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Saint Augustine On the Predestination
of the Saints Addressed to Prosper and Hilary in reply to their letter. A.D. 428 or 429 This treatise is the first portion of a work, of which On the Gift of Perseverance is the other. Chapter 1.--Introduction. We know that in the
Epistle to the Philippians the apostle said, “To write the same things to you
to me indeed is not grievous but for you it is safe;” [Phil. iii. 1] yet the
same apostle writing to the Galatians when he saw that he had done enough
among them of what he regarded as being needful for them, by the ministry of
his preaching, said, “For the rest let no man cause me labour,” [Gal. vi. 17]
or as it is read in many codices, “Let no one be troublesome to me.” But
although I confess that it causes me trouble that the divine word in which
the grace of God is preached (which is absolutely no grace if it is given
according to our merits), great and manifest as it is, is not yielded to,
nevertheless my dearest sons, Prosper and Hilary, your zeal and brotherly
affection--which makes you so reluctant to see any of the brethren in error,
as to wish that, after so many books and letters of mine on this subject, I
should write again from here--I love more than I can tell, although I do not
dare to say that I love it as much as I ought. Wherefore, behold, I write to
you again. And although not with you, yet through you I am still doing what I
thought I had done sufficiently. Chapter 2.--To What Extent the
Massilians [Semi-Pelagians] Withdraw from the Pelagians. For on consideration of your letters, I
seem to see that those brethren on whose behalf you exhibit a pious care that
they may not hold the poetical opinion in which it is affirmed, “Every one is
a hope for himself,” [Virg. Æneid, xi. 309] and so fall under that
condemnation which is, not poetically, but prophetically, declared, “Cursed
is every man that hath hope in man,” [Jer. xvii. 5] must be treated in that
way wherein the apostle dealt with those to whom he said, “And if in anything
ye be otherwise minded, God shall reveal even this unto you.” [Phil. iii. 15]
For as yet they are in darkness on the question concerning the predestination
of the saints, but they have that whence, “if in anything they are otherwise
minded, God will reveal even this unto them,” if they are walking in that to
which they have attained. For which reason the apostle, when he had said, “If
ye are in anything otherwise minded, God shall reveal even this unto you,”
says, “Nevertheless whereunto we have attained, let us walk in the same.”
[Phil. iii. 16] And those brethren of ours, on whose behalf your pious love
is solicitous, have attained with Christ’s Church to the belief that the
human race is born obnoxious to the sin of the first man, and that none can
be delivered from that evil save by the righteousness of the Second Man.
Moreover, they have attained to the confession that men’s wills are
anticipated by God’s grace; and to the agreement that no one can suffice to
himself either for beginning or for completing any good work. These things,
therefore, unto which they have attained, being held fast, abundantly
distinguish them from the error of the Pelagians. Further, if they walk in
them, and beseech Him who giveth understanding, if in anything concerning
predestination they are otherwise minded, He will reveal even this unto them.
Yet let us also spend upon them the influence of our love, and the ministry
of our discourse, according to His gift, whom we have asked that in these
letters we might say what should be suitable and profitable to them. For
whence do we know whether by this our service, wherein we are serving them in
the free love of Christ, our God may not perchance will to effect that
purpose? Chapter 3.--Even the Beginning of
Faith is of God’s Gift. Therefore I ought first to show that the
faith by which we are Christians is the gift of God, if I can do that more
thoroughly than I have already done in so many and so large volumes. But I
see that I must now reply to those who say that the divine testimonies which
I have adduced concerning this matter are of avail for this purpose, to
assure us that we have faith itself of ourselves, but that its increase is of
God; as if faith were not given to us by Him, but were only increased in us
by Him, on the ground of the merit of its having begun from us. Thus there is
here no departure from that opinion which Pelagius himself was constrained to
condemn in the judgment of the bishops of Palestine, as is testified in the
same Proceedings, “That the grace of God is given according to our merits,”
[On the Proceedings of Peliagus, ch. 30] if it is not of God’s grace that we
begin to believe, but rather that on account of this beginning an addition is
made to us of a more full and perfect belief; and so we first give the
beginning of our faith to God, that His supplement may also be given to us
again, and whatever else we faithfully ask. Chapter 4.--Continuation of the
Preceding. But why do we not in opposition to this,
rather hear the words, “Who hath first given to Him and it shall be
recompensed to him again? since of Him, and through Him, and in Him, are all
things.” [Rom. xi. 35] And from whom, then, is that very beginning of our
faith if not from Him? For this is not excepted when other things are spoken
of as of Him; but “of Him, and through Him, and in Him, are all things.” But
who can say that he who has already begun to believe deserves nothing from
Him in whom he has believed? Whence it results that, to him who already
deserves, other things are said to be added by a divine retribution, and thus
that God’s grace is given according to our merits. And this assertion when
put before him, Pelagius himself condemned, that he might not be condemned.
Whoever, then, wishes on every side to avoid this condemnable opinion, let
him understand that what the apostle says is said with entire truthfulness, “Unto
you it is given in the behalf of Christ not only to believe on Him, but also
to suffer for His sake.” [Phil. i. 29] He shows that both are the gifts of
God, because he said that both were given. And he does not say, “to believe
on Him more fully and perfectly,” but, “to believe on Him.” Neither does he
say that he himself had obtained mercy to be more faithful, but “to be
faithful,” [1 Cor. vii. 25] because he knew that he had not first given the
beginning of his faith to God, and had its increase given back to him again
by Him; but that he had been made faithful by God, who also had made him an
apostle. For the beginnings of his faith are recorded, and they are very well
known by being read in the church on an occasion calculated to distinguish
them: how, being turned away from the faith which he was destroying, and
being vehemently opposed to it, he was suddenly by a more powerful grace
converted to it, by the conversion of Him, to whom as One who would do this
very thing it was said by the prophet, “Thou wilt turn and quicken us;” [Ps.
lxxxv. 6] so that not only from one who refused to believe he was made a
willing believer, but, moreover, from being a persecutor, he suffered
persecution in defence of that faith which he persecuted. Because it was
given him by Christ “not only to believe on Him, but also to suffer for His
sake.” Chapter 5.--To Believe is to Think
with Assent. And, therefore, commending that grace
which is not given according to any merits, but is the cause of all good
merits, he says, “Not that we are sufficient to think anything as of
ourselves, but our sufficiency is of God.” [2 Cor. iii. 5] Let them give
attention to this, and well weigh these words, who think that the beginning
of faith is of ourselves, and the supplement of faith is of God. For who
cannot see that thinking is prior to believing? For no one believes anything
unless he has first thought that it is to be believed. For however suddenly,
however rapidly, some thoughts fly before the will to believe, and this
presently follows in such wise as to attend them, as it were, in closest
conjunction, it is yet necessary that everything which is believed should be
believed after thought has preceded; although even belief itself is nothing
else than to think with assent. For it is not every one who thinks that
believes, since many think in order that they may not believe; but everybody
who believes, thinks,--both thinks in believing and believes in thinking.
Therefore in what pertains to religion and piety (of which the apostle was
speaking), if we are not capable of thinking anything as of ourselves, but
our sufficiency is of God, we are certainly not capable of believing anything
as of ourselves, since we cannot do this without thinking; but our sufficiency,
by which we begin to believe, is of God. Wherefore, as no one is sufficient
for himself, for the beginning or the completion of any good work
whatever,--and this those brethren of yours, as what you have written
intimates, already agree to be true, whence, as well in the beginning as in
the carrying out of every good work, our sufficiency is of God,--so no one is
sufficient for himself, either to begin or to perfect faith; but our
sufficiency is of God. Because if faith is not a matter of thought, it is of
no account; and we are not sufficient to think anything as of ourselves, but
our sufficiency is of God. Chapter 6.--Presumption and
Arrogance to Be Avoided. Care must be taken, brethren, beloved of
God, that a man do not lift himself up in opposition to God, when he says
that he does what God has promised. Was not the faith of the nations promised
to Abraham, “and he, giving glory to God, most fully believed that what He
promised He is able also to perform”? [Rom. iv. 20] He therefore makes the
faith of the nations, who is able to do what He has promised. Further, if God
works our faith, acting in a wonderful manner in our hearts so that we
believe, is there any reason to fear that He cannot do the whole; and does
man on that account arrogate to himself its first elements, that he may merit
to receive its last from God? Consider if in such a way any other result be
gained than that the grace of God is given in some way or other, according to
our merit, and so grace is no more grace. For on this principle it is
rendered as debt, it is not given gratuitously; for it is due to the believer
that his faith itself should be increased by the Lord, and that the increased
faith should be the wages of the faith begun; nor is it observed when this is
said, that this wage is assigned to believers, not of grace, but of debt. And
I do not at all see why the whole should not be attributed to man,--as he who
could originate for himself what he had not previously, can himself increase
what he had originated,--except that it is impossible to withstand the most
manifest divine testimony by which faith, whence piety takes its beginning,
is shown also to be the gift of God: such as is that testimony that “God hath
dealt to every man the measure of faith;” [Rom. xii. 3] and that one, “Peace
be to the brethren, and love with faith, from God the Father, and the Lord
Jesus Christ,” [Eph. vi. 23] and other similar passages. Man, therefore,
unwilling to resist such clear testimonies as these, and yet desiring himself
to have the merit of believing, compounds as it were with God to claim a
portion of faith for himself, and to leave a portion for Him; and, what is
still more arrogant, he takes the first portion for himself and gives the
subsequent to Him; and so in that which he says belongs to both, he makes
himself the first, and God the second!
