(Book) Fulgentius of Ruspe, Roy McGregor, Donald Fairbairn - Fulgentius of Ruspe and The Scythian Monks-Correspondence On Christology and Grace
(Book) Fulgentius of Ruspe, Roy McGregor, Donald Fairbairn - Fulgentius of Ruspe and The Scythian Monks-Correspondence On Christology and Grace
(Book) Fulgentius of Ruspe, Roy McGregor, Donald Fairbairn - Fulgentius of Ruspe and The Scythian Monks-Correspondence On Christology and Grace
OF THE CHURCH
A new Tr a nsl at ion
Volume 126
THE FATHERS
OF THE CHURCH
A NEW T R A NSL AT ION
E D ITORIA L BOA RD
David G. Hunter
University of Kentucky
Editorial Director
Trevor Lipscombe
Director
The Catholic University of America Press
Donald Fairbairn
dedicates this book to his children,
Trey and Ella, who greeted him many times
as he came home from the office
by asking, “How’s Fulgie?”
CONTENTS
Preface ix
Abbreviations xi
Select Bibliography xiii
INTRODUCTION
Introduction 3
CORRESPONDENCE ON
CHRISTOLOGY AND GRACE
Letter from the Scythian Monks to 25
the Bishops (Ep. 16)
Fulgentius’s First Letter to the 43
Scythian Monks (Ep. 17)
Fulgentius’s Second Letter to the 108
Scythian Monks (Ep. 15)
Fulgentius’s The Truth about 121
Predestination and Grace
This is the second volume in the Fathers of the Church series dedicat-
ed to the North African bishop and theologian St. Fulgentius of Ruspe
(ca. 467–ca. 532). The first, translated by Robert Eno and published
in 1997, is broad in scope, containing the Life of the Blessed Bishop Ful-
gentius and a number of the bishop’s theological and moral treatises.
This current volume is meant as a complement to that earlier one, and
its focus is considerably narrower. It contains correspondence between
Fulgentius (writing on behalf of a group of North African bishops)
and a group of Latin-speaking monks from Scythia (near the mouth of
the Danube River in modern-day Romania) between AD 519 and 523.
The correspondence between Fulgentius and the Scythian monks
is significant—and striking—because it stands at the intersection of
two great theological discussions: the primarily eastern Christological
controversies between the Fourth Ecumenical Council (at Chalce-
don in 451) and the Fifth (at Constantinople in 553) and the largely
western discussions about grace (the so-called “Semi-Pelagian” con-
troversy) that stretched from the closing years of St. Augustine’s life
(the discussion began in 427, and Augustine died in 430) to the Sec-
ond Synod of Orange in 529. Contemporary western scholars nor-
mally treat these controversies over Christ and grace separately, but
there were noteworthy points of contact between the discussions. In
the 420s, John Cassian was the ardent opponent of both Nestorius on
Christology and Pelagius on grace, even though he has subsequently
been branded (probably unjustly) as the father of Semi-Pelagianism.
The correspondence between Fulgentius and the Scythian monks
from a century later is another significant instance of direct connec-
tion between the controversies over Christ and those over grace.
These connections suggest that we today may do well to treat
Christology and grace more as two sides of the same coin than as sep-
arate theological issues. Both sets of issues deal fundamentally with
the relation between God and humanity: Christological questions ask
ix
x PREFACE
how divine and human are related in the person of the Savior, and
grace-related questions ask how the divine and the human are linked
in the conversion, Christian life, and final salvation of each Chris-
tian. We offer Fulgentius’s correspondence with the Scythian monks
to the English-reading world in the hope not only that it will aid our
understanding of sixth-century Byzantine/Roman theology, but also
that it will encourage and contribute to our own thinking about the
relation between two of the Christian faith’s most central doctrines.
These translations represent a collaborative effort between Dr. Rob
Roy McGregor (a retired classicist, Romance languages specialist, and
translator of Calvin’s French sermons) and me. The stimulus that ulti-
mately led to this volume began in the early 2000s when Dr. McGregor
asked me whether there was something in my field written in French
that he could translate for a general audience. Because I had long
wanted to explore more fully the relation between grace and Christol-
ogy in the Semi-Pelagian Controversy, I asked whether he would in-
stead be willing to translate some of Fulgentius’s writings from Latin.
