A Treatise on Nature and Grace, against Pelagius

 Chapter 1 [I.]—The Occasion of Publishing This Work What God’s Righteousness is.

 Chapter 2 [II.]—Faith in Christ Not Necessary to Salvation, If a Man Without It Can Lead a Righteous Life.

 Chapter 3 [III.]—Nature Was Created Sound and Whole It Was Afterwards Corrupted by Sin.

 Chapter 4 [IV.]—Free Grace.

 Chapter 5 [V.]—It Was a Matter of Justice that All Should Be Condemned.

 Chapter 6 [VI.]—The Pelagians Have Very Strong and Active Minds.

 Chapter 7 [VII.]—He Proceeds to Confute the Work of Pelagius He Refrains as Yet from Mentioning Pelagius’ Name.

 Chapter 8.—A Distinction Drawn by Pelagius Between the Possible and Actual.

 Chapter 9 [VIII.]—Even They Who Were Not Able to Be Justified are Condemned.

 Chapter 10 [IX.]—He Could Not Be Justified, Who Had Not Heard of the Name of Christ Rendering the Cross of Christ of None Effect.

 Chapter 11 [X.]—Grace Subtly Acknowledged by Pelagius.

 Chapter 12 [XI.]—In Our Discussions About Grace, We Do Not Speak of that Which Relates to the Constitution of Our Nature, But to Its Restoration.

 Chapter 13 [XII.]—The Scope and Purpose of the Law’s Threatenings “Perfect Wayfarers.”

 Chapter 14 [XIII.]—Refutation of Pelagius.

 Chapter 15 [XIV.]—Not Everything [of Doctrinal Truth] is Written in Scripture in So Many Words.

 Chapter 16 [XV.]—Pelagius Corrupts a Passage of the Apostle James by Adding a Note of Interrogation.

 Chapter 17 [XVI.]—Explanation of This Text Continued.

 Chapter 18 [XVII.]—Who May Be Said to Be in the Flesh.

 Chapter 19.—Sins of Ignorance To Whom Wisdom is Given by God on Their Requesting It.

 Chapter 20 [XVIII.]—What Prayer Pelagius Would Admit to Be Necessary.

 Chapter 21 [XIX.]—Pelagius Denies that Human Nature Has Been Depraved or Corrupted by Sin.

 Chapter 22 [XX.]—How Our Nature Could Be Vitiated by Sin, Even Though It Be Not a Substance.

 Chapter 23 [XXI.]—Adam Delivered by the Mercy of Christ.

 Chapter 24 [XXII.]—Sin and the Penalty of Sin the Same.

 Chapter 25 [XXIII.]—God Forsakes Only Those Who Deserve to Be Forsaken. We are Sufficient of Ourselves to Commit Sin But Not to Return to the Way of

 Chapter 26 [XXIV.]—Christ Died of His Own Power and Choice.

 Chapter 27.—Even Evils, Through God’s Mercy, are of Use.

 Chapter 28 [XXV.]—The Disposition of Nearly All Who Go Astray. With Some Heretics Our Business Ought Not to Be Disputation, But Prayer.

 Observe, indeed, how cautiously he expresses himself: “God, no doubt, applies His mercy even to this office, whenever it is necessary because man afte

 Chapter 30 [XXVII.]—Sin is Removed by Sin.

 Chapter 31.—The Order and Process of Healing Our Heavenly Physician Does Not Adopt from the Sick Patient, But Derives from Himself. What Cause the Rig

 Chapter 32 [XXVIII.]—God Forsakes Us to Some Extent that We May Not Grow Proud.

 Chapter 33 [XXIX.]—Not Every Sin is Pride. How Pride is the Commencement of Every Sin.

 Chapter 34 [XXX.]—A Man’s Sin is His Own, But He Needs Grace for His Cure.

 Chapter 35 [XXXI.]—Why God Does Not Immediately Cure Pride Itself. The Secret and Insidious Growth of Pride. Preventing and Subsequent Grace.

 Chapter 36 [XXXII.]—Pride Even in Such Things as are Done Aright Must Be Avoided. Free Will is Not Taken Away When Grace is Preached.

 Chapter 37 [XXXIII.]—Being Wholly Without Sin Does Not Put Man on an Equality with God.

 Chapter 38 [XXXIV.]—We Must Not Lie, Even for the Sake of Moderation. The Praise of Humility Must Not Be Placed to the Account of Falsehood.

 Chapter 39.—Pelagius Glorifies God as Creator at the Expense of God as Saviour.

 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 Shor

 Chapter 41.—Whether Holy Men Have Died Without Sin.

 Chapter 42 [XXXVI.]—The Blessed Virgin Mary May Have Lived Without Sin. None of the Saints Besides Her Without Sin.

 Chapter 43 [XXXVII.]—Why Scripture Has Not Mentioned the Sins of All.

 Chapter 44.—Pelagius Argues that Abel Was Sinless.

