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ST. AUGUSTIN
ON THE GOOD OF MARRIAGE
DE BONO CONJUGALI
1. FORASMUCH as each man is a part of the human race, and human nature is
something social, and hath for a great and natural good, the power also of
friendship; on this account God willed to create all men out of one, in order
that they might be held in their society not only by likeness of kind, but
also by bond of kindred. Therefore the first natural bond of human society
is man and wife. Nor did God create these each by himself, and join them together
as alien by birth: but He created the one out of the other, setting a sign
also of the power of the union in the side, whence she was drawn, was formed.(1)
For they are joined one to another side by side, who walk together, and look
together whither they walk. Then follows the connexion of fellowship in children,
which is the one alone worthy fruit, not of the union of male and female, but
of the sexual intercourse. For it were possible that there should exist in
either sex, even without such intercourse, a certain friendly and true union
of the one ruling, and the other obeying.
2. Nor
is it now necessary that we enquire, and put forth a definite opinion on
that question, whence
could
exist the progeny of the first men, whom God
had blessed, saying, "Increase, and be ye multiplied, and fill the earth;"(2)
if they had not sinned, whereas their bodies by sinning deserved the condition
of death, and there can be no sexual intercourse save of mortal bodies. For
there have existed several and different opinions on this matter; and if we
must examine, which of them be rather agreeable to the truth of Divine Scriptures,
there is matter for a lengthened discussion.(3) Whether, therefore, without
intercourse, in some other way, had they not sinned, they would have had sons,
from the gift of the Almighty Creator, Who was able to create themselves also
without parents, Who was able to form the Flesh of Christ in a virgin womb,
and (to speak even to unbelievers themselves) Who was able to bestow on bees
a progeny without sexual intercourse; or whether many things there were spoken
by way of mystery and figure, and we are to understand in another sense what
is written, "Fill the earth, and rule over it;" that is, that it
should come to pass by fullness and perfection of life and power, so that the
very increase and multiplication, whereby it is said, "Increase, and be
ye multiplied," be understood to be by advance of mind, and abundance
of virtue, as it is set in the Psalm, "Thou shall multiply me in my soul
by virtue;"(4) and that succession of progeny was not given unto man,
save after that, by reason of sin, there was to be hereafter departure in death:
or whether the body was not made spiritual in the case of these men, but at
the first animal, in order that by merit of obedience it might after become
spiritual, to lay hold of immortality, not after death, which by the malice
of the devil entered into the world, and was made the punishment of sin; but
after that change, which the Apostle signifies, when he says, "Then we
living, who remain, together with them, shall be caught up in the clouds, to
meet Christ, into the air,"(5) that we may understand both that those
bodies of the first pair were mortal, in the first forming, and yet that they
would not have died, had they not sinned, as God had threatened: even as if
He should threaten a wound, in that the body was capable of wounds; which yet
would not have happened, unless what He had forbidden were done. Thus, therefore,
even through sexual intercourse there might take place generations of such
bodies, as up to a certain point should have increase, and yet should not pass
into old age; or even into old age, and yet not into death; until the earth
were filled with that multiplication of the blessing. For if to the garments
of the Israelites(1) God granted their proper state without any wearing away
during forty years, how much more would He grant unto the bodies of such as
obeyed His command a certain most happy temperament of sure state, until they
should be changed for the better, not by death of the man, whereby the body
is abandoned by the soul, but by a blessed change from mortality to immortality,
from an animal to a spiritual quality. Of these opinions which be true, or
whether some other or others yet may be formed out of these words, were a long
matter to enquire and discuss.
3. This we now say, that, according to this condition of being born and dying,
which we know, and in which we have been created, the marriage of male and
female is some good; the compact; whereof divide Scripture so commends, as
that neither is it allowed one put away by her husband to marry, so long as
her husband lives: nor is it allowed one put away by his wife to marry another,
unless she who have separated from him be dead. Therefore, concerning the good
of marriage, which the Lord also confirmed in the Gospel, not only in that
He forbade to put away a wife,(2) save because of fornication, but also in
that He came by invitation to a marriage,(3) there is good ground to inquire
for what reason it be a good. And this seems not to me to be merely on account
of the begetting of children, but also on account of the natural society itself
in a difference of sex. Otherwise it would not any longer be called marriage
in the case of old persons, especially if either they had lost sons, or had
given birth to none. But now in good, although aged, marriage, albeit there
hath withered away the glow of full age between male and female, yet there
lives in full vigor the order of charity between husband and wife: because,
the better they are, the earlier they have begun by mutual consent to contain
from sexual intercourse with each other: not that it should be matter of necessity
afterwards not to have power to do what they would, but that it should be matter
of praise to have been unwilling at the first, to do what they had power to
do. If therefore there be kept good faith of honor, and of services mutually
due from either sex, although the members of either be languishing and almost
corpse-like, yet of souls duly joined together, the chastity(3) continues,
the purer by how much it is the more proved, the safer, by how much it is the
calmer. Marriages have this good also, that carnal or youthful incontinence,
although it be faulty, is brought unto an honest use in the begetting of children,
in order that out of the evil of lust the marriage union may bring to pass
some good. Next, in that the lust of the flesh is repressed, and rages in a
way more modestly, being tempered by parental affection. For there is interposed
a certain gravity of glowing pleasure, when in that wherein husband and wife
cleave to one another, they have in mind that they be father and mother.
4. There
is this further, that in that very debt which married persons pay one to
another, even if
they
demand it with somewhat too great intemperance
and incontinence, yet they owe faith alike one to another. Unto which faith
the Apostle allows so great right, as to call it "power," saying, "The
woman hath not power of her own body, but the man; again in like manner also
the man hath not power of his own body, but the woman."(5) But the violation
of this faith is called adultery, when either by instigation of one's own lust,
or by consent of lust of another, there is sexual intercourse on either side
with another against the marriage compact: and thus faith is broken, which,
even in things that are of the body, and mean, is a great good of the soul:
and therefore it is certain that it ought to be preferred even to the health
of tile body, wherein even this life of ours is contained. For, although a
little chaff in comparison of much gold is almost nothing; yet faith, when
it is kept pure in a matter of chaff, as in gold, is not therefore less because
it is kept in a lesser matter. But when faith is employed to commit sin, it
were strange that we should have to call it faith; however of what kind soever
it be, if also the deed be done against it, it is the worse done; save when
it is on this account abandoned, that there may be a return unto true and lawful
faith, that is, that sin may be amended, by correction of perverseness of the
will. As if any, being unable alone to rob a man, should find a partner in
his iniquity, and make an agreement with him to do it together, and to divide
the spoil; and, after the crime hath been committed, should take off the whole
to himself alone. That other grieves and complains that faith hath not been
kept with him, but in his very complaint he ought to consider, that he himself
rather ought to have kept faith with human society in a good life, not to make
unjust spoil of a man, if he feels with how great injustice it hath failed
to be kept with himself in a fellowship of sin. Forsooth the former, being
faithless in both instances, must assuredly be judged the more wicked. But,
if he had been displeased at what they had done ill, and had been on this account
unwilling to divide the spoil with his partner in crime, in order that it might
be restored to the man, from whom it had been taken, not even a faithless man
would call him faithless. Thus a woman, if, having broken her marriage faith,
she keep faith with her adulterer, is certainly evil: but, if not even with
her adulterer, worse. Further, if she repent her of her sin, and returning
to marriage chastity, renounce all adulterous compacts and resolutions, I count
it strange if even the adulterer himself will think her one who breaks faith.
