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| The Laws of Grace, Which Extend to All the Epochs of the Life of the Regenerate. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 16.—The Laws of Grace,
Which Extend to All the Epochs of the Life of the
Regenerate.
But such is God’s mercy towards
the vessels of mercy which He has prepared for glory, that even the
first age of man, that is, infancy, which submits without any
resistance to the flesh, and the second age, which is called
boyhood, and which has not yet understanding enough to undertake
this warfare, and therefore yields to almost every vicious pleasure
(because though this age has the power of speech,1527 and may
therefore seem to have passed infancy, the mind is still too weak
to comprehend the commandment), yet if either of these ages has
received the sacraments of the Mediator, then, although the present
life be immediately brought to an end, the child, having been
translated from the power of darkness to the kingdom of Christ,
shall not only be saved from eternal punishments, but shall not
even suffer purgatorial torments after death. For spiritual
regeneration of itself suffices to prevent any evil consequences
resulting after death from the connection with death which carnal
generation forms.1528
1528 See Aug. Ep. 98, ad
Bonifacium. | But when we reach that age which
can now comprehend the commandment, and submit to the dominion of
law, we must declare war upon vices, and wage this war keenly, lest
we be landed in damnable sins. And if vices have not gathered
strength, by habitual victory they are more easily overcome and
subdued; but if they have been used to conquer and rule, it is only
with difficulty and labor they are mastered. And indeed this
victory cannot be sincerely and truly gained but by delighting in
true righteousness, and it is faith in Christ that gives this.
For if the law be present with its command, and the Spirit be
absent with His help, the presence of the prohibition serves only
to increase the desire to sin, and adds the guilt of
transgression. Sometimes, indeed, patent vices are overcome by
other and hidden vices, which are reckoned virtues, though pride
and a kind of ruinous self-sufficiency are their informing
principles. Accordingly vices are then only to be considered
overcome when they are conquered by the love of God, which God
Himself alone gives, and which He gives only through the Mediator
between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, who became a partaker of
our mortality that He might make us partakers of His divinity.
But few indeed are they who are so happy as to have passed their
youth without committing any damnable sins, either by dissolute or
violent conduct, or by following some godless and unlawful
opinions, but have subdued by their greatness of soul everything in
them which could make them the slaves of carnal pleasures. The
greater
number having first become transgressors of the law that
they have received, and having allowed vice to have the ascendency
in them, then flee to grace for help, and so, by a penitence more
bitter, and a struggle more violent than it would otherwise have
been, they subdue the soul to God, and thus give it its lawful
authority over the flesh, and become victors. Whoever, therefore,
desires to escape eternal punishment, let him not only be baptized,
but also justified in Christ, and so let him in truth pass from the
devil to Christ. And let him not fancy that there are any
purgatorial pains except before that final and dreadful judgment.
We must not, however deny that even the eternal fire will be
proportioned to the deserts of the wicked, so that to some it will
be more, and to others less painful, whether this result be
accomplished by a variation in the temperature of the fire itself,
graduated according to every one’s merit, or whether it be that
the heat remains the same, but that all do not feel it with equal
intensity of torment.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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