fleeing from us that we say when we pray, "Lead us not into
temptation;" (6) to the same end also are we warned by our Captain, exhorting us as
soldiers in the words: "Watch ye and pray, lest ye enter into temptation." (7)
CHAP. 69 [LIX.]--PELAGIUS PUTS NATURE IN THE PLACE OF GRACE.
In opposition, however, to those who ask, "And who would be unwilling to
be without sin, if it were put in the power of a man?" he tightly contends,
saying "that by this very question they acknowledge that the thing is not
impossible; because so much as this, many, if not all men, certainly desire." Well then,
let him only confess the means by which this is possible, and then our
controversy is ended. Now the means is "the grace of God through our Lord Jesus
Christ;" by which he nowhere has been willing to allow that we are assisted when we
pray, for the avoidance of sin. If indeed he secretly allows this, he must
forgive us if we suspect this subject, wishes to entertain the secret opinion, and
yet is unwilling to confess or profess it. It would surely be no great matter
were he to speak out, especially since he has undertaken to handle and open this
point, as if it had been objected against him on the side of opponents. Why on
such occasions did he choose only to defend nature, and assert that man was so
created as to have it in his power not to sin if he wished not to sin; and,
from the fact that he was so created, definitely say that the power was owing to
God's grace which enabled him to avoid sin, if he was unwilling to commit it;
and yet refuse to say anything concerning the fact that even nature itself is
either, because disordered, healed by God's grace through our Lord Jesus Christ or
rise assisted by it, because in itself it is so insufficient?
CHAP. 70 [LX.]--WHETHER ANY MAN IS WITHOUT SIN IN THIS LIFE.
Now, whether there ever has been, or is, or ever can be, a man living so
righteous a life in this world as to have no sin at all, may be an open question
among true and pious Christians; (8) but whoever doubts the possibility of
this sinless state after this present life; is foolish. For my own part, indeed, I
am unwilling to dispute the point even as respects this life. For although
that passage seems to me to be incapable of bearing any doubtful sense, wherein it
is written, "In thy sight shall no man living be justified" (1) (and so of
similar passages), yet I could wish it were possible to show either that such
quotations were capable of beating a better signification, or that a perfect and
plenary righteousness, to which it were impossible for any accession to be made,
had been realized at some former time in some one whilst passing through this
life in the flesh, or was now being realized, or would be hereafter. They,
however, are in a great majority, who, while not doubting that to the last day of
their life it will be needful to them to resort to the prayer which they can so
truthfully utter, "Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass
against us," (2) still trust that in Christ and His promises they possess a
true, certain, and unfailing hope. There is, however, no method whereby any persons
arrive at absolute perfection, or whereby any man makes the slightest progress
to true and godly righteousness, but the assisting grace of our crucified
Saviour Christ, and the gift of His Spirit; and whosoever shall deny this cannot
rightly, I almost think, be reckoned in the number of any kind of Christians at
all.
CHAP. 71 [LXI.]--AUGUSTIN REPLIES AGAINST THE QUOTATIONS WHICH PELAGIUS HAD
ADVANCED OUT OF THE CATHOLIC WRITERS. LACTANTIUS.
Accordingly, with respect also to the passages which he has adduced,--not
indeed from the canonical Scriptures, but out of certain treatises of catholic
writers,--I wish to meet the assertions of such as say that the said quotations
make for him. The fact is, these passages are own opinion nor his. Amongst
them he wanted to class something out of my own books, thus accounting me to be a
person who seemed worthy of being ranked with them. For this I must not be
ungrateful, and I should be sorry--so I say with unaffected friendliness--for him
to be in error, since he has conferred this honour upon me. As for his first
quotation, indeed, why need I examine it largely, since I do not see here the
authors name, either because he has not given it, or because from some casual
mistake the copy which you (3) forwarded to me did not contain it? Especially as in
writings of such authors I feel myself free to use my own judgment (owing
unhesitating assent to nothing but the canonical Scriptures), whilst in fact there
is not a passage which he has quoted from the works of this anonymous author (4)
that disturbs me. "It behooved, " says he, "for the Master and Teacher of
virtue to become most like to man, that by conquering sin He might show that man is
able to conquer sin." Now, however this passage may be expressed, its author
must see to it as to what explanation it is capable of bearing. We, indeed, on
our part, could not possibly doubt that in Christ there was no sin to
conquer,--born as He was in the likeness of sinful flesh, not in sinful flesh itself.
