A Treatise concerning man’s perfection in righteousness,

 Translation absent

 Chapter II.—(1.) The First Breviate of Cœlestius.

 (2.) The Second Breviate.

 (3.) The Third Breviate.

 (4.) The Fourth Breviate.

 Chapter III.—(5.) The Fifth Breviate.

 (6.) The Sixth Breviate.

 (7.) The Seventh Breviate.

 (8.) The Eighth Breviate.

 Chapter IV.—(9.) The Ninth Breviate.

 (10.) The Tenth Breviate.

 Chapter V.—(11.) The Eleventh Breviate.

 Chapter VI.—(12.) The Twelfth Breviate.

 (13.) The Thirteenth Breviate.

 (14.) The Fourteenth Breviate.

 (15.) The Fifteenth Breviate.

 Chapter VII.—(16.) The Sixteenth Breviate.

 Chapter VIII.—(17.) It is One Thing to Depart from the Body, Another Thing to Be Liberated from the Body of This Death.

 (18.) The Righteousness of This Life Comprehended in Three Parts,—Fasting, Almsgiving, and Prayer.

 (19.) The Commandment of Love Shall Be Perfectly Fulfilled in the Life to Come.

 Chapter IX.—(20.) Who May Be Said to Walk Without Spot Damnable and Venial Sins.

 Chapter X.—(21.) To Whom God’s Commandments are Grievous And to Whom, Not. Why Scripture Says that God’s Commandments are Not Grievous A Commandment

 (22.) Passages to Show that God’s Commandments are Not Grievous.

 Chapter XI.—(23.) Passages of Scripture Which, When Objected Against Him by the Catholics, Cœlestius Endeavours to Elude by Other Passages: the First

 (24.) To Be Without Sin, and to Be Without Blame—How Differing.

 (25.) Hence the force of the statement: “There was no injustice in my hands, but my prayer was pure.” For the purity of his prayer arose from this cir

 (26.) Why Job Was So Great a Sufferer.

 (27.) Who May Be Said to Keep the Ways of the Lord What It is to Decline and Depart from the Ways of the Lord.

 (28.) When Our Heart May Be Said Not to Reproach Us When Good is to Be Perfected.

 Chapter XII.—(29.) The Second Passage. Who May Be Said to Abstain from Every Evil Thing.

 (30.) “Every Man is a Liar,” Owing to Himself Alone But “Every Man is True,” By Help Only of the Grace of God.

 Chapter XIII.—(31.) The Third Passage. It is One Thing to Depart, and Another Thing to Have Departed, from All Sin. “There is None that Doeth Good,”—O

 Chapter XIV.—(32.) The Fourth Passage. In What Sense God Only is Good. With God to Be Good and to Be Himself are the Same Thing.

 “This,” says he, “is another text of theirs: ‘Who will boast that he has a pure heart?’” And then he answered this with several passages, wishing to s

 Chapter XV.—(34.) The Opposing Passages.

 (35.) The Church Will Be Without Spot and Wrinkle After the Resurrection.

 (36.) The Difference Between the Upright in Heart and the Clean in Heart.

 Chapter XVI.—(37.) The Sixth Passage.

 Chapter XVII.—(38.) The Seventh Passage. Who May Be Called Immaculate. How It is that in God’s Sight No Man is Justified.

 Chapter XVIII.—(39.) The Eighth Passage. In What Sense He is Said Not to Sin Who is Born of God. In What Way He Who Sins Shall Not See Nor Know God.

 Chapter XIX—(40.) The Ninth Passage.

 (41.) Specimens of Pelagian Exegesis.

 (42.) God’s Promises Conditional. Saints of the Old Testament Were Saved by the Grace of Christ.

 Chapter XX.—(43.) No Man is Assisted Unless He Does Himself Also Work. Our Course is a Constant Progress.

 Chapter XXI.—(44.) Conclusion of the Work. In the Regenerate It is Not Concupiscence, But Consent, Which is Sin.

(28.) When Our Heart May Be Said Not to Reproach Us; When Good is to Be Perfected.