5. Also the question is wont to be asked, when a male and female, neither
the one the husband, nor the other the wife, of any other, come together, not
for the begetting of children, but, by reason of incontinence, for the mere
sexual intercourse, there being between them this faith, that neither he do
it with any other woman, nor she with any other man, whether it is to be called
marriage.(1) And perhaps this may, not without reason, be called marriage,(2)
if it shall be the resolution(3) of both parties until the death of one, and
if the begetting of children, although they came not together for that cause,
yet they shun not, so as either to be unwilling to have children born to them,
or even by some evil work to use means that they be not born. But, if either
both, or one, of these be wanting, I find not how we can call it marriage.
For, if a man should take unto him any one for a time, until he find another
worthy either of his honors or of his means, to marry as his compeer; in his
soul itself he is an adulterer, and that not with her whom he is desirous of
finding, but with her, with whom he so lies, as not to have with her the partnership
of a husband. Whence she also herself, knowing and willing this, certainly
acts unchastely in having intercourse with him, with whom she has not the compact
of a wife. However, if she keep to him faith of bed, and after he shall have
married, have no thought of marriage herself, and prepare to contain herself
altogether from any such work, perhaps I should not dare lightly to call her
an adulteress; but who shall say that she sins not, when he is aware that she
has intercourse with a man, not being his wife? But further, if from that intercourse,
so far as pertains to herself, she has no wish but for sons, and suffers unwilling
whatever she suffers beyond the cause of begetting; there are many matrons
to whom she is to be preferred; who, although they are not adulteresses, yet
force their husbands, for the most part also wishing to exercise continence,
to pay the due of the flesh, not through desire of children, but through glow
of lust making an intemperate use of their very right; in whose marriages,
however, this very thing, that they are married, is a good. For for this purpose
are they married, that the lust being brought under a lawful bond, should not
float at large without form and loose; having of itself weakness of flesh that
cannot be curbed, but of marriage fellowship of faith that cannot be dissolved;
of itself encroachment of immoderate intercourse, of marriage a way of chastely
begetting. For, although it be shameful to wish to use a husband for purposes
of lust, yet it is honorable to be unwilling to have intercourse save with
an husband, and not to give birth to children save from a husband. There are
also men incontinent to that degree, that they spare not their wives even when
pregnant. Therefore whatever that is immodest, shameless, base, married persons
do one with another, is the sin of the persons, not the fault of marriage.
6. Further,
in the very case of the more immoderate requirement of the due of the flesh,
which the
Apostle
enjoins not on them by way of command, but
allows to them by way of leave, that they have intercourse also beside the
cause of begetting children; although evil habits impel them to such intercourse,
yet marriage guards them from adultery or fornication. For neither is that
committed because of marriage, but is pardoned because of marriage. Therefore
married persons owe one another not only the faith of their sexual intercourse
itself, for the begetting of children, which is the first fellowship of the
human kind in this mortal state; but also, in a way, a mutual service of sustaining(4)
one another's weakness, in order to shun unlawful intercourse: so that, although
perpetual continence be pleasing to one of them, he may not, save with consent
of the other. For thus far also, "The wife hath not power of her own body,
but the man: in like manner also the man hath not power of his own body, but
the woman."(5) That that also, which, not for the begetting of children,
but for weakness and incontinence, either he seeks of marriage, or she of her
husband, they deny not the one or the other; lest by this they fall into damnable
seductions, through temptation of Satan, by reason of incontinence either of
both, or of whichever of them. For intercourse of marriage for the sake of
begetting hath not fault; but for the satisfying of lust, but yet with husband
or wife, by reason of the faith of the bed, it hath venial fault: but adultery
or fornication hath deadly fault, and, through this, continence from all intercourse
is indeed better even than the intercourse of marriage itself, which takes
place for the sake of begetting. But because that Continence is of larger desert,
but to pay the due of marriage is no crime, but to demand it beyond the necessity
of begetting is a venial fault, but to commit fornication or adultery is a
crime to be punished; charity of the married ought to beware, lest whilst it
seek for itself occasion of larger honor, it do that for its partner which
cause condemnation. "For whosoever putteth away his wife, except for the
cause of fornication, maketh her to commit adultery."(1) To such a degree
is that marriage compact entered upon a matter of a certain sacrament, that
it is not made void even by separation itself, since, so long as her husband
lives, even by whom she hath been left, she commits adultery, in case she be
married to another: and he who hath left her, is the cause of this evil.
7. But I marvel, if, as it is allowed to put away a wife who is an adulteress,
so it be allowed, having put her away, to marry another. For holy Scripture
causes a hard knot in this matter, in that the Apostle says, that, by commandment
of the Lord, the wife ought not to depart from her husband, but, in case she
shall have departed, to remain unmarried, or to be reconciled to her husband;(2)
whereas surely she ought not to depart and remain unmarried, save from an husband
that is an adulterer, lest by withdrawing from him, who is not an adulterer,
she cause him to commit adultery. But perhaps she may justly be reconciled
to her husband, either he being to be borne with, if she cannot contain herself,
or being now corrected. But I see not how the man can have permission to marry
another, in case he have left an adulteress, when a woman has not to be married
to another, in case she have left an adulterer. And, this being the case, so
strong is that bond of fellowship in married persons, that, although it be
tied for the sake of begetting children, not even for the sake of begetting
children is it loosed. For it is in a man's power to put away a wife that is
barren, and marry one of whom to have children. And yet it is not allowed;
and now indeed in our times, and after the usage of Rome, neither to marry
in addition, so as to have more than one wife living: and, surely, in case
of an adulteress or adulterer being left, it would be possible that more men
should be born, if either the woman were married to another, or the man should
marry another. And yet, if this be not lawful, as the Divine Rule seems to
prescribe, who is there but it must make him attentive to learn, what is the
meaning of this so great strength of the marriage bond? Which I by no means
think could have been of so great avail, were it not that there were taken
a certain sacrament of some greater matter from out this weak mortal state
of men, so that, men deserting it, and seeking to dissolve it, it should remain
unshaken for their punishment. Seeing that the compact of marriage is not done
away by divorce intervening; so that they continue wedded persons one to another,
even after separation; and commit adultery with those, with whom they shall
be joined, even after their own divorce, either the woman with a man, or the
man with a woman. And yet, save in the City of our God, in His Holy Mount,
the case is not such with the wife.(3) But, that the laws of the Gentiles are
otherwise, who is there that knows not; where, by the interposition of divorce,
without any offense of which man takes cognizance, both the woman is married
to whom she will, and the man marries whom he will. And something like this
custom, on account of the hardness of the Israelites, Moses seems to have allowed,
concerning a bill of divorcement.(4) In which matter there appears rather a
rebuke, than an approval, of divorce.(5)
8. "Honorable," therefore, "is marriage in all, and the bed
undefiled."(6) And this we do not so call a good, as that it is a good
in comparison of fornication: otherwise there will be two evils, of which the
second is worse: or fornication will also be a good, because adultery is worse:
for it is worse to violate the marriage of another, than to cleave unto an
harlot: and adultery will be a good, because incest is worse; for it is worse
to lie with a mother than with the wife of another: and, until we arrive at
those things, which, as the Apostle saith, "it is a shame even to speak
