Chapter V.
Now, there are three kinds of
virtue, by means of which the possession of the kingdom of heaven is
secured. The first is chastity, the second, contempt of the world, and
the third, righteousness, which, as when joined together, they very
greatly benefit their possessors, so, when separated, they can hardly
be of any advantage, since every one of them is required, not for its
own sake only, but for the sake of another. First of all, then,
chastity is demanded,
60that contempt
of the world may more easily follow, because the world can be more
easily despised by those who are not held fast in the bonds of
matrimony. Contempt of the world, again, is required, in order that
righteousness may be maintained, which those can with difficulty fully
preserve who are involved in desires after worldly advantages, and in
the pursuit of mundane pleasures. Whosoever, therefore, possesses the
first kind of virtue, chastity, but does not, at the same time, have
the second, which is contempt of the world, possesses the first almost
to no purpose, since he does not have the second, for the sake of which
the first was required. And if any one possesses the first and second,
but is destitute of the third which is righteousness, he labors in
vain, since the former two are principally required for the sake of the
third. For what profits it to possess chastity in order to contempt of
the world, and yet not to have that on account of which you have the
other? Or why should you despise the things of the world, if you do not
observe righteousness, for the sake of which it is fitting that you
should possess chastity, as well as contempt for the world? For as the
first kind of virtue is on account of the second, and the second on
account of the third, so the first and the second are on account of the
third; and if it does not exist, neither the first nor the second will
prove of any advantage.