Another passage is adduced from the same author to this effect: "And again, that
by subduing the desires of the flesh He might teach us that it is not of
necessity that one sins, but of set purpose and will." (5) For my own part, I
understand these desires of the flesh (if it is not of its unlawful lusts that the
writer here speaks) to be such as hunger, thirst, refreshment after fatigue, and
the like. For it is through these, however faultless they be in themselves, that
some men fall into sin,--a result which was far from our blessed Saviour, even
though, as we see from the evidence of the gospel, these affections were
natural to Him owing to His likeness to sinful flesh.
CHAP. 72 [LXI.]--HILARY. THE PURE IN HEART BLESSED. THE DOING AND PERFECTING
OF RIGHTEOUSNESS.
He quotes the following words from the blessed Hilary: "It is only when we
shall be perfect in spirit and changed in our immortal state, which
blessedness has been appointed only for the pure in heart, (6) that we shall see that
which is immortal in God." (7) Now I am reply not aware what is here said contrary
to our own statement, or in what respect this passage is of any use to our
opponent, unless it be that it testifies to the possibility of a man's being "pure
in heart." But who denies such possibility? Only it must be by the grace of
God, through Jesus Christ our Lord, and not merely by our freedom of will. He
goes on to quote also this passage: "This Job had so effectually read these
Scriptures, that cause he worshipped God purely with a mind unmixed with offences:
now such worship of God is the proper work of righteousness." (8) It is what not
what he had brought to perfection in this world,--much less what he had done or
perfected without the grace of that Saviour whom he had actually foretold. (9)
For that man, indeed, abstains from every wicked work, who does not allow the
sin which he has within him to have dominion over him; and who, whenever an
unworthy thought stole over him, suffered it not to come to a head in actual deed.
It is, however, one thing not to have sin, and another to refuse obedience to
its desires. It is one thing to fulfil the command, "Thou shalt not covet;" (1)
and another thing, by an endeavour at any rate after abstinence, to do that
which is also written, "Thou shalt not go after thy lusts." (2) And yet one is
quite aware that he can do nothing of all this without the Saviour's grace. It
is to work righteousness, therefore, to fight in an internal struggle with the
internal evil of concupiscence in the true worship of God; whilst to perfect it
means to have no adversary at all. Now he who has to fight is still in danger,
and is sometimes shaken, even if he is not overthrown; whereas he who has no
enemy at all rejoices in perfect peace. He, moreover, is in the highest truth
said to be without sin in whom no sin has an indwelling,--not he who, abstaining
from evil deeds, uses such language as "Now it is no longer I that do it, but
the sin that dwelleth in me." (3)
CHAP. 73.--HE MEETS PELAGIUS WITH ANOTHER PASSAGE FROM HILARY.
Now even Job himself is not silent respecting his own sins; and your
friend, (4) of course, is justly of opinion that humility must not by any means "be
put on the side of falsehood?" Whatever confession, therefore, Job makes,
inasmuch as he is a true worshipper of God, he undoubtedly makes it in truth. (5)
Hilary, likewise, while expounding that passage of the psalm in which it is
written, "Thou hast despised all those who turn aside from Thy commandments," (6)
says: "If God were to despise sinners, He would despise indeed all men, because
no man is without sin; but it is those who turn away from Him, whom they call
apostates, that He despises." You observe his statement: it is not to the effect
that no man was without sin, as if he spoke of the past; but no man is without
sin; and on this point, as I have already remarked, I have no contention with
him. But if one refuses to submit to the Apostle John,--who does not himself
declare, "If we were to say we have had no sin," but "If we say we have no sin,"
(7)--how is he likely to show deference to Bishop Hilary? It is in defence of
the grace of Christ that I lift up my voice, without which grace no man is
justified,--just as if natural free will were sufficient. Nay, He Himself lifts up
His own voice in defence of the same. Let us submit to Him when He says: "Without
me ye can do nothing." (8)
CHAP. 74 [LXIII.]--AMBROSE.
