9. “And in this,” saith he, “we do know Him, if we keep His commandments.” i.e.
10. “For all that is in the world, is the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride
9. “Let us love, because He first loved us.” i.e.
3. “If ye know that He is righteous, know ye206 Scitote Vulg. γινώσκετε as imperative, “hence learn ye to know that, &c.” Were it indicative, “to know that He is righteous is to know that, &c.” probably οἴδατε would have been repeated as in 5, 15, ἂν οἴδαμεν—οἴδαμεν. that every one that doeth righteousness is born of Him.”207 1 John ii. 29. The righteousness which at present is ours is of faith. Perfect righteousness is not, save only in the angels: and scarce in angels, if they be compared with God: yet if there be any perfect righteousness of souls and spirits which God hath created, it is in the angels, holy, just, good, by no lapse turned aside, by no pride falling, but remaining ever in the contemplation of the Word of God, and having nothing else sweet unto them save Him by whom they were created; in them is perfect righteousness: but in us it has begun to be, of faith, by the Spirit. Ye heard when the Psalm was read, “Begin208 Incipite, LXX. ἐξάρξατε. Vulg. præcinite. ye to the Lord in confession.”209 Ps. cxlvii. 7. “Begin,” saith it; the beginning of our righteousness is the confession of sins. Thou hast begun not to defend thy sin; now hast thou made a beginning of righteousness: but it shall be perfected in thee when to do nothing else shall delight thee, when “death shall be swallowed up in victory,”210 1 Cor. xv. 24. when there shall be no itching of lust, when there shall be no struggling with flesh and blood, when there shall be the palm of victory, the triumph over the enemy; then shall there be perfect righteousness. At present we are still fighting: if we fight we are in the lists;211 Stadium. we smite and are smitten; but who shall conquer, remains to be seen. And that man conquers, who even when he smites presumes not on his own strength, but relies upon God that cheers him on. The devil is alone when he fights against us. If we are with God, we overcome the devil: for if thou fight alone with the devil, thou wilt be overcome. He is a skillful enemy: how may palms has he won! Consider to what he has cast us down! That we are born mortal, comes of this, that he in the first place cast down from Paradise our very original. What then is to be done, seeing he is so well practised? Let the Almighty be invoked to thine aid against the devices of the devil. Let Him dwell in thee, who cannot be overcome, and thou shalt securely overcome him who is wont to overcome. But to overcome whom? Those in whom God dwelleth not. For, that ye may know it, brethren; Adam being in Paradise despised the commandment of God, and lifted up the neck, as if he desired to be his own master, and were loath to be subject to the will of God: so he fell from that immortality, from that blessedness. But there was a certain man, a man now well skilled, though a mortal born, who even as he sat on the dunghill, putrifying with worms, overcame the devil: yea, Adam himself then overcame: even he, in Job; because Job was of his race. So then, Adam, overcome in Paradise, overcame on the dunghill. Being in Paradise, he gave ear to the persuasion of the woman which the devil had put into her: but being on the dunghill he said to Eve, “Thou hast spoken as one of the foolish women.”212 Job ii. 10. There he lent an ear, here he gave an answer: when he was glad, he listened, when he was scourged, he overcame. Therefore, see what follows, my brethren, in the Epistle: because this is what it would have us lay to heart, that we may overcome the devil indeed, but not of ourselves. “If ye know that He is righteous,” saith it, “know ye that every one that doeth righteousness is born of Him:” of God, of Christ. And in that he hath said, “Is born of Him,” he cheers us on. Already therefore, in that we are born of Him, we are perfect.
3. Si scitis quia justus est, scitote quia omnis qui facit justitiam, ex ipso est natus. Justitia modo nostra ex fide. Justitia perfecta non est nisi in Angelis; et vix in Angelis, si Deo comparentur: tamen si qua perfecta justitia animarum et spirituum est quos Deus creavit, in Angelis est sanctis, justis, bonis, nullo lapsu aversis, nulla superbia cadentibus, sed manentibus semper in contemplatione Verbi Dei, et nihil aliud dulce habentibus, nisi a quo creati sunt; in ipsis perfecta justitia est: in nobis autem ex fide coepit esse secundum Spiritum. Audistis cum Psalmus legeretur, Incipite Domino in confessione (Psal. CXLVI, 7). Incipite, inquit: initium justitiae nostrae, confessio est peccatorum. Coepisti non defendere peccatum tuum, jam inchoasti justitiam: perficietur autem in te, quando nihil aliud facere delectabit, quando absorbebitur mors in victoriam (I Cor. XV, 54), quando nulla concupiscentia titillabit, quando non erit lucta cum carne et sanguine, quando erit corona victoriae, triumphus de inimico; tunc erit perfecta justitia. Modo adhuc pugnamus: si pugnamus, in stadio sumus; ferimus, et ferimur: sed qui vincat, exspectatur. Ille autem vincit, qui et quod ferit, non de viribus suis praesumit, sed de hortatore Deo. Solus diabolus adversum nos pugnat. Nos si cum Deo sumus, diabolum vincimus: nam et si tu solus cum diabolo pugnaveris, vinceris. Exercitatus hostis est: quot palmarum? Considerate quo dejecerit: ut mortales nasceremur, primo ipsam originem nostram de paradiso dejecit. Quid ergo faciendum est, quia ipse exercitatus est? Invocetur Omnipotens adversus exercitatum diabolum. Habitet in te qui non potest vinci, et securus vinces eum qui vincere solet. Sed quos? In quibus non habitat Deus. Nam, ut noveritis, fratres, contempsit 2007 Adam in paradiso positus praeceptum Dei, et erexit cervicem veluti in potestate sua esse cupiens, et nolens subdi voluntati Dei, et lapsus est ab illa immortalitate, ab illa beatitudine (Gen. III, 6). Homo autem quidam jam exercitatus, natus mortalis, cum sederet in stercore putris vermibus, diabolum vicit: vicit et ipse Adam, et in Job ipse; quia de genere ipsius, Job. Ergo Adam victus in paradiso, vicit in stercore. In paradiso cum esset, audivit persuasionem mulieris, quam illi immiserat diabolus: in stercore autem cum esset, ait Evae, Tanquam una ex insipientibus mulieribus locuta es (Job. II, 10). Ibi aurem apposuit; hic responsum dedit: cum esset laetus, audivit; cum esset flagellatus, vicit. Ideo videte quid sequitur, fratres, in Epistola ista; quia hoc nobis commendat, ut diabolum quidem vincamus, sed non ex nobis. Si scitis quia justus est, ait, scitote quia omnis qui facit justitiam, ex ipso est natus: ex Deo, ex Christo. Et quia dixit, Ex ipso est natus, hortatur nos. Jam ergo quia nati ex illo sumus, perfecti sumus.