In the beginning the writer sets forth what is the Catholic faith
concerning law, concerning free will, and concerning grace. He teaches
that the grace of God by Jesus Christ is that by which alone men are
delivered from evil, and without which they do absolutely no good; and
this not only by the fact that it points out what is to be done, but
that it also supplies the means of doing it with love, since God bestows
on men the inspiration of a good will and deed. He teaches that the
rebuke of evil men who have not received this grace is neither unjust—since
they are evil by their own will—nor useless, although it must be
confessed that it is only by God's agency that it can avail. That
perseverance in good is truly a great gift of God, but that still the
rebuke of one who has not persevered must not on that account be
neglected; and that if a man who has not received this gift should
relapse of his own will into sin, he is not only deserving of rebuke,
but if he should continue in evil until his death, he is moreover worthy
of eternal damnation. That it is inscrutable why one should receive this
gift and another should not receive it. That of those who are
predestinated none can perish. And that the perseverance, which all do
not receive who are here called children of God, is constantly given to
all those who are truly children by God's foreknowledge and
predestination. He answers the question which suggests itself concerning
Adam—in what way he sinned by not persevering, since he did not
receive perseverance. He shows that such assistance was at the first
given to him, as that without it he could not continue if he would, not
as that with it it must result that he would. But that now through
Christ is given us not only such help as that without it we cannot
continue even if we will, but moreover such and so great as that by it
we will. He proves that the number of the predestinated, to whom a gift
of this kind is appropriated, is certain, and can neither be increased
nor diminished. And since it is unknown who belongs to that number, and
who does not, that medicinal rebuke must be applied to all who sin, lest
they should either themselves perish, or be the ruin of others. Finally,
he concludes that neither is rebuke prohibited by grace, nor is grace
denied by rebuke.
Chap. 1 [I.]—Introductory.
I HAVE read your letter—Valentine, my dearly beloved brother, and
you who are associated with him in the service of God—which your Love
sent by brother Florus and those who came to us with him; and I gave God
thanks that I have known your peace in the Lord and agreement in the
truth and ardour in love, by your discourse delivered to us. But that an
enemy has striven among you to the subversion of some, has, by the mercy
of God and His marvellous goodness in turning his arts to the advantage1
of His servants, rather availed to this result,
that while none of you were cast down for the worse, some were built up
for the better. There is therefore no need to reconsider again and again
all that I have already transmitted to you, sufficiently argued out in a
lengthy treatise; for your replies indicate how you have received this.
Nevertheless, do not in any wise suppose that, when once read, it can
have become sufficiently well known to you. Therefore if you desire to
have it exceedingly productive, do not count it a grievance by
re-perusal to make it thoroughly familiar; so that you may most
accurately know what and what kind of questions they are, for the
solution and satisfaction of which there arises an authority not human
but divine, from which we ought not to depart if we desire to attain to
the point whither we are tending.
Chap. 2.—The Catholic faith concerning law, grace, and free will.
Now the Lord Himself not only shows us what evil we should shun, and
what good we should do, which is all that the letter of the law is able
to effect; but He moreover helps us that we may shun evil and do good,
which none can do without the Spirit of grace; and if this be wanting,
the law comes in merely to make us guilty and to slay us. It is on this
account that the apostle says, "The letter killeth, but the Spirit
giveth life." He, then, who lawfully uses the law learns therein
evil and good, and, not trusting in his own strength, flees to grace, by
the help of which he may shun evil and do good. But who is there who
flees to grace except when "the steps of a man are ordered by the
Lord, and He shall determine his way"? And thus also to desire the
help of grace is the beginning of grace; of which, says he, "And I
said, Now I have begun; this is the change of the right hand of the Most
High." It is to be confessed, therefore, that we have free choice
to do both evil and good; but in doing evil every one is free from
righteousness and a servant of sin, while in doing good no one can be
free, unless he have been made free by Him who said, "If the Son
shall make you free, then you shall be free indeed." Neither is it
thus, that when any one has been made free from the dominion of sin, he
no longer needs the help of his Deliverer; but rather thus, that hearing
from Him, "Without me ye can do nothing," he himself also says
to Him, "Be thou my helper! Forsake me not." I rejoice that I
have found in our brother Florus also this faith, which without doubt is
the true and prophetical and apostolical and catholic faith; whence
those are the rather to be corrected—whom indeed I now think to have
been corrected by the favour of God—who did not understand him.
Chap. 3 [II.]—What the grace of God through
Jesus Christ is.
For the grace of God through Jesus Christ our Lord must be
apprehended,—as that by which alone men are delivered from evil, and
without which they do absolutely no good thing, whether in thought, or
will and affection, or in action; not only in order that they may know,
by the manifestation of that grace, what should be done, but moreover in
order that, by its enabling, they may do with love what they know.
Certainly the apostle asked for this inspiration of good will and work
on behalf of those to whom he said, "Now we pray to God that ye do
no evil, not that we should appear approved, but that ye should do that
which is good." Who can hear this and not awake and confess that we
have it from the Lord God that we turn aside from evil and do good?—since
the apostle indeed says not, We admonish, we teach, we exhort, we
rebuke; but he says, "We pray to God that ye do no evil, but that
ye should do that which is good." And yet he was also in the habit
of speaking to them, and doing all those things which I have mentioned,—he
admonished, he taught, he exhorted, he rebuked. But he knew that all
these things which he Was doing in the way of planting and watering
openly were of no avail unless He who giveth the increase in secret
should give heed to his prayer on their behalf. Because, as the same
teacher of the Gentiles says, "Neither is he that planteth
anything, neither he that watereth, but God that giveth the
increase."
Chap. 4—The children of God are led by the Spirit of God.
Let those, therefore, not deceive themselves who ask, "Wherefore
is it preached and prescribed to us that we should turn away from evil
and do good, if it is not we that do this, but 'God who worketh in us to
will and to do it'?" But let them rather understand that if they
are the children of God, they are led by the Spirit of God to do that
which should be done; and when they have done it, let them give thanks
to Him by whom they act. For they are acted upon that they may act, not
that they may themselves do nothing; and in addition to this, it is
shown them what they ought to do, so that when they have done it as it
ought to be done—that is, with the love and the delight of
righteousness—they may rejoice in having received "the sweetness
which the Lord has given, that their land should yield her increase.''
But when they do not act, whether by not doing at all or by not doing
from love, let them pray that what as yet they have not, they may
receive. For what shall they have which they shall not receive? or what
have they which they have not received?
Chap. 5 [III.]—Rebuke must not be neglected.
"Then," say they, "let those who are over us only
prescribe to us what we ought to do, and pray for us that we may do it;
but let them not rebuke and censure us if we should not do it."
Certainly let all be done, since the teachers of the churches, the
apostles, were in the habit of doing all,—as well prescribing what
things should be done, as rebuking if they were not done, and praying
that they might be done. The apostle prescribes, saying, "Let all
your things be done with love." He rebukes, saying, "Now
therefore there is utterly a fault among you, because ye have judgments
among yourselves. For why do ye not rather suffer wrong? Why are ye not
rather defrauded? Nay, ye do wrong and defraud; and that, your brethren.
Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not possess the kingdom of
God?" Let us hear him also praying: "And the Lord," says
he, "multiply you, and make you to abound in love one towards
another and towards all men." He prescribes, that love should be
maintained; he rebukes, because love is not maintained; he prays, that
love may abound. O man! learn by his precept what you ought to have;
learn by his rebuke that it is by your own fault that you have it not;
learn by his prayer whence you may receive what you desire to have.
Chap. 6 [IV.] —Objections to the use of
rebuke.
"How," says he," "is it my fault that I have not
what I have not received from Him, when unless it is given by Him, there
is no other at all whence such and so great a gift can be had?"
Suffer me a little, my brethren, not as against you whose heart is right
with God, but as against those who mind earthly things, or as against
those human modes of thinking themselves, to contend for the truth, of
the heavenly and divine grace. For they who say this are such as in
their wicked works are unwilling to be rebuked by those who proclaim
this grace. "Prescribe to me what I shall do, and if I should do
it, give thanks to God for me who has given me to do it; but if I do it
not, I must not be rebuked, but He must be besought to give what He has
not given; that is, that very believing love of God and of my neighbour
by which His precepts are observed. Pray, then, for me that I may
receive this, and may by its means do freely and with good will that
which He commands. But I should be justly rebuked if by my own fault I
had it not; that is, if I myself could give it to myself, or could
receive it, and did not do so, or if He should give it and I should be
unwilling to receive it. But since even the will itself is prepared by
the Lord, why dust thou rebuke me because thou seeest me unwilling to do
His precepts, and dust not rather ask Him Himself to work in me the will
also?"
Chap. 7 [V.]—The necessity and advantage of
rebuke.
To this we answer: Whoever you are that do not the commandments of
God that are already known to you, and do not wish to be rebuked, you
must be rebuked even for that very reason that you do not wish to be
rebuked. For you do not wish that your faults should be pointed out to
you; you do not wish that they should be touched, and that such a useful
pain should be caused you that you may seek the Physician; you do not
desire to be shown to yourself, that, when you see yourself to be
deformed, you may wish for the Reformer, and may supplicate Him that you
may not continue in that repulsiveness. For it is your fault that you
are evil; and it is a greater fault to be unwilling to be rebuked
because you are evil, as if faults should either be praised, or regarded
with indifference so as neither to be praised nor blamed, or as if,
indeed, the dread, or the shame or the mortification of the rebuked man
were of no avail, or were of any other avail in healthfully stimulating,
except to cause that He who is good may be besought, and so out of evil
men who are rebuked may make good men who may be praised. For what he
who will not be rebuked desires to be done for him, when he says,
"Pray for me rather,"—he must be rebuked for that very
reason that he may himself also do for himself; because that
mortification with which he is dissatisfied with himself when he feels
the sting of rebuke, stirs him up to a desire for more earnest prayer,
that, by God's mercy, he may be aided by the increase of love, and cease
to do things which are shameful and mortifying, and do things
praiseworthy and gladdening. This is the benefit of rebuke that is
wholesomely applied, sometimes with greater, sometimes with less
severity, in accordance with the diversity of sins; and it is then
wholesome when the supreme Physician looks. For it is of no profit
unless when it makes a man repent of his sin. And who gives this but He
who looked upon the Apostle Peter when he denied, and made him weep?
