ON MARRIAGE AND CONCUPISCENCE. IN TWO BOOKS, ADDRESSED TO THE COUNT VALERIUS
BY AURELIUS AUGUSTIN, BISHOP OF HIPPO, A.D. 419/420 (BOOK I)
ADVERTISEMENT TO THE READER ON THE FOLLOWING TREATISE.
ON revising these two Books, which he addressed to the Count Valerius,
Augustin placed them immediately after his reply to the discourse of the Arians,
which was affixed to the Proceedings with Emeritus.(1) Now these proceedings are
stated to have taken place on the 20th of September, in the year of our Lord
418.(2) There can be no doubt, then, that these subjoined books--or, at any
rate, the former of them--were written either at the close of the year 418, or in
the beginning of the year 419. For, concerning this first book, Augustin says
himself: "This book of mine, however, which he [Julianus] says he answered in
four books, I wrote after the condemnation of Pelagius and Coelestius. This," he
adds, "I have deemed it right to mention, because he declares that my words had
been used by the enemies of the truth to bring it into odium. Let no one,
therefore, suppose that it was owing to this book of mine that condemnation had been
passed on the new heretics who are enemies of the grace of Christ.''(3) From
these words one may see at once that this first book was published about the
same time as the condemnation of the Pelagians in the year 418.
Soon after its publication it began to be assailed by the Pelagians, who
observed that its perusal was producing in the minds of the catholics much odium
against their heresy. One of them, Julianus,(4) influenced with a warm desire
of furthering the heretical movement, attacked the first book of Augustin's
treatise in four books of his own. Out of these, sundry extracts were culled by
some interested person, and forwarded to Count Valerius. Valerius despatched them
from Ravenna to Rome, to Alypius,(5) in order that he, on returning to Africa,
might hand them to Augustin for the purpose of an early refutation, together
with a letter in which Valerius thanked Augustin for the previous work which he
also mentioned. Augustin saw at once that these extracts had been taken out of
the work of Julianus; and, although he preferred reserving his answer to the
selections till he had received the entire work from which they were culled, he
still thought that he was bound to avoid all delay in satisfying the Count
Valerius. Without loss of time, therefore, he drew up in answer his second book,
with the same title as before, On Marriage and Concupiscence, which, as we think,
must be assigned to the year 420, since the holy doctor wrote it immediately
after the expression of thanks for the first book; for it is clearly improbable
that Valerius should have waited two years or more to make the acknowledgment of
his gratitude.
Moreover, the Valerius whom Augustin dignifies with the title of
Illustrious as well as Count, was much employed in public life--not, to be sure, in the
forum, but in the field; and from this circumstance we find it difficult to
accede to the opinion that supposes him to have been the same person with the
Valerius who was Count of the Private Estate in the year 425, Consul in 432, and
lastly Master of the Offices under Theodosius the younger in the year 434. These
appointments, indeed, had no connection with military service, nor had the
prefects of Theodosius anything in common with those of Honorius.
A LETTER(1) ADDRESSED TO THE COUNT VALERIUS,
ON AUGUSTIN'S FORWARDING TO HIM WHAT HE CALLS HIS FIRST BOOK "ON MARRIAGE AND
CONCUPISCENCE."
TO THE ILLUSTRIOUS AND DESERVEDLY EMINENT LORD AND HIS MOST DEARLYBELOVED SON
IN THE LOVE OF CHRIST, VALERIUS, AUGUSTIN SENDS GREETINGIN THE LORD.
1. WHILE I was chafing at the long disappointment of receiving no
acknowledgments from your Highness of the many letters which I had written to you, I
all at once received three letters from your Grace,--one by the hand of my fellow
bishop Vindemialis, which was not meant for me only, and two, soon afterwards,
through my brother presbyter Firmus. This holy man, who is bound to me, as you
may have ascertained from his own lips, by the ties of a most intimate love,
had much conversation with me about your excellence, and gave me undoubted
proofs of his complete knowledge of your character "in the bowels of Christ;''(2) by
these means he had sight, not only of the letters of which the fore-mentioned
bishop and he himself had been the bearers, but also of those which we
expressed our disappointment at not having received. Now his information respecting you
was all the more pleasant to us, inasmuch as he gave me to understand, what it
was out of your power to do, that you would not, even at my earnest request
for an answer, become the extoller of your own praises, contrary to the
permission of Holy Scripture.(3) But I ought myself to hesitate to write to you in this
strain, lest I should incur the suspicion of flattering you, my illustrious and
deservedly eminent lord and dearly beloved son in the love of Christ.
2. Now, as to your praises in Christ, or rather Christ's praises in you,
see what delight and joy it was to me to hear of them from him, who could
neither deceive me because of his fidelity to me, nor be ignorant of them by reason
of his friendship with you. But other testimony, which though inferior in amount
and certainty has still reached my ear from divers quarters, assures me how
sound and catholic is your faith; how devout your, hope of the future; how great
your love to God and the brethren; how humble your mind amid the highest
honours, as you do not trust in uncertain riches, but in the living God, and art rich
in good works;(4) how your house is a rest and comfort of the saints, and a
terror to evil-doers; how great is your care that no man lay snares for Christ's
members (either among His old enemies or those of more recent days), although
he use Christ's name as a cloak for his wiles; and at the same time, though you
give no quarter to the error of these enemies, how provident you are to secure
their salvation. This and the like, we frequently hear, as I have already said,
even from others; but at the present moment we have, by means of the
above-mentioned brother, received a fuller and more trustworthy knowledge.
3. Touching, however, the subject of conjugal purity, that we might be
able to bestow our commendation and love upon you for it, could we possibly listen
to the information of any one but some bosom friend of your own, who had no
mere superficial acquaintance with you, but knew your innermost life? Concerning,
therefore, this excellent gift of God to you, I am delighted to converse with
you with more frankness and at greater length. I am quite sure that I shall not
prove burdensome to you, even if I send you a prolix treatise, the perusal of
which will only ensure a longer converse between us. For this have I
discovered, that amidst your manifold and weighty cares you pursue your reading with ease
and pleasure; and that you take great delight in any little performances of
ours, even if they are addressed to other persons, whenever they have chanced to
fall into your hands. Whatever, therefore, is addressed to yourself, in which I
can speak to you as it were personally, you will deign both to notice with
greater attention, and to receive with a higher pleasure. From the perusal, then,
of this letter, turn to the book which I send with it. It will in its very
commencement, in a more convenient manner, intimate to your Reverence the reason,
both why it has been written, and why it has been submitted specially to your
consideration.
ON MARRIAGE AND CONCUPISCENCE.
IN TWO BOOKS,
ADDRESSED TO THE COUNT VALERIUS
BY AURELIUS AUGUSTIN, BISHOP OF HIPPO; WRITTEN IN 419 AND 420,
BOOK I.(1)
WHEREIN HE EXPOUNDS THE PECULIAR AND NATURAL BLESSINGS OF MARRIAGE. HE SHOWS
THAT AMONG THESE BLESSINGS MUST NOT BE RECKONED FLESHLY CONCUPISCENCE; INSOMUCH
AS THIS IS WHOLLY EVIL, SUCH AS DOES NOT PROCEED FROM THE VERY NATURE OF
MARRIAGE, BUT IS AN ACCIDENT THEREOF ARISING FROM ORIGINAL SIN. THIS EVIL,
NOTWITHSTANDING, IS RIGHTLY EMPLOYED BY MARRIAGE FOR THE PROCREATION OF CHILDREN. BUT, AS
THE RESULT OF THIS CONCUPISCENCE, IT COMES TO PASS THAT, EVEN FROM THE LAWFUL
MARRIAGE OF THE CHILDREN OF GOD, MEN ARE NOT BORN CHILDREN OF GOD, BUT OF THE
WORLD, AND ARE BOUND WITH THE CHAIN OF SIN, ALTHOUGH THEIR PARENTS HAVE BEEN
LIBERATED THEREFROM BY GRACE; AND ARE LED CAPTIVE BY THE DEVIL, IF THEY BE NOT IN
LIKE MANNER RESCUED BY THE SELF-SAME GRACE OF CHRIST. HE EXPLAINS HOW IT IS
THAT CONCUPISCENCE REMAINS IN THE BAPTIZED IN ACT THOUGH NOT IN GUILT. HE TEACHES,
THAT BY THE SANCTITY OF BAPTISM, NOT MERELY THIS ORIGINAL GUILT, BUT ALL OTHER
SINS OF MEN WHATEVER, ARE TAKEN AWAY. HE LASTLY QUOTES THE AUTHORITY OF
AMBROSE TO SHOW THAT THE EVIL OF CONCUPISCENCE MUST BE DISTINGUISHED FROM THE GOOD OF
MARRIAGE.
CHAP. 1.--CONCERNING THE ARGUMENT OF THIS TREATISE.
OUR new heretics, my dearest son Valerius, who maintain that infants born
in the flesh have no need of that medicine of Christ whereby sins are healed,
are constantly affirming, in their excessive hatred of us, that we condemn
marriage and that divine procedure by which God creates human brings by means of men
and women, inasmuch as we assert that they who are born of such a union
contract that original sin of which the apostle says, "By one man sin entered into
the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men, for in him alI
sinned;"(2) and because we do not deny, that of whatever kind of parents they are
born, they are still under the devil's dominion, unless they be born again in
Christ, and by His grace be removed from the power of darkness and translated
into His kingdom,(3) who willed not to be born from the same union of the two
sexes. Because, then, we affirm this doctrine, which is contained in the oldest
and unvarying rule of the catholic faith, these propounders of the novel and
perverse dogma, who assert that there is no sin in infants to be washed away in the
layer of regeneration,(1) in their unbelief or ignorance calumniate us, as if
we condemned marriage, and as if we asserted to be the devil's work what is
God's own work--the human being which is born of marriage. Nor do they reflect
that the good of marriage is no more impeachable on account of the original evil
which is derived therefrom, than the evil of adultery and fornication is
excusable on account of the natural good which is still have existed even if no man
had sinned, since the procreation of children in the body that belonged to that
life would have been effected without that malady which in "the body of this
death"(2) cannot be separated from the process of procreation.
