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| Chapter VI. On what is useful: not that which is advantageous, but that which is just and virtuous. It is to be found in losses, and is divided into what is useful for the body, and what is useful unto godliness. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter VI.
On what is useful: not that which is advantageous,
but that which is just and virtuous. It is to be found in losses,
and is divided into what is useful for the body, and what is useful
unto godliness.
22. In the first
book we made our division in such a way as to set in the first place
what is virtuous and what is seemly; for all duties are derived from
these. In the second place we set what is useful. But as at
the start we said that there was a difference between what is virtuous
and what is seemly—which one can comprehend more easily than one
can explain—so also when we are thinking of what is useful, we
have to give considerable thought to what is the more useful.413
23. But we do not reckon usefulness by the
value of any gain in money, but in acquiring godliness, as the Apostle
says: “But godliness is profitable unto all things, having
promise of the life that now is, and of that which is to
come.”414 Thus in the
holy Scriptures, if we look carefully we shall often find that what is
virtuous is called useful: “All things are lawful unto me,
but all things are not profitable” [useful].415 Before that he was speaking of vices,
and so means: It is lawful to sin, but it is not seemly.
Sins rest in one’s own power, but they are not virtuous. To
live wantonly is easy, but it is not right. For food serves not
God but the belly.
24. Therefore, because what is useful is
also just, it is just to serve Christ, Who redeemed us. They too
are just who for His Name’s sake have given themselves up to
death, they are unjust who have avoided it. Of them it
says: What profit is there in my blood?416
that is: what advance has my justice made? Wherefore they
also say: “Let us bind the just, for he is useless to
us,”417 that is: he
is unjust, for he complains of us, condemns and rebukes us. This
could also be referred to the greed of impious men, which closely
resembles treachery; as we read in the case of the traitor Judas, who
in his longing for gain and his desire for money put his head into the
noose of treachery and fell.
25. We have then to speak of that usefulness
which is full of what is virtuous, as the Apostle himself has laid it
down in so many words, saying: “And this I speak for your
own profit, not that I may cast a snare upon you, but for that which is
comely.”418 It is
plain, then, that what is virtuous is useful, and what is useful is
virtuous; also that what is useful is just, and what is just is
useful. I can say this, for I am speaking, not to merchants who
are covetous from a desire to make gain, but to my children. And
I am speaking of the duties which I wish to impress upon and impart to
you, whom I have chosen for the service of the Lord; so that those
things which have been already implanted and fixed in your minds and
characters by habit and training may now be further unfolded to you by
explanation and instruction.
26. Therefore as I am about to speak of what is
useful, I will take up those words of
the Prophet: “Incline my
heart unto Thy testimonies and not to covetousness,”419 that the sound of the word
“useful” may not rouse in us the desire for money.
Some indeed put it thus: “Incline my heart unto Thy
testimonies and not to what is useful,” that is, that kind of
usefulness which is always on the watch for making gains in business,
and has been bent and diverted by the habits of men to the pursuit of
money. For as a rule most people call that only useful which is
profitable, but we are speaking of that kind of usefulness which is
sought in earthly loss “that we may gain Christ,”420 whose gain is “godliness with
contentment.”421 Great, too,
is the gain whereby we attain to godliness, which is rich with God, not
indeed in fleeting wealth, but in eternal gifts, and in which rests no
uncertain trial but grace constant and unending.
27. There is therefore a usefulness
connected with the body, and also one that has to do with godliness,
according to the Apostle’s division: “Bodily exercise
profiteth a little, but godliness is profitable unto all
things.”422 And what is
so virtuous as integrity? what so seemly as to preserve the body
unspotted and undefiled, and its purity unsullied? What, again,
is so seemly as that a widow should keep her plighted troth to her dead
husband? What more useful than this whereby the heavenly kingdom
is attained? For “there are some who have made themselves
eunuchs for the kingdom of heaven’s sake.”423
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