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A paper containing sundry definitions,1
said to have been drawn up by Coelestius, was put
into the hands of Augustine. In this document, Coelestius, or some
person who shared in his errors, had recklessly asserted that a man had
it in his power to live here without sin. Augustine first refutes the
several propositions in brief answers, showing that the perfect and
plenary state of righteousness, in which a man exists absolutely without
sin, is unattainable without grace by the mere resources of our corrupt
nature, and never occurs in this present state of existence. He next
proceeds to consider the authorities which the paper contained as
gathered out of the scriptures; some of them teaching man to be
"unspotted" and "perfect;" others mentioning the
commandments of God as "not grievous;" while others again are
quoted as opposed to the authoritative passages which the Catholics were
accustomed to advance against the Pelagians.
Augustine to his holy brethren and fellow-bishops Eutropius and
Paulus.
Chap. I.
YOUR love, which in both of you is so great and so holy that it is a
delight to obey its commands, has laid me under an obligation to reply
to some definitions which are said to be the work of Coelestius; for so
runs the title of the paper which you have given me, "The
definitions, so it is said, of Coelestius." As for this title, I
take it that it is not his, but theirs who have brought this work from
Sicily, where Coelestius is said not to be,—although many there make
boastful pretension of holding views like his, and, to use the apostle's
word, "being themselves deceived, lead others also astray."
That these views are, however, his, or those of some associates s of
his, we, too, can well believe. For the above- mentioned brief
definitions, or rather propositions, are by no means at variance with
his opinion, such as I have seen it expressed in another work, of which
he is the undoubted author. There was therefore good reason, I think,
for the report which those brethren, who brought these tidings to us,
heard in Sicily, that Coelestius taught or wrote such opinions. I should
like, if it were possible, so to meet the obligation imposed on me by
your brotherly kindness, that I, too, in my own answer should be equally
brief. But unless I set forth also the propositions which I answer, who
will be able to form a judgment of the value of my answer? Still I will
try to the best of my ability, assisted, too, by God's mercy, by your
own prayers, so to conduct the discussion as to keep it from running to
an unnecessary length.
Chap. II. (1.) The first breviate of Coelestius.
I . "First of all," says he, "he must be asked
who denies man's ability to live without sin, what: every sort of sin
is,—is it such as can be avoided? or is it unavoidable? If it is
unavoidable, then it is not sin; if it can be avoided, then a man can
live without the sin which can be avoided. No reason or justice permits
us to designate as sin what cannot in any way be avoided." Our
answer to this is, that sin can be avoided, if our corrupted nature be
healed by God's grace, through our Lord Jesus Christ. For, in so far as
it is not sound, in so far does it either through blindness fail to see,
or through weakness fail to accomplish, that which it ought to do;
"for the flesh lusteth against the spirit, and the spirit against
the flesh," so that a man does not do the things which he would.
(2.) The second breviate.
II . "We must next ask," he says, "whether sin
comes from will, or from necessity? If from necessity, it is not sin; if
from will, it can be avoided." We answer as before; and in order
that we may be healed, we pray to Him to whom it is said in the psalm:
"Lead Thou me out of my necessities."
(3.) The third breviate.
III . "Again we must ask," he says, "what sin
is,—natural? or accidental? If natural, it is not sin; if accidental,
it is separable; and if it is separable, it can be avoided; and because
it can be avoided, man can be without that which can be avoided."
The answer to this is, that sin is not natural; but nature (especially
in that corrupt state from which we have become by nature "children
of wrath") has too little determination of will to avoid sin,
unless assisted and healed by God's grace through Jesus Christ our Lord.
(4.) The fourth breviate.
IV . "We must ask, again," he says, "What is
sin,—an act, or a thing? If it is a thing, it must have an author; and
if it be said to have an author, then another besides God will seem to
be introduced as the author of a thing. But if it is impious to say
this, we are driven to confess that every sin is an act, not a thing. If
therefore it is an act, for this very reason, because it is an act, it
can be avoided." Our reply is, that sin no doubt is called an act,
and is such, not a thing. But likewise in the body, lameness for the
same reason is an act, not a thing, since it is the foot itself, or the
body, or the man who walks lame because of an injured foot, that is the
thing; but still the man cannot avoid the lameness, unless his foot be
cured. The same change may take place in the inward man, but it is by
God's grace, through our Lord Jesus Christ. The defect itself which
causes the lameness of the man is neither the foot, nor the body, nor
the man, nor indeed the lameness itself; for there is of course no
lameness when there is no walking, although there is nevertheless the
defect which causes the lameness whenever there is an attempt to walk.
Let him therefore ask, what name must be given to this defect,—would
he have it called a thing, or an act, or rather a bad property in the
thing, by which the deformed act comes into existence? So in the inward
man the soul is the thing, theft is an act, and avarice is the defect,
that is, the property by which the soul is evil, even when it does
nothing in gratification of its avarice,even when it hears the
prohibition, "Thou shalt not covet," and censures itself, and
yet remains avaricious. By faith, however, it receives renovation; in
other words, it is healed day by day,—yet only by God's grace through
our Lord Jesus Christ.
Chap. III. (5.) The fifth breviate.
V . "We must again," he says, "inquire whether a
man ought to be without sin. Beyond doubt he ought. If he ought, he is
able; if he is not able, then he ought not. Now if a man ought not to be
without sin, it follows that he ought to be with sin,—and then it
ceases to be sin at all, if it is determined that it is owed. Or if it
is absurd to say this, we are obliged to confess that man ought to be
without sin; and it is clear that his obligation is not more than his
ability." We frame our answer with the same illustration that we
employed in our previous reply. When we see a lame man who has the
opportunity of being cured of his lameness, we of course have a right to
say: "That man ought not to be lame; and if he ought, he is
able." And yet whenever he wishes he is not immediately able; but
only after he has been cured by the application of the remedy, and the
medicine has assisted his will. The same thing takes place in the inward
man in relation to sin which is its lameness, by the grace of Him who
"came not to call the righteous, but sinners;" since "the
whole need not the physician, but only they that be sick."
(6.) The sixth breviate.
VI . "Again," he says, "we have to inquire
whether man is commanded to be without sin; for either he is not able,
and then he is not commanded; or else because he is commanded, he is
able. For why should that be commanded which cannot at all be
done?" The answer is, that man is most wisely commanded to walk
with right steps, on purpose that, when he has discovered his own
inability to do even this, he may seek the remedy which is provided for
the inward man to cure the lameness of sin, even the grace of God,
through our Lord Jesus Christ.
(7.) The seventh breviate.
VII . "The next question we shall have to propose,"
he says, "is, whether God wishes that man be without sin. Beyond
doubt God wishes it; and no doubt he has the ability. For who is so
foolhardy as to hesitate to believe that to be possible, which he has no
doubt about God's wishing?" This is the answer. If God wished not
that man should be without sin, He would not have sent His Son without
sin, to heal men of their sins. This takes place in believers who are
being renewed day by day, until their righteousness becomes perfect,
like fully restored health.
(8.) The eighth breviate.
VIII . "Again, this question must be asked," he says,
"how God wishes man to be,—with sin, or without sin? Beyond
doubt, He does not wish him to be with sin. We must reflect how great
would be the impious blasphemy for it to be said that man has it in his
power to be with sin, which God does not wish; and for it to be denied
that he has it in his power to be without sin, which God wishes: just as
if God had created any man for such a result as this,—that he should
be able to be what He would not have him, and unable to be what He would
have him; and that he should lead an existence contrary to His will,
rather than one which should be in accordance therewith." This has
been in fact already answered; but I see that it is necessary for me to
make here an additional remark, that we are saved by hope. "But
hope that is seen is not hope; for what a man seeth, why doth he yet
hope for? But if we hope for that we see not, then do we with patience
wait for it." Full righteousness, therefore, will only then be
reached, when fulness of health is attained; and this fulness of health
shall be when there is fulness of love, for "love is the fulfilling
of the law; " and then shall come fulness of love, when "we
shall see Him even as He is." Nor will any addition to love be
possible more, when faith shall have reached the fruition of sight.
Chap. IV. (9.) The ninth breviate.
IX . "The next question we shall require to be
solved," says he, "is this: By what means is it brought about
that man is with sin?—by the necessity of nature, or by the freedom of
choice? If it is by the necessity of nature, he is blameless; if by the
freedom of choice, then the question arises, from whom he has received
this freedom of choice. No doubt, from God. Well, but that which God
bestows is certainly good. This cannot be gainsaid. On what principle,
then, is a thing proved to be good, if it is more prone to evil than to
good? For it is more prone to evil than to good if by means of it man
can be with sin and cannot be without sin." The answer is this: It
came by the freedom of choice that man was with sin; but a penal
corruption closely followed thereon, and out of the liberty produced
necessity. Hence the cry of faith to God, "Lead Thou me out of my
necessities." With these necessities upon us, we are either unable
to understand what we want, or else (while having the wish) we are not
strong enough to accomplish what we have come to understand. Now it is
just liberty itself that is promised to believers by the Liberator.