CHAP. 2. [II.]--WHY THIS TREATISE WAS ADDRESSED TO VALERIUS.
Now there are three very special reasons, which I will briefly indicate,
why I wished to write to you particularly on this subject. One is, because by
the gift of Christ you are a strict observer of conjugal chastity. Another is,
because by your great care and diligence you have effectually withstood those
profane novelties which we are they had committed to writing had found its way
into your hands; and although in your robust faith you could despise such an
attempt, it is still a good thing for us also to know how to bring aid to our faith
by defending it. For the Apostle Peter instructs us to be "ready always to give
an answer to every one that asketh us a reason of the faith and hope that is
in us;"(3) and the Apostle Paul says, "Let your speech be always with grace,
seasoned with salt, that ye may know how ye ought to answer every man."(4) These
are the motives which chiefly impel me to hold such converse with you in this
volume, as he Lord shall enable me. I have never liked, indeed, to intrude the
perusal of any of my humble labours on any eminent person, who is like yourself
conspicuous to all from the elevation of his office, without his own
request,--especially when he is not blessed with the enjoyment of a dignified retirement,
but is still occupied in the public duties of a soldier's profession; this has
always seemed to me to savour more impertinence than of respectful esteem. If,
then, I have incurred censure of this kind, while acting on the reasons which I
have now mentioned, I crave the favour of your forgiveness, and kindly regard
to the following arguments.
CHAP. 3 [III.]--CONJUGAL CHASTITY THE GIFT OF GOD.
That chastity in the married state is God's gift, is shown by the most
blessed Paul, when, speaking on this very subject, he says: "But I would that all
men were even as I myself: but every man hath his proper gift of God, one after
this manner, and another after that."(5) Observe, he tells us that this gift
is from God; and although he classes it brow that continence in which he would
have alI men to be like himself, he still describes it as a gift of God. Whence
we understand that, when these precepts are given to us in order that we should
do them, nothing else is stated than that there ought to be within us our own
will also for receiving and having them. When, therefore, these are shown to be
gifts of God, it is meant that they must be sought from Him if they are not
already possessed; and if they are possessed, thanks must be given to Him for the
possession; moreover, that our own wills have but small avail for seeking,
obtaining, and holding fast these gifts, unless they be assisted by God's grace.
CHAP. 4.--A DIFFICULTY AS REGARDS THE CHASTITY OF UNBELIEVERS. NONE BUT A
BELIEVER IS TRULY A CHASTE MAN.(6)
What, then, have we to say when conjugal chastity is discovered even in
some unbelievers? Must it be said that they sin, in that they make a bad use of a
gift of God, in not restoring it to the worship of Him from whom they received
it? Or must these endowment, perchance, be not regarded as gifts of God at
all, when they are not believers who exercise them; according to the apostle's
sentiment, when he says, "Whatsoever Is not of faith is sin?"(7) But who would
dare to say that a gift of God is sin? For the soul and the body, and all the
natural endowments which are implanted in the soul and the body, even in the
persons of sinful men, are still gifts of God; for it is God who made them, and not
they themselves. When it is said, "Whatsoever is not of faith is sin," only
those things are meant which men themselves do. When men, therefore, do without
faith those things which seem to appertain to conjugal chastity, they do them
either to please men, whether themselves or others, or to avoid incurring such
troubles as are incidental to human nature in those things which they corruptly
desire, or to pay service to devils. Sins are not really resigned, but some sins
are overpowered by other sins. God forbid, then, that a man be truly called
chaste who observes connubial fidelity to his wife from any other motive than
devotion to the true God.
CHAP. 5 [IV.]--THE NATURAL GOOD OF MARRIAGE. ALL SOCIETY NATURALLY REPUDIATES
A FRAUDULENT COMPANION. WHAT IS TRUE CONJUGAL PURITY? NO TRUE VIRGINITY AND
CHASTITY EXCEPT IN DEVOTION TO TRUE FAITH.
The union, then, of male and female for the purpose of procreation is the
natural good of marriage. But he makes a bad use of this good who uses it
bestially, so that his intention is on the gratification of lust, intend of the
desire of offspring. Nevertheless, in sundry animals unendowed with reason, as, for
instance, in most birds, there is both preserved a certain kind of
confederation of pairs, and a social combination of skill in nest-building; and their
mutual division of the periods for cherishing their eggs and their alternation in
the labor of feeding their young, give them the appearance of so acting, when
they mate, as to be intent rather on securing the continuance of their kind than
on gratifying lust. Of these two, the one is the likeness of man in a brute;
the other, the likeness of the brute in man. With respect, however, to what I
ascribed to the nature of marriage, that the male and the female are united
together as associates for procreation, and consequently do not defraud each other
(forasmuch as every associated state has a natural abhorrence of a fraudulent
companion), although even men without faith possess this palpable blessing of
nature, yet, since they use it not in faith, they only turn it to evil and sin. In
like manner, therefore, the marriage of believers converts to the use of
righteousness that carnal concupiscence by which "the flesh lusteth against the
Spirit."(1) For they entertain the firm purpose of generating offspring to be
regenerated--that the children who are born of them as "children of the world" may be
born again and become "sons of God." Wherefore all parents who do not beget
children with this intention, this will this purpose, of transferring them from
bring members of the first man into being members of Christ, but boast as
unbelieving parents over unbelieving children,--however circumspect they be in their
cohabitation, studiously limiting it to the begetting of children,--really have
no conjugal chastity in themselves. For inasmuch as chastity is a virtue,
hating unchastity as its contrary vice, and as all the virtues (even those whose
operation is by means of the body) have their seat in the soul, how can the body
be in any true sense said to be chaste, when the soul itself is committing
fornication against the true God? Now such fornication the holy psalmist censures
when he says: "For, lo, they that are far from Thee shall perish: Thou hast
destroyed all them that go a whoring from Thee."(2) There is, then, no true
chastity, whether conjugal, or vidual, or virginal, except that which devotes itself
to true faith. For though consecrated virginity is rightly preferred to
marriage, yet what Christian in his sober mind would not prefer catholic Christian
women who have been even more than once married, to not only vestals, but also to
heretical virgins? So great is the avail of faith, of which the apostle says,
"Whatsoever is not of faith is sin;"(3) and of which it is written in the Epistle
to the Hebrews, "Without faith it is impossible to please God."(4)
CHAP. 6 [V.]--THE CENSURING OF LUST IS NOT A CONDEMNATION OF MARRIAGE; WHENCE
COMES SHAME IN THE HUMAN BODY. ADAM AND EVE WERE NOT CREATED BLIND; MEANING OF
THEIR "EYES BEING OPENED."
Now, this being the real state of the question, they undoubtedly err who
suppose that, when fleshly lust is censured, marriage is condemned; as if the
malady of concupiscence was the outcome of marriage and not of sin. Were not
those first spouses, whose nuptials God blessed with the words, "Be fruitful and
multiply,"(5) naked, and yet not ashamed? Why, then, did shame arise out of their
members after sin, except because an indecent motion arose from them, which,
if men had not sinned, would certainly never have existed in marriage? Or was
it, forsooth, as some hold(who give little heed to what they read), that human
beings were, like dogs, at first created blind; and--absurder still --obtained
sight, not as dogs do, by growing, but by sinning? Far be it from us to
entertain such an opinion. But they gather that opinion of theirs from reading: "She
took of the fruit thereof, and did eat; and gave also unto her husband with her,
and he did eat: and the eyes of them both were opened, and they knew that they
were naked."(6) This accounts for the opinion of unintelligent persons, that
the eyes of the first man and woman were previously closed, because Holy
Scripture testifies that they were then opened. Well, then, were Hagar's eyes, the
handmaid of Sarah, previously shut, when, with her thirsty and sobbing child, she
opened her eyes(1) and saw the wall? Or did those two disciples, after the
Lord's resurrection, walk in the way with Him with their eyes shut, since the
evangelist says of them that" in the breaking of bread their eyes were opened, and
they knew Him"?(2) What, therefore, is written concerning the first man and
woman, that "the eyes of them both were opened,"(3) we ought to understand as that
they gave attention to perceiving and recognising the new state which had
befallen their body. Now that their eyes were opened, their body appeared to them
naked, and they knew it. If this were not the meaning, how, when the beast of the
field and the fowls of the air were brought unto them,(4) could Adam have given
them names if his eyes were shut? He could not have done this without
distinguishing them; and he could not distinguish them without seeing them. How, too,
could the woman herself have been beheld so clearly by him when he said, "This
is now bone of my bone, and flesh of my flesh"? (5) If, indeed, any one shall be
so determined on cavilling as to insist that Adam might have acquired a
discernment of these objects, not by sight but by touch, what explanation will he
have to give of the passage wherein we are told how the woman "saw that the tree,"
from which she was about to pluck the forbidden fruit, "was pleasant for the
eyes to behold"?(6) No; "they were both naked, and were not ashamed,"(7) not
because they had no eyesight, but because they perceived no reason to be ashamed
in their members, which had all along been seen by them. For it is not said:
They were beth naked, and knew it not; but "they were not ashamed." Because,
indeed, nothing had previously happened which was not lawful, so nothing had ensued
which could cause them shame.
CHAP. 7 [VI.]--MAN'S DISOBEDIENCE JUSTLY REQUITED IN THE REBELLION OF HIS OWN
FLESH; THE BLUSH OF SHAME FOR THE DISOBEDIENT MEMBERS OF THE BODY.