Chapter 7.--Augustin Confesses that
He Had Formerly Been in Error Concerning the Grace of God. It was not thus that that pious and humble
teacher thought--I speak of the most blessed Cyprian--when he said “that we
must boast in nothing, since nothing is our own.” [Cyprian, Testimonies to
Quirinus, Book iii. ch. 4] And in order to show this, he appealed to the
apostle as a witness, where he said, “For what hast thou that thou hast not
received? And if thou hast received it, why boastest thou as if thou hadst
not received it?” [1 Cor. iv. 7] And it was chiefly by this testimony that I
myself also was convinced when I was in a similar error, thinking that faith
whereby we believe on God is not God’s gift, but that it is in us from
ourselves, and that by it we obtain the gifts of God, whereby we may live
temperately and righteously and piously in this world. For I did not think
that faith was preceded by God’s grace, so that by its means would be given
to us what we might profitably ask, except that we could not believe if the
proclamation of the truth did not precede; but that we should consent when
the gospel was preached to us I thought was our own doing, and came to us
from ourselves. And this my error is sufficiently indicated in some small
works of mine written before my episcopate. Among these is that which you
have mentioned in your letters [Hilary’s Letter, No. 226 in the collection of
Augustin’s Letters] wherein is an exposition of certain propositions from the
Epistle to the Romans. Eventually, when I was retracting all my small works,
and was committing that retractation to writing, of which task I had already
completed two books before I had taken up your more lengthy letters,--when in
the first volume I had reached the retractation of this book, I then spoke
thus:--”Also discussing, I say, `what God could have chosen in him who was as
yet unborn, whom He said that the elder should serve; and what in the same
elder, equally as yet unborn, He could have rejected; concerning whom, on
this account, the prophetic testimony is recorded, although declared long
subsequently, “Jacob have I loved, and Esau have I hated,”‘ [Mal. i. 2, 3.
Cf. Rom. ix. 13] I carried out my reasoning to the point of saying: `God did
not therefore choose the works of any one in foreknowledge of what He Himself
would give them, but he chose the faith, in the foreknowledge that He would
choose that very person whom He foreknew would believe on Him,--to whom He
would give the Holy Spirit, so that by doing good works he might obtain
eternal life also.’ I had not yet very carefully sought, nor had I as yet
found, what is the nature of the election of grace, of which the apostle
says, `A remnant are saved according to the election of grace.’ [Rom. xi. 5]
Which assuredly is not grace if any merits precede it; lest what is now
given, not according to grace, but according to debt, be rather paid to
merits than freely given. And what I next subjoined: `For the same apostle
says, “The same God which worketh all in all;” [1 Cor. xii. 6] but it was
never said, God believeth all in all;’ and then added, `Therefore what we
believe is our own, but what good thing we do is of Him who giveth the Holy
Spirit to them that believe:’ I certainly could not have said, had I already
known that faith itself also is found among those gifts of God which are
given by the same Spirit. Both, therefore, are ours on account of the choice
of the will, and yet both are given by the spirit of faith and love. For
faith is not alone but as it is written, `Love with faith, from God the
Father, and our Lord Jesus Christ.’ [Eph. vi. 23] And what I said a little
after, `For it is ours to believe and to will, but it is His to give to those
who believe and will, the power of doing good works through the Holy Spirit,
by whom love is shed abroad in our hearts,’--is true indeed; but by the same
rule both are also God’s, because God prepares the will; and both are ours
too, because they are only brought about with our good wills. And thus what I
subsequently said also: `Because we are not able to will unless we are
called; and when, after our calling, we would will, our willing is not
sufficiently nor our running, unless God gives strength to us that run, and
leads us whither He calls us;’ and thereupon added: `It is plain, therefore,
that it is not of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that
showeth mercy, that we do good works’--this is absolutely most true. But I
discovered little concerning the calling itself, which is according to God’s
purpose; for not such is the calling of all that are called, but only of the
elect. Therefore what I said a little afterwards: `For as in those whom God
elects it is not works but faith that begins the merit so as to do good works
by the gift of God, so in those whom He condemns, unbelief and impiety begin
the merit of punishment, so that even by way of punishment itself they do
evil works’--I spoke most truly. But that even the merit itself of faith was
God’s gift, I neither thought of inquiring into, nor did I say. And in
another place I say: `For whom He has mercy upon, He makes to do good works,
and whom He hardeneth He leaves to do evil works; but that mercy is bestowed
upon the preceding merit of faith, and that hardening is applied to preceding
iniquity.’ And this indeed is true; but it should further have been asked,
whether even the merit of faith does not come from God’s mercy,--that is,
whether that mercy is manifested in man only because he is a believer, or
whether it is also manifested that he may be a believer? For we read in the
apostle’s words: `I obtained mercy to be a believer.’ [1 Cor. vii. 25] He
does not say, `Because I was a believer.’ Therefore although it is given to
the believer, yet it has been given also that he may be a believer. Therefore
also, in another place in the same book I most truly said: `Because, if it is
of God’s mercy, and not of works, that we are even called that we may believe
and it is granted to us who believe to do good works, that mercy must not be
grudged to the heathen;’--although I there discoursed less carefully about
that calling which is given according to God’s purpose.” [Retractations, Book
i. ch. 23, Nos. 3, 4] Chapter 8.--What Augustin Wrote to
Simplicianus, the Successor of Ambrose, Bishop of Milan. You see plainly what was at that time my
opinion concerning faith and works, although I was labouring in commending
God’s grace; and in this opinion I see that those brethren of ours now are,
because they have not been as careful to make progress with me in my writings
as they were in reading them. For if they had been so careful, they would
have found that question solved in accordance with the truth of the divine
Scriptures in the first book of the two which I wrote in the very beginning
of my episcopate to Simplicianus, of blessed memory, Bishop of the Church of
Milan, and successor to St. Ambrose. Unless, perchance, they may not have
known these books; in which case, take care that they do know them. Of this
first of those two books, I first spoke in the second book of the
Retractations; and what I said is as follows: “Of the books, I say, on which,
as a bishop, I have laboured, the first two are addressed to Simplicianus,
president of the Church of Milan, who succeeded the most blessed Ambrose,
concerning divers questions, two of which I gathered into the first book from
the Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the Romans. The former of them is about
what is written: `What shall we say, then? Is the law sin? By no means;’
[Rom. vii. 7] as far as the passage where he says, `Who shall deliver me from
the body of this death? The grace of God through Jesus Christ our Lord.’
[Rom. vii. 24] And therein I have expounded those words of the apostle: `The
law is spiritual; but I am carnal,’ [Rom. vii. 14] and others in which the
flesh is declared to be in conflict against the Spirit in such a way as if a
man were there described as still under law, and not yet established under
grace. For, long afterwards, I perceived that those words might even be (and
probably were) the utterance of a spiritual man. The latter question in this
book is gathered from that passage where the apostle says, `And not only
this, but when Rebecca also had conceived by one act of intercourse, even by
our father Isaac,’ [Rom. ix. 10] as far as that place where he says, `Except
the Lord of Sabaoth had left us a seed, we should be as Sodoma, and should
have been like unto Gomorrah.’ [Rom. ix. 29] In the solution of this question
I laboured indeed on behalf of the free choice of the human will, but God’s
grace overcame, and I could only reach that point where the apostle is
perceived to have said with the most evident truth, `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 receivedst it not?’ [1 Cor. iv.