of,"(7) all will be good in comparison of what are worse. But who can
doubt that this is false? Therefore marriage and fornication are not two evils,
whereof the second is worse: but marriage and continence are two goods, whereof
the second is better, even as this temporal health and sickness are not two
evils, whereof the second is worse; but that health and immortality are two
goods, whereof the second is better. Also knowledge and vanity are not two
evils, whereof vanity is the worse: but knowledge and charity are two goods,
whereof charity is the better. For "knowledge shall be destroyed,"(1)
saith the Apostle: and yet it is necessary for this time: but "charity
shall never fail." Thus also this mortal begetting, on account of which
marriage takes place, shall be destroyed: but freedom from all sexual intercourse
is both angelic exercise(2) here, and continueth for ever. But as the repasts
of the Just are better than the fasts of the sacrilegious, so the marriage
of the faithful is to be set before the virginity of the impious. However neither
in that case is repast preferred to fasting, but righteousness to sacrilege;
nor in this, marriage to virginity, but faith to impiety. For for this end
the righteous, when need is, take their repast, that, as good masters, they
may give to their slaves, i.e., their bodies, what is just and fair: but for
this end the sacrilegious fast, that they may serve devils. Thus for this end
the faithful are married, that they may be chastely joined unto husbands, but
for this end the impious are virgins, that they may commit fornication away
from the true God. As, therefore, that was good, which Martha was doing, being
engaged in the ministering unto the Saints, but that better, which Mary, her
sister, sitting at the feet of the Lord, and hearing His word; thus we praise
the good of Susanna(3) in married chastity, but yet we set before her the good
of the widow Anna,(4) and, much more, of the Virgin Mary.(5) It was good that
they were doing, who of their substance were ministering necessaries unto Christ
and His disciples: but better, who left all their substance, that they might
be freer to follow the same Lord. But in both these cases of good, whether
what these, or whether what Martha and Mary were doing, the better could not
be done, unless the other had been passed over or left. Whence we are to understand,
that we are not, on this account, to think marriage an evil, because, unless
there be abstinence from it, widowed chastity, or virgin purity, cannot be
had. For neither on this account was what Martha was doing evil, because, unless
her sister abstained from it, she could not do what was better: nor on this
account is it evil to receive a just man or a prophet into one's house, because
he, who wills to follow Christ unto perfection, ought not even to have a house,
in order to do what is better.
9. Truly we must consider, that God gives us some goods, which are to be sought
for their own sake, such as wisdom, health, friendship: but others, which are
necessary for the sake of somewhat, such as learning, meat, drink, sleep, marriage,
sexual intercourse. For of these certain are necessary for the sake of wisdom,
as learning: certain for the sake of health, as meat and drink and sleep: certain
for the sake of friendship, as marriage or sexual intercourse: for hence subsists
the propagation of the human kind, wherein friendly fellowship is a great good.
These goods, therefore, which are necessary for the sake of something else,
whoso useth not for this purpose, wherefore they were instituted, sins; in
some cases venially, in other cases damnably. But whoso useth them for this
purpose, wherefore they were given doeth well. Therefore, to whomsoever they
are not necessary, if he use them not, he doeth better. Wherefore, these goods,
when we have need, we do well to wish; but we do better not to wish than to
wish: because ourselves are in a better state, when we account them not necessary.
And on this account it is good to marry, because it is good to beget children,
to be a mother of a family: but it is better not to marry,(6) because it is
better not to stand in need of this work, in order to human fellowship itself.
For such is the state of the human race now, that (others, who contain not,
not only being taken up with marriage, but many also waxing wanton through
unlawful concubinages, the Good Creator working what is good out of their evils)
there fails not numerous progeny, and abundant succession, out of which to
procure holy friendships. Whence we gather, that, in the first times of the
human race, chiefly for the propagation of the People of God, through whom
the Prince and Saviour of all people should both be prophesied of, and be born,
it was the duty of the Saints to use this good of marriage, not as to be sought
for its own sake, but necessary for the sake of something else: but now, whereas,
in order to enter upon holy and pure fellowship, there is on all sides from
out all nations an overflowing fullness of spiritual kindred, even they who
wish to contract marriage only for the sake of children, are to be admonished,
that they use rather the larger good of continence.
10. But
I am aware of some that murmur: What, say they, if all men should abstain
from all sexual
intercourse,
whence will the human race exist? Would
that all would this, only in "charity out of a pure heart, and good conscience,
and faith unfeigned;"(1) much more speedily would the City of God be filled,
and the end of the world hastened. For what else doth the Apostle, as is manifest,
exhort to, when he saith, speaking on this head, "I would that all were
as myself;"(2) or in that passage, "But this I say, brethren, the
time is short: it remains that both they who have wives, be as though not having:
and they who weep, as though not weeping: and they who rejoice, as though not
rejoicing: and they who buy, as though not buying: and they who use this world
as though they use it not. For the form of this world passeth by. I would have
you without care." Then he adds, "Whoso is without a wife thinks
of the things of the Lord, how to please the Lord: but whoso is joined in marriage,
thinks of the things of the world, how to please his wife: and a woman that
is unmarried and a virgin is different: she that is unmarried is anxious about
the things of the Lord, to be holy both in body and spirit: but she that is
married, is anxious about the things of the world, how to please her husband."(3)
Whence it seems to me, that at this time, those only, who contain not, ought
to marry, according to that sentence of the same Apostle, "But if they
contain not, let them be married: for it is better to be married than to burn."(4)
11. And
yet not to these themselves is marriage a sin; which, if it were chosen in
comparison of fornication,
would be a less sin than fornication, and yet
would be a sin. But now what shall we say against the most plain speech of
the Apostle, saying, "Let her do what she will; she sinneth not, if she
be married;"(5) and, "If thou shalt have taken a wife, thou hast
not sinned: and, if a virgin shall have been married, she sinneth not."(6)
Hence surely it is not lawful now to doubt that marriage is no sin. Therefore
the Apostle alloweth not marriage as matter "of pardon:"(7) for who
can doubt that it is extremely absurd to say, that they have not sinned, unto
whom "pardon" is granted. But he allows, as matter of "pardon," that
sexual intercourse, which takes place through incontinence, not alone for the
begetting of children, and, at times, not at all for the begetting of children;
and it is not that marriage forces this to take place, but that it procures
pardon for it; provided however it be not so in excess as to hinder what ought
to be set aside as seasons of prayer, nor be changed into that use which is
against nature, on which the Apostle could not be silent, when speaking of
the excessive corruptions of unclean and impious men. For necessary sexual
intercourse for begetting is free from blame, and itself is alone worthy of
marriage. But that which goes beyond this necessity, no longer follows reason,
but lust.(8) And yet it pertains to the character of marriage, not to exact
this, but to yield it to the partner, lest by fornication the other sin damnably.
But, if both are set under such lust, they do what is plainly not matter of
marriage. However, if in their intercourse they love what is honest more than
what is dishonest, that is, what is matter of marriage more than what is not
matter of marriage, this is allowed to them on the authority of the Apostle
as matter of pardon: and for this fault, they have in their marriage, not what
sets them on to commit it, but what entreats pardon for it, if they turn not
away from them the mercy of God, either by not abstaining on certain days,
that they may be free to pray, and through this abstinence, as through fasting,
may commend their prayers; or by changing the natural use into that which is
against nature, which is more damnable when it is done in the case of husband
or wife.