Furthermore, concerning these words of Job, “My heart shall not reproach me in all my life,”110    Job xxvii. 6. we remark, that it is in this present life of ours, in which we live by faith, that our heart does not reproach us, if the same faith whereby we believe unto righteousness does not neglect to rebuke our sin. On this principle the apostle says: “The good that I would I do not; but the evil which I would not, that I do.”111    Rom. vii. 15. Now it is a good thing to avoid concupiscence, and this good the just man would, who lives by faith;112    Hab. ii. 4. and still he does what he hates, because he has concupiscence, although “he goes not after his lusts;”113    Ecclus. xviii. 30. if he has done this, he has himself at that time really done it, so as to yield to, and acquiesce in, and obey the desire of sin. His heart then reproaches him, because it reproaches himself, and not his sin which dwelleth in him. But whensoever he suffers not sin to reign in his mortal body to obey it in the lusts thereof,114    Rom. vi. 12. and yields not his members as instruments of unrighteousness unto sin,115    Rom. vi. 13. sin no doubt is present in his members, but it does not reign, because its desires are not obeyed. Therefore, while he does that which he would not,—in other words, while he wishes not to lust, but still lusts,—he consents to the law that it is good:116    Rom. vii. 16. for what the law would, that he also wishes; because it is his desire not to indulge concupiscence, and the law expressly says, “Thou shalt not covet.”117    Ex. xx. 17. Now in that he wishes what the law also would have done, he no doubt consents to the law: but still he lusts, because he is not without sin; it is, however, no longer himself that does the thing, but the sin which dwells within him. Hence it is that “his heart does not reproach him in all his life;” that is, in his faith, because the just man lives by faith, so that his faith is his very life. He knows, to be sure, that in himself dwells nothing good,—even in his flesh, which is the dwelling-place of sin. By not consenting, however, to it, he lives by faith, wherewith he also calls upon God to help him in his contest against sin. Moreover, there is present to him to will that no sin at all should be in him, but then how to perfect this good is not present. It is not the mere “doing” of a good thing that is not present to him, but the “perfecting” of it. For in this, that he yields no consent, he does good; he does good again, in this, that he hates his own lust; he does good also, in this, that he does not cease to give alms; and in this, that he forgives the man who sins against him, he does good; and in this, that he asks forgiveness for his own trespasses,—sincerely avowing in his petition that he also forgives those who trespass against himself, and praying that he may not be led into temptation, but be delivered from evil,—he does good. But how to perfect the good is not present to him; it will be, however, in that final state, when the concupiscence which dwells in his members shall exist no more. His heart, therefore, does not reproach him, when it reproaches the sin which dwells in his members; nor can it reproach unbelief in him. Thus “in all his life,”—that is, in his faith,—he is neither reproached by his own heart, nor convinced of not being without sin. And Job himself acknowledges this concerning himself, when he says, “Not one of my sins hath escaped Thee; Thou hast sealed up my transgressions in a bag, and marked if I have done iniquity unawares.”118    Job xiv. 16, 17. With regard, then, to the passages which he has adduced from the book of holy Job, we have shown to the best of our ability in what sense they ought to be taken. He, however, has failed to explain the meaning of the words which he has himself quoted from the same Job: “Who then is pure from uncleanness? Not one; even if he be an infant of only one day upon the earth.”119    Job xiv. 4, 5.

28. Quod autem iterum ait idem sanctus Job, Non enim reprehendit me cor meum in omni vita mea (Id. XXVII, 6): tunc nos in ista vita, in qua ex fide vivimus, non reprehendit cor nostrum, si eadem fides qua corde creditur ad justitiam, non negligit reprehendere peccatum nostrum. Unde dicit Apostolus, Non enim quod volo facio bonum: sed quod odi malum, hoc ago (Rom. VII, 15). Bonum est enim non concupiscere, et hoc bonum vult justus, qui ex fide vivit (Habac. II, 4): et tamen facit quod odit, quia concupiscit; quamvis post concupiscentias suas non eat (Eccli. XVIII, 30): quod si fecerit, tunc vere ipse fecit ut cedat, ut consentiat, ut desiderio peccati obediat. Tunc eum cor ejus reprehendit; quia ipsum reprehendit , non illud peccatum ejus, quod habitat in membris ejus. Cum vero non sinit regnare peccatum in suo mortali corpore ad obediendum desideriis ejus, nec exhibet membra sua arma iniquitatis peccato (Rom. VI, 12, 13); inest quidem peccatum in membris ejus, sed non regnat, quia non obeditur desideriis ejus. Et ideo dum quod non vult agit, id est, non vult concupiscere et concupiscit; consentit legi, quia bona est. Hoc enim vult et ipse quod lex; quia vult ipse non concupiscere, et lex dicit, Non concupisces (Exod. X, 17). In hoc quoniam vult quod et lex vult, procul dubio consentit legi: concupiscit 0306 tamen, quia non est sine peccato; sed jam non ipse operatur illud, sed id quod in illo habitat peccatum. Ideo non eum reprehendit cor ejus in omni vita ejus; hoc est, in fide ejus, quia justus ex fide vivit: et ideo fides ejus est vita ejus. Scit enim quia non habitat in carne ejus bonum, ubi habitat peccatum: sed non ei consentiendo vivit ex fide, qua invocat Deum ut adjuvetur pugnans contra peccatum; quod ut omnino ibi non sit, adjacet ei velle, sed perficere bonum non adjacet (Rom. VII, 15-21). Non facere bonum non adjacet, sed perficere. Nam in eo quod non consentit, bonum facit; et in eo quod odit concupiscentiam suam, bonum facit; et in eo quod eleemosynas facere non cessat, bonum facit; et in eo quod illi qui in eum peccat ignoscit, bonum facit; et in eo quod petit sibi dimitti debita sua, et veraciter dicit quod dimittit etiam ipse debitoribus suis, et orat ut non inferatur in tentationem, sed liberetur a malo, bonum facit: ei tamen perficere bonum non adjacet, quod tunc erit, quando illa concupiscentia quae habitat in membris ejus, nulla erit. Non ergo eum reprehendit cor ejus, quando reprehendit peccatum quod habitat in membris ejus, et non habet quam reprehendat infidelitatem ejus . Ita nec in vita sua, id est, in fide sua, a corde suo reprehenditur, et sine peccato non esse convincitur. Quod et ipse Job de se confitetur, ubi dicit: Nihil te latuit peccatorum meorum. Signasti iniquitates meas in sacculo, et annotasti si quid invitus transgressus sum (Job XIV, 16, 17). Testimonia ergo quae posuit de verbis sancti Job, nos sicut potuimus, quemadmodum sint accipienda monstravimus: nec tamen ille solvit, quod eumdem Job dixisse proposuit, Quis enim mundus est a peccato? Nec infans cujus est diei unius vita super terram.