7] And this the martyr Cyprian was also desirous of setting forth when he
compressed the whole of it in that title: `That we must boast in nothing,
since nothing is our own.’“ [Cypr. Test. Book iii. ch. 4] This is why I
previously said that it was chiefly by this apostolic testimony that I myself
had been convinced, when I thought otherwise concerning this matter; and this
God revealed to me as I sought to solve this question when I was writing, as
I said, to the Bishop Simplicianus. This testimony, therefore, of the
apostle, when for the sake of repressing man’s conceit he said, “For what
hast thou which thou hast not received?” [1 Cor. iv. 7] does not allow any
believer to say, I have faith which I received not. All the arrogance of this
answer is absolutely repressed by these apostolic words. Moreover, it cannot
even be said, “Although I have not a perfected faith, yet I have its
beginning, whereby I first of all believed in Christ.” Because here also is
answered: “But what hast thou that thou hast not received? Now, if thou hast
received it, why dost thou glory as if thou receivedst it not?” Chapter 9.--The Purpose of the
Apostle in These Words. The notion, however, which they
entertain, “that these words, `What hast thou that thou hast not received?’
cannot be said of this faith, because it has remained in the same nature,
although corrupted, which at first was endowed with health and perfection,”
[See Epistle of Hilary (Augustin’s Epistles, 226)] is perceived to have no
force for the purpose that they desire if it be considered why the apostle
said these words. For he was concerned that no one should glory in man,
because dissensions had sprung up among the Corinthian Christians, so that
every one was saying, “I, indeed, am of Paul, and another, I am of Apollos,
and another, I am of Cephas;” [1 Cor. i. 12] and thence he went on to say: “God
hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God
hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the strong things; and
God hath chosen the ignoble things of the world, and contemptible things, and
those things which are not, to make of no account things which are; that no
flesh should glory before God.” [1 Cor. i. 27] Here the intention of the
apostle is of a certainty sufficiently plain against the pride of man, that
no one should glory in man; and thus, no one should glory in himself. Finally,
when he had said “that no flesh should glory before God,” in order to show in
what man ought to glory, he immediately added, “But it is of Him that ye are
in Christ Jesus, who is made unto us wisdom from God, and righteousness, and
sanctification, and redemption: that according as it is written, He that
glorieth, let him glory in the Lord.” [1 Cor. i. 30] Thence that intention of
his progressed, till afterwards rebuking them he says, “For ye are yet
carnal; for whereas there are among you envying and contention, are ye not
carnal, and walk according to man? For while one saith I am of Paul, and
another, I am of Apollos, are ye not men? What, then, is Apollos, and what
Paul? Ministers by whom you believed; and to every one as the Lord has given.
I have planted, and Apollos watered; but God gave the increase. Therefore,
neither is he that planteth anything, nor he that watereth, but God that
giveth the increase.” [1 Cor. iii. 3 ff.] Do you not see that the sole
purpose of the apostle is that man may be humbled, and God alone exalted?
Since in all those things, indeed, which are planted and watered, he says
that not even are the planter and the waterer anything, but God who giveth
the increase: and the very fact, also, that one plants and another waters he
attributes not to themselves, but to God, when he says, “To every one as the
Lord hath given; I have planted, Apollos watered.” Hence, therefore,
persisting in the same intention he comes to the point of saying, “Therefore
let no man glory in man,” [1 Cor. iii. 21] for he had already said, “He that
glorieth, let him glory in the Lord.” After these and some other matters
which are associated therewith, that same intention of his is carried on in
the words: “And these things, brethren, I have in a figure transferred to
myself and to Apollos for your sakes, that ye might learn in us that no one
of you should be puffed up for one against another above that which is
written. For who maketh thee to differ? And what hast thou which thou hast
not received? Now, if thou hast received it, why dost thou glory as if thou
receivedst it not?” [1 Cor. iv. 6] Chapter 10.--It is God’s Grace
Which Specially Distinguishes One Man from Another. In this the apostle’s most evident intention,
in which he speaks against human pride, so that none should glory in man but
in God, it is too absurd, as I think, to suppose God’s natural gifts, whether
man’s entire and perfected nature itself as it was bestowed on him in his
first state, or the remains, whatever they may be, of his degraded nature.
For is it by such gifts as these, which are common to all men, that men are
distinguished from men? But here he first said, “For who maketh thee to
differ?” and then added, “And what hast thou that thou hast not received?”
Because a man, puffed up against another, might say, “My faith makes me to
differ,” or “My righteousness,” or anything else of the kind. In reply to
such notions, the good teacher says, “But what hast thou that thou hast not
received?” And from whom but from Him who maketh thee to differ from another,
on whom He bestowed not what He bestowed on thee? “Now if,” says he, “thou
hast received it, why dost thou glory as if thou receivedst it not?” Is he
concerned, I ask, about anything else save that he who glorieth should glory
in the Lord? But nothing is so opposed to this feeling as for any one to
glory concerning his own merits in such a way as if he himself had made them
for himself, and not the grace of God,--a grace, however, which makes the
good to differ from the wicked, and is not common to the good and the wicked.
Let the grace, therefore, whereby we are living and reasonable creatures, and
are distinguished from cattle, be attributed to nature; let that grace also
by which, among men themselves, the handsome are made to differ from the
ill-formed, or the intelligent from the stupid, or anything of that kind, be
ascribed to nature. But he whom the apostle was rebuking did not puff himself
up as contrasted with cattle, nor as contrasted with any other man, in
respect of any natural endowment which might be found even in the worst of
men. But he ascribed to himself, and not to God, some good gift which
pertained to a holy life, and was puffed up therewith when he deserved to
hear the rebuke, “Who hath made thee to differ? and what hast thou that thou
receivedst not?” For though the capacity to have faith is of nature, is it
also of nature to have it? “For all men have not faith,” [2 Thess. iii. 2]
although all men have the capacity to have faith. But the apostle does not
say, “And what hast thou capacity to have, the capacity to have which thou
receivedst not?” but he says, “And what hast thou which thou receivedst not?”
Accordingly, the capacity to have faith, as the capacity to have love,
belongs to men’s nature; but to have faith, even as to have love, belongs to
the grace of believers. That nature, therefore, in which is given to us the
capacity of having faith, does not distinguish man from man, but faith itself
makes the believer to differ from the unbeliever. And thus, when it is said, “For
who maketh thee to differ? and what hast thou that thou receivedst not?” if
any one dare to say, “I have faith of myself, I did not, therefore, receive
it,” he directly contradicts this most manifest truth,--not because it is not
in the choice of man’s will to believe or not to believe, but because in the
elect the will is prepared by the Lord. Thus, moreover, the passage, “For who
maketh thee to differ? and what hast thou that thou receivedst not?” refers
to that very faith which is in the will of man. Chapter 11.--That Some Men are
Elected is of God’s Mercy. “Many hear the word of truth; but some
believe, while others contradict. Therefore, the former will to believe; the
latter do not will.” Who does not know this? Who can deny this? But since in
some the will is prepared by the Lord, in others it is not prepared, we must
assuredly be able to distinguish what comes from God’s mercy, and what from
His judgment. “What Israel sought for,” says the apostle, “he hath not
obtained, but the election hath obtained it; and the rest were blinded, as it
is written, God gave to them the spirit of compunction,--eyes that they
should not see, and ears that they should not hear, even to this day. And
David said, Let their table be made a snare, a retribution, and a
stumblingblock to them; let their eyes be darkened, that they may not see;
and bow down their back always.” [Rom. xi. 7] Here is mercy and
judgment,--mercy towards the election which has obtained the righteousness of
God, but judgment to the rest which have been blinded. And yet the former,
because they willed, believed; the latter, because they did not will believed
not. Therefore mercy and judgment were manifested in the very wills themselves.
Certainly such an election is of grace, not at all of merits. For he had
before said, “So, therefore, even at this present time, the remnant has been
saved by the election of grace. And if by grace, now it is no more of works;
otherwise grace is no more grace.” [Rom. xi. 5] Therefore the election
obtained what it obtained gratuitously; there preceded none of those things
which they might first give, and it should be given to them again. He saved
them for nothing. But to the rest who were blinded, as is there plainly
declared, it was done in recompense. “All the paths of the Lord are mercy and
truth.” [Ps. xxv. 10] But His ways are unsearchable. Therefore the mercy by
which He freely delivers, and the truth by which He righteously judges, are
equally unsearchable. Chapter 12.--Why the Apostle Said
that We are Justified by Faith and Not by Works. But perhaps it may be said: “The apostle
distinguishes faith from works; he says, indeed, that grace is not of works,
but he does not say that it is not of faith.” This, indeed, is true. But
Jesus says that faith itself also is the work of God, and commands us to work
it. For the Jews said to Him, “What shall we do that we may work the work of
God? Jesus answered, and said unto them, This is the work of God, that ye
believe on Him whom He hath sent.” [John vi. 28] The apostle, therefore,
distinguishes faith from works, just as Judah is distinguished from Israel in
the two kingdoms of the Hebrews, although Judah is Israel itself. And he says
that a man is justified by faith and not by works, because faith itself is
first given, from which may be obtained other things which are specially
characterized as works, in which a man may live righteously. For he himself
also says, “By grace ye are saved through faith; and this not of yourselves;
but it is the gift of God,” [Eph. ii. 8] --that is to say, “And in saying
`through faith,’ even faith itself is not of yourselves, but is God’s gift.” “Not
of works,” he says, “lest any man should be lifted up.” For it is often said,
“He deserved to believe, because he was a good man even before he believed.”
Which may be said of Cornelius [Acts x] since his alms were accepted and his
prayers heard before he had believed on Christ; and yet without some faith he
neither gave alms nor prayed. For how did he call on him on whom he had not
believed? But if he could have been saved without the faith of Christ the
Apostle Peter would not have been sent as an architect to build him up;
although, “Except the Lord build the house, they labour in vain who build it.”