"If the Son," says He, "shall make you free, ye shall be
free indeed." For, vanquished by the sin into which it fell by its
volition, nature has lost liberty. Hence another scripture says,
"For of whom a man is overcome, of the same is he brought in
bondage." Since therefore "the whole need not the physician,
but only they that be sick;" so likewise it is not the free that
need the Deliverer, but only the enslaved. Hence the cry of joy to Him
for deliverance, "Thou hast saved my soul from the straits of
necessity." For true liberty is also real health; and this would
never have been lost, if the will had remained good. But because the
will has sinned, the hard necessity of having sin has pursued the
sinner; until his infirmity be wholly healed, and such freedom be
regained, that there must needs be, on the one hand, a permanent will to
live happily, and, on the other hand, a voluntary and happy necessity of
living virtuously, and never sinning.
(10.) The tenth breviate.
X . "Since God made man good," he says, "and,
besides making him good, further commanded him to do good, how impious
it is for us to hold that man is evil, when he was neither made so, nor
so commanded; and to deny him the ability of being good, although he was
both made so, and commanded to act so!" Our answer here is: Since
then it was not man himself, but God, who made man good; so also is it
God, and not man himself, who remakes him to be good, while liberating
him from the evil which he himself did upon his wishing, believing, and
invoking such a deliverance. But all this is effected by the renewal day
by day of the inward man, by the grace of God through our Lord Jesus
Christ, with a view to the outward man's resurrection at the last day to
an eternity not of punishment, but of life.
Chap. V. (11.) The eleventh breviate.
XI . "The next question which must be put," he says,
"is, in how many ways all sin is manifested? In two, if I mistake
not: if either those things are done which are forbidden, or those
things are not done which are commanded. Now, it is just as certain that
all things which are forbidden are able to be avoided, as it is that all
things which are commanded are able to be effected. For it is vain
either to forbid or to enjoin that which cannot either be guarded
against or accomplished. And how shall we deny the possibility of man's
being without sin, when we are compelled to admit that he can as well
avoid all those things which are forbidden, as do all those which are
commanded?" My answer is, that in the Holy Scriptures there are
many divine precepts, to mention the whole of which would be too
laborious; but the Lord, who on earth consummated and abridged His word,
expressly declared that the law and the prophets hung on two
commandments, that we might understand that whatever else has been
enjoined on us by God ends in these two commandments, and must be
referred to them: "Thou shall love the Lord thy God with all thy
heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind;" and
"Thou shall love thy neighbour as thyself." "On these two
commandments," says He, "hang all the law and the
prophets." Whatever, therefore, we are by God's law forbidden, and
whatever we are bidden to do, we are forbidden and bidden with the
direct object of fulfilling these two commandments. And perhaps the
general prohibition is, "Thou shalt not covet;" and the
general precept, "Thou shall love." Accordingly the Apostle
Paul, in a certain place, briefly embraced the two, expressing the
prohibition in these words, "Be not conformed to this world,"
and the command in these, "But be ye transformed by the renewing of
your mind." The former falls under the negative precept, not to
covet; the latter under the positive one, to love. The one has reference
to continence, the other to righteousness. The one enjoins avoidance of
evil; the other, pursuit of good. By eschewing covetousness we put off
the old man, and by showing love we put on the new. But no, man can be
continent unless God endow him with the gift; nor is God's love shed
abroad in our hearts by our own selves, but by the Holy Ghost that is
given to us. This, however, takes place day after day in those who
advance by willing, believing, and praying, and who, "forgetting
those things which are behind, reach forth unto those things which are
before." For the reason why the law inculcates all these precepts
is, that when a man has failed in fulfilling them, he may not be swollen
with pride, and so exalt himself, but may in very weariness betake
himself to grace. Thus the law fulfils its office as"
schoolmaster," so terrifying the man as "to lead him to
Christ," to give Him his love?
Chap. VI. (12.) The twelfth breviate.
XII . "Again the question arises," he says, "how
it is that man is unable to be without sin,—by his will, or by nature?
If by nature, it is not sin; if by his will, then will can very easily
be changed by will." We answer by reminding him how he ought to
reflect on the extreme presumption of saying—not simply that it is
possible (for this no doubt is undeniable, when God's grace comes in
aid), but—that it is "very easy" for will to be changed by
will; whereas the apostle says, "The flesh lusteth against the
spirit, and the spirit against the flesh: and these are contrary the one
to the other; so that ye do not the things that ye would." He does
not say, "These are contrary the one to the other, so that ye will
not do the things that ye can," but, "so that ye do not the
things that ye would." How happens it, then, that the lust of the
flesh which of course is culpable and corrupt, and is nothing else than
the desire for sin, as to which the same apostle instructs us not to let
it "reign in our mortal body;" by which expression he shows us
plainly enough that that must have an existence in our mortal body which
must not be permitted to hold a dominion in it;—how happens it, I say,
that such lust of the flesh has not been changed by that will, which the
apostle clearly implied the existence of in his words, "So that ye
do not the things that ye would," if so be that the will can so
easily be changed by will? Not that we, indeed, by this argument throw
the blame upon the nature either of the soul or of the body, which God
created, and which is wholly good; but we say that it, having been
corrupted by its own will, cannot be made whole without the grace of
God.
(13.) The thirteenth breviate.
XIII . "The next question we have to ask," says he,
"is this: If man cannot be without sin, whose fault is it,—man's
own, or some one's else? If man's own, in what way is it his fault if he
is not that which he is unable to be?" We reply, that it is man's
fault that he is not without sin on this account, because it has by
man's sole will come to pass that he has come into such a necessity as
cannot be overcome by man's sole will.
(14.) The fourteenth breviate.
XIV . "Again the question must be asked," he says,
"If man's nature is good, as nobody but Marcion or Manichaeus will
venture to deny, in what way is it good if it is impossible for it to be
free from evil? For that all sin is evil who can gainsay?" We
answer, that man's nature is both good, and is also able to be free from
evil. Therefore do we earnestly pray, "Deliver us from evil."
This deliverance, indeed, is not fully wrought, so long as the soul is
oppressed by the body, which is hastening to corruption. This process,
however, is being effected by grace through faith, so that it may be
said by and by, "O death, where is thy struggle? Where is thy
sting, O death? The sting of death is sin, and the strength of sin is
the law;" because the law by prohibiting sin only increases the
desire for it, unless the Holy Ghost spreads abroad that love, which
shall then be full and perfect, when we shall see face to face.
(15.) The fifteenth breviate.
XV . "And this, moreover, has to be said," he says:
"God is certainly righteous; this cannot be denied. But God imputes
every sin to man. This too, I suppose, must be allowed, that whatever
shall not be imputed as sin is not sin. Now if there is any sin which is
unavoidable, how is God said to be righteous, when He is supposed to
impute to any man that which cannot be avoided?" We reply, that
long ago was it declared in opposition to the proud, "Blessed is
the man to whom the Lord imputeth not sin." Now He does not impute
it to those who say to Him in faith, "Forgive us our debts, as we
forgive our debtors." And justly does He withhold this imputation,
because that is just which He says: "With what measure ye mete, it
shall be measured to you again." That, however, is sin in which
there is either not the love which ought to be, or where the love is
less than it ought to be,—whether it can be avoided by the human will
or not; because when it can be avoided, the man's present will does it,
but if it cannot be avoided his past will did it; and yet it can be
avoided,—not, however, when the proud will is lauded, but when the
humble one is assisted.
Chap. VII. (16.) The sixteenth breviate.
XVI . After all these disputations, their author introduces
himself in person as arguing with another, and represents himself as
under examination, and as being addressed by his examiner: "Show me
the man who is without sin." He answers: "I show you one who
is able to be without sin." His examiner then says to him:
"And who is he?" He answers: "You are the man."
"But if," he adds, "you were to say, 'I, at any rate,
cannot be without sin,' then you must answer me, 'Whose fault is that?'
If you then were to say, 'My own fault,' you must be further asked, 'And
how is it your fault, if you cannot be without sin?' " He again
represents himself as under examination, and thus accosted: "Are
you yourself without sin, who say that a man can be without sin?"