Whence also the Apostle Paul, after he said that they were to be rebuked
with moderation who thought otherwise, immediately added, "Lest
perchance God give them repentance, to the acknowledging of the truth,
and they recover themselves out of the snares of the devil."
Chap. 8.—Further replies to those who object to rebuke.
But wherefore do they, who are unwilling be rebuked, say, "Only
prescribe to me, and pray for me that I may do what you prescribe?"
Why do they not rather, in accordance with their own evil inclination,
reject these things also, and say, "I wish you neither to prescribe
to me, nor to pray for me"? For what man is shown to have prayed
for Peter, that God should give him the repentance wherewith he bewailed
the denial of his Lord? What man instructed Paul in the divine precepts
which pertain to the Christian faith? When, therefore, he was heard
preaching the gospel, and saying, "For I certify you, brethren,
that the gospel which was preached of me is not after man. For I neither
received it from man, nor did I learn it, but by the revelation of Jesus
Christ,"—would it be replied to him: "Why are you troubling
us to receive and to learn from you that which you have not received nor
learnt from man? He who gave to you is able also to give to us in like
manner as to you." Moreover, if they dare not say this, but suffer
the gospel to be preached to them by man, although it cannot be given to
man by man, let them concede also that they ought to be rebuked by those
who are set over them, by whom Christian grace is preached; although it
is not denied that God is able, even when no man rebukes, to correct
whom He will, and to lead him on to the wholesome mortification of
repentance by the most hidden and mighty power of His medicine. And as
we are not to cease from prayer on behalf of those whom we desire to be
corrected,—even although without any man's prayer on behalf of Peter,
the Lord looked upon him and caused him to bewail his sin,—so we must
not neglect rebuke, although God can make those whom He will to be
corrected, even when not rebuked. But a man then profits by rebuke when
He pities and aids who makes those whom He will to profit even without
rebuke. But wherefore these are called to be reformed in one way, those
in another way, and others in still another way, after different and
innumerable manners, be it far from us to assert that it is the business
of the clay to judge, but of the potter.
Chap. 9 [VI.]—Why they may justly be rebuked
who do not obey god, although they have not yet received the grace of
obedience.
"The apostle says," say they, "'For who maketh thee to
differ? And what hast thou that thou hast not received? Now also if thou
hast received it, why dost thou glory as if thou hadst not received it?'
Why, then, are we rebuked, censured, reproved, accused? What do we do,
we who have not received?" They who say this wish to appear without
blame in respect of their not obeying God, because assuredly obedience
itself is His gift; and that gift must of necessity be in him in whom
dwells love, which without doubt is of God, and the Father gives it to
His children. "This," say they, "we have not received.
Why, then, are we rebuked, as if we were able to give it to ourselves,
and of our own choice would not give it?" And they do not observe
that, if they are not yet regenerated, the first reason why, when they
are reproached because they are disobedient to God, they ought to be
dissatisfied with themselves is, that God made man upright from the
beginning of the human creation, and there is no unrighteousness with
God. And thus the first depravity, whereby God is not obeyed, is of man,
because, falling by his own evil will from the rectitude in which God at
first made him, he became depraved. Is, then, that depravity not to be
rebuked in a man because it is not peculiar to him who is rebuked, but
is common to all? Nay, let that also be rebuked in individuals, which is
common to all. For the circumstance that none is altogether free from it
is no reason why it should not attach to each man. Those original sins,
indeed, are said to be the sins of others, because individuals derived
them from their parents; but they are not unreasonably said to be our
own also, because in that one, as the apostle says, all have sinned.
Let, then, the damnable source be rebuked, that from the mortification
of rebuke may spring the will of regeneration,—if, indeed, he who is
rebuked is a child of promise,—in order that, by the noise of the
rebuke sounding and lashing from without, God may by His hidden
inspiration work in him from within to will also. If, however, being
already regenerate and justified, he relapses of his own will into an
evil life, assuredly he cannot say, "I have not received,"
because of his own free choice to evil he has lost the grace of God,
that he had received. And if, stung with compunction by rebuke, he
wholesomely bewails, and returns to similar good works, or even better,
certainly here most manifestly appears the advantage of rebuke. But yet
for rebuke by the agency of man to avail, whether it be of love or not,
depends only upon God.
Chap. 10—All perseverance is God's gift.
Is such an one as is unwilling to be rebuked still able to say,
"What have I done,—I who have not received?" when it appears
plainly that he has received, and by his own fault has lost that which
he has received? "I am able," says he, "I am altogether
able,—when you reprove me for having of my own will relapsed from a
good life into a bad one,—still to say, What have I done,—I who have
not received? For I have received faith, which worketh by love, but I
have not received perseverance therein to the end. Will any one dare to
say that this perseverance is not the gift of God, and that so great a
possession as this is ours in such wise that if any one have it the
apostle could not say to him, 'For what hast thou which thou hast not
received?' since he has this in such a manner as that he has not
received it?" To this, indeed, we are not able to deny, that
perseverance in good, progressing even to the end, is also a great gift
of God; and that it exists not save it come from Him of whom it is
written, "Every best gift and every perfect gift is from above,
coming down from the Father of lights." But the rebuke of him who
has not persevered must not on that account be neglected, "lest God
perchance give unto him repentance, and he recover from the snares of
the devil;" since to the usefulness of rebuke the apostle has
subjoined this decision, saying, as I have above mentioned,
"Rebuking with moderation those that think differently, lest at any
time God give them repentance." For if we should say that such a
perseverance, so laudable and so blessed, is man's in such wise as that
he has it not from God, we first of all make void that which the Lord
says to Peter: "I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail
not." For what did He ask for him, but perseverance to the end? And
assuredly, if a man could have this from man, it should not have been
asked from God. Then when the apostle says, "Now we pray to God
that ye do no evil," beyond a doubt he prays to God on their behalf
for perseverance. For certainly he does not "do no evil" who
forsakes good, and, not persevering in good, turns to the evil, from
which he ought to turn aside. In that place, moreover, where he says,
"I thank my God in every remembrance of you, always in every prayer
of mine for you all making quest with joy for your fellowship in the
gospel from the first day until now, being confident of this very thing,
that He who has begun a good work in you will perform it until the day
of Jesus Christ,"—what else does he promise to them from the
mercy of God than perseverance in good to the end? And again where he
says, "Epaphras saluteth you, who is one of you, a servant of
Christ Jesus, always striving for you in prayer, that you may stand
perfect and fulfilled in all the will of God,"—what is "that
you may stand" but "that you may persevere"? Whence it
was said of the devil, "He stood not in the truth;" because he
was there, but he did not continue. For assuredly those were already
standing in the faith. And when we pray that he who stands may stand, we
do not pray for anything else than that he may persevere. Jude the
apostle, again, when he says, "Now unto Him that is able to keep
you without offence, and to establish you before the presence of His
glory, immaculate in joy," does he not most manifestly show that
perseverance in good unto the end is God's gift? For what but a good
perseverance does He give who preserves without offence that He may
place before the presence of His glory immaculate in joy? What is it,
moreover, that we read in the Acts of the Apostles: "And when the
Gentiles heard, they rejoiced and received the word of the Lord; and as
many as were ordained to eternal life believed"? Who could be
ordained to eternal life save by the gift of perseverance? And when we
read, "He that shall persevere unto the end shall be saved;"
with what salvation but eternal? And when, in the Lord's Prayer, we say
to God the Father, "Hallowed be Thy name," what do we ask but
that His name may be hallowed in us? And as this is already accomplished
by means of the layer of regeneration, why is it daily asked by
believers, except that we may persevere in that which is already done in
us? For the blessed Cyprian also understands this in this manner,
inasmuch as, in his exposition of the same prayer, he says: "We
say, 'Hallowed be Thy name,' not that we wish for God that He may be
hallowed by our prayers, but that we ask of God that His name may be
hallowed in us. But by whom is God hallowed; since He Himself hallows?
Well, because He said, 'Be ye holy, since I also am holy;' we ask and
entreat that we who have been hallowed in baptism may persevere in that
which we have begun to be." Behold the most glorious martyr is of
this opinion, that what in these words Christ's faithful people are
daily asking is, that they may persevere in that which they have begun
to be. And no one need doubt, but that whosoever prays from the Lord
that he may persevere in good, confesses thereby that such perseverance
is His gift.
Chap. 11 [VII.]—They who have not received
the gift of perseverance, and have relapsed into mortal sin and have
died therein, must righteously be condemned.
If, then, these things be so, we still rebuke those, and reasonably
rebuke them, who, although they were living well, have not persevered
therein; because they have of their own will been changed from a good to
an evil life, and on that account are worthy of rebuke; and if rebuke
should be of no avail to them, and they should persevere in their ruined
life until death, they are also worthy of divine condemnation for ever.
Neither shall they excuse themselves, saying,—as now they say,
"Wherefore are we rebuked?"—so then, "Wherefore are we
condemned, since indeed, that we might return from good to evil, we did
not receive that perseverance by which we should abide in good?"
They shall by no means deliver themselves by this excuse from righteous
condemnation. For if, according to the word of truth, no one is
delivered from the condemnation which was incurred through Adam except
through the faith of Jesus Christ, and yet from this condemnation they
shall not deliver themselves who shall be able to say that they have not
heard the gospel of Christ, on the ground that "faith cometh by
hearing," how much less shall they deliver themselves who shall
say, "We have not received perseverance!" For the excuse of
those who say, "We have not received hearing," seems more
equitable than that of those who say, "We have not received
perseverance;" since it may be said, O man, in that which thou
hadst heard and kept, in that thou mightest persevere if thou wouldest;
but in no wise can it be said, That which thou hadst not heard thou
mightest believe if thou wouldest.
Chap. 12.—They who have not received perseverance are not
distinguished from the mass of those that are lost.