When the first man transgressed the law of God, he began to have another
law in his members which was repugnant to the law of his mind, and he felt the
evil of his own disobedience when he experienced in the disobedience of his
flesh a most righteous retribution recoiling on himself. Such, then, was "the
opening of his eyes" which the serpent had promised him in his temptation (8)--the
knowledge, in fact, of something which he had better been ignorant of. Then,
indeed, did man perceive within himself what he had done; then did he distinguish
evil from good,--not by avoiding it, but by enduring it. For it certainly was
not just that obedience should be rendered by his servant, that is, his body, to
him, who had not obeyed his own Lord. Well, then, how significant is the fact
that the eyes, and lips, and tongue, and hands, and feet, and the bending of
back, and neck, and sides, are all placed within our power--to be applied to such
operations as are suitable to them, when we have a body free from impediments
and in a sound state of health; but when it must come to man's great function
of the procreation of children the members which were expressly created for this
purpose will not obey the direction of the will, but lust has to be waited for
to set these members in motion, as if it had legal right over them, and
sometimes it refuses to act when the mind wills, while often it acts against its
will! Must not this bring the blush of shame over the freedom of the human will,
that by its contempt of God, its own Commander, it has lost all proper command
for itself over its own members? Now, wherein could be found a more fitting
demonstration of the just depravation of human nature by reason of its disobedience,
than in the disobedience of those parts whence nature herself derives
subsistence by succession? For it is by an especial propriety that those parts of the
body are designated as natural. This, then, was the reason why the first human
pair, on experiencing in the flesh that motion which was indecent because
disobedient, and on feeling the shame of their nakedness, covered these offending
members with fig-leaves;(3) in order that, at the very least, by the will of the
ashamed offenders, a veil might be thrown over that which was put into motion
without the will of those who wished it: and since shame arose from what
indecently pleased, decency might be attained by concealment.
CHAP. 8 [VII.]--THE EVIL OF LUST DOES NOT TAKE AWAY THE GOOD OF MARRIAGE.
Forasmuch, then, as the good of marriage could not be lost by the addition
of this evil, some imprudent persons suppose that this is not an added evil,
but something which appertains to the original good. A distinction, however,
occurs not only to subtle reason, but even to the most ordinary natural judgment,
which was both apparent in the case of the first man and woman, and also holds
good still in the case of married persons to-day. What they afterward effected
in propagation,--that is the good of marriage; but what they first veiled
through shame,--that is the evil of concupiscence, which everywhere shuns sight, and
in its shame seeks privacy. Since, therefore, marriage effects some good even
out of that evil, it has whereof to glory; but since the good cannot be
effected without the evil, it has reason for feeling shame. The case may be
illustrated by the example of a lame man. Suppose him to attain to some good object by
limping after it, then, on the one hand, the attainment itself is not evil
because of the evil of the man's lameness; nor, on the other hand, is the lameness
good because of the goodness of the attainment. So, on the same principle, we
ought not to condemn marriage because of the evil of lust; nor must we praise lust
because of the good of marriage.
CHAP. 9 [VIII.]--THIS DISEASE OF CONCUPISCENCE IN MARRIAGE IS NOT TO BE A
MATTER OF WILL, BUT OF NECESSITY; WHAT OUGHT TO BE THE WILL OF BELIEVERS IN THE USE
OF MATRIMONY; WHO IS TO BE REGARDED AS USING, AND NOT SUCCUMBING TO, THE EVIL
OF CONCUPISCENCE; HOW THE HOLY FATHERS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT FORMERLY USED WIVES.
This disease of concupiscence is what the apostle refers to, when,
speaking to married believers, he says: "This is the will of God, even your
sanctification, that ye should abstain from fornication: that every one of you should
know how to possess his vessel in sanctification and honour; not in the disease of
desire, even as the Gentiles which know not God."[1] The married believer,
therefore, must not only not use another man's vessel, which is what they do who
lust after others' wives; but he must know that even his own vessel is not to be
possessed in the disease of carnal concupiscence. And this counsel is not to
be understood as if the apostle prohibited conjugal--that is to say, lawful and
honourable --cohabitation; but so as that that cohabitation (which would have
no adjunct of unwholesome lust, were it not that man's perfect freedom of choice
had become by preceding sin so disabled that it has this fatal adjunct) should
not be a matter of will, but of necessity, without which, nevertheless, it
would be impossible to attain to the fruition of the will itself in the
procreation of children. And this wish is not in the marriages of believers determined by
the purpose of having such children born as shall pass through life in this
present world, but such as shall be born again in Christ, and remain in Him for
evermore. Now if this result should come about, the reward of a full felicity
will spring from marriage; but if such result be not realized, there will yet
ensue to the married pair the peace of their good will. Whosoever possesses his
vessel (that is, his wife) with this intention of heart, certainly does not
possess her in the "disease of desire," as the Gentiles which know not God, but in
sanctification and honour, as believers who hope in God. A man turns to use the
evil of concupiscence, and is not overcome by it, when he bridles and restrains
its rage, as it works in inordinate and indecorous motions; and never relaxes
his hold upon it except when intent on offspring, and then controls and applies
it to the carnal generation of children to be spiritually regenerated, not to
the subjection of the spirit to the flesh in a sordid servitude. That the holy
fathers of olden times after Abraham, and before him, to whom God gave His
testimony that "they pleased Him,"[2] thus used their wives, no one who is a
Christian ought to doubt, since it was permitted to certain individuals amongst them
to have a plurality of wives, where the reason was for the multiplication of
their offspring, not the desire of varying gratification.
CHAP. 10 [IX.]--WHY IT WAS SOMETIMES PERMITTED THAT A MAN SHOULD HAVE SEVERAL
WIVES, YET NO WOMAN WAS EVER ALLOWED TO HAVE MORE THAN ONE HUSBAND. NATURE
PREFERS SINGLENESS IN HER DOMINATIONS.
Now, if to the God of our fathers, who is likewise our God, such a plurality
of wives had not been displeasing for the purpose that lust might have a fuller
range of indulgence; then, on such a supposition, the holy women also ought
each to have rendered service to several husbands. But if any woman had so acted,
what feeling but that of a disgraceful concupiscence could impel her to have
more husbands, seeing that by such licence she could not have more children? That
the good purpose of marriage, however, is better promoted by one husband with
one wife, than by a husband with several wives, is shown plainly enough by the
very first union of a married pair, which was made by the Divine Being Himself,
with the intention of marriages taking their beginning therefrom, and of its
affording to them a more honourable precedent. In the advance, however, of the
human race, it came to pass that to certain good men were united a plurality of
good wives,--many to each; and from this it would seem that moderation sought
rather unity on one side for dignity, while nature permitted plurality on the
other side for fecundity. For on natural principles it is more feasible for one
to have dominion over many, than for many to have dominion over one. Nor can it
be doubted, that it is more consonant with the order of nature that men should
bear rule over women, than women over men. It is with this principle in view
that the apostle says, "The head of the woman is the man;"[3] and, "Wives, submit
yourselves unto your own husbands."[4] So also the Apostle Peter writes: "Even
as Sara obeyed Abraham, calling him lord."[1] Now, although the fact of the
matter is, that while nature loves singleness in her dominations, but we may see
plurality existing more readily in the subordinate portion of our race; yet for
all that, it was at no time lawful for one man to have a plurality of wives,
except for the purpose of a greater number of children springing from him.
Wherefore, if one woman cohabits with several men inasmuch as no increase of
offspring accrues to her therefrom, but only a more frequent gratification of lust,
she cannot possibly be a wife, but only a harlot.
CHAP. 11 [X.]--THE SACRAMENT OF MARRIAGE; MARRIAGE INDISSOLUBLE; THE WORLD'S
LAW ABOUT DIVORCE DIFFERENT FROM THE GOSPEL'S.
It is certainly not fecundity only, the fruit of which consists of
offspring, nor chastity only, whose bond is fidelity, but also a certain sacramental
bond[2] in marriage which is recommended to believers in wedlock. Accordingly it
is en-joined by the apostle: "Husbands, love your wives, even as Christ also
loved the Church."[3] Of this bond the substance[4] undoubtedly is this, that
the man and the woman who are joined together in matrimony should remain
inseparable as long as they live; and that it should be unlawful for one consort to be
parted from the other, except for the cause of fornication.[5] For this is
preserved in the case of Christ and the Church; so that, as a living one with a
living one, there is no divorce, no separation for ever. And so complete is the
observance of this bond in the city of our God, in His holy mountain[6]--that is
to say, in the Church of Christ--by all married believers, who are undoubtedly
members of Christ, that, although women marry, and men take wives, for the
purpose of procreating children, it is never permitted one to put away even an
unfruitful wife for the sake of having another to bear children. And whosoever does
this is held to be guilty of adultery by the law of the gospel; though not by
this world's rule, which allows a divorce between the parties, without even the
allegation of guilt, and the contraction of other nuptial engagements,--a
concession which, the Lord tells us, even the holy Moses extended to the people of
Israel, because of the hardness of their hearts.[7] The same condemnation
applies to the woman, if she is married to another man. So enduring, indeed, are the
rights of marriage between those who have contracted them, as long as they
both live, that even they are looked on as man and wife still, who have separated
from one another, rather than they between whom a new connection has been
formed. For by this new connection they would not be guilty of adultery, if the
previous matrimonial relation did not still continue. If the husband die, with whom
a true marriage was made, a true marriage is now possible by a connection
which would before have been adultery. Thus between the conjugal pair, as long as
they live, the nuptial bond has a permanent obligation, and can be cancelled
neither by separation nor by union with another. But this permanence avails, in
such cases, only for injury from the sin, not for a bond of the covenant. In like
manner the soul of an apostate, which renounces as it were its marriage union
with Christ, does not, even though it has cast its faith away, lose the
sacrament of its faith, which it received in the laver of regeneration. It would
undoubtedly be given back to him if he were to return, although he lost it on his
departure from Christ. He retains, however, the sacrament after his apostasy, to
the aggravation of his punishment, not for meriting the reward.
CHAP. 12 [XI.]--MARRIAGE DOES NOT CANCEL A MUTUAL VOW OF CONTINENCE; THERE WAS
TRUE WEDLOCK BETWEEN MARY AND JOSEPH; IN WHAT WAY JOSEPH WAS THE FATHER OF
CHRIST.