 Chapter 45 [XXXVIII.]—Why Cain Has Been by Some Thought to Have Had Children by His Mother Eve. The Sins of Righteous Men. Who Can Be Both Righteous,

 Chapter 46 [XXXIX.]—Shall We Follow Scripture, or Add to Its Declarations?

 Chapter 47 [XL.]—For What Pelagius Thought that Christ is Necessary to Us.

 Chapter 48 [XLI.]—How the Term “All” Is to Be Understood.

 Chapter 49 [XLII.]—A Man Can Be Sinless, But Only by the Help of Grace. In the Saints This Possibility Advances and Keeps Pace with the Realization.

 Chapter 50 [XLIII.]—God Commands No Impossibilities.

 Chapter 51 [XLIV.]—State of the Question Between the Pelagians and the Catholics. Holy Men of Old Saved by the Self-Same Faith in Christ Which We Exer

 Chapter 52.—The Whole Discussion is About Grace.

 Chapter 53 [XLV.]—Pelagius Distinguishes Between a Power and Its Use.

 Chapter 54 [XLVI.]—There is No Incompatibility Between Necessity and Free Will.

 Chapter 55 [XLVII.]—The Same Continued.

 Chapter 56 [XLVIII.]—The Assistance of Grace in a Perfect Nature.

 Chapter 57 [XLIX.]—It Does Not Detract from God’s Almighty Power, that He is Incapable of Either Sinning, or Dying, or Destroying Himself.

 Chapter 58 [L.]—Even Pious and God-Fearing Men Resist Grace.

 Chapter 59 [LI.]—In What Sense Pelagius Attributed to God’s Grace the Capacity of Not Sinning.

 Chapter 60 [LII.]—Pelagius Admits “Contrary Flesh” In the Unbaptized.

 Chapter 61 [LIII.]—Paul Asserts that the Flesh is Contrary Even in the Baptized.

 Chapter 62.—Concerning What Grace of God is Here Under Discussion. The Ungodly Man, When Dying, is Not Delivered from Concupiscence.

 Chapter 63 [LIV.]—Does God Create Contraries?

 Chapter 64.—Pelagius’ Admission as Regards the Unbaptized, Fatal.

 Chapter 65 [LV.]—“This Body of Death,” So Called from Its Defect, Not from Its Substance.

 Chapter 66.—The Works, Not the Substance, of the “Flesh” Opposed to the “Spirit.”

 Chapter 67 [LVII.]—Who May Be Said to Be Under the Law.

 Chapter 68 [LVIII.]—Despite the Devil, Man May, by God’s Help, Be Perfected.

 Chapter 69 [LIX.]—Pelagius Puts Nature in the Place of Grace.

 Chapter 70 [LX.]—Whether Any Man is Without Sin in This Life.

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

 Chapter 72 [LXI.]—Hilary. The Pure in Heart Blessed. The Doing and Perfecting of Righteousness.

 Chapter 73.—He Meets Pelagius with Another Passage from Hilary.

 Chapter 74 [LXIII.]—Ambrose.

 Chapter 75.—Augustin Adduces in Reply Some Other Passages of Ambrose.

 Chapter 76 [LXIV.]—John of Constantinople.

 Chapter 77.—Xystus.

 Chapter 78 [LXV.]—Jerome.

 Chapter 79 [LXVI.]—A Certain Necessity of Sinning.

 Chapter 80 [LXVII.]—Augustin Himself. Two Methods Whereby Sins, Like Diseases, are Guarded Against.

 Chapter 81.—Augustin Quotes Himself on Free Will.

 Chapter 82 [LXVIII.]—How to Exhort Men to Faith, Repentance, and Advancement.

 Chapter 83 [LXIX.]—God Enjoins No Impossibility, Because All Things are Possible and Easy to Love.

 Chapter 84 [LXX.]—The Degrees of Love are Also Degrees of Holiness.

Chapter 24 [XXII.]—Sin and the Penalty of Sin the Same.