And, consequently, both those who have not heard the gospel, and
those who, having heard it and been changed by it for the better, have
not received perseverance, and those who, having heard the gospel, have
refused to come to Christ, that is, to believe on Him, since He Himself
says, "No man cometh unto me, except it were given him of my
Father," and those who by their tender age were unable to believe,
but might be absolved from original sin by the sole layer of
regeneration, and yet have not received this laver, and have perished in
death: are not made to differ from that lump which it is plain is
condemned, as all go from one into condemnation. Some are made to
differ, however, not by their own merits, but by the grace of the
Mediator; that is to say, they are justified freely in the blood of the
second Adam. Therefore, when we hear, "For who maketh thee to
differ? and what hast thou that thou hast not received? Now, if thou
hast received it, why dost thou glory as if thou hadst not received
it?" we ought to understand that from that mass of perdition which
originated through the first Adam, no one can be made to differ except
he who has this gift, which whosoever has, has received by the grace of
the Saviour. And this apostolical testimony is so great, that the
blessed Cyprian writing to Quirinus put it in the place of a title, when
he says, "That we must boast in nothing, since nothing is our
own."
Chap. 13.—Election is of grace, not of merit.
Whosoever, then, are made to differ from that original condemnation
by such bounty of divine grace, there is no doubt but that for such it
is provided that they should hear the gospel, and when they hear they
believe, and in the faith which worketh by love they persevere unto the
end; and if, perchance, they deviate from the way, when they are rebuked
they are amended and some of them, although they may not be rebuked by
men, return into the path which they had left; and some who have
received grace in any age whatever are withdrawn from the perils of this
life by swiftness of death. For He worketh all these things in them who
made them vessels of mercy, who also elected them in His Son before the
foundation of the world by the election of grace: "And if by grace,
then is it no more of works, otherwise grace is no more grace." For
they were not so called as not to be elected, in respect of which it is
said, "For many are called but few are elected;" but because
they were called according to the purpose, they are of a certainty also
elected by the election, as it is said, of grace, not of any precedent
merits of theirs, because to them grace is all merit.
Chap. 14.—None of the elect and predestinated can perish.
Of such says the apostle, "We know that to those that love God
He worketh together all things for good, to them who are called
according to His purpose; because those whom He before foreknew, He also
did predestinate to be conformed to the image of His Son, that He might
be the first-born among many brethren. Moreover, whom He did
predestinate, them He also called; and whom He called, them He also
justified; and whom He justified, them He also glorified." Of these
no one perishes, because all are elected. And they are elected because
they were called according to the purpose—the purpose, however, not
their own, but God's; of which He elsewhere says, "That the purpose
of God according to election might stand, not of works, but of Him that
calleth, it was said unto her that the elder shall serve the
younger." And in another place he says, "Not according to our
works, but according to His own purpose and grace." When,
therefore, we hear," Moreover, whom He did predestinate, them He
also called," we ought to acknowledge that they were called
according to His purpose; since He thence began, saying, "He
worketh together all things for good to those who are called according
to His purpose," and then added, "Because those whom He before
foreknew, He also did predestinate, to be conformed to the image of His
Son, that He might be the first-born among many brethren And to these
promises He added, "Moreover, whom, He did predestinate, them He
also called." He wishes these, therefore, to be understood whom He
called according to His purpose, lest any among them should be thought
to be called and not elected, on account of that sentence of the Lord's:
"Many the called but few are elected." For whoever are elected
are without doubt also called; but not whosoever are called are as a
consequence elected. Those, then, are elected, as has often been said,
who are called according to the purpose, who also are predestinated and
foreknown. If any one of these perishes, God is mistaken; but none of
them perishes, because God is not mistaken. If any one of these perish,
God is overcome by human sin; but none of them perishes, because God is
overcome by nothing. Moreover, they are elected to reign with Christ,
not as Judas was elected, to a work for which he was fitted. Because he
was chosen by Him who well knew how to make use even of wicked men, so
that even by his damnable deed that venerable work, for the sake of
which He Himself had come, might be accomplished. When, therefore, we
hear, "Have not I chosen you twelve, and one of you is a
devil?" we ought to understand that the rest were elected by mercy,
but he by judgment; those to obtain His kingdom, he to shed His blood!
Chap. 15.—Perseverance is given to the end.
Rightly follows the word to the kingdom of the elect: "If God be
for us, who can be against us? He that spared not His own Son, but
delivered Him up for us all, how has He not also with Him given us all
things? Who shall lay anything to the charge of God's elect? God who
justifieth? Who condemneth? Christ who died? yea, rather who rose again
also, who is at the right hand of God, who also soliciteth on our
behalf?" And of how stedfast a perseverance even to the end they
have received the gift, let them follow on to say: "Who shall
separate us from the love of Christ? shall tribulation, or distress, or
persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword? As it is
written, Because for thy sake we are killed all the day long, we are
accounted as sheep for the slaughter. But in all these things we are
more than conquerors, through Him that hath loved us. For I am certain,
that neither death, nor life, nor angel, nor principality, nor things
present, nor things to come, nor power, nor height, nor depth, nor any
other creature, shall be able to separate us from the love of God which
is in Christ Jesus our Lord."
Chap. 16.—Whosoever do not persevere are not distinguished from the
mass of perdition by predestination.
Such as these were they who were signified to Timothy, where, when it
had been said that Hymenaeus and Philetus had subverted the faith of
some, it is presently added, "Nevertheless the foundation of God
standeth sure, having this seal, The Lord has known them that are
His." The faith of these, which worketh by love, either actually
does not fail at all, or, if there are any whose faith fails, it is
restored before their life is ended, and the iniquity which had
intervened is done away, and perseverance even to the end is allotted to
them. But they who are not to persevere, and who shall so fall away from
Christian faith and conduct that the end of this life shall find them in
that case, beyond all doubt are not to be reckoned in the number of
these, even in that season wherein they are living well and piously. For
they are not made to differ from that mass of perdition by the
foreknowledge and predestination of God, and therefore are not called
according to God's purpose, and thus are not elected; but are called
among those of whom it was said, "Many are called," not among
those of whom it was said, "But few are elected." And yet who
can deny that they are elect, since they believe and are baptized, and
live according to God? Manifestly, they are called elect by those who
are ignorant of what they shall be, but not by Him who knew that they
would not have the perseverance which leads the elect forward into the
blessed life, and knows that they so stand, as that He has foreknown
that they will fall.
Chap. 17 [VIII.]—Why perseverance should be
given to one and not another is inscrutable.
Here, if I am asked why God should not have given them perseverance
to whom He gave that love by which they might live Christianly, I answer
that I do not know. For I do not speak arrogantly, but with
acknowledgment of my small measure, when I hear the apostle saying,
"O man, who art thou that repliest against God?" and, "O
the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how
unsearchable are His judgments, and His ways untraceable!" So far,
therefore, as He condescends to manifest His judgments to us, let us
give thanks; but so far as He thinks fit to conceal them, let us not
murmur against His counsel, but believe that this also is the most
wholesome for us. But whoever you are that are hostile to His grace, and
thus ask, what do you yourself say? it is well that you do not deny
yourself to be a Christian and boast of being a catholic. If, therefore,
you confess that to persevere to the end in good is God's gift, I think
that equally with me you are ignorant why one man should receive this
gift and another should not receive it; and in this case we are both
unable to penetrate the unsearchable judgments of God. Or if you say
that it pertains to man's free will—which you defend, not in
accordance with God's grace, but in opposition to it—that any one
should persevere in good, or should not persevere, and it is not by the
gift of God if he persevere, but by the performance of human will, why
will you strive against the words of Him who says, "I have prayed
for thee, Peter, that thy faith fail not"? Will you dare to say
that even when Christ prayed that Peter's faith might not fail, it would
still have failed if Peter had willed it to fail; that is, if he had
been unwilling that it should continue even to the end? As if Peter
could in any measure will otherwise than Christ had asked for him that
he might will. For who does not know that Peter's faith would then have
perished if that will by which he was faithful should fail, and that it
would have continued if that same will should abide? But because
"the will is prepared by the Lord," therefore Christ's
petition on his behalf could not be a vain petition. When, then, He
prayed that his faith should not fail, what was it that he asked for,
but that in his faith he should have a most free, strong, invincible,
persevering will! Behold to what an extent the freedom of the will is
defended in accordance with the grace of God, not in opposition to it;
because the human will does not attain grace by freedom, but rather
attains freedom by grace, and a delightful constancy, and an insuperable
fortitude that it may persevere.
Chap. 18.—Some instances of God's amazing judgments.
It is, indeed, to be wondered at, and greatly to be wondered at, that
to some of His own children—whom He has regenerated in Christ—to
whom He has given faith, hope, and love, God does not give perseverance
also, when to children of another He forgives such wickedness, and, by
the bestowal of His grace, makes them His own children. Who would not
wonder at this? Who would not be exceedingly astonished at this? But,
moreover, it is not less marvellous, and still true, and so manifest
that not even the enemies of God's grace can find any means of denying
it, that some children of His friends, that is, of regenerated and good
believers, departing this life as infants without baptism, although He
certainly might provide the grace of this layer if He willed, since in
His power are all things,—He alienates from His kingdom into which He
introduces their parents; and some children of His enemies He causes to
come into the hands of Christians, and by means of this layer introduces
into the kingdom, from which their parents are aliens; although, as well
to the former infants there is no evil deserving, as to the latter there
is no good, of their own proper will. Certainly, in this case the
judgments of God, because they are righteous and deep, may neither be
blamed nor penetrated. Among these also is that concerning perseverance,
of which we are now discoursing. Of both, therefore, we may exclaim,
"O the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how
unsearchable are His judgments!"
Chap. 19.—God's ways past finding out.