But God forbid that the nuptial bond should be regarded as broken between
those who have by mutual consent agreed to observe a perpetual abstinence from
the use of carnal concupiscence. Nay, it will be only a firmer one, whereby
they have exchanged pledges together, which will have to be kept by an especial
endearment and concord,--not by the voluptuous links of bodies, but by the
voluntary affections of souls. For it was not deceitfully that the angel said to
Joseph: "Fear not to take unto thee Mary thy wife."[8] She is called his wife
because of her first troth of betrothal, although he had had no carnal knowledge of
her, nor was destined to have. The designation of wife was neither destroyed
nor made untrue, where there never had been, nor was meant to be, any carnal
connection. That virgin wife was rather a holier and more wonderful joy to her
husband because of her very pregnancy without man, with disparity as to the child
that was born, without disparity in the faith they cherished. And because of
this conjugal fidelity they are both deservedly called "parents"[9] of Christ (not
only she as His mother, but he as His father, as being her husband), both
having been such in mind and purpose, though not in the flesh. But while the one
was His father in purpose only, and the other His mother in the flesh also, they
were both of them, for all that, only the parents of His humility, not of His
sublimity; of His weakness, not of His divinity. For the Gospel does not lie, in
which one reads, "Both His father and His mother marvelled at those things
which were spoken about Him;"[1] and in another passage, "Now His parents went to
Jerusalem every year;"[2] and again a little afterwards, "His mother said unto
Him, Son, why hast Thou thus dealt with us? Behold, Thy father and I have
sought Thee sorrowing."[3] In order, however, that He might show them that He had a
Father besides them, who begat Him without a mother, He said to them in answer:
"How is it that ye sought me? Wist ye not that I must be about my Father's
business?"[4] Furthermore, lest He should be thought to have repudiated them as
His parents by what He had just said, the evangelist at once added: "And they
understood not the saying which He spake unto them; and He went down with them,
and came to Nazareth, and was subject unto them."[5] Subject to whom but His
parents? And who was the subject but Jesus Christ, "who, being in the form of God,
thought it not robbery to be equal with God"?[6] And wherefore subject to them,
who were far beneath the form of God, except that "He emptied Himself, and
took upon Him the form of a servant,"[7]--the form in which His parents lived?
Now, since she bore Him without his engendering, they could not surely have both
been His parents, of that form of a servant, if they had not been conjugally
united, though without carnal connection. Accordingly the genealogical series
(although both parents of Christ are mentioned together in the succession)[8] had
to be extended, as it is in fact,[9] down rather to Joseph's name, that no
wrong might be done, in the case of this marriage, to the male, and indeed the
stronger sex, while at the same time there was nothing detrimental to truth, since
Joseph, no less than Mary, was of the seed of David,[10] of whom it was
foretold that Christ should come.
CHAP. 13.--IN THE MARRIAGE OF MARY AND JOSEPH THERE WERE ALL THE BLESSINGS OF
THE WEDDED STATE; ALL THAT IS BORN OF CONCUBINAGE IS SINFUL FLESH.
The entire good, therefore, of the nuptial institution was effected in the
case of these parents of Christ: there was offspring, there was faithfulness,
there was the bond.[11] As offspring, we recognise the Lord Jesus Himself; the
fidelity, in that there was no adultery; the bond,[11] because there was no
divorce. [XII.] Only there was no nuptial cohabitation; because He who was to be
without sin, and was sent not in sinful flesh, but in the likeness of sinful
flesh,[12] could not possibly have been made in sinful flesh itself without that
shameful lust of the flesh which comes from sin, and without which He willed to
be born, in order that He might teach us, that every one who is born of sexual
intercourse is in fact sinful flesh, since that alone which was not born of
such intercourse was not sinful flesh. Nevertheless conjugal intercourse is not in
itself sin, when it is had with the intention of producing children; because
the mind's good-will leads the ensuing bodily pleasure, instead of following its
lead; and the human choice is not distracted by the yoke of sin pressing upon
it, inasmuch as the blow of the sin is rightly brought back to the purposes of
procreation. This blow has a certain prurient activity which plays the king in
the foul indulgences of adultery, and fornication, and lasciviousness, and
uncleanness; whilst in the indispensable duties of the marriage state, it exhibits
the docility of the slave. In the one case it is condemned as the shameless
effrontery of so violent a master; in the other, it gets modest praise as the
honest service of so submissive an attendant. This lust, then, is not in itself the
good of the nuptial institution; but it is obscenity in sinful men, a
necessity in procreant parents, the fire of lascivious indulgences, the shame of
nuptial pleasures. Wherefore, then, may not persons remain man and wife when they
cease by mutual consent from cohabitation; seeing that Joseph and Mary continued
such, though they never even began to cohabit?
CHAP. 14 [XIII.]--BEFORE CHRIST IT WAS A TIME FOR MARRYING; SINCE CHRIST IT
HAS BEEN A TIME FOR CONTINENCE.
Now this propagation of children which among the ancient saints was a most
bounden duty for the purpose of begetting and preserving a people for God,
amongst whom the prophecy of Christ's coming must needs have had precedence over
everything, now has no longer the same necessity. For from among all nations the
way is open for an abundant offspring to receive spiritual regeneration, from
whatever quarter they derive their natural birth. So that we may acknowledge
that the scripture which says there is "a time to embrace, and a time to refrain
from embracing,"[13] is to be distributed in its clauses to the periods before
Christ and since. The former was the time to embrace, the latter to refrain
from embracing.
CHAP. 15.--THE TEACHING OF THE APOSTLE ON THIS SUBJECT.
Accordingly the apostle also, speaking apparently with this passage in
view, declares: "But this I say, brethren, the time is short: it remaineth, that
both they that have wives be as though they had them not; and they that weep, as
though they wept not; and they that rejoice, as though they rejoiced not; and
they that buy, as though they possessed not; and they that use this world, as
though they used it not: for the fashion of this world passeth away. But I would
have you without solicitude."[1] This entire passage (that I may express my
view on this subject in the shape of a brief exposition of the apostle's words) I
think must be understood as follows: "This I say, brethren, the time is
short." No longer is God's people to be propagated by carnal generation; but,
henceforth, it is to be gathered out by spiritual regeneration. "It remaineth,
therefore, that they that have wives" be not subject to carnal concupiscence; "and
they that weep," under the sadness of present evil, should rejoice in the hope of
future blessing; "and they that rejoice," over any temporary advantage, should
fear the eternal judgment; "and they that buy," should so hold their
possessions as not to cleave to them by overmuch love; "and they that use this world"
should reflect that it is passing away, and does not remain. "For the fashion of
this world passeth away: but," he says, "I would have you to be without
solicitude,"--in other words: I would have you lift up your heart, that it may dwell
among those things which do not pass away. He then goes on to say: "He that is
unmarried careth for the things that belong to the Lord, how he may please the
Lord: but he that is married careth for the things that are of the world, how he
may please his wife."[2] And thus to some extent he explains what he had
already said: "Let them that have wives be as though they had none." For they who
have wives in such a way as to care for the things of the Lord, how they may
please the Lord, without having any care for the things of the world in order to
please their wives, are, in fact, just as if they had no wives. And this is
effected with greater ease when the wives, too, are of such a disposition, because
they please their husbands not merely because they are rich, because they are
high in rank, noble in race, and amiable in natural temper, but because they are
believers, because they are religious, because they are chaste, because they
are good men.
CHAP. 16 [XIV.]--A CERTAIN DEGREE OF INTEMPERANCE IS TO BE TOLERATED IN THE
CASE OF MARRIED PERSONS; THE USE OF MATRIMONY FOR THE MERE PLEASURE OF LUST IS
NOT WITHOUT SIN, BUT BECAUSE OF THE NUPTIAL RELATION THE SIN IS VENIAL.
But in the married, as these things are desirable and praiseworthy, so the
others are to be tolerated, that no lapse occur into damnable sins; that is,
into fornications and adulteries. To escape this evil, even such embraces of
husband and wife as have not procreation for their object, but serve an
overbearing concupiscence, are permitted, so far as to be within range of forgiveness,
though not prescribed by way of commandment:[3] and the married pair are enjoined
not to defraud one the other, lest Satan should tempt them by reason of their
incontinence.[4] For thus says the Scripture: "Let the husband render unto the
wife her due:[5] and likewise also the wife unto the husband. The wife hath not
power of her own body, but the husband: and likewise also the husband hath not
power of his own body, but the wife. Defraud ye not one the other; except it
be with consent for a time, that ye may have leisure for prayer;[6] and then
come together again, that Satan tempt you not for your incontinency. But I speak
this by permission,[7] and not of commandment."[8] Now in a case where
permission[7] must be given, it cannot by any means be contended that there is not some
amount of sin. Since, however, the cohabitation for the purpose of procreating
children, which must be admitted to be the proper end of marriage, is not
sinful, what is it which the apostle allows to be permissible,[7] but that married
persons, when they have not the gift of continence, may require one from the
other the due of the flesh-- and that not from a wish for procreation, but for the
pleasure of concupiscence? This gratification incurs not the imputation of
guilt on account of marriage, but receives permission[7] on account of marriage.
This, therefore, must be reckoned among the praises of matrimony; that, on its
own account, it makes pardonable that which does not essentially appertain to
itself. For the nuptial embrace, which subserves the demands of concupiscence,
is so effected as not to impede the child-bearing, which is the end and aim of
marriage.
CHAP. 17 [XV.]--WHAT IS SINLESS IN THE USE OF MATRIMONY? WHAT IS ATTENDEDWITH
VENIAL SIN, AND WHAT WITH MORTAL?
It is, however, one thing for married persons to have intercourse only for
the wish to beget children, which is not sinful: it is another thing for them
to desire carnal pleasure in cohabitation, but with the spouse only, which
involves venial sin. For although propagation of offspring is not the motive of the
intercourse, there is still no attempt to prevent such propagation, either by
wrong desire or evil appliance. They who resort to these, although called by
the name of spouses, are really not such; they retain no vestige of true
matrimony, but pretend the honourable designation as a cloak for criminal conduct.
