Chapter 4.—5. Nor would I therefore be understood to urge that ecclesiastical discipline should be set at naught, and that every one
should be allowed to do exactly as he pleased, without any check, without a kind of healing chastisement, a lenity which should
inspire fear, the severity of love. For then what will become of the precept of the apostle, "Warn them that are unruly,
comfort the feeble-minded, support the weak, be patient
toward all men; see that none render evil for evil unto any man?"23382338
At any rate, when he added these last words, "See that none render evil for evil unto any man," he showed with sufficient
clearness that there is no rendering of evil for evil when one chastises 599those that are unruly, even though for the fault of unruliness be administered the punishment of chastising. The punishment
of chastising therefore is not an evil, though the fault be an evil. For indeed it is the steel, not of an enemy inflicting
a
wound, but of a surgeon performing an operation. Things like this are done within the Church, and that spirit of gentleness
within its pale burns with zeal towards God, lest the chaste virgin which is espoused to one husband, even Christ, should
in any of her members be corrupted from the simplicity which is in Christ, as Eve was beguiled by the subtilty of the serpent.23392339
Notwithstanding, far be it from the servants of the father of the family that they should be unmindful of the precept of
their Lord, and be so inflamed with the fire of holy indignation against the multitude of the tares, that while they seek
to gather them in bundles before the time, the wheat should be rooted up together with them. And of this sin these men would
be held to be guilty, even though they showed that those were true charges which they brought against the
traditors whom they accused; because they separated themselves in a spirit of impious presumption, not only from the wicked, whose
society they professed to be avoiding, but also from the good and faithful in all nations of the world, to whom they could
not prove the truth of what they said they knew; and with themselves they drew away into the same destruction many others
over whom they had some slight authority, and who were not wise enough to understand that the unity of the Church
dispersed throughout the world was on no account to be forsaken for other men’s sins. So that, even though they themselves
knew that they were pressing true charges against certain of their neighbors, yet in this way a weak brother, for whom Christ
died, was perishing through their knowledge;23402340
whilst, being offended at other men’s sins, he was destroying in himself the blessing of peace which he had with the good
brethren, who partly had never heard such charges, partly had shrunk from giving hasty credence to what was neither discussed
nor proved, partly, in the peaceful spirit of humility, had left these charges, whatsoever they might be, to the cognizance
of the judges of the Church, to whom the whole matter had been referred, across the sea.