Nor let us wonder that we cannot trace His unsearchable ways. For, to
say nothing of innumerable other things which are given by the Lord God
to some men, and to others are not given, since with Him is no respect
of persons; such things as are not conferred on the merits of will, as
bodily swiftness, strength, good health, and beauty of body, marvellous
intellects and mental natures capable of many arts, or such as fall to
man's lot from without, such as are wealth, nobility, honours, and other
things of this kind, which it is in the power of God alone that a man
should have; not to dwell even on the baptism of infants (which none of
those objectors can say does not pertain, as might be said of those
other matters, to the kingdom of God), why it is given to this infant
and not given to that, since both of them are equally in God's power,
and without that sacrament none can enter into the kingdom of God;—to
be silent, then, on these matters, or to leave them on one side, let men
consider those very special cases of which we are treating. For we are
discoursing of such as have not perseverance in goodness, but die in the
decline of their good will from good to evil. Let the objectors answer,
if they can, why, when these were living faithfully and piously, God did
not then snatch them from the perils of this life, "lest wickedness
should change their understanding, and lest deceit should beguile their
souls"? Had He not this in His power, or was He ignorant of their
future sinfulness? Assuredly, nothing of this kind is said, except most
perversely and insanely. Why, then, did He not do this? Let them reply
who mock at us when in such matters we exclaim, "How inscrutable
are His judgments, and His ways past finding out!" For either God
giveth this to whom He will, or certainly that Scripture is wrong which
says concerning the immature death of the righteous man, "He was
taken away test wickedness should change his understanding, or lest
deceit should beguile his soul." Why, then, does God give this so
great benefit to some, and not give it to others, seeing that in Him is
no unrighteousness nor acceptance of persons, and that it is in His
power how long every one may remain in this life, which is called a
trial upon earth? As, then, they are constrained to confess that it is
God's gift for a man to end this life of his before it can be changed
from good to evil, but they do not know why it is given to some and not
given to others, so let them confess with us that perseverance in good
is God's gift, according to the Scriptures, from which I have already
set down many testimonies; and let them condescend with us to be
ignorant, without a murmur against God, why it is given to some and not
given to others.
Chap. 20 [IX.]—Some are children of God
according to grace temporally received, some according to God's eternal
foreknowledge.
Nor let it disturb us that to some of His children God does not give
this perseverance. Be this far from being so, however, if these were of
those who are predestinated and called according to His purpose,—who
are truly the children of the promise. For the former, while they live
piously, are called children of God; but because they will live
wickedly, and die in that impiety, the foreknowledge of God does not
call them God's children. For they are children of God whom as yet we
have not, and God has already, of whom the Evangelist John says,
"that Jesus should die for that nation, and not for that nation
only, but that also He should gather together in one the children of God
which were scattered abroad;" and this certainly they were to
become by believing, through the preaching of the gospel. And yet before
this had happened they had already been enrolled as sons of God with
unchangeable stedfastness in the memorial of their Father. And, again,
there are some who are called by us children of God on account of grace
received even in temporal things, yet are not so called by God; of whom
the same John says, "They went out from us, but they were not of
us, because if they had been of us they would, no doubt, have continued
with us." He does not say, "They went out from us, but because
they did not abide with us they are no longer now of us;" but he
says, "They went out from us, but they were not of us,"—that
is to say, even when they appeared among us, they were not of us. And as
if it were said to him, Whence do you prove this? he says, "Because
if they had been of us, they would assuredly have continued with
us." It is the word of God's children; John is the speaker, who was
ordained to a chief place among the children of God. When, therefore,
God's children say of those who had not perseverance, "They went
out from us, but they were not of us," and add, "Because if
they had been of us, they would assuredly have continued with us,"
what else do they say than that they were not children, even when they
were in the profession and name of children? Not because they simulated
righteousness, but because they did not continue in it. For he does not
say, "For if they had been of us, they would assuredly have
maintained a real and not a feigned righteousness with us;" but he
says, "If they had been of us, they would assuredly have continued
with us." Beyond a doubt, he wished them to continue in goodness.
Therefore they were in goodness; but because they did not abide in it,—that
is, they did not persevere unto the end,—he says, They were not of us,
even when they were with us,—that is, they were not of the number of
children, even when they were in the faith of children; because they who
are truly children are foreknown and predestinated as conformed to the
image of His Son, and are called according to His purpose, so as to be
elected. For the son of promise does not perish. but the son of
perdition.
Chap. 21.—Who may be understood as given to Christ.
Those, then, were of the multitude of the called, but they were not
of the fewness of the elected. It is not, therefore, to His
predestinated children that God has not given perseverance for they
would have it if they were in that number of children; and what would
they have which they had not received, according to the apostolical and
true judgment? And thus such children would be given to Christ the Son
just as He Himself says to the Father, "That all that Thou hast
given me may not perish, but have eternal life." Those, therefore,
are understood to be given to Christ who are ordained to eternal life.
These are they who are predestinated and called according to the
purpose, of whom not one perishes. And therefore none of them ends this
life when he has changed from good to evil, because he is so ordained,
and for that purpose given to Christ, that he may not perish, but may
have eternal life. And again, those whom we call His enemies, or the
infant children of His enemies, whomever of them He will so regenerate
that they may end this life in that faith which worketh by love, are
already, and before this is done, in that predestination His children,
and are given to Christ His Son, that they may not perish, but have
everlasting life.
Chap. 22.—True children of God are true disciples of Christ.
Finally, the Saviour Himself says, "If ye continue in my word,
ye are indeed my disciples." Is Judas, then, to be reckoned among
them, since he did not continue in His word? Are they to be reckoned
among them of whom the gospel speaks in such wise, where, when the Lord
had commanded His flesh to be eaten and His blood to be drunk, the
Evangelist says, "These things said He in the synagogue as He
taught in Capernaum. Many, therefore, of His disciples, when they had
heard this, said, This is a hard saying; who can hear it? But Jesus,
knowing in Himself that His disciples were murmuring at it, said to
them, Doth this offend you? What and if ye shall see the Son of man
ascending where He was before? It is the Spirit that quickeneth, but the
flesh profiteth nothing. The words that I have spoken unto you are
spirit and life. But there are some of you who believe not. For Jesus
knew from the beginning who were the believing ones, and who should
betray Him; and He said, Therefore said I unto you, that no man cometh
unto me except it were given of my Father. From this time many of His
disciples went away back from Him, and no longer walked with Him.'' Are
not these even in the words of the gospel called disciples? And yet they
were not truly disciples, because they did not continue in His word,
according to what He says: "If ye continue in my word, then are ye
indeed my disciples." Because, therefore, they possessed not
perseverance, as not being truly disciples of Christ, so they were not
truly children of God even when they appeared to be so, and were so
called. We, then, call men elected, and Christ's disciples, and God's
children, because they are to be so called whom, being regenerated, we
see to live piously; but they are then truly what they are called if
they shall abide in that on account of which they are so called. But if
they have not perseverance,—that is, if they continue not in that
which they have begun to be,—they are not truly called what they are
called and are not; for they are not this in the sight of Him to whom it
is known what they are going to be,—that is to say, from good men, bad
men.
Chap. 23.—Those who are called according to the purpose alone are
predestinated.
For this reason the apostle, when he had said, "We know that to
those who love God He worketh all things together for good,"—knowing
that some love God, and do not continue in that good way unto the end,—immediately
added, "to them who are the called according to His purpose."
For these in their love for God continue even to the end; and they who
for a season wander from the way return, that they may continue unto the
end what they had begun to be in good. Showing, however, what it is to
be called according to His purpose, he presently added what I have
already quoted above, "Because whom He did before foreknow, He also
predestinated to be conformed to the image of His Son, that He might be
the first-born among many brethren. Moreover, whom He did predestinate,
them He also called," to wit, according to His purpose; "and
whom He called, them He also justified; and whom He justified, them He
also glorified." All those things are already done: He foreknew, He
predestinated, He called, He justified; because both all are already
foreknown and predestinated, and many are already called and justified;
but that which he placed at the end, "them He also glorified"
(if, indeed, that glory is here to be understood of which the same
apostle says, "When Christ your life shall appear, then shall ye
also appear with Him in glory"), this is not yet accomplished.
Although, also, those two things—that is, He called, and He justified—have
not been effected in all of whom they are said,—for still, even until
the end of the world, there remain many to be called and justified,—nevertheless,
He used verbs of the past tense, even concerning things future, as if
God had already arranged from eternity that they should come to pass.
For this reason, also, the prophet Isaiah says concerning Him, "Who
has made the things that shall be." Whosoever, therefore, in God's
most providential ordering, are foreknown, predestinated, called,
justified, glorified,—I say not, even although not yet born again, but
even although not yet born at all, are already children of God, and
absolutely cannot perish. These truly come to Christ, because they come
in such wise as He Himself says, "All that the Father giveth me
shall come to me, and him that cometh to me I will not cast out;"
and a little after He says, "This is the will of the Father who
hath sent me, that of all that He hath given me I shall lose
nothing." From Him, therefore, is given also perseverance in good
even to the end; for it is not given save to those who shall not perish,
since they who do not persevere shall perish.
Chap. 24.—Even the sins of the elect are turned by God to their
advantage.
To such as love Him, God co-worketh with all things for good; so
absolutely all things, that even if any of them go astray, and break out
of the way, even this itself He makes to avail them for good, so that
they return more lowly and more instructed. For they learn that in the
right way itself they ought to rejoice with trembling; not with
arrogation to themselves of confidence of abiding as if by their own
strength; not with saying, in their abundance, "We shall not be
moved for ever." For which reason it is said to them, "Serve
the Lord in fear, and rejoice unto Him with trembling, lest at any time
the Lord should be angry, and ye perish from the right way." For He
does not say, "And ye come not into the right way;" but He
says, "Lest ye perish from the right way." And what does this
show, but that those who are already walking in the right way are
reminded to serve God in fear; that is, "not to be high-minded, but
to fear"? which signifies, that they should not be haughty, but
humble. Whence also He says in another place, "not minding high
things, but consenting with the lowly;" let them rejoice in God,
but with trembling; glorying in none, since nothing is ours, so that he
who glorieth may glory in the Lord, lest they perish from the right way
in which they have already begun to walk, while they are ascribing to
themselves their very presence in it. These words also the apostle made
use of when he says, "Work out your own salvation with fear and
trembling." And setting forth why with fear and trembling, he says,
"For it is God that worketh in you, both to will and to do for His
good pleasure." For he had not this fear and trembling who said in
his abundance, "I shall not be moved for ever." But because he
was a child of the promise, not of perdition, he experienced in God's
desertion for a little while what he himself was: "Lord," said
he, "in Thy favour Thou gavest strength to my honour; Thou turnedst
away Thy face from me, and I became troubled." Behold how much
better instructed, and for this reason also more humble, he held on his
way, at length seeing and confessing that by His will God had endowed
his honour with strength; and this he had attributed to himself and
presumed to be from himself, in such abundance as God had afforded it,
and not from Him who had given it, and so had said, "I shall not be
moved for ever!" Therefore he became troubled so that he found
himself, and being lowly minded learnt not only of eternal life, but,
moreover, of a pious conversation and perseverance in this life, as that
in which hope should be maintained. This might moreover be the word of
the Apostle Peter, because he also had said in his abundance, "I
will lay down my life for Thy sake;" attributing to himself, in his
eagerness, what was afterwards to be bestowed on him by his Lord. But
the Lord turned away His face from him, and be became troubled, so that
in his fear of dying for Him he thrice denied Him. But the Lord again
turned His face to him, and washed away his sin with his tears. For what
else is, "He turned and looked upon him," but, He restored to
him the face which, for a little while, He had turned away from him?