12. For,
whereas that natural use, when it pass beyond the compact of marriage, that
is, beyond
the necessity
of begetting, is pardonable in the case of a
wife, damnable in the case of an harlot; that which is against nature is execrable
when done in the case of an harlot, but more execrable in the case of a wife.
Of so great power is the ordinance of the Creator, and the order of Creation,
that, in matters allowed us to use, even when the due measure is exceeded,
it is far more tolerable, than, in what are not allowed, either a single, or
rare excess. And, therefore, in a matter allowed, want of moderation, in a
husband or wife, is to be borne with, in order that lust break not forth into
a matter that is not allowed. Hence is it also that he sins far less, who is
ever so unceasing in approaches to his wife, than he who approaches ever so
seldom to commit fornication. But, when the man shall wish to use the member
of the wife not allowed for this purpose, the wife is more shameful, if she
suffer it to take place in her own case, than if in the case of another woman.
Therefore the ornament of marriage is chastity of begetting, and faith of yielding
the due of the flesh: this is the work of marriage, this the Apostle defends
from every charge, in saying, "Both if thou shall have taken a wife, thou
hast not sinned: and if a virgin shall have been married, she sinneth not:" and, "Let
her do what she will: she sinneth not if she be married."(1) But an advance
beyond moderation in demanding the due of either sex, for the reasons which
I have stated above, is allowed to married persons as matter of pardon.
13. What
therefore he says, "She, that is unmarried, thinketh of the
things of the Lord, that she may be holy both in body and spirit;" we
are not to take in such sense, as to think that a chaste Christian wife is
not holy in body. Forsooth unto all the faithful it was said, "Know ye
not that your bodies are a temple of the Holy Ghost within you, Whom ye have
from God?"(2) Therefore the bodies also of the married are holy, so long
as they keep faith to one another and to God. And that this sanctity of either
of them, even an unbelieving partner does not stand in the way of, but rather
that the sanctity of the wife profits the unbelieving husband, and the sanctity
of the husband profits the unbelieving wife, the same Apostle is witness, saying, "For
the unbelieving husband is sanctified in the wife, and the unbelieving wife
is sanctified in a brother."(3) Wherefore that was said according to the
greater sanctity of the unmarried than of the married, unto which there is
also due a greater reward, according as, the one being a good, the other is
a greater good: inasmuch as also she has this thought only, how to please the
Lord. For it is not that a female who believes, keeping married chastity, thinks
not how to please the Lord; but assuredly less so, in that she thinks of the
things of the world, how to please her husband. For this is what he would say
of them, that they may, in a certain way, find themselves obliged by marriage
to think of the things of the world, how to please their husbands.
14. And
not without just cause a doubt is raised, whether he said this of all married
women, or of
such
as so many are, as that nearly all may be thought
so to be. For neither doth that, which he saith of unmarried women, "She,
that is unmarried, thinkest of the things of the Lord, to be holy both in body
and spirit:"(4) pertain unto all unmarried women: whereas there are certain
widows who are dead, who live in delights. However, so far as regards a certain
distinction and, as it were, character of their own, of the unmarried and married;
as she deserves the excess of hatred, who containing from marriage,(5) that
is, from a thing allowed, does not contain from offenses, either of luxury,
or pride, or curiosity and prating; so the married woman is seldom met with,
who, in the very obedience of married life, hath no thought save how to please
God, by adorning herself, not with plaited hair, or gold and pearls and costly
attire,(6) but as becometh women making profession of piety, through a good
conversation. Such marriages, forsooth, the Apostle Peter also describes by
giving commandment. "In like manner," saith he, "wives obeying
their own husbands; in order that, even if any obey not the word, they may
be gained without discourse through the conversation of the wives, seeing your
fear and chaste conversation: that they be not they that are adorned without
with crispings of hair, or clothed with gold or with fair raiment; but that
hidden man of your heart, in that unbroken continuance of a quiet and modest
spirit, which before the Lord also is rich. For thus certain holy women, who
hoped in the Lord, used to adorn themselves, obeying their own husbands: as
Sarah obeyed Abraham, calling him Lord: whose daughters ye are become, when
ye do well, and fear not with any vain fear. Husbands in like manner living
at peace and in chastity with your wives, both give ye honor as to the weaker
and subject vessel, as with co-heirs of grace, and see that your prayers be
not hindered."(7) Is it indeed that such marriages have no thought of
the things of the Lord, how to please the Lord? But they are very rare: who
denies this? And, being, as they are, rare, nearly all the persons who are
such, were not joined together in order to be such, but being already joined
together became such.
15. For
what Christian men of our time being free from the marriage bond, having
power to contain
from all
sexual intercourse, seeing it to be now "a
time," as it is written, "not of embracing, but of abstaining from
embrace,"(8) would not choose rather to keep virginal or widowed continence,
than (now that there is no obligation from duty to human society) to endure
tribulation of the flesh, without which marriages cannot be (to pass over in
silence other things from which the Apostle spares.) But when through desire
reigning they shall have been joined together, if they shall after overcome
it, because it is not lawful to loose, in such wise as it was lawful not to
tie, the marriage bond, they become such as the form of marriage makes profession
of, so as that either by mutual consent they ascend unto a higher degree of
holiness, or, if both are not such, the due who is such will not be one to
exact but to yield the due, observing in all things a chaste and religious
concord. But in those times, wherein as yet the mystery of our salvation was
veiled in prophetic sacraments, even they who were such before marriage, yet
contracted marriage through the duty of begetting children, not overcome by
lust, but led by piety, unto whom if there were given such choice as in the
revelation of the New Testament there hath been given, the Lord saying "Whoso
can receive, let him receive;"(1) no one doubts that they would have been
ready to receive it even with joy, who reads with careful attention what use
they made of their wives, at a time when also it was allowed one man to have
several, whom he had with more chastity, than any now has his one wife, of
these, unto whom we see what the Apostle allows by way of leave.(2) For they
had them in the work of begetting children, not "in the disease of desire,
as the nations which know not God."(3) And this is so great a thing, that
many at this day more easily abstain from all sexual intercourse their whole
life through, than, if they are joined in marriage, observe the measure of
not coming together except for the sake of children. Forsooth we have many
brethren and partners in the heavenly inheritance of both sexes that are continent,
whether they be such as have made trial of marriage, or such as are entirely
free from all such intercourse: forsooth they are without number: yet, in our
familiar discourses with them, whom have we heard, whether of those who are,
or of those who have been, married, declaring to us that he has never had sexual
intercourse with his wife, save with the hope of conception? What, therefore,
the Apostles command the married, this is proper to marriage, but what they
allow by way of pardon, or what hinders prayers, this marriage compels not,
but bears with.
16. Therefore if haply, (which whether it can take place, I know not; and
rather think it cannot take place; but yet, if haply), having taken unto himself
a concubine for a time, a man shall have sought sons only from this same intercourse;
neither thus is that union to be preferred to the marriage even of those women,
who do this, that is matter of pardon.(4) For we must consider what belongs
to marriage, not what belongs to such women as marry and use marriage with
less moderation than they ought. For neither if each one so use lands entered
upon unjustly and wrongly, as out of their fruits to give large alms, cloth
he therefore justify rapine: nor if another brood over, through avarice, an
estate to which he has succeeded, or which he hath justly gained, are we on
this account to blame the rule of civil law, whereby he is made a lawful owner.
