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church fathers 14
A
TREATISE ON THE MERITS AND FORGIVENESS OF SINS, AND ON THE BAPTISM OF
INFANTS, BY AURELIUS AUGUSTIN, BISHOP OF HIPPO, ADDRESSED TO
MARCELLINUS, A.D. 412 (BOOK II)
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BOOK II.
IN
WHICH AUGUSTIN ARGUES AGAINST SUCH AS SAY THAT IN THE PRESENT LIFE
THERE ARE, HAVE BEEN, AND WILL BE, MEN WHO HAVE ABSOLUTELY NO SIN AT
ALL. HE LAYS DOWN FOUR PROPOSITIONS ON THIS HEAD: AND TEACHES, FIRST,
THAT A MAN MIGHT POSSIBLY LIVE IN THE PRESENT LIFE WITHOUT SIN, BY THE
GRACE OF GOD AND HIS OWN FREE WILL; HE NEXT SHOWS THAT NEVERTHELESS IN
FACT THERE IS NO MAN WHO LIVES QUITE FREE FROM SIN IN THIS LIFE;
THIRDLY, HE SETS FORTH THE REASON OF THIS,--BECAUSE THERE IS NO MAN WHO
EXACTLY CONFINES HIS WISHES WITHIN THE LIMITS OF THE JUST REQUIREMENT
OF EACH CASE, WHICH JUST REQUIREMENT HE EITHER FAILS TO PERCEIVE, OR IS
UNWILLING TO CARRY OUT IN PRACTICE; IN THE FOURTH PLACE, HE PROVES THAT
THERE IS NOT, NOR HAS BEEN, NOR EVER WILL BE, A HUMAN BEING--EXCEPT THE
ONE MEDIATOR, CHRIST--WHO IS FREE FROM ALL SIN.
CHAP. 1 [I.]--WHAT HAS THUS FAR BEEN DWELT ON; AND WHAT IS TO BE TREATED IN THIS BOOK.
WE have, my dearest Marcellinus, discussed at sufficient length, I
think, in the former book the baptism of infants,--how that it is given
to them not only for entrance into the kingdom of God, but also for
attaining salvation and eternal life, which none can have without the
kingdom of God, or without that union with the Saviour Christ, wherein
He has redeemed us by His blood. I undertake in the present book to
discuss and explain the question, Whether there lives in this world, or
has yet lived, or ever will live, any one without any sin whatever,
except "the one Mediator between God and man, the Man Christ Jesus, who
gave Himself a ransom for all;"[1]--with as much care and ability as He
may Himself vouchsafe to me. And should there occasionally arise in
this discussion, either inevitably or casually from the argument, any
question about the baptism or the sin of infants, I must
neither be surprised nor must I shrink from giving the best answer I
can, at such emergencies, to whatever point challenges my attention.
CHAP. 2 [II.]--SOME PERSONS ATTRIBUTE TOO MUCH TO THE FREEDOM OF MAN'S WILL; IGNORANCE AND INFIRMITY.
A solution is extremely necessary of this question about a human life
unassailed by any deception or preoccupation of sin, in consequence
even of our daily prayers. For there are some persons who presume so
much upon the free determination of the human will, as to suppose that
it need not sin, and that we require no divine assistance,--attributing
to our nature, once for all, this determination of free will. An
inevitable consequence of this is, that we ought not to pray "not to
enter into temptation,"-that is, not to be overcome of temptation,
either when it deceives and surprises us in our ignorance, or when it
presses and importunes us in our weakness. Now how hurtful, and how
pernicious and contrary to our salvation in Christ, and how violently
adverse to the religion itself in which we are instructed, and to the
piety whereby we worship God, it cannot but be for us not to
beseech the Lord for the attainment of such a benefit, but be rather
led to think that petition of the Lord's Prayer, "Lead us not into
temptation,"[2] a vain and useless insertion,--it is beyond my ability
to express in words.
CHAP. 3 [III.]--IN WHAT WAY GOD COMMANDS NOTHING IMPOSSIBLE. WORKS OF MERCY, MEANS OF WIPING OUT SINS.
Now these people imagine that they are acute (as if none among us knew
it) when they say, that "if we have not the will, we commit no sin; nor
would God command man to do what was impossible for human volition."
But they do not see, that in order to overcome certain things, which
are the objects either of an evil desire or an ill-conceived fear, men
need the strenuous efforts, and sometimes even all the energies, of the
will; and that we should only imperfectly employ these in every
instance, He foresaw who willed so true an utterance to be spoken by
the prophet: "In Thy sight shall no man living be justified."[1] The
Lord, therefore, foreseeing that such would be our character, was
pleased to provide and endow with efficacious virtue certain healthful
remedies against the guilt and bonds even of sins committed after
baptism,--for instance, the works of mercy,--as when he says:
"Forgive, and ye shall be forgiven; give, and it shall be given unto
you.''[2] For who could quit this life with any hope of obtaining
eternal salvation, with that sentence impending: "Whosoever shall keep
the whole law, and yet offend in one point, he is guilty of all,"[3] if
there did not soon after follow: "So speak ye, and so do, as they that
shall be judged by the law of liberty: for he shall have judgment
without mercy that hath showed no mercy; and mercy rejoiceth against
judgment?"[4]
CHAP. 4 [IV.]--CONCUPISCENCE, HOW FAR IN US; THE BAPTIZED ARE NOT INJURED BY CONCUPISCENCE, BUT ONLY BY CONSENT THEREWITH.
Concupiscence, therefore, as the law of sin which remains in the
members of this body of death, is born with infants. In baptized
infants, it is deprived of guilt, is left for the struggle [of
life],[5] but pursues with no condemnation, such as die before the
struggle. Unbaptized infants it implicates as guilty and as children of
wrath, even if they die in infancy, draws into condemnation. In
baptized adults, however, endowed with reason, whatever consent their
mind gives to this concupiscence for the commission of sin is an act of
their own will. After all sins have been blotted out, and that guilt
has been cancelled which by nature[6] bound men in a conquered
condition, it still remains,--but not to hurt in any way those who
yield no consent to it for unlawful deeds,--until death is swallowed up
in victory[7] and, in that perfection of peace, nothing is left to be
conquered. Such,
however, as yield consent to it for the commission of unlawful deeds,
it holds as guilty; and unless, through the medicine of repentance, and
through works of mercy, by the intercession in our behalf of the
heavenly High Priest, they be healed, it conducts us to the second
death and utter condemnation. It was on this account that the Lord,
when teaching us to pray, advised us, besides other petitions, to say:
"Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors; and lead us not into
tempation, but deliver us from evil."[8] For evil remains in our flesh,
not by reason of the nature in which man was created by God and wisdom,
but by reason of that offence into which he fell by his own will, and
in which, since its powers are lost, he is not healed with the same
facility of will as that with which he was wounded. Of this evil the
apostle says: "I know that in my flesh dwelleth no good thing
;"[9] and it is likewise to the same evil that he counsels us to give
no obedience, when he says: "Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal
body, to obey the lusts thereof."[10] When, therefore, we have by an
unlawful inclination of our will yielded consent to these lusts of the
flesh, we say, with a view to the cure of this fault, "Forgive us our
debts;"[11] and we at the same time apply the remedy of a work of
mercy, in that we add, "As we forgive our debtors." That we may not,
however, yield such consent, let us pray for assistance, and say, "And
lead us not into temptation;"--not that God ever Himself tempts any one
with such temptation, "for God is not a tempter to evil, neither
tempteth He any man;"[12] but in order that whenever we feel the rising
of temptation from our concupiscence, we may not be deserted by His
help, in order that thereby we may be able to conquer, and not be
carried away by enticement. We then add our request for that which is
to be perfected at the last, when mortality shall be swallowed up of
life:[13] "But deliver us from evil."[14] For then there will exist no
longer a concupiscence which we are bidden to struggle against, and not
to consent to. The whole substance, accordingly, of these three
petitions may be thus briefly expressed: "Pardon us for those things in
which we have been drawn away by concupiscence; help us not to be drawn
away by concupiscence; take away concupiscence from us."
CHAP. 5 [V.]--THE WILL OF MAN REQUIRES THE HELP OF GOD.
Now for the commission of sin we get no help from God; but we are not
able to do justly, and to fulfil the law of righteousness in every part
thereof, except we are helped by God. For as the bodily eye is not
helped by the light to turn away therefrom shut or averted, but is
helped by it to see, and cannot see at all unless it help it; so God,
who is the light of the inner man, helps our mental sight, in order
that we may do some good, not according to our own, but according to
His righteousness. But if we turn away from Him, it is our own act; we
then are wise according to the flesh, we then consent to the
concupiscence of the flesh for unlawful deeds. When we turn to Him,
therefore, God helps us; when we turn away from Him, He forsakes us.
But then He helps us even to turn to Him; and this, certainly, is
something that light does not do for the eyes of the body. When,
therefore,
He commands us in the words, "Turn ye unto me, and I will turn unto
you,"[1] and we say to Him, "Turn us, O God of our salvation,''[2] and
again, "Turn us, O God of hosts;"[3] what else do we say than, "Give
what Thou commandest?"[4] When He commands us, saying, "Understand now,
ye simple among the people,"[5] and we say to Him, "Give me
understanding, that I may learn Thy commandments;"[6] what else do we
say than, "Give what Thou commandest?" When He commands us, saying, "Go
not after thy lusts,"[7] and we say to Him, "We know that no man can be
continent, except God gives it to him;"[8] what else do we say than,
"Give what Thou commandest?" When He commands us, saying, "Do
justice,"[9] and we say, "Teach me Thy judgments, O Lord;"[10] what
else do we say than, "Give what Thou commandest?" In like manner, when
He says: "Blessed are they which hunger and thirst after righteousness;
for
they shall be filled,"[11] from whom ought we to seek for the meat and
drink of righteousness, but from Him who promises His fulness to such
as hunger and thirst after it?
CHAP.6.--WHEREIN THE PHARISEE SINNED WHEN HE THANKED GOD; TO GOD'S GRACE MUST BE ADDED THE EXERTION OF OUR OWN WILL.
Let us then drive away from our ears and minds those who say that we
ought to accept the determination of our own free will and not pray God
to help us not to sin. By such darkness as this even the Pharisee was
not blinded; for although he erred in thinking that he needed no
addition to his righteousness, and supposed himself to be saturated
with abundance of it, he nevertheless gave thanks to God that he was
not "like other men, unjust, extortioners, adulterers, or even as the
publican; for he fasted twice in the week, he gave tithes of all that
he possessed."[12] He wished, indeed, for no addition to his own
righteousness; but yet, by giving thanks to God, he confessed that all
he had he had received from Him. Notwithstanding, he was not approved,
both because he asked for no further food of righteousness, as if he
were already filled, and because he arrogantly preferred himself
to the publican, who was hungering and thirsting after righteousness.