St. Ambrose, however, really opposes those who say that man cannot exist
without sin in the present life. For, in order to support his statement, he
avails himself of the instance of Zacharias and Elisabeth, because they are
mentioned as "having walked in all the commandments and ordinances "of the law
"blameless." (9) Well, but does he for all that deny that it was by God's grace that
they did this through our Lord Jesus Christ? It was undoubtedly by such faith in
Him that holy men lived of old, even before His death. It is He who sends the
Holy Ghost that is given to us, through whom that love is shed abroad in our
hearts whereby alone whosoever are righteous are righteous. This same Holy Ghost
the bishop expressly mentioned when he reminds us that He is to be obtained by
prayer (so that the will is not sufficient unless it be aided by Him); thus in
his hymn he says:
"Votisque praestat sedulis,
Sanctum mereri Spiritum," (10)--
"To those who sedulously seek He gives to gain the Holy Spirit."
CHAP. 75.--AUGUSTIN ADDUCES IN REPLY SOME OTHER PASSAGES OF AMBROSE.
I, too, will quote a passage out of this very work of St. Ambrose, from
which our opponent has taken the statement which he deemed favourable for
citation: "' It seemed good to me,' " he says; "but what he declares seemed good to
him cannot have seemed good to him alone. For it is not simply to his human will
that it seemed good, but also as it pleased Him, even Christ, who, says he,
speaketh in me, who it is that causes that which is good in itself to seem good to
ourselves also. For him on whom He has mercy He also calls. He, therefore, who
follows Christ, when asked why he wished to be a Christian, can answer: 'It
seemed good to me.' In saying this he does not deny that it also pleased God; for
from God proceeds the preparation of man's will inasmuch as it is by God's
grace that God is honoured by His saint" (11) See now what your author must learn,
if he takes pleasure in the words of Ambrose, how that man's will is prepared
by God, and that it is of no importance, or, at any rate, does not much matter,
by what means or at what time the preparation is accomplished, provided no
doubt is raised as to whether the thing itself be capable of accomplishment
without the grace of Christ. Then, again, how important it was that he should observe
one line from the words of Ambrose which he quoted! For after that holy man
had said, "Inasmuch as the Church has been gathered out of the world, that is,
out of sinful men, how can it be unpolluted when composed of such polluted
material, except that, in the first place, it be washed of sins by the grace of
Christ, and then, in the next place, abstain from sins through its nature of
avoiding sin?"--he added the following sentence, which your author has refused to
quote for a self-evident reason; for [Ambrose] says: "It was not from the first
unpolluted, for that was impossible for human nature: but it is through God's
grace and nature that because it no longer sins, it comes to pass that it seems
unpolluted." (1) Now who does not understand the reason why your author declined
adding these words? It is, of course, so contrived in the discipline of the
present life, that the holy Church shall arrive at last at that condition of most
immaculate purity which all holy men desire; and that it may in the world to
come, and in a state unmixed with anything of evil men, and undisturbed by any law
of sin resisting the law of the mind, bad the purest life in a divine
eternity. Still he should well observe what Bishop Ambrose says, --and his statement
exactly tallies with the Scriptures: "It was not from the first unpolluted, for
that condition was impossible for human nature." By his phrase, "from the
first," he means indeed from the time of our bring born of Adam. Adam no doubt was
himself created immaculate; in the case, however, of those who are by nature
children of wrath, deriving from him what in him was corrupted, he distinctly
averred that it was an impossibility in human nature that they should be immaculate
from the first.
CHAP. 76 [LXIV.]--JOHN OF CONSTANTINOPLE.
He quotes also John, bishop of Constantinople, as saying "that sin is not
a substance, but a wicked act." Who denies this? "And because it is not
natural, therefore the law was given against it, and because it proceeds from the
liberty of our will." (2) Who, too, denies this? However, the present question
concerns our human nature in its corrupted state; it is a further question also
concerning that grace of God whereby our nature is healed by the great. Physician,
Christ, whose remedy it would not need if it were only whole. And yet your
author defends it as capable of not sinning, as if it were sound, or as if its
freedom of will were self-sufficient.
CHAP. 77.--XYSTUS.
What Christian, again, is unaware of what he quotes the most blessed
Xystus, bishop of Rome and martyr of Christ, as having said, "God has conferred upon
men liberty of their own will, in order that by purity and sinlessness of life
they may become like unto God?" (3) But the man who appeals to free will ought
to listen and believe, and ask Him in whom he believes to give him His
assistance not to sin. For when he speaks of "becoming like unto God," it is indeed
through God's love that men are to be like unto God,--even the love which is
"shed abroad in our hearts," not by any ability of nature or the free will within
us, but "by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us." (4) Then, in respect of what
the same martyr further says, "A pure mind is a holy temple for God, and a
heart clean and without sin is His best altar" who knows not that the dean heart
must be brought to this perfection, whilst "the inward man is renewed day by
day," (5) but yet not without the grace of God through Jesus Christ our Lord?