Nor will the wrongfulness of a tyrannical rebellion deserve praise, if the
tyrant treat his subjects with royal clemency: nor will the order of royal
power deserve blame, if a king rage with tyrannical cruelty. For it is one
thing to wish to use well unjust power, and it is another thing to use unjustly
just power. Thus neither do concubines taken for a time, if they be such in
order to sons, make their concubinage lawful; nor do married women, if they
live wantonly with their husbands, attach any charge to the order of marriage.
17. That marriage can take place of persons first ill joined, an honest decree
following after, is manifest. But a marriage once for all entered upon in the
City of our God, where, even from the first union of the two,the man and the
woman, marriage bears a certain sacramental character, can no way be dissolved
but by the death of one of them. For the bond of marriage remains, although
a family, for the sake of which it was entered upon, do not follow through
manifest barrenness; so that, when now married persons know that they shall
not have children, yet it is not lawful for them to separate even for the very
sake of children, and to join themselves unto others. And if they shall so
do, they commit adultery with those unto whom they join themselves, but themselves
remain husbands and wives. Clearly with the good will of the wife to take another
woman, that from her may be born sons common to both, by the sexual intercourse
and seed of the one, but by the right and power of the other, was lawful among
the ancient fathers: whether it be lawful now also, I would not hastily pronounce.
For there is not now necessity of begetting children, as there then was, when,
even when wives bare children, it was allowed, in order to a more numerous
posterity, to marry other wives in addition, which now is certainly not lawful.
For the difference that separates times causes the due season to have so great
force unto the justice and doing or not doing any thing, that now a man does
better, if he marry not even one wife, unless he be unable to contain. But
then they married even several without any blame, even those who could much
more easily contain, were it not that piety at that time had another demand
upon them. For, as the wise and just man,(1) who now desires to be dissolved
and to be with Christ, and takes more pleasure in this, the best, now not from
desire of living here, but from duty of being useful(2), takes food that he
may remain in the flesh, which is necessary for the sake of others; so to have
intercourse with females in right of marriage, was to holy men at that time
a matter of duty not of lust.
18. For what food is unto the conservation of the man, this sexual intercourse
is unto the conservation of the race: and both are not without carnal delight:
which yet being modified, and by restraint of temperance reduced unto the use
after nature, cannot be lust.(3) But what unlawful food is in the supporting
of life, this sexual intercourse of fornication or adultery is in the seeking
of a family. And what unlawful food is in luxury of belly and throat, this
unlawful intercourse is in lust that seeks not a family. And what the excessive
appetite of some is in lawful food, this that intercourse that is matter of
pardon is in husband and wife. As therefore it is better to die of hunger than
to eat things offered unto idols: so it is better to die without children,
than to seek a family from unlawful intercourse. But from whatever source men
be born, if they follow not the vices of their parents, and worship God aright,
they shall be honest and safe. For the seed of man, from out what kind of man
soever, is the creation of God, and it shall fare ill with those who use it
ill, yet shall not, itself at any time be evil. But as the good sons of adulterers
are no defense of adulteries, so the evil sons of married persons are no charge
against marriage. Wherefore as the Fathers of the time of the New Testament
taking food from the duty of conservation, although they took it with natural
delight of the flesh, were yet in no way compared with the delight of those
who fed on what had been offered in sacrifice, or of those who, although the
food was lawful, yet took it to excess: so the Fathers of the time of the Old
Testament from the duty of conservation used sexual intercourse; and yet that
their natural delight, by no means relaxed unto unreasonable and unlawful lust,
is not to be compared either with the vileness of fornications, or with the
intemperance of married persons. Forsooth through the same vein(4) of charity,
now after the spirit, then after the flesh, it was a duty to beget sons for
the sake of that mother Jerusalem: but it was nought save the difference of
times which made the works of the fathers different. But thus it was necessary
that even Prophets, not living after the flesh, should come together after
the flesh; even as it was necessary that Apostles also, not living after the
flesh, should eat food after the flesh.
19. Therefore
as many women as there are now, unto whom it is said, "if
they contain not, let them be married,(5)" are not to be compared to the
holy women then, even when they married. Marriage itself indeed in all nations
is for the same cause of begetting sons, and of what character soever these
may be afterward, yet was marriage for this purpose instituted, that they may
be born in due and honest order. But men, who contain not, as it were ascend
unto marriage by a step of honesty: but they, who without doubt would contain,
if the purpose of that time had allowed this, in a certain measure descended
unto marriage by a step of piety. And, on this account, although the marriages
of both, so far as they are marriages, in that they are for the sake of begetting,
are equally good, yet these men when married are not to be compared with those
men as married. For these have, what is allowed them by the way of leave, on
account of the honesty of marriage, although it pertain not to marriage; that
is, the advance which goes beyond the necessity of begetting, which they had
not. But neither can these, if haply there be now any found, who neither seek,
nor desire, in marriage any thing, save that wherefore marriage was instituted,
be made equal to those men. For in these the very desire of sons is carnal,
but in those it was spiritual, in that it was suited to the sacrament of that
time. Forsooth now no one who is made perfect in piety seeks to have sons,
save after a spiritual sense; but then it was the work of piety itself to beget
sons even after a carnal sense: in that the begetting of that people was fraught
with tidings of things to come, and pertained unto the prophetic dispensation.
20. And on this account, not, so as it was allowed one man to have even several
wives, was it allowed one female to have several husbands, not even for the
sake of a family, m case it should happen that the woman could bear, the man
could not beget. For by a secret law of nature things that stand chief love
to be singular; but what are subject are set under, not only one under one,
but, if the system of nature or society allow, even several under one, not
without becoming beauty. For neither hath one slave so several masters, in
the way that several slaves have one master. Thus we read not that any of the
holy women served two or more living husbands: but we read that many females
served one husband, when the social state(1) of that nation allowed it, and
the purpose of the time persuaded to it: for neither is it contrary to the
nature of marriage. For several females can conceive from one man: but one
female cannot from several, (such is the power of things principal:) as many
souls are rightly made subject unto one God. And on this account there is no
True God of souls, save One: but one soul by means of many false gods may commit
fornication, but not be made fruitful.
21. But
since out of many souls there shall be hereafter one City of such as have
one soul and one
heart(2)
towards God; which perfection of our unity
shall be hereafter, after this sojourn in a strange land, wherein the thoughts
of all shall neither be hidden one from another, nor shall be in any matter
opposed one to another; on this account the Sacrament of marriage of our time
hath been so reduced to one man and one wife, as that it is not lawful to ordain
any as a steward of the Church, save the husband of one wife.(3) And this they
have understood more acutely who have been of opinion, that neither is he to
be ordained,(4) who as a catechumen or as a heathen(5) had a second wife. For
it is a matter of sacrament, not of sin. For in baptism all sins are put away.
