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| Chapter XI. Explanation of the phrase: “For I delight in the law of God after the inner man,” etc. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter XI.
Explanation of the phrase: “For I delight in the
law of God after the inner man,” etc.
And they
“delight” indeed “in the law of God after the inner
man,” which soars above all visible things and ever strives to be
united to God alone, but they “see another law in their
members,” i.e., implanted in their natural human condition, which
“resisting the law of their mind,”2266 brings their thoughts into captivity to
the forcible law of sin, compelling them to forsake that chief good and
submit to earthly notions, which though they may appear necessary and
useful when they are taken up in the interests of some religious want,
yet when they are set against that good which fascinates the gaze of
all the saints, are seen by them to be bad and such as should be
avoided, because by them in some way or other and for a short time they
are drawn away from the joy of that perfect bliss. For the law of sin
is really what the fall of its first father brought on mankind by that
fault of his, against which there was uttered this sentence by the most
just Judge: “Cursed is the ground in thy works; thorns and
thistles shall it bring forth to thee, and in the sweat of thy brow
shalt thou eat bread.”2267 This, I say,
is the law, implanted in the members of all mortals, which resists the
law of our mind and keeps it back from the vision of God, and which, as
the earth is cursed in our works after the knowledge of good and evil,
begins to produce the thorns and thistles of thoughts, by the sharp
pricks of which the natural seeds of virtues are choked, so that
without the sweat of our brow we cannot eat our bread which
“cometh down from heaven,” and which “strengtheneth
man’s heart.”2268
2268 S.
John vi. 33; Ps. ciii. (civ.) 15. | The whole
human race in general therefore is without exception subject to this
law. For there is no one, however saintly, who does not take the
bread mentioned above with the
sweat of his brow and anxious efforts of his heart. But many rich men,
as we see, are fed on that common bread without any sweat of their
brow.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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