What, then, is to be said of those who, whilst acknowledging that they
have no righteousness, or no fulness thereof, yet imagine that it is to
be had from themselves alone, not to be besought from their Creator, in
whom is its store and its fountain? And yet this is not a question
about prayers alone, as if the energy of our will also should not be
strenuously added. God is said to be "our Helper;"[13] but nobody can
be helped who does not make some effort of his own accord. For God does
not work our salvation in us as if he were working in insensate stones,
or in creatures in whom nature has placed neither reason nor will. Why,
however, He helps one man, but not another; or why one man so much, and
another so much; or why one man in one way, and another in another,--He
reserves to Himself according to the method of His own most secret
justice, and to the excellency of His power.
CHAP. 7 [VI.]--FOUR QUESTIONS ON THE PERFECTION OF RIGHTEOUSNESS: (1.) WHETHER A MAN CAN BE WITHOUT SIN IN THIS LIFE.
Now those who aver that a man can exist in this life without sin, must
not be immediately opposed with incautious rashness; for if we should
deny the possibility, we should derogate both from the free will of
man, who in his wish desires it, and from the power or mercy of God,
who by His help effects it. But it is one question, whether he could
exist; and another question, whether he does exist. Again, it is one
question, if he does not exist when he could exist, why he does not
exist; and another question, whether such a man as had never sinned at
all, not only is in existence, but also could ever have existed, or can
ever exist. Now, if in the order of this fourfold set of interrogative
propositions, I were asked, [1st,] Whether it be possible for a man in
this life to be without sin? I should allow the possibility, through
the grace of God and the man's own free will; not doubting
that the free will itself is ascribable to God's grace, in other words,
to the gifts of God,--not only as to its existence, but also as to its
being good, that is, to its conversion to doing the commandments of
God. Thus it is that God's grace not only shows what ought to be done,
but also helps to the possibility of doing what it shows. "What indeed
have we that we have not received?"[1] Whence also Jeremiah says: "I
know, O Lord, that the way of man is not in himself; it is not in man
to walk and direct his steps."[2] Accordingly, when in the Psalms one
says to God, "Thou hast commanded me to keep Thy precepts
diligently,"[3] he at once adds not a word of confidence concerning
himself but a wish to be able to keep these precepts: "O that my ways,"
says he, "were directed to keep Thy statutes! Then should I not be
ashamed, when I have respect to all Thy commandments?[4] Now who ever
wishes for what he has already so in his own power, that he requires no
further help for attaining it? To whom, however, he directs his
wish,--not to fortune, or fate, or some one else besides God,--he shows
with sufficient clearness in the following words, where he says: "Order
my steps in Thy word; and let not any iniquity have dominion over
me."[5] From the thraldom of this execrable dominion they are
liberated, to whom the Lord Jesus gave power to become the sons of
God.[6] From so horrible a domination were they to be freed, to whom He
says, "If the Son shall make you free, then shall ye be free
indeed."[7] From these and many other like testimonies, I cannot doubt
that God has laid no impossible command on man; and that, by God's aid
and help, nothing is impossible, by which is wrought what He commands.
In this way may a man, if he pleases, be without sin by the assistance
of God.
CHAP. 8 [VII.]--(2) WHETHER THERE IS IN THIS WORLD A MAN WITHOUT SIN.
[2nd.] If, however, I am asked the second question which I have
suggested,--whether there be a sinless man,--I believe there is not.
For I rather believe the Scripture, which says: "Enter not into
judgment with Thy servant; for in Thy sight shall no man living be
justified."[8] There is therefore need of the mercy of God, which
"exceedingly rejoiceth against judgment,"[9] and which that man shall
not obtain who does not show mercy.[9] And whereas the prophet says, "I
said, I will confess my transgressions unto the Lord, and Thou
forgavest the iniquity of my heart,"[10] he yet immediately adds, "For
this shall every saint pray unto Thee in an acceptable time."[11] Not
indeed every sinner, but "every saint;" for it is the voice of saints
which says, "If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and
the truth is not in us."[12] Accordingly we read, in the Apocalypse of
the same
Apostle, of "the hundred and forty and four thousand" saints, "which
were not defiled with women; for they continued virgins: and in their
mouth was found no guile; for they are without fault."[13] "Without
fault," indeed, they no doubt are for this reason,--because they truly
found fault with themselves; and for this reason," in their mouth was
discovered no guile,"--" because if they said they had no sin, they
deceived themselves, and the truth was not in them."[12] Of course,
where the truth was not, there would be guile; and when a righteous man
begins a statement by accusing himself, he verily utters no falsehood.
CHAP.
9.--THE BEGINNING OF RENEWAL; RESURRECTION CALLED REGENERATION; THEY
ARE THE SONS OF GOD WHO LEAD LIVES SUITABLE TO NEWNESS OF LIFE.
And hence in the passage, "Whosoever is born of God doth not sin, and
he cannot sin, for His seed remaineth in him,"[14] and in every other
passage of like import, they much deceive themselves by an inadequate
consideration of the Scriptures. For they fail to observe that men
severally become sons of God when they begin to live in newness of
spirit, and to be renewed as to the inner man after the image of Him
that created them.[15] For it is not from the moment of a man's baptism
that all his old infirmity is destroyed, but renovation begins with the
remission of all his sins, and so far as he who is now wise is
spiritually wise. All things else, however, are accomplished in hope,
looking forward to their being also realized in fact,[16] even to the
renewal of the body itself in that better state of immortality and
incorruption with which we shall be clothed at the resurrection of
the dead. For this too the Lord calls a regeneration,--though, of
course, not such as occurs through baptism, but still a regeneration
wherein that which is now begun in the spirit shall be brought to
perfection also in the body. "In the regeneration," says He, "when the
Son of man shall sit in the throne of His glory, ye also shall sit upon
twelve thrones, judging the twelve tribes of Israel."[17] For however
entire and full be the remission of sins in baptism, nevertheless, if
there was wrought by it at once, an entire and full change of the man
into his everlasting newness,--I do not mean change in his body, which
is now most clearly tending evermore to the old corruption and to
death, after which it is to be renewed into a total and true
newness,--but, the body being excepted, if in the soul itself, which is
the inner man, a perfect renewal was wrought in baptism, the apostle
would
not say: "Even though our outward man perishes, yet the inward man is
renewed day by day."[1] Now, undoubtedly, he who is still renewed day
by day is not as yet wholly renewed; and in so far as he is not yet
wholly renewed, he is still in his old state. Since, then, men, even
after they are baptized, are still in some degree in their old
condition, they are on that account also still children of the world;
but inasmuch as they are also admitted into a new state, that is to
say, by the full and perfect remission of their sins, and in so far as
they are spiritually-minded, and behave correspondingly, they are the
children of God. Internally we put off the old man and put on the new;
for we then and there lay aside lying, and speak truth, and do those
other things wherein the apostle makes to consist the putting off of
the old man and the putting on of the new, which after God is created
in
righteousness and true holiness? Now it is men who are already baptized
and faithful whom he exhorts to do this,--an exhortation which would be
unsuitable to them, if the absolute and perfect change had been already
made in their baptism. And yet made it was, since we were then actually
saved; for "He saved us by the layer of regeneration."[3] In another
passage, however, he tells us how this took place. "Not they only,"
says he, "but 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. 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."[4]
CHAP. 10 [VIII.]--PERFECTION, WHEN TO BE REALIZED.
Our full adoption, then, as children, is to happen at the redemption of
our body. It is therefore the first-fruits of the Spirit which we now
possess, whence we are already really become the children of God; for
the rest, indeed, as it is by hope that we are saved and renewed, so
are we the children of God. But inasmuch as we are not yet actually
saved, we are also not yet fully renewed, nor yet also fully sons of
God, but children of the world. We are therefore advancing in renewal
and holiness of life,--and it is by this that we are children of God,
and by this also we cannot commit sin;--until at last the whole of that
by which we are kept as yet children of this world is changed into
this;--for it is owing to this that we are as yet able to sin. Hence it
comes to pass that "whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin;"[5]
and as well, "if we were to say that we have no sin, we
should deceive ourselves, and the truth would not be in us."[6] There
shall be then an end put to that within us which keeps us children of
the flesh and of the world; whilst that other shall be perfected which
makes us the children of God, and renews us by His Spirit. Accordingly
the same John says, "Beloved, now are we the sons of God; and it doth
not yet appear what we shall be."[7] Now what means this variety in the
expressions, "we are," and "we shall be," but this --we are in hope, we
shall be in reality? For he goes on to say, "We know that when He shall
appear, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is."[7] We
have therefore even now begun to be like Him, having the first-fruits
of the Spirit; but yet we are still unlike Him, by reason of the
remainders of the old nature. In as far, then, as we are like Him, in
so far are we, by the regenerating Spirit, sons of God; but
in as far as we are unlike Him, in so far are we the children of the
flesh and of the world. On the one side, we cannot commit sin; but, on
the other, if we say that we have no sin, we only deceive
ourselves,--until we pass entirely into the adoption, and the sinner be
no more, and you look for his place and find it not.[8]
CHAP. 11 [IX.]--AN OBJECTION OF THE PELAGIANS: WHY DOES NOT A RIGHTEOUS MAN BEGET A RIGHTEOUS MAN?[9]
In vain, then, do some of them argue: "If a sinner begets a sinner, so
that the guilt of original sin must be done away in his infant son by
his receiving baptism, in like manner ought a righteous man to beget a
righteous son." Just as if a man begat children in the flesh by reason
of his righteousness, and not because he is moved thereto by the
concupiscence which is in his members, and the law of sin is applied by
the law of his mind to the purpose of procreation. His begetting
children, therefore, shows that he still retains the old nature among
the children of this world; it does not arise from the fact of his
promotion to newness of life among the children of God. For "the
children of this world beget and are begotten."[10] Hence also what is
born of them is like them; for "that which is born of the flesh is
flesh."[11] Only the children of God, however, are righteous; but in so
far as they are the children of God, they do not carnally beget,
because it is of the Spirit, and not of the flesh, that they are
themselves begotten. But as many of them as become parents, beget
children from the circumstance that they have not yet put off the
entire remains of their old nature in exchange for the perfect
renovation which awaits them. It follows, therefore, that every son who
is born in this old and infirm condition of his father's nature, must
needs himself partake of the same old and infirm condition. In order,
then, that he may be begotten again, he must also himself be renewed by
the Spirit through the remission of sin; and if this change does not
take place in him, his righteous father will be of no use to him. For
it is by the Spirit that he is righteous, but it is not by the Spirit
that he begat his son. On the other hand, if this change does accrue to
him, he
will not be damaged by an unrighteous father: for it is by the grace of
the Spirit that he has passed into the hope of the eternal newness;
whereas it is owing to his carnal mind that his father has wholly
remained in the old nature.
CHAP. 12 [X.]--HE RECONCILES SOME PASSAGES OF SCRIPTURE.
