On Rebuke and Grace, to the same Valentinus and the Monks with Him

 Chapter 2.—The Catholic Faith Concerning Law, Grace, and Free Will.

 Chapter 3 [II.]—What the Grace of God Through Jesus Christ is.

 Chapter 4—The Children of God are Led by the Spirit of God.

 Chapter 5 [III.]—Rebuke Must Not Be Neglected.

 Chapter 6 [IV.]—Objections to the Use of Rebuke.

 Chapter 7 [V.]—The Necessity and Advantage of Rebuke.

 Chapter 8.—Further Replies to Those Who Object to Rebuke.

 Chapter 9 [VI]—Why They May Justly Be Rebuked Who Do Not Obey God, Although They Have Not Yet Received the Grace of Obedience.

 Chapter 10—All Perseverance is God’s Gift.

 Chapter 11 [VII.]—They Who Have Not Received the Gift of Perseverance, and Have Relapsed into Mortal Sin and Have Died Therein, Must Righteously Be Co

 Chapter 12.—They Who Have Not Received Perseverance are Not Distinguished from the Mass of Those that are Lost.

 Chapter 13.—Election is of Grace, Not of Merit.

 Chapter 14.—None of the Elect and Predestinated Can Perish.

 Chapter 15.—Perseverance is Given to the End.

 Chapter 16.—Whosoever Do Not Persevere are Not Distinguished from the Mass of Perdition by Predestination.

 Chapter 17 [VIII.]—Why Perseverance Should Be Given to One and Not Another is Inscrutable.

 Chapter 18.—Some Instances of God’s Amazing Judgments.

 Chapter 19.—God’s Ways Past Finding Out.

 Chapter 20 [IX.]—Some are Children of God According to Grace Temporally Received, Some According to God’s Eternal Foreknowledge.

 Chapter 21.—Who May Be Understood as Given to Christ.

 Chapter 22.—True Children of God are True Disciples of Christ.

 Chapter 23.—Those Who are Called According to the Purpose Alone are Predestinated.

 Chapter 24.—Even the Sins of the Elect are Turned by God to Their Advantage.

 Chapter 25.—Therefore Rebuke is to Be Used.

 Chapter 26 [X.]—Whether Adam Received the Gift of Perseverance.

 Chapter 27.—The Answer.

 Chapter 28.—The First Man Himself Also Might Have Stood by His Free Will.

 Chapter 29 [XI.]—Distinction Between the Grace Given Before and After the Fall.

 Chapter 30.—The Incarnation of the Word.

 Chapter 31.—The First Man Had Received the Grace Necessary for His Perseverance, But Its Exercise Was Left in His Free Choice.

 Chapter 32.—The Gifts of Grace Conferred on Adam in Creation.

 Chapter 33 [XII.]—What is the Difference Between the Ability Not to Sin, to Die, and Forsake Good, and the Inability to Sin, to Die, and to Forsake Go

 Chapter 34.—The Aid Without Which a Thing Does Not Come to Pass, and the Aid with Which a Thing Comes to Pass.

 Chapter 35.—There is a Greater Freedom Now in the Saints Than There Was Before in Adam.

 Chapter 36.—God Not Only Foreknows that Men Will Be Good, But Himself Makes Them So.

 Chapter 37.—To a Sound Will is Committed the Power of Persevering or of Not Persevering.

 Chapter 38.—What is the Nature of the Gift of Perseverance that is Now Given to the Saints.

 Chapter 39 [XIII.]—The Number of the Predestinated is Certain and Defined.

 Chapter 40.—No One is Certain and Secure of His Own Predestination and Salvation.

 Chapter 41.—Even in Judgment God’s Mercy Will Be Necessary to Us.

 Chapter 42.—The Reprobate are to Be Punished for Merits of a Different Kind.

 Chapter 43 [XIV.]—Rebuke and Grace Do Not Set Aside One Another.

 Chapter 44.—In What Way God Wills All Men to Be Saved.

 Chapter 45.—Scriptural Instances Wherein It is Proved that God Has Men’s Wills More in His Power Than They Themselves Have.

 Chapter 46 [XV.]—Rebuke Must Be Varied According to the Variety of Faults. There is No Punishment in the Church Greater Than Excommunication.

