35. Ego, inquit, lux in saeculum veni, ut omnis qui crediderit in me, non maneat in tenebris
Chapter 35.—Unless Infants are Baptized, They Remain in Darkness.
“I am come,” says Christ, “a light into the world, that whosoever believeth on me should not abide in darkness.”113 John xii. 46. Now what does this passage show us, but that every person is in darkness who does not believe on Him, and that it is by believing on Him that he escapes from this permanent state of darkness? What do we understand by the darkness but sin? And whatever else it may embrace in its meaning, at any rate he who believes not in Christ will “abide in darkness,”—which, of course, is a penal state, not, as the darkness of the night, necessary for the refreshment of living beings.
35. Ego, inquit, lux in saeculum veni, ut omnis qui crediderit in me, non maneat in tenebris (Joan. XII, 46). Hoc dicto quid ostendit, nisi in tenebris esse omnem qui non credit in eum, et credendo efficere ne maneat in tenebris? Has tenebras quid nisi peccata intelligimus? Sed quodlibet aliud intelligantur hae tenebrae, profecto qui non credit in Christum, manebit in eis: et utique poenales sunt, non quasi nocturnae ad quietem animantium necessariae.