CHAPTER XVII.
Of the inscrutable providence of God.
BY those instances then which we have brought forward from the gospel records we can very clearly perceive that God brings
salvation to mankind in diverse and innumerable methods and inscrutable ways, and that He stirs up the course of some, who
are already wanting it, and thirsting for it, to greater zeal, while He forces some even against their will, and resisting.
And that at one time He gives his assistance for the fulfilment of those things which he sees that we
desire for our good, while at another time He puts into us the very beginnings of holy desire, and grants both the commencement
of a good work and perseverance in it. Hence it comes that in our prayers we proclaim God as not only our Protector and Saviour,
but actually as our Helper and Sponsor. For whereas He first calls us to Him, and while we are still ignorant and unwilling,
draws us towards salvation, He is our Protector and Saviour, but whereas when we are already striving, He is wont to
bring us help, and to receive and defend those who fly to Him for refuge, He is termed our Sponsor and Refuge. Finally
the blessed Apostle when revolving in his mind this manifold bounty of God's providence, as he sees that he has fallen into
some vast and boundless ocean of God's goodness, exclaims: "O the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God!
How inscrutable are the judgments of God and His ways past finding out! For who hath known the mind of the Lord?"779779
Whoever then imagines that he can by human reason fathom the depths of that inconceivable abyss, will be trying to explain
away the astonishment at that knowledge, at which that great and mighty teacher of the gentiles was awed. For if a man thinks
that he can either conceive in his mind or discuss exhaustively the dispensation of God whereby He works salvation in men,
he certainly impugns the truth of the Apostle's words and asserts with profane audacity that His judgments
can be scrutinized, and His ways searched out. This providence and love of God therefore, which the Lord in His unwearied
goodness vouchsafes to show us, He compares to the tenderest heart of a kind mother, as He wishes to express it by a figure
of human affection, and finds in His creatures no such feeling of love, to which he could better compare it. And He uses this
example, because nothing dearer can be found in human nature, saying: "Can a mother forget her child, that she should not
have
compassion on the son of her womb?" But not content with this comparison He at once goes beyond it, and subjoins these
words: "And though she may forget, yet will not I forget thee."780780