Chapter 40 [XXXV.]—Why There is a Record in Scripture of Certain Men’s Sins, Recklessness in Sin Accounts It to Be So Much Loss Whenever It Falls Short in Gratifying Lust.
He who has a sound judgment says soundly, “that the examples of certain persons, of whose sinning we read in Scripture, are not recorded for this purpose, that they may encourage despair of not sinning, and seem somehow to afford security in committing sin,”—but that we may learn the humility of repentance, or else discover that even in such falls salvation ought not to be despaired of. For there are some who, when they have fallen into sin, perish rather from the recklessness of despair, and not only neglect the remedy of repentance, but become the slaves of lusts and wicked desires, so far as to run all lengths in gratifying these depraved and abandoned dispositions,—as if it were a loss to them if they failed to accomplish what their lust impelled them to, whereas all the while there awaits them a certain condemnation. To oppose this morbid recklessness, which is only too full of danger and ruin, there is great force in the record of those sins into which even just and holy men have before now fallen.
CAPUT XXXV.
40. Quorumdam cur scripta peccata. Desperatio in peccatis perdere se putat si quid non fecerit quo instigat libido. An sancti mortui sint sine peccato. «Quorumdam» sane «exempla, quos peccasse legimus,» non «ideo scripta» dicit, qui sanum sapit, «ut ad desperationem non peccandi valeant, et securitatem peccandi nobis quodam modo praebere videantur:» sed ut disceremus, vel poenitendi humilitatem, vel etiam in talibus lapsibus non desperandam salutem. Quidam enim in peccata prolapsi desperatione plus pereunt, nec solum poenitendi negligunt medicinam, sed ad explenda inhonesta et nefaria desideria servi libidinum et sceleratarum cupiditatum fiunt; quasi perdant, si non fecerint, quod instigat libido, cum eos jam maneat certa damnatio. Adversus hunc morbum nimium periculosum et exitiabilem, valet commemoratio peccatorum etiam in quae justi sanctique prolapsi sunt.