Again, when he says, "A man of chastity and without sin has receded power from God
to be a son of God," he of course meant it as an admonition that on a man's
becoming so chaste and sinless (without raising any question as to where and when
this perfection was to be obtained by him,--although in fact it is quite an
interesting question among godly men, who are notwithstanding agreed as to the
possibility of such perfection on the one hand, and on the other hand its
impossibility except through "the one Mediator between God and men, the Man Christ
Jesus"); (6)--nevertheless, as I began to say, Xystus designed his words to be an
admonition that, on any man's attiring such a high character, and thereby being
rightly reckoned to be among the sons of God, the attainment must not be
thought to have been the work of his own power. This indeed he, through grace,
received from God, since he did not have it in a nature which had become corrupted
and depraved,--even as we read in the Gospel, "But as many as received Him, to
them gave He power to become the sons of God;" (7) which they were not by nature,
nor could at all become, unless by receiving Him they also receivedpower
through His grace. This is the power that love which is only communicated to us by
the Holy Ghost bestowed upon us.
CHAP. 78 [LXV.]--JEROME.
We have next a quotation of some words of the venerable presbyter Jerome,
from his exposition of the passage where it is written: " 'Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they shall see God.' (8) These are they whom no consciousness of
sin reproves," he says, and adds: "The pure man is seen by his purity of hear;
the temple of God cannot be defiled." (1) This perfection is, to be sure,
wrought in us by endeavour, by labour, by prayer, by effectual importunity therein
that we may be brought to the perfection in which we may be able to look upon
God with a pure heart, by His grace through our Lord Jesus Christ. As to his
quotation, that the forementioned presbyter said, "God created us with free will;
we are drawn by necessity neither to virtue nor to vice; otherwise, where there
is necessity there is no crown;" (2)--who would it? Who would deny that human
nature was so created? The reason, however, why in doing a right action there
is no bondage of necessity, is that liberty comes of love.
CHAP. 79 [LXVI.] --A CERTAIN NECESSITY OF SINNING.
But let us revert to the apostle's assertion: "The love of God is shed
abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us." (3) By whom given
if not by Him who "ascended up on high, led captivity captive, and gave gifts
unto men?" (4) Forasmuch, however, as there is, owing to the defects that have
entered our nature, not to the constitution of our nature, a certain necessary
tendency to sin, a man should listen, and in order that the said necessity may
cease to exit, learn to say to God, "Bring Thou me out of my necessities;" (5)
because in the very offering up of such a prayer there h a struggle against the
tempter, who fights against us concerning this very necessity; and thus, by the
assistance of grace through our Lord Jesus Christ, both the evil necessity
will be removed and full liberty be bestowed.
CHAP. 80 [LXVII.]--AUGUSTIN HIMSELF. TWO METHODS WHEREBY SINS, LIKE DISEASES,
ARE GUARDED AGAINST.
Let us now turn to our own case. "Bishop Augustin also," says your author,
"in his books on Free Will has these words: ' Whatever the cause itself of
volition is, if it is impossible to resist it, submission to it is not sinful; if,
however, it may be resisted, let it not be submitted to, and there will be no
sin. Does it, perchance, deceive the unwary man? Let him then beware that he be
not deceived. Is the deception, however, so potent that it is not possible to
guard against it? If such is the case, then there are no sins. For who sins in
a case where precaution is quite impossible? Sin, however, is committed;
precaution therefore is possible.'" (6) I acknowledge it, these are my words; but he,
too, should condescend to acknowledge all that was said previously, seeing
that the discussion is about the grace of God, which help us as a medicine through
the Mediator; not about the impossibility of righteousness. Whatever, then,
may be the cause, it ca be resisted. Most certainly it can. Now it is because of
this that we pray for help, saying, "Lead us not into temptation," (7) and we
should not ask for help if we supposed that the resistance were quite
impossible. It is possible to guard against sin, but by the help of Him who cannot be
decayed. (8) For this very circumstance has much to do with guarding against sin
that we can unfeignedly say, "Forgive us our debt, as we forgive our debtors"
(9) Now there are two ways whereby, even in bodily maladies, the evil is guarded
against,--to prevent its occurrence, and, if it happen, to secure a speedy
cure. To prevent its occurrence, we may find precaution in the prayer, "Lead us not
into temptation;" to secure the prompt remedy, we have the resource in the
prayer, "Forgive us our debts." Whether then the danger only threaten or be
inherent, it may be guarded against.