Dr. McGregor kindly agreed and did the initial translation of two of
Fulgentius’s writings included in this volume. Other tasks prevented
me from being able to take up Dr. McGregor’s work, and the project
languished for several years. Eventually I was able to give attention to
Fulgentius, and as Dr. McGregor translated the third document by Ful-
gentius, I revised his translations, added my own translations of the
documents by the Scythian monks, compiled the notes, and wrote the
introduction. I would like to acknowledge my debt to Dr. McGregor
for his initial offer, his patience with me when it must have seemed to
him that I was doing everything except writing on Fulgentius, and his
diligent work on Fulgentius’s writings themselves. Without him these
translations would likely have never made the transition from being
a nice idea in my mind to becoming an actual volume that could be
useful to others.
I would also like to acknowledge my gratitude to Dr. Carole Mon-
ica Burnett, staff editor of the Fathers of the Church series, for her
enthusiastic correspondence as I was working on this project and her
superb work in checking and improving the translation.
Donald Fairbairn
Charlotte, North Carolina
March 2013
ABBREVIATIONS
xi
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
xiii
xiv SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
Studies
Cappuyns, D. M. “L’origine des «Capitula» d’Orange 529.” In Recherches
de théologie ancienne et médiévale 6 (1934): 121–42.
Casiday, Augustine, and Frederick W. Norris, eds. The Cambridge History
of Christianity. Vol. 2: Constantine to c. 600. Cambridge: University
Press, 2007.
Davidson, Ivor J. A Public Faith: From Constantine to the Medieval World,
A.D. 312–600. The Baker History of the Church, Vol. 2. Ed. Tim
Dowley. Grand Rapids: Baker, 2005.
Davis, Leo Donald. The First Seven Ecumenical Councils (325–787): Their
History and Theology. Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 1983.
Dewart, Joanne McWilliam. “The Christology of the Pelagian Contro-
versy.” Studia Patristica 17 (1982): 1221–44.
Djuth, Marianne. “Faustus of Riez: Initium Bonae Voluntatis.” Augustinian
Studies 21 (1990): 35–53.
———. “Fulgentius of Ruspe: The ‘Initium Bonae Voluntatis.’” Augustin-
ian Studies 20 (1989): 39–60.
Fairbairn, Donald. Grace and Christology in the Early Church. Oxford Early
Christian Studies. Oxford: University Press, 2003.
Frend, W. H. C. The Rise of the Monophysite Movement: Chapters in the His-
tory of the Church in the Fifth and Sixth Centuries. Cambridge: University
Press, 1972.
Gray, Patrick. The Defense of Chalcedon in the East (451–553). Studies in
the History of Christian Thought 20. Ed. Heiko A. Oberman. Leiden:
Brill, 1979.
Grillmeier, Aloys. Christ in Christian Tradition. Volume One: From the Apos-
tolic Age to Chalcedon (451). Trans. by John Bowden. Rev. ed. London:
Mowbray, 1975.
Grillmeier, Aloys, and Theresia Hainthaler. Christ in Christian Tradition.
Volume Two: From the Council of Chalcedon (451) to Gregory the Great
(590–604). Part Two: The Church of Constantinople in the Sixth Century.
Trans. by John Cawte and Pauline Allen. London: Mowbray, 1995.
Gumerlock, Francis X. Fulgentius of Ruspe on the Saving Will of God: The
Development of a Sixth-Century African Bishop’s Interpretation of 1 Timothy
2:4 During the Semi-Pelagian Controversy. Lewiston, NY: The Edwin Mel-
len Press, 2009.
Lapeyre, G. G. Saint Fulgence de Ruspe: un évêque catholique africain sous la
domination vandale. Paris: P. Lathielleux, 1929.
Maxwell, David R. “Christology and Grace in the Sixth-Century Latin
West: The Theopaschite Controversy.” Ph.D. diss., University of Notre
Dame, 2003.
———. “Crucified in the Flesh: Christological Confession or Evasive
Qualification?” Pro Ecclesia 13 (2004): 70–81.
McGuckin, John A. “The ‘Theopaschite Confession’ (Text and Histori-
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY xv
cal Context): A Study in the Cyrilline Re-interpretation of Chalce-
don.” Journal of Ecclesiastical History 35 (1984): 239–55.