Therefore he had become troubled; but because he learned not to be
confident concerning himself, even this was of excellent profit to him,
by His agency who co-works for good with all things to those who love
Him; because he had been called according to the purpose, so that no one
could pluck him out of the hand of Christ, to whom he had been given.
Chap. 25.—Therefore rebuke is to be used.
Let no one therefore say that a man must not be rebuked when he
deviates from the right way, but that his return and perseverance must
only be asked for from the Lord for him. Let no considerate and
believing man say this. For if such an one is called according to the
purpose, beyond all doubt God is co-working for good to him even in the
fact of his being rebuked. But since he who rebukes is ignorant whether
he is so called, let him do with love what he knows ought to be done;
for he knows that such an one ought to be rebuked. God will show either
mercy or judgment; mercy, indeed, if be who is rebuked is "made to
differ" by the bestowal of grace from the mass of perdition, and is
not found among the vessels of wrath which are completed for
destruction, but among the vessels of mercy which God has prepared for
glory; but judgment, if among the former he is condemned, and is not
predestinated among the latter.
Chap. 26 [X.]—Whether Adam received the gift
of perseverance.
Here arises another question, not reasonably to be slighted, but to
be approached and solved in the help of the Lord in whose hand are both
we and our discourses. For I am asked, in respect of this gift of God
which is to persevere in good to the end, what I think of the first man
himself, who assuredly was made upright without any fault. And I do not
say: If he had not perseverance, how was he without fault, seeing that
he was in want of so needful a gift of God? For to this interrogatory
the answer is easy, that he had not perseverance, because he did not
persevere in that goodness in which he was without sin; for he began to
have sin from the point at which he fell; and if he began, certainly he
was without sin before he had begun. For it is one thing not to have
sin, and it is another not to abide in that goodness in which there is
no sin. Because in that very fact, that he is not said never to have
been without sin, but he is said not to have continued without sin,
beyond all doubt it is demonstrated that he was without sin, seeing that
he is blamed for not having continued in that goodness. But it should
rather be asked and discussed with greater pains in what way we can
answer those who say, "If in that uprightness in which he was made
without sin he had perseverance, beyond all doubt he persevered in it;
and if he persevered, he certainly did not sin, and did not forsake that
his uprightness. But that he did sin, and was a forsaker of goodness,
the Truth declares. Therefore he had not perseverance in that goodness;
and if he had it not, he certainly received it not. For how should he
have both received perseverance, and not have persevered? Further, if he
had it not because he did not receive it, what sin did he commit by not
persevering, if he did not receive perseverance? For it cannot be said
that he did not receive it, for the reason that he was not separated by
the bestowal of grace from the mass of perdition. Because that mass of
perdition did not as yet exist in the human race before he had sinned
from whom the corrupted source was derived."
Chap. 27.—The answer.
Wherefore we most wholesomely confess what we most correctly believe,
that the God and Lord of all things, who in His strength created all
things good, and foreknew that evil things would arise out of good, and
knew that it pertained to His most omnipotent goodness even to do good
out of evil things rather than not to allow evil things to be at all, so
ordained the life of angels and men that in it He might first of all
show what their free will was capable of, and then what the kindness of
His grace and the judgment of His righteousness was capable of. Finally,
certain angels, of whom the chief is he who is called the devil, became
by free will outcasts from the Lord God. Yet although they fled from His
goodness, wherein they had been blessed, they could not flee from His
judgment, by which they were made most wretched. Others, however, by the
same free will stood fast in the truth, and merited the knowledge of
that most certain truth that they should never fall. For if from the
Holy Scriptures we have been able to attain the knowledge that none of
the holy angels shall fall evermore, how much more have they themselves
attained this knowledge by the truth more sublimely revealed to them!
Because to us is promised a blessed life without end, and equality with
the angels, from which promise we are certified that when after judgment
we shall have come to that life, we shall not fall from it; but if the
angels are ignorant of this truth concerning themselves, we shall not be
their equals, but more blessed than they. But the Truth has promised us
equality with them. It is certain, then, that they have known this by
sight, which we have known by faith, to wit, that there shall be now no
more any fall of any holy angel. But the devil and his angels, although
they were blessed before they fell, and did not know that they should
fall unto misery,—there was still something which might be added to
their blessedness, if by free will they had stood in the truth, until
they should receive that fulness of the highest blessing as the reward
of that continuance; that is, that by the great abundance of the love of
God, given by the Holy Spirit, they should absolutely not be able to
fall any more, and that they should know this with complete certainty
concerning themselves. They had not this plenitude of blessedness; but
since they were ignorant of their future misery, they enjoyed a
blessedness which was less, indeed, but still without any defect. For if
they had known their future fall and eternal punishment, they certainly
could not have been blessed; since the fear of so great an evil as this
would compel them even then to be miserable.
Chap. 28.—The first man himself also might have stood by his free
will.
Thus also He made man with free will; and although ignorant of his
future fall, yet therefore happy, because he thought it was in his own
power both not to die and not to become miserable. And if he had willed
by his own free will to continue in this state of uprightness and
freedom from sin, assuredly without any experience of death and of
unhappiness he would have received by the merit of that continuance the
fulness of blessing with which the holy angels also are blessed; that
is, the impossibility of falling any more, and the knowledge of this
with absolute certainty. For even he himself could not be blessed
although in Paradise, nay, he would not be there, where it would not
become him to be miserable, if the foreknowledge of his fall had made
him wretched with the dread of such a disaster. But because he forsook
God of his free will, he experienced the just judgment of God, that with
his whole race, which being as yet all placed in him had sinned with
him, he should be condemned. For as many of this race as are delivered
by God's grace are certainly delivered from the condemnation in which
they are already held bound. Whence, even if none should be delivered,
no one could justly blame the judgment of God. That, therefore, in
comparison of those that perish few, but in their absolute number
many,
are delivered, is effected by grace, is effected freely: thanks must be
given, because it is effected, so that no one may be lifted up as of his
own deservings, but that every mouth may be stopped, and he that
glorieth may glory in the Lord.
Chap. 29 [XI.]—Distinction between the grace
given before and after the fall.
What then? Did not Adam have the grace of God? Yes, truly, he had it
largely, but of a different kind. He was placed in the midst of benefits
which he had received from the goodness of his Creator; for he had not
procured those benefits by his own deservings; in which benefits he
suffered absolutely no evil. But saints in this life, to whom pertains
this grace of deliverance, are in the midst of evils out of which they
cry to God, "Deliver us from evil." He in those benefits
needed not the death of Christ: these, the blood of that Lamb absolves
from guilt, as well inherited as their own. He had no need of that
assistance which they implore when they say, "I see another law in
my members warring against the law of my mind, and making me captive in
the law of sin which is in my members. O wretched man that I am! who
shall deliver me from the body of this death? The grace of God through
Jesus Christ our Lord." Because in them the flesh lusteth against
the spirit, and the spirit against the flesh, and as they labour and are
imperilled in such a contest, they ask that by the grace of Christ the
strength to fight and to conquer may be given them. He, however, tempted
and disturbed in no such conflict concerning himself against himself, in
that position of blessedness enjoyed his peace with himself.
Chap. 30.—The incarnation of the word.
Hence, although these do not now require a grace more joyous for the
present, they nevertheless need a more powerful grace; and what grace is
more powerful than the only-begotten Son of God, equal to the Father and
co-eternal, made man for them, and, without any sin of His own, either
original or actual, crucified by men who were shiners? And although He
rose again on the third day, never to die any more, He yet bore death
for men and gave life to the dead, so that redeemed by His blood, having
received so great and such a pledge, they could say, "If God be for
us, who is against us? He who spared not His own Son, but delivered Him
up for us all, how has He not with Him also given to us all
things?" God therefore took upon Him our nature—that is, the
rational soul and flesh of the man Christ—by an undertaking singularly
marvellous, or marvellously singular; so that with no preceding merits
of His own righteousness He might in such wise be the Son of God from
the beginning, in which He had begun to be man, that He, and the Word
which is without beginning, might be one person. For there is no one
blinded by such ignorance of this matter and the Faith as to dare to say
that, although born of the Holy Spirit and the Virgin Mary the Son of
man, yet of His own free will by righteous living and by doing good
works, without sin, He deserved to be the Son of God; in opposition to
the gospel, which says, "The Word was made flesh." For where
was this made flesh except in the Virginal womb, whence was the
beginning of the man Christ? And, moreover, when the Virgin asked how
that should come to pass which was told her by the angel, the angel
answered "The Holy Ghost shall come over on to thee and the power
of the Highest shall overshadow thee, therefore that holy thing that
shall be born of thee shall be called the Son of God."
"Therefore," he said; not because of works of which certainly
of a yet unborn infant there are none; but "therefore,"
because "the Holy Ghost shall come over on to thee, and the power
of the Highest shall overshadow thee, that holy thing which shall be
born of thee shall be called the Son of God." That nativity,
absolutely gratuitous, conjoined, in the unity of the person, man to
God, flesh to the Word! Good works followed that nativity; good works
did not merit it. For it was in no wise to be feared that the human
nature taken up by God the Word in that ineffable manner into a unity of
person, would sin by free choice of will, since that taking up itself
was such that the nature of man so taken up by God would admit into
itself no movement of an evil will. Through this Mediator God makes
known that He makes those whom He redeemed by His blood from evil,
everlastingly good; and Him He in such wise assumed that He never would
be evil, and, not being made out of evil, would always be good.
Chap. 31.—The first man had received the grace necessary for his
perseverance, but its exercise was left in his free choice.