CHAP. 81.--AUGUSTIN QUOTES HIMSELF ON FREE WILL.
In order, however, that my meaning on this subject may be dear not merely
to him, but also to such persons as have not read those treatises of mine on
Free Will, which your author has read, and who have not only not read them, but
perchance do read him; I must go on to quote out of my books what he has omitted
but which, if he had perceived and quoted in his book, no controversy would be
left between us on this subject. For immediately after those words of mine
which he has quoted, I expressly added, and (as fully as I could) worked out, the
train of thought which might occur to any one's mind, to the following effect:
"And yet some actions are disapproved of, even when they are done in ignorance,
and are judged deserving of chastisement, as we read in the inspired
authorities." After taking some examples out of these, I went on to speak also of
infirmity as follows: "Some actions also deserve disapprobation, that are done from
necessity; as when a man wishes to act rightly and cannot. For whence arise
those utterances: 'For the good that I would, I do not; but the evil which I would
not, that I do'?" (10) Then, after quoting some other passages of the Holy
Scriptures to the same effect, I say: "But all these are the sayings of persons who
are coming out of that condemnation of death; for if this is not man's
punishment, but his nature, then those are no sins." Then, again, a little afterwards
I add: "It remains, therefore, that this just punishment come of man's
condemnation. Nor ought it to be wondered at, that either by ignorance man has not free
determination of will to choose what he will rightly do, or that by the
resistance of carnal habit (which by force of mortal transmission has, in a certain
sense, become engrafted into his nature), though seeing what ought rightly to be
done and wishing to do it, he yet is unable to accomplish it. For this is the
most just penalty of sin, that a man should lose what he has been unwilling to
make good use of, when he might with ease have done so if he would; which,
however, amounts to this, that the man who knowingly does not do what is right
loses the ability to do it when he wishes. For, in truth, to every soul that sins
there accrue these two penal consequences--ignorance and difficulty. Out of the
ignorance springs the error which disgraces; out of the difficulty arises the
pain which afflicts. But to approve of falsehoods as if they were true, so as to
err involuntarily, and to be unable, owing to the resistance and pain of
carnal bondage, to refrain from deeds of lust, is not the nature of man as he was
created, but the punishment of man as under condemnation. When, however, we speak
of a free will to do what is right, we of course mean that liberty in which
man was created." Some men at once deduce from this what seems to them a just
objection from the transfer and transmission of sins of ignorance and difficulty
from the first man to his posterity. My answer to such objectors is this: "I
tell them, by way of a brief reply, to be silent and to cease from murmuring
against God. Perhaps their complaint might have been a proper one, if no one from
among men had stood forth a vanquisher of error and of lust; but when there is
everywhere present One who calls off from himself, through the creature by so
many means, the man who serves the Lord, teaches him when believing, consoles him
when hoping, encourages him when loving, helps him when endeavouring, hears him
when praying,--it is not reckoned to you as a fault that you are involuntarily
ignorant, but that you neglect to search out what you are ignorant of; nor is
it imputed to you in censure that you do not bind up the limbs that are
wounded, but that you despise him who wishes to heal them." (1) In such terms did I
exhort them, as web as I could, to live righteously; nor did I make the grace of
God of none effect, without which the now obscured and tarnished nature of man
can neither be enlightened nor puttied. Our whole discussion with them on this
subject turns upon this, that we frustrate not the grace of God which is in
Jesus Christ our Lord by a perverted assertion of nature. In a passage occurring
shortly after the last quoted one, I said in reference to nature: "Of nature
itself we speak in one sense, when we properly describe it as that human nature in
which man was created faultless after his kind; and in another sense as that
nature in which we are born ignorant and carnally minded, owing to the penalty
of condemnation, after the manner of the apostle, 'We ourselves likewise were by
nature children of wrath, even as others.' " (2)
CHAP. 82 [LXVIII.]--HOW TO EXHORT MEN TO FAITH, REPENTANCE, AND ADVANCEMENT.