———. St. Cyril of Alexandria: The Christological Controversy. Supplements
to Vigiliae Christianae 23. Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1994.
Meyendorff, John. Christ in Eastern Christian Thought. Rev. ed. Crestwood,
NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1975.
Nisters, Bernhard. Die Christologie des Hl. Fulgentius von Ruspe. Münster-
ische Beiträge zur Theologie 16. Ed. F. Diechamp and R. Stapper.
Münster: Aschendorffsche Verlagsbuchhandlung, 1930.
O’Keefe, John J. “‘Impassible Suffering?’ Divine Passion and Fifth-Century
Christology.” Theological Studies 58 (1997): 38–60.
Plagnieux, Jean. “Le grief de complicité entre erreurs nestorienne et
pélagienne: d’Augustin à Cassian par Prosper d’Aquitaine?” Revue des
études augustiniennes 2 (1956): 391–402.
Smith, Thomas A. De Gratia: Faustus of Riez’s Treatise on Grace and Its Place
in the History of Theology. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame
Press, 1990.
Weaver, Rebecca Harden. Divine Grace and Human Agency: A Study of the
Semi-Pelagian Controversy. North American Patristic Society Patristic
Monograph Series 15. Macon, GA: Mercer University Press, 1996.
INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
General Historical-Theological
Background to this Correspondence
The background to Fulgentius’s correspondence with the
Scythian monks from AD 519 to 523 is a rope with many strands,
both political and theological. I will present three of the ma-
jor strands composing this rope: the Vandal rule of North Af-
rica from 439 to 535, the Christological disputes in the Eastern
Roman Empire from the Council of Chalcedon (451) until the
time of this correspondence, and the Western theological discus-
sion known as the Semi-Pelagian Controversy from its beginning
in 427 until the time of this correspondence.
1. The history of the Roman Empire’s interaction with the northern Euro-
pean tribes has been told and re-told many times. An excellent short discussion
comes in Chapter 11 of Ivor J. Davidson, A Public Faith: From Constantine to the
Medieval World, A.D. 312–600, The Baker History of the Church, Vol. 2, ed. Tim
Dowley (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 2005). See the bibliography to this chapter
of Davidson’s work (p. 426) for more detailed studies.
3
4 INTRODUCTION
2. The historical origins of the Christian movement among the Gothic and
Vandal tribes are unclear, but much of the early work of christianization is at-
tributed to the fourth-century missionary Ulfilas, who translated the Bible into
Gothic.
3. See The Life of the Blessed Bishop Fulgentius, in Robert Eno, trans., Fulgentius:
Selected Works, FOTC 95, 3–56. See also Eno’s brief introduction to Fulgentius’s
life (pp. xv–xviii) and his select bibliography (pp. xi–xiii).
4. The date one gives for Fulgentius’s ordination as a bishop depends on
INTRODUCTION 5
the date one adopts for his death. We know from The Life of the Blessed Fulgentius
28–29 (see FOTC 95, 54–55) that he died on January 1 of some year, at age 65,
after having been bishop of Ruspe for twenty-five years, that he was buried the
next day, and that his successor as bishop (Felicianus) was ordained on a Sun-
day, exactly one year after Fulgentius was buried. Since January 2 fell on a Sun-
day in 528 and 533, Fulgentius died in either 527 or 532. J. Fraipont, Introduc-
tion to Sancti Fulgentii Episcopi Ruspensis Opera, CCL 91, pp. v–vi, argues for 527
as the year of Fulgentius’s death, but Eno, Introduction to FOTC 95, pp. xv–xvi,
prefers the year 532. Fulgentius’s episcopate thus began in either 502 or 507.
5. Although Hilderic’s father, Huneric, was an Arian, his mother, Eudocia,
the daughter of the Byzantine emperor Valentinian, was a Catholic.
6 INTRODUCTION
7. For an excellent discussion of the patristic use of the Greek words ou-
sia, physis, hypostasis, and prosopon, see John A. McGuckin, St. Cyril of Alexandria:
The Christological Controversy, Supplements to Vigiliae Christianae 23 (Leiden: E. J.
Brill, 1994), 138–45.
8. For the Greek text and English translation of the Chalcedonian Defini-
tion, see (inter alia) Tanner, ed., Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils, Vol. 1: Nicaea I
to Lateran V (Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, 1990), 86.