The statement, therefore, "He that is born of God sinneth not,"[1] is
not contrary to the passage in which it is declared by those who are
born of God, "If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and
the truth is not in us."[2] For however complete may be a man's present
hope, and however real may be his renewal by spiritual regeneration in
that part of his nature, he still, for all that, carries about a body
which is corrupt, and which presses down his soul; and so long as this
is the case, one must distinguish even in the same individual the
relation and source of each several action. Now, I suppose it is not
easy to find in God's Scripture so weighty a testimony of holiness
given of any man as that which is written of His three servants, Noah,
Daniel, and Job, whom the Prophet Ezekiel describes as the only men
able to be delivered from God's impending wrath.[3] In these
three men he no doubt prefigures three classes of mankind to be
delivered: in Noah, as I suppose, are represented righteous leaders of
nations, by reason of his government of the ark as a type of the
Church; in Daniel, men who are righteous in continence; in Job, those
who are righteous in wedlock; -- to say nothing of any other view of
the passage, which it is unnecessary now to consider. It is, at any
rate, clear from this testimony of the prophet, and from other inspired
statements, how eminent were these worthies in righteousness. Yet no
man must be led by their history to say, for instance, that drunkenness
is not sin, although so good a man was overtaken by it; for we read
that Noah was once drunk,[4] but God forbid that it should be thought
that he was an habitual drunkard.
CHAP. 13.--A SUBTERFUGE OF THE PELAGIANS.
Daniel, indeed, after the prayer which he poured out before God,
actually says respecting himself, "Whilst I was praying and confessing
my sins, and the sins of my people, before the Lord my God."[5] This is
the reason, if I am not mistaken, why in the above-mentioned Prophet
Ezekiel a certain most haughty person is asked, "Art thou then wiser
than Daniel?"[6] Nor on this point can that be possibly said which some
contend for in opposition to the Lord's Prayer: "For although," they
say, "that prayer was offered by the apostles, after they became holy
and perfect, and had no sin whatever, yet it was not in behalf of their
own selves, but of imperfect and still sinful men that they said,
'Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our debtors.' They used the
word our," they say, "in order to show that in one body are contained
both those who still have sins, and themselves, who were
already altogether free from sin." Now this certainly cannot be said in
the case of Daniel, who (as I suppose) foresaw as a prophet this
presumptuous opinion, when he said so often in his prayer, "We have
sinned;" and explained to us why he said this, not so as that we should
hear from him, Whilst was praying and confessing the sins of my people
to the Lord, my God; nor yet confounding distinction, so as that it
would be uncertain whether he had said, on account of the fellowship of
one body, While I was confessing sins to the Lord my God; but he
expresses himself in language so distinct and precise, as if he were
full of the distinction himself, and wanted above all things to commend
it to our notice: "My sins," says he, "and the sins of my people." Who
can gainsay such evidence as this, but he who is more pleased to defend
what he thinks than to find out what he ought to think?
CHAP. 14.--JOB WAS NOT WITHOUT SIN.
But let us see what Job has to say of himself, after God's great
testimony of his righteousness. "I know of a truth," he says, "that it
is so: for how shall a mortal man be just before the Lord? For if He
should enter into judgment with him, he would not be able to obey
Him."[7] And shortly afterwards he asks: "Who shall resist His
judgment? Even if I should seem righteous, my mouth will speak
profanely."[1] And again, further on, he says: "I know He will not
leave me unpunished. But since I am ungodly, why have I not died? If I
should wash myself with snow, and be purged with clean hands, thou
hadst thoroughly stained me with filth."[2] In another of his
discourses he says: "For Thou hast written evil things against me, and
hast compassed me with the sins of my youth; and Thou hast placed my
foot in the stocks. Thou hast watched all my works, and hast inspected
the soles of my feet,
which wax old like a bottle, or like a moth-eaten garment. For man that
is born of a woman hath but a short time to live, and is full of wrath;
like a flower that hath bloomed, so doth he fall; he is gone like a
shadow, and continueth not. Hast Thou not taken account even of him,
and caused him to enter into judgment with Thee? For who is pure from
uncleanness? Not even one; even should his life last but a day."[3]
Then a little afterwards he says: "Thou hast numbered all my
necessities; and not one of my sins hath escaped Thee. Thou hast sealed
up my transgressions in a bag, and hast marked whatever I have done
unwillingly."[4] See how Job, too, confesses his sins, and says how
sure he is that there is none righteous before the Lord. So he is sure
of this also, that if we say we have no sin, the truth is not in us.
While, therefore, God bestows on him His high testimony of
righteousness, according to the standard of human conduct, Job himself,
taking his measure from that rule of righteousness, which, as well as
he can, he beholds in God, knows of a truth that so it is; and he goes
on at once to say, "How shall a mortal man be just before the Lord? For
if He should enter into judgment with him, he would not be able to obey
Him;" in other words, if, when challenged to judgment, he wished to
show that nothing could be found in him which He could condemn, "he
would not be able to obey him," since he misses even that obedience
which might enable him to obey Him who teaches that sins ought to be
confessed. Accordingly [the Lord] rebukes certain men, saying, "Why
will ye contend with me in judgment?"[5] This [the Psalmist] averts,
saying, "Enter not into judgment with Thy servant; for in Thy sight
shall no man living be justified."[6] In accordance with this,
Job also asks: "For who shall resist his judgment? Even if I should
seem righteous, my mouth will speak profanely;" which means: If,
contrary to His judgment, I should call myself righteous, when His
perfect rule of righteousness proves me to be unrighteous, then of a
truth my mouth would speak profanely, because it would speak against
the truth of God.
CHAP. 15.--CARNAL GENERATION CONDEMNED ON ACCOUNT OF ORIGINAL SIN.
He sets forth that this absolute weakness, or rather condemnation, of
carnal generation is from the transgression of original sin, when,
treating of his own sins, he shows, as it were, their causes, and says
that "man that is born of a woman hath but a short time to live, and is
full of wrath." Of what wrath, but of that in which all are, as the
apostle says, "by nature," that is, by origin, "children of wrath,"[7]
inasmuch as they are children of the concupiscence of the flesh and of
the world? He further shows that to this same wrath also pertains the
death of man. For after saying, "He hath but a short time to live, and
is full of wrath," he added, "Like a flower that hath bloomed, so doth
he fall; he is gone like a shadow, and continueth not." He then
subjoins: "Hast Thou not caused him to enter into judgment with Thee?
For who is pure from uncleanness? Not even one; even should
his life last but a day." In these words he in fact says, Thou hast
thrown upon man, short-lived though he be, the care of entering into
judgment with Thee. For how brief soever be his life, -- even if it
last but a single day,--he could not possibly be clean of filth; and
therefore with perfect justice must he come under Thy judgment. Then,
when he says again, "Thou hast numbered all my necessities, and not one
of my sins hath escaped Thee: Thou hast sealed up my transgressions in
a bag, and hast marked whatever I have done unwillingly;" is it not
clear enough that even those sins are justly imputed which are not
committed through allurement of pleasure, but for the sake of avoiding
some trouble, or pain, or death? Now these sins, too, are said to be
committed under some necessity, whereas they ought all to be overcome
by the love and pleasure of righteousness. Again, what he said in
the clause, "Thou hast marked whatever I have done unwillingly," may
evidently be connected with the saying: "For what I would, that I do
not; but what I hate, that do I."[8]
CHAP. 16.--JOB FORESAW THAT CHRIST WOULD COME TO SUFFER; THE WAY OF HUMILITY IN THOSE THAT ARE PERFECT.
Now it is remarkable[9] that the Lord Himself, after bestowing on Job
the testimony which is expressed in Scripture, that is, by the Spirit
of God, "In all the things which happened to him he sinned not with his
lips before the Lord,"[1] did yet afterwards speak to him with a
rebuke, as Job himself tells us: "Why do I yet plead, being admonished,
and hearing the rebukes of the Lord?"[2] Now no man is justly rebuked
unless there be in him something which deserves rebuke. [XI.] And what
sort of rebuke is this, -- which, moreover, is understood to proceed
from the person of Christ our Lord? He re-counts to him all the divine
operations of His power, rebuking him under this idea,--that He seems
to say to him, "Canst thou effect all these mighty works as I can?" But
to what purpose is all this but that Job might understand (for this
instruction was divinely inspired into him, that he
might foreknow Christ's coming to suffer),--that he might understand
how patiently he ought to endure all that he went through, since
Christ, although, when He became man for us, He was absolutely without
sin, and although as God He possessed so great power, did for all that
by no means refuse to obey even to the suffering of death? When Job
understood this with a purer intensity of heart, he added to his own
answer these words: "I used before now to hear of Thee by the hearing
of the ear; but behold now mine eye seeth Thee: therefore I abhor
myself and melt away, and account myself but dust and ashes."[3] Why
was he thus so deeply displeased with himself? God's work, in that he
was man, could not rightly have given him displeasure, since it is even
said to God Himself, "Despise not Thou the work of Thine own hands."[4]
It was indeed in view of that righteousness, in which he had
discovered his own unrighteousness,[5] that he abhorred himself and
melted away, and deemed himself dust and ashes,--beholding, as he did
in his mind, the righteousness of Christ, in whom there could not
possibly be any sin, not only in respect of His divinity, but also of
His soul and His flesh. It was also in view of this righteousness which
is of God that the Apostle Paul, although as "touching the
righteousness which is of the law he was blameless," yet "counted all
things" not only as loss, but even as dung.[6]
CHAP. 17 [XII.]--NO ONE RIGHTEOUS IN ALL THINGS.[7]
That illustrious testimony of God, therefore, in which Job is
commended, is not contrary to the passage in which it is said, "In Thy
sight shall no man living be justified;"[8] for it does not lead us to
suppose that in him there was nothing at all which might either by
himself truly or by the Lord God rightly be blamed, although at the
same time he might with no untruth be said to be a righteous man, and a
sincere worshipper of God, and one who keeps himself from every evil
work. For these are God's words concerning him: "Hast thou diligently
considered my servant Job? For there is none like him on the earth,
blameless, righteous, a true worshipper of God, who keeps himself from
every evil work."[9] First, he is here praised for his excellence in
comparison with all men on earth. He therefore excelled all who were at
that time able to be righteous upon earth; and yet, because of
this superiority over others in righteousness, he was not therefore
altogether without sin. He is next said to be "blameless" -- no one
could fairly bring an accusation against him in respect of his life;
"righteous" -- he had advanced so greatly in moral probity, that no man
could be mentioned on a par with him; "a true worshipper of
God"--because he was a sincere and humble confessor of his own sins;
"who keeps himself from every evil work"-it would have been wonderful
if this had extended to every evil word and thought. How great a man
indeed Job was, we are not told; but we know that he was a just man; we
know, too, that in the endurance of terrible afflictions and trials he
was great; and we know that it was not on account of his sins, but for
the purpose of demonstrating his righteousness, that he had to bear so
much suffering. But the language in which the Lord commends Job might
also be applied to him who "delights in the law of God after the inner
man, whilst he sees another law in his members warring against the law
of his mind;"[10] especially as he says, "The good 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."[11] Observe how he too after the inward man is separate from every
evil work, because such work he does not himself effect, but the evil
which dwells in his flesh; and yet, since he does not have even that
ability to delight in the law of God except from the grace of God, he,
as still in want of deliverance, exclaims, "O wretched man that I am!
who shall deliver me from the body of this death? God's grace, through
Jesus Christ our Lord!" [12]
CHAP. 18 [XIII.]--PERFECT HUMAN RIGHTEOUSNESS IS IMPERFECT.
