Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| God Just as Well as Merciful; Accordingly, Mercy Must Not Be Indiscriminate. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter II.—God
Just as Well as Merciful; Accordingly, Mercy Must Not Be
Indiscriminate.
“But,” say they, “God is
‘good,’ and ‘most good,’715
715 See Matt. xix. 17; Mark x. 18; Luke xviii.
19. |
and ‘pitiful-hearted,’ and ‘a pitier,’ and
‘abundant in pitiful-heartedness,’716 which
He holds ‘dearer than all sacrifice,’717
717 Hos. vi. 6; Mic. vi. 8; Matt. ix. 13; xii.
7. |
‘not thinking the sinner’s death of so much worth as his
repentance’,718
718 Ezek. xviii. 23, 32; xxxiii.
11. | ‘a Saviour of
all men, most of all of believers.’719
And so it will be becoming for ‘the sons of God’720 too to be
‘pitiful-hearted’721 and
‘peacemakers;’722 ‘giving in
their turn just as Christ withal hath given to
us;’723
723 Comp. Matt. x. 8; but the reference seems to be to
Eph. iv. 32, where the Vulgate reads almost as
Tertullian does, “donantes invicem, sicut et Deus in Christo
donavit vobis.” | ‘not judging,
that we be not judged.’724 For ‘to
his own lord a man standeth or falleth; who art thou, to judge
another’s servant?’725 ‘Remit,
and remission shall be made to thee.’”726 Such and so great futilities of theirs
wherewith they flatter God and pander to themselves, effeminating
rather than invigorating discipline, with how cogent and contrary
(arguments) are we for our part able to rebut,—(arguments) which
set before us warningly the “severity”727
of God, and provoke our own constancy? Because, albeit God is by
nature good, still He is “just”728
too. For, from the nature of the case, just as He knows how to
“heal,” so does He withal know how to
“smite;”729 “making
peace,” but withal “creating evils;”730 preferring repentance, but withal commanding
Jeremiah not to pray for the aversion of ills on behalf of the sinful
People,—“since, if they shall have fasted,” saith He,
“I will not listen to their entreaty.”731
731 Jer. xiv. 11, 12; vii. 16; xi.
14. | And again: “And pray not
thou unto (me) on behalf of the People, and request not on their behalf
in prayer and supplication, since I will not listen to (them) in the
time wherein they shall have invoked me, in the time of their
affliction.”732 And further,
above, the same preferrer of mercy above sacrifice (says):
“And pray not thou unto (me) on behalf of this People, and
request not that they may obtain mercy, and approach not on their
behalf unto me, since I will not listen to (them)”733 —of course when they sue for mercy, when
out of repentance they weep and fast, and when they offer their
self-affliction to God. For God is
“jealous,”734
734 Comp. Bible:Deut.6.15 Bible:Josh.24.19 Bible:Nah.1.2">Ex. xx. 5; xxxiv. 14; Deut. iv. 24; v. 9;
vi. 15; Josh. xxiv. 19; Nahum i. 2. | and is One who is not
contemptuously derided735 —derided,
namely, by such as flatter His goodness—and who, albeit
“patient,”736
736 Comp. Rom. xv. 5; Ps. vii. 12 (in LXX.). | yet threatens,
through Isaiah, an end of (His) patience. “I have held my
peace; shall I withal always hold my peace and endure? I have
been quiet as (a woman) in birth-throes; I will arise, and will make
(them) to grow arid.”737 For “a
fire shall proceed before His face, and shall utterly burn His
enemies;”738 striking down not the
body only, but the souls too, into hell.739
Besides, the Lord Himself demonstrates the manner in which He threatens
such as judge: “For with what judgment ye judge, judgment
shall be given on you.”740 Thus He has not
prohibited judging, but taught (how to do it). Whence the apostle
withal judges, and that in a case of fornication,741
that “such a man must be surrendered to Satan for the destruction
of the flesh;”742 chiding them likewise
because “brethren” were not “judged at the bar of the
saints:”743 for he goes on
and says, “To what (purpose is it) for me to judge those who are
without?” “But you remit, in order that remission may
be granted you by God.” The sins which are (thus) cleansed
are such as a man may have committed against his brother, not against
God. We profess, in short, in our prayer, that we will grant
remission to our debtors;744 but it is not
becoming to distend further, on the ground of the authority of such
Scriptures, the cable of contention with alternate pull into diverse
directions; so that one (Scripture) may seem to draw tight, another to
relax, the reins of discipline—in uncertainty, as it
were,—and the latter to debase the remedial aid of repentance
through lenity, the former to refuse it through austerity.
Further: the authority of Scripture will stand within its own
limits, without reciprocal opposition. The remedial aid of
repentance is determined by its own conditions, without unlimited
concession; and the causes of it themselves are anteriorly
distinguished without confusion in the proposition. We agree that
the causes of repentance are sins. These we divide into two
issues: some will be remissible, some irremissible: in
accordance wherewith it will be doubtful to no one that some deserve
chastisement, some condemnation. Every sin is dischargeable
either by pardon or else by penalty: by pardon as the result of
chastisement, by penalty as the result of condemnation. Touching
this difference, we have not only already premised certain antithetical
passages of the Scriptures, on one hand retaining, on the other
remitting, sins;745 but John, too, will
teach us: “If any knoweth his brother to be sinning a sin
not unto death, he shall request, and life shall be given to
him;” because he is not “sinning unto death,” this
will be remissible. “(There) is a sin unto death; not for
this do I say that any is to request”746 —this will be irremissible. So,
where there is the efficacious power of “making request,”
there likewise is that of remission: where there is no
(efficacious power) of “making request,” there equally is
none of remission either. According to this difference of sins, the condition of repentance
also is discriminated. There will be a condition which may
possibly obtain pardon,—in the case, namely, of a remissible
sin: there will be a condition which can by no means obtain
it,—in the case, namely, of an irremissible sin. And it
remains to examine specially, with regard to the position of adultery
and fornication, to which class of sins they ought to be
assigned.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|