8 INTRODUCTION
that the words hypostasis and prosopon refer to the one “person”
of Christ (which was in accord with early fifth-century usage of
those words), but it is stating that physis shall refer to the two
inner realities within Christ (two “natures” in English). Thus
Chalcedon was forging a relatively new use of the word physis,
different from the way Cyril had normally used it. As a result,
this confession of two physeis in Christ was the lightning rod that
ignited the passions of Cyril’s most adamant defenders in Egypt
and Syria. Many people read Chalcedon as if it were using physis
to mean “personal nature” and were convinced that the affirma-
tion of two physeis within the one Christ implied that the Logos
and the man Jesus were two distinct persons. As a result, they be-
lieved Chalcedon was rejecting Cyril and adopting a Nestorian
view that Christ is a divinely inspired trailblazer who can lead us
up to God. Furthermore, on the political front many in the East
and West also resented the rising preeminence of Constantino-
ple as a patriarchal see, and political jousting over the suprem-
acy of one see or another (Antioch, Alexandria, Rome, or Con-
stantinople) added to the firestorm that Chalcedon sparked.9
A generation after Chalcedon, the dispute had reached such
a pitch that the Byzantine Emperor Zeno, in a drastic effort to
bring unity to his empire, sought to bypass the beleaguered
council altogether. In 482, he published the Henotikon,10 a state-
ment of faith rooted in the work of the first three Ecumenical
Councils (Nicaea I [325], Constantinople I [381], and Ephe-
9. The standard treatment of the political aspects of the post-Chalcedonian
Christological debates is W. H. C. Frend, The Rise of the Monophysite Movement:
Chapters in the History of the Church in the Fifth and Sixth Centuries (Cambridge:
University Press, 1972). See also Chapter 6 of Leo Donald Davis, The First Sev-
en Ecumenical Councils (325–787): Their History and Theology (Collegeville, MN:
Liturgical Press, 1983). For a detailed discussion of the theological issues, see
Parts 1–3 of Aloys Grillmeier and Theresia Hainthaler, Christ in Christian Tradi-
tion, Volume Two: From the Council of Chalcedon (451) to Gregory the Great (590–
604), Part Two: The Church of Constantinople in the Sixth Century, translated by
John Cawte and Pauline Allen (London: Mowbray, 1995). A recent, relatively
brief but very clear, treatment comes in Frederick W. Norris, “Greek Christiani-
ties,” in The Cambridge History of Christianity, Vol. 2 (Cambridge: University Press,
2007), 87–109.
10. Greek text in PG 86:2620–25; English translation in (inter alia) Frend,
The Rise of the Monophysite Movement, 360–62.
INTRODUCTION 9
11. This schism lasted until 518, and, as we shall see later in this introduc-
tion, the healing of that schism was a significant part of the background to the
correspondence between the Scythian monks and Fulgentius.
12. John A. McGuckin, “The ‘Theopaschite Confession’ (Text and Histori-
cal Context): A Study in the Cyrilline Re-interpretation of Chalcedon,” Journal
of Ecclesiastical History 35 (1984): 241, points out that in the East, the Henotikon
fractured the imperium into three parties: those who accepted the text as a con-
ciliatory move with a fresh start (a return to Cyril and Ephesus rather than Chal-
cedon), those who accepted the text because it was basically Monophysite and
who hoped the dyophysites would be won over to it, and those hard-line Mono-
physites who anathematized the Henotikon because it did not explicitly anath-
ematize Chalcedon.
10 INTRODUCTION
the Council of Carthage, see CCL 149, 69–73. For an English translation, see
J. Patout Burns, ed., Theological Anthropology, Sources of Early Christian Thought
(Philadelphia: Fortress, 1981), 57–60.
16. Augustine, Ep. 194 ad Sixtum (Latin text in CSEL 57, 176–214; English
translation in FOTC 30, 301–32).
17. Augustine, De gratia et libero arbitrio (Latin text in PL 44:881–912; English
translation in NPNF, first series, 5, 443–65).
18. Augustine, De correptione et gratia (Latin text in PL 44:915–46; English
translation in NPNF, first series, 5, 471–91).
