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  • In What Sense a Sinless Righteousness in This Life Can Be Asserted.
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    Chapter 65.—In What Sense a Sinless Righteousness in This Life Can Be Asserted.

    Forasmuch, however, as an inferior righteousness may be said to be competent to this life, whereby the just man lives by faith1096

    1096 Rom. i. 17.

    although absent from the Lord, and, therefore, walking by faith and not yet by sight,1097

    1097 2 Cor. v. 7.

    —it may be without absurdity said, no doubt, in respect of it, that it is free from sin; for it ought not to be attributed to it as a fault, that it is not as yet sufficient for so great a love to God as is due to the final, complete, and perfect condition thereof. It is one thing to fail at present in attaining to the fulness of love, and another thing to be swayed by no lust. A man ought therefore to abstain from every unlawful desire, although he loves God now far less than it is possible to love Him when He becomes an object of sight; just as in matters connected with the bodily senses, the eye can receive no pleasure from any kind of darkness, although it may be unable to look with a firm sight amidst refulgent light. Only let us see to it that we so constitute the soul of man in this corruptible body, that, although it has not yet swallowed up and consumed the motions of earthly lust in that super-eminent perfection of the love of God, it nevertheless, in that inferior righteousness to which we have referred, gives no consent to the aforesaid lust for the purpose of effecting any unlawful thing. In respect, therefore, of that immortal life, the commandment is even now applicable: “Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy might;”1098

    1098 Deut. vi. 5.

    but in reference to the present life the following: “Let not sin reign in your mortal body, that ye should obey it in the lusts thereof.”1099

    1099 Rom. vi. 12.

    To the one, again, belongs, “Thou shalt not covet;”1100

    1100 Ex. xx. 17.

    to the other, “Thou shalt not go after thy lusts.”1101

    1101 Ecclus. xviii. 30.

    To the one it appertains to seek for nothing more than to continue in its perfect state; to the other it belongs actively to do the duty committed to it, and to hope as its reward for the perfection of the future life,—so that in the one the just man may live forevermore in the sight of that happiness which in this life was his object of desire; in the other, he may live by that faith whereon rests his desire for the ultimate blessedness as its certain end. (These things being so, it will be sin in the man who lives by faith ever to consent to an unlawful delight,—by committing not only frightful deeds and crimes, but even trifling faults; sinful, if he lend an ear to a word that ought not to be listened to, or a tongue to a phrase which should not be uttered; sinful, if he entertains a thought in his heart in such a way as to wish that an evil pleasure were a lawful one, although known to be unlawful by the commandment,—for this amounts to a consent to sin, which would certainly be carried out in act, unless fear of punishment deterred.)1102

    1102 The Benedictine editor is not satisfied with the place of the lines in the parenthesis. He would put them in an earlier position, perhaps before the clause beginning with, “Only let us see to it,” etc.

    Have such just men, while living by faith, no need to say: “Forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors?”1103

    1103 Matt. vi. 12.

    And do they prove this to be wrong which is written, “In Thy sight shall no man living be justified?”1104

    1104 Ps. cxliii. 2.

    and this: “If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us?”1105

    1105 1 John i. 8.

    and, “There is no man that sinneth not;”1106

    1106 1 Kings viii. 46.

    and again, “There is not on the earth a righteous man, who doeth good and sinneth not”1107

    1107 Ecclus. vii. 21.

    (for both these statements are expressed in a general future sense,—“sinneth not,” “will not sin,”—not in the past time, “has not sinned”)?—and all other places of this purport contained in the Holy Scripture? Since, however, these passages cannot possibly be false, it plainly follows, to my mind, that whatever be the quality or extent of the righteousness which we may definitely ascribe to the present life, there is not a man living in it who is absolutely free from all sin; and that it is necessary for every one to give, that it may be given to him;1108

    1108 Luke vi. 30; 38.

    and to forgive, that it may be forgiven him;1109

    1109 Luke xi. 4.

    and whatever righteousness he has, not to presume that he has it of himself, but from the grace of God, who justifies him, and still to go on hungering and thirsting for righteousness1110

    1110 Matt. v. 6.

    from Him who is the living bread,1111

    1111 John vi. 51.

    and with whom is the fountain of life;1112

    1112 Ps. xxxvi. 9.

    who works in His saints, whilst labouring amidst temptation in this life, their justification in such manner that He may still have somewhat to impart to them liberally when they ask, and something mercifully to forgive them when they confess.

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