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| Chapter XV. How we can do nothing against our faults without the help of God, and how we should not be puffed up by victories over them. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XV.
How we can do nothing against our faults without the
help of God, and how we should not be puffed up by victories over
them.
And that we ought not to
be puffed up by victories over them he likewise charges us; saying,
“Lest after thou hast eaten and art filled, hast built goodly
houses and dwelt in them, and shalt have herds of oxen and flocks of
sheep, and plenty of gold and of silver, and of all things, thy heart
be lifted up and thou remember not the Lord thy God, who brought thee
out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage; and was thy
leader in the great and terrible wilderness.”1340 Solomon also says in Proverbs: “When
thine enemy shall fall be not glad, and in his ruin be not lifted up,
lest the Lord see and it displease Him, and He turn away His wrath from
him,”1341 i.e., lest He
see thy pride of heart, and cease from attacking him, and thou begin to
be forsaken by Him and so once more to be troubled by that passion
which by God’s grace thou hadst previously overcome. For the
prophet would not have prayed in these words, “Deliver not up to
beasts, O Lord, the soul that confesseth to Thee,”1342 unless he had known that because of
their pride of heart some were given over again to those faults which
they had overcome, in order that they might be humbled. Wherefore it is
well for us both to be certified by actual experience, and also to be
instructed by countless passages of Scripture, that we cannot possibly
overcome such mighty foes in our own strength, and unless supported by
the aid of God alone; and that we ought always to refer the whole of
our victory each day to God Himself, as the Lord Himself also gives us
instruction by Moses on this very point: “Say not in thine heart
when the Lord thy God shall have destroyed them in thy sight: For
my
righteousness hath
the Lord brought me in to possess this land, whereas these nations are
destroyed for their wickedness. For it is not for thy righteousness,
and the uprightness of thine heart, that thou shalt go in to possess
their lands: but because they have done wickedly they are destroyed at
thy coming in.”1343 I ask what
could be said clearer in opposition to that impious notion and
impertinence of ours, in which we want to ascribe everything that we do
to our own free will and our own exertions? “Say not,” he
tells us, “in thine heart, when the Lord thy God shall have
destroyed them in thy sight: For my righteousness the Lord hath brought
me in to possess this land.” To those who have their eyes opened
and their ears ready to hearken does not this plainly say: When your
struggle with carnal faults has gone well for you, and you see that you
are free from the filth of them, and from the fashions of this world,
do not be puffed up by the success of the conflict and victory and
ascribe it to your own power and wisdom, nor fancy that you have gained
the victory over spiritual wickedness and carnal sins through your own
exertions and energy, and free will? For there is no doubt that in all
this you could not possibly have succeeded, unless you had been
fortified and protected by the help of the Lord.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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