INTRODUCTION 13
grace and Christology because they saw these as two sides of the
same coin, and Fulgentius agreed with them.
and Pelagianism, but also argues convincingly against both of them. See Donald
Fairbairn, Grace and Christology in the Early Church, Oxford Early Christian Stud-
ies (Oxford: University Press, 2003). Augustine Casiday, Tradition and Theology in
St John Cassian, Oxford Early Christian Studies (Oxford: University Press, 2007),
226–27, 256, generally agrees with me. Furthermore, Maxwell, “Christology and
Grace in the Sixth-Century Latin West,” 62–63, arrives independently at an ap-
praisal of Cassian almost identical to mine.
30. For more of the details, see Frend, The Rise of the Monophysite Movement,
244–47; Maxwell, “Christology and Grace in the Sixth-Century Latin West,”
77–93. See also Maxwell, “‘Crucified in the Flesh’: Christological Confession or
Evasive Qualification?” Pro Ecclesia 13 (2004): 70–75.
31. A century earlier, Cassian—unparalleled at the time for his fluency in
both languages—probably came from the same region, although some scholars
place his birth in southern Gaul.
INTRODUCTION 17
44. Maxwell, “Christology and Grace in the Sixth-Century Latin West,” 242.
45. Rome, Bibl. Naz. 1006 (Cheltenham 12260), saec. VIII–IX (ex abbatia
S. Crucis, sed fortasse Nonantulae confectus), fol. 1v–125.
46. Grenoble, Bibl. Munic. 226 (134), saec. XII (e Cartusia Portarum), fol.
95–179.
47. Editio Bartholomei Grauii, Louanii, 1556 (iuxta codicem quem Io-
hannes Hesselius in abbatia Parcensi repperit).
48. Editio Christophori Plantini, Antuerpiae, 1573, pp. 363–437 (text taken
from Gravius’s edition).
49. Editio Sebastiani Henricpetri, Basiliae, 1587.
22 INTRODUCTION
50. Editio Iacobi Sirmondi, S.J., Parisiis, 1612. This edition is missing most
of Book Three of The Truth about Predestination and Grace.
51. Editio Petri Francisci Chiffletii, S.J., Diuione, 1649. This edition includes
only Book Three of The Truth about Predestination and Grace.
52. Editio Paschasii Quesnel et Lucae Mangeant, Sancti Fulgentii Ruspensis
Episcopi Opera, quae sunt publici iuris, omnia, Parisiis, 1684.
53. CCL 91A, 445–615.
54. The editor of the critical text of the monks’ writings (published in
1978), Fr. Glorie, repeated Fraipont’s text of the monks’ letter to the North
African bishops, without the critical apparatus but with a full set of notes in-
dicating similarities between that letter and Maxentius’s Libellus fidei. See CCL
85A, 157–72.
55. Oxford, Bodleian Library, Laud.misc.580. S. IX2, fols. 9–12.
56. ACO 4.2, 10–11.
57. CCL 85A, 29–36.
CORRESPONDENCE ON
CHRISTOLOGY AND GRACE
LETTER FROM THE SCYTHIAN MONKS
TO THE BISHOPS
1. As explained in the introduction, the monks wrote this letter during their
stay in Rome in 519, to the North African bishops whom Thrasamund had ex-
iled to Sardinia. The standard title of the letter is Epistula Scytharum monachorum
ad episcopos, and the letter is preserved as Ep. 16 in the collection of Fulgentius’s
letters. The Latin critical text may be found in CCL 91A, 551–62 (also printed
in CCL 85A, 157–72). John McGuckin has translated this letter in Journal of
Ecclesiastical History 35 (1984): 239–55, and we have made use of his translation
in composing the new one here.
25
26 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
2. The point of these seemingly convoluted sentences is that both “one na-
ture” and “two nature” confessions can be orthodox, depending on what one
means by “nature.”
3. Bishop of Alexandria in the early fifth century. An ardent student of Atha-
nasius’s writings, Cyril dominated the Christological controversy.
LETTER FROM MONKS 27
our substance subsist?’ For indeed, when one uses the word ‘in-
carnate,’ one thereby implies both the perfection of humanity
and the manifestation of our essence. As a result, people should
stop supporting themselves with such fragile reeds and aban-
doning the economy or denying the Incarnation.”4
4. Cyril of Alexandria, Second Letter to Succensus (= Ep. 46), par. 4. Greek text
and English translation in Cyril of Alexandria: Select Letters, trans. Lionel Wick-
ham, Oxford Early Christian Texts (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1983), 88–91.
