Bad Advertisement?
Are you a Christian?
Online Store:Visit Our Store
| Against Those Who Fancy that in the Judgment of God All the Accused Will Be Spared in Virtue of the Prayers of the Saints. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 24.—Against Those Who
Fancy that in the Judgment of God All the Accused Will Be Spared in
Virtue of the Prayers of the Saints.
And this reasoning is equally
conclusive against those who, in their own interest, but under the
guise of a greater tenderness of spirit, attempt to invalidate the
words of God, and who assert that these words are true, not because
men shall suffer those things which are threatened by God, but
because they deserve to suffer them. For God, they say, will
yield them to the prayers of His saints, who will then the more
earnestly pray for their enemies, as they shall be more perfect in
holiness, and whose prayers will be the more efficacious and the
more worthy of God’s ear, because now purged from all sin
whatsoever. Why, then, if in that perfected holiness their
prayers be so pure and all-availing, will they not use them in
behalf of the angels for whom eternal fire is prepared, that God
may mitigate His sentence and alter it, and extricate them from
that fire? Or will there, perhaps, be some one hardy enough to
affirm that even the holy angels will make common cause with holy
men (then become the equals of God’s angels), and will intercede
for the guilty, both men and angels, that mercy may spare them the
punishment which truth has pronounced them to deserve? But this
has been asserted by no one sound in the faith; nor will be.
Otherwise there is no reason why the Church should not even now
pray for the devil and his angels, since God her Master has ordered
her to pray for her enemies. The reason, then, which prevents the
Church from now praying for the wicked angels, whom she knows to be
her enemies, is the identical reason which shall prevent her,
however perfected in holiness, from praying at the last judgment
for those men who are to be punished in eternal fire. At present
she prays for her enemies among men, because they have yet
opportunity for fruitful repentance. For what does she especially
beg for them but that “God would grant them repentance,” as the
apostle says, “that they may return to soberness out of the snare
of the devil, by whom they are held captive according to his
will?”1546 But if
the Church
were certified who those are, who, though they are still
abiding in this life, are yet predestinated to go with the devil
into eternal fire, then for them she could no more pray than for
him. But since she has this certainty regarding no man, she prays
for all her enemies who yet live in this world; and yet she is not
heard in behalf of all. But she is heard in the case of those
only who, though they oppose the Church, are yet predestinated to
become her sons through her intercession. But if any retain an
impenitent heart until death, and are not converted from enemies
into sons, does the Church continue to pray for them, for the
spirits, i.e., of such persons deceased? And why does she
cease to pray for them, unless because the man who was not
translated into Christ’s kingdom while he was in the body, is now
judged to be of Satan’s following?
It is then, I say, the same reason
which prevents the Church at any time from praying for the wicked
angels, which prevents her from praying hereafter for those men who
are to be punished in eternal fire; and this also is the reason
why, though she prays even for the wicked so long as they live, she
yet does not even in this world pray for the unbelieving and
godless who are dead. For some of the dead, indeed, the prayer of
the Church or of pious individuals is heard; but it is for those
who, having been regenerated in Christ, did not spend their life so
wickedly that they can be judged unworthy of such compassion, nor
so well that they can be considered to have no need of it.1547 As also,
after the resurrection, there will be some of the dead to whom,
after they have endured the pains proper to the spirits of the
dead, mercy shall be accorded, and acquittal from the punishment of
the eternal fire. For were there not some whose sins, though not
remitted in this life, shall be remitted in that which is to come,
it could not be truly said, “They shall not be forgiven, neither
in this world, neither in that which is to come.”1548 But when
the Judge of quick and dead has said, “Come, ye blessed of my
Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of
the world,” and to those on the other side, “Depart from me, ye
cursed, into the eternal fire, which is prepared for the devil and
his angels,” and “These shall go away into eternal punishment,
but the righteous into eternal life,”1549
1549 Matt. xxv. 34, 41,
46. | it were excessively presumptuous
to say that the punishment of any of those whom God has said shall
go away into eternal punishment shall not be eternal, and so bring
either despair or doubt upon the corresponding promise of life
eternal.
Let no man then so understand the
words of the Psalmist, “Shall God forget to be gracious? shall He
shut up in His anger His tender mercies”1550 as if the sentence of God were
true of good men, false of bad men, or true of good men and wicked
angels, but false of bad men. For the Psalmist’s words refer to
the vessels of mercy and the children of the promise, of whom the
prophet himself was one; for when he had said, “Shall God forget
to be gracious? shall He shut up in His anger His tender
mercies?” and then immediately subjoins, “And I said, Now I
begin: this is the change wrought by the right hand of the Most
High,”1551 he
manifestly explained what he meant by the words, “Shall he shut
up in His anger His tender mercies?” For God’s anger is this
mortal life, in which man is made like to vanity, and his days pass
as a shadow.1552 Yet in
this anger God does not forget to be gracious, causing His sun to
shine and His rain to descend on the just and the unjust;1553 and thus
He does not in His anger cut short His tender mercies, and
especially in what the Psalmist speaks of in the words, “Now I
begin: this change is from the right hand of the Most High;”
for He changes for the better the vessels of mercy, even while they
are still in this most wretched life, which is God’s anger, and
even while His anger is manifesting itself in this miserable
corruption; for “in His anger He does not shut up His tender
mercies.” And since the truth of this divine canticle is quite
satisfied by this application of it, there is no need to give it a
reference to that place in which those who do not belong to the
city of God are punished in eternal fire. But if any persist in
extending its application to the torments of the wicked, let them
at least understand it so that the anger of God, which has
threatened the wicked with eternal punishment, shall abide, but
shall be mixed with mercy to the extent of alleviating the torments
which might justly be inflicted; so that the wicked shall neither
wholly escape, nor only for a time endure these threatened pains,
but that they shall be less severe and more endurable than they
deserve. Thus the anger of God shall continue, and at the same
time He will not in this anger shut up His tender mercies. But
even this hypothesis I am not to be supposed to affirm because I do
not positively oppose it.1554
1554 It is the theory which Chrysostom
adopts. |
As for those who find an empty threat rather than a
truth in such passages as these: “Depart from me, ye cursed,
into everlasting fire;” and “These shall go away into eternal
punishment;”1555 and
“They shall be tormented for ever and ever;”1556 and “Their worm shall not die,
and their fire shall not be quenched,”1557 —such persons, I say, are most
emphatically and abundantly refuted, not by me so much as by the
divine Scripture itself. For the men of Nineveh repented in this
life, and therefore their repentance was fruitful, inasmuch as they
sowed in that field which the Lord meant to be sown in tears that
it might afterwards be reaped in joy. And yet who will deny that
God’s prediction was fulfilled in their case, if at least he
observes that God destroys sinners not only in anger but also in
compassion? For sinners are destroyed in two ways,—either, like
the Sodomites, the men themselves are punished for their sins, or,
like the Ninevites, the men’s sins are destroyed by repentance.