[Ps. cxxvii. 1] And we are told, Faith is of ourselves; other things which
pertain to works of righteousness are of the Lord; as if faith did not belong
to the building,--as if, I say, the foundation did not belong to the
building. But if this primarily and especially belongs to it, he labours in
vain who seeks to build up the faith by preaching, unless the Lord in His
mercy builds it up from within. Whatever, therefore, of good works Cornelius
performed, as well before he believed in Christ as when he believed and after
he had believed, are all to be ascribed to God, lest, perchance any man be
lifted up. Chapter 13.--The Effect of Divine
Grace. Accordingly, our only Master and Lord Himself,
when He had said what I have above mentioned,--”This is the work of God, that
ye believe on Him whom He hath sent,”--says a little afterwards in that same
discourse of His, “I said unto you that ye also have seen me and have not
believed. All that the Father giveth me shall come to me.” [John vi. 36] What
is the meaning of “shall come to me,” but, “shall believe in me”? But it is
the Father’s gift that this may be the case. Moreover, a little after He
says, “Murmur not among yourselves. No one can come to me, except the Father
which hath sent me draw him; and I will raise him up at the last day. It is
written in the prophets, And they shall be all teachable of God. Every man
that hath heard of the Father, and hath learned, cometh unto me.” [John vi.
43 ff.] What is the meaning of, “Every man that hath heard from the Father,
and hath learned, cometh unto me,” except that there is none who hears from
the Father, and learns, who cometh not to me? For if every one who has heard
from the Father, and has learned, comes, certainly every one who does not
come has not heard from the Father; for if he had heard and learned, he would
come. For no one has heard and learned, and has not come; but every one, as
the Truth declares, who has heard from the Father, and has learned, comes.
Far removed from the senses of the flesh is this teaching in which the Father
is heard, and teaches to come to the Son. Engaged herein is also the Son
Himself, because He is His Word by which He thus teaches; and He does not do
this through the ear of the flesh, but of the heart. Herein engaged, also, at
the same time, is the Spirit of the Father and of the Son; and He, too,
teaches, and does not teach separately, since we have learned that the
workings of the Trinity are inseparable. And that is certainly the same Holy
Spirit of whom the apostle says, “We, however, having the same Spirit of
faith.” [2 Cor. iv. 13] But this is especially attributed to the Father, for
the reason that of Him is begotten the Only Begotten, and from Him proceeds
the Holy Spirit, of which it would be tedious to argue more elaborately; and
I think that my work in fifteen books on the Trinity which God is, has
already reached you. Very far removed, I say, from the senses of the flesh is
this instruction wherein God is heard and teaches. We see that many come to
the Son because we see that many believe on Christ, but when and how they
have heard this from the Father, and have learned, we see not. It is true
that that grace is exceedingly secret, but who doubts that it is grace? This
grace, therefore, which is hiddenly bestowed in human hearts by the Divine
gift, is rejected by no hard heart, because it is given for the sake of first
taking away the hardness of the heart. When, therefore, the Father is heard
within, and teaches, so that a man comes to the Son, He takes away the heart
of stone and gives a heart of flesh, as in the declaration of the prophet He
has promised. Because He thus makes them children and vessels of mercy which
He has prepared for glory. Chapter 14.--Why the Father Does
Not Teach All that They May Come to Christ. Why, then, does He not teach all that
they may come to Christ, except because all whom He teaches, He teaches in
mercy, while those whom He teaches not, in judgment He teaches not? Since, “On
whom He will He has mercy, and whom He will He hardeneth.” [Rom. ix. 18] But
He has mercy when He gives good things. He hardens when He recompenses what
is deserved. Or if, as some would prefer to distinguish them, those words
also are his to whom the apostle says, “Thou sayest then unto me,” so that he
may be regarded as having said, “Therefore hath He mercy on whom He will, and
whom He will He hardeneth,” as well as those which follow,--to wit, “What is
it that is still complained of? for who resists His will?” does the apostle
answer, “O man, what thou hast said is false?” No; but he says, “O man, who
art thou that repliest against God? Doth the thing formed say to him that
formed it, Why hast thou made me thus? Hath not the potter power over the
clay of the same lump?” [Rom. ix. 18, ff.] and what follows, which you very
well know. And yet in a certain sense the Father teaches all men to come to
His Son. For it was not in vain that it was written in the prophets, “And
they shall all be teachable of God.” [John vi. 45] And when He too had
premised this testimony, He added, “Every man, therefore, who has heard of
the Father, and has learned, cometh to me.” As, therefore, we speak justly
when we say concerning any teacher of literature who is alone in a city, He
teaches literature here to everybody,--not that all men learn, but that there
is none who learns literature there who does not learn from him,--so we
justly say, God teaches all men to come to Christ, not because all come, but
because none comes in any other way. And why He does not teach all men the
apostle explained, as far as he judged that it was to be explained, because, “willing
to show His wrath, and to exhibit His power, He endured with much patience
the vessels of wrath which were perfected for destruction; and that He might
make known the riches of His glory on the vessels of mercy which He has
prepared for glory.” [Rom. ix. 22] Hence it is that the “word of the cross is
foolishness to them that perish; but unto them that are saved it is the power
of God.” [1 Cor. i. 18] God teaches all such to come to Christ, for He wills
all such to be saved, and to come to the knowledge of the truth. And if He
had willed to teach even those to whom the word of the cross is foolishness
to come to Christ, beyond all doubt these also would have come. For He
neither deceives nor is deceived when He says, “Everyone that hath heard of
the Father, and hath learned, cometh to me.” Away, then, with the thought
that any one cometh not, who has heard of the Father and has learned. Chapter 15.--It is Believers that
are Taught of God. “Why,” say they, “does He not teach all
men?” If we should say that they whom He does not teach are unwilling to
learn, we shall be met with the answer: And what becomes of what is said to
Him, “O God, Thou wilt turn us again, and quicken us”? [Ps. lxxx. 7] Or if
God does not make men willing who were not willing, on what principle does
the Church pray, according to the Lord’s commandment, for her persecutors?
For thus also the blessed Cyprian [Cypr. Treatise on the Lord’s Prayer] would
have it to be understood that we say, “Thy will be done, as in heaven so in
earth,”--that is, as in those who have already believed, and who are, as it
were, heaven, so also in those who do not believe, and on this account are
still the earth. What, then, do we pray for on behalf of those who are
unwilling to believe, except that God would work in them to will also?
Certainly the apostle says, “Brethren, my heart’s good will, indeed, and my
prayer to God for them, is for their salvation.” [Rom. x. 1] He prays for
those who do not believe,--for what, except that they may believe? For in no
other way do they obtain salvation. If, then, the faith of the petitioners
precede the grace of God, does the faith of them on whose behalf prayer is
made that they may believe precede the grace of God?--since this is the very
thing that is besought for them, that on them that believe not--that is, who
have not faith--faith itself may be bestowed? When, therefore, the gospel is
preached, some believe, some believe not; but they who believe at the voice
of the preacher from without, hear of the Father from within, and learn;
while they who do not believe, hear outwardly, but inwardly do not hear nor learn;--that
is to say, to the former it is given to believe; to the latter it is not
given. Because “no man,” says He, “cometh to me, except the Father which sent
me draw him.” [John vi. 44] And this is more plainly said afterwards. For
after a little time, when He was speaking of eating his flesh and drinking
His blood, and some even of His disciples said, “This is a hard saying, who
can hear it? Jesus, knowing in Himself that His disciples murmured at this,
said unto them, Doth this offend you?” [John vi. 60 ff.] And a little after
He said, “The words that I have spoken unto you are spirit and life; but
there are some among you which believe not.” [John vi. 63 ff.] And
immediately the evangelist says, “For Jesus knew from the beginning who were
the believers, and who should betray Him; and He said, Therefore said I unto
you, that no man can come unto me except it were given him of my Father.”
Therefore, to be drawn to Christ by the Father, and to hear and learn of the
Father in order to come to Christ, is nothing else than to receive from the
Father the gift by which to believe in Christ. For it was not the hearers of
the gospel that were distinguished from those who did not hear, but the
believers from those who did not believe, by Him who said, “No man cometh to
me except it were given him of my Father.”
Chapter 16.--Why the Gift of Faith
is Not Given to All. Faith, then, as well in its beginning as
in its completion, is God’s gift; and let no one have any doubt whatever,
unless he desires to resist the plainest sacred writings, that this gift is
given to some, while to some it is not given. But why it is not given to all
ought not to disturb the believer, who believes that from one all have gone
into a condemnation, which undoubtedly is most righteous; so that even if
none were delivered therefrom, there would be no just cause for finding fault
with God. Whence it is plain that it is a great grace for many to be
delivered, and to acknowledge in those that are not delivered what would be
due to themselves; so that he that glorieth may glory not in his own merits,
which he sees to be equalled in those that are condemned, but in the Lord.