Having also proceeded so far, they are betrayed into exposing their children, which
are born against their will. They hate to nourish and retain those whom they
were afraid they would beget. This infliction of cruelty on their offspring so
reluctantly begotten, unmasks the sin which they had practised in darkness, and
drags it clearly into the light of day. The open cruelty reproves the concealed
sin. Sometimes, indeed, this lustful cruelty, or; if you please, cruel lust,
resorts to such extravagant methods as to use poisonous drugs to secure
barrenness; or else, if unsuccessful in this, to destroy the conceived seed by some
means previous to birth, preferring that its offspring should rather perish than
receive vitality; or if it was advancing to life within the womb, should be
slain before it was born. Well, if both parties alike are so flagitious, they are
not husband and wife; and if such were their character from the beginning, they
have not come together by wedlock but by debauchery. But if the two are not
alike in such sin, I boldly declare either that the woman is, so to say, the
husband's harlot; or the man the wife's adulterer.
CHAP. 18 [XVI.]--CONTINENCE BETTER THAN MARRIAGE; BUT MARRIAGE BETTER THAN
FORNICATION.
Forasmuch, then, as marriage cannot be such as that of the primitive men
might have been, if sin had not preceded; it may yet be like that of the holy
fathers of the olden time, in such wise that the carnal concupiscence which
causes shame (which did not exist in paradise previous to the fall, and after that
event was not allowed to remain there), although necessarily forming a part of
the body of this death, is not subservient to it, but only submits its function,
when forced thereto, for the sole purpose of assisting in the procreation of
children; otherwise, since the present time (as we have already[1] said) is the
period for abstaining from the nuptial embrace, and therefore makes no
necessary demand on the exercise of the said function, seeing that all nations now
contribute so abundantly to the production of an offspring which shall receive
spiritual birth, there is the greater room for the blessing of an excellent
continence. "He that is able to receive it, let him receive it."[2] He, however, who
cannot receive it, "even if he marry, sinneth not;"[3] and if a woman have not
the gift of continence, let her also marry[4] "It is good, indeed, for a man not
to touch a woman."[5] But since "all men cannot receive this saying, save they
to whom it is given,"[6] it remains that "to avoid fornication, every man
ought to have his own wife, and every woman her own husband."[7] And thus the
weakness of incontinence is hindered from falling into the ruin of profligacy by
the honourable estate of matrimony. Now that which the apostle says of women, "I
will therefore that the younger women marry," [8] is also applicable to males:
I will that the younger men take wives; that so it may appertain to both sexes
alike "to bear children, to be" fathers and "mothers of families, to give none
occasion to the adversary to speak reproachfully."[8]
CHAP. 19 [XVII.]--BLESSING OF MATRIMONY.
In matrimony, however, let these nuptial blessings be the objects of our
love--offspring, fidelity, the sacramental bond.[9] Offspring, not that it be
born only, but born again; for it is born to punishment unless it be born again
to life. Fidelity, not such as even unbelievers observe one towards the other,
in their ardent love of the flesh. For what husband, however impious himself,
likes an adulterous wife? Or what wife, however impious she be, likes an
adulterous husband? This is indeed a natural good in marriage, though a carnal one. But
a member of Christ ought to be afraid of adultery, not on account of himself,
but of his spouse.: and ought to hope to receive from Christ the reward of that
fidelity which he shows to his spouse. The sacramental bond, again, which is
lost neither by divorce nor by adultery, should be guarded by husband and wife
with concord and chastity. For it alone is that which even an unfruitful
marriage retains by the law of piety, now that all that hope of fruitfulness is lost
for the purpose of which the couple married. Let these nuptial blessings be
praised in marriage by him who wishes to extol the nuptial institution. Carnal
concupiscence, however, must not be ascribed to marriage: it is only to be
tolerated in marriage. It is not a good which comes out of the essence of marriage, but
an evil which is the accident of original sin.
CHAP. 20 [XVIII]--WHY CHILDREN OF WRATH ARE BORN OF HOLY MATRIMONY.
This is the reason, indeed, why of even the just and lawful marriages of
the children of God are born, not children of God, but children of the world;
because also those who generate, if they are already regenerate, beget children
not as children of God, but as still children of the world. "The children of
this world," says our Lord, beget and are begotten."[1] From the fact, therefore,
that we are still children of this world, our outer man is in a state of
corruption; and on this account our offspring are born as children of the present
world; nor do they become sons of God, except they be regenerated.[2] Yet inasmuch
as we are children of God, our inner man is renewed from day to day.[3] And
yet even our outer man has been sanctified through the layer of regeneration, and
has received the hope of future incorruption, on which account it is justly
designated as "the temple of God." "Your bodies," says the apostle, "are the
temples of the Holy Ghost, which is in you, and which ye have of God; and ye are
not your own, for ye are bought with a great price: therefore glorify and carry
God in your body."[4] The whole of this statement is made in reference to our
present sanctification, but especially in consequence of that hope of which he
says in another passage, "We ourselves also, which have the first-fruits of the
Spirit, even we ourselves groan within ourselves, waiting for the adoption, to
wit, the redemption of our body."[5] If, then, the redemption of our body is
expected, as the apostle declares, it follows, that being an expectation, it is as
yet a matter of hope, and not of actual possession. Accordingly the apostle
adds: "For we are saved by hope: but hope that is seen is not hope: for what a
man seeth, why doth he yet hope for? But if we hope for that we see not, then do
we with patience wait for it."[6] Not, therefore, by that which we are waiting
for, but by that which we are now enduring, are the children of our flesh born.
God forbid that a man who possesses faith should, when he hears the apostle
bid men "love their wives,"[7] love that carnal concupiscence in his wife which
he ought not to love even in himself; as he may know, if he listens to the words
of another apostle: "Love not the world, neither the things that are in the
world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him. For all
that is, in the world, the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the
pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world. And the world passeth
away, and the lust thereof: but he that doeth the will of God abideth for
ever, even as also God abideth for ever."[8]
CHAP. 21 [XIX.]--THUS SINNERS ARE BORN OF RIGHTEOUS PARENTS, EVEN AS WILD
OLIVES SPRING FROM THE OLIVE.
That, therefore, which is born of the lust of the flesh is really born of
the world, and not of God; but it is born of God, when it is born again of
water and of the Spirit. The guilt of this concupiscence, regeneration alone
remits, even as natural generation contracts it. What, then, is generated must be
regenerated, in order that likewise since it cannot be otherwise, what has been
contracted may be remitted. It is, no doubt, very wonderful that what has been
remitted in the parent should still be contracted in the offspring; but
nevertheless such is the case. That this mysterious verity, which unbelievers neither
see nor believe, might get some palpable evidence in its support, God in His
providence has secured in the example of certain trees. For why should we not
suppose that for this very purpose the wild olive springs from the olive? Is it not
indeed credible that, in a thing which has been created for the use of mankind,
the Creator provided and appointed what should afford an instructive example,
applicable to the human race? It is a wonderful thing, then, how those who have
been themselves delivered by grace from the bondage of sin, should still beget
those who are tied and bound by the self-same chain, and who require the same
process of loosening? Yes; and we admit the wonderful fact. But that the embryo
of wild olive trees should latently exist in the germs of true olives, who
would deem credible, if it were not proved true by experiment and observation? In
the same manner, therefore, as a wild olive grows out of the seed of the wild
olive, and from the seed of the true olive springs also nothing but a wild
olive, notwithstanding the very great difference there is between the wild olive and
the olive; so what is born in the flesh, either of a sinner or of a just man,
is in both instances a sinner, notwithstanding the vast distinction which
exists between the sinner and the righteous man. He that is begotten is no sinner as
yet in act, and is still new from his birth; but in guilt he is old. Human
from the Creator, he is a captive of the destroyer, and needs a redeemer. The
difficulty, however, is how a state of captivity can possibly befall the offspring,
when the parents have been themselves previously redeemed from it. Now it is
no easy matter to unravel this intricate point, or to explain it in a set
discourse; therefore unbelievers refuse to accept it as true; just as if in that
other point about the wild olive and the olive, which we gave in illustration,
any reason could be easily found, or explanation clearly given, why the self-same
shoot should sprout out of so dissimilar a stock. The truth, however, of this
can be discovered by any one who is willing to make the experiment. Let it then
serve for a good example for suggesting belief of what admits not of ocular
demonstration.
CHAP. 22 [XX.]--EVEN INFANTS, WHEN UNBAPTIZED, ARE IN THE POWER OF THE DEVIL;
EXORCISM IN THE CASE OF INFANTS, AND RENUNCIATION OF THE DEVIL.
Now the Christian faith unfalteringly declares, what our new heretics have
begun to deny, both that they who are cleansed in the layer of regeneration
are redeemed from the power of the devil, and that those who have not yet been
redeemed by such regeneration are still captive in the power of the devil, even
if they be infant children of the redeemed, unless they be themselves redeemed
by the self-same grace of Christ. For we cannot doubt that that blessing of God
applies to every stage of human life, which the apostle describes when he says
concerning Him: "Who hath delivered us from the power of darkness, and hath
translated us into the kingdom of His dear Son."[1] From this power of darkness,
therefore, of which the devil is the prince,--in other words, from the power of
the devil and his angels,--infants are delivered when they are baptized; and
whosoever denies this, is convicted by the truth of the Church's very sacraments,
which no heretical novelty in the Church of Christ is permitted to destroy or
change, so long as the Divine Head rules and helps the entire body which He
owns--small as well as great. It is true, then, and in no way false, that the
devil's power is exorcised in infants, and that they renounce him by the hearts and
mouths of those who bring them to baptism, being unable, to do so by their
own; in order that they may be delivered from the power of darkness, and be
translated into the kingdom of their Lord. What is that, therefore, within them which
keeps them in the power of the devil until they are delivered from it by
Christ's sacrament of baptism? What is it, I ask, but sin? Nothing else, indeed, has
the devil found which enables him to put under his own control that nature of
man which the good Creator made good. But infants have committed no sin of
their own since they have been alive. Only original sin, therefore, remains,
whereby they are made captive under the devil's power, until they are redeemed
therefrom by the layer of regeneration and the blood of Christ, and pass into their
Redeemer's kingdom,--the power of their enthraller being frustrated, and power
being given them to become "sons of God" instead of children of this world.[2]
CHAP. 23 [XXI.]--SIN HAS NOT ARISEN OUT OF THE GOODNESS OF MARRIAGE; THE
SACRAMENT OF MATRIMONY A GREAT ONE IN THE CASE OF CHRIST AND THE CHURCH--A VERY
SMALL ONE IN THE CASE OF A MAN AND HIS WIFE.