If, therefore, we wish "to rouse and kindle cold and sluggish souls by
Christian exhortations to lead righteous lives," (3) we must first of all exhort
them to that faith whereby they may become Christians, and be subjects of His
name and authority, without whom they cannot be saved. If, however, they are
already Christians but neglect to lead holy lives, they must be chastised with
alarms and be aroused by the praises of reward,--in such a manner, indeed, that we
must not forget to urge them to godly prayers as well as to virtuous actions,
and furthermore to instruct them in such wholesome doctrine that they be induced
thereby to return thanks for being able to accomplish any step in that holy
life which they have entered upon, without difficulty, (4) and whenever they do
experience such "difficulty," that they then wrestle with God in most faithful
and persistent prayer and ready works of mercy to obtain from Him facility. But
provided they thus progress, I am not over-anxious as to the where and the when
of their perfection in fulness of righteousness; only I solemnly assert, that
wheresoever and whensoever they become perfect, it cannot be but by the grace
of God through our Lord Jesus Christ When, indeed, they have attained to the
clear knowledge that they have no sin, let them not say they have sin, lest the
truth be not in them; (5) even as the truth h not in those persons who, though
they have sin, yet say that they have it not.
CHAP. 83 [LXIX.]--GOD ENJOINS NO IMPOSSIBILITY, BECAUSE ALL THINGS ARE
POSSIBLE AND EASY TO LOVE.
But "the precepts of the law are very good," if we use them lawfully. (6)
Indeed, by the very fact (of which we have the firmest conviction) "that the
just and good God could not possibly have enjoined impossibilities," we are
admonished both what to do in easy paths and what to ask for when they are
difficult. Now all things are easy for love to effect, to which (and which alone)
"Christ's burden is light," (1)--or rather, it is itself alone the burden which is
light. Accordingly it is said, "And His commandments are not grievous;" (2) so
that whoever finds them grievous must regard the inspired statement about their
"not being grievous" as having been capable of only this meaning, that there may
be a state of heart to which they are not burdensome, and he must pray for
that disposition which he at present wants, so as to be able to fulfil all that is
commanded him. And this is the purport of what is said to Israel in
Deuteronomy, if understood in a godly, sacred and spiritual sense, since the apostle,
after quoting the passage, "The word is nigh thee, even in thy mouth and in thy
heart" (3) (and, as the verse also has it, in thine hands, (4) for in man's heart
are his spiritual hands), adds in explanation, "This is the word of faith
which we preach." (5) No man, therefore, who "returns to the Lord his God," as he
is there commanded, "with all his heart and with all his sol," (6) will find
God's commandment "grievous." How, indeed, can it be grievous, when it is the
precept of love? Either, therefore, a man has not love, and then it is grievous; or
he has love, and then it is not grievous. But he possesses love if he does
what is there enjoined on Israel, by returning to the Lord his God with all his
heart and with alI his soul. "A new commandment" says He, "do I give unto you,
that ye love one another; "(7) and "He that loveth his neighbour hath fulfilled
the law;" (8) and again, "Love is the fulfilling of the law." (9) In accordance
with these sayings is that passage, "Had they trodden good paths, they would
have found, indeed, the ways of righteousness easy." (10) How then is it written,
"Because of the words of Thy lips, I have kept the paths of difficulty," (11)
except it be that both statements are true: These paths are paths of difficulty
to fear; but to love they are easy?
CHAP. 84 [LXX.]--THE DEGREES OF LOVE ARE ALSO DEGREES OF HOLINESS.
Inchoate love, therefore, is inchoate holiness; advanced love is advanced
holiness; great love is great holiness; "perfect love is perfect
holiness,"--but this "love is out of a pure heart, and of a good conscience, and of faith
unfeigned," (12) which in this life is then the greatest, when life itself is
contemned in comparison with it." (13) I wonder, however, whether it has not a soil
in which to grow after it has quitted this mortal life ! But in what place and
at what time soever shall reach that state of absolute perfection, which shall
admit of no increase, it is certainly not "shed abroad in our hearts" by any
energies either of the nature or the volition that are within us, but "by the
Holy Ghost which is given unto us," "and which both helps our infirmity and
co-operates with our strength. For it is itself indeed the grace of God, through our
Lord Jesus Christ, to whom, with the Father and the Holy Spirit, appertaineth
eternity, and all goodness, for ever and ever. Amen.