The first man had not that grace by which he should never will to be
evil; but assuredly he had that in which if he willed to abide he would
never be evil, and without which, moreover, he could not by free will be
good, but which, nevertheless, by free will he could forsake. God,
therefore, did not will even him to be without His grace, which He left
in his free will; because free will is sufficient for evil, but is too
little for good, unless it is aided by Omnipotent Good. And if that man
had not forsaken that assistance of his free will, he would always have
been good; but he forsook it, and he was forsaken. Because such was the
nature of the aid, that he could forsake it when he would, and that he
could continue in it if he would; but not such that it could be brought
about that he would. This first is the grace which was given to the
first Adam; but more powerful than this is that in the second Adam. For
the first is that whereby it is affected that a man may have
righteousness if he will; the second, therefore, can do more than this,
since by it is even effected that he will, and will so much, and love
with such ardour, that by the will of the Spirit he overcomes the will
of the flesh, that lusteth in opposition to it. Nor was that, indeed. a
small grace by which was demonstrated even the power of free will,
because man was so assisted that without this assistance he could not
continue in good, but could forsake this assistance if he would. But
this latter grace is by so much the greater, that it is too little for a
man by its means to regain his lost freedom; it is too little, finally,
not to be able without it either to apprehend the good or to continue in
good if he will, unless he is also made to will.
Chap. 32.—The gifts of grace conferred on Adam in creation.
At that time, therefore, God had given to man a good will, because in
that will He had made him, since He had made him upright. He had given
help without which he could not continue therein if he would; but that
he should will, He left in his free will. He could therefore continue if
he would, because the help was not wanting whereby he could, and without
which he could not, perseveringly hold fast the good which he would. But
that he willed not to continue is absolutely the fault of him whose
merit it would have been if he had willed to continue; as the holy
angels did, who, while others fell by free will, themselves by the same
free will stood, and deserved to receive the due reward of this
continuance—to wit, such a fulness of blessing that by it they might
have the fullest certainty of always abiding in it. If, however, this
help had been wanting, either to angel or to man when they were first
made, since their nature was not made such that without the divine help
it could abide if it would, they certainly would not have fallen by
their own fault, because the help would have been wanting without which
they could not continue. At the present time, however, to those to whom
such assistance is wanting, it is the penalty of sin; but to those to
whom it is given, it is given of grace, not of debt; and by so much the
more is given through Jesus Christ our Lord to those to whom it has
pleased God to give it, that not only we have that help without which we
cannot continue even if we will, but, moreover, we have so great and
such a help! as to will. Because by this grace of God there is caused in
us, in the reception of good and in the persevering hold of it, not only
to be able to do what we will, but even to will to do what we are able.
But this was not the case in the first man; for the one of these things
was in him, but the other was not. For he did not need grace to receive
good, because he had not yet lost it; but he needed the aid of grace to
continue in it, and without this aid he could not do this at all; and he
had received the ability if he would, but he had not the will for what
he could; for if he had possessed it, he would have persevered. For he
could persevere if he would; but that he would not was the result of
free will, which at that time was in such wise free that he was capable
of willing well and ill. For what shall be more free than free will,
when it shall not be able to serve sin? and this should be to man also
as it was made to the holy angels, the reward of deserving. But now that
good deserving has been lost by sin, in those who are delivered that has
become the gift of grace which would have been the reward of deserving.
Chap. 33 [XII.]—What is the difference
between the ability not to sin, to die, and forsake good, and the
inability to sin, to die, and to forsake good?
On which account we must consider with diligence and attention in
what respect those pairs differ from one another,—to be able not to
sin, and not to be able to sin; to be able not to die, and not to be
able to die; to be able not to forsake good, and not to be able to
forsake good. For the first man was able not to sin, was able not to
die, was able not to forsake good. Are we to say that he who had such a
free will could not sin? Or that he to whom it was said, "If thou
shalt sin thou shalt die by death," could not die? Or that he could
not forsake good, when he would forsake this by sinning, and so die?
Therefore the first liberty of the will was to be able not to sin, the
last will be much greater, not to be able to sin; the first immortality
was to be able not to die, the last will be much greater, not to be able
to die; the first was the power of perseverance, to be able not to
forsake good—the last will be the felicity of perseverance, not to be
able to forsake good. But because the last blessings will be preferable
and better, were those first ones, therefore, either no blessings at
all, or trifling ones?
Chap. 34.—The aid without which a thing does not come to pass, and
the aid with which a thing comes to pass.
Moreover, the aids themselves are to be distinguished. The aid
without which a thing does not come to pass is one thing, and the aid by
which a thing comes to pass is another. For without food we cannot live;
and yet although food should be at hand, it would not cause a man to
live who should will to die. Therefore the aid of food is that without
which it does not come to pass that we live, not that by which it comes
to pass that we live. But, indeed, when the blessedness which a man has
not is given him, he becomes at once blessed. For the aid is not only
that without which that does not happen, but also with which that does
happen for the sake of which it is given. Wherefore this is an
assistance both by which it comes to pass, and without which it does not
come to pass; because, on the one hand, if blessedness should be given
to a man, he becomes at once blessed; and, on the other, if it should
never be given he will never be so. But food does not of necessity cause
a man to live, and yet without it he cannot live. Therefore to the first
man, who, in that good in which he had been made upright, had received
the ability not to sin, the ability not to die, the ability not to
forsake that good itself, was given the aid of perseverance,—not that
by which it should be brought about that he should persevere, but that
without which he could not of free will persevere. But now to the saints
predestinated to the kingdom of God by God's grace, the aid of
perseverance that is given is not such as the former, but such that to
them perseverance itself is bestowed; not only so that without that gift
they cannot persevere, but, moreover, so that by means of this gift they
cannot help persevering. For not only did He say, "Without me ye
can do nothing," but He also said, "Ye have not chosen me, but
I have chosen you, and ordained you that ye should go and bring forth
fruit, and that your fruit should remain." By which words He showed
that He had given them not only righteousness, but perseverance therein.
For when Christ thus ordained them that they should go and bring forth
fruit, and that their fruit should remain, who would dare to say, It
shall not remain? Who would dare to say, Perchance it will not remain?
"For the gifts and calling of God are without repentance;" but
the calling is of those who are called according to the purpose. When
Christ intercedes, therefore, on behalf of these, that their faith
should not fail, doubtless it will not fail unto the end. And thus it
shall persevere even unto the end; nor shall the end of this life find
it anything but continuing.
Chap. 35.—There is a greater freedom now in the saints than there
was before in Adam.
Certainly a greater liberty is necessary in the face of so many and
so great temptations, which had no existence in Paradise,—a liberty
fortified and confirmed by the gift of perseverance, so that this world,
with all its loves, its fears, its errors, may be overcome: the
martyrdoms of the saints have taught this. In fine, he [Adam], not only
with nobody to make him afraid, but, moreover, in spite of the authority
of God's fear, using free will, did not stand in such a state of
happiness, in such a facility of [not] sinning. But these [the saints],
I say, not under the fear of the world, but in spite of the rage of the
world lest they should stand, stood firm in the faith; while he could
see the good things present which he was going to forsake, they could
not see the good things future which they were going to receive. Whence
is this, save by the gift of Him from whom they obtained mercy to be
faithful; from whom they received the spirit, not of fear, whereby they
would yield to the persecutors, but of power, and of love, and of
continence, in which they could overcome all threatenings, all
seductions, all torments? To him, therefore, without any sin, was given
the free will with which he was created; and he made it to serve sin.
But although the will of these had been the servant of sin, it was
delivered by Him who said, "If the Son shall make you free, then
shall ye be free indeed." And by that grace they receive so great a
freedom, that although as long as they live here they are fighting
against sinful lusts, and some sins creep upon them unawares, on account
of which they daily say, "Forgive us our debts," yet they do
not any more obey the sin which is unto death, of which the Apostle John
says, "There is a sin unto death: I do not say that he shall pray
for it." Concerning which sin (since it is not expressed) many and
different notions may be entertained. I, however, say, that sin is to
forsake even unto death the faith which worketh by love. This sin they
no longer serve who are not in the first condition, as Adam, free; but
are freed by the grace of God through the second Adam, and by that
deliverance have that free will which enables them to serve God, not
that by which they may be made captive by the devil. From being made
free from sin they have become the servants of righteousness, in which
they will stand till the end, by the gift to them of perseverance from
Him who foreknew them, and predestinated them, and called them according
to His purpose, and justified them, and glorified them, since He has
even already formed those things that are to come which He promised
concerning them. And when He promised, "Abraham believed Him, and
it was counted unto him for righteousness." For "he gave glory
to God, most fully believing," as it is written, "that what He
has promised He is able also to perform."
Chap. 36.—God not only foreknows that men will be good, but Himself
makes them so.
It is He Himself, therefore, that makes those men good, to do good
works. For He did not promise them to Abraham because He foreknew that
of themselves they would be good. For if this were the case, what He
promised was not His, but theirs. But it was not thus that Abraham
believed, but "he was not weak in faith, giving glory to God;"
and "most fully believing that what He has promised He is able also
to perform." He does not say, "What He foreknew, He is able to
promise;" nor "What He fore told, He is able to
manifest;" nor "What He promised, He is able to
foreknow:" but "What He promised, He is able also to do."
It is He, therefore, who makes them to persevere in good, who makes them
good. But they who fall and perish have never been in the number of the
predestinated. Although, then, the apostle might be speaking of all
persons regenerated and living piously when he said, "Who art thou
that judgest another man's servant? To his own master he standeth or
falleth;" yet he at once had regard to the predestinated, and said,
"But he shall stand;" and that they might not arrogate this to
themselves, he says, "For God is able to make him stand." It
is He Himself, therefore, that gives perseverance, who is able to
establish those who stand, so that they may stand fast with the greatest
perseverance; or to restore those who have fallen, for "the Lord
setteth up those who are broken down."
Chap. 37.—To a sound will is committed the power of persevering or
of not persevering.
