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| That in Adam’s Sin an Evil Will Preceded the Evil Act. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 13.—That in Adam’s Sin
an Evil Will Preceded the Evil Act.
Our first parents fell into open
disobedience because already they were secretly corrupted; for the
evil act had never been done had not an evil will preceded it.
And what is the origin of our evil will but pride? For “pride
is the beginning of sin.”729 And what is pride but the craving
for undue exaltation? And this is undue exaltation, when the soul
abandons Him to whom it ought to cleave as its end, and becomes a
kind of end to itself. This happens when it becomes its own
satisfaction. And it does so when it falls away from that
unchangeable good which ought to satisfy it more than itself.
This falling away is spontaneous; for if the will had remained
steadfast in the love of that higher and changeless good by which
it was illumined to intelligence and kindled into love, it would
not have turned away to find satisfaction in itself, and so become
frigid and benighted; the woman would not have believed the serpent
spoke the truth, nor would the man have preferred the request of
his wife to the command of God, nor have supposed that it was a
venial trangression to cleave to the partner of his life even in a
partnership of sin. The wicked deed, then,—that is to say, the
trangression of eating the forbidden fruit,—was committed by
persons who were already wicked. That “evil fruit”730 could be
brought forth only by “a corrupt tree.” But that the tree was
evil was not the result of nature; for certainly it could become so
only by the vice of the will, and vice is contrary to nature.
Now, nature could not have been depraved by vice had it not been
made out of nothing. Consequently, that it is a nature, this is
because it is made by God; but that it falls away from Him, this is
because it is made out of nothing. But man did not so fall away731 as to become
absolutely nothing; but being turned towards himself, his being
became more contracted than it was when he clave to Him who
supremely is. Accordingly, to exist in himself, that is, to be
his own satisfaction after abandoning God, is not quite to become a
nonentity, but to approximate to that. And therefore the holy
Scriptures designate the proud by another name,
“self-pleasers.” For it is good to have the heart lifted up,
yet not to one’s self, for this is proud, but to the Lord, for
this is obedient, and can be the act only of the humble. There
is, therefore, something in humility which, strangely enough,
exalts the heart, and something in pride which debases it. This
seems, indeed, to be contradictory, that loftiness should debase
and lowliness exalt. But pious humility enables us to submit to
what is above us; and nothing is more exalted above us than God;
and therefore humility, by making us subject to God, exalts us.
But pride, being a defect of nature, by the very act of refusing
subjection and revolting from Him who is supreme, falls to a low
condition; and then comes to pass what is written: “Thou
castedst them down when they lifted up themselves.”732 For he
does not say, “when they had been lifted up,” as if first they
were exalted, and then afterwards cast down; but “when they
lifted up themselves” even then they were cast down,—that is to
say, the very lifting up was already a fall. And therefore it is
that humility is specially recommended to the city of God as it
sojourns in this world, and is specially exhibited in the city of
God, and in the person of Christ its King; while the contrary vice
of pride, according to the testimony of the sacred writings,
specially rules his adversary the devil. And certainly this is
the great difference which distinguishes the two cities of which we
speak, the one being the society of the godly men, the other of the
ungodly, each associated with the angels that adhere to their
party, and the one guided and fashioned by love of self, the other
by love of God.
The devil, then, would not have ensnared man in the open
and manifest sin of doing what God had forbidden, had man not
already begun to live for himself. It was this that made him
listen with pleasure to the words, “Ye shall be as gods,”733 which they
would much more readily have accomplished by obediently adhering to
their supreme and true end than by proudly living to themselves.
For created gods are gods not by virtue of what is in themselves,
but by a participation of the true God. By craving to be more,
man becomes less; and by aspiring to be self-sufficing, he fell
away from Him who truly suffices him. Accordingly, this wicked
desire which prompts man to please himself as if he were himself
light, and which thus turns him away from that light by which, had
he followed it, he would himself have become light,—this wicked
desire, I say, already secretly existed in him, and the open sin
was but its consequence. For that is true which is written,
“Pride goeth before destruction, and before honor is
humility;”734 that is to
say, secret ruin precedes open ruin, while the former is not
counted ruin. For who counts exaltation ruin, though no sooner is
the Highest forsaken than a fall is begun? But who does not
recognize it as ruin, when there occurs an evident and indubitable
transgression of the commandment? And consequently, God’s
prohibition had reference to such an act as, when committed, could
not be defended on any pretense of doing what was righteous.735
735 That is to say, it was an obvious
and indisputable transgression. | And I make
bold to say that it is useful for the proud to fall into an open
and indisputable transgression, and so displease themselves, as
already, by pleasing themselves, they had fallen. For Peter was
in a healthier condition when he wept and was dissatisfied with
himself, than when he boldly presumed and satisfied himself. And
this is averred by the sacred Psalmist when he says, “Fill their
faces with shame, that they may seek Thy name, O Lord;”736 that is,
that they who have pleased themselves in seeking their own glory
may be pleased and satisfied with Thee in seeking Thy
glory.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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