On Modesty.

 I.

 Chapter II.—God Just as Well as Merciful Accordingly, Mercy Must Not Be Indiscriminate.

 Chapter III.—An Objection Anticipated Before the Discussion Above Promised is Commenced.

 Chapter IV.—Adultery and Fornication Synonymous.

 Chapter V.—Of the Prohibition of Adultery in the Decalogue.

 Chapter VI.—Examples of Such Offences Under the Old Dispensation No Pattern for the Disciples of the New.  But Even the Old Has Examples of Vengeance

 Chapter VII.—Of the Parables of the Lost Ewe and the Lost Drachma.

 Chapter VIII.—Of the Prodigal Son.

 Chapter IX.—Certain General Principles of Parabolic Interpretation.  These Applied to the Parables Now Under Consideration, Especially to that of the

 Chapter X.—Repentance More Competent to Heathens Than to Christians.

 Chapter XI.—From Parables Tertullian Comes to Consider Definite Acts of the Lord.

 Chapter XII.—Of the Verdict of the Apostles, Assembled in Council, Upon the Subject of Adultery.

 Chapter XIII.—Of St. Paul, and the Person Whom He Urges the Corinthians to Forgive.

 Chapter XIV.—The Same Subject Continued.

 Chapter XV.—The Same Subject Continued.

 Chapter XVI.—General Consistency of the Apostle.

 Chapter XVII.—Consistency of the Apostle in His Other Epistles.

 Chapter XVIII.—Answer to a Psychical Objection.

 Chapter XIX.—Objections from the Revelation and the First Epistle of St. John Refuted.

 Chapter XX.—From Apostolic Teaching Tertullian Turns to that of Companions of the Apostles, and of the Law.

 Chapter XXI.—Of the Difference Between Discipline and Power, and of the Power of the Keys.

 Chapter XXII.—Of Martyrs, and Their Intercession on Behalf of Scandalous Offenders.

Chapter XI.—From Parables Tertullian Comes to Consider Definite Acts of the Lord.

From the side of its pertinence to the Gospel, the question of the parables indeed has by this time been disposed of.  If, however, the Lord, by His deeds withal, issued any such proclamation in favour of sinners; as when He permitted contact even with his own body to the “woman, a sinner,”—washing, as she did, His feet with tears, and wiping them with her hair, and inaugurating His sepulture with ointment; as when to the Samaritaness—not an adulteress by her now sixth marriage, but a prostitute—He showed (what He did show readily to any one) who He was;118    John iv. 1–25.—no benefit is hence conferred upon our adversaries, even if it had been to such as were already Christians that He (in these several cases) granted pardon.  For we now affirm:  This is lawful to the Lord alone:  may the power of His indulgence be operative at the present day!119    Comp. c. iii. above.  At those times, however, in which He lived on earth we lay this down definitively, that it is no prejudgment against us if pardon used to be conferred on sinners—even Jewish ones.  For Christian discipline dates from the renewing of the Testament,120    Comp. Matt. xxvi. 28, Mark xiv. 24, Luke xxii. 21, with Heb. ix. 11–20. and (as we have premised) from the redemption of flesh—that is, the Lord’s passion.  None was perfect before the discovery of the order of faith; none a Christian before the resumption of Christ to heaven; none holy before the manifestation of the Holy Spirit from heaven, the Determiner of discipline itself.

CAPUT XI.

Exinde, quod ad Evangelium pertinet, parabolarum quidem discussa jam quaestio est. Si vero et factis aliquid tale pro peccatoribus edidit Dominus, ut 1001B cum peccatrici foeminae etiam corporis sui contactum permittit lavanti lacrymis pedes ejus et crinibus detergenti, et unguento sepulturam ipsius inauguranti (Luc. VII, 37, et seqq.); ut cum Samaritanae sexto jam matrimonio, non moechae, sed prostitutae (Jo. IV, 7 et seqq.), etiam, quod nemini facile, quis esset ostendit, nihil ex hoc adversariis confertur, etsi jam Christianis veniam delictorum praestitisset. Nunc enim dicimus, soli Domino hoc licet, hodie potestas indulgentiae ejus operetur. Ad illa tamen tempora quibus in terris egit, hoc definimus nihil adversum nos praejudicare, si peccatoribus etiam Judaeis venia conferebatur. Christiana enim disciplina a novatione Testamenti et, ut praemisimus, a redemptione carnis, id est Domini passione censetur. Nemo perfectus ante 1001C repertum ordinem fide, nemo Christianus ante Christum coelo resumptum, nemo sanctus ante Spiritum Sanctum de coelo repraesentatum ipsius disciplinae determinatorem.