But why He delivers one rather than another,--”His judgments are
unsearchable, and His ways past finding out.” [Rom. xi. 33] For it is better
in this case for us to hear or to say, “O man, who art thou that repliest
against God?” [Rom. ix. 20] than to dare to speak as if we could know what He
has chosen to be kept secret. Since, moreover, He could not will anything unrighteous. Chapter 17.--His Argument in His
Letter Against Porphyry, as to Why the Gospel Came So Late into the World. But that which you remember my saying in
a certain small treatise of mine against Porphyry, under the title of The
Time of the Christian Religion, I so said for the sake of escaping this more
careful and elaborate argument about grace; although its meaning, which could
be unfolded elsewhere or by others, was not wholly omitted, although I had
been unwilling in that place to explain it. For, among other matters, I spoke
thus in answer to the question proposed, why it was after so long a time that
Christ came: “Accordingly, I say, since they do not object to Christ that all
do not follow His teaching (for even they themselves feel that this could not
be objected at all with any justice, either to the wisdom of the philosophers
or even to the deity of their own gods), what will they reply, if--leaving
out of the question that depth of God’s wisdom and knowledge where perchance
some other divine plan is far more secretly hidden, without prejudging also
other causes, which cannot be traced out by the wise--we say to them only
this, for the sake of brevity in the arguing of this question, that Christ
willed to appear to men, and that His doctrine should be preached among them,
at that time when He knew, and at that place where He knew, that there were
some who would believe on Him. For at those times, and in those places, at
which His gospel was not preached, He foreknew that all would be in His
preaching such as, not indeed all, but many were in His bodily presence, who
would not believe on Him, even when the dead were raised by Him; such as we
see many now, who, although the declarations of the prophets concerning Him
are fulfilled by such manifestations, are still unwilling to believe, and
prefer to resist by human astuteness, rather than yield to divine authority
so clear and perspicuous, and so lofty, and sublimely made known, so long as
the human understanding is small and weak in its approach to divine truth.
What wonder is it, then, if Christ knew the world in former ages to be so
full of unbelievers, that He should reasonably refuse to appear, or to be
preached to them, who, as He foreknew, would believe neither His words nor
His miracles? For it is not incredible that all at that time were such as
from His coming even to the present time we marvel that so many have been and
are. And yet from the beginning of the human race, sometimes more hiddenly,
sometimes more evidently, even as to Divine Providence the times seemed to be
fitting, there has neither been a failure of prophecy, nor were there wanting
those who believed on Him; as well from Adam to Moses, as in the people of
Israel itself which by a certain special mystery was a prophetic people; and
in other nations before He had come in the flesh. For as some are mentioned
in the sacred Hebrew books, as early as the time of Abraham,--neither of his
fleshly race nor of the people of Israel nor of the foreign society among the
people of Israel,--who were, nevertheless, sharers in their sacrament, why
may we not believe that there were others elsewhere among other people, here
and there, although we do not read any mention of them in the same
authorities? Thus the salvation of this religion, by which only true one true
salvation is truly promised, never failed him who was worthy of it; and
whoever it failed was not worthy of it. And from the very beginning of the
propagation of man, even to the end, the gospel is preached, to some for a reward,
to some for judgment; and thus also those to whom the faith was not announced
at all were foreknown as those who would not believe; and those to whom it
was announced, although they were not such as would believe, are set forth as
an example for the former; while those to whom it is announced who should
believe, are prepared for the kingdom of heaven, and the company of the holy
angels.” [Augustin’s Epistles, 102, chs. 14, 15] Chapter 18.--The Preceding Argument
Applied to the Present Time. Do you not see that my desire was,
without any prejudgment of the hidden counsel of God, and of other reasons,
to say what might seem sufficient about Christ’s foreknowledge, to convince
the unbelief of the pagans who had brought forward this question? For what is
more true than that Christ foreknew who should believe on Him, and at what
times and places they should believe? But whether by the preaching of Christ
to themselves by themselves they were to have faith, or whether they would
receive it by God’s gift,--that is, whether God only foreknew them, or also
predestinated them, I did not at that time think it necessary to inquire or
to discuss. Therefore what I said, “that Christ willed to appear to men at
that time, and that His doctrine should be preached among them when He knew,
and where He knew, that there were those who would believe on Him,” may also
thus be said, “That Christ willed to appear to men at that time, and that His
gospel should be preached among those, whom He knew, and where He knew, that
there were those who had been elected in Himself before the foundation of the
world.” But since, if it were so said, it would make the reader desirous of
asking about those things which now by the warning of Pelagian errors must of
necessity be discussed with greater copiousness and care, it seemed to me
that what at that time was sufficient should be briefly said, leaving to one
side, as I said, the depth of the wisdom and knowledge of God, and without
prejudging other reasons, concerning which I thought that we might more
fittingly argue, not then, but at some other time. Chapter 19.--In What Respects
Predestination and Grace Differ. Moreover, that which I said, “That the
salvation of this religion has never been lacking to him who was worthy of
it, and that he to whom it was lacking was not worthy,”--if it be discussed
and it be asked whence any man can be worthy, there are not wanting those who
say--by human will. But we say, by divine grace or predestination. Further,
between grace and predestination there is only this difference, that
predestination is the preparation for grace, while grace is the donation
itself. When, therefore the apostle says, “Not of works, lest any man should
boast. For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus in good works,”
[Eph. ii. 9, 10] it is grace; but what follows--”which God hath prepared that
we should walk in them”--is predestination, which cannot exist without
foreknowledge, although foreknowledge may exist without predestination;
because God foreknew by predestination those things which He was about to do,
whence it was said, “He made those things that shall be.” [Isa. xlv. 11]
Moreover, He is able to foreknow even those things which He does not Himself
do,--as all sins whatever. Because, although there are some which are in such
wise sins as that they are also the penalties of sins, whence it is said, “God
gave them over to a reprobate mind, to do those things which are not
convenient,” [Rom. i. 28] it is not in such a case the sin that is God’s, but
the judgment. Therefore God’s predestination of good is, as I have said, the
preparation of grace; which grace is the effect of that predestination.
Therefore when God promised to Abraham in his seed the faith of the nations,
saying, “I have established thee a father of many nations,” [Gen. xvii. 5]
whence the apostle says, “Therefore it is of faith, that the promise,
according to grace, might be established to all the seed,” [Rom. iv. 16] He
promised not from the power of our will but from His own predestination. For
He promised what He Himself would do, not what men would do. Because,
although men do those good things which pertain to God’s worship, He Himself
makes them to do what He has commanded; it is not they that cause Him to do
what He has promised. Otherwise the fulfilment of God’s promises would not be
in the power of God, but in that of men; and thus what was promised by God to
Abraham would be given to Abraham by men themselves. Abraham, however, did
not believe thus, but “he believed, giving glory to God, that what He
promised He is able also to do.” [Rom. iv. 21] He does not say, “to foretell”--he
does not say, “to foreknow;” for He can foretell and foreknow the doings of
strangers also; but he says, “He is able also to do;” and thus he is speaking
not of the doings of others, but of His own. Chapter 20.--Did God Promise the
Good Works of the Nations and Not Their Faith, to Abraham? Did God, perchance, promise to Abraham in
his seed the good works of the nations, so as to promise that which He
Himself does, but did not promise the faith of the Gentiles, which men do for
themselves; but so as to promise what He Himself does, did He foreknow that
men would effect that faith? The apostle, indeed, does not speak thus,
because God promised children to Abraham, who should follow the footsteps of
his faith, as he very plainly says. But if He promised the works, and not the
faith of the Gentiles certainly since they are not good works unless they are
of faith (for “the righteous lives of faith,” [Hab. ii. 4] and, “Whatsoever
is not of faith is sin,” [Rom. xiv. 23] and, “Without faith it is impossible
to please” [Heb. xi. 6]), it is nevertheless in man’s power that God should
fulfil what He has promised. For unless man should do what without the gift
of God pertains to man, he will not cause God to give,--that is, unless man
have faith of himself. God does not fulfil what He has promised, that works
of righteousness should be given by God. And thus that God should be able to
fulfil His promises is not in God’s power, but man’s. And if truth and piety
do not forbid our believing this, let us believe with Abraham, that what He
has promised He is able also to perform. But He promised children to Abraham;
and this men cannot be unless they have faith, therefore He gives faith
also. Chapter 21.--It is to Be Wondered
at that Men Should Rather Trust to Their Own Weakness Than to God’s Strength. Certainly, when the apostle says, “Therefore
it is of faith that the promise may be sure according to grace,” [Rom. iv.
