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| That the Passions Which Assail the Souls of Christians Do Not Seduce Them to Vice, But Exercise Their Virtue. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 5.—That the Passions
Which Assail the Souls of Christians Do Not Seduce Them to Vice,
But Exercise Their Virtue.
We need not at present give a
careful and copious exposition of the doctrine of Scripture, the
sum of Christian knowledge, regarding these passions. It subjects
the mind itself to God, that He may rule and aid it, and the
passions, again, to the mind, to moderate and bridle them, and turn
them to righteous uses. In our ethics, we do not so much inquire
whether a pious soul is angry, as why he is angry; not whether he
is sad, but what is the cause of his sadness; not whether he fears,
but what he fears. For I am not aware that any right thinking
person would find fault with anger at a wrongdoer which seeks his
amendment, or with sadness which intends relief to the suffering,
or with fear lest one in danger be destroyed. The Stoics, indeed,
are accustomed to condemn compassion.341
341 Seneca, De Clem. ii. 4 and
5. | But how much more honorable had
it been in that Stoic we have been telling of, had he been
disturbed by compassion prompting him to relieve a fellow-creature,
than to be disturbed by the fear of shipwreck! Far better and
more humane, and more consonant with pious sentiments, are the
words of Cicero in praise of Cæsar, when he says, “Among your
virtues none is more admirable and agreeable than your
compassion.”342 And what
is compassion but a fellow-feeling for another’s misery, which
prompts us to help him if we can? And this emotion is obedient to
reason, when compassion is shown without violating right, as when
the poor are relieved, or the penitent forgiven. Cicero, who knew
how to use language, did not hesitate to call this a virtue, which
the Stoics are not ashamed to reckon among the vices, although, as
the book of the eminent Stoic, Epictetus, quoting the opinions of
Zeno and Chrysippus, the founders of the school, has taught us,
they admit that passions of this kind invade the soul of the wise
man, whom they would have to be free from all vice. Whence it
follows that these very passions are not judged by them to be
vices, since they assail the wise man without forcing him to act
against reason and virtue; and that, therefore, the opinion of the
Peripatetics or Platonists and of the Stoics is one and the same.
But, as Cicero says,343
343 De Oratore,i. 11, 47. | mere logomachy is the bane of these
pitiful Greeks, who thirst for contention rather than for truth.
However, it may justly be asked, whether our subjection to these
affections, even while we follow virtue, is a part of the infirmity
of this life? For the holy angels feel no anger while they punish
those whom the eternal law of God consigns to punishment, no
fellow-feeling with misery while they relieve the miserable, no
fear while they aid those who are in danger; and yet ordinary
language ascribes to them also these mental emotions, because,
though they have none of our weakness, their acts resemble the
actions to which these emotions move us; and thus even God Himself
is said in Scripture to be angry, and yet without any
perturbation. For this word is used of the effect of His
vengeance, not of the disturbing mental affection.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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