18. All we therefore, who
believe in the Living and True God, Whose Nature, being in the
highest sense good and incapable of change, neither doth any evil,
nor suffers any evil, from Whom is every good, even that which
admits of decrease, and Who admits not at all of decrease in His
own Good, Which is Himself, when we hear the Apostle saying,
“Walk in the Spirit, and perform ye not the lusts of the flesh.
For the flesh lusteth against the Spirit, and the Spirit against
the flesh: For these are opposed one to another, that ye do not
what ye would.”18641864 Far be it from us to believe, what
the madness of the Manichees believes, that there are here shown
two natures or principles contrary one to another at strife, the
one nature of good, the other of evil. Altogether these two are
both good; both the Spirit is a good, and the flesh a good: and
man, who is composed of both, one ruling, the other obeying, is
assuredly a good, but a good capable of change, which yet could not
be made save by a Good incapable of change, by Whom was created
every good, whether small or great; but how small soever, yet made
by What is Great; and how great soever, yet no way to be compared
with the greatness of the Maker. But in this nature of man, that is
good, and well formed and ordered by One That is Good, there is now
war, since there is not yet health. Let the sickness be healed,
there is peace. But that sickness fault hath deserved, not nature
hath had. And this fault indeed through the laver of regeneration
the grace of God hath already remitted unto the faithful; but under
the hands of the same Physician nature as yet striveth with its
sickness. But in such a conflict victory will be entire soundness;
and that, soundness not for a time, but for ever: wherein not only
this sickness is to come to an end, but also none to arise after
it. Wherefore the just man addresseth his soul and saith, “Bless
the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all His returns: Who becometh
propitious to all thy iniquities, Who healeth all thy
sicknesses.”18651865 He
becometh propitious to our iniquities, when He pardons sins: He
heals sicknesses when He restrains evil desires. He becometh
propitious unto iniquities by the grant of forgiveness: He heals
sicknesses, by the grant of continence. The one was done in Baptism
to persons confessing; the other is done in the strife to persons
contending; wherein through His help we are to overcome our
disease. Even now the one is done, when we are heard, saying,
“Forgive us our debts;”18661866 but the other, when we are heard,
saying, “Lead us not into temptation. For every one is
tempted,” saith the Apostle James, “being drawn away and
enticed by his own lust.”18671867 And against this fault there is
sought the help of medicine from Him, Who can heal all such
sicknesses, not by the removal of a nature that is alien from us,
but in the renewal of our own nature. Whence also the
above-mentioned Apostle saith not, “Every one is tempted” by
lust, but added, “by his own:” that he who hears this may
understand, how he ought to cry, “I said, Lord, have mercy upon
me, heal my soul, for I have sinned against Thee.”18681868 For it
would not have needed healing, had it not corrupted18691869 itself by
sinning, so that its own flesh should lust against it, that is,
itself should be opposed to itself, on that side, wherein in the
flesh it was made sick.