The Apology [Defense] of the Augsburg Confession
Article XVIII: Of Free
Will.
67] The Eighteenth Article, Of Free Will, the adversaries
receive, although they add some testimonies not at all adapted to this
case. They add also a declamation that neither, with the Pelagians, is
too much to be granted to the free will, nor, with the Manicheans, is all
freedom to be denied it. 68] Very well; but what difference is there
between the Pelagians and our adversaries, since both hold that without
the Holy Ghost men can love God and perform God's commandments with respect
to the substance of the acts, and can merit grace and justification by
works which reason performs by itself, without the Holy Ghost? 69]
How many absurdities follow from these Pelagian opinions, which are taught
with great authority in the schools! These Augustine, following Paul, refutes
with great emphasis, whose judgment we have recounted above in the article
Of
Justification. (see 119, 1 and 153, 106.) 70] Nor, indeed, do
we deny liberty to the human will. The human will has liberty in the choice
of works and things which reason comprehends by itself. It can to a certain
extent render civil righteousness or the righteousness of works; it can
speak of God, offer to God a certain service by an outward work, obey magistrates,
parents; in the choice of an outward work it can restrain the bands from
murder, from adultery, from theft. Since there is left in human nature
reason and judgment concerning objects subjected to the senses, choice
between these things, the liberty and power to render civil righteousness,
are also left. For Scripture calls this the righteousness of the flesh
which the carnal nature, i.e., reason, renders by itself, 71]
without the Holy Ghost. Although the power of concupiscence is such that
men more frequently obey evil dispositions than sound judgment. And the
devil, who is efficacious in the godless, as Paul says, Eph. 2, 2, does
not cease to incite this feeble nature to various offenses. These are the
reasons why even civil righteousness is rare among men, as we see that
not even the philosophers themselves, who seem 72] to have aspired
after this righteousness, attained it. But it is false to say that he who
performs the works of the commandments without grace does not sin. And
they add further that such, works also merit
de congruo the remission
of sins and justification. For human hearts without the Holy Ghost are
without the fear of God; without trust toward God, they do not believe
that they are heard, forgiven, helped, and preserved by God. Therefore
they are godless. For neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit,
Matt. 7, 18. And without faith it is impossible to please God, Heb.
11, 6.
73] Therefore, although we concede to free will the liberty and
power to perform the outward works of the Law, yet we do not ascribe to
free will these spiritual matters, namely, truly to fear God, truly to
believe God, truly to be confident and hold that God regards us, hears
us, forgives us, etc. These are the true works of the First Table, which
the heart cannot render without the Holy Ghost, as Paul says, 1 Cor. 2,
14: The natural man, i.e., man using only natural strength,
receiveth
not the things 74] of the Spirit of God. (That is, a
person who is not enlightened by the Spirit of God does not, by his natural
reason, receive any thing of God's will and divine matters.] And this can
be decided if men consider what their hearts believe concerning God's will,
whether they are truly confident that they are regarded and heard by God.
Even for saints to retain this faith [and, as Peter says (1 Pet. 1, 8),
to risk and commit himself entirely to God, whom he does not see, to love
Christ, and esteem Him highly, whom he does not see] is difficult, so far
is it from existing in the godless. But it is conceived, as we have said
above, when terrified hearts hear the Gospel and receive consolation [when
we are born anew of the Holy Ghost].
75] Therefore such a distribution is of advantage in which civil
righteousness is ascribed to the free will and spiritual righteousness
to the governing of the Holy Ghost in the regenerate. For thus the outward
discipline is retained, because all men ought to know equally, both that
God requires this civil righteousness [God will not tolerate indecent wild,
reckless conduct], and that, in a measure, we can afford it. And yet a
distinction is shown between human and spiritual righteousness, between
philosophical doctrine and the doctrine of the Holy Ghost, and it can be
understood for what there is need of the Holy Ghost. 76] Nor has
this distribution been invented by us, but Scripture most clearly teaches
it. Augustine also treats of it, and recently it has been well treated
of by William of Paris, but it has been wickedly suppressed by those who
have dreamt that men can obey God's Law without the Holy Ghost, but that
the Holy Ghost is given in order that, in addition, it may be considered
meritorious.
|