20. Nor let any one marvel, beloved brethren, that even some of the confessors advance to these lengths, and thence also that some others sin thus wickedly, thus grievously. For neither does confession make a man free from the snares of the devil, nor does it defend a man who is still placed in the world, with a perpetual security from temptations, and dangers, and onsets, and attacks of the world; otherwise we should never see in confessors those subsequent frauds, and fornications, and adulteries, which now with groans and sorrow we witness in some. Whosoever that confessor is, he is not greater, or better, or dearer to God than Solomon, who, although so long as he walked in God’s ways, retained that grace which he had received from the Lord, yet after he forsook the Lord’s way he lost also then Lord’s grace.56 Some read, “As it is written, And the Lord stirred up the adversary (Satan) against Solomon; and therefore in the Apocalypse the Lord solemnly warns John.” And therefore it is written, “Hold fast that which thou hast, lest another take thy crown.”57 Apoc. iii. 11. But assuredly the Lord would not threaten that the crown of righteousness might be taken away, were it not that, when righteousness departs, the crown must also depart.
XX. Nec quisquam miretur, dilectissimi fratres, etiam de confessoribus quosdam ad ista procedere , inde quoque aliquos tam nefanda quam gravia peccare. Neque enim confessio immunem facit ab insidiis diaboli, aut contra tentationes et pericula et incursus atque impetus saeculares adhuc in saeculo positum perpetua securitate defendit. Caeterum numquam in confessoribus fraudes et stupra et adulteria postmodum videremus, quae nunc in quibusdam videntes ingemiscimus et dolemus. Quisquis ille confessor est, Salomone major aut melior aut Deo charior non est: qui tamen quamdiu in viis Domini ambulavit, 0515B tamdiu gratiam quam de Domino fuerat consecutus obtinuit; postquam dereliquit Domini viam, perdidit et gratiam Domini. Et ideo scriptum est : Tene quod habes, ne alius accipiat coronam tuam (Apoc. III, 11). Quod utique Dominus non minaretur auferri posse coronam justitiae, nisi quia, recedente justitia, recedat necesse est et corona.