If now we interrogate, so to speak, those goods of marriage to which we
have often referred,[3] and inquire how it is that sin could possibly have been
propagated from them to infants, we shall get this answer from the first of
them--the work of procreation of offspring: "My happiness would in paradise have
been greater if sin had not been committed. For to me belongs that blessing of
almighty God: 'Be fruitful, and multiply.[4] For accomplishing this good work,
divers members were created suited to leach sex; these members were, of course,
in existence before sin, but they were not objects of shame." This will be the
answer of the second good--the fidelity of chastity: "If sin had not been
committed, what in paradise could have been more secure than myself, when there was
no lust of my own to spur me, none of another to tempt me?" And then this will
be the answer of the sacramental bond of marriage,--the third good: "Of me was
that word spoken in paradise before the entrance of sin: 'A man shall leave his
father and his mother, and shall cleave unto his wife; and they two shall
become one flesh.'"[5] This the apostle applies to the case of Christ and of the
Church, and calls it then "a great sacrament."[6] What, then, in Christ and in
the Church is great, in the instances of each married pair it is but very small,
but even then it is the sacrament of an inseparable union. What now is there in
these three blessings of marriage out of which the bond of sin could pass over
to posterity? Absolutely nothing. And in these blessings it is certain that
the goodness of matrimony, is entirely comprised; and even now good wedlock
consists of these same blessings.
CHAP. 24.--LUST AND SHAME COME FROM SIN; THE LAW OF SIN; THE SHAMELESSNESS OF
THE CYNICS.
But if, in like manner, the question be asked of the concupiscence of the
flesh, how it is that acts now bring shame which once were free from shame,
will not her answer be, that she only began to have existence in men's members
after sin? [XXII.] And, therefore, that the apostle designated her influence as
"the law of sin,"(7) inasmuch as she subjugated man to herself when he was
unwilling to remain subject to his God; and that it was she who made the first
married pair ashamed at that moment when they covered their loins; even as all are
still ashamed, and seek out secret retreats for cohabitation, and dare not have
even the children, whom they have themselves thus begotten, to be witnesses of
what they do. It was against this modesty of natural shame that the Cynic
philosophers, in the error of their astonishing shamelessness, struggled so hard:
they thought that the intercourse indeed of husband and wife, since it was lawful
and honourable, should therefore be done in public. Such barefaced obscenity
deserved to receive the name of dogs; and so they went by the title of
"Cynics."(1)
CHAP. 25 [XXIII.]--CONCUPISCENCE IN THE REGENERATE WITHOUT CONSENT IS NOT SIN;
IN WHAT SENSE CONCUPISCENCE IS CALLED SIN.
Now this concupiscence, this law of sin which dwells in our members, to
which the law of righteousness forbids allegiance, saying in the words of the
apostle, "Let not sin, therefore, reign in your mortal body, that ye should obey
it in the lusts thereof; neither yield ye your members as instruments of
unrighteousness unto sin:"[2]--this concupiscence, I say, which is cleansed only by
the sacrament of regeneration, does undoubtedly, by means of natural birth, pass
on the bond of sin to a man's posterity, unless they are themselves loosed from
it by regeneration. In the case, however, of the regenerate, concupiscence is
not itself sin any longer, whenever they do not consent to it for illicit
works, and when the members are not applied by the presiding mind to perpetrate such
deeds. So that, if what is enjoined in one passage, "Thou shalt not covet,"[3]
is not kept, that at any rate is observed which is commanded in another place,
"Thou shalt not go after thy concupiscences."[4] Inasmuch, however, as by a
certain manner of speech it is called sin, since it arose from sin, and, when it
has the upper hand, produces sin, the guilt of it prevails in the natural man;
but this guilt, by Christ's grace through the remission of all sins, is not
suffered to prevail in the regenerate man, if he does not yield obedience to it
whenever it urges him to the commission of evil. As arising from sin, it is, I
say, called sin, although in the regenerate it is not actually sin; and it has
this designation applied to it, just as speech which the tongue produces is
itself called "tongue;" and just as the word "hand" is used in the sense of writing,
which the hand produces. In the same way concupiscence is called sin, as
producing sin when it conquers the will: so to cold and frost the epithet "sluggish"
is given; not as arising from, but as productive of, sluggishness; benumbing
us, in fact.
CHAP. 26.--WHATEVER IS BORN THROUGH CONCUPISCENCE IS NOT UNDESERVEDLY IN
SUBJECTION TO THE DEVIL BY REASON OF SIN; THE DEVIL DESERVES HEAVIER PUNISHMENT
THAN MEN.
This wound which the devil has inflicted on the human race compels
everything which has its birth in consequence of it to be under the devil's power, as
if he were rightly plucking fruit off his own tree. Not as if man's nature,
which is only of God, came from him, but sin alone, which is not of God. For it is
not on its own account that man's nature is under condemnation, because it is
the work of God, and therefore laudable; but on account of that condemnable
corruption by which it has been vitiated. Now it is by reason of this condemnation
that it is in subjection to the devil, who is also in the same damnable state.
For the devil is himself an unclean spirit: good, indeed, so far as he is a
spirit, but evil as being unclean; for by nature he is a spirit, by the
corruption thereof an unclean one. Of these two, the one is of God, the other of
himself. His hold over men, therefore, whether of an advanced age or in infancy, is
not because they are human, but because they are polluted. He, then, who feels
surprise that God's creature is a subject of the devil, should cease from such
feeling. For one creature of God is in subjection to another creature of God, the
less to the greater, a human being to an angelic one; and this is not owing to
nature, but to a corruption of nature: polluted is the sovereign, polluted
also the subject. All this is the fruit of that ancient stock of pollution which
he has planted in man; himself being destined to suffer a heavier punishment at
the last judgment, as being the more polluted; but at the same time even they
who will have to bear a less heavy burden in that condemnation are subjects of
him as the prince and author of sin, for there will be no other cause of
condemnation than sin.
CHAP. 27 [XXIV.]--THROUGH LUST ORIGINAL SIN IS TRANSMITTED; VENIAL SINS IN
MARRIED PERSONS; CONCUPISCENCE OF THE FLESH, THE DAUGHTER AND MOTHER OF SIN.
Wherefore the devil holds infants guilty who are born, not of the good by
which marriage is good, but of the evil of concupiscence, which, indeed,
marriage uses aright, but at which even marriage has occasion to feel shame. Marriage
is itself "honourable in all"[5] the goods which properly appertain to it; but
even when it has its "bed undefiled" (not only by fornication and adultery,
which are damnable disgraces, but also by any of those excesses of cohabitation
such as do not arise from any prevailing desire of children, but from an
overbearing lust of pleasure, which are venial sins in man and wife), yet, whenever it
comes to the actual process of generation, the very embrace which is lawful
and honourable cannot be effected without the ardour of lust, so as to be able to
accomplish that which appertains to the use of reason and not of lust. Now,
this ardour, whether following or preceding the will, does somehow, by a power of
its own, move the members which cannot be moved simply by the will, and in
this manner it shows itself not to be the servant of a will which commands it, but
rather to be the punishment of a will which disobeys it. It shows, moreover,
that it must be excited, not by a free choice, but by a certain seductive
stimulus, and that on this very account it produces shame. This is the carnal
concupiscence, which, while it is no longer accounted sin in the regenerate, yet in no
case happens to nature except from sin. It is the daughter of sin, as it were;
and whenever it yields assent to the commission of shameful deeds, it becomes
also the mother of many sins. Now from this concupiscence whatever comes into
being by natural birth is bound by original sin, unless, indeed, it be born
again in Him whom the Virgin conceived without this concupiscence. Wherefore, when
He vouchsafed to be born in the flesh, He alone was born without sin.
CHAP. 28 [XXV.]--CONCUPISCENCE REMAINS AFTER BAPTISM, JUST AS LANGUOR DOES
AFTER RECOVERY FROM DISEASE; CONCUPISCENCE IS DIMINISHED IN PERSONS OF ADVANCING
YEARS, AND INCREASED IN THE INCONTINENT.
If the question arises, how this concupiscence of the flesh remains in the
regenerate, in whose case has been effected a remission of all sins whatever;
seeing that human semination takes place by its means, even when the carnal
offspring of even a baptized parent is born: or, at all events, if it may be in
the case of a baptized parent concupiscence and not be sin, why should this same
concupiscence be sin in the offspring?--the answer to be given is this: Carnal
concupiscence is remitted, indeed, in baptism; not so that it is put out of
existence, but so that it is not to be imputed for sin. Although its guilt is now
taken away, it still remains until our entire infirmity be healed by the
advancing renewal of our inner man, day by day, when at last our outward man shall be
clothed with incorruption.[1] It does not remain, however, substantially, as a
body, or a spirit; but it is nothing more than a certain affection of an evil
quality, such as languor, for instance. There is not, to be sure, anything
remaining which may be remitted whenever, as the Scripture says, "the Lord
forgiveth all our iniquities.''[2] But until that happens which immediately follows in
the same passage, "Who healeth all thine infirmities, who redeemeth thy life
from corruption,"[3] there remains this concupiscence of the flesh in the body of
this death. Now we are admonished not to obey its sinful desires to do evil:
"Let not sin reign in your mortal body."[4] Still this concupiscence is daily
lessened in persons of continence and increasing years, and most of all when old
age makes a near approach. The man, however, who yields to it a wicked service,
receives such great energies that, even when all his members are now failing
through age, and those especial parts of his body are unable to be applied to
their proper function, he does not ever cease to revel in a still increasing rage
of disgraceful and shameless desire.