There are then on earth righteous men, there are great men, brave,
prudent, chaste, patient, pious, merciful, who endure all kinds of
temporal evil with an even mind for righteousness' sake. If, however,
there is truth -- nay, because there is truth -- in these words, "If we
say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves,"[1] and in these, "In Thy
sight shall no man living be justified," they are not without sin; nor
is there one among them so proud and foolish as not to think that the
Lord's Prayer is needful to him, by reason of his manifold sins.
CHAP. 19.--ZACHARIAS AND ELISABETH, SINNERS.
Now what must we say of Zacharias and Elisabeth, who are often alleged
against us in discussions on this question, except that there is clear
evidence in the Scripture[2] that Zacharias was a man of eminent
righteousness among the chief priests, whose duty it was to offer up
the sacrifices of the Old Testament? We also read, however, in the
Epistle to the Hebrews, in a passage which I have already quoted in my
previous book,[3] that Christ was the only High Priest who had no need,
as those who were called high priests, to offer daily a sacrifice for
his own sins first, and then for the people. "For such a High Priest,"
it says, "became us, righteous, harmless, undefiled, separate from
sinners, and made higher than the heavens; who needeth not daily, as
those high priests, to offer up sacrifice, first for his own sins."[4]
Amongst the priests here referred to was Zacharias, amongst
them was Phinehas, yea, Aaron himself, from whom this priesthood had
its beginning, and whatever others there were who lived laudably and
righteously in this priesthood; and yet all these were under the
necessity, first of all, of offering sacrifice for their own sins, --
Christ, of whose future coming they were a type, being the only one
who, as an incontaminable priest, had no such necessity.
CHAP. 20.--PAUL WORTHY TO BE THE PRINCE OF THE APOSTLES, AND YET A SINNER.
What commendation, however, is bestowed on Zacharias and Elisabeth
which is not comprehended in what the apostle has said about himself
before he believed in Christ? He said that, "as touching the
righteousness which is in the law, he had been blameless."[5] The same
is said also of them: "They were both righteous before God, walking in
all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord blameless."[6] It was
because whatever righteousness they had in them was not a pretence
before men that it is said accordingly, "They walked before the Lord."
But that which is written of Zacharias and his wife in the phrase, in
all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord, the apostle briefly
expressed by the words, in the law. For there was not one law for him
and another for them previous to the gospel. It was one and the same
law which, as we read, was given by Moses to their fathers, and
according to which, also, Zacharias was priest, and offered sacrifices
in his course. And yet the apostle, who was then endued with the like
righteousness, goes on to say: "But what things were gain to me, those
I counted loss for Christ. Yea doubtless, and I count all things but
loss for the excellency of the knowledge of our Lord Jesus Christ; for
whose sake I have not only thought all things to be only detriments,
but I have even counted them as dung, that I may win Christ, and be
found in Him, not having my own righteousness, which is of the law, but
that which is through the faith of Christ, the righteousness which is
of God by faith: that I may know Him, and the power of His
resurrection, and the fellowship of His suffering, being made
comformable unto His death; if by any means I might attain unto the
resurrection of the dead."[7] So far, then, is it from being true that
we
should, from the words in which Scripture describes them, suppose that
Zacharias and Elisabeth had a perfect righteousness without any sin,
that we must even regard the apostle himself, according to the selfsame
rule, as not perfect, not only in that righteousness of the law which
he possessed in common with them, and which he counts as loss and dung
in comparison with that most excellent righteousness which is by the
faith of Christ, but also in the very gospel itself, wherein he
deserved the pre-eminence of his great apostleship. Now I would not
venture to say this if I did not deem it very wrong to refuse credence
to himself. He extends the passage which we have quoted, and says: "Not
as though I had already attained, or were already perfect; but I follow
after, if I may comprehend that for which also I am apprehended in
Christ Jesus. Brethren, I count not myself to have apprehended:
but this one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind, and
reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press toward the
mark, for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus.''[8]
Here he confesses that he has not yet attained, and is not yet perfect
in that plenitude of righteousness which he had longed to obtain in
Christ; but that he was as yet pressing towards the mark, and,
forgetting what was past, was reaching out to the things which are
before him. We are sure, then, that what he says elsewhere is true even
of himself: "Although our outward man is perishing, yet the inward man
is renewed day by day."[1] Although he was already a perfect[2]
traveller, he had not yet attained the perfect end of his journey. All
such he would fain take with him as companions of his course. This he
expresses in the words which follow our former quotation: "Let as many,
then, of us as are perfect, be thus minded: and if ye be yet of another
mind, God will reveal even this also to you. Nevertheless, whereunto we
have already attained, let us walk by that rule."[3] This "walk" is not
performed with the legs of the body, but with the affections, of the
soul and the character of the life, so that they who possess
righteousness may arrive at perfection, who, advancing in their renewal
day by day along the straight path of faith, have by this time become
perfect as travellers in the selfsame righteousness.
CHAP. 21 [XIV.]--ALL RIGHTEOUS MEN SINNERS.
In like manner, all who are described in the Scriptures as exhibiting
in their present life good will and the actions of righteousness, and
all who have lived like them since, although lacking the same testimony
of Scripture; or all who are even now so living, or shall hereafter so
live: all these are great, they are all righteous, and they are all
really worthy of praise, -- yet they are by no means without sin:
inasmuch as, on the authority of the same Scriptures which make us
believe in their virtues, we believe also that in "God's sight no man
living is justified,"[4] whence all ask that He will "not enter into
judgment with His servants:"[4] and that not only to all the faithful
in general, but to each of them in particular, the Lord's Prayer is
necessary, which He delivered to His disciples.[5]
CHAP.
22 [XV.]--AN OBJECTION OF THE PELAGIANS; PERFECTION IS RELATIVE; HE IS
RIGHTLY SAID TO BE PERFECT IN RIGHTEOUSNESS WHO HAS MADE MUCH PROGRESS
THEREIN.
"Well, but," they say, "the Lord says, 'Be ye perfect even as your
Father which is in heaven is perfect,'[6]--an injunction which He would
not have given, if He had known that what He enjoined was
impracticable." Now the present question is not whether it be possible
for any men, during this present life, to be without sin if they
receive that perfection for the purpose; for the question of
possibility we have already discussed:[7]--but what we have now to
consider is, whether any man in fact achieves perfection. We have,
however, already recognised the fact that no man wills as much as the
duty demands, as also the testimony of the Scriptures, which we have
quoted so largely above, declares. When, indeed, perfection is ascribed
to any particular person; we must look carefully at the thing in which
it is ascribed. For I have just above quoted a passage of the apostle,
wherein he
confesses that he was not yet perfect in the attainment of
righteousness which he desired; but still he immediately adds, "Let as
many of us as are perfect be thus minded." Now he would certainly not
have uttered these two sentences if he had not been perfect in one
thing, and not in another. For instance, a man may be perfect as a
scholar in the pursuit of wisdom: and this could not yet be said of
those to whom [the apostle] said, "I have fed you with milk, sand not
with meat: for hitherto ye have not been able to bear it, neither are
ye yet able;"[8] whereas to those of whom it could be said he says,"
Howbeit we speak wisdom among them that are perfect," --meaning, of
course, "perfect pupils" to be understood. It may happen, therefore, as
I have said, that a man may be already perfect as a scholar, though not
as yet perfect as a teacher of wisdom; may be perfect as a learner,
though
not as yet perfect as a doer of righteousness; may be perfect as a
lover of his enemies, though not as yet perfect in bearing their
wrong.[9] Even in the case of him who is so far perfect as to love all
men, inasmuch as he has attained even to the love of his enemies, it
still remains a question whether he be perfect in that love,--in other
words, whether he so loves those whom he loves as is prescribed to be
exercised towards those to be loved, by the unchangeable love of truth.
Whenever, then, we read in the Scriptures of any man's perfection, it
must be carefully considered in what it is asserted, since a man is not
therefore to be understood as being entirely without sin because he is
described as perfect in some particular thing; although the term may
also be employed to show, not, indeed, that there is no longer any
point left for a man to reach his way to perfection, but that he
has in fact advanced a very great way, and on that account may be
deemed worthy of the designation. Thus, a man may be said to be perfect
in the science of the law, even if there be still something unknown to
him; and in the same manner the apostle called men perfect, to whom he
said at the same time, "Yet if in anything ye be otherwise minded, God
shall reveal even this to you. Nevertheless, whereto we have already
attained, let us walk by the same rule."[10]
CHAP. 23 [XXI.]--WHY GOD PRESCRIBES WHAT HE KNOWS CANNOT BE OBSERVED.
We must not deny that God commands that we ought to be so perfect in
doing righteousness, as to have no sin at all. Now that cannot be sin,
whatever it may be, unless God has enjoined that it shall not be. Why
then, they ask, does He command what He knows no man living will
perform? In this manner it may also be asked, Why He commanded the
first human beings, who were only two, what He knew they would not
obey? For it must not be pretended that He issued that command, that
some of us might obey it, if they did not; for, that they should not
partake of the fruit of the particular tree, God commanded them, and
none besides. Because, as He knew what amount of righteousness they
would fail to perform, so did He also know what righteous measures He
meant Himself to adopt concerning them. In the same way, then, He
orders all men to commit no sin, although He knows beforehand that no
man
will fulfil the command; in order that He may, in the case of all who
impiously and condemnably despise His precepts, Himself do what is just
in their condemnation; and, in the case of all who while obediently and
piously pressing on in his precepts, though failing to observe to the
utmost all things which He has enjoined, do yet forgive others as they
wish to t be forgiven themselves, Himself do what is good in their
cleansing. For how can forgiveness be bestowed by God's mercy on the
forgiving, when there is no sin? or how prohibition fail to be given by
the justice of God, when there is sin?
CHAP. 24.--AN OBJECTION OF THE PELAGIANS. THE APOSTLE PAUL WAS NOT FREE PROM SIN SO LONG AS HE LIVED.
"But see," say they, "how the apostle says, 'I have fought a good
fight, I have kept the faith, I have finished my course: henceforth
there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness; '[1] which he would
not have said if he had any sin." It is for them, then, to explain how
he could have said this, when there still remained for him to encounter
the great conflict, the grievous and excessive weight of that suffering
which he had just said awaited him.[2] In order to finish his course,
was there yet wanting only a small thing, when that in fact was still
left to suffer wherein would be a fiercer and more cruel foe? If,
however, he uttered such words of joy feeling sure and secure, because
he had been made sure and secure by Him who had revealed to him the
imminence of his suffering, then he spoke these words, not in the
fulness of realization, but in the firmness of hope, and
represents what he foresees is to come as if it had already been done.