And he answers: "Whose fault is it that I am not without sin? But
if," continues he, "he had said in reply, 'The fault is your
own;' then the answer would be, 'How my fault, when I am unable to be
without sin?' " Now our answer to all this running argument is,
that no controversy ought to have been raised between them about such
words as these; because he nowhere ventures to affirm that a man (either
any one else, or himself) is without sin, but he merely said in reply
that he can be, —a position which we do not ourselves deny. Only the
question arises, when can he, and through whom can he? If at the present
time, then by no faithful soul which is enclosed within the body of this
death must this prayer be offered, or such words as these be spoken,
"Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors," since in
holy baptism all past debts have been already forgiven. But whoever
tries to persuade us that such a prayer is not proper for faithful
members of Christ, does in fact acknowledge nothing else than that he is
not himself a Christian. If, again, it is through himself that a man is
able to live without sin, then did Christ die in vain. But "Christ
is not dead in vain." No man, therefore, can be without sin, even
if he wish it, unless he be assisted by the grace of God through our
Lord Jesus Christ. And that this perfection may be attained, there is
even now a training carried on in growing [Christians,] and there will
be by all means a completion made, after the conflict with death is
spent, and love, which is now cherished by the operation of faith and
hope, shall be perfected in the fruition of sight and possession.
Chap. VIII. (17.) It is one thing to depart
from the body, another thing to be liberated from the body of this
death.
He next proposes to establish his point by the testimony of Holy
Scripture. Let us carefully observe what kind of defence he makes.
"There are passages," says he, "which prove that man is
commanded to be without sin." Now our answer to this is: Whether
such commands are given is not at all the point in question, for the
fact is clear enough; but whether the thing which is evidently commanded
be itself at all possible of accomplishment in the body of this death,
wherein "the flesh lusteth against the spirit, and the spirit
against the flesh, so that we cannot do the things that we would."
Now from this body of death not every one is liberated who ends the
present life, but only he who in this life has received grace, and given
proof of not receiving it in vain by spending his days in good works.
For it is plainly one thing to depart from the body, which all men are
obliged to do in the last day of their present life, and another to be
delivered from the body of this death,—which God's grace alone,
through our Lord Jesus Christ, imparts to His faithful saints. It is
after this life, indeed, that the reward of perfection is bestowed, but
only upon those by whom in their present life has been acquired the
merit of such a recompense. For no one, after going hence, shall arrive
at fulness of righteousness, unless, whilst here, he shall have run his
course by hungering and thirsting after it. "Blessed are they which
do hunger and thirst after righteousness; for they shall be
filled."
(18.) The righteousness of this life comprehended in three parts,—fasting,
alms-giving, and prayer.
As long, then, as we are "absent from the Lord, we walk by
faith, not by sight;" whence it is said, "The just shall live
by faith." Our righteousness in this pilgrimage is this—that we
press forward to that perfect and full righteousness in which there
shall be perfect and full love in the sight of His glory; and that now
we hold to the rectitude and perfection of our course, by "keeping
under our body and bringing it into subjection," by doing our alms
cheerfully and heartily, while bestowing kindnesses and forgiving the
trespasses which have been committed against us, and by "continuing
instant in prayer;"—and doing all this with sound doctrine,
whereon are built a right faith, a firm hope, and a pure charity. This
is now our righteousness, in which we pass through our course hungering
and thirsting after the perfect and full righteousness, in order that we
may hereafter be satisfied therewith. Therefore our Lord in the Gospel
(after saying, "Take heed that ye do not your righteousness before
men, to be seen of them,") in order that we should not measure our
course of life by the limit of human glory, declared in his exposition
of righteousness itself that there is none except there be these three,—
fasting, alms, prayers. Now in the fasting He indicates the entire
subjugation of the body; in the alms, all kindness of will and deed,
either by giving or forgiving; and in prayers He implies all the rules
of a holy desire. So that, although by the subjugation of the body a
check is given to that concupiscence, which ought not only to be bridled
but to be put altogether out of existence (and which will not be found
at all in that state of perfect righteousness, where sin shall be
absolutely excluded),— yet it often exerts its immoderate desire even
in the use of things which are allowable and right. In that real
beneficence in which the just man consults his neighbour's welfare,
things are sometimes done which are prejudicial, although it was thought
that they would be advantageous. Sometimes, too, through infirmity, when
the amount of the kindness and trouble which is expended either fails
short of the necessities of the objects, or is of little use under the
circumstances, then there steals over us a disappointment which
tarnishes that "cheerfulness" which secures to the
"giver" the approbation of God. This trail of sadness,
however, is the greater or the less, as each man has made more or less
progress in his kindly purposes. If, then, these considerations, and
such as these, be duly weighed, we are only right when we say in our
prayers, "Forgive us our debts, as we also forgive our
debtors." But what we say in our prayers we must carry into act,
even to loving our very enemies; or if any one who is still a babe in
Christ fails as yet to reach this point, he must at any rate, whenever
one who has trespassed against him repents and craves his pardon,
exercise forgiveness from the bottom of his heart, if he would have his
heavenly Father listen to his prayer.
(19.) The commandment of love shall be perfectly fulfilled in the
life to come.
And in this prayer, unless we choose to be contentious, there is
placed before our view a mirror of sufficient brightness in which to
behold the life of the righteous, who live by faith, and finish their
course, although they are not without sin. Therefore they say,"
Forgive us," because they have not yet arrived at the end of their
course. Hence the apostle says, "Not as if had already attained,
either were already perfect. . . Brethren, I count not myself to have
apprehended: but this one thing I do, forgetting those things which are
behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press
toward the mark, for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ
Jesus. Let us therefore, as many as be perfect, be thus minded."
In other words, let us, as many as are running perfectly, be thus
resolved, that, being not yet perfected, we pursue our course to
perfection along the way by which we have thus far run perfectly, in
order that "when that which is perfect is come, then that which is
in part may be done away; " that is, may cease to be but in part
any longer, but become whole and complete. For to faith and hope shall
succeed at once the very substance itself, no longer to be believed in
and hoped for, but to be seen and grasped. Love, however, which is the
greatest among the three, is not to be superseded, but increased and
fulfilled,—contemplating in full vision what it used to see by faith,
and acquiring in actual fruition what it once only embraced in hope.
Then in all this plenitude of charity will be fulfilled the commandment,
"Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart, and with
all thy soul, and with all thy mind." For while there remains
any remnant of the lust of the flesh, to be kept m check by the rein of
continence, God is by no means loved with all one's soul. For the flesh
does not lust without the soul; although it is the flesh which is said
to lust, because the soul lusts carnally. In that perfect state the just
man shall live absolutely without any sin, since there will be in his
members no law warring against the law of his mind, but wholly will
he love God, with all his heart, with all his soul, and with all his
mind? which is the first and chief commandment. For why should not such
perfection be enjoined on man, although in this life nobody may attain
to it? For we do not rightly run if we do not know whither we are to
run. But how could it be known, unless it were pointed out in precepts? Let us therefore "so run that we may obtain."
For all who run rightly will obtain,—not as in the contest of the
theatre, where all indeed run, but only one wins the prize. Let us
run, believing, hoping, longing; let us run, subjugating the body,
cheerfully and heartily doing alms,—in giving kindnesses and forgiving
injuries, praying that our strength may be helped as we run; and let us
so listen to the commandments which urge us to perfection, as not to
neglect running towards the fulness of love.
Chap. IX. (20.) Who may be said to walk without
spot; damnable and venial sins.
Having premised these remarks, let us carefully attend to the
passages which he whom we are answering has produced, as if we ourselves
had quoted them. "In Deuteronomy, 'Thou shalt be perfect before the
Lord thy God.' Again, in the same book, 'There shall be not an
imperfect man among the sons of Israel.' In like manner the
Saviour says in the Gospel, 'Be ye perfect, even as your Father which is
in heaven is perfect.' So the apostle, in his second Epistle to the
Corinthians, says: 'Finally, brethren, farewell. Be perfect.' Again,
to the Colossians he writes: 'Warning every man, and teaching every man
in all wisdom, that we may present every man perfect in Christ.' And
so to the Philippians: 'Do all things without murmurings and disputings,
that ye may be blameless, and harmless, as the immaculate sons of God.' In like manner to the Ephesians he writes: 'Blessed be the God
and father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who hath blessed us with all
spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ; according as He hath
chosen us in Him before the foundation of the world, that we should be
holy and blameless before Him.' Then again to the Colossians he says
in another passage: 'And you, that were sometime alienated, and enemies
in your mind by wicked works, yet now hath He reconciled in the body of
His flesh through death; present yourselves holy and unblameable and
unreprovable in His sight.' In the same strain, he says to the
Ephesians: 'That He might present to Himself a glorious Church, not
having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing but that it should be holy
and without blemish. So in his first Epistle to the Corinthians he
says 'Be ye sober, and righteous, and sin not.' So again in the
Epistle of St. Peter it is written 'Wherefore gird up the loins of your
mind, be sober, and hope to the end, for the grace that is offered to
you: . . . as obedient children, not fashioning yourselves according to
the former lusts in your ignorance: but as He who hath called you is
holy, so be ye holy in all manner of conversation; because it is
written, Be ye holy; for I am holy.' Whence blessed David likewise
says: 'O Lord, who shall sojourn in Thy tabernacle, or who shall rest on
Thy holy mountain? He that walketh without blame, and worketh
righteousness.' And in another passage: 'I shall be blameless with Him.' And yet again: 'Blessed are the blameless in the way, who walk
in the law of the Lord.' To the same effect it is written in Solomon:
'The Lord loveth holy hearts, and all they that are blameless are
acceptable unto Him.'" Now some of these passages exhort men who
are running their course that they run perfectly; others refer to the
end thereof, that men may reach forward to it as they run. He, however,
is not unreasonably said to walk blamelessly, not who has already
reached the end of his journey, but who is pressing on towards the end
in a blameless manner, free from damnable sins, and at the same time not
neglecting to cleanse by almsgiving such sins as are venial. For the way
in which we walk, that is, the road by which we reach perfection, is
cleansed by clean prayer. That, however, is a clean prayer in which we
say in truth, "Forgive us, as we ourselves forgive." So
that, as there is nothing censured when blame is not imputed, we may
hold on our course to perfection without censure, in a word,
blamelessly; and in this perfect state, when we arrive at it at last, we
shall find that there is absolutely nothing which requires cleansing by
forgiveness.
