A Treatise on the Spirit and the Letter,
Chapter 2 [II.]—The Examples Apposite.
Chapter 6 [IV.]—The Teaching of Law Without the Life-Giving Spirit is “The Letter that Killeth.”
Chapter 7 [V.]—What is Proposed to Be Here Treated.
Chapter 9 [VI].—Through the Law Sin Has Abounded.
Chapter 11 [VII.]—From What Fountain Good Works Flow.
Chapter 15 [IX.]—The Righteousness of God Manifested by the Law and the Prophets.
Chapter 16 [X.]—How the Law Was Not Made for a Righteous Man.
Chapter 18 [XI.]—Piety is Wisdom That is Called the Righteousness of God, Which He Produces.
Chapter 19 [XII]—The Knowledge of God Through the Creation.
Chapter 21 [XIII.]—The Law of Works and the Law of Faith.
Chapter 23 [XIV.]—How the Decalogue Kills, If Grace Be Not Present.
Chapter 27 [XV.]—Grace, Concealed in the Old Testament, is Revealed in the New.
Chapter 28 [XVI]—Why the Holy Ghost is Called the Finger of God.
Chapter 29 [XVII.]—A Comparison of the Law of Moses and of the New Law.
Chapter 31 [XVIII.]—The Old Law Ministers Death The New, Righteousness.
Chapter 32 [XIX.]—The Christian Faith Touching the Assistance of Grace.
Chapter 35 [XX.]—The Old Law The New Law.
Chapter 36 [XXI.]—The Law Written in Our Hearts.
Chapter 37 [XXII.]—The Eternal Reward.
Chapter 42 [XXV.]—Difference Between the Old and the New Testaments.
Chapter 47 [XXVII.]—The Law “Being Done by Nature” Means, Done by Nature as Restored by Grace.
Chapter 50 [XXIX.]—Righteousness is the Gift of God.
Chapter 52 [XXX.]—Grace Establishes Free Will.
Chapter 53 [XXXI.]—Volition and Ability.
Chapter 56.—The Faith of Those Who are Under the Law Different from the Faith of Others.
Chapter 57 [XXXIII.]—Whence Comes the Will to Believe?
Chapter 60 [XXXIV.]—The Will to Believe is from God.
Chapter 61 [XXXV.]—Conclusion of the Work.
Chapter 64 [XXXVI.]—When the Commandment to Love is Fulfilled.
A Treatise on the Spirit and the Letter,
by Aurelius Augustin, Bishop of Hippo;
In One Book,
Addressed to Marcellinus, a.d. 412.
Marcellinus, in a letter to Augustin, had expressed some surprise at having read, in the preceding work, of the possibility being allowed of a man continuing if he willed it, by God’s help, without sin in the present life, although not a single human example anywhere of such perfect righteousness has ever existed. Augustin takes the opportunity of discussing, in opposition to the Pelagians, the subject of the aid of God’s grace; and he shows that the divine help to the working of righteousness by us does not lie in the fact of God’s having given us a law which is full of good and holy precepts; but in the fact that our will itself, without which we can do nothing good, is assisted and elevated by the Spirit of grace being imparted to us, without the aid of which the teaching of the law is “the letter that killeth,” because instead of justifying the ungodly, it rather holds them guilty of transgression. He begins to treat of the question proposed to him at the commencement of this work, and returns to it towards its conclusion; he shows that, as all allow, many things are possible with God’s help, of which there occurs indeed no example; and then concludes that, although a perfect righteousness is unexampled among men, it is for all that not impossible.
S. AURELLII AUGUSTINI DE SPIRITU ET LITTERA Liber unus .
Marcellino scribente se permotum eo, quod in superiori opere legisset, fieri posse ut sit homo in hac vita sine peccato, si velit, adjutus a Deo; nec ullum tamen usquam in hominibus tam perfectae justitiae exemplum exstare: hanc Augustinus 0201 occasionem arripit disputandi contra Pelagianos de adjutorio gratiae Dei, ostenditque non in eo nos divinitus adjuvari ad operandam justitiam, quod legem Deus dedit plenam bonis sanctisque praeceptis; sed quod ipsa voluntas nostra, sine qua operari bonum non possumus, adjuvetur et erigatur impertito spiritu gratiae, sine quo adjutorio doctrina legis littera est occidens, quia reos potius praevaricationis tenet, quam justificat impios. Inde ad propositam quaestionem, quam solvere incipit in principio libri, rediens iterum in fine, demonstrat multa esse nemine diffitente possibilia cum Dei auxilio, quorum nullum usquam exstet exemplum: atque ita sine exemplo esse in hominibus perfectam justitiam, et tamen impossibilem non esse concludit.