If, therefore, he had added to those words the further statement, "I
have no longer any sin," we must have understood him as even then
speaking of a perfection arising from a future prospect, not from an
accomplished fact. For his having no sin, which they suppose was
completed when he spoke these words, pertained to the finishing of his
course; just in the same way as his triumphing over his adversary in
the decisive conflict of his suffering had also reference to the
finishing of his course, although this they must needs themselves allow
remained yet to be effected, when he was speaking these words. The
whole of this, therefore, We declare to have been as yet awaiting its
accomplishment, at the time when the apostle, with his perfect trust in
the promise of God, spoke of it all as having been already realized.
For
it was in reference to the finishing of his course that he forgave the
sins of those who sinned against him, and prayed that his own sins
might in like manner be forgiven him; and it was in his most certain
confidence in this promise of the Lord, that he believed he should have
no sin in that last end, which was still future, even when in his
trustfulness he spoke of it as already accomplished. Now, omitting all
other considerations, I wonder whether, when he uttered the words in
which he is thought to imply that he had no sin, that "thorn of the
flesh" had been already removed from him, for the taking away of which
he had three times entreated the Lord, and had received this answer:
"My grace is sufficient for thee; for my strength is made perfect in
weakness."[3] For bringing so great a man to perfection, it was needful
that that "messenger of Satan" should not be taken away by whom
he was therefore to be buffeted, "lest he should be unduly exalted by
the abundance of his revelations,"[4] and is there then any man so bold
as either to think or to say, that any one who has to bend beneath the
burden of this life is altogether clean from all sin whatever?
CHAP. 25.--GOD PUNISHES BOTH IN WRATH AND IN MERCY.
Although there are some men who are so eminent in righteousness that
God speaks to them out of His cloudy pillar, such as "Moses and Aaron
among His priests, and Samuel among them that call upon His name,"[5]
the latter of whom is much praised for his piety and purity in the
Scriptures of truth, from his earliest childhood, in which his mother,
to accomplish her vow, placed him in God's temple, and devoted him to
the Lord as His servant;--yet even of such men it is written, "Thou, O
God, wast propitious unto them, though Thou didst punish all their
devices."[1] Now the children of wrath God punishes in anger; whereas
it is in mercy that He punishes the children of grace; since "whom He
loveth He correcteth, and scourgeth every son whom He receiveth."[2]
However, there are no punishments, no correction, no scourge of God,
but what are owing to sin, except in the case of Him who
prepared His back for the smiter, in order that He might experience all
things in our likeness without sin, in order that He might be the
saintly Priest of saints, making intercession even for saints, who with
no sacrifice of truth say each one even for himself, "Forgive us our
trespasses, even as we also forgive them that trespass against us."[3]
Wherefore even our opponents in this controversy, whilst they are
chaste in their life, and commendable in character, and although they
do not hesitate to do that which the Lord enjoined on the rich man, who
inquired of Him about the attainment of eternal life, after he had told
Him, in answer to His first question, that he had already fully kept
every commandment in the law, -- that "if he wished to be perfect, he
must sell all that he had and give to the poor, and transfer his
treasure to heaven;"[4] yet they do not in any one instance
venture to say that they are without sin. But this, as we believe, they
refrain from saying, with deceitful intent; but if they are lying, in
this very act they begin either to augment or commit sin.
CHAP. 26 [XVII.] -- (3)[5] WHY NO ONE IN THIS LIFE IS WITHOUT SIN.
[3d.][5] Let us now consider the point which I mentioned as our third
inquiry. Since by divine grace assisting the human will, man may
possibly exist in this life without sin, why does he not? To this
question I might very easily and truthfully answer: Because men are
unwilling. But if I am asked why they are unwilling, we are drawn into
a lengthy statement. And yet, without prejudice to a more careful
examination, I may briefly say this much: Men are unwilling to do what
is right, either because what is right is unknown to them, or because
it is unpleasant to them. For we desire a thing more ardently in
proportion to the certainty of our knowledge of its goodness, and the
warmth of our delight in it. Ignorance, therefore, and infirmity are
faults which impede the will from moving either for doing a good work,
or for refraining from an evil one. But that what was hidden may come
to
light, and what was unpleasant may be made agreeable, is of the grace
of God which helps the wills of men; and that they are not helped by
it, has its cause likewise in themselves, not in God, whether they be
predestinated to condemnation, on account of the iniquity of their
pride, or whether they are to be judged and disciplined contrary to
their very pride, if they are children of mercy. Accordingly Jeremiah,
after saying, "I know, O Lord, that the way of man is not in himself,
and that it belongeth not to any man to walk and direct his steps,"[6]
immediately adds, "Correct me, O Lord, but with judgment, and not in
Thine anger;"[7] as much as to say, I know that it is for my correction
that I am too little assisted by Thee, for my footsteps to be perfectly
directed: but yet do not in this so deal with me as Thou dost in Thine
anger, when Thou dost determine to condemn the wicked; but
as Thou dost in Thy judgment whereby Thou dost teach Thy children not
to be proud. Whence in another passage it is said, "And Thy judgments
shall help me."[8]
CHAP. 27.[9]--THE DIVINE REMEDY FOR PRIDE.
You cannot therefore attribute to God the cause of any human fault. For
of all human offences, the cause is pride. For the conviction and
removal of this a great remedy comes from heaven. God in mercy humbles
Himself, descends from above, and displays to man, lifted up by pride,
pure and manifest grace in very manhood, which He took upon Himself out
of vast love for those who partake of it. For, not even did even this
One, so conjoined to the Word of God that by that conjunction he became
at once the one Son of God and the same One the one Son of man, act by
the antecedent merits of His own will. It behoved Him, without doubt,
to be one; had there been two, or three, or more, if this could have
been done, it would not have come from the pure and simple gift of God,
but from man's free will and choice.[10] This, then, is especially
commended to us; this, so far as I dare to think, is
the divine lesson especially taught and learned in those treasures of
wisdom and knowledge which are hidden in Christ. Every one of us,
therefore, now knows, now does not know--now rejoices, now does not
rejoice --to begin, continue, and complete our good work, in order that
he may know that it is due not to his own will, but to the gift of God,
that he either knows or rejoices; and thus he is cured of vanity which
elated him, and knows how truly it is said not of this earth of ours,
but spiritually, "The Lord will give kindness and sweet grace, and our
land shall yield her fruit."[1] A good work, moreover, affords greater
delight, in proportion as God is more and more loved as the highest
unchangeable Good, and as the Author of all good things of every kind
whatever. And that God may be loved, "His love is shed abroad in our
hearts," not by ourselves, but "by the Holy Ghost that is given unto
us."[2]
CHAP. 28 [XVIII.] -- A GOOD WILL COMES FROM GOD.
Men, however, are laboring to find in our own will some good thing of
our own, -- not given to us by God; but how it is to be found I cannot
imagine. The apostle says, when speaking of men's good works, "What
hast thou that thou didst not receive? now, if thou didst receive it,
why dost thou glory, as if thou hadst not received it?"[3] But, besides
this, even reason itself, which may be estimated in such things by such
as we are, sharply restrains every one of us in our investigations so
as that we may not so defend grace as to seem to take away free will,
or, on the other hand, so assert free will as to be judged ungrateful
to the grace of God, in our arrogant impiety.[4]
CHAP. 29.--A SUBTERFUGE OF THE PELAGIANS.
Now, with reference to the passage of the apostle which I have quoted,
some would maintain it to mean that "whatever amount of good will a man
has, must be attributed to God on this account,--namely, because even
this amount could not be in him if he were not a human being. Now,
inasmuch as he has from God alone the capacity of being any thing at
all, and of being human, why should there not be also attributed to God
whatever there is in him of a good will, which could not exist unless
he existed in whom it is?" But in this same manner it may also be said
that a bad will also may be attributed to God as its author; because
even it could not exist in man unless he were a man in whom it existed;
but God is the author of his existence as man; and thus also of his bad
will, which could have no existence if it had not a man in whom it
might exist. But to argue thus is blasphemy.
CHAP. 30.--ALL WILL IS EITHER GOOD, AND THEN IT LOVES RIGHTEOUSNESS, OR EVIL, WHEN IT DOES NOT LOVE RIGHTEOUSNESS.
Unless, therefore, we obtain not simply determination of will, which is
freely turned in this direction and that, and has its place amongst
those natural goods which a bad man may use badly; but also a good
will, which has its place among those goods of which it is impossible
to make a bad use:--unless the impossibility is given to us from God, I
know not how to defend what is said: "What hast thou that thou didst
not receive?" For if we have from God a certain free will, which may
still be either good or bad; but the good will comes from ourselves;
then that which comes from ourselves is better than that which comes
from Him. But inasmuch as it is the height of absurdity to say this,
they ought to acknowledge that we attain from God even a good will. It
would indeed be a strange thing if the will could so stand in some mean
as to be neither good nor bad; for we either love
righteousness, and it is good, and if we love it more, more good, -- if
less, it is less good; or if we do not love it at all, it is not good.
And who can hesitate to affirm that, when the will loves not
righteousness in any way at all, it is not only a bad, but even a
wholly depraved will? Since therefore the will is either good or bad,
and since of course we have not the bad will from God, it remains that
we have of God a good will; else, I am ignorant, since our
justification is from it, in what other gift from Him we ought to
rejoice. Hence, I suppose, it is written, "The will is prepared of the
Lord;"[5] and in the Psalms, "The steps of a man will be rightly
ordered by the Lord, and His way will be the choice of his will;"[6]
and that which the apostle says, "For it is God who worketh in you both
to will and to do of His own good pleasure."[7]
CHAP. 31.--GRACE IS GIVEN TO SOME MEN IN MERCY; IS WITHHELD FROM OTHERS IN JUSTICE AND TRUTH.
Forasmuch then as our turning away from God is our own act, and this is
evil will; but our turning to God is not possible, except He rouses and
helps us, and this is good will,--what have we that we have not
received? But if we received, why do we glory as if we had not
received? Therefore, as "he that glorieth must glory in the Lord," s it
comes from His mercy, not their merit, that God wills to impart this to
some, but from His truth that He wills not to impart it to others. For
to sinners punishment is justly due, because "the Lord God loveth mercy
and truth"[9] and "mercy and truth are met together;"[10] and "all the
paths of the Lord are mercy and truth."[1] And who can tell the
numberless instances in which Holy Scripture combines these two
attributes? Sometimes, by a change in the terms, grace is put for
mercy, as in the passage, "We beheld His glory, the glory as of the
Only-begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth."[2] Sometimes
also judgment occurs instead of truth, as in the passage, "I will sing
of mercy and judgment unto Thee, O Lord."[3]
CHAP. 32.--GOD'S SOVEREIGNITY IN HIS GRACE.
As to the reason why He wills to convert some, and to punish others for
turning away, -although nobody can justly censure the merciful One in
conferring His blessing, nor can any man justly find fault with the
truthful One in awarding His punishment (as no one could justly blame
Him, in the parable of the labourers, for assigning to some their
stipulated hire, and to others unstipulated largess[4]), yet, after
all, the purpose of His more hidden judgment is in His own power.