God’s prediction, therefore, was fulfilled,—the wicked Nineveh
was overthrown, and a good Nineveh built up. For its walls and
houses remained standing; the city was overthrown in its depraved
manners. And thus, though the prophet was provoked that the
destruction which the inhabitants dreaded, because of his
prediction, did not take place, yet that which God’s
foreknowledge had predicted did take place, for He who foretold the
destruction knew how it should be fulfilled in a less calamitous
sense.
But that these perversely
compassionate persons may see what is the purport of these words,
“How great is the abundance of Thy sweetness, Lord, which Thou
hast hidden for them that fear Thee,”1558 let them read what follows:
“And Thou hast perfected it for them that hope in Thee.” For
what means, “Thou hast hidden it for them that fear Thee,”
“Thou hast perfected it for them that hope in Thee,” unless
this, that to those who through fear of punishment seek to
establish their own righteousness by the law, the righteousness of
God is not sweet, because they are ignorant of it? They have not
tasted it. For they hope in themselves, not in Him; and therefore
God’s abundant sweetness is hidden from them. They fear God,
indeed, but it is with that servile fear “which is not in love;
for perfect love casteth out fear.”1559 Therefore to them that hope in
Him He perfecteth His sweetness, inspiring them with His own love,
so that with a holy fear, which love does not cast out, but which
endureth for ever, they may, when they glory, glory in the Lord.
For the righteousness of God is Christ, “who is of God made unto
us,” as the apostle says, “wisdom, and righteousness, and
sanctification, and redemption: as it is written, He that
glorieth, let him glory in the Lord.”1560 This righteousness of God, which
is the gift of grace without merits, is not known by those who go
about to establish their own righteousness, and are therefore not
subject to the righteousness of God, which is Christ.1561 But it
is in this righteousness that we find the great abundance of
God’s sweetness, of which the psalm says, “Taste and see how
sweet the Lord is.”1562 And this we rather taste than
partake of to satiety in this our pilgrimage. We hunger and
thirst for it now, that hereafter we may be satisfied with it when
we see Him as He is, and that is fulfilled which is written, “I
shall be satisfied when Thy glory shall be manifested.”1563 It is
thus that Christ perfects the great abundance of His sweetness to
them that hope in Him. But if God conceals His sweetness from
them that fear Him in the sense that these our objectors fancy, so
that men’s ignorance of His purpose of mercy towards the wicked
may lead them to fear Him and live better, and so that there may be
prayer made for those who are not living as they ought, how then
does He perfect His sweetness to them that hope in Him, since, if
their dreams be true, it is this very sweetness which will prevent
Him from punishing those who do not hope in Him? Let us then seek
that sweetness of His, which He perfects to them that hope in Him,
not that which He is supposed to perfect to those who despise and
blaspheme Him; for in vain, after this life, does a man seek for
what he has neglected to provide while in this life.
Then, as to that saying of the
apostle, “For God hath concluded all in unbelief, that He may
have mercy upon all,”1564 it does not mean that He will
condemn no one; but the foregoing context shows what is meant.
The apostle composed the epistle for the Gentiles who were already
believers; and when he was speaking to them of the Jews who were
yet to believe, he says, “For as ye in times past believed not
God, yet have now obtained mercy through their unbelief; even so
have these also now not believed, that through your mercy they also
may obtain mercy.” Then he added the words in question with
which these persons beguile themselves: “For God concluded all
in unbelief, that He might have mercy upon all.” All whom, if
not all those of whom he
was speaking, just as if he had
said, “Both you and them?” God then concluded all those in
unbelief, both Jews and Gentiles, whom He foreknew and
predestinated to be conformed to the image of His Son, in order
that they might be confounded by the bitterness of unbelief, and
might repent and believingly turn to the sweetness of God’s
mercy, and might take up that exclamation of the psalm, “How
great is the abundance of Thy sweetness, O Lord, which Thou hast
hidden for them that fear Thee, but hast perfected to them that
hope,” not in themselves, but “in Thee.” He has mercy,
then, on all the vessels of mercy. And what means “all?”
Both those of the Gentiles and those of the Jews whom He
predestinated, called, justified, glorified: none of these will
be condemned by Him; but we cannot say none of all men
whatever.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
|