CHAPTER II.
How the Apostle completed many good actions.
IT remains therefore for us to measure its meaning and drift from the inmost feelings of the speaker, and to discuss what
the blessed Apostle called good, and what he pronounced by comparison evil, not by the bare meaning of the words, but with
the same insight which he showed, and to investigate his meaning with due regard to the worth and goodness of the speaker.
For then we shall be able to understand the words, which were uttered by God's inspiration, in accordance
with his purpose and wish, when we weigh the position and character of those by whom they were spoken, and are ourselves
clothed with the same feelings (not in words but by experience), in accordance with the character of which most certainly
all the thoughts are conceived and opinions uttered. Wherefore let us carefully consider what was in the main that good which
the Apostle could not do when he would. For we know that there are many good things which we cannot deny that the blessed
Apostle
and all men as good as he either have by nature, or acquire by grace. For chastity is good, continence is praiseworthy,
prudence is to be admired, kindness is liberal, sobriety is careful, temperance is modest, pity is kind, justice is holy:
all of which we cannot doubt existed fully and in perfection in the Apostle Paul and his companions, so that they taught religion
by the lesson of their virtues rather than their words. What if they were always consumed with the constant care of all the
churches and watchful anxiety? How great a good is this pity, what perfection it is to burn for them that are offended,
to be weak with the weak!11531153
If then the Apostle abounded with such good things, we cannot recognize what that good was, in the perfection of which the
Apostle was lacking, unless we have advanced to that state of mind in which he was speaking. And so all those virtues which
we say that he possessed, though they are like most splendid and precious gems, yet when they are compared with that most
beautiful and unique pearl which the merchant in the gospel sought and wanted to acquire by selling all that
he possessed, so does their value seem poor and trifling, so that if they are without hesitation got rid of, the possession
of one good thing alone will enrich the man who sells countless good things.