As, therefore, the first man did not receive this gift of God,—that
is, perseverance in good, but it was left in his choice to persevere or
not to persevere, his will had such strength,—inasmuch as it had been
created without any sin, and there was nothing in the way of
concupiscence of himself that withstood it,—that the choice of
persevering could worthily be entrusted to such goodness and to such
facility m living well. But God at the same time foreknew what he would
do in unrighteousness; foreknew, however, but did not compel him to
this; but at the same time He knew what He Himself would do in
righteousness concerning him. But now, since that great freedom has been
lost by the desert of sin, our weakness has remained to be aided by
still greater gifts. For it pleased God, in order most effectually to
quench the pride of human presumption, "that no flesh should glory
in His presence"—that is, "no man." But whence should
flesh not glory in His presence, save concerning its merits? Which,
indeed, it might have had, but lost; and lost by that very means whereby
it might have had them, that is, by its free will; on account of which
there remains nothing to those who are to be delivered, save the grace
of the Deliverer. Thus, therefore, no flesh glories in His presence. For
the unrighteous do not glory, since they have no ground of glory; nor
the righteous, because they have a ground from Him, and have no glory of
theirs, but Himself, to whom they say, "My glory, and the lifter up
of my head." And thus it is that what is written pertains to every
man, "that no flesh should glory in His presence." To the
righteous, however, pertains that Scripture: "He that glorieth, let
him glory in the Lord." For this the apostle most manifestly
showed, when, after saying "that no flesh should glory in His
presence," lest the saints should suppose that they had been left
without any glory, he presently added, "But of Him are ye in Christ
Jesus, who of God is made unto us wisdom, and righteousness, and
sanctification, and redemption: that, according as it is written, He
that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord." Hence it is that in this
abode of miseries, where trial is the life of man upon the earth,
"strength is made perfect in weakness." What strength, save
"that he that glorieth should glory in the Lord"?
Chap. 38.—What is the nature of the gift of perseverance that is
now given to the saints.
And thus God willed that His saints should not—even concerning
perseverance in goodness itself—glory in their own strength, but in
Himself, who not only gives them aid such as He gave to the first man,
without which they cannot persevere if they will, but causes in them
also the will; that since they will not persevere unless they both can
and will, both the capability and the will to persevere should be
bestowed on them by the liberality of divine grace. Because by the Holy
Spirit their will is so much enkindled that they therefore can, because
they so will; and they therefore so will because God works in them to
will. For if in so much weakness of this life (in which weakness,
however, for the sake of checking pride, strength behoved to be
perfected) their own will should be left to themselves, that they might,
if they willed, continue in the help of God, without which they could
not persevere, and God should not work m them to will, in the midst of
so many and so great weaknesses their will itself would give way, and
they would not be able to persevere, for the reason that failing from
infirmity they would not will, or in the weakness of will they would not
so will that they would be able. Therefore aid is brought to the
infirmity of human will, so that it might be unchangeably and invincibly
influenced by divine grace; and thus, although weak, it still might not
fail, nor be overcome by any adversity. Thus it happens that man's will,
weak and incapable, in good as yet small, may persevere by God's
strength; while the will of the first man, strong and healthful, having
the power of free choice, did not persevere in a greater good; because
although God's help was not wanting, without which it could not
persevere if it would, yet it was not such a help as that by which God
would work in man to will. Certainly to the strongest He yielded and
permitted to do what He willed; to those that were weak He has reserved
that by His own gift they should most invincibly will what is good, and
most invincibly refuse to forsake this. Therefore when Christ says,
"I have prayed for thee that thy faith fail not," we may
understand that it was said to him who is built upon the rock. And thus
the man of God, not only because he has obtained mercy to be faithful,
but also because faith itself does not fail, if he glories, must glory
in the Lord.
Chap. 39 [XIII.]—The number of the
predestinated is certain and defined.
I speak thus of those who are predestinated to the kingdom of God,
whose number is so certain that one can neither be added to them nor
taken from them; not of those who, when He had announced and spoken,
were multiplied beyond number. For they may be said to be called but not
chosen, because they are not called according to the purpose. But that
the number of the elect is certain, and neither to be increased nor
diminished,— although it is signified by John the Baptist when he
says, "Bring forth, therefore, fruits meet for repentance: and
think not to say within yourselves, We have Abraham to our father: for
God is able of these stones to raise up children to Abraham," to
show that they were in such wise to be cut off if they did not produce
fruit, that the number which was promised to Abraham would not be
wanting, is yet more plainly declared in the Apocalypse: "Hold fast
that which thou hast, lest another take thy crown." For if another
would not receive unless one should have lost, the number is fixed.
Chap. 40.—No one is certain and secure of his own predestination
and salvation.
But, moreover, that such things as these are so spoken to saints who
will persevere, as if it were reckoned uncertain whether they will
persevere, is a reason that they ought not otherwise to hear these
things, since it is well for them "not to be high-minded, but to
fear." For who of the multitude of believers can presume, so long
as he is living in this mortal state, that he is in the number of the
predestinated? Because it is necessary that in this condition that
should be kept hidden; since here we have to beware so much of pride,
that even so great an apostle was buffetted by a messenger of Satan,
lest he should be lifted up. Hence it was said to the apostles, "If
ye abide in me;" and this He said who knew for a certainty that
they would abide; and through the prophet, "If ye shall be willing,
and will hear me," although He knew in whom He would work to will
also. And many similar things are said. For on account of the usefulness
of this secrecy, lest, perchance, any one should be lifted up, but that
all, even although they are running well, should fear, in that it is not
known who may attain,—on account of the usefulness of this secrecy, it
must be believed that some of the children of perdition, who have not
received the gift of perseverance to the end, begin to live in the faith
which worketh by love, and live for some time faithfully and
righteously, and afterwards fall away, and are not taken away from this
life before this happens to them. If this had happened to none of these,
men would have that very wholesome fear, by which the sin of presumption
is kept down, only so long as until they should attain to the grace of
Christ by which to live piously, and afterwards would for time to come
be secure that they would never fall away from Him. And such presumption
in this condition of trials is not fitting, where there is so great
weakness, that security may engender pride. Finally, this also shall be
the case; but it shall be at that time, in men also as it already is in
the angels, when there cannot be any pride. Therefore the number of the
saints, by God's grace predestinated to God's kingdom, with the gift of
perseverance to the end bestowed on them, shall be guided thither in its
completeness, and there shall be at length without end preserved in its
fullest completeness, most blessed, the mercy of their Saviour still
cleaving to them, whether in their conversion, in their conflict, or in
their crown!
Chap. 41.—Even in judgment God's mercy will be necessary to us.
For the Holy Scripture testifies that God's mercy is then also
necessary for them, when the Saint says to his soul concerning the Lord
its God, "Who crowneth thee in mercy and compassion." The
Apostle James also says: "He shall have judgment without mercy who
hath showed no mercy;" where he sets forth that even in that
judgment in which the righteous are crowned and the unrighteous are
condemned, some will be judged with mercy, others without mercy. On
which account also the mother of the Maccabees says to her son,
"That in that mercy I may receive thee with thy brethren."
"For when a righteous king," as it is written, "shall sit
on the throne, no evil thing shall oppose itself to him. Who will boast
that he has a pure heart? or who will boast that he is pure from sin?
And thus God's mercy is even then necessary, by which he is made
"blessed to whom the Lord has not imputed sin." But at that
time even mercy itself shall be allotted in righteous judgment in
accordance with the merits of good works. For when it is said,
"Judgment without mercy to him that hath showed no mercy," it
is plainly shown that in those in whom are found the good works of
mercy, judgment shall be executed with mercy; and thus even that mercy
itself shall be returned to the merits of good works. It is not so now;
when not only no good works, but many bad works precede, His mercy
anticipates a man so that he is delivered from evils,—as well from
evils which he has done, as from those which he would have done if he
were not controlled by the grace of God; and from those, too, which he
would have suffered for ever if he were not plucked from the power of
darkness, and transferred into the kingdom of the Son of God's love.
Nevertheless, since even that life eternal itself, which, it is certain,
is given as due to good works, is called by so great an apostle the
grace of God, although grace is not rendered to works, but is given
freely, it must be confessed without any doubt, that eternal life is
called grace for the reason that it is rendered to those merits which
grace has conferred upon man. Because that saying is rightly understood
which in the gospel is read, "grace for grace,"—that is, for
those merits which grace has conferred.
Chap. 42.—The reprobate are to be punished for merits of a
different kind.
But those who do not belong to this number of the predestinated, whom—
whether that they have not yet any free choice of their will, or with a
choice of will truly free, because freed by grace itself—the grace of
God brings to His kingdom,—those, then, who do not belong to that most
certain and blessed number, are most righteously judged according to
their deservings. For either they lie under the sin which they have
inherited by original generation, and depart hence with that inherited
debt which is not put away by regeneration, or by their free will have
added other sins besides; their will, I say, free, but not freed,—
free from righteousness, but enslaved to sin, by which they are tossed
about by divers mischievous lusts, some more evil, some less, but all
evil; and they must be adjudged to diverse punishments, according to
that very diversity. Or they receive the grace of God, but they are only
for a season, and do not persevere; they forsake and are forsaken. For
by their free will, as they have not received the gift of perseverance,
they are sent away by the righteous and hidden judgment of God.
Chap. 43 [XIV.]—Rebuke and grace do not set
aside one another.
Let men then suffer themselves to be rebuked when they sin, and not
conclude against grace from the rebuke itself, nor from grace against
rebuke; because both the righteous penalty of sin is due, and righteous
rebuke belongs to it, if it is medicinally applied, even although the
salvation of the ailing man is uncertain; so that if he who is rebuked
belongs to the number of the predestinated, rebuke may be to him a
wholesome medicine; and if he does not belong to that number, rebuke may
be to him a penal infliction. Under that very uncertainty, therefore, it
must of love be applied, although its result is unknown; and prayer must
be made on his behalf to whom it is applied, that he may be healed. But
when men either come or return into the way of righteousness by means of
rebuke, who is it that worketh salvation in their hearts but that God
who giveth the increase, whoever plants and waters, and whoever labours
on the fields or shrubs,—that God whom no man's will resists when He
wills to give salvation? For so to will or not to will is in the power
of Him who willeth or willeth not, as not to hinder the divine will nor
overcome the divine power. For even concerning those who do what He
wills not, He Himself does what He will.
Chap. 44.—In what way God wills all men to be saved.
