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| Chapter XVII. That gentleness must be added to severity, as is shown in the case of St. Paul at Corinth. The man had been baptized, though the Novatians argue against it. And by the word “destruction” is not meant annihilation but severe chastening. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XVII.
That gentleness must be added to severity, as is shown
in the case of St. Paul at Corinth. The man had been baptized,
though the Novatians argue against it. And by the word
“destruction” is not meant annihilation but severe
chastening.
92. Why do we
postpone the time of pardon for those who have mortified themselves,
who during life have done themselves to death?
“Sufficient,” says St. Paul, “to such a one is this
punishment which is inflicted by the many; so that contrariwise, ye
should rather forgive him and comfort him, lest by any means he should
be swallowed up with overmuch sorrow.”3043 If the punishment which is
inflicted by the many is sufficient for condemnation, the intercession
which is made by many is also sufficient for the remission of
sin. The Master of morals, Who both knows our weakness and is the
interpreter of the will of God, wills that comfort should be given,
lest sorrow through the weariness of long delay should swallow up the
penitent.
93. The Apostle then forgave him, and not
only forgave him, but desired that love to him should again grow
strong. He who is loved receives not harshness but mercy.
And not only did he himself forgive him only, but willed that all
should forgive him, and says that he forgave for the sake of others,
lest many should be longer saddened on account of one. “To
whom,” says he, “ye have forgiven anything, I forgive also,
for I also have forgiven for your sakes in the person of Christ, for we
are not ignorant of his devices.”3044 Rightly can he be on his guard
against the serpent who is not ignorant of his devices, of which there
are so many to our detriment. He is always desirous to do harm,
always desirous to circumvent us, that he may cause death; but we ought
to take heed lest our remedy become an occasion of triumph for him; for
we are circumvented by him, if any one perish through overmuch sorrow,
who might be set free by pitifulness.
94. And that we may know that this person
was baptized, he added: “I wrote to you in my epistle to
have no company with fornicators, not altogether with fornicators of
this world.”3045 And farther
on he adds: “But now I write unto you not to keep company
if any man that is named a brother be a fornicator, or covetous, or an
idolator.”3046 Those whom
he has joined together under one penalty, he willed to attain together
to forgiveness. “If any be such,” he says,
“with him not to eat.”3047 How
severe he is with the obstinate, how indulgent to those who seek.
Against those rises up in arms the injury done to Christ, whilst the
calling upon Christ aids these.
95. But lest any one be perplexed because it
is written: “I have delivered such an one unto Satan for
the destruction of the flesh,”3048 and
should say: How can he attain forgiveness whose whole flesh has
perished, seeing that it is evident that man was redeemed both in body
and soul, and is saved in both and that neither the soul without the
body, nor yet the body without the soul, since both are united by their
fellowship in the deeds that have been done, can be without fellowship
either in punishment or in reward? Let this suffice for an answer
to him: That “destruction” does not mean the complete
annihilation of the flesh, but its chastening. For as he who is
dead to sin lives to God, so the allurements of the flesh perish, and
the flesh dies to its lusts, in order that it may live again to purity
and to other good works.
96. And what more suitable example can we take
than one from our common mother? For the earth itself, from which
we are all taken, when it is not worked and cultivated, seems to be
desert; and the field dies to the vines or olive-trees with which it
was planted, and yet it does not lose its own nutritive power, which
is, as it were, its life. And then later, when cultivation begins
once more, and the seed is sown for which the land seems suitable, it
breaks forth again more fruitful than before with its products.
It is not, then, anything so strange if our flesh is said to die, and
yet is understood to be subdued rather than annihilated. E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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