[XIX.] So far as it has been given us, let us have wisdom, and let us
understand that the good Lord God sometimes withholds even from His
saints either the certain knowledge or the triumphant joy of a good
work, just in order that they may discover that it is not from
themselves, but from Him that they receive the light which illuminates
their darkness, and the sweet grace which causes their land s to yield
her fruit.
CHAP. 33.--THROUGH GRACE WE HAVE BOTH THE KNOWLEDGE OF GOOD, AND THE DELIGHT WHICH IT AFFORDS.
But when we pray Him to give us His help to do and accomplish
righteousness, what else do we pray for than that He would open what
was hidden, and impart sweetness to that which gave no pleasure? For
even this very duty of praying to Him we have learned by His grace,
whereas before it was hidden; and by His grace have come to love it,
whereas before it gave us no pleasure,--so that "he who glorieth must
glory not in himself, but in the Lord." To be lifted up, indeed, to
pride, is the result of men's own will, not of the operation of God;
for to such a thing God neither urges us nor helps us. There first
occurs then in the will of man a certain desire of its own power, to
become disobedient through pride. If it were not for this desire,
indeed, there would be nothing difficult; and whenever man willed it,
he might refuse without difficulty. There ensued, however, out of the
penalty
which was justly due such a defect, that henceforth it became difficult
to be obedient unto righteousness; and unless this defect were overcome
by assisting grace, no one would turn to holiness; nor unless it were
healed by efficient grace would any one enjoy the peace of
righteousness. But whose grace is it that conquers and heals, but His
to whom the prayer is directed: "Convert us, O God of our salvation,
and turn Thine anger away from us?"[6] And both if He does this, He
does it in mercy, so that it is said of Him, "Not according to our sins
hath He dealt with us, nor hath He recompensed us according to our
iniquities;"[7] and when He refrains from doing this to any, it is in
judgment that He refrains. And who shall say to Him, "What hast Thou
done?" when with pious mind the saints sing to the praise of His mercy
and judgment? Wherefore even in the case of His saints and faithful
servants He applies to them a tardier cure in certain of their
failings, in order that, while they are involved in these, a less
pleasure than is sufficient for the fulfilling of righteousness in all
its perfection may be experienced by them at any good they may achieve,
whether hidden or manifest; so that in respect of His most perfect rule
of equity and truth" no man living can be justified in His sight."[8]
He does not in His own self, indeed, wish us to fall under
condemnation, but that we should become humble; and He displays to us
all the self-same grace of His own. Let us not, however, after we have
attained facility in all things, suppose that to be our own which is
really His; for that would be an error most antagonistic to religion
and piety. Nor let us think that we should, because of His grace,
continue in the same sins as of old; but against that very pride, on
account of
which we are humiliated in them, let us, above all things, both
vigilantly strive and ardently pray Him, knowing at the same time that
it is by His gift that we have the power thus to strive and thus to
pray; so that in every case, while we look not at ourselves, but raise
our hearts above, we may render thanks to the Lord our God, and
whenever we glory, glory in Him alone.
CHAP. 34 [XX.]--(4) THAT NO MAN, WITH THE EXCEPTION OF CHRIST, HAS EVER LIVED, OR CAN LIVE WITHOUT SIN.[9]
[4th.] There now remains our fourth point, after the explanation of
which, as God shall help us, this lengthened treatise of ours may at
last be brought to an end. It is this: Whether the man who never has
had sin or is to have it, not merely is now living as one of the sons
of men, but even could ever have existed at any time, or will yet in
time to come exist? Now it is altogether most certain that such a man
neither does now live, nor has lived, nor ever will live, except the
one only Mediator between God and men, the Man Christ Jesus. we have
already said a good deal on this subject in our remarks on the baptism
of infants; for if these have no sin, not only are there at present,
but also there have been, and there will be, persons innumerable
without sin. Now if the point which we treated of under the second head
be truly substantiated, that there is in fact no man without
sin,[1] then of course not even infants are without sin. From which the
conclusion arises, that even supposing a man could possibly exist in
the present life so far advanced in virtue as to have reached the
perfect fulness of holy living which is absolutely free from sin, he
still must have been undoubtedly a sinner previously, and have been
converted from the sinful state to this subsequent newness of life. Now
when we were discussing the second head, a different question was
before us from that which is before us under this fourth head. For then
the point we had to consider was, Whether any man in this life could
ever attain to such perfection as to be absolutely without sin by the
grace of God, by the hearty desire of his own will? whereas the
question now proposed in this fourth place is, Whether there be among
the sons of men, or could possibly ever have been, or yet ever can be,
a
man who has not indeed emerged out of sin and attained to perfect
righteousness, but has never, at any time whatever, been under the
bondage of sin? If, therefore, the remarks are true which we have made
at so great length concerning infants, there neither is, has been, nor
will be, among the sons of men any such man, except the one Mediator,
in whom there accrues to us propitiation and justification through
which we have reconciliation with God, by the termination of the enmity
produced by our sins. It will therefore be not unsuitable to retrace a
few considerations, so far as the present subject seems to require,
from the very commencement of the human race, in order that they may
inform and strengthen the reader's mind in answer to some objections
which may possibly disturb him.
CHAP. 35 [XXI.] -- ADAM AND EVE; OBEDIENCE MOST STRONGLY ENJOINED BY GOD ON MAN.
When the first human beings--the one man Adam, and his wife Eve who
came out of him --willed not to obey the commandment which they had
received from God, a just and deserved punishment overtook them. The
Lord had threatened that, on the day they ate the forbidden fruit, they
should surely die.[2] Now, inasmuch as they had received the permission
of using for food every tree that grew in Paradise, among which God had
planted the tree of life, but had been forbidden to partake of one only
tree, which He called the tree of knowledge of good and evil, to
signify by this name the consequence of their discovering whether what
good they would experience if they kept the prohibition, or what evil
if they transgressed it: they are no doubt rightly considered to have
abstained from the forbidden food previous to the malignant persuasion
of the devil, and to have used all which had been
allowed them, and therefore, among all the others, and before all the
others, the tree of life. For what could be more absurd than to suppose
that they partook of the fruit of other trees, but not of that which
had been equally with others granted to them, and which, by its
especial virtue, prevented even their animal bodies from undergoing
change through the decay of age, and from aging into death, applying
this benefit from its own body to the man's body, and in a mystery
demonstrating what is conferred by wisdom (which it symbolized) on the
rational soul, even that, quickened by its fruit, it should not be
changed into the decay and death of iniquity? For of her it is rightly
said, "She is a tree of life to them that lay hold of her."[3] Just as
the one tree was for the bodily Paradise, the other is for the
spiritual; the one affording a vigour to the senses of the outward man,
the other to those of the inner man, such as will abide without any
change for the worse through time. They therefore served God, since
that dutiful obedience was committed to them, by which alone God can be
worshipped. And it was not possible more suitably to intimate the
inherent importance of obedience, or its sole sufficiency securely to
keep the rational creature under the Creator, than by forbidding a tree
which was not in itself evil. For God forbid that the Creator of good
things, who made all things, "and behold they were very good,"[4]
should plant anything evil amidst the fertility of even that material
Paradise. Still, however, in order that he might show man, to whom
submission to such a Master would be very useful, how much good
belonged simply to obedience (and this was all that He had demanded of
His servant, and this would be of advantage not so much for the
lordship of
the Master as for the profit of the servant), they were forbidden the
use of a tree, which, if it had not been for the prohibition, they
might have used without suffering any evil result whatever; and from
this circumstance it may be clearly understood, that whatever evil they
brought on themselves because they made use of it in spite of the
prohibition, the tree did not produce from any noxious or pernicious
quality in its fruit, but entirely on account of their violated
obedience.
CHAP. 36 [XXII.]--MAN'S STATE BEFORE THE FALL.
Before they had thus violated their obedience they were pleasing to
God, and God was pleasing to them; and though they carried about an
animal body, they yet felt in it no disobedience moving against
themselves. This was the righteous appointment, that inasmuch as their
soul had received from the Lord the body for its servant, as it itself
obeyed the Lord, even so its body should obey Him, and should exhibit a
service suitable to the life given it without resistance. Hence "they
were both naked, and were not ashamed."' It is with a natural instinct
of shame that the rational soul is now indeed affected, because in that
flesh, over whose service it received the right of power, it can no
longer, owing to some indescribable infirmity, prevent the motion of
the members thereof, notwithstanding its own unwillingness, nor excite
them to motion even when it wishes. Now these members are on
this account, in every man of chastity, rightly called "pudenda,"[2]
because they excite themselves, just as they like, in opposition to the
mind which is their master, as if they were their own masters; and the
sole authority which the bridle of virtue possesses over them is to
check them from approaching impure and unlawful pollutions. Such
disobedience of the flesh as this, which lies in the very excitement,
even when it is not allowed to take. effect, did not exist in the first
man and woman whilst they were naked and not ashamed. For not yet had
the rational soul, which rules the flesh, developed such a disobedience
to its Lord, as by a reciprocity of punishment to bring on itself the
rebellion of its own servant the flesh, along with that feeling of
confusion and trouble to itself which it certainly failed to inflict
upon God by its own disobedience to Him; for God is put to no
shame or trouble when we do not obey Him, nor are we able in any wise
to lessen His very great power over us; but we are shamed in that the
flesh is not submissive to our government,--a result which is brought
about by the infirmity which we have earned by sinning, and is called
"the sin which dwelleth in our members."[3] But this sin is of such a
character that it is the punishment of sin. As soon, indeed, as that
transgression was effected, and the disobedient soul turned away from
the law of its Lord, then its servant, the body, began to cherish a law
of disobedience against it; and then the man and the woman grew ashamed
of their nakedness, when they perceived the rebellious motion of the
flesh, which they had not felt before, and which perception is called
"the opening of their eyes;"[4] for, of course, they did not walk about
among the trees with closed eyes. The same thing is said
of Hagar: "Her eyes were opened, and she saw a well."[5] Then the man
and the woman covered their parts of shame, which God had made for them
as members, but they had made parts of shame.
CHAP. 37 [XXIII.] --THE CORRUPTION OF NATURE IS BY SIN, ITS RENOVATION IS BY CHRIST.
From this law of sin is born the flesh of sin, which requires cleansing
through the sacrament of Him who came in the likeness of sinful flesh,
that the body of sin might be destroyed, which is also called "the body
of this death," from which only God's grace delivers wretched man
through Jesus Christ our Lord.[6] For this law, the origin of death,
passed on from the first pair to their posterity, as is seen in the
labour with which all men toil in the earth, and the travail of women
in the pains of childbirth. For these sufferings they merited by the
sentence of God, when they were convicted of sin; and we see them
fulfilled not only in them, but also in their descendants, in some
more, in others less, but nevertheless in all. Whereas, however, the
primeval righteousness of the first human beings consisted in obeying
God, and not having in their members the law of their own
concupiscence against the law of their mind; now, since their sin, in
our sinful flesh which is born of them, it is obtained by those who
obey God, as a great acquisition, that they do not obey the desires of
this evil concupiscence, but crucify in themselves the flesh with its
affections and lusts, in order that they may be Jesus Christ's, who on
His cross symbolized this, and who gave them power through His grace to
become the sons of God. For it is not to all men, but to as many as
have received Him, that He has given to be born again to God of the
Spirit, after they were born to the world by the flesh. Of these indeed
it is written: "But as many as received Him, to them gave He power to
become the sons of God; which were born, not of the flesh, nor of
blood, nor of the will of man, nor of the will of the flesh, but of
God."[7]
CHAP.