16] I marvel that men would rather entrust themselves to their own weakness,
than to the strength of God’s promise. But sayest thou, God’s will concerning
myself is to me uncertain? What then? Is thine own will concerning thyself certain
to thee? and dost thou not fear,--”Let him that thinketh he standeth take
heed lest he fall”? [1 Cor. x. 12] Since, then, both are uncertain, why does
not man commit his faith, hope, and love to the stronger will rather than to
the weaker? Chapter 22.--God’s Promise is Sure. “But,” say they, “when it is said, `If
thou believest, thou shalt be saved,’ one of these things is required; the
other is offered. What is required is in man’s power; what is offered is in
God’s.” [See Hilary’s Letter in Augustin’s Letters, 226, ch. 2] Why are not
both in God’s, as well what He commands as what He offers? For He is asked to
give what He commands. Believers ask that their faith may be increased; they
ask on behalf of those who do not believe, that faith may be given to them;
therefore both in its increase and in its beginnings, faith is the gift of
God. But it is said thus: “If thou believest, thou shalt be saved,” in the
same way that it is said, “If by the Spirit ye shall mortify the deeds of the
flesh, ye shall live.” [Rom. viii. 13] For in this case also, of these two
things one is required, the other is offered. It is said, “If by the Spirit
ye shall mortify the deeds of the flesh, ye shall live.” Therefore, that we
mortify the deeds of the flesh is required, but that we may live is offered.
Is it, then, fitting for us to say, that to mortify the deeds of the flesh is
not a gift of God, and not to confess it to be a gift of God, because we hear
it required of us, with the offer of life as a reward if we shall do it? Away
with this being approved by the partakers and champions of grace! This is the
condemnable error of the Pelagians, whose mouths the apostle immediately
stopped when he added, “For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are
the sons of God;” [Rom. viii. 14] lest we should believe that we mortify the
deeds of the flesh, not by God’s Spirit, but by our own. And of this Spirit
of God, moreover, he was speaking in that place where he says, “But all these
worketh that one and the self-same Spirit, dividing unto every man what is
his own, as He will;” [1 Cor. xii. 11] and among all these things, as you
know, he also named faith. As, therefore, although it is the gift of God to
mortify the deeds of the flesh, yet it is required of us, and life is set
before us as a reward; so also faith is the gift of God, although when it is
said, “If thou believest, thou shalt be saved,” faith is required of us, and
salvation is proposed to us as a reward. For these things are both commanded
us, and are shown to be God’s gifts, in order that we may understand both
that we do them, and that God makes us to do them, as He most plainly says by
the prophet Ezekiel. For what is plainer than when He says, “I will cause you
to do”? [Ezek. xxxvi. 27] Give heed to that passage of Scripture, and you
will see that God promises that He will make them to do those things which He
commands to be done. He truly is not silent as to the merits but as to the
evil deeds, of those to whom He shows that He is returning good for evil, by
the very fact that He causeth them thenceforth to have good works, in causing
them to do the divine commands. Chapter 23.--Remarkable
Illustrations of Grace and Predestination in Infants, and in Christ. But all this reasoning, whereby we
maintain that the grace of God through Jesus Christ our Lord is truly grace,
that is, is not given according to our merits, although it is most manifestly
asserted by the witness of the divine declarations, yet, among those who
think that they are withheld from all zeal for piety unless they can
attribute to themselves something, which they first give that it may be
recompensed to them again, involves somewhat of a difficulty in respect of
the condition of grown-up people, who are already exercising the choice of
will. But when we come to the case of infants, and to the Mediator between
God and man Himself, the man Christ Jesus, there is wanting all assertion of
human merits that precede the grace of God, because the former are not
distinguished from others by any preceding good merits that they should
belong to the Deliverer of men; any more than He Himself being Himself a man,
was made the Deliverer of men by virtue of any precedent human merits. Chapter 24.--That No One is Judged According
to What He Would Have Done If He Had Lived Longer. For who can hear that infants, baptized
in the condition of mere infancy, are said to depart from this life by reason
of their future merits, and that others not baptized are said to die in the
same age because their future merits are foreknown,--but as evil; so that God
rewards or condemns in them not their good or evil life, but no life at all?
[See Prosper’s Letter in Augustin’s Letters, 225, ch. 5] The apostle, indeed,
fixed a limit which man’s incautious suspicion, to speak gently, ought not to
transgress, for he says, “We shall all stand before the judgment-seat of
Christ; that every one may receive according to the things which he has done
by means of the body, whether it be good or evil.” [2 Cor. v. 10] “Has done,”
he said; and he did not add, “or would have done.” But I know not whence this
thought should have entered the minds of such men, that infants’ future
merits (which shall not be) should be punished or honoured. But why is it said
that a man is to be judged according to those things which he has done by
means of the body, when many things are done by the mind alone, and not by
the body, nor by any member of the body; and for the most part things of such
importance, that a most righteous punishment would be due to such thought,
such as,--to say nothing of others,--that “The fool hath said in his heart
there is no God”? [Ps. xiv. 1] What, then, is the meaning of, “According to
those things that he hath done by means of the body,” except according to
those things which he has done during that time in which he was in the body,
so that we may understand “by means of the body” as meaning “throughout the
season of bodily life”? But after the body, no one will be in the body except
at the last resurrection,--not for the purpose of establishing any claims of
merit, but for the sake of receiving recompenses for good merits, and
enduring punishments for evil merits. But in this intermediate period between
the putting off and the taking again of the body, the souls are either
tormented or they are in repose, according to those things which they have
done during the period of the bodily life. And to this period of the bodily
life moreover pertains, what the Pelagians deny, but Christ’s Church confesses,
original sin; and according to whether this is by God’s grace loosed, or by
God’s judgment not loosed, when infants die, they pass, on the one hand, by
the merit of regeneration from evil to good, or on the other, by the merit of
their origin from evil to evil. The catholic faith acknowledges this, and
even some heretics, without any contradiction, agree to this. But in the
height of wonder and astonishment I am unable to discover whence men, whose
intelligence your letters show to be by no means contemptible, could
entertain the opinion that any one should be judged not according to the
merits that he had as long as he was in the body, but according to the merits
which he would have had if he had lived longer in the body; and I should not
dare to believe that there were such men, if I could venture to disbelieve
you. But I hope that God will interpose, so that when they are admonished
they may at once perceive, that if those sins which, as is said, would have
been, can rightly be punished by God’s judgment in those who are not
baptized, they may alo be rightly remitted by God’s grace in those who are
baptized. For whoever says that future sins can only be punished by God’s
judgment, but cannot be pardoned by God’s mercy, ought to consider how great
a wrong he is doing to God and His grace; as if future sin could be
foreknown, and could not be foregone. And if this is absurd, it is the
greater reason that help should be afforded to those who would be sinners if
they lived longer, when they die in early life, by means of that laver
wherein sins are washed away. Chapter 25.--Possibly the Baptized
Infants Would Have Repented If They Had Lived, and the Unbaptized Not. But if, perchance, they say that sins are
re-remitted to penitents, and that those who die in infancy are not baptized
because they are foreknown as not such as would repent if they should live,
while God has foreknown that those who are baptized and die in infancy would
have repented if they had lived, let them observe and see that if it be so it
is not in this case original sins which are punished in infants that die
without baptism, but what would have been the sins of each one had he lived;
and also in baptized infants, that it is not original sins that are washed
away, but their own future sins if they should live, since they could not sin
except in more mature age; but that some were foreseen as such as would
repent, and others as such as would not repent, therefore some were baptized,
and others departed from this life without baptism. If the Pelagians should
dare to say this, by their denial of original sin they would thus be relieved
of the necessity of seeking, on behalf of infants outside of the kingdom of
God, for some place of I know not what happiness of their own; especially
since they are convinced that they cannot have eternal life because they have
not eaten the flesh nor drank the blood of Christ; and because in them who
have no sin at all, baptism, which is given for the remission of sins, is
falsified. For they would go on to say that there is no original sin, but
that those who as infants are released are either baptized or not baptized
according to their future merits if they should live, and that according to
their future merits they either receive or do not receive the body and blood
of Christ, without which they absolutely cannot have life; and are baptized
for the true remission of sins although they derived no sins from Adam,
because the sins are remitted unto them concerning which God foreknew that
they would repent. Thus with the greatest ease they would plead and would win
their cause, in which they deny that there is any original sin, and contend
that the grace of God is only given according to our merits. But that the
future merits of men, which merits will never come into existence are beyond
all doubt no merits at all, it is certainly most easy to see: for this reason
even the Pelagians were not able to say this; and much rather these ought not
to say it. For it cannot be said with what pain I find that they who with us
on catholic authority condemn the error of those heretics, have not seen
this, which the Pelagians themselves have seen to be most false and
absurd. Chapter 26.--Reference to Cyprian’s
Treatise “On the Mortality.” Cyprian wrote a work On the Mortality,
known with approval to many and almost all who love ecclesiastical
literature, wherein he says that death is not only not disadvantageous to
believers, but that it is even found to be advantageous, because it withdraws
men from the risks of sinning, and establishes them in a security of not
sinning. But wherein is the advantage of this, if even future sins which have
not been committed are punished? Yet he argues most copiously and well that
the risks of sinning are not wanting in this life, and that they do not
continue after this life is done; where also he adduces that testimony from
the book of Wisdom: “He was taken away, lest wickedness should alter his
understanding.” [Wisd. iv. 11] And this was also adduced by me, though you
said that those brethren of yours had rejected it on the ground of its not
having been brought forward from a canonical book; as if, even setting aside
the attestation of this book, the thing itself were not clear which I wished
to be taught therefrom. For what Christian would dare to deny that the
righteous man, if he should be prematurely laid hold of by death, will be in
repose? Let who will, say this, and what man of sound faith will think that
he can withstand it? Moreover, if he should say that the righteous man, if he
should depart from his righteousness in which he has long lived, and should
die in that impiety after having lived in it, I say not a year, but one day,
will go hence into the punishment due to the wicked, his righteousness having
no power in the future to avail him,--will any believer contradict this
evident truth? Further, if we are asked whether, if he had died then at the
time that he was righteous, he would have incurred punishment or repose,
shall we hesitate to answer, repose? This is the whole reason why it is
said,--whoever says it,--”He was taken away lest wickedness should alter his
understanding.” For it was said in reference to the risks of this life, not
with reference to the foreknowledge of God, who foreknew that which was to be,
not that which was not to be--that is, that He would bestow on him an
untimely death in order that he might be withdrawn from the uncertainty of
temptations; not that he would sin, since he was not to remain in temptation.
