A Treatise concerning man’s perfection in righteousness,
Chapter II.—(1.) The First Breviate of Cœlestius.
Chapter III.—(5.) The Fifth Breviate.
Chapter IV.—(9.) The Ninth Breviate.
Chapter V.—(11.) The Eleventh Breviate.
Chapter VI.—(12.) The Twelfth Breviate.
(13.) The Thirteenth Breviate.
(14.) The Fourteenth Breviate.
Chapter VII.—(16.) The Sixteenth Breviate.
(18.) The Righteousness of This Life Comprehended in Three Parts,—Fasting, Almsgiving, and Prayer.
(19.) The Commandment of Love Shall Be Perfectly Fulfilled in the Life to Come.
Chapter IX.—(20.) Who May Be Said to Walk Without Spot Damnable and Venial Sins.
(22.) Passages to Show that God’s Commandments are Not Grievous.
(24.) To Be Without Sin, and to Be Without Blame—How Differing.
(26.) Why Job Was So Great a Sufferer.
(28.) When Our Heart May Be Said Not to Reproach Us When Good is to Be Perfected.
Chapter XII.—(29.) The Second Passage. Who May Be Said to Abstain from Every Evil Thing.
Chapter XV.—(34.) The Opposing Passages.
(35.) The Church Will Be Without Spot and Wrinkle After the Resurrection.
(36.) The Difference Between the Upright in Heart and the Clean in Heart.
Chapter XVI.—(37.) The Sixth Passage.
Chapter XIX—(40.) The Ninth Passage.
(41.) Specimens of Pelagian Exegesis.
(42.) God’s Promises Conditional. Saints of the Old Testament Were Saved by the Grace of Christ.
(4.) The Fourth Breviate.
IV. “We must ask, again,” he says, “What is sin,—an act, or a thing? If it is a thing, it must have an author; and if it be said to have an author, then another besides God will seem to be introduced as the author of a thing. But if it is impious to say this, we are driven to confess that every sin is an act, not a thing. If therefore it is an act, for this very reason, because it is an act, it can be avoided.” Our reply is, that sin no doubt is called an act, and is such, not a thing. But likewise in the body, lameness for the same reason is an act, not a thing, since it is the foot itself, or the body, or the man who walks lame because of an injured foot, that is the thing; but still the man cannot avoid the lameness, unless his foot be cured. The same change may take place in the inward man, but it is by God’s grace, through our Lord Jesus Christ. The defect itself which causes the lameness of the man is neither the foot, nor the body, nor the man, nor indeed the lameness itself; for there is of course no lameness when there is no walking, although there is nevertheless the defect which causes the lameness whenever there is an attempt to walk. Let him therefore ask, what name must be given to this defect,—would he have it called a thing, or an act, or rather a bad property5 [Cœlestius had in the previous breviate confined sin to either nature or accident: Augustin declares it to be a property. By this he apparently means that it is a non-essential attribute, without which man would remain man, but yet not what is called a “separable accident.”—W.] in the thing, by which the deformed act comes into existence? So in the inward man the soul is the thing, theft is an act, and avarice is the defect, that is, the property by which the soul is evil, even when it does nothing in gratification of its avarice, even when it hears the prohibition, “Thou shalt not covet,”6 Ex. xx. 17. and censures itself, and yet remains avaricious. By faith, however, it receives renovation; in other words, it is healed day by day,7 2 Cor. iv. 16.—yet only by God’s grace through our Lord Jesus Christ.
Ratiocinatio 4. Iterum, ait, quaerendum est, quid est peccatum; actus, an res. Si res est, auctorem habeat necesse est; et si auctorem habere dicitur, jam alter praeter Deum rei alicujus auctor induci videbitur: at si hoc dici impium est, confiteri necesse est peccatum omne actum esse, non rem. Si igitur actus est, imo quia vere actus est, vitari potest. Respondemus, peccatum quidem actum dici et esse, non rem. Sed etiam in corpore claudicatio eadem ratione actus est, non res: quoniam res, pes ipse vel corpus vel homo est, qui pede vitiato claudicat; nec tamen vitare potest homo claudicationem, nisi habeat sanatum pedem. Quod etiam in interiore homine fieri potest, sed gratia Dei per Jesum Christum Dominum nostrum. Ipsum sane vitium quo claudicat homo, nec pes est, nec corpus, nec homo, nec ipsa claudicatio; quae utique non est quando non ambulat, cum tamen insit vitium quo fit claudicatio quando ambulat. Quaerat ergo quod eidem vitio nomen imponat, utrum rem velit dicere, an actum, an rei potius qualitatem malam, qua deformis actus existit. Sic et in homine interiore animus res est, rapina actus est, avaritia vitium est; id est, qualitas secundum quam malus est animus, etiam quando nihil agit unde avaritiae suae serviat, etiam quando audit, Non concupisces (Exod. XX, 17), seque vituperat, et tamen avarus manet: sed per fidem renovatur, id est sanatur, de die in diem (II Cor. IV, 16), nec tamen nisi gratia Dei per Jesum Christum Dominum nostrum.