38 [XXIV]--WHAT BENEFIT HAS BEEN CONFERRED ON US BY THE INCARNATION OF
THE WORD; CHRIST'S BIRTH IN THE FLESH, WHEREIN IT IS LIKE AND WHEREIN
UNLIKE OUR OWN BIRTH.
He goes on to add, "And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among
us;"[1] as much as to say, A great thing indeed has been done among
them, even that they are born again to God of God, who had before been
born of the flesh to the world, although created by God Himself; but a
far more wonderful thing has been done that, although it accrued to
them by nature to be born of the flesh, but by the divine goodness to
be born of God,--in order that so great a benefit might be imparted to
them, He who was in His own nature born of God, vouchsafed in mercy to
be also born of the flesh;--no less being meant by the passage, "And
the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us." Hereby, he says in
effect, it has been wrought that we who were born of the flesh as
flesh, by being afterwards born of the Spirit, may be spirit and dwell
in God; because also God, who was born of God, by being afterwards
born of the flesh, became flesh, and dwelt among us. For the Word,
which became flesh, was in the beginning, and was God with God.[2] But
at the same time His participation in our inferior condition, in order
to our participation in His higher state, held a kind of medium[3] in
His birth of the flesh; so that we indeed were born in sinful flesh,
but He was born in the likeness of sinful flesh,--we not only of flesh
and blood, but also of the will of man, and of the flesh, but He was
born only of flesh and blood, not of the will of man, nor or the will
of the flesh, but of God: we, therefore, to die on account of sin, He,
to die on our account without sin. So also, just as His inferior
circumstances, into which He descended to us, were not in every
particular exactly the same with our inferior circumstances, in which
He found us here; so our superior state, into which we ascend to Him,
will not be quite the same with His superior state, in which we are
there to find Him. For we by His grace are to be made the sons of God,
whereas He was evermore by nature the Son of God; we, when we are
converted, shall cleave to God, though not as His equals; He never
turned from God, and remains ever equal to God; we are partakers of
eternal life, He is eternal life. He, therefore, alone having become
man, but still continuing to be God, never had any sin, nor did he
assume a flesh of sin, though born of a maternal[4] flesh of sin. For
what He then took of flesh, He either cleansed in order to take it, or
cleansed by taking it. His virgin mother, therefore, whose conception
was not according to the law of sinful flesh (in other words, not by
the excitement of carnal concupiscence), but who merited by her faith
that the holy seed should be framed within her, He formed in order to
choose her, and chose in order to be formed from her. How much more
needful, then, is it for sinful flesh to be baptized in order to escape
the judgment, when the flesh which was untainted by sin was baptized to
set an example for imitation?
CHAP. 39 [XXV.]--AN OBJECTION OF PELAGIANS.
The answer, which we have already given,[5] to those who say, "If a
sinner has begotten a sinner, a righteous man ought also to have
begotten a righteous man," we now advance in reply to such as argue
that one who is born of a baptized man ought himself to be regarded as
already baptized. "For why," they ask, "could he not have been baptized
in the loins of his father, when, according to the Epistle to the
Hebrews, Levi,[6] was able to pay tithes in the loins of Abraham?" They
who propose this argument ought to observe that Levi did not on this
account subsequently not pay tithes, because he had paid tithes already
in the loins of Abraham, but because he was ordained to the office of
the priesthood in order to receive tithes, not to pay them; otherwise
neither would his brethren, who all contributed their tithes to him,
have been tithed--because they too, whilst in the loins of Abraham, had
already paid tithes to Melchisedec.
CHAP. 40.--AN ARGUMENT ANTICIPATED.
And let no one contend that the descendants of Abraham might fairly
enough have paid tithes, although they had already paid tithes in the
loins of their forefather, seeing that paying tithes was an obligation
of such a nature as to require constant repetition from each several
person, just as the Israelites used to pay such contributions every
year all through life to their Levites, to whom were due various tithes
from all kinds of produce; whereas baptism is a sacrament of such a
nature as is administered once for all, and if one had already received
it when in his father, he must be considered as no other than baptized,
since he was born of a man who had been himself baptized. Well, whoever
thus argues (I will simply say, without discussing the point at
length,) should look at circumcision, which was administered once for
all, and yet was administered to each person separately and
individually. Just as therefore it was necessary in the time of that
ancient sacrament for the son of a circumcised man to be himself
circumcised, so now the son of one who has been baptized must himself
also receive baptism.
CHAP. 41.-- CHILDREN OF BELIEVERS ARE CALLED "CLEAN" BY THE APOSTLE.[1]
The apostle indeed says, "Else were your children unclean, but now are
they holy;" [2] and "therefore" they infer "there was no necessity for
the children of believers to be baptized." I am surprised at the use of
such language by persons who deny that original sin has been
transmitted from Adam. For, if they take this passage of the apostle to
mean that the children of believers are born in a state of holiness,
how is it that even they have no doubt about the necessity of their
being baptized? Why, in fine, do they refuse to admit that any original
sin is derived from a sinful parent, if some holiness is received from
a holy parent? Now it certainly does not contravene our assertion, even
if from the faithful "holy" children are propagated, when we hold that
unless they are baptized those go into damnation, to whom our opponents
themselves shut the kingdom of heaven, although they
insist that they are without sin, whether actual or original.[3] Or, if
they think it an unbecoming thing for "holy ones" to be damned, how can
it be a becoming thing to exclude "holy ones" from the kingdom of God?
They should rather pay especial attention to this point, How can
something sinful help being derived from sinful parents, if something
holy is derived from holy parents, and uncleanness from unclean
parents? For the twofold principle was affirmed when he said, "Else
were your children unclean, but now are they holy." They should also
explain to us how it is right that the holy children of believers and
the unclean children of unbelievers are, notwithstanding their
different circumstances, equally prohibited from entering the kingdom
of God, if they have not been baptized. What avails that sanctity of
theirs to the one? Now if they were to maintain that the unclean
children of
unbelievers are damned, but that the holy children of believers are
unable to enter the kingdom of heaven unless they are baptized, -- but
nevertheless are not damned, because they are "holy," --that would be
some sort of a distinction; but as it is, they equally declare
respecting the holy children of holy parents and the unclean offspring
of unclean parents, that they are not damned, since they have not any
sin; and that they are excluded from the kingdom of God because they
are unbaptized. What an absurdity! Who can suppose that such splendid
geniuses do not perceive it?
CHAP. 42.--SANCTIFICATION MANIFOLD; SACRAMENT OF CATECHUMENS.
Our opinions on this point are strictly in unison with the apostle's
himself, who said, "From one all to condemnation," and "from one all to
justification of life." [4] Now how consistent these statements are
with what he elsewhere says, when treating of another point, "Else were
your children unclean, but now are they holy," consider a while.
[XXVI.] Sanctification is not of merely one measure; for even
catechumens, I take it, are sanctified in their own measure by the sign
of Christ, and the prayer of imposition of hands; and what they receive
is holy, although it is not the body of Christ, -- holier than any food
which constitutes our ordinary nourishment, because it is a
sacrament.[5] However, that very meat and drink, wherewithal the
necessities of our present life are sustained, are, according to the
same apostle, "sanctified by the word of God and prayer," [6] even the
prayer
with which we beg that our bodies may be refreshed. Just as therefore
this sanctification of our ordinary food does not hinder what enters
the mouth from descending into the belly, and being ejected into the
draught,[7]] and partaking of the corruption into which everything
earthly is resolved, whence the Lord exhorts us to labour for the other
food which never perishes: [8] so the sanctification of the catechumen,
if he is not baptized, does not avail for his entrance into the kingdom
of heaven, nor for the remission of his sins. And, by parity of
reasoning, that sanctification likewise, of whatever measure it be,
which, according to the apostle, is in the children of believers, has
nothing whatever to do with the question of baptism and of the origin
or the remission of sin.[9] The apostle, in this very passage which has
occupied our attention, says that the unbeliever of a married
couple is sanctified by a believing partner: "For the unbelieving
husband is sanctified by the wife, and the unbelieving wife is
sanctified by the husband. Else were your children unclean, but now are
they holy."[2] Now, I should say, there is not a man whose mind is so
warped by unbelief, as to suppose that, whatever sense he gives to
these words, they can possibly mean that a husband who is not a
Christian should not be baptized, because his wife is a Christian, and
that he has already obtained remission of his sins, with the certain
prospect of entering the kingdom of heaven, because he is described as
being sanctified by his wife.
CHAP. 43 [XXVII.] --WHY THE CHILDREN OF THE BAPTIZED SHOULD BE BAPTIZED.
If any man, however, is still perplexed by the question why the
children of baptized persons are baptized, let him briefly consider
this: Inasmuch as the generation of sinful flesh through the one man,
Adam, draws into condemnation all who are born of such generation, so
the generation of the Spirit of grace through the one man Jesus Christ,
draws to the justification of eternal life all who, because
predestinated, partake of this regeneration. But the sacrament of
baptism is undoubtedly the sacrament of regenation: Wherefore, as the
man who has never lived cannot die, and he who has never died cannot
rise again, so he who has never been born cannot be born again. From
which the conclusion arises, that no one who has not been born could
possibly have been born again in his father. Born again, however, a man
must be, after he has been born; because, "Except a man be born again,
he
cannot see the kingdom of God "' Even an infant, therefore, must be
imbued with the sacrament of regeneration, lest without it his would be
an unhappy exit out of this life; and this baptism is not administered
except for the remission of sins. And so much does Christ show us in
this very passage; for when asked, How could such things be? He
reminded His questioner of what Moses did when he lifted up the
serpent. Inasmuch, then, as infants are by the sacrament of baptism
conformed to the death of Christ, it must be admitted that they are
also freed from the serpent's poisonous bite, unless we wilfully wander
from the rule of the Christian faith. This bite, however, they did not
receive in their own actual life, but in him on whom the wound was
primarily inflicted.
CHAP. 44. --AN OBJECTION OF THE PELAGIANS.
Nor do they fail to see this point, that his own sins are no detriment
to the parent after his conversion; they therefore raise the question:
"How much more impossible is it that they should be a hinderance to his
son?" But they who thus think do not attend to this consideration, that
as his own sins are not injurious to the father for the very reason
that he is born again of the Spirit, so in the case of his son, unless
he be in the same manner born again, the sins which he derived from his
father will prove injurious to him. Because even renewed parents beget
children, not out of the first-fruits of their renewed condition, but
carnally out of the remains of the old nature; and the children who are
thus the offspring of their parents' remaining old nature, and are born
in sinful flesh, escape from the condemnation which is due to the old
man by the sacrament of spiritual
regeneration and renewal. Now this is a consideration which, on account
of the controversies that have arisen, and may still arise, on this
subject, we ought to keep in our view and memory, -- that a full and
perfect remission of sins takes place only in baptism, that the
character of the actual man does I not at once undergo a total change,
but that the first-fruits of the Spirit in such as walk worthily change
the old carnal nature into one of like character by a process of
renewal, which increases day by day, until the entire old nature is so
renovated that the very weakness of the natural body attains to the
strength and incorruptibility of the spiritual body.
