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GraciousCall.org - Handbook on Faith, Hope, and Love
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Handbook on Faith, Hope, and Love by Saint Augustine
CHAPTER
VIII. The Plight of Man After the Fall
23. With this much said, within the necessary brevity of this kind of treatise,
as to what we need to know about the causes of good and evil--enough to lead us
in the way toward the Kingdom, where there will be life without death, truth
without error, happiness without anxiety--we ought not to doubt in any way that
the cause of everything pertaining to our good is nothing other than the
bountiful goodness of God himself. The cause of evil is the defection of the
will of a being who is mutably good from the Good which is immutable. This
happened first in the case of the angels and, afterward, that of man.
24. This was the primal lapse of the rational creature, that is, his first
privation of the good. In train of this there crept in, even without his
willing it, ignorance of the right things to do and also an appetite for
noxious things. And these brought along with them, as their companions, error
and misery. When these two evils are felt to be imminent, the soul's motion in
flight from them is called fear. Moreover, as the soul's appetites are
satisfied by things harmful or at least inane--and as it fails to recognize the
error of its ways--it falls victim to unwholesome pleasures or may even be
exhilarated by vain joys. From these tainted springs of action--moved by the
lash of appetite rather than a feeling of plenty--there flows out every kind of
misery which is now the lot of rational natures.
25. Yet such a nature, even in its evil state, could not lose its appetite for
blessedness. There are the evils that both men and angels have in common, for
whose wickedness God hath condemned them in simple justice. But man has a
unique penalty as well: he is also punished by the death of the body. God had
indeed threatened man with death as penalty if he should sin. He endowed him
with freedom of the will in order that he might rule him by rational command
and deter him by the threat of death. He even placed him in the happiness of
paradise in a sheltered nook of life [
in umbra vitae
] where, by being a
good steward of righteousness, he would rise to better things.
26. From this state, after he had sinned, man was banished, and through his sin
he subjected his descendants to the punishment of sin and damnation, for he had
radically corrupted them, in himself, by his sinning. As a consequence of this,
all those descended from him and his wife (who had prompted him to sin and who
was condemned along with him at the same time)--all those born through carnal
lust, on whom the same penalty is visited as for disobedience--all these
entered into the inheritance of original sin. Through this involvement they
were led, through divers errors and sufferings (along with the rebel angels,
their corruptors and possessors and companions), to that final stage of
punishment without end. "Thus by one man, sin entered into the world and death
through sin; and thus death came upon all men, since all men have sinned."[44]
By "the world" in this passage the
apostle is, of course, referring to the whole human race.
27. This, then, was the situation: the whole mass of the human race stood
condemned, lying ruined and wallowing in evil, being plunged from evil into
evil and, having joined causes with the angels who had sinned, it was paying
the fully deserved penalty for impious desertion. Certainly the anger of God
rests, in full justice, on the deeds that the wicked do freely in blind and
unbridled lust; and it is manifest in whatever penalties they are called on to
suffer, both openly and secretly. Yet the Creator's goodness does not cease to
sustain life and vitality even in the evil angels, for were
this
sustenance withdrawn, they would simply cease to exist. As for mankind,
although born of a corrupted and condemned stock, he still retains the power to
form and animate his seed, to direct his members in their temporal order, to
enliven his senses in their spatial relations, and to provide bodily
nourishment. For God judged it better to bring good out of evil than not to
permit any evil to exist. And if he had willed that there should be no
reformation in the case of men, as there is none for the wicked angels, would
it not have been just if the nature that deserted God and, through the evil use
of his powers, trampled and transgressed the precepts of his Creator, which
could have been easily kept--the same creature who stubbornly turned away from
His Light and violated the image of the Creator in himself, who had in the evil
use of his free will broken away from the wholesome discipline of God's
law--would it not have been just if such a being had been abandoned by God
wholly and forever and laid under the everlasting punishment which he deserved?
Clearly God would have done this if he were only just and not also merciful and
if he had not willed to show far more striking evidence of his mercy by
pardoning some who were unworthy of it.
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