S. AURELII AUGUSTINI HIPPONENSIS EPISCOPI DE NATURA ET GRATIA AD TIMASIUM ET JACOBUM CONTRA PELAGIUM LIBER UNUS .

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 8. Nam prius distinguit, aliud esse quaerere, an possit aliquid esse, quod ad solam possibilitatem pertinet: aliud, utrumne sit. Hanc distinctionem ve

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 19. Tractat etiam iste de peccatis ignorantiae, et dicit, «hominem praevigilare debere ne ignoret ideoque esse culpandam ignorantiam, quia id homo ne

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 27. Dicit nullum malum boni alicujus esse causam. Avertisti faciem tuam a me, et factus sum conturbatus? Non movebor in aeternum: Domine, in voluntate

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 31. Sed Deus, inquiunt, potest omnia sanare. Virtus in infirmitate perficitur: Cum timore et tremore vestram ipsorum salutem operamini: Deus enim est

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 39. Porro autem quod Dei causam sibi agere videtur, defendendo naturam non attendit quod eamdem naturam sanam esse dicendo, medici repellit misericor

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 41. Sed acute videtur interrogare, «quomodo istos sanctos de hac vita abiisse credendum sit, cum peccato, an sine peccato.» Ut si responsum fuerit, Cu

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 44. Sed hoc etiam forsitan ipse vidit, et ideo subjecit atque ait: «Sed esto, aliis temporibus turbae numerositate omnium dissimulaverit peccata conte

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 52. Iste vero objecta sibi quaestione, in qua revera intolerabilis videtur cordibus christianis, quid respondeat attendamus. Ait enim: «Sed hoc est qu

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 62. Quando enim istis rectissime dicitur, Quare sine adjutorio gratiae Dei dicitis hominem posse esse sine peccato? non tunc de illa gratia quaestio e

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 66. Porro si ab istis vel hoc impetramus, ut nondum baptizati implorent auxilium gratiae Salvatoris, non est hoc quidem parum adversus illam falsam de

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 73. Nam et ipse Job de peccatis suis non tacet, et utique huic amico vestro merito placet, humilitatem nullo modo in falsitatis parte ponendam: unde i

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 75. Commemorabo et ego de hoc ipso opere sancti Ambrosii aliquid, ex quo iste commemoravit quod commemorandum putavit. « Visum est, » inquit, « mihi.

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 77. Quis item christianus ignorat, quod beatissimum Xystum Romanae Ecclesiae episcopum et Domini martyrem dixisse commemorat , Quia libertatem arbitri

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 81. Sed ut non tantum illi, verum etiam iis qui eosdem libros meos, quos iste legit, de Libero Arbitrio non legerunt, atque illis non lectis, hunc for

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Chapter 71 [LXI.]—Augustin Replies Against the Quotations Which Pelagius Had Advanced Out of the Catholic Writers. Lactantius.

Accordingly, with respect also to the passages which he has adduced,—not indeed from the canonical Scriptures, but out of certain treatises of catholic writers,—I wish to meet the assertions of such as say that the said quotations make for him. The fact is, these passages are so entirely neutral, that they oppose neither our own opinion nor his. Amongst them he wanted to class something out of my own books, thus accounting me to be a person who seemed worthy of being ranked with them. For this I must not be ungrateful, and I should be sorry—so I say with unaffected friendliness—for him to be in error, since he has conferred this honour upon me. As for his first quotation, indeed, why need I examine it largely, since I do not see here the author’s name, either because he has not given it, or because from some casual mistake the copy which you182    Timasius and Jacobus, to whom the treatise is addressed. See ch. 1. forwarded to me did not contain it? Especially as in writings of such authors I feel myself free to use my own judgment (owing unhesitating assent to nothing but the canonical Scriptures), whilst in fact there is not a passage which he has quoted from the works of this anonymous author183    Lactantius is the writer from whom Pelagius takes his first quotations here. See his Instit. Divin. iv. 24. that disturbs me. “It behooved,” says he, “for the Master and Teacher of virtue to become most like to man, that by conquering sin He might show that man is able to conquer sin.” Now, however this passage may be expressed, its author must see to it as to what explanation it is capable of bearing. We, indeed, on our part, could not possibly doubt that in Christ there was no sin to conquer,—born as He was in the likeness of sinful flesh, not in sinful flesh itself. Another passage is adduced from the same author to this effect: “And again, that by subduing the desires of the flesh He might teach us that it is not of necessity that one sins, but of set purpose and will.”184    Lactantius, Instit. Divin. iv. 25. For my own part, I understand these desires of the flesh (if it is not of its unlawful lusts that the writer here speaks) to be such as hunger, thirst, refreshment after fatigue, and the like. For it is through these, however faultless they be in themselves, that some men fall into sin,—a result which was far from our blessed Saviour, even though, as we see from the evidence of the gospel, these affections were natural to Him owing to His likeness to sinful flesh.

CAPUT LXI.

71. Respondet ad catholicorum scriptorum testimonia quae Pelagius pro se protulerat: Lactantii, Hilarii, Ambrosii et Hieronymi. Ac per hoc et ea testimonia, quae non quidem de Scripturis canonicis, sed de quibusdam catholicorum tractatorum opusculis posuit, volens occurrere iis qui eum solum dicerent ista defendere, ita sunt media, ut neque contra nostram sententiam sint, neque contra ipsius. In quibus etiam nonnihil de libris meis interponere voluit, me quoque aliquem deputans, qui cum illis commemorari dignus viderer. Unde ingratus esse non debeo, et familiariore affectu nolim ut erret, qui hunc mihi detulit honorem. Prima enim quae posuit, quia nomen ejus qui ea dixit , non ibi legi, sive quia ille non scripsit, sive quia codex quem misistis, id aliqua forte mendositate non habuit, pertractare quid opus est? Maxime quoniam me, in hujusmodi quorumlibet hominum scriptis liberum (quia solis canonicis debeo sine ulla recusatione consensum), nihil movet quod de illius scriptis, cujus nomen non ibi inveni, ille posuit: «Oportuit magistrum doctoremque virtutis homini simillimum fieri, ut vincendo peccatum doceat hominem vincere posse peccatum» (Lactantius Institutionum lib. 4, capp. 24, 25). Quomodo enim dictum sit, auctor hujus sententiae viderit qualiter possit exponere: dum tamen nos minime dubitemus, peccatum Christum in se non habuisse quod vinceret, qui natus est in similitudine carnis peccati, non in carne peccati. Aliud ejusdem ita posuit: «Et iterum, ut desideriis carnis edomitis, doceret non necessitatis esse peccare, sed propositi ac voluntatis .» Ego desideria carnis (si non illicitarum concupiscentiarum hic dicuntur) accipio, sicuti est fames, sitis, refectio lassitudinis, et si quid hujusmodi est. Per haec enim quidam, quamvis ea sint inculpabilia, in culpas decidunt; quod ab illo Salvatore abfuit, etiamsi haec in eo fuisse propter 0283 similitudinem carnis peccati, Evangelio teste videamus.