Chap. X. (21.) To whom God's commandments are
grievous; and to whom, not. Why Scripture says that God's commandments
are not grievous; a commandment is a proof of the freedom of man's will;
prayer is a proof of grace.
He next quotes passages to show that God's commandments are not
grievous. But who can be ignorant of the fact that, since the generic
commandment is love (for "the end of the commandment is love,
and "love is the fulfilling of the law"), whatever is
accomplished by the operation of love, and not of fear, is not grievous?
They, however, are oppressed by the commandments of God, who try to
fulfil them by fearing. "But perfect love casteth out
fear;" and, in respect of the burden of the commandment, it not
only takes off the pressure of its heavy weight, but it actually lifts
it up as if on wings. In order, however, that this love may be
possessed, even as far as it can possibly be possessed in the body of
this death, the determination of will avails but little, unless it be
helped by God's grace through our Lord Jesus Christ. For as it must
again and again be stated, it is "shed abroad in our hearts,"
not by our own selves, but "by the Holy Ghost which is given unto
us." And for no other reason does Holy Scripture insist on the
truth that God's commandments are not grievous, than this, that the soul
which finds them grievous may understand that it has not yet received
those resources which make the Lord's commandments to be such as they
are commended to us as being, even gentle and pleasant; and that it may
pray with groaning of the will to obtain the gift of facility. For the
man who says, "Let my heart be blameless;" and,
"Order Thou my steps according to Thy word: and let not any
iniquity have dominion over me;" and, "Thy will be done in
earth, as it is in heaven;" and, "Lead us not into
temptation;" and other prayers of a like purport, which it
would be too long to particularize, does in effect offer up a prayer for
ability to keep God's commandments. Neither, indeed, on the one hand,
would any injunctions be laid upon us to keep them, if our own will had
nothing to do in the matter; nor, on the other hand, would there be any
room for prayer, if our will were alone sufficient. God's commandments,
therefore, are commended to us as being not grievous, in order that he
to whom they are grievous may understand that he has not as yet received
the gift which removes their grievousness; and that he may not think
that he is really performing them, when he so keeps them that they are
grievous to him. For it is a cheerful giver whom God loves.
Nevertheless, when a man finds God's commandments grievous, let him not
be broken down by despair; let him rather oblige himself to seek, to
ask, and to knock.
(22.) Passages to show that God's commandments are not grievous.
He afterwards adduces those passages which represent God as
recommending His own commandments as not grievous: let us now attend to
their testimony. "Because," says he, "God's commandments
are not only not impossible, but they are not even grievous. In
Deuteronomy: 'The Lord thy God will again turn and rejoice over thee for
good, as He rejoiced over thy fathers, if ye shall hearken to the voice
of the Lord your God, to keep His commandments, and His ordinances, and
His judgments, written in the book of this law; if thou turn to the Lord
thy God with all thine heart, and With all thy soul. For this command,
which I give thee this day, is not grievous, neither is it far from
thee: it is not in heaven, that thou shouldest say, Who will ascend into
heaven, and obtain it for us, that we may hear and do it? neither is it
beyond the sea, that thou shouldest say, Who will cross over the sea,
and obtain it for us, that we may hear and do it? The word is nigh thee,
in thy mouth, and in thine heart, and in thine hands to do it.' In the
Gospel likewise the Lord says: 'Come unto me, all ye that labour and are
heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you, and learn
of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto
your souls. For my yoke is easy, and my burden is light.' So also in
the Epistle of Saint John it is written: 'This is the love of God, that
we keep His commandments: and His commandments are not grievous.'"
On hearing these testimonies out of the law, and the gospel, and the
epistles, let us be built up unto that grace which those persons do not
understand, who, "being ignorant of God's righteousness, and
wishing to establish their own righteousness, have not submitted
themselves unto the righteousness of God." For, if they understand
not the passage of Deuteronomy in the sense that the Apostle Paul quoted
it,—that "with the heart men believe unto righteousness, and with
their mouth make confession unto salvation;" since "the
that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick,"—they
certainly ought (by that very passage of the Apostle John which he
quoted last to this effect: "This is the love of God, that we keep
His commandments; and His commandments are not grievous") to be
admonished that God's commandment is not grievous to the love of God,
which is shed abroad in our hearts only by the Holy Ghost, not by the
determination of man's will by attributing to which more than they
ought, they are ignorant of God's righteousness. This love, however,
shall then be made perfect, when all fear of punishment shall be cut
off.
Chap. XI. (23.) Passages of Scripture which,
when objected against him by the Catholics, Coelestius endeavours to
elude by other passages: the first passage.
After this he adduced the passages which are usually quoted against
them. He does not attempt to explain these passages, but, by quoting
what seem to be contrary ones, he has entangled the questions more
tightly. "For," says he, "there are passages of Scripture
which are in opposition to those who ignorantly suppose that they are
able to destroy the liberty of the will, or the possibility of not
sinning, by the authority of Scripture. For," he adds, "they
are in the habit of quoting against us what holy Job said: 'Who is pure
from uncleanness? Not one; even if he be an infant of only one day upon
the earth.' " Then he proceeds to give a sort of answer to this
passage by help of other quotations; as when Job himself said: "For
although I am a righteous and blameless man, I have become a subject for
mockery,"—not understanding that a man may be called
righteous, who has gone so far towards perfection in righteousness as to
be very near it; and this we do not deny to have been in the power of
many even in this life, when they walk in it by faith.
(24.) To be without sin, and to be without blame— how differing.
The same thing is affirmed in another passage, which he has quoted
immediately afterwards, as spoken by the same Job: "Behold, I am
very near my judgment, and I know that I shall be found
righteous." Now this is the judgment of which it is said in
another scripture: "And He shall bring forth thy righteousness as
the light, and thy judgment as the noonday." But he does not say, I
am already there; but, "I am very near." If, indeed, the
judgment of his which he meant was not that which he would himself
exercise, but that whereby he was to be judged at the last day, then in
such judgment all will be found righteous who with sincerity pray:
"Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors." For it
is through this forgiveness that they will be found righteous; on this
account that whatever sins they have here incurred, they have blotted
out by their deeds of charity. Whence the Lord says: "Give alms;
and, behold, all things are clean unto you." For in the end, it
shall be said to the righteous, when about to enter into the promised
kingdom: "I was an hungered, and ye gave me meat," and so
forth. However, it is one thing to be without sin, which in this life
can only be predicated of the Only-begotten, and another thing to be
without accusation, which might be said of many just persons even in the
present life; for there is a certain measure of a good life, according
to which even in this human intercourse there could no just accusation
be possibly laid against him. For who can justly accuse the man who
wishes evil to no one, and who faithfully does good to all he can, and
never cherishes a wish to avenge himself on any man who does him wrong,
so that he can truly say, "As we forgive our debtors ?" And
yet by the very fact that he truly says, "Forgive, as we also
forgive," he plainly admits that he is not without sin.
(25.) Hence the force of the statement: "There was no injustice
in my hands, but my prayer was pure." For the purity of his
prayer arose from this circumstance, that it was not improper for him to
ask forgiveness in prayer, when he really bestowed forgiveness himself.
(26.) Why Job was so great a sufferer.
And when he says concerning the Lord, "For many bruises hath He
inflicted upon me without a cause,'' observe that his words are not,
He hath inflicted none with a cause; but, "many without a
cause." For it was not because of his manifold sins that these many
bruises were inflicted on him, but in order to make trial of his
patience. For on account of his sins, indeed, without which, as he
acknowledges in another passage, he was certainly not, he yet judges
that he ought to have suffered less.
(27.) Who may be said to keep the ways of the Lord; what it is to
decline and depart from the ways of the Lord.
