12. But now, that as bearing
with the infirmity of men he did this, let us hear what follows:
“For though I be free from all men, yet have I made myself
servant unto all, that I might gain the more. To them that are
under the law, I became as under the law, that I might gain them
that are under the law; to them that are without law, as without
law, (being not without law to God, but under the law to Christ,)
that I might gain them that are without law.”25052505 Which thing he did, not with
craftiness of simulation, but with mercy of compassion with others;
that is, not as if to feign himself a Jew, as some have thought, in
that he observed at Jerusalem the things prescribed by the old
law.25062506 For he did
this in accordance with his free and openly declared sentence, in
which he says, “Is any called being circumcised? let him not
become uncircumcised.” That is, let him not so live, as though he
had become uncircumcised, and covered that which he had laid bare:
as in another place he saith, “Thy circumcision is become
uncircumcision.”25072507 It was in accordance then with
this his sentence, in which he saith, “Is any called being
circumcised? let him not become uncircumcised. Is any called in
uncircumcision? let him not be circumcised;”25082508 that he did those things, in
which, by persons not understanding and not enough attending, he
has been accounted to have feigned. For he was a Jew, and was
called being circumcised; therefore he would not become
uncircumcised; that is, would not so live as if he had not been
circumcised. For this he now had in his power to do. And
“under” the law, indeed, he was not as they who servilely
wrought it; but yet “in” the law of God and of Christ. For that
law was not one, and the law of God another, as accursed Manicheans
are wont to say. Otherwise, if when he did those things he is to be
accounted to have feigned, then he feigned himself also a pagan,
and sacrificed to idols, because he says that he became to those
without law, as without law. By whom, doubtless, he would have us
to understand no other than Gentiles whom we call Pagans. It is one
thing therefore to be under the law, another in the law, another
without law. “Under the law,” the carnal Jews; “in the
law,” spiritual men, both Jews and Christians; (whence the former
kept that custom of their fathers, but did not impose unwonted
burdens upon the believing Gentiles; and therefore they also were
circumcised;) but “without law,” are the Gentiles which have
not yet believed, to whom yet the Apostle testifieth himself to
have become like, through sympathy of a merciful heart, not
simulation of a changeable exterior; that is, that he might in that
way succor carnal Jew or Pagan, in which way himself, if he were
that, would have wished to be succored: bearing, to wit, their
infirmity, in likeness of compassion, not deceiving in fiction of
lying; as he straightway goes on, and says, “I became to the weak
as weak, that I might gain the weak.”25092509 For it was from this point that he
was speaking, in saying all those other things. As then, that he
became to the weak as weak, was no lie; so all those other things
above rehearsed. For what doth he mean his weakness towards the
weak to have been, but that of suffering with them, insomuch that,
lest he should appear to be a seller of the Gospel, and by falling
into an ill suspicion with ig510norant men, should hinder the
course of God’s word, he would not accept what by warrant of the
Lord was his due? Which if he were willing to accept, he would not
in any wise lie, because it was truly due to him; and for that he
would not, he did not in any wise lie. For he did not say, it was
not due; but he showed it to be due, and that being due he had not
used it, and professed that he would not at all use it, in that
very thing becoming weak; namely, in that he would not use his
power; being, to wit, with so merciful affection endued, that he
thought in what way he should wish to be dealt withal, if himself
also were made so weak, that possibly, if he should see them by
whom the Gospel was preached to him, accepting their charges, he
might think it a bringing of wares to market, and hold them in
suspicion accordingly.