A Treatise on the Predestination of the Saints,

 Chapter 1 [I.]—Introduction.

 For on consideration of your letters, I seem to see that those brethren on whose behalf you exhibit a pious care that they may not hold the poetical o

 Chapter 3 [II.]—Even the Beginning of Faith is of God’s Gift.

 Chapter 4.—Continuation of the Preceding.

 Chapter 5.—To Believe is to Think with Assent.

 Chapter 6.—Presumption and Arrogance to Be Avoided.

 Chapter 7 [III.]—Augustin Confesses that He Had Formerly Been in Error Concerning the Grace of God.

 Chapter 8 [IV.]—What Augustin Wrote to Simplicianus, the Successor of Ambrose, Bishop of Milan.

 Chapter 9 [V.]—The Purpose of the Apostle in These Words.

 Chapter 10.—It is God’s Grace Which Specially Distinguishes One Man from Another.

 Chapter 11 [VI.]—That Some Men are Elected is of God’s Mercy.

 Chapter 12 [VII.]—Why the Apostle Said that We are Justified by Faith and Not by Works.

 Chapter 13 [VIII.]—The Effect of Divine Grace.

 Chapter 14.—Why the Father Does Not Teach All that They May Come to Christ.

 Chapter 15.—It is Believers that are Taught of God.

 Chapter 16.—Why the Gift of Faith is Not Given to All.

 Chapter 17 [IX.]—His Argument in His Letter Against Porphyry, as to Why the Gospel Came So Late into the World.

 Chapter 18.—The Preceding Argument Applied to the Present Time.

 Chapter 19 [X]—In What Respects Predestination and Grace Differ.

 Chapter 20.—Did God Promise the Good Works of the Nations and Not Their Faith, to Abraham?

 Chapter 21.—It is to Be Wondered at that Men Should Rather Trust to Their Own Weakness Than to God’s Strength.

 Chapter 22.—God’s Promise is Sure.

 Chapter 23 [XII.]—Remarkable Illustrations of Grace and Predestination in Infants, and in Christ.

 Chapter 24.—That No One is Judged According to What He Would Have Done If He Had Lived Longer.

 Chapter 25 [XIII.]—Possibly the Baptized Infants Would Have Repented If They Had Lived, and the Unbaptized Not.

 Chapter 26 [XIV]—Reference to Cyprian’s Treatise “On the Mortality.”

 Chapter 27.—The Book of Wisdom Obtains in the Church the Authority of Canonical Scripture.

 Chapter 28.—Cyprian’s Treatise “On the Mortality.”

 Chapter 29.—God’s Dealing Does Not Depend Upon Any Contingent Merits of Men.

 Chapter 30 [XV.]—The Most Illustrious Instance of Predestination is Christ Jesus.

 Chapter 31.—Christ Predestinated to Be the Son of God.

 Chapter 32 [XVI.]—The Twofold Calling.

 Chapter 33.—It is in the Power of Evil Men to Sin But to Do This or That by Means of that Wickedness is in God’s Power Alone.

 Chapter 34 [XVII.]—The Special Calling of the Elect is Not Because They Have Believed, But in Order that They May Believe.

 Chapter 35 [XVIII.]—Election is for the Purpose of Holiness.

 Chapter 36.—God Chose the Righteous Not Those Whom He Foresaw as Being of Themselves, But Those Whom He Predestinated for the Purpose of Making So.

 Chapter 37.—We Were Elected and Predestinated, Not Because We Were Going to Be Holy, But in Order that We Might Be So.

 Chapter 38 [XIX.]—What is the View of the Pelagians, and What of the Semi-Pelagians, Concerning Predestination.

 Chapter 39—The Beginning of Faith is God’s Gift.

 Chapter 40 [XX.]—Apostolic Testimony to the Beginning of Faith Being God’s Gift.

 Chapter 41.—Further Apostolic Testimonies.

 Chapter 42.—Old Testament Testimonies.

 Chapter 43 [XXI.]—Conclusion.

Chapter 27.—The Book of Wisdom Obtains in the Church the Authority of Canonical Scripture.

And since these things are so, the judgment of the book of Wisdom ought not to be repudiated, since for so long a course of years that book has deserved to be read in the Church of Christ from the station of the readers of the Church of Christ, and to be heard by all Christians, from bishops downwards, even to the lowest lay believers, penitents, and catechumens, with the veneration paid to divine authority. For assuredly, if, from those who have been before me in commenting on the divine Scriptures, I should bring forward a defence of this judgment, which we are now called upon to defend more carefully and copiously than usual against the new error of the Pelagians,—that is, that God’s grace is not given according to our merits, and that it is given freely to whom it is given, because it is neither of him that willeth, nor of him that runneth, but of God that showeth mercy; but that by righteous judgment it is not given to whom it is not given, because there is no unrighteousness with God;—if, therefore, I should put forth a defence of this opinion from catholic commentators on the divine oracles who have preceded us, assuredly these brethren for whose sake I am now discoursing would acquiesce, for this you have intimated in your letters. What need is there, then, for us to look into the writings of those who, before this heresy sprang up, had no necessity to be conversant in a question so difficult of solution as this, which beyond a doubt they would have done if they had been compelled to answer such things? Whence it arose that they touched upon what they thought of God’s grace briefly in some passages of their writings, and cursorily; but on those matters which they argued against the enemies of the Church, and in exhortations to every virtue by which to serve the living and true God for the purpose of attaining eternal life and true happiness, they dwelt at length. But the grace of God, what it could do, shows itself artlessly by its frequent mention in prayers; for what God commands to be done would not be asked for from God, unless it could be given by Him that it should be done.

27. Quae cum ita sint, non debuit repudiari sententia libri Sapientiae, qui meruit in Ecclesia Christi de gradu lectorum Ecclesiae Christi tam longa annositate recitari, et ab omnibus Christianis, ab episcopis usque ad extremos laicos fideles, poenitentes, catechumenos, cum veneratione divinae auctoritatis audiri. Certe enim si de divinarum Scripturarum tractatoribus qui fuerunt ante nos, proferrem defensionem hujusce sententiae, quam nunc solito diligentius atque copiosius contra novum Pelagianorum defendere urgemur errorem; hoc est, gratiam Dei non secundum merita nostra dari, et gratis dari cui datur; quia neque volentis, neque currentis, sed miserentis est Dei; justo autem judicio non dari cui non datur, quia non est iniquitas apud Deum (Id. IX, 16, 14): si hujus ergo sententiae defensionem ex divinorum eloquiorum nos praecedentibus catholicis tractatoribus promerem; profecto hi fratres, pro quibus nunc agimus, acquiescerent: hoc enim significastis litteris vestris. Quid igitur opus est ut eorum scrutemur opuscula, qui priusquam ista haeresis oriretur, non habuerunt necessitatem in hac difficili ad solvendum quaestione versari? quod procul dubio facerent, si respondere talibus cogerentur. Unde factum est ut de gratia Dei quid sentirent, breviter quibusdam scriptorum suorum locis et transeunter attingerent: immorarentur vero in eis quae adversus inimicos Ecclesiae disputabant, et in exhortationibus ad quasque virtutes, quibus Deo vivo et vero pro adipiscenda vita aeterna et vera felicitate servitur. Frequentationibus autem orationum simpliciter apparebat Dei gratia quid valeret: non enim poscerentur de Deo quae praecipit fieri, nisi ab illo donaretur ut fierent.