Then again, as for what he says, "For I have kept His ways, and
have not turned aside from His commandments, nor will I depart from
them; " he has kept God's ways who does not so turn aside as to
forsake them, but makes progress by running his course therein;
although, weak as he is, he sometimes stumbles or falls, onward,
however, he still goes, sinning less and less until he reaches the
perfect state in which he will sin no more. For in no other way could he
make progress, except by keeping His ways. The man, indeed, who declines
from these and becomes an apostate at last, is certainly not he who,
although he has sin, yet never ceases to persevere in fighting against
it until he arrives at the home where there shall remain no more
conflict with death. Well now, it is in our present struggle therewith
that we are clothed with the righteousness in which we here live by
faith,—clothed with it as it were with a breastplate. Judgment also
we take on ourselves; and even when it is against us, we turn it round
to our own behalf; for we become our own accusers and condemn our sins:
whence that scripture which says, "The righteous man accuses
himself at the beginning of his speech." Hence also he says:
"I put on righteousness, and clothed myself with judgment like a
mantle." Our vesture at present no doubt is wont to be armour
for war rather than garments of peace, while concupiscence has still to
be subdued; it will be different by and by, when our last enemy death
shall be destroyed, and our righteousness shall be full and complete,
without an enemy to molest us more.
(28.) When our heart may be said not to reproach us; when good is to
be perfected.
Furthermore, concerning these words of Job, "My heart shall not
reproach me in all my life," we remark, that it is in this
present life of ours, in which we live by faith, that our heart does not
reproach us, if the same faith whereby we believe unto righteousness
does not neglect to rebuke our sin. On this principle the apostle says:
"The good that I would I do not; but the evil which I would not,
that I do." Now it is a good thing to avoid concupiscence, and
this good the just man would, who lives by faith; and still he does
what he hates, because he has concupiscence, although "he goes not
after his lusts;" if he has done this, he has himself at that
time really done it, so as to yield to, and acquiesce in, and obey the
desire of sin. His heart then reproaches him, because it reproaches
himself, and not his sin which dwelleth in him. But whensoever he
suffers not sin to reign in his mortal body to obey it in the lusts
thereof, and yields not his members as instruments of
unrighteousness unto sin, sin no doubt is present in his members,
but it does not reign, because its desires are not obeyed. Therefore,
while he does that which he would not,— in other words, while he
wishes not to lust, but still lusts,—he consents to the law that it is
good: for what the law would, that he also wishes; because it is his
desire not to indulge concupiscence, and the law expressly says,
"Thou shalt not covet." Now in that he wishes what the law
also would have done, he no doubt consents to the law: but still he
lusts, because he is not without sin; it is, however, no longer himself
that does the thing, but the sin which dwells within him. Hence it is
that "his heart does not reproach him in all his life;" that
is, in his faith, because the just man lives by faith, so that his faith
is his very life. He knows, to be sure, that in himself dwells nothing
good,— even in his flesh, which is the dwelling- place of sin. By not
consenting, however, to it, he lives by faith, wherewith he also calls
upon God to help him in his contest against sin. Moreover, there is
present to him to will that no sin at all should be in him, but then how
to perfect this good is not present. It is not the mere
"doing" of a good thing that is not present to him, but the
"perfecting" of it. For in this, that he yields no consent, he
does good; he does good again, in this, that he hates his own lust; he
does good also, in this, that he does not cease to give alms; and in
this, that he forgives the man who sins against him, he does good; and
in this, that he asks forgiveness for his own trespasses,—sincerely
avowing in his petition that he also forgives those who trespass against
himself, and praying that he may not be led into temptation, but be
delivered from evil,—he does good. But how to perfect the good is not
present to him; it will be, however, in that final state, when the
concupiscence which dwells in his members shall exist no more. His
heart, therefore, does not reproach him, when it reproaches the sin
which dwells in his members; nor can it reproach unbelief in him. Thus
"in all his life,"—that is, in his faith,—he is neither
reproached by his own heart, nor convinced of not being without sin. And
Job himself acknowledges this concerning himself, when he says,
"Not one of my sins hath escaped Thee; Thou hast sealed up my
transgressions in a bag, and marked if I have done iniquity
unawares." With regard, then, to the passages which he has
adduced from the book of holy Job, we have shown to the best of our
ability in what sense they ought to be taken. He, however, has failed to
explain the meaning of the words which he has himself quoted from the
same Job: "Who then is pure from uncleanness? Not one; even if he
be an infant of only one day upon the earth."
Chap. XII. (29.) The second passage. Who may be
said to abstain from every evil thing.
"They are in the habit of next quoting," says he, "the
passage: 'Every man is a liar.'" But here again he offers no
solution of words which are quoted against himself even by himself; all
he does is to mention other apparently opposite passages before persons
who are unacquainted with the sacred Scriptures, and thus to cast the
word of God into conflict. This is what he says: "We tell them in
answer, how in the book of Numbers it is said, 'Man is true.' While
of holy Job this eulogy is read: 'There was a certain man in the land of
Ausis, whose name was Job; that man was true, blameless, righteous, and
godly, abstaining from every evil thing.'" I am surprised that
he has brought forward this passage, which says that Job "abstained
from every evil thing," wishing it to mean "abstained from
every sin;" because he has argued already that sin is not a
thing, but an act. Let him recollect that, even if it is an act, it may
still be called a thing. That man, however, abstains from every evil
thing, who either never consents to the sin, which is always with him,
or, if sometimes hard pressed by it, is never oppressed by it; just as
the wrestling champion, who, although he is sometimes caught in a fierce
grapple, does not for all that lose the prowess which constitutes him
the better man. We read, indeed, of a man without blame, of one without
accusation; but we never read of one without sin, except the Son of man,
who is also the only- begotten Son of God.
(30.) "Every man is a liar," owing to himself alone; but
"every man is true," by help only of the grace of God.
"Moreover," says he, "in Job himself it is said: 'And
he maintained the miracle of a true man.' Again we read in Solomon,
touching wisdom: 'Men that are liars cannot remember her, but men of
truth shall be found in her.' Again in the Apocalypse: 'And in their
mouth was found no guile, for they are without fault.' " To all
these statements we reply with a reminder to our opponents, of how a man
may be called true, through the grace and truth of God, who is in
himself without doubt a liar. Whence it is said: "Every man is a
liar." As for the passage also which he has quoted in reference
to Wisdom, when it is said, "Men of truth shall be found in
her," we must observe that it is undoubtedly not "in
her," but in themselves that men shall be found liars. Just as in
another passage: "Ye were sometimes darkness, but now are ye light
in the Lord,—when he said, "Ye were darkness," he did
not add, "in the Lord;" but after saving, "Ye are now
light," he expressly added the phrase, "in the Lord," for
they could not possibly be "light" in themselves; in order
that "he who glorieth may glory in the Lord." The
"faultless" ones, indeed, in the Apocalypse, are so called
because "no guile was found in their mouth." They did not
say they had no sin: if they had said this, they would deceive
themselves, and the truth would not be in them; and if the truth
were not in them, guile and untruth would be found in their mouth. if,
however, to avoid envy, they said they were not without sin, although
they were sinless, then this very insincerity would be a lie, and the
character given of them would be untrue: "In their mouth was found
no guile." Hence indeed "they are without fault;" for as
they have forgiven those who have done them wrong, so are they purified
by God's forgiveness of themselves. Observe now how we have to the best
of our power explained in what sense the quotations he has in his own
behalf advanced ought to be understood. But how the passage, "Every
man is a liar," is to be interpreted, he on his part has altogether
omitted to explain; nor is an explanation within his power, without a
correction of the error which makes him believe that man can be true
without the help of God's grace, and merely by virtue of his own free
will.
Chap. XIII. (31.) The third passage. It is one
thing to depart, and another thing to have departed, from all sin.
"there is none that doeth good,"—of whom this is to be
understood.