But he who said, "If thou shall have taken a wife, thou hast not sinned;
and if a virgin shall have been married, she sinneth not:"(6) and, "Let
her do what she will, she sinneth not, if she be married," hath made it
plain enough that marriage is no sin. But on account of the sanctity of the
Sacrament, as a female, although it be as a catechumen that she hath suffered
violence, cannot after Baptism be consecrated among the virgins of God: so
there was no absurdity in supposing of him who had exceeded the number of one
wife, not that he had committed any sin, but that he had lost a certain prescript
rule(7) of a sacrament necessary not unto desert of good life, but unto the
seal of ecclesiastic ordination; and thus, as the many wives of the old Fathers
signified our future Churches out of all nations made subject unto one husband,
Christ: so our chief-priest,(8) the husband of one wife, signifies unity out
of all nations, made subject unto one husband, Christ: which shall then be
perfected, when He shall have unveiled the hidden things of darkness,(9) and
shall have I made manifest the thoughts of the heart, that then each may have
praise from God. But now there are manifest, there are hidden, dissensions,
even where charity is safe between those, who shall be hereafter one, and in
one; which shall then certainly have no existence. As therefore the Sacrament
of marriage with several of that time signified the multitude that should be
hereafter made subject unto God in all nations of the earth, so the Sacrament
of marriage with one of our times signifies the unity of us all made subject
to God, which shall be hereafter in one Heavenly City. Therefore as to serve
two or more, so to pass over from a living husband into marriage with another,
was neither lawful then, nor is it lawful now, nor will it ever be lawful.
Forsooth to apostatise from the One God, and to go into adulterous superstition
of another, is ever an evil. Therefore not even for the sake of a more numerous
family did our Saints do, what the Roman Cato is said to have done,(10) to
give up his wife, during his own life, to fill even another's house with sons.
Forsooth in the marriage of one woman the sanctity of the Sacrament is of more
avail than the fruitfulness of the womb.
22. If, therefore, even they who are united in marriage only for the purpose
of begetting, for which purpose marriage was instituted, are not compared with
the Fathers, seeking their very sons in a way far other than do these; forasmuch
as Abraham, being bidden to slay his son, fearless and devoted, spared not
his only son, whom from out of great despair he had received(11) save that
he laid down his hand, when He forbade him, at Whose command he had lifted
it up; it remains that we consider, whether at least continent persons among
us are to be compared to those Fathers who were married; unless haply now these
are to be preferred to them, to whom we have not yet found persons to compare.
For there was a greater good in their marriage, than is the proper good of
marriage: to which without doubt the good of Continence is to be preferred:
because they sought not sons from marriage by such duty as these are led by,
from a certain sense of mortal nature requiring succession against decease.
And, whoso denies this to be good he knows not God, the Creator of all things
good, from things heavenly even unto things earthly, from things immortal even
unto things mortal. But neither are beasts altogether without this sense of
begetting, and chiefly birds, whose care of building nests meets us at once,
and a certain likeness to marriages, in order to beget and nurture together.
But those men, with mind far holier, surpassed this affection of mortal nature,
the chastity whereof in its own kind, there being added thereto the worship
of God, as some have understood, is set forth as bearing first thirty-fold;
who sought sons of their marriage for the sake of Christ; in order to distinguish
His race after the flesh from all nations: even as God was pleased to order,
that this above the rest should avail to prophesy of Him, in that it was foretold
of what race also, and of what nation, He should hereafter come in the flesh.
Therefore it was a far greater good than the chaste marriages of believers
among us, which father Abraham knew in his own thigh, under which he bade his
servant to put his hand, that he might take an oath concerning the wife, whom
his son was to marry. For putting his hand under the thigh of a man, and swearing
by the God of Heaven,(1) what else did he signify, than that in that Flesh,
which derived its origin from that thigh, the God of Heaven would come? Therefore
marriage is a good, wherein married persons are so much the better, in proportion
as they fear God with greater chastity and faithfulness, specially if the sons,
whom they desire after the flesh, they also bring up after the spirit.
23. Nor, in that the Law orders a man to be purified even after intercourse
with a wife, doth it show it to be sin: unless it be that which is allowed
by way of pardon, which also, being in excess, hinders prayers. But, as the
Law sets(2) many things in sacraments and shadows of things to come; a certain
as it were material formless state of the seed, which having received form
will hereafter produce the body of man, is set to signify a life formless,
and untaught: from which formless state, forasmuch as it behoves that man be
cleansed by form and teaching of learning; as a sign of this, that purification
was ordered after the emission of seed. For neither in sleep also doth it take
place through sin. And yet there also a purification was commanded. Or, if
any think this also to be sin, thinking that it comes not to pass save from
some lust of this kind, which without doubt is false; what? are the ordinary
menses also of women sins? And yet from these the same old Law commanded that
they should be cleansed by expiation; for no other cause, save the material
formless state itself, in that which, when conception hath taken place, is
added as it were to build up the body, and for this reason, when it flows without
form, the Law would have signified by it a soul without form of discipline,
flowing and loose in an unseemly manner. And that this ought to receive form,
it signifies, when it commands such flow of the body to be purified. Lastly,
what? to die, is that also a sin? or, to bury a dead person, is it not also
a good work of humanity? and yet a purification was commanded even on occasion
of this also; because also a dead body, life abandoning it, is not sin, but
signifies the sin of a soul abandoned by righteousness.(3)
24. Marriage, I say, is a good, and may be, by sound reason, defended against
all calumnies. But with the marriage of the holy fathers, I inquire not what
marriage, but what continence, is on a level: or rather not marriage with marriage;
for it is an equal gift in all cases given to the mortal nature of men; but
men who use marriage, forasmuch as I find not, to compare with other men who
used marriage in a far other spirit, we must require what continent persons
admit of being compared with those married persons. Unless, haply, Abraham
could not contain from marriage, for the sake of the kingdom of heaven, he
who, for the sake of the kingdom of heaven, could fearless sacrifice his only
pledge of offspring, for whose sake marriage was dear!
25. Forsooth
continence is a virtue, not of the body, but of the soul. But the virtues
of the soul
are sometimes
shown in work, sometimes lie hid in habit,
as the virtue of martyrdom shone forth and appeared by enduring sufferings;
but how many are there of the same virtue of mind, unto whom trial is wanting,
whereby what is within, in the sight of God, may go forth also into the sight
of men, and not to men begin to exist, but only become known? For there was
already in Job patience, which God knew, and to which He bore witness: but
it became known unto men by test of trial:(4) and what lay hid within was not
produced, but shown, by the things that were brought on him from without. Timothy
also certainly had the virtue of abstaining from wine,(5) which Paul took not
from him, by advising him to use a moderate portion of wine, "for the
sake of his stomach and his often infirmities," otherwise he taught him
a deadly lesson, that for the sake of the health of the body there should be
a loss of virtue in the soul: but because what he advised could take place
with safety to that virtue, the profit of drinking was so left free to the
body, as that the habit of continence continued in the soul. For it is the
habit itself, whereby any thing is done, when there is need;(1) but when it
is not done, it can be done, only there is no need. This habit, in the matter
of that continence which is from sexual intercourse, they have not, unto whom
it is said, "If they contain not, let them be married."(2) But this
they have, unto whom it is said, "Whoso can receive, let him receive."(3)
Thus have perfect souls used earthly goods, that are necessary for something
else, through this habit of continence, so as, by it, not to be bound by them,
and so as by it, to have power also not to use them, in case there were no
need. Nor doth any use them well, save who hath power also not to use them.