CHAP. 29 [XXVI.]--HOW CONCUPISCENCE REMAINS IN THE BAPTIZED IN ACT, WHEN IT
HAS PASSED AWAY AS TO ITS GUILT.
In the case, then, of those persons who are born again in Christ, when
they receive an entire remission of all their sins, it is of course necessary that
the guilt also of the still indwelling concupiscence should be remitted, in
order that (as I said) it should not be imputed to them for sin. For even as in
the case of those sins which cannot be themselves permanent, since they pass
away as soon as they are committed, the guilt yet is permanent, and (if not
remitted) will remain for evermore; so, when the concupiscence is remitted, the guilt
of it also is taken away. For not to have sin means this, not to be deemed
guilty of sin. If a man have (for example) committed adultery, though he do not
repeat the sin, he is held to be guilty of adultery until the indulgence in guilt
be itself remitted. He has the sin, therefore, remaining, although the
particular act of his sin no longer exists, since it has passed away along with the
time when it was committed. For if to desist from sinning were the same thing as
not to have sins, it would be sufficient if Scripture were content to give us
the simple warning, "My son, hast thou sinned? Do so no more."[5] This, however,
does not suffice, for it goes on to say, "Ask forgiveness for thy former
sins."[5] Sins remain, therefore, if they are not forgiven. But how do they remain
if they are passed away? Only thus, they have passed away in their act, but they
are permanent in their guilt. Contrariwise, then, may it happen that a thing
may remain in act, but pass away in guilt.
CHAP. 30 [XXVII.]--THE EVIL DESIRES OF CONCUPISCENCE; WE OUGHT TO WISH THAT
THEY MAY NOT BE.
For the concupiscence of the flesh is in some sort active, even when it
does not exhibit either an assent of the heart, where its seat of empire is, or
those members whereby, as its weapons, it fulfils what it is bent on. But what
in this action does it effect, unless it be its evil and shameful desires? For
if these were good and lawful, the apostle would not forbid obedience to them,
saying, "Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal body, that ye should obey
the lusts thereof."[1] He does not say, that ye should have the lusts thereof,
but "that ye should obey the lusts thereof;" in order that (as these desires are
greater or less in different individuals, according as each shall have
progressed in the renewal of the inner man) we may maintain the fight of holiness and
chastity, for the purpose of withholding obedience to these lusts.
Nevertheless, our wish ought to be nothing less than the nonexistence of these very
desires, even if the accomplishment of such a wish be not possible in the body of this
death. This is the reason why the same apostle, in another passage, addressing
us as if in his own person, gives us this instruction: "For what I would,"
says he, "that do I not; but what I hate, that do I."[2] In a word, "I covet."[3]
For he was unwilling to do this, that he might be perfect on every side. "If,
then, I do that which I would not," he goes on to say, "I consent unto the law
that it is good."[4] Because the law, too, wills not that which I also would
not. For it wills not that I should have concupiscence, for it says, "Thou shall
not covet;"[3] and I am no less unwilling to cherish so evil a desire. In this,
therefore, there is complete accord between the will of the law and my own
will. But because he was unwilling to covet,[3] and yet did covet,[3] and for all
that did not by any means obey this concupiscence so as to yield assent to it,
he immediately adds these words: "Now, then, it is no more I that do it, but sin
that dwelleth in me."[5]
CHAP. 31 [XXVIII.] -- WHO IS THE MAN THAT CAN SAY, "IT IS NO MORE I THAT DO IT
A man, however, is much deceived if, while consenting to the lust of his
flesh, and then both resolving in his mind to do its desires and setting about
it, he supposes that he has still a right to say, "It is not I that do it," even
if he hates and loathes himself for assenting to evil desires. The two things
are simultaneous in his case: he hates the thing himself because he knows that
it is evil; and yet he does it, because he is bent on doing it. Now if, in
addition to all this, he proceeds to do what the Scripture forbids him, when it
says," Neither yield ye your members as instruments of unrighteousness unto
sin,"[6] and completes with a bodily act what he was bent on doing in his mind; and
says, "It is not I that do the thing, but sin that dwelleth in me,"[5] because
he feels displeased with himself for resolving on and accomplishing the
deed,--he so greatly errs as not to know his own self. For, whereas he is altogether
himself, his mind determining and his body executing his own purpose, he yet
supposes that he is himself no longer! [XXIX.] That man, therefore, alone speaks
the truth when he says, "It is no more I that do it, but sin that dwelleth in
me," who only feels the concupiscence, and neither resolves on doing it with the
consent of his heart, nor accomplishes it with the ministry of his body.
CHAP. 32.--WHEN GOOD WILL BE PERFECTLY DONE.
The apostle then adds these words: "For I know that in me (that is, in my
flesh) dwelleth no good thing: for to will is present with me; but how to
perfect that which is good I find not."[7] Now this is said, because a good thing is
not then perfected, when there is an absence of evil desires, as evil is
perfected when evil desires are obeyed. But when they are present, but are not
obeyed, neither evil is performed, since obedience is not yielded to them; nor good,
because of their inoperative presence. There is rather an intermediate
condition of things: good is effected in some degree, because the evil concupiscence
has gained no assent to itself; and in some degree there is a remnant of evil,
because the concupiscence is present. This accounts for the apostle's precise
words. He does not say, To do good is not present to him, but "how to perfect
it." For the truth is, one does a good deal of good when he does what the
Scripture enjoins, "Go not after thy lusts;"[8] yet he falls short of perfection, in
that he fails to keep the great commandment, "Thou shalt not covet."[9] The law
said, "Thou shalt not covet," in order that, when we find ourselves lying in
this diseased state, we might seek the medicine of Grace, and by that commandment
know both in what direction our endeavours should aim as we advance in our
present mortal condition, and to what a height it is possible to reach in the
future immortality. For unless perfection could somewhere be attained, this
commandment would never have been given to us.
CHAP. 33 [XXX.]--TRUE FREEDOM COMES WITH WILLING DELIGHT IN GOD'S LAW.
The apostle then repeats his former statement, the more fully to recommend
its purport: "For the good," says he, "that I would, I do not: but the evil
which I would not, that I do. Now, if I do that I would not, it is no more I that
do it, but sin that dwelleth in me." Then follows this: "I find then the law,
when I would act to be good to me; for evil is present with me."[1] In other
words, I find that the law is a good to me, when I wish to do what the law would
have me do; inasmuch as it is not with the law itself (which says, "Thou shalt
not covet") that evil is present; no, it is with myself that the evil is
present, which I would not do, because I have the concupiscence even in my
willingness. "For," he adds, "I delight in the law of God after the inward man; but I see
another law in my members warring against the law of my mind, and bringing me
into captivity to the law of sin which is in my members."[2] This delight with
the law of God[3] after the inward man, comes to us from the mighty grace of
God; for thereby is our inward man renewed day by day,[4] because it is thereby
that progress is made by us with perseverance. In it there is not the fear that
has torment, but the love that cheers and gratifies. We are truly free there,
where we have no unwilling joy.
CHAP. 34.--HOw CONCUPISCENCE MADE A CAPTIVE OF THE APOSTLE; WHAT THE LAW OF
SIN WAS TO THE APOSTLE.
Then, indeed, this statement, "I see another law in my members warring
against the law of my mind," refers to that very concupiscence which we are now
speaking of--the law of sin in our sinful flesh. But when he said, "And bringing
me into captivity to the law of sin," that is, to its own self, "which is in my
members," he either meant "bringing me into captivity," in the sense of
endeavouring to make me captive, that is, urging me to approve and accomplish evil
desire; or rather (and this opens no controversy), in the sense of leading me
captive according to the flesh, and, if this is not possessed by the carnal
concupiscence which he calls the law of sin, no unlawful desire--such as our mind
ought not to obey--would, of course, be there to excite and disturb. The fact,
however, that the apostle does not say, Bringing my flesh into captivity, but
"Bringing me into captivity," leads us to look out for some other meaning for the
phrase, and to understand the term "bringing me into captivity" as if he had
said, endeavouring to make me captive. But why, after all, might he not say,
"Bringing me into captivity," and at the same time mean us to understand his flesh?
Was it not spoken by one concerning Jesus, when His flesh was not found in the
sepulchre: "They have taken away my Lord, and I know not where they have laid
Him"?[5] Was Mary's then an improper question, because she said, "My Lord," and
not "My Lord's body" or "flesh"?
CHAP. 35 [XXXI.]--THE FLESH, CARNAL AFFECTION.