He has likewise propounded another question, as we shall proceed to
show, but has failed to solve it; nay, he has rather rendered it more
difficult, by first stating the testimony that had been quoted against
him: "There is none that doeth good, no, not one;" and then
resorting to seemingly contrary passages to show that there are persons
who do good. This he succeeded, no doubt, in doing. It is, however, one
thing for a man not to do good, and another thing not to be without sin,
although he at the same time may do many good things. The passages,
therefore, which he adduces are not really contrary to the statement
that no person is without sin in this life. He does not, for his own
part, explain in what sense it is declared that "there is none that
doeth good, no, not one." These are his words: "Holy David
indeed says, 'Hope thou in the Lord and be doing good.'" But
this is a precept, and not an accomplished fact; and such a precept as
is never kept by those of whom it is said, "There is none that
doeth good, no, not one." He adds: "Holy Tobit also said,
'Fear not, my son, that we have to endure poverty; we shall have many
blessings if we fear God, and depart from all sin, and do that which is
good.'" Most true indeed it is, that man shall have many
blessings when he shall have departed from all sin. Then no evil shall
betide him; nor shall he have need of the prayer, "Deliver us from
evil." Although even now every man who progresses, advancing
ever with an upright purpose, departs from all sin, and becomes further
removed from it as he approaches nearer to the fulness and perfection of
the righteous state; because even concupiscence itself, which is sin
dwelling in our flesh, never ceases to diminish in those who are making
progress, although it still remains in their mortal members. It is one
thing, therefore, to depart from all sin, —a process which is even now
in operation, —and another thing to have departed from all sin, which
shall happen in the state of future perfection. But still, even he who
has departed already from evil, and is continuing to do so, must be
allowed to be a doer of good. How then is it said, in the passage which
he has quoted and left unsolved, "There is none that doeth good,
no, not one," unless that the Psalmist there censures some one
nation, amongst whom there was not a man that did good, wishing to
remain" children of men," and not sons of God, by whose grace
man becomes good, in order to do good? For we must suppose the Psalmist
here to mean that "good" which he describes in the context,
saying, "God looked down from heaven upon the children of men, to
see if there were any that did understand, and seek God." Such
good then as this, seeking after God, there was not a man found who
pursued it, no, not one; but this was in that class of men which is
predestinated to destruction. It was upon such that God looked down
in His foreknowledge, and passed sentence.
Chap. XIV. (32.) The fourth passage. In what
sense God only is good. With God to be good and to be Himself are the
same thing.
"They likewise," says he, "quote what the Saviour
says: 'Why callest thou me good? There is none good save one, that is,
God? '" This statement, however, he makes no attempt whatever to
explain; all he does is to oppose to it sundry other passages which seem
to contradict it, which he adduces to show that man, too, is good. Here
are his remarks: "We must answer this text with another, in which
the same Lord says, 'A good man out of the good treasure of his heart
bringeth forth good things.' And again: 'He maketh His sun to rise on
the good and on the evil.' Then in another passage it is written,
'For the good things are created from the beginning ;' and yet
again, 'They that are good shall dwell in the land.'" Now to
all this we must say in answer, that the passages in question must be
understood in the same sense as the former one, "There is none
good, save one, that is, God." Either because all created things,
although God made them very good, are yet, when compared with their
Creator, not good, being in fact incapable of any comparison with Him.
For in a transcendent, and yet very proper sense, He said of Himself,
"I AM THAT I AM." The statement therefore before us,
"None is good save one, that is, God," is used in some such
way as that which is said of John, "He was not that light;"
although the Lord calls him "a lamp," just as He says to His
disciples: "Ye are the light of the world: . . . neither do men
light a lamp and put it under a bushel." Still, in comparison with
that light which is "the true light which light every man that
cometh into the world," he was not light. Or else, because the very
sons of God even, when compared with themselves as they shall hereafter
become in their eternal perfection, are good in such a way that they
still remain also evil. Although I should not have dared to say this of
them (for who would be so bold as to call them evil who have God for
their Father?) unless the Lord had Himself said: "If ye then, being
evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more shall
your Father which is in heaven give good things to them that ask Him
?" Of course, by applying to them the words, "your
Father," He proved that they were already sons of God; and yet at
the same time He did not hesitate to say that they were
"evil." Your author, however, does not explain to us how they
are good, whilst yet "there is none good save one, that is,
God." Accordingly the man who asked "what good thing he was to
do," was admonished to seek Him by whose grace he might be good; to
whom also to be good is nothing else than to be Himself, because He is
unchangeably good, and cannot be evil at all.
(33.) The fifth passage.
"This," says he, "is another text of theirs: `Who will
boast that he has a pure heart?'" And then he answered this with
several passages, wishing to show that there can be in man a pure heart.
But he omits to inform us how the passage which he reported as quoted
against himself must be taken, so as to prevent Holy Scripture seeming
to be opposed to itself in this text, and in the passages by which be
makes his answer. We for our part indeed tell him, in answer, that the
clause, "Who will boast that he has a pure heart?" is a
suitable sequel to the preceding sentence, "whenever a righteous
king sits upon the throne." For how great soever a man's
righteousness may be, he ought to reflect and think, lest there should
be found something blameworthy, which has escaped indeed his own notice,
when that righteous King shall sit upon His throne, whose cognizance no
sins can possibly escape, not even those of which it is said, "Who
understandeth his transgressions?" "When, therefore, the
righteous King shall sit upon His throne, . . . who will boast that he
has a pure heart? or who will boldly say that he is pure from sin?"
Except perhaps those who wish to boast of their own righteousness, and
not glory in the mercy of the Judge Himself.
Chap. XV. (34.) The opposing passages.
And yet the passages are true which he goes on to adduce by way of
answer, saying: "The Saviour in the gospel declares, `Blessed are
the pure in heart; for they shall see God.' David also says, `Who shall
ascend into the hill of the Lord? or who shall stand in His holy place?
He that is innocent in his hands, and pure in his heart;' and again in
another passage, 'Do good, O Lord, unto those that be good and upright
in heart.' So also in Solomon: 'Riches are good unto him that hath no
sin on his conscience;' and again in the same book, 'Leave off from sin,
and order thine hands aright, and cleanse thy heart from wickedness.' So
in the Epistle of John, 'If our heart condemn us not, then have we
confidence toward God; and whatsoever we ask, we shall receive of
Him.'" For all this is accomplished by the will, by the exercise of
faith, hope, and love; by keeping under the body; by doing alms; by
forgiving injuries; by earnest prayer; by supplicating for strength to
advance in our course; by sincerely saying, "Forgive us, as we also
forgive others," and "Lead us not into temptation, but deliver
us from evil." By this process, it is certainly brought about that
our heart is cleansed, and all our sin taken away; and what the
righteous King, when sitting on His throne, shall find concealed in the
heart and uncleansed as yet, shall be remitted by His mercy, so that the
whole shall be rendered sound and cle ansed for seeing God. For" he
shall have judgment without mercy, that hath showed no mercy: yet mercy
triumpheth against judgment." If it were not so, what hope could
any of us have? "When, indeed, the righteous King shall sit upon
His throne, who shall boast that he hath a pure heart, or who shall
boldly say that he is pure from sin?" Then, however, through His
mercy shall the righteous, being by that time fully and perfectly
cleansed, shine forth like the glorious sun in the kingdom of their
Father.
(35.) The Church will be without spot and wrinkle after the
resurrection.
Then shall the Church realize, fully and perfectly, the condition of
"not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing," because then
also will it in a real sense be glorious. For inasmuch as he added the
epithet "glorious," when he said, "That He might present
the Church to Himself, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such
thing," he signified sufficiently when the Church will be without
spot, or wrinkle, or anything of this kind,— then of course when it
shall be glorious. Because it is not so much when the Church is involved
in so many evils, or amidst such offences, and in so great a mixture of
very evil men, and amidst the heavy reproaches of the ungodly, that we
ought to say that it is glorious, because kings serve it,- -a fact which
only produces a more perilous and a sorer temptation;—but then shall
it rather be glorious, when that event shall come to pass of which the
apostle also speaks in the words, "When Christ, who is your life,
shall appear, then shall ye also appear with Him in glory." For
since the Lord Himself, in that form of a servant by which He united
Himself as Mediator to the Church, was not glorified except by the glory
of His resurrection (whence it is said, "The Spirit was not yet
given, because Christ was not yet glorified"), how, shall His
Church be described as glorious, before its resurrection? He cleanses
it, therefore, now "by the layer of the water in the word,"
washing away its past sins, and driving off from it the dominion of
wicked angels; but then by bringing all its healthy powers to
perfection, He makes it meet for that glorious state, where it shall
shine without a spot or wrinkle. For "whom He did predestinate,
them He also called; and whom He called, them He also justified; and
whom He justified, them He also glorified." It was under this
mystery, as I suppose, that that was spoken, "Behold, I cast out
devils, and I do cures to-day and to-morrow, and the third day I shall
be consummated," or perfected. For He said this in the person of
His body, which is His Church, putting days for distinct and appointed
periods, which He also signified in "the third day" in His
resurrection.
(36.) The difference between the upright in heart and the clean in
heart.