Many indeed with more ease practise abstinence, so as not to use, than practise
temperance, so as to use well. But no one can wisely use them, save who can
also continently not use them. From this habit Paul also said, "I know
both to abound, and to suffer want."(4) Forsooth to suffer want is the
part of any men soever; but to know to suffer want is the part of great men.
So, also, to abound, who cannot? but to know also to abound, is not, save of
those, whom abundance corrupts not.
26. But,
in order that it may be more clearly understood, how there may be virtue
in habit, although
it be
not in work, I speak of an example, about which
no Catholic Christian can doubt. For that our Lord Jesus Christ in truth of
flesh hungered and thirsted, ate and drank, no one doubts of such as out of
the Gospel are believers. What, then, was there not in Him the virtue of continence
from meat and drink, as great as in John Baptist? "For John came neither
eating nor drinking; and they said, He hath a devil; the Son of Man came both
eating and drinking; and they said, "Lo, a glutton and wine-bibber, a
friend of publicans and sinners."(5) What, are not such things said also
against them of His household, our fathers, from another kind of using of things
earthy, so far as pertains to sexual intercourse; "Lo, men lustful and
unclean, lovers of women and lewdness?" And yet as in Him that was not
true, although it were true that He abstained not, even as John, from eating
and drinking, for Himself saith most plainly and truly, "John came, not
eating, nor drinking; the Son of Man came eating and drinking:" so neither
is this true in these Fathers; although there hath come now the Apostle of
Christ, not wedded, nor begetting, so that the heathen say of him, He was a
magician; but there came then the Prophet of Christ, marrying and begetting
sons, so that the Manichees say of him, He was a man fond of women: "And
wisdom," saith He, "hath been justified of her children."(6)
What the Lord there added, after He had thus spoken of John and of Himself; "But
wisdom," saith He, "hath been justified of her children." Who
see that the virtue of continence ought to exist even in the habit of the soul,
but to be shown forth in deed, according to opportunity of things and times;
even as the virtue of patience of holy martyrs appeared in deed; but of the
rest equally holy was in habit. Wherefore, even as there is not unequal desert
of patience in Peter, who suffered, and in John, who suffered not; so there
is not unequal desert of continence in John who made no trial of marriage,(7)
and in Abraham, who begat sons. For both the celibate of the one, and the marriage
estate of the other, did service as soldiers to Christ, as times were allotted;
but John had continence in work also, but Abraham in habit alone.
27. Therefore
at that time, when the Law also, following upon the days of the Patriarchs,(8)
pronounced
accursed,
whoso raised not up seed in Israel,
even he, who could, put it not forth, but yet possessed it. But from the period
that the fullness of time hath come,(9) that it should be said, "Whoso
can receive, let him receive,"(10) from that period even unto this present,
and from henceforth even unto the end, whoso hath, worketh: whoso shall be
unwilling to work, let him not falsely say, that he hath. And through this
means, they, who corrupt good manners by evil communications,(11) with empty
and vain craft, say to a Christian man exercising continence, and refusing
marriage, What then, are you better than Abraham? But let him not, upon hearing
this, be troubled; neither let him dare to say, "Better," nor let
him fall away from his purpose: for the one he saith not truly, the other he
doth not rightly. But let him say, I indeed am not better than Abraham, but
the chastity of the unmarried is better than the chastity of marriage; whereof
Abraham had one in use, both in habit. For he lived chastely in the marriage
state: but it was in his power to be chaste without marriage, but at chat time
it behoved not. But I with more ease use not marriage, which Abraham used,
than so use marriage as Abraham used it: and therefore I am better than those,
who through incontinence of mind cannot do what I do; not than those, who,
on account of difference of time, did not do what I do. For what I now do,
they would have done better, if it had been to be done at that time; but what
they did, I should not so do, although it were now to be done. Or, if he feels
and knows himself to be such, as that, (the virtue of continence being preserved
and continued in the habit of his mind, in case he had descended unto the use
of marriage from some duty of religion,) he should be such an husband, and
such a father, as Abraham was; let him dare to make plain answer to that captious
questioner, and to say, I am not indeed better than Abraham, only in this kind
of continence, of which he was not void, although it appeared not: but I am
such, not having other than he, but doing other. Let him say this plainly:
forasmuch as, even if he shall wish to glory, he will not be a fool, for he
saith the truth. But if he spare, lest any think of him above what he sees
him,(1) or hears any thing of him; let him remove from his own person the knot
of the question, and let him answer, not concerning the man, but concerning
the thing itself, and let him say, Whoso hath so great power is such as Abraham.
But it may happen that the virtue of continence is less in his mind, who uses
not marriage, which Abraham used: but yet it is greater than in his mind, who
on this account held chastity of marriage, in that he could not a greater.
Thus also let the unmarried woman, whose thoughts are of the things of the
Lord, that she may be holy both in body and spirit,(2) when she shall have
heard that shameless questioner saying, What, then, are you better than Sara?
answer, I am better, but than those, who are void of the virtue of continence,
which I believe not of Sara: she therefore together with this virtue did what
was suited to that time, from which I am free, that in my body also may appear,
what she kept in her mind.
28. Therefore, if we compare the things themselves, we may no way doubt that
the chastity of continence is better than marriage chastity, whilst yet both
are good: but when we compare the persons, he is better, who hath a greater
good than another. Further, he who hath a greater of the same kind, hath also
that which is less; but he, who only hath what is less, assuredly hath not
that which is greater. For in sixty, thirty also are contained, not sixty also
in thirty. But not to work from out that which he hath, stands in the allotment
of duties, not in the want of virtues: forasmuch as neither is he without the
good of mercy, who finds not wretched persons such as he may mercifully assist.
29. And there is this further, that men are not rightly compared with men
in regard of some one good. For it may come to pass, that one hath not what
another hath, but hath another thing, which must be esteemed of more value.
The good of obedience is better than of continence. For marriage is in no place
condemned by authority of our Scriptures, but disobedience is in no place acquitted.
If therefore there be set before us a virgin about to continue so, but yet
disobedient, and a married woman who could not continue a virgin, but yet obedient,
which shall we call better? shall it be (the one) less praiseworthy, than if
she were a virgin, or (the other) worthy of blame, even as she is a virgin?
So, if you compare a drunken virgin with a sober married woman, who can doubt
to pass the same sentence? Forsooth marriage and virginity are two goods, whereof
the one is greater; but sobriety and drunkenness, even as obedience and stubbornness,
are, the one good, and the other evil. But it is better to have all goods even
in a less degree, than great good with great evil: forasmuch as in the goods
of the body also it is better to have the stature of Zacchaeus with sound health,
than that of Goliah with fever.
30. The right question plainly is, not whether a virgin every way disobedient
is to be compared to an obedient married woman, but a less obedient to a more
obedient: forasmuch as that also of marriage is chastity, and therefore a good,
but less than virginal. Therefore if the one, by so much less in the good of
obedience, as she is greater in the good of chastity, be compared with the
other, which of them is to be preferred that person judges, who in the first
place comparing chastity itself and obedience, sees that obedience is in a
certain way the mother of all virtues. And therefore, for this reason, there
may be obedience without virginity, because virginity is of counsel, not of
precept. But I call that obedience, whereby precepts are complied with. And,
therefore, there may be obedience to precepts without virginity, but not without
chastity. For it pertains unto chastity, not to commit fornication, not to
commit adultery, to be defiled by no unlawful intercourse: and whoso observe
not these, do contrary to the precepts of God, and on this account are banished
from the virtue of obedience. But there may be virginity without obedience,
on this account, because it is possible for a woman, having received the counsel
of virginity, and having guarded virginity, to slight precepts: even as we
have known many sacred virgins, talkative, curious, drunken, litigious, covetous,
proud: all which are contrary to precepts, and slay one, even as Eve herself,
by the crime of disobedience. Wherefore not only is the obedient to be preferred
to the disobedient, but a more obedient married woman to a less obedient virgin.