But we have in the apostle's own language, a little before, a sufficiently
clear proof that he might have meant his flesh when he said," Bringing me into
captivity." For after declaring, "I know that in me dwelleth no good thing,"
he at once added an explanatory sentence to this effect, "That is, in my
flesh.''[6] It is then the flesh, in which there dwells nothing good, that is brought
into captivity to the law of sin. Now he designates that as the flesh wherein
lies a certain morbid carnal affection, not the mere conformation of our bodily
fabric whose members are not to be used as weapons for sin--that is, for that
very concupiscence which holds this flesh of ours captive. So far, indeed, as
concerns this actual bodily substance and nature of ours, it is already God's
temple in all faithful men, whether living in marriage or in continence. If,
however, absolutely nothing of our flesh were in captivity, not even to the devil,
because there has accrued to it the remission of sin, that sin be not imputed to
it (and this is properly designated the law of sin); yet if under this law of
sin, that is, under its own concupiscence, our flesh were not to some degree
held captive, how could that be true which the apostle states, when he speaks of
our "waiting for the adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body"?[7] In so
far, then, as there is now this waiting for the redemption of our body, there is
also in some degree still existing something in us which is a captive to the
law of sin. Accordingly he exclaims, "O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver
me from the body of this death? The grace of God, through Jesus Christ our
Lord."[8] What are we to understand by such language, but that our body, which is
undergoing corruption, weighs heavily on our soul? When, therefore, this very
body of ours shall be restored to us in an incorrupt state, there shall be a
full liberation from the body of this death; but there will be no such deliverance
for them who shall rise again to condemnation. To the body of this death then
is understood to be owing the circumstance that there is in our members another
law which wars against the law of the mind, so long as the flesh lusts against
the spirit--without, however, subjugating the mind, inasmuch as on its side,
too, the spirit has a concupiscence contrary to the flesh.[1] Thus, although the
actual law of sin partly holds the flesh in captivity (whence comes its
resistance to the law of the mind), still it has not an absolute empire in our body,
notwithstanding its mortal state, since it refuses obedience to its desires,[2]
For in the case of hostile armies between whom there is an earnest conflict,
even the side which is inferior in the fight usually holds a something which
it has captured; and although in some such way there is somewhat in our flesh
which is kept under the law of sin, yet it has before it the hope of redemption:
and then there will remain not a particle of this corrupt concupiscence; but
our flesh, healed of that diseased plague, and wholly clad in immortality, shall
live for evermore in eternal blessedness.
CHAP. 36.--EVEN NOW WHILE WE STILL HAVE CONCUPISCENCE WE MAY BE SAFE IN CHRIST.
But the apostle pursues the subject, and says, "So then with the mind I
myself serve the law of God, but with the flesh the law of sin;"[3] which must be
thus understood: "With my mind I serve the law of God," by refusing my consent
to the law of sin; "with my flesh, however," I serve "the law of sin," by
having the desires of sin, from which I am not yet entirely freed, although I yield
them no assent. Then let us observe carefully what he has said after all the
above: "There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ
Jesus."[4] Even now, says he, when the law in my members keeps up its warfare
against the law of my mind, and retains in captivity somewhat in the body of this
death, there is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus. And listen why:
"For the law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus," says he, "hath made me
free from the law of sin and death."[5] How made me free, except by abolishing
its sentence of guilt by the remission of all my sins; so that, though it still
remains, only daily lessening more and more, it is nevertheless not imputed to
me as sin?
CHAP. 37 [XXXII.]--THE LAW OF SIN WITH ITS GUILT IN UNBAPTIZED INFANTS. BY
ADAM'S SIN THE HUMAN RACE HAS BECOME A "WILD OLIVE TREE."
Until, then, this remission of sins takes place in the offspring, they
have within them the law of sin in such manner, that it is really imputed to them
as sin; in other words, with that law there is attaching to them its sentence
of guilt, which holds them debtors to eternal condemnation. For what a parent
transmits to his carnal offspring is the condition of his own carnal birth, not
that of his spiritual new birth. For, that he was born in the flesh, although no
hindrance after the remission of his guilt to his fruit, still remains hidden,
as it were, in the seed of the olive, even though, because of the remission of
his sins, it in no respect injures the oil--that is, in plain language, his
life which he lives, "righteous by faith,"[6] after Christ, whose very name comes
from the oil, that is, from the anointing.[7] That, however, which in the case
of a regenerate parent, as in the seed of the pure olive, is covered without
any guilt, which has been remitted, is still no doubt retained in the case of
his offspring, which is yet unregenerate, as in the wild olive, with all its
guilt, until here also it be remitted by the self-same grace. When Adam sinned, he
was changed from that pure olive, which had no such corrupt seed whence should
spring the bitter issue of the wild olive, into a wild olive tree; and,
inasmuch as his sin was so great, that by it his nature became commensurately changed
for the worse, he converted the entire race of man into a wild olive stock.
The effect of this change we see illustrated, as has been said above, in the
instance of these very trees. Whenever God's grace converts a sapling into a good
olive, so that the fault of the first birth (that original sin which had been
derived and contracted from the concupiscence of the flesh) is remitted, covered,
and not imputed, there is still inherent in it that nature from which is born
a wild olive, unless it, too, by the same grace, is by the second birth changed
into a good olive.
CHAP. 38 [XXXIII.]--TO BAPTISM MUST BE REFERRED ALL REMISSION OF SINS, AND THE
COMPLETE HEALING OF THE RESURRECTION. DAILY CLEANSING.
Blessed, therefore, is the olive tree "whose iniquities are forgiven, and
whose sins are covered;" blessed is it "to which the Lord hath not imputed
sin.''[8] But this, which has received the remission, the covering, and the
acquittal, even up to the complete change into an eternal immortality, still retains a
secret force which furnishes seed for a wild and bitter olive tree, unless the
same tillage of God prunes it also, by remission, covering, and acquittal.
There will, however, be left no corruption at all in even carnal seed, when the
same regeneration, which is now effected through the sacred layer, purges and
heals all man's evil to the very end. By its means the very same flesh, through
which the carnal mind was formed, shall become spiritual,--no longer having that
carnal lust which resists the law of the mind, no longer emitting carnal seed.
For in this sense must be understood that which the apostle whom we have so
often quoted says elsewhere: "Christ loved the Church, and gave Himself for it;
that He might sanctify and cleanse it by the washing of water by the word that He
might present it to Himself a glorious Church, not having spot, or wrinkle, or
any such thing."[1] It must, I say, be understood as implying, that by this
layer of regeneration and word of sanctification all the evils of regenerate men
of whatever kind are cleansed and healed,--not the sins only which are all now
remitted in baptism, but those also which after baptism are committed by human
ignorance and frailty; not, indeed, that baptism is to be repeated as often as
sin is repeated, but that by its one only ministration it comes to pass that
pardon is secured to the faithful of all their sins both before and after their
regeneration. For of what use would repentance be, either before baptism, if
baptism did not follow; or after it, if it did not precede? Nay, in the Lord's
Prayer itself, which is our daily cleansing, of what avail or advantage would it
be for that petition to be uttered, "Forgive us our debts,"[2] unless it be by
such as have been baptized? And in like manner, how great soever be the
liberality and kindness of a man's arms, what, I ask, would they profit him towards the
remission of his sins if he had not been baptized? In short, on whom but on
the baptized shall be bestowed the very felicities of the kingdom of heaven;
where the Church shall have no spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing; where there
shall be nothing blameworthy, nothing unreal; where there shall be not only no
guilt for sin, but no concupiscence to excite it?
CHAP. 39 [XXXIV.]--BY THE HOLINESS OF BAPTISM, NOT SINS ONLY, BUT ALL EVILS
WHATSOEVER, HAVE TO BE REMOVED. THE CHURCH IS NOT YET FREE FROM ALL STAIN.
And thus not only all the sins, but all the ills of men of what kind
soever, are in course of removal by the holiness of that Christian layer whereby
Christ cleanses His Church, that He may present it to Himself, not in this world,
but in that which is to come, as not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such
thing. Now there are some who maintain that such is the Church even now, and yet
they are in it. Well then, since they confess that they have some sins themselves,
if they say the truth in this (and, of course, they do, as they are not free
from sins), then the Church has "a spot" in them; whilst if they tell an untruth
in their confession (as speaking from a double heart), then the Church has in
them "a wrinkle." If, however, they assert that it is themselves, and not the
Church, which has all this, they then as good as acknowledge that they are not
its members, nor belong to its body, so that they are even condemned by their
own confession.
CHAP. 40 [XXXV.]--REFUTATION OF THE PELAGIANS BY THE AUTHORITY OF ST. AMBROSE,
WHOM THEY QUOTE TO SHOW THAT THE DESIRE OF THE FLESH IS A NATURAL GOOD.
In respect, however, to this concupiscence of the flesh, we have striven
in this lengthy discussion to distinguish it accurately from the goods of
marriage. This we have done on account of our modern heretics, who cavil whenever
concupiscence is censured, as if it involved a censure of marriage. Their object
is to praise concupiscence as a natural good, that so they may defend their own
baneful dogma, which asserts that those who are born by its means do not
contract original sin. Now the blessed Ambrose, bishop of Milan, by whose priestly
office I received the washing of regeneration, briefly spoke on this matter,
when, expounding the prophet Isaiah, he gathered from him the nativity of Christ in
the flesh: "Thus," says the bishop, "He was both tempted in all points as a
man,[3] and in the likeness of man He bare all things; but inasmuch as He was
born of the Spirit, He kept Himself from sin. For every man is a liar; and there
is none without sin but God alone. It has, therefore, been ever firmly
maintained, that it is clear that no man from husband and wife, that is to say, by
means of that conjunction of their persons, is free from sin. He who is free from
sin is also free from conception of this kind." Well now, what is it which St.
Ambrose has here condemned in the true doctrine of this deliverance?--is it the
goodness of marriage, or not rather the worthless opinion of these heretics,
although they had not then come upon the stage? I have thought it worth while to
adduce this testimony, because Pelagius mentions Ambrose with such commendation
as to say: "The blessed Bishop Ambrose, in whose writings more than anywhere
else the Roman faith is clearly stated, has flourished like a beautiful flower
among the Latin writers. His fidelity and extremely pure perception of the sense
of Scripture no opponent even has ever ventured to impugn." [4] I hope he may
regret having entertained opinions opposed to Ambrose, but not that he has
bestowed this praise on that holy man.
Here, then, you have my book, which, owing to its tedious length and
difficult subject, it has been as troublesome for me to compose as for you to read,
in those little snatches of time in which you have been able (or at least, as I
suppose, have been able) to find yourself at leisure. Although it has been
indeed drawn up with considerable labour amidst my ecclesiastical duties, as God
has vouchsafed to give me His help, I should hardly have intruded it on your
notice, with all your public cares, if I had not been informed by a godly man, who
has an intimate knowledge of you, that you take such pleasure in reading as to
lie awake by the hour, night after night, spending the precious time in your
favourite pursuit.