I suppose, too, that there is a difference between one who is upright
in heart and one who is clean in heart. A man is upright in heart when
he "reaches forward to those things which are before, forgetting
those things which are behind" so as to arrive in a right course,
that is, with right faith and purpose, at the perfection where he may
dwell clean and pure in heart. Thus, in the psalm, the conditions ought
to be severally bestowed on each separate character, where it is said,
"Who shall ascend into the hill of the Lord? or who shall stand in
His holy place? He that is innocent in his hands, and clean in his
heart." He shall ascend, innocent in his hands, and stand, clean in
his heart,—the one state in present operation, the other in its
consummation. And of them should rather be understood that which is
written: "Riches are good unto him that hath no sin on his
conscience." Then indeed shall accrue the good, or true riches,
when all poverty shall have passed away; in other words, when all
infirmity shall have been removed. A man may now indeed "leave off
from sin," when in his onward course he departs from it, and is
renewed day by day; and he may "order his hands," and direct
them to works of mercy, and "cleanse his heart from all
wickedness,"— he may be so merciful that what remains may be
forgiven him by free pardon. This indeed is the sound and suitable
meaning, without any vain and empty boasting, of that which St. John
said: "If our heart condemn us not, then have we confidence toward
God. And whatsoever we ask, we shall receive of Him." The warning
which he clearly has addressed to us in this passage, is to beware lest
our heart should reproach us in our very prayers and petitions; that is
to say, lest, when we happen to resort to this prayer, and say,
"Forgive us, even as we ourselves forgive, we should have to feel
compunction for not doing what we say, or should even lose boldness to
utter what we fail to do, and thereby forfeit the confidence of faithful
and earnest prayer.
Chap. XVI. (37.) The sixth passage.
He has also adduced this passage of Scripture, which is very commonly
quoted against his party: "For there is not a just man upon earth,
that doeth good, and sinneth not." And he makes a pretence of
answering it by other passages,—how, "the Lord says concerning
holy Job, 'Hast thou considered my servant Job? For there is none like
him upon earth, a man who is blameless, true, a worshipper of God, and
abstaining from every evil thing.'" On this passage we have already
made some remarks. But he has not even attempted to show us how, on the
one hand, Job was absolutely sinless upon earth,—if the words are to
bear such a sense; and, on the other hand, how that can be true which he
has admitted to be in the Scripture, "There is not a just man upon
earth, that doeth good, and sinneth not."
Chap. XVII. (38.) The seventh passage. Who may
be called immaculate. How it is that in God's sight no man is justified.
"They also, says he, "quote the text: "For in thy
sight shall no man living be justified.'" And his affected answer
to this passage amounts to nothing else than the showing how texts of
Holy Scripture seem to clash with one another, whereas it is our duty
rather to demonstrate their agreement. These are his words: "We
must confront them with this answer, from the testimony of the
evangelist concerning holy Zacharias and Elisabeth, when he says, 'And
they were both righteous before God, walking in all the commandments and
ordinances of the Lord blameless.'" Now both these righteous
persons had, of course, read amongst these very commandments the method
of cleansing their own sins. For, according to what is said in the
Epistle to the Hebrews of "every high priest taken from among
men," Zacharias used no doubt to offer sacrifices even for his own
sins. The meaning, however, of the phrase "blameless," which
is applied to him, we have already, as I suppose, sufficiently
explained. "And," he adds, "the blessed apostle says,
'That we should be holy, and without blame before Him.'" This,
according to him, is said that we should be so, if those persons are to
be understood by "blameless" who are altogether without sin.
If, however, they are "blameless" who are without blame or
censure, then it is impossible for us to deny that there have been, and
still are, such persons even in this present life; for it does not
follow that a man is without sin because be has not a blot of
accusation. Accordingly the apostle, when selecting ministers for
ordination, does not say, "If any be sinless," for he would be
unable to find any such; but he says, "If any be without
accusation," for such, of course, he would be able to find. But our
opponent does not tell us how, in accordance with his views, we ought to
understand the scripture, "For in Thy sight shall no man living be
justified." The meaning of these words is plain enough, receiving
as it does additional light from the preceding clause: "Enter
not," says the Psalmist, "into judgment with Thy servant, for
in Thy sight shall no man living be justified." It is judgment
which he fears, therefore he desires that mercy which triumphs over
judgment. For the meaning of the prayer, "Enter not into judgment
with Thy servant," is this: "Judge me not according to
Thyself," who art without sin; "for in Thy sight shall no man
living be justified." This without doubt is understood as spoken of
the present life, whilst the predicate "shall not be
justified" has reference to that perfect state of righteousness
which belongs not to this life.
Chap. XVIII. (39.) The eighth passage. In what
sense he is said not to sin who is born of God. In what way he who sins
shall not see nor know God.
"They also quote," says he, "this passage, "If we
say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in
us.'" And this very clear testimony he has endeavoured to meet with
apparently contradictory texts, saying thus: "The same St. John in
this very epistle says, 'This, however, brethren, I say, that ye sin
not. Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin; for his seed
remaineth in him: and he cannot sin.' Also elsewhere: 'Whosoever is born
of God sinneth not; because his being born of God preserveth him, and
the evil one toucheth him not.' And again in another passage, when
speaking of the Saviour, he says: 'Since He was manifested to take away
sins, whosoever abideth in Him sinneth not: whosoever sinneth hath not
seen Him, neither known Him.' And yet again: 'Beloved, now are we the
sons of God; and it doth not yet appear what we shall be: but we know
that, when He shall appear, we shall be like Him; for we shall see Him
as He is. And every man that hath this hope towards Him purifieth
himself, even as He is pure.'" And yet, notwithstanding the truth
of all these passages, that also is true which he has adduced, without,
however, offering any explanation of it: "If we say that we have no
sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us." Now it
follows from the whole of this, that in so far as we are born of God we
abide in Him who appeared to take away sins, that is, in Christ, and sin
not,—which is simply that "the inward man is renewed day by
day;" but in so far as we are born of that man "through whom
sin entered into the world, and death by sin, and so death passed upon
all men" we are not without sin, because we are not as yet free
from his infirmity, until, by that renewal which takes place from day to
day (for it is in accordance with this that we were born of God), that
infirmity shall be wholly repaired, wherein we were born from the first
than, and in which we are not without sin. While the remains of this
infirmity abide in our inward man, however much they may be daily
lessened in those who are advancing, "we deceive ourselves, and the
truth is not in us, if we say that we have no sin." Now, however
true it is that "whosoever sinneth hath not seen Him, nor known
Him" since with that vision and knowledge, which shall be realized
in actual sight, no one can in this life see and know Him; yet with that
vision and knowledge which come of faith, there may be many who commit
sin,—even apostates themselves,—who still have believed in Him some
time or other; so that of none of these could it be said, according to
the vision and knowledge which as yet come of faith, that he has neither
seen Him nor known Him. But I suppose it ought to be understood that it
is the renewal which awaits perfection that sees and knows Him; whereas
the infirmity which is destined to waste and ruin neither sees nor knows
Him. And it is owing to the remains of this infirmity, of whatever
amount, which remain firm in our inward man, that "we deceive
ourselves, and have not the truth in us, when we say that we have no
sin." Although, then, by the grace of renovation "we are the
sons of God," yet by reason of the remains of infirmity within us
"it doth not appear what we shall be; only we know that, when He
shall appear, we shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is."
Then there shall be no more sin, because no infirmity shall any longer
remain within us or without us. "And every man that hath this hope
towards Him purifieth himself, even as He is pure,"—purifieth
himself, not indeed by himself alone, but by believing in Him, and
calling on Him who sanctifieth His saints; which sanctification, when
perfected at last (for it is at present only advancing and growing day
by day), shall take away from us for ever all the remains of our
infirmity.
Chap. XIX. (40.) The ninth passage.
"This passage, too," says he, "is quoted by them: 'It
is not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that
showeth mercy.'" And he observes that the answer to be given to
them is derived from the same apostle's words in another passage:
"Let him do what he will." And he adds another passage from
the Epistle to Philemon, where, speaking of Onesimus, [St. Paul says]:
"'Whom I would have retained with me, that in thy stead he might
have ministered unto me in the bonds of the gospel. But without thy mind
would I do nothing; that thy benefit should not be as it were of
necessity, but willingly.' Likewise, in Deuteronomy: 'Life and death
hath He set before thee, and good and evil: . . . choose thou life, that
thou mayest live.' So in the book of Solomon: 'God from the beginning
made man, and left him in the hand of His counsel; and He added for him
commandments and precepts: if thou wilt—to perform acceptable
faithfulness for the time to come, they shall save thee. He hath set
fire and water before thee: stretch forth thine hand unto whether thou
wilt. Before man are good and evil, and life and death; poverty and
honour are from the Lord God.' So again in Isaiah we read: 'If ye be
willing, and hearken unto me, ye shall eat the good of the land; but if
ye be not willing, and hearken not to me, the sword shall devour you:
for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken this.'" Now with all their
efforts of disguise they here betray their purpose; for they plainly
attempt to controvert the grace and mercy of God, which we desire to
obtain whenever we offer the prayer, "Thy will be done in earth as
it is in heaven;" or again this, "Lead us not into temptation,
but deliver us from evil." For indeed why do we present such
petitions in earnest supplication, if the result is of him that willeth,
and him that runneth, but not of God that showeth mercy? Not that the
result is without our will, but that our will does not accomplish the
result, unless it receive the divine assistance. Now the wholesomeness
of faith is this, that it makes us "seek, that we may find; ask,
that we may receive; and knock, that it may be opened to us.' Whereas
the man who gainsays it, does really shut the door of God's mercy
against himself. I am unwilling to say more touching so important a
matter, because I do better in committing it to the groans of the
faithful, than to words of my own.