31. From
this obedience that Father, who was not without a wife, was prepared to be
without an only
son,(1) and
that slain by himself. For I shall not without
due cause call him an only son, concerning whom he heard the Lord say, "In
Isaac shall there be called for thee a seed.(2)" Therefore how much sooner
would he hear it, that he should be even without a wife, if this he were bidden?
Wherefore it is not without reason that we often consider, that some of both
sexes, containing from all sexual intercourse, are negligent in obeying precepts,
after having with so great warmth caught at the not making use of things that
are allowed. Whence who doubts that we do not rightly compare unto the excellence
of those holy fathers and mothers begetting sons, the men and women of our
time, although free from all intercourse, yet in virtue of obedience inferior:
even if there had been wanting to those men in habit of mind also, what is
plain in the deed of the latter. Therefore let these follow the Lamb, boys
singing the new song, as it is written in the Apocalypse, "who have not
defiled themselves with women:"(3) for no other reason than that they
have continued virgins. Nor let them on this account think themselves better
than the first holy fathers, who used marriage, so to speak, after the fashion
of marriage. Forsooth the use of it is such, as that, if in it there hath taken
place through carnal intercourse aught which exceeds necessity of begetting,
although in a way that deserves pardon, there is pollution. For what doth pardon
expiate, if that advance cause no pollution whatever? From which pollution
it were strange if boys following the Lamb were free, unless they continued
virgins.
32. Therefore
the good of marriage throughout all nations and all men stands in the occasion
of
begetting, and
faith of chastity: but, so far as pertains
unto the People of God, also in the sanctity of the Sacrament, by reason of
which it is unlawful for one who leaves her husband, even when she has been
put away, to be married to another, so long as her husband lives, no not even
for the sake of bearing children: and, whereas this is the alone cause, wherefore
marriage takes place, not even where that very thing, wherefore it takes place,
follows not, is the marriage bond loosed, save by the death of the husband
or wife. In like manner as if there take place an ordination of clergy in order
to form a congregation of people, although the congregation of people follow
not, yet there remains in the ordained persons the Sacrament of Ordination;
and if, for any fault, any be removed from his office, he will not be without
the Sacrament of the Lord once for all set upon him, albeit continuing unto
condemnation. Therefore that marriage takes place for the sake of begetting
children, the Apostle is a witness thus, "I will," says he, "that
the younger women be married." And, as though it were said to him, For
what purpose? straightway he added, "to have children, to be mothers of
families." But unto the faith of chastity pertains that saying, "The
wife hath not power of her own body, but the husband: likewise also the husband
hath not power of his own body, but the wife."(4) But unto the sanctity
of the Sacrament that saying, "The wife not to depart from her husband,
but, in case she shall have departed, to remain unmarried, or to be reconciled
to her husband: and let not the husband put away his wife."(5) All these
are goods, on account of which marriage is a good; offspring, faith, sacrament.
But now, at this time, not to seek offspring after the flesh, and by this means
to maintain a certain perpetual freedom from every such work, and to be made
subject after a spiritual manner unto one Husband Christ, is assuredly better
and holier; provided, that is, men so use that freedom, as it is written, so
as to have their thoughts of the things of the Lord, how to please the Lord;
that is, that Continence(6) at all times do take thought, that obedience fall
not short in any matter: and this virtue, as the root-virtue, and (as it is
wont to be called) the womb, and dearly universal, the holy fathers of old
exercised in deed; but that Continence they possessed in habit of mind. Who
assuredly, through that obedience, whereby they were just and holy, and ever
prepared unto every good work, even if they were bidden to abstain from all
sexual intercourse, would perform it. For how much more easily could they,
at the bidding or exhortation of God, not use sexual intercourse, who, as an
act of obedience, could slay the child, for the begetting of which alone they
used the ministry of sexual intercourse?
33. And, the case being thus, enough and more than enough answer has been
made to the heretics, whether they be Manichees, or whosoever other that bring
false charges against the Fathers of the Old Testament, on the subject of their
having several wives, thinking this a proof whereby to convict them of incontinence:
provided, that is, that they perceive, that that is no sin, which is committed
neither against nature, in that they used those women not for wantonness, but
for the begetting of children: nor against custom, forasmuch as such things
were usually done at those times: nor against command, forasmuch as they were
forbidden by no law. But such as used women unlawfully, either the divine sentence
in those Scriptures convicts them, or the reading sets them forth for us to
condemn and shun, not to approve or imitate.
34. But those of ours who have wives we advise, with all our power, that they
dare not to judge of those holy fathers after their own weakness, comparing,
as the Apostle says, themselves with themselves;(1) and therefore, not understanding
how great strength the soul hath, doing service unto righteousness against
lusts, that it acquiesce not in carnal motions of this sort, or suffer them
to glide on or advance unto sexual intercourse beyond the necessity of begetting
children, so far as the order of nature, so far as the use of custom, so far
as the decrees of laws prescribe. Forsooth it is on this account that men have
this suspicion concerning those fathers, in that they themselves have either
chosen marriage through incontinence, or use their wives with intemperance.
But however let such as are continent, either men, who, on the death of their
wives, or, women, who, on the death of their husbands, or both, who, with mutual
consent, have vowed continence unto God, know that to them indeed there is
due a greater recompense than marriage chastity demands; but, (as regards)
the marriages of the holy Fathers, who were joined after the manner of prophecy,
who neither in sexual inter course sought aught save children, nor in children
themselves aught save what should set forward Christ coming hereafter in the
flesh, not only let them not despise them in comparison of their own purpose,
but let them without any doubting prefer them even to their own purpose.
35. Boys
also and virgins dedicating unto God actual chastity we do before all things
admonish, that
they be aware
that they must guard their life meanwhile
upon earth with so great humility, by how much the more what they have vowed
is heavenly. Forsooth it is written, "How great soever thou art, by so
much humble thyself in all things."(2) Therefore it is our part to say
something of their greatness, it is their part to have thought of great humility.
Therefore, except certain, those holy fathers and mothers who were married,
than whom these although they be not married are not better, for this reason,
that, if they were married, they would not be equal, let them not doubt that
they surpass all the rest of this time, either married, or after trial made
of marriage, exercising continence; not so far as Anna surpasses Susanna; but
so far as Mary surpasses both. I am speaking of what pertains unto the holy
chastity itself of the flesh; for who knows not, what other deserts Mary hath?
Therefore let them add to this so high purpose conduct suitable, that they
may have an assured security of the surpassing reward; knowing of a truth,
that, unto themselves and unto all the faithful, beloved and chosen members
of Christ, coming many from the East, and from the West, although shining with
light of glory that differeth one from another, according to their deserts,
there is this great gift bestowed in common, to sit down in the kingdom of
God with Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob,(3) who not for the sake of this world,
but for the sake of Christ, were husbands, for the sake of Christ were fathers.
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