CHAP.
45 [XXVIII.]-- THE LAW OF SIX IS CALLED SIN; HOW CONCUPISCENCE STILL
REMAINS AFTER ITS EVIL HAS BEEN REMOVED IN THE BAPTIZED.
This law of sin, however, which the apostle also designates "sin," when
he says, "Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal body, that ye
should obey it in the lusts thereof,'' [2] does not so remain in the
members of those who are born again of water and the Spirit, as if no
remission thereof has been made, because there is a full and perfect
remission of our sins, all the enmity being slain, which separated us
from God; but it remains in our old carnal nature, as if overcome and
destroyed, if it does not, by consenting to unlawful objects, somehow
revive, and recover its own reign and dominion. There is, however, so
clear a distinction to be seen between this old carnal nature, in which
the law of sin, or sin, is already repealed, and that life of the
Spirit, in the newness of which they who are baptized are through God's
grace born again, that the apostle deemed it too little to
say of such that they were not in sin; unless he also said that they
were not in the flesh itself, even before they departed out of this
mortal life. "They that are in the flesh," says he, "cannot please God;
but ye are not in the flesh, but in the Spirit, if so be that the
Spirit of God dwell in you." [3] And indeed, as they turn to good
account the flesh itself, however corruptible it be, who apply its
members to good works, and no longer are in that flesh, since they do
not mould their understanding nor their life according to its
principles; and as they in like manner make even a good use of death,
which is the penalty of the first sin, who encounter it with fortitude
and patience for their brethren's sake, and for the faith, and in
defence of whatever is true and holy and just, -- so also do all "true
yokefellows" in the faith turn to good account that very law of sin
which still
remains, though remitted, in their old carnal nature, who, because they
have the new life in Christ, do not permit lust to have dominion over
them. And yet these very persons, because they still carry about Adam's
old nature, mortally generate children to be immortally regenerated,
with that propagation of sin, in which such as are born again are not
held bound, and from which such as are born are released by being born
again. As long, then, as the law by concupiscence [1] dwells in the
members, although it remains, the guilt of it is released; but it is
released only to him who has received the sacrament of regeneration,
and has already begun to be renewed. But whatsoever is born of the old
nature, which still abides with its concupiscence, requires to be born
again in order to be healed. Seeing that believing parents, who have
been both carnally born and spiritually born again, have
themselves begotten children in a carnal manner, how could their
children by any possibility, previous to their first birth, have been
born again?
CHAP. 46. 2-- GUILT MAY BE TAKEN AWAY BUT CONCUPISCENCE REMAIN.
You must not be surprised at what I have said, that although the law of
sin remains with its concupiscence, the guilt thereof is done away
through the grace of the sacrament. For as wicked deeds, and words, and
thoughts have already passed away, and cease to exist, so far as
regards the mere movements of the mind and the body, and yet their
guilt remains after they have passed away and no longer exist, unless
it be done away by the remission of sins; so, contrariwise, in this law
of concupiscence, which is not yet done away but still remains, its
guilt is done away, and continues no longer, since in baptism there
takes place a full forgiveness of sins. Indeed, if a man were to quit
this present life immediately after his baptism, there would be nothing
at all left to hold him liable, inasmuch as all which held him is
released. As, on the one hand, therefore, there is nothing strange
in the fact that the guilt of past sins of thought, and word, and deed
remains before their remission; so, on the other hand, there ought to
be nothing to create surprise, that the guilt of remaining
concupiscence passes away after the remission of sin.
CHAP. 47 [XXIX.]--ALL THE PREDESTINATED ARE SAVED THROUGH THE ONE MEDIATOR CHRIST, AND BY ONE AND THE SAME FAITH.
This being the case, ever since the time when by one man sin thus
entered into this world and death by sin, and so it passed through to
all men, up to the end of this carnal generation and perishing world,
the children of which beget and are begotten, there never has existed,
nor ever Will exist, a human being of whom, placed in this life of
ours, it could be said that he had no sin at all, with the exception of
the one Mediator, who reconciles us to our Maker through the
forgiveness of sins. Now this same Lord of ours has never yet refused,
at any period of the human race, nor to the last judgment will He ever
refuse, this His healing to those whom, in His most sure foreknowledge
and future loving-kindness, He has predestinated to reign with Himself
to life eternal. For, previous to His birth in the flesh, and weakness
in suffering, and power in His own resurrection, He instructed
all who then lived, in the faith of those then future blessings, that
they might inherit everlasting life; whilst those who were alive when
all these things were being accomplished in Christ, and who were
witnessing the fulfilment of prophecy, He instructed in the faith of
these then present blessings; whilst again, those who have since lived,
and ourselves who are now alive, and all those who are yet to live, He
does not cease to instruct, in the faith of these now past blessings.
It is therefore "one faith" which saves all, who after their carnal
birth are born again of the Spirit, and it terminates in Him, who came
to be judged for us and to die,-- the Judge of quick and dead. But the
sacraments of this "one faith" are varied from time to time in order to
its suitable signification.
CHAP. 48.--CHRIST THE SAVIOUR EVEN OF INFANTS; CHRIST, WHEN AN INFANT, WAS FREE FROM IGNORANCE AND MENTAL WEAKNESS.
He is therefore the Saviour at once of infants and of adults, of whom
the angel said, "There is born unto you this day a Saviour;" [3] and
concerning whom it was declared to the Virgin Mary,[4] "Thou shalt call
His name Jesus, for He shall save His people from their sins," where it
is plainly shown that He was called Jesus because of the salvation
which He bestows upon us,--Jesus being tantamount to the Latin
Salvator, "Saviour." Who then can be so bold as to maintain that the
Lord Christ is Jesus only for adults and not for infants also? who came
in the likeness of sinful flesh, to destroy the body of sin, with
infants' limbs fitted and suitable for no use in the extreme weakness
of such body, and His rational soul oppressed with miserable ignorance!
Now that such entire ignorance existed, I cannot suppose in the infant
in whom the Word was made flesh, that He might dwell among us;
nor can I imagine that such weakness of the mental faculty ever existed
in the infant Christ which we see in infants generally. For it is owing
to such infirmity and ignorance that infants are disturbed with
irrational affections, and are restrained by no rational command or
government, but by pains and penalties, or the terror of such; so that
you can quite see that they are children of that disobedience, which
excites itself in the members of our body in opposition to the law of
the mind,-- and refuses to be still, even when the reason wishes; nay,
often is either repressed only by some actual infliction of bodily
pain, as for instance by flogging; or is checked only by fear, or by
some such mental emotion, but not by any admonishing of the will.
Inasmuch, however, as in Him there was the likeness of sinful flesh, He
willed to pass through the changes of the various stages of life,
beginning even with infancy, so that it would seem as if even His flesh
might have arrived at death by the gradual approach of old age, if He
had not been killed while young. Nevertheless, the death is inflicted
in sinful flesh as the due of disobedience, but in the likeness of
sinful flesh it was undergone in voluntary obedience. For when He was
on His way to it, and was soon to suffer it, He said, "Behold, the
prince of this world cometh, and hath nothing in me. But that all may
know that I am doing my Father's will, arise, let us go hence."[1]
Having said these words, He went straightway, and encountered His
undeserved death, having become obedient even unto death.
CHAP. 49 [XXX.]--AN OBJECTION OF THE PELAGIANS.
They therefore who say, "If through the sin of the first man it was
brought about that we must die, by the coming of Christ it should be
brought about that, believing in Him, we shall not die; "and they add
what they deem a reason, saying, "For the sin of the first transgressor
could not possibly have injured us more than the incarnation or
redemption of the Saviour has benefited us." But why do they not rather
give an attentive ear, and an unhesitating belief, to that which the
apostle has stated so unambiguously: "Since by man came death, by Man
came also the resurrection of the dead; for as in Adam all die, even so
in Christ shall all be made alive?"[2] For it is of nothing else than
of the resurrection of the body that he was speaking. Having said that
the bodily death of all men has come about through one man, he adds the
promise that the bodily resurrection of all men to
eternal life shall happen through one, even Christ. How can it
therefore be that "the one has injured us more by sinning than the
other has benefited us by redeeming," when by the sin of the former we
die a temporal death, but by the redemption of the latter we rise again
not to a temporal, but to a perpetual life? Our body, therefore, is
dead because of sin, but Christ's body only died without sin, in order
that, having poured out His blood without fault, "the bonds" [3] which
contain the register of all faults "might be blotted out," by which
they who now believe in Him were formerly held as debtors by the devil.
And accordingly He says, "This is my blood, which is shed for many for
the remission of sins." [4]]
CHAP. 50 [XXXI.]--WHY IT IS THAT DEATH ITSELF IS NOT ABOLISHED, ALONG WITH SIN, BY BAPTISM.
He might, however, have also conferred this upon believers, that they
should not even experience the death of their body. But if He had done
this, there might no doubt have been l added a certain felicity to the
flesh, but the fortitude of faith would have been diminished; for men
have such a fear of death, that they would declare Christians happy,
for nothing else than their mere immunity from dying. And no one would,
for the sake of that life which is to be so happy after death, hasten
to the grace of Christ by the power of his contempt of death itself;
but with a view to remove the trouble of death, would rather resort to
a more delicate mode of believing in Christ. More grace, therefore,
than this has He conferred on those who believe on Him; and a greater
gift, undoubtedly, has He vouchsafed to them! What great matter would
it have been for a man, on seeing that people did not
die when they became believers, himself also to believe that he was not
to die? How much greater a thing is it, how much braver, how much more
laudable, so to believe, that although one is sure to die, he can still
hope to live hereafter for evermore! At last, upon some there will be
bestowed this blessing at the last day, that they shall not feel death
itself in sudden change, but shall be caught up along with the risen in
the clouds to meet Christ in the air, and so shall they ever live with
the Lord.[5] And rightly shall it be these who receive this grace,
since there will be no posterity after them to be led to believe, not
by the hope of what they see not, but by the love of what they see.
This faith is weak and nerveless, and must not be called faith at all,
inasmuch as faith is thus defined: "Faith is the firmness of those who
hope,[6] the clear proof of things which they do not
see." [7] Accordingly, in the same Epistle to the Hebrews, where this
passage occurs, after enumerating in subsequent sentences certain
worthies who pleased God by their faith, he says: "These all died in
faith, not having received the promises, but seeing them afar off, and
hailing them, and confessing that they were strangers and pilgrims on
the earth."[2] And then afterwards he concluded his eulogy on faith in
these words: "And these all, having obtained a good report through
faith, did not indeed receive Go |
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