And what is written, that "He wills all men' to be saved,"
while yet all men are not saved, may be understood in many ways, some of
which I have mentioned in other writings of mine; but here I will say
one thing: "He wills all men to be saved," is so said that all
the predestinated may be understood by it, because every kind of men is
among them. Just as it was said to the Pharisees, "Ye tithe every
herb;" where the expression is only to be understood of every herb
that they had, for they did not tithe every herb which was found
throughout the whole earth. According to the same manner of speaking, it
was said, "Even as I also please all men in all things." For
did he who said this please also the multitude of his persecutors? But
he pleased every kind of men that assembled in the Church of Christ,
whether they were already established therein, or were to be introduced
into it.
Chap. 45.—Scriptural instances wherein it is proved that God has
men's wills more in his power than they themselves have.
It is not, then, to be doubted that men's wills cannot, so as to
prevent His doing what he wills, withstand the will of God, "who
hath done all things whatsoever He pleased in heaven and in earth,"
and who also "has done those things that are to come;" since
He does even concerning the wills themselves of men what He will, when
He will. Unless, perchance (to mention some things among many), when God
willed to give the kingdom to Saul, it was so in the power of the
Israelites, as it certainly was placed in their will, either to subject
themselves or not to the man in question, that they could even prevail
to withstand God. God, however, did not do this, save by the will of the
men themselves, because he beyond doubt had the most omnipotent power of
inclining men's hearts whither it pleased Him. For thus it is written:
"And Samuel sent the people away, and every one went away unto his
own place. And Saul went away to his house in Gibeah: and there went
away with Saul mighty men, whose hearts the Lord touched. And pestilent
children said, Who shall save us? This man? And they despised him, and
brought him no presents." Will any one say that any of those whose
hearts the Lord touched to go with Saul would not have gone with him, or
that any of those pestilent fellows, whose hearts He did not touch to do
this, would have gone? Of David also, whom the Lord ordained to the
kingdom in a more prosperous succession, we read thus: "And David
continued to increase, and was magnified, and the Lord was with
him." This having been premised, it is said a little afterwards,
"And the Spirit clothed Amasai, chief of the thirty, and he said,
We are thine, 0 David, and we will be with thee, 0 son of Jesse: Peace,
peace be unto thee, and peace be to thy helpers; because the Lord has
helped thee." Could he withstand the will of God, and not rather do
the will of Him who wrought in his heart by His Spirit, with which he
was clothed, to will, speak, and do thus? Moreover, a little afterwards
the same Scripture says, "All these warlike men, setting the battle
in array, came with a peaceful heart to Hebron to establish David over
all Israel." By their own will, certainly, they appointed David
king. Who cannot see this? Who can deny it? For they did not do it under
constraint or without good-will, since they did it; with a peaceful
heart. And yet He wrought this in them who worketh what He will in the
hearts of men. For which reason the Scripture premised, "And David
continued to increase, and was magnified, and the Lord Omnipotent was
with him." And thus the Lord Omnipotent, who was with him, induced
these men to appoint him king. And how did He induce them? Did He
constrain thereto by any bodily fetters? He wrought within; He held
their hearts; He stirred their hearts, and drew them by their own wills,
which He Himself wrought in them. If, then, when God wills to set up
kings in the earth, He has the wills of men more in His power than they
themselves have, who else causes rebuke to be wholesome and correction
to result in the heart of him that is rebuked, that he may be
established in the kingdom of heaven?
Chap. 46 [XV.]—Rebuke must be varied
according to the variety of faults. There is no punishment in the Church
greater than excommunication.
Therefore, let brethren who are subject be rebuked by those who are
set over them, with rebukes that spring from love, varied according to
the diversity of faults, whether smaller or greater. Because that very
penalty that is called condemnation, which episcopal judgment inflicts,
than which there is no greater punishment in the Church, may, if God
will, result and be of advantage for most wholesome rebuke. For we know
not what may happen on the coming day; nor must any one be despaired of
before the end of this life; nor can God be contradicted, that He may
not look down and give repentance, and receive the sacrifice of a
troubled spirit and a contrite heart, and absolve from the guilt of
condemnation, however just, and so Himself not condemn the condemned
person. Yet the necessity of the pastoral office requires, in order that
the terrible contagion may not creep through the many, that the diseased
sheep should be separated from the sound ones; perchance, by that very
separation, to be healed by Him to whom nothing is impossible. For as we
know not who belongs to the number of the predestinated, we ought in
such wise to be influenced by the affection of love as to will all men
to be saved. For this is the case when we endeavour to lead every
individual to that point where they may meet with those agencies by
which we may prevail, to the accomplishment of the result, that being
justified by faith they may have peace with God,— which peace,
moreover, the apostle announced when he said, "Therefore, we
discharge an embassage for Christ, as though God were exhorting by us,
we pray you in Christ's stead to be reconciled to God." For what is
"to be reconciled" to Him but to have peace with Him? For the
sake of which peace, moreover, the Lord Jesus Christ Himself said to His
disciples, "Into whatsoever house ye enter first, say, Peace be to
this house; and if the son of peace be there, your peace shall rest upon
it; but if not, it shall return to you again." When they preach the
gospel of this peace of whom it is predicted, "How beautiful are
the feet of those that publish peace, that announce good things!"
to us, indeed, every one then begins to be a son of peace who obeys and
believes this gospel, and who, being justified by faith, has begun to
have peace towards God; but, according to God's predestination, he was
already a son of peace. For it was not said, Upon whomsoever your peace
shall rest, he shall become a son of peace; but Christ says, "If
the son of peace be there, your peace shall rest upon that house."
Already, therefore, and before the announcement of that peace to him,
the son of peace was there, as he had been known and foreknown, by—
not the evangelist, but—God. For we need not fear lest we should lose
it, if in our ignorance he to whom we preach is not a son of peace, for
it will return to us again—that is, that preaching will profit us, and
not him; but if the peace proclaimed shall rest upon him, it will profit
both us and him.
Chap. 47.—Another interpretation of the apostolic passage,
"who will have all men to be saved."
That, therefore, in our ignorance of who shall be saved, God commands
us to will that all to whom we preach this peace may be saved, and
Himself works this in us by diffusing that love in our hearts by the
Holy Spirit who is given to us,—may also thus be understood, that God
wills all men to be saved, because He makes us to will this; just as
"He sent the Spirit of His Son, crying, Abba, Father;" that
is, making us to cry, Abba, Father. Because, concerning that same
Spirit, He says in another place, "We have received the Spirit of
adoption, in whom we cry, Abba, Father! " We therefore cry, but He
is said to cry who makes us to cry. If, then, Scripture tightly said
that the Spirit was crying by whom we are made to cry, it rightly also
says that God wills, when by Him we are made to will. And thus, because
by rebuke we ought to do nothing save to avoid departure from that peace
which is towards God, or to induce return to it of him who had departed,
let us do in hope what we do. If he whom we rebuke is a son of peace,
our peace shall rest upon him; but if not, it shall return to us again.
Chap. 48.—The purpose of rebuke.
Although, therefore, even while the faith of some is subverted, the
foundation of God standeth sure, since the Lord knoweth them that are
His, still, we ought not on that account to be indolent and negligent in
rebuking those who should be rebuked. For not for nothing was it said,
"Evil communications corrupt good manners;" and, "The
weak brother shall perish in thy knowledge, on account of whom Christ
died." Let us not, in opposition to these precepts, and to a
wholesome fear, pretend to argue, saying, "Well, let evil
communications corrupt good manners, and let the weak brother perish.
What is that to us? The foundation of God standeth sure, and no one
perishes but the son of perdition." [XVI.]
Be it far from us to babble in this wise, and think that we ought to be
secure in this negligence. For it is true that no one perishes except
the son of perdition, but God says by the mouth of the prophet Ezekiel:
"He shall surely die in his sin, but his blood will I require at
the hand of the watchman."
Chap. 49.—Conclusion.
Hence, as far as concerns us, who are not able to distinguish those
who are predestinated from those who are not, we ought on this very
account to will all men to be saved. Severe rebuke should be medicinally
applied to all by us that they perish not themselves, or that they may
not be the means of destroying others. It belongs to God, however, to
make that rebuke useful to them whom He Himself has foreknown and
predestinated to be conformed to the image of His Son. For, if at any
time we abstain from rebuking, for fear lest by rebuke a man should
perish, why do we not also rebuke, for fear lest a man should rather
perish by our withholding it? For we have no greater bowels of love than
the blessed apostle who says, "Rebuke those that are unruly;
comfort the feeble-minded; support the weak; be patient towards all men.
See that none render to any man evil for evil" Where it is to be
understood that evil is then rather rendered for evil when one who ought
to be rebuked is not rebuked, but by a wicked dissimulation is
neglected. He says, moreover, "Them that sin rebuke before all,
that others also may fear;" which must be received concerning those
sins which are not concealed, lest he be thought to have spoken in
opposition to the word of the Lord. For He says, "If thy brother
shall sin against thee, rebuke him between thee and him."
Notwithstanding, He Himself carries out the severity of rebuke to the
extent of saying, "If he will not hear the Church, let him be unto
thee as a heathen man and a publican." And who has more loved the
weak than He who became weak for us all, and of that very weakness was
crucified for us all? And since these things are so, grace neither
restrains rebuke, nor does rebuke restrain grace; and on this account
righteousness is so to be prescribed that we may ask in faithful prayer,
that, by God's grace, what is prescribed may be done; and both of these
things are in such wise to be done that righteous rebuke may not be
neglected. But let all these things be done with love, since love both
does not sin, and does cover the multitude of sins.
[Translated by the Rev. Ernest Wallis, Ph.D., incumbent of Christ
Church, Coxley, Somerset; revised by Benjamin B. Warfield, D.D.,
Professor in the Theological Seminary at Princeton, N.J.]
Taken from "The Early Church Fathers and Other Works"
originally published by Wm. B. Eerdmans Pub. Co. in English in
Edinburgh, Scotland, beginning in 1867. (LNPF I/V, Schaff). The digital
version is by The Electronic Bible Society, P.O. Box 701356, Dallas, TX
75370, 214-407-WORD.
Footnotes were not included in the
transcription. Return
(NOTE: The electronic text obtained from The Electronic Bible Society
was not completely corrected. EWTN has corrected all discovered errors.)
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