“The very matter,” says he, “of sin is its punishment, if the sinner is so much weakened that he commits more sins.” He does not consider how justly the light of truth forsakes the man who transgresses the law. When thus deserted he of course becomes blinded, and necessarily offends more; and by so falling is embarrassed and being embarrassed fails to rise, so as to hear the voice of the law, which admonishes him to beg for the Saviour’s grace. Is no punishment due to them of whom the apostle says: “Because that, when they knew God, they glorified Him not as God, neither were thankful; but became vain in their imaginations, and their foolish heart was darkened?”61    Rom. i. 21. This darkening was, of course, already their punishment and penalty; and yet by this very penalty—that is, by their blindness of heart, which supervenes on the withdrawal of the light of wisdom—they fell into more grievous sins still. “For giving themselves out as wise, they became fools.” This is a grievous penalty, if one only understands it; and from such a penalty only see to what lengths they ran: “And they changed,” he says, “the glory of the uncorruptible God into an image made like to corruptible man, and to birds, and four-footed beasts, and creeping things.”62    Rom. i. 23. All this they did owing to that penalty of their sin, whereby “their foolish heart was darkened.” And yet, owing to these deeds of theirs, which, although coming in the way of punishment, were none the less sins (he goes on to say): “Wherefore God also gave them up to uncleanness, through the lusts of their own hearts.”63    Rom. i. 24. See how severely God condemned them, giving them over to uncleanness in the very desires of their heart. Observe also the sins they commit owing to such condemnation: “To dishonour,” says he, “their own bodies among themselves.”64    Rom. i. 24. Here is the punishment of iniquity, which is itself iniquity; a fact which sets forth in a clearer light the words which follow: “Who changed the truth of God into a lie, and worshipped and served the creature more than the Creator, who is blessed for ever. Amen.” “For this cause,” says he, “God gave them up unto vile affections.”65    Rom. i. 25, 26. See how often God inflicts punishment; and out of the self-same punishment sins, more numerous and more severe, arise. “For even their women did change the natural use into that which is against nature; and likewise the men also, leaving the natural use of the woman, burned in their lust one toward another; men with men working that which is unseemly.”66    Rom. i. 26, 27. Then, to show that these things were so sins themselves, that they were also the penalties of sins, he further says: “And receiving in themselves that recompense of their error which was meet.”67    Rom. i. 27. Observe how often it happens that the very punishment which God inflicts begets other sins as its natural offspring. Attend still further: “And even as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge,” says he, “God gave them over to a reprobate mind, to do those things which are not convenient; being filled with all unrighteousness, fornication, wickedness, covetousness, maliciousness; full of envy, murder, debate, deceit, malignity; whisperers, backbiters, odious to God, despiteful, proud, boasters, inventors of evil things, disobedient to parents, without understanding, covenant-breakers, without natural affection, implacable, unmerciful.”68    Rom. i. 28–31. Here, now, let our opponent say: “Sin ought not so to have been punished, that the sinner, through his punishment, should commit even more sins.”

CAPUT XXII.

24. Idem peccatum et poena peccati. «Materiam peccati» dicit «esse vindictam, si ad hoc peccator infirmatus est, ut plura peccaret.» Nec cogitat praevaricatorem legis quam digne lux deserat veritatis; qua desertus utique fit caecus, et plus necesse est offendat, et cadendo vexetur, vexatusque non surgat, ut ideo tantum audiat vocem legis, quo admoneatur implorare gratiam Salvatoris. An nulla poena est eorum, de quibus dicit Apostolus, Quia cum cognovissent Deum, non sicut Deum glorificaverunt aut gratias egerunt; sed evanuerunt in cogitationibus suis, et obscuratum est insipiens cor eorum? Utique ista obscuratio vindicta et poena jam fuit: et tamen per hanc poenam, id est, per cordis caecitatem, quae fit deserente luce sapientiae, in plura et gravia peccata collapsi sunt. Dicentes enim se esse sapientes, stulti facti sunt. Gravis haec poena est, si quis intelligat, et ex hac poena vide quo ierunt: Et immutaverunt, inquit, gloriam incorruptibilis Dei in similitudinem imaginis corruptibilis hominis, et volucrum, et quadrupedum, et serpentium. Ista fecerunt ex peccati poena, qua obscuratum est insipiens cor eorum. Et propter haec tamen, quia licet poenalia, etiam ipsa peccata sunt, adjungit et dicit: Propterea tradidit illos Deus in desideria cordis illorum, in immunditiam. Ecce quemadmodum Deus gravius condemnavit, tradens illos in desideria cordis illorum, in immunditiam. Videte etiam ex hac poena quae faciant: Ut contumeliis, inquit, afficiant corpora sua in semetipsis. Et quia poena est ista iniquitatis, cum sit et iniquitas, evidentius commendat dicens: Qui transmutaverunt veritatem Dei in mendacium, et coluerunt et servierunt creaturae potius quam Creatori, qui est benedictus in saecula. Amen. Propter hoc, inquit, tradidit Deus illos in passiones ignominiae. Ecce quoties vindicat Deus, et ex eadem vindicta plura et graviora peccata consurgunt. Nam feminae eorum immutaverunt naturalem usum in eum usum qui est contra naturam: similiter autem et 0259masculi relicto naturali usu feminae, exarserunt in appetitum suum in invicem, masculi in masculos deformitatem operantes. Atque ut ostenderet sic esse ista peccata, ut etiam poenae sint peccatorum, etiam his adjunxit: Et mercedem mutuam, quam oportuit, erroris sui in semetipsis recipientes. Videte quoties vindicet, eademque vindicta quae pariat pulluletque peccata. Adhuc attendite: Et sicut non probaverunt, inquit, Deum habere in notitia, tradidit illos Deus in reprobam mentem, ut faciant quae non conveniunt, repletos omni iniquitate, cum circumventione, malitia, avaritia, plenos invidia, homicidio, contentione, dolo, malignitate, susurrones, detractores, Deo odibiles, contumeliosos, superbos, elatos; inventores malorum, parentibus non obedientes, insipientes, incompositos, sine affectu, sine misericordia (Rom. I, 21-31). Hic nunc iste dicat, «Non debuit sic vindicari peccatum, ut peccator per vindictam plura committeret.»