Latin version by Dionysius Exiguus (with some minor differences from the text
translated here) in ACO, 1.5, 301.
5. Fourth-century bishop of Sasima, but native and resident of Nazianzus,
both in Asia Minor. He was chosen as bishop of Constantinople in 380 and briefly
headed the Council of Constantinople (Second Ecumenical Council) in 381, be-
fore being asked to resign. His “Theological Orations” on the Trinity, preached
in Constantinople in 380, have gained him the title “Gregory the Theologian.”
6. Cledonius was a presbyter at Nazianzus in Asia Minor (modern-day Tur-
key) who was acting as Gregory’s deputy while the bishop himself was at a spa in
Xanxaris recovering from the trauma of trying to lead the Council of Constanti-
nople. Gregory wrote this letter to Cledonius in 382 to counter the Apollinarian
insistence that God the Son assumed human flesh, but not a human mind, at
the Incarnation.
7. When the monks quote Gregory as saying that “the union came about es-
28 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
sentially,” they are actually strengthening the language Gregory used. The word
he used in Greek for “the union came about” (synaptomai) was used in the fourth
century not only for the union of natures in Christ, but also for an individual
Christian’s connection to God. Fifth-century christology would later deem this
word insufficient to describe the christological union, and here in the early sixth
century the monks’ alteration of Gregory’s language by using the Latin unitio
rather than societas reflects the later developments.
8. Gregory of Nazianzus, First Letter to Cledonius (= Ep. 101), par. 22. Greek
text in SC 208, 46. English translation from Greek in St. Gregory of Nazianzus:
On God and Christ, trans. Lionel Wickham et al., Popular Patristics Series (Crest-
wood, NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 2002), 157.
9. Cf. John Maxentius’s third anathema in the appendix to this work.
10. Bishop of Constantinople in the early fifth century. Nestorius was de-
posed at the Council of Ephesus in 431 and spent the last two decades of his life
in exile in Upper Egypt.
11. The Greek word hypostasis, which Cyril uses here, had originally been a
synonym for the Latin substantia, but by Cyril’s time it had become a synonym
for the Latin persona. Accordingly, the Latin version of Cyril’s letter should have
written personae (“persons”) or subsistentiae (“subsistences”) here, rather than
substantiae (“substances”). Despite the imprecision in the Latin version, how-
ever, the next sentence makes clear that the monks are speaking of Christ as a
single person, God the Son.
12. Cyril’s third anathema from his Third Letter to Nestorius (= Ep. 17), written
on November 30, 430. Greek text and English translation in Cyril of Alexandria:
Select Letters, 28–29. Latin version by Dionysius Exiguus (almost identical to the
text translated here) in ACO 1.5, 243.
LETTER FROM MONKS 29
13. The Latin word compositus naturally lends itself to a translation as “com-
posite” in English. The translation “composite,” however, might imply that two
entities have been combined to make the person of Christ. Instead, what the
monks intend here is that a single person, God the Word, was formerly simple
(that is, only God) but is now complex or compound since he has added hu-
manity to who he already was as God. Therefore, throughout this book we use
“compound” to render the adjective compositus and the noun compositio.
14. Third-century bishop of Antioch. He was condemned at two or three
synods in Antioch in 268 for teaching that the man Jesus became Son of God
when the Holy Spirit descended on him.
15. Malchion was a third-century presbyter in Antioch who led the inter-
rogation against Paul of Samosata and may have written the synodal letter that
condemned him, a letter from which the monks quote in this passage.
16. In this passage the word “Wisdom” is referring to the Logos, the Second
Person of the Trinity. We indicate this by adding the article “the” in front of
“Wisdom” and by using the masculine pronoun “he.”
17. Cf. Phil 2.6. 18. That is, in the man Jesus.
19. The acts of the Synod of Antioch survive only in fragments, which Henri
de Riedmatten has collected in Les actes du procès de Paul de Samosate, Paradosis 6
30 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
(Fribourg: Editions St-Paul, 1952). On pp. 148–50 Riedmatten discusses the frag-
ment translated here.
