Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| Liberty and Necessity. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter
VIII.—Liberty and Necessity.
“But, you say, God ought to have made us at
first so that we should not have thought at all of such things.
You who say this do not know what is free-will, and how it is possible
to be really good; that he who is good by his own choice is really
good; but he who is made good by another under necessity is not really
good, because he is not what he is by his own choice.1128
1128 [Comp.
Recognitions, iii. 21, etc. In that work the freedom of
the will, as necessary to goodness, is more frequently
affirmed.—R.] | Since therefore every one’s
freedom constitutes the true good, and shows the true evil, God has
contrived that friendship or hostility should be in each man by
occasions. But no, it is said: everything that we think He
makes us to think. Stop! Why do you blaspheme more and
more, in saying this? For if we are under His influence in all
that we think, you say that He is the cause of fornications, lusts,
avarice, and all blasphemy. Cease your evil-speaking, ye who
ought to speak well of Him, and to bestow all honour upon Him.
And do not say that God does not claim any honour; for if He Himself
claims nothing, you ought to look to what is right, and to answer with
thankful voice Him who does you good in all things.
E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|