Because, concerning this life, we read in the book of Job, “Is not the life
of man upon earth a temptation?” [Job vii. 1] But why it should be granted to
some to be taken away from the perils of this life while they are righteous,
while others who are righteous until they fall from righteousness are kept in
the same risks in a more lengthened life,--who has known the mind of the
Lord? And yet it is permitted to be understood from this, that even those
righteous people who maintain good and pious characters, even to the maturity
of old age and to the last day of this life, must not glory in their own
merits, but in the Lord, since He who took away the righteous man from the
shortness of life, lest wickedness should alter his understanding, Himself
guards the righteous man in any length of life, that wickedness may not alter
his understanding. But why He should have kept the righteous man here to
fall, when He might have withdrawn him before,--His judgments, although
absolutely righteous, are yet unsearchable.
Chapter 27.--The Book of Wisdom
Obtains in the Church the Authority of Canonical Scripture. And since these things are so, the
judgment of the book of Wisdom ought not to be repudiated, since for so long
a course of years that book has deserved to be read in the Church of Christ
from the station of the readers of the Church of Christ, and to be heard by
all Christians, from bishops downwards, even to the lowest lay believers,
penitents, and catechumens, with the veneration paid to divine authority. For
assuredly, if, from those who have been before me in commenting on the divine
Scriptures, I should bring forward a defence of this judgment, which we are
now called upon to defend more carefully and copiously than usual against the
new error of the Pelagians,--that is, that God’s grace is not given according
to our merits, and that it is given freely to whom it is given, because it is
neither of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that showeth
mercy; but that by righteous judgment it is not given to whom it is not
given, because there is no unrighteousness with God;--if, therefore, I should
put forth a defence of this opinion from catholic commentators on the divine
oracles who have preceded us, assuredly these brethren for whose sake I am
now discoursing would acquiesce, for this you have intimated in your letters.
What need is there, then, for us to look into the writings of those who,
before this heresy sprang up, had no necessity to be conversant in a question
so difficult of solution as this, which beyond a doubt they would have done
if they had been compelled to answer such things? Whence it arose that they
touched upon what they thought of God’s grace briefly in some passages of
their writings, and cursorily; but on those matters which they argued against
the enemies of the Church, and in exhortations to every virtue by which to
serve the living and true God for the purpose of attaining eternal life and
true happiness, they dwelt at length. But the grace of God, what it could do,
shows itself artlessly by its frequent mention in prayers; for what God
commands to be done would not be asked for from God, unless it could be given
by Him that it should be done. Chapter 28.--Cyprian’s Treatise “On
the Mortality.” But if any wish to be instructed in the
opinions of those who have handled the subject, it behoves them to prefer to
all commentators the book of Wisdom, where it is read, “He was taken away,
that wickedness should not alter his understanding;” because illustrious
commentators, even in the times nearest to the apostles, preferred it to
themselves, seeing that when they made use of it for a testimony they
believed that they were making use of nothing but a divine testimony; and
certainly it appears that the most blessed Cyprian, in order to commend the
advantage of an earlier death, contended that those who end this life,
wherein sin is possible, are taken away from the risks of sins. In the same
treatise, among other things, he says, “Why, when you are about to be with
Christ, and are secure of the divine promise, do you not embrace being called
to Christ, and rejoice that you are free from the devil?” And in another
place he says, “Boys escape the peril of their unstable age.” And again, in
another place, he says, “Why do we not hasten and run, that we may see our
country, that we may hail our relatives? A great number of those who are dear
to us are expecting us there,--a dense and abundant crowd of parents,
brethren, sons, are longing for us; already secure of their own safety, but
still anxious about our salvation.” By these and such like sentiments, that
teacher sufficiently and plainly testifies, in the clearest light of the
catholic faith, that perils of sin and trials are to be feared even until the
putting off of this body, but that afterwards no one shall suffer any such
things. And even if he did not testify thus, when could any manner of
Christian be in doubt on this matter? How, then, should it not have been of
advantage to a man who has lapsed, and who finishes his life wretchedly in that
same state of lapse, and passes into the punishment due to such as he,--how,
I say, should it not have been of the greatest and highest advantage to such
an one to be snatched by death from this sphere of temptations before his
fall? Chapter 29.--God’s Dealing Does Not
Depend Upon Any Contingent Merits of Men. And thus, unless we indulge in reckless
disputation, the entire question is concluded concerning him who is taken away
lest wickedness should alter his understanding. And the book of Wisdom, which
for such a series of years has deserved to be read in Christ’s Church, and in
which this is read, ought not to suffer injustice because it withstands those
who are mistaken on behalf of men’s merit, so as to come in opposition to the
most manifest grace of God: and this grace chiefly appears in infants, and
while some of these baptized, and some not baptized, come to the end of this
life, they sufficiently point to God’s mercy and His judgment,--His mercy,
indeed, gratuitous, His judgment, of debt. For if men should be judged
according to the merits of their life, which merits they have been prevented
by death from actually having, but would have had if they had lived, it would
be of no advantage to him who is taken away lest wickedness should alter his
understanding; it would be of no advantage to those who die in a state of
lapse if they should die before. And this no Christian will venture to say.
Wherefore our brethren, who with us on behalf of the catholic faith assail
the pest of the Pelagian error, ought not to such an extent to favour the
Pelagian opinion, wherein they conceive that God’s grace is given according
to our merits, as to endeavour (which they cannot dare) to invalidate a true
sentiment, plainly and from ancient times Christian,--”He was taken away,
lest wickedness should alter his understanding;” and to build up that which
we should think, I do not say, no one would believe, but no one would
dream,--to wit, that any deceased person would be judged according to those
things which he would have done if he had lived for a more lengthened period.
Surely thus what we say manifests itself clearly to be incontestable,--that
the grace of God is not given according to our merits; so that ingenious men
who contradict this truth are constrained to say things which must be
rejected from the ears and from the thoughts of all men. Chapter 30.--The Most Illustrious
Instance of Predestination is Christ Jesus. Moreover, the most illustrious Light of
predestination and grace is the Saviour Himself,--the Mediator Himself
between God and men, the man Christ Jesus. And, pray, by what preceding
merits of its own, whether of works or of faith, did the human nature which is
in Him procure for itself that it should be this? Let this have an answer, I
beg. That man, whence did He deserve this--to be assumed by the Word
co-eternal with the Father into unity of person, and be the only-begotten Son
of God? Was it because any kind of goodness in Him preceded? What did He do
before? What did He believe? What did He ask, that He should attain to this
unspeakable excellence? Was it not by the act and the assumption of the Word
that that man, from the time He began to be, began to be the only Son of God?
Did not that woman, full of grace, conceive the only Son of God? Was He not
born the only Son of God, of the Holy Spirit and the Virgin Mary,--not of the
lust of the flesh, but by God’s peculiar gift? Was it to be feared that as
age matured this man, He would sin of free will? Or was the will in Him not
free on that account? and was it not so much the more free in proportion to
the greater impossibility of His becoming the servant of sin? Certainly, in
Him human nature--that is to say, our nature--specially received all those
specially admirable gifts, and any others that may most truly be said to be
peculiar to Him, by virtue of no preceding merits of its own. Let a man here
answer to God if he dare, and say, Why was it not I also? And if he should
hear, “O man, who art thou that repliest against God?” [Rom. ix. 10] let him
not at this point restrain himself, but increase his impudence and say, “How
is it that I hear, Who art thou, O man? since I am what I hear,--that is, a
man, and He of whom I speak is but the same? Why should not I also be what He
is? For it is by grace that He is such and so great; why is grace different
when nature is common? Assuredly, there is no respect of persons with God.” I
say, not what Christian man, but what madman will say this? Chapter 31.--Christ Predestinated
to Be the Son of God. Therefore in Him who is our Head let
there appear to be the very fountain of grace, whence, according to the
measure of every man, He diffuses Himself through all His members. It is by
that grace that every man from the beginning of his faith becomes a
Christian, by which grace that one man from His beginning became Christ. Of
the same Spirit also the former is born again of which the latter was born.
