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Chapter XVIII.—What Error is
Harmless in Sacred Scripture.
27. All which things having been heard and
considered, I am unwilling to contend about words,1132
1132 See p. 164, note 2, above. | for that
is profitable to nothing but to the subverting of the hearers.1133 But the
law is good to edify, if a man use it lawfully;1134 for the end of it “is charity
out of a pure heart, and of a good conscience, and of faith
unfeigned.”1135 And well
did our Master know, upon which two commandments He hung all the
Law and the Prophets.1136
1136 Matt. xxii. 40. For he says in his Con.
Faust. xvii. 6, remarking on John i. 17, a text which he often quotes
in this connection: “The law itself by being fulfilled becomes
grace and truth. Grace is the fulfilment of love.” And so in
ibid. xix. 27 we read: “From the words, ‘I came not to
destroy the law but to fulfil it,’ we are not to understand that
Christ by His precepts filled up what was wanting in the law; but
what the literal command failed in doing from the pride and
disobedience of men is accomplished by grace.…So, the apostle
says, ‘faith worketh by love.’” So, again, we read in
Serm. cxxv.: “Quia venit dare caritatem, et caritas perficit
legem; merito dixit non veni legem solvere sed implere.” And
hence in his letter to Jerome (Ep. clxvii. 19), he speaks of
the “royal law” as being “the law of liberty, which is the
law of love.” See p. 348, note 4, above. | And what doth it hinder me, O my
God, Thou light of my eyes in secret, while ardently confessing
these things,—since by these words many things may be understood,
all of which are yet true,—what, I say, doth it hinder me, should
I think otherwise of what the writer thought than some other man
thinketh? Indeed, all of us who read endeavour to trace out and to
understand that which he whom we read wished to convey; and as we
believe him to speak truly, we dare not suppose that he has spoken
anything which we either know or suppose to be false. Since,
therefore, each person endeavours to understand in the Holy
Scriptures that which the writer understood, what hurt is it if a
man understand what Thou, the light of all true-speaking minds,
dost show him to be true although he whom he reads understood not
this, seeing that he also understood a Truth, not, however, this
Truth?
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