(41.) Specimens of Pelagian exegesis.
But I beg of you to see what kind of objection, after all, he makes,
that to him who "willeth and runneth" there is no necessity
for God's mercy, which actually anticipates him in order that he may
run,—because, forsooth, the apostle says concerning a certain person,
"Let him do what he will,"—in the matter, as I suppose,
which he goes on to treat, when he says, "He sinneth not, let him
marry!" As if indeed it should be regarded as a great matter to be
willing to marry, when the subject is a laboured discussion concerning
the assistance of God's grace, or that it is of any great advantage to
will it, unless God's providence, which governs all things, joins
together the man and the woman. Or, in the case of the apostle's writing
to Philemon, that "his kindness should not be as it were of
necessity, but voluntary,"—as if any good act could indeed be
voluntary otherwise than by God's "working in us both to will and
to do of His own good pleasure." Or, when the Scripture says in
Deuteronomy," Life and death hath He set before man and good and
evil," and admonishes him "to choose life;" as if,
forsooth, this very admonition did not come from God's mercy, or as if
there were any advantage in choosing life, unless God inspired love to
make such a choice, and gave the possession of it when chosen,
concerning which it is said: "For anger is in His indignation, and
in His pleasure is life."
Or again, because it is said, "The commandments, if thou wilt,
shall save thee,"—as if a man ought not to thank God, because he
has a will to keep the commandments, since, if he wholly lacked the
light of truth, it would not be possible for him to possess such a will.
"Fire and water being set before him, a man stretches forth his
hand towards which he pleases;" and yet higher is He who calls man
to his higher vocation than any thought on man's own part, inasmuch as
the beginning of correction of the heart lies in faith, even as it is
written, "Thou shall come, and pass on from the beginning of
faith." Every one makes his choice of good, "according as God
hath dealt to every man the measure of faith;" and as the Prince of
faith says, "No man can come to me, except the Father which hath
sent me draw him." And that He spake this in reference to the faith
which believes in Him, He subsequently explains with sufficient
clearness, when He says: "The words that I speak unto you, they are
spirit, and they are life; yet there are some of you that believe not.
For Jesus knew from the beginning who they were that believed not, and
who should betray Him. And He said, Therefore said I unto you, that no
man call come unto me, except it were given unto him of my Father."
(42.) God's promises conditional. Saints of the Old Testament were
saved by the grace of Christ.
He, however, thought he had discovered a great support for his cause
in the prophet Isaiah; because by him God said: "If ye be willing,
and hearken unto me, ye shall eat the good of the land; but if ye be not
willing, and hearken. not to me, the sword shall devour you: for the
mouth of the Lord hath spoken this." As if the entire law were not
full of conditions of this sort; or as if its commandments had been
given to proud men for any other reason than that "the law was
added because of transgression, until the seed should come to whom the
promise was made." "It entered, therefore, that the offence
might abound; but where sin abounded, grace did much more abound."
In other words, That man might receive commandments, trusting as he did
in his own resources, and that, failing in these and becoming a
transgressor, he might ask for a deliverer and a saviour; and that the
fear of the law might humble him, and bring him, as a schoolmaster, to
faith and grace. Thus "their weaknesses being multiplied, they
hastened after;" and in order to heal them, Christ in due season
came. In His grace even righteous men of old believed, and by the same
grace were they holpen; so that with joy did they receive a
foreknowledge of Him, and some of them even foretold His coming,—whether
they were found among the people of Israel themselves, as Moses, and
Joshua the son of Nun, and Samuel, and David, and other such; or outside
that people, as Job; or previous to that people, as Abraham, and Noah,
and all others who are either mentioned or not in Holy Scripture.
"For there is but one God, and one Mediator between God and man,
the man Christ Jesus," without whose grace nobody is delivered from
condemnation, whether he has derived that condemnation from him in whom
all men sinned, or has afterwards aggravated it by his own iniquities.
Chap. XX. (43.) No man is assisted unless he
does himself also work. Our course is a constant progress.
But what is the import of the last statement which he has made:
"If any one say, 'May it possibly be that a man sin not even in
word?' then the answer," says he, "which must be given is,
'Quite possible, if God so will; and God does so will, therefore it is
possible.'" See how unwilling he was to say, "If God give His
help, then it would be possible;" and yet the Psalmist thus
addresses God: "Be Thou my helper, forsake me not;" where of
course help is not sought for procuring bodily advantages and avoiding
bodily evils, but for practising and fulfilling righteousness. Hence it
is that we say: "Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from
evil." Now no man is assisted unless he also himself does
something; assisted, however, he is, if he prays, if he believes, if he
is "called according to God's purpose;" for "whom He did
fore-know, 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." We
run, therefore, whenever we make advance; and our wholeness runs with us
in our advance (just as a sore is said to run when the wound is in
process of a sound and careful treatment), in order that we may be in
every respect perfect, without any infirmity of sin whatever,—a result
which God not only wishes, but even causes and helps us to accomplish.
And this God's grace does, in co- operation with ourselves, through
Jesus Christ our Lord, as well by commandments, sacraments, and
examples, as by His Holy Spirit also; through whom there is hiddenly
shed abroad in our heads that love, "which maketh intercession for
us with groanings which cannot be uttered," until wholeness and
salvation be perfected in us, and God be manifested to us as He will be
seen in His eternal truth.
Chap. XXI. (44.) Conclusion of the work. In the
regenerate it is not concupiscence, but consent, which is sin.
Whosoever, then, supposes that any man or any men (except the one
Mediator between God and man) have ever lived, or are yet living in this
present state, who have not needed, and do not need, forgiveness of
sins, he opposes Holy Scripture, wherein it is said by the apostle:
"By one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so
death passed upon all men, in which all have sinned." And he must
needs go on to assert, with an impious contention, that there may
possibly be men who are freed and saved from sin without the liberation
and salvation of the one Mediator Christ. Whereas He it is who has said:
"They that be whole need not a physician, but they that are
sick;" "I am not come to call the righteous, but sinners to
repentance." He, moreover, who says that any man, after he has
received remission of sins, has ever lived in this body, or still is
living, so righteously as to have no sin at all, he contradicts the
Apostle John, who declares that "If we say we have no sin, we
deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us." Observe, the
expression is not we had, but "we have." If, however, anybody
contend that the apostle's statement concerns the sin which dwells in
our mortal flesh according to the defect which was caused by the will of
the first man when he sinned, and concerning which the Apostle Paul
enjoins us "not" to "obey it in the lusts thereof,—so
that he does not sin who altogether withholds his consent from this same
indwelling sin, and so brings it to no evil work,— either in deed, or
word, or thought,—although the lusting after it may be excited (which
in another sense has received the name of sin, inasmuch as consenting to
it would amount to sinning), but excited against our will,— he
certainly is drawing subtle distinctions, and should consider what
relation all this bears to the Lord's Prayer, wherein we say,
"Forgive us our debts." Now, if I judge aright, it would be
unnecessary to put up such a prayer as this, if we never in the least
degree consented to the lusts of the before-mentioned sin, either in a
slip of the tongue, or in a wanton thought; all that it would be needful
to say would be, "Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from
evil." Nor could the Apostle James say: "In many things we all
offend." For in truth only that man offends whom an evil
concupiscence persuades, either by deception or by force, to do or say
or think something which he ought to avoid, by directing his appetites
or his aversions contrary to the rule of righteousness. Finally, if it
be asserted that there either have been, or are in this present life,
any persons, with the sole exception of our Great Head, "the
Saviour of His body," who are righteous, without any sin,— and
this, either by not consenting to the lusts thereof, or because that
must not be accounted as any sin which is such that God does not impute
it to them by reason of their godly lives (although the blessedness of
being without sin is a different thing from the blessedness of not
having one's sin imputed to him),—I do not deem it necessary to
contest the point over much. I am quite aware that some hold this
opinion, whose views on the subject I have not the courage to censure,
although, at the same time, I cannot defend them. But if any man says
that we ought not to use the prayer, "Lead us not into
temptation" (and he says as much who maintains that God's help is
unnecessary to a person for the avoidance of sin, and that human will,
after accepting only the law, is sufficient for the purpose), then I do
not hesitate at once to affirm that such a man ought to be removed from
the public ear, and to be anathematized by every mouth.
[Translated by Peter Holmes, D.D., F.R.A.S., domestic chaplain to the
Right Honorable the Countess of Rothes, and curate of Pennycross,
Plymouth; revised by Benjamin B. Warfield, D.D., Professor in the
Theological Seminary at Princetion, 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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