 Chapter 47.—Another Interpretation of the Apostolic Passage, “Who Will Have All Men to Be Saved.”

 Chapter 48.—The Purpose of Rebuke.

 [XVI.] Be it far from us to babble in this wise, and think that we ought to be secure in this negligence. For it is true that no one perishes except t

 Chapter 49.—Conclusion.

Chapter 7 [V.]—The Necessity and Advantage of Rebuke.

To this we answer: Whoever you are that do not the commandments of God that are already known to you, and do not wish to be rebuked, you must be rebuked even for that very reason that you do not wish to be rebuked. For you do not wish that your faults should be pointed out to you; you do not wish that they should be touched, and that such a useful pain should be caused you that you may seek the Physician; you do not desire to be shown to yourself, that, when you see yourself to be deformed, you may wish for the Reformer, and may supplicate Him that you may not continue in that repulsiveness. For it is your fault that you are evil; and it is a greater fault to be unwilling to be rebuked because you are evil, as if faults should either be praised, or regarded with indifference so as neither to be praised nor blamed, or as if, indeed, the dread, or the shame, or the mortification of the rebuked man were of no avail, or were of any other avail in healthfully stimulating, except to cause that He who is good may be besought, and so out of evil men who are rebuked may make good men who may be praised. For what he who will not be rebuked desires to be done for him, when he says, “Pray for me rather,”—he must be rebuked for that very reason that he may himself also do for himself; because that mortification with which he is dissatisfied with himself when he feels the sting of rebuke, stirs him up to a desire for more earnest prayer, 26    Or, “more earnest desire for prayer.” that, by God’s mercy, he may be aided by the increase of love, and cease to do things which are shameful and mortifying, and do things praiseworthy and gladdening. This is the benefit of rebuke that is wholesomely applied, sometimes with greater, sometimes with less severity, in accordance with the diversity of sins; and it is then wholesome when the supreme Physician looks. For it is of no profit unless when it makes a man repent of his sin. And who gives this but He who looked upon the Apostle Peter when he denied,27    Luke xxii. 61. and made him weep? Whence also the Apostle Paul, after he said that they were to be rebuked with moderation who thought otherwise, immediately added, “Lest perchance God give them repentance, to the acknowledging of the truth, and they recover themselves out of the snares of the devil.”28    2 Tim. ii. 25.

CAPUT V.

7. Ad haec respondemus: Quicumque Dei praecepta jam tibi nota non facis, et corripi non vis, etiam propterea corripiendus es, quia corripi non vis. Non vis enim tibi tua vitia demonstrari: non vis ut feriantur, fiatque tibi utilis dolor, quo medicum quaeras: non vis tibi tu ipse ostendi, ut cum deformem te vides, reformatorem desideres, eique supplices, ne in illa remaneas foeditate. Tuum quippe vitium est quod malus es, et majus vitium corripi nolle quia malus es: quasi laudanda vel indifferenter habenda sint vitia, ut neque laudentur neque vituperentur; aut vero nihil agat timor correpti hominis, vel pudor, vel dolor; aut aliud agat, cum salubriter stimulat, nisi ut rogetur bonus, et ex malis qui corripiuntur, bonos faciat qui laudentur. Quod enim vult pro se fieri qui corripi non vult, et dicit, Ora potius pro me; ideo corripiendus est, ut faciat etiam ipse pro se. Dolor quippe ille, quo sibi displicet, quando sentit correptionis aculeum, excitat eum in majoris orationis affectum; ut Deo miserante, incremento charitatis adjutus desinat agere pudenda et dolenda, et agat laudanda atque gratanda. Haec est correptionis utilitas, quae nunc major, nunc minor pro peccatorum diversitate salubriter adhibetur; et tunc est salubris, quando supernus medicus respicit. Non enim aliquid proficit, nisi cum facit ut peccati sui quemque poeniteat. Et quis hoc dat, nisi qui respexit apostolum Petrum negantem, et fecit flentem (Luc. XXII, 61, 62)? Unde et apostolus Paulus posteaquam dixit, cum modestia 0920 corripiendos esse diversa sentientes, protinus addidit, Ne quando det eis Deus poenitentiam ad cognoscendam veritatem, et resipiscant de diaboli laqueis (II Tim. II, 25, 26).