20. Athanasius was the leader of the Nicene party during the height of the
Arian controversy in the fourth century. This work is one whose attribution to
Athanasius is questionable. It may have been written by an unknown follower
of Apollinarius in the latter part of the fourth century. (See CPG 2, no. 3737.)
21. Notice again the confusion between “subsistence” or “person” on one
hand and “substance” on the other. To be consistent, one would need to write
“instead of the one subsistence of our Lord Jesus Christ.”
22. Ps (?)-Athanasius, That the Christ is One. Greek text in PG 28:124C.
23. Gregory of Nazianzus.
24. That is, to God the Son considered in his post-incarnate state, in which
he possesses humanity as well as the deity he has always possessed.
25. Gregory of Nazianzus, Third Theological Oration (= Or. 29), par. 18. Greek
text in A. J. Mason, ed., The Five Theological Orations of Gregory of Nazianzus, Cam-
LETTER FROM MONKS 31
rightly that even after he assumed flesh, the full and perfect God
the Word suffered no increase or diminution. On the contrary, by
his union he brought ineffable glory to the nature he assumed.
8. (IV.) But on this matter of the Trinity, even after the mystery
of the Incarnation, the Trinity remains intact because the same
God the Word, even with his own flesh, is one of the Trinity. And
this is not because his flesh is of the substance of the Trinity, but
because it is the flesh of God the Word who is one of the Trinity.
For he, and no other person,26 was the one “who ascended into
heaven, he who had descended from heaven, the Son of man
who is in heaven.”27 And for this reason we profess that God the
Word suffered in the flesh, was crucified in the flesh, and was
buried in the flesh, in accordance with the blessed Cyril when he
says: “If anyone does not confess that God the Word suffered in
the flesh, was crucified in the flesh, tasted death in the flesh, and
was made the firstborn from the dead, even though as God he is
Life and the Life-giver, let that person be anathema.”28
9. Similarly, we say that the man was Christ the Word in ac-
cordance with the saying of the blessed John: “that which was
from the beginning, that which we have heard, that which we
have seen with our eyes, that which we have looked upon and
touched with our hands, concerning the Word of Life.”29 For
the Word could not be touched by human hands according to
bridge Patristic Texts (Cambridge: University Press, 1899), 101–2. English trans-
lation from Greek in St. Gregory of Nazianzus: On God and Christ, 86.
26. The word “person” does not occur here, but the Latin adjective alius is
masculine, indicating that the monks are speaking of the Son as a person, not
of his divinity as a nature. Among both Greek and Latin writers in the fourth
through sixth centuries, it was common to write of Christ as “one” and “an-
other” with the pronouns for “one” and “another” in neuter forms, but not as
“one” and “another” with the pronouns in masculine form. The best way to ren-
der this in English is to write that Christ is one thing and another thing (or “one
nature and another nature”), but he is not one person and another person.
27. Jn 3.13.
28. Cyril’s twelfth anathema from his Third Letter to Nestorius (= Ep. 17).
Greek text and English translation in Cyril of Alexandria: Select Letters, 32–33. Lat-
in version by Dionysius Exiguus (virtually identical to the text translated here)
in ACO 1.5, 244.
29. 1 Jn 1.1.
32 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
the nature of his deity unless he became man. But as for this
child whom the blessed Virgin bore, whom she wrapped in
cloths, whom she placed in a manger, whom she had circum-
cised on the eighth day, whom the just man Simeon clasped
to his bosom, who (the evangelists indicate) was subject to his
parents, and who (those evangelists bear witness) advanced in
age and wisdom,30 it is beyond doubt that this one was by na-
ture God, the one through whom all things—visible and invis-
ible—were made, the Only-Begotten one and the Firstborn “in
whom all things hold together,”31 according to the Apostle Paul.
And the prophet Isaiah also bears witness of this fact in a clear
voice when he says: “A child has been born to us, a son has been
given to us, whose power is in his shoulder, and he will be called
‘Messenger of great counsel,’ ‘Wonderful,’ ‘Counselor,’ ‘Mighty
God,’ ‘Lord,’ ‘Father of the coming age,’ ‘Prince of peace.’”32
what the heretics say when they dare to assert that Christ is God
by advancement, not by nature. God was anointed because he
himself was made man. There is not one person who is God and
another person who is man, but the same one is