By the same Spirit is effected in us the remission of sins, by which Spirit
it was effected that He should have no sin. God certainly foreknew that He
would do these things. This, therefore, is that same predestination of the
saints which most especially shone forth in the Saint of saints; and who is
there of those who rightly understand the declarations of the truth that can
deny this predestination? For we have learned that the Lord of glory Himself
was predestinated in so far as the man was made the Son of God. The teacher
of the Gentiles exclaims, in the beginning of his epistles, “Paul, a servant
of Jesus Christ, called to be an apostle, separated unto the gospel of God
(which He had promised afore by His prophets in the Holy Scriptures)
concerning His Son, which was made of the seed of David according to the
flesh, who was predestinated the Son of God in power, according to the Spirit
of sanctification by the resurrection of the dead.” [Rom. i. 1 ff.] Therefore
Jesus was predestinated, so that He who was to be the Son of David according
to the flesh should yet be in power the Son of God, according to the Spirit
of sanctification, because He was born of the Holy Spirit and of the Virgin
Mary. This is that ineffably accomplished sole taking up of man by God the
Word, so that He might truly and properly be called at the same time the Son
of God and the Son of man,--Son of man on account of the man taken up, and
the Son of God on account of the God only-begotten who took Him up, so that a
Trinity and not a Quaternity might be believed in. Such a transporting of
human nature was predestinated, so great, so lofty, and so sublime that there
was no exalting it more highly,--just as on our behalf that divinity had no
possibility of more humbly putting itself off, than by the assumption of man’s
nature with the weakness of the flesh, even to the death of the cross. As,
therefore, that one man was predestinated to be our Head, so we being many
are predestinated to be His members. Here let human merits which have
perished through Adam keep silence, and let that grace of God reign which
reigns through Jesus Christ our Lord, the only Son of God, the one Lord. Let
whoever can find in our Head the merits which preceded that peculiar
generation, seek in us His members for those merits which preceded our
manifold regeneration. For that generation was not recompensed to Christ, but
given; that He should be born, namely, of the Spirit and the Virgin, separate
from all entanglement of sin. Thus also our being born again of water and the
Spirit is not recompensed to us for any merit, but freely given; and if faith
has brought us to the laver of regeneration, we ought not therefore to
suppose that we have first given anything, so that the regeneration of
salvation should be recompensed to us again; because He made us to believe in
Christ, who made for us a Christ on whom we believe. He makes in men the
beginning and the completion of the faith in Jesus who made the man Jesus the
beginner and finisher of faith; [Heb. xii. 2] for thus, as you know, He is
called in the epistle which is addressed to the Hebrews. Chapter 32.--The Twofold Calling. God indeed calls many predestinated
children of His, to make them members of His only predestinated Son,--not
with that calling with which they were called who would not come to the
marriage, since with that calling were called also the Jews, to whom Christ
crucified is an offence, and the Gentiles, to whom Christ crucified is
foolishness; but with that calling He calls the predestinated which the apostle
distinguished when he said that he preached Christ, the wisdom of God and the
power of God, to them that were called, Jews as well as Greeks. For thus he
says “But unto them which are called,” [1 Cor. i. 24] in order to show that
there were some who were not called; knowing that there is a certain sure
calling of those who are called according to God’s purpose, whom He has
foreknown and predestinated before to be conformed to the image of His Son.
And it was this calling he meant when he said, “Not of works, but of Him that
calleth; it was said unto her, That the elder shall serve the younger.” [Rom.
ix. 12] Did he say, “Not of works, but of him that believeth”? Rather, he
actually took this away from man, that he might give the whole to God.
Therefore he said, “But of Him that calleth,”--not with any sort of calling
whatever, but with that calling wherewith a man is made a believer. Chapter 33.--It is in the Power of
Evil Men to Sin; But to Do This or That by Means of that Wickedness is in God’s
Power Alone. Moreover, it was this that he had in view
when he said, “The gifts and calling of God are without repentance.” [Rom.
xi. 29] And in that saying also consider for a little what was its purport.
For when he had said, “For I would not, brethren, that ye should be ignorant
of this mystery, that ye may not be wise in yourselves, that blindness in
part is happened to Israel, until the fulness of the Gentiles be come in, and
so all Israel should be saved; as it is written, There shall come out of Sion
one who shall deliver, and turn away impiety from Jacob: and this is the
covenant to them from me, when I shall take away their sins;” [Rom. xi. 25
ff.] he immediately added, what is to be very carefully understood, “As
concerning the gospel, indeed, they are enemies for your sakes: but as
concerning the election, they are beloved for their fathers’ sakes.” [Rom.
xi. 28] What is the meaning of, “as concerning the gospel, indeed, they are
enemies for your sake,” but that their enmity wherewith they put Christ to
death was, without doubt, as we see, an advantage to the gospel? And he shows
that this came about by God’s ordering, who knew how to make a good use even
of evil things; not that the vessels of wrath might be of advantage to Him,
but that by His own good use of them they might be of advantage to the
vessels of mercy. For what could be said more plainly than what is actually
said, “As concerning the gospel, indeed, they are enemies for your sakes”? It
is, therefore, in the power of the wicked to sin; but that in sinning they
should do this or that by that wickedness is not in their power, but in God’s,
who divides the darkness and regulates it; so that hence even what they do
contrary to God’s will is not fulfilled except it be God’s will. We read in
the Acts of the Apostles that when the apostles had been sent away by the
Jews, and had come to their own friends, and shown them what great things the
priests and elders said to them, they all with one consent lifted up their
voices to the Lord and said, “Lord, thou art God, which hast made heaven, and
earth, and the sea, and all things that are therein; who, by the mouth of our
father David, thy holy servant, hast said, Why did the heathen rage, and the
peoples imagine vain things? The kings of the earth stood up, and the princes
were gathered together against the Lord, and against His Christ. For in
truth, there have assembled together in this city against Thy holy child
Jesus, whom Thou hast anointed, Herod and Pilate, and the people of Israel,
to do whatever Thy hand and counsel predestinated to be done.” [Acts iv. 24
ff.] See what is said: “As concerning the gospel, indeed, they are enemies
for your sakes.” Because God’s hand and counsel predestinated such things to
be done by the hostile Jews as were necessary for the gospel, for our sakes.
But what is it that follows? “But as concerning the election, they are
beloved for their fathers’ sakes.” For are those enemies who perished in
their enmity and those of the same people who still perish in their opposition
to Christ,--are those chosen and beloved? Away with the thought! Who is so
utterly foolish as to say this? But both expressions, although contrary to
one another--that is, “enemies” and “beloved”--are appropriate, though not to
the same men, yet to the same Jewish people, and to the same carnal seed of
lsrael, of whom some belonged to the falling away, and some to the blessing
of Israel himself. For the apostle previously explained this meaning more
clearly when he said, “That which lsrael wrought for, he hath not obtained;
but the election hath obtained it, and the rest were blinded?” [Rom. xi. 7]
Yet in both cases it was the very same Israel. Where, therefore, we hear, “Israel
hath not obtained,” or, “The rest were blinded,” there are to be understood
the enemies for our sakes; but where we hear, “that the election hath
obtained it,” there are to be understood the beloved for their father’s
sakes, to which fathers those things were assuredly promised; because “the
promises were made to Abraham and his seed,” [Gal. iii. 16] whence also in
that olive-tree is grafted the wild olive-tree of the Gentiles. Now
subsequently we certainly ought to fall in with the election, of which he
says that it is according to grace, not according to debt, because “there was
made a remnant by the election of grace” [Rom. xi. 5] This election obtained
it, the rest being blinded. As concerning this election, the Israelites were
beloved for the sake of their fathers. For they were not called with that
calling of which it is said, “Many are called,” but with that whereby the
chosen are called. Whence also after he had said, “But as concerning the
election, they are beloved for the fathers’ sakes,” he went on to add those
words whence this discussion arose: “For the gifts and calling of God are
without repentance,”--that is, they are firmly established without change.
Those who belong to this calling are all teachable by God; nor can any of
them say, “I believed in order to being thus called,” because the mercy of
God anticipated him, because he was so called in order that he might believe.
For all who are teachable of God come to the Son because they have heard and
learned from the Father through the Son, who most clearly says, “Every one
who has heard of the Father, and has learned, cometh unto me.” [John vi. 45]
But of such as these none perishes, because “of all that the Father hath
given Him, He will lose none.” [John vi. 39] Whoever, therefore, is of these
does not perish at all; nor was any who perishes ever of these. For which
reason it is said, “They went out from among us, but they were not of us; for
if they had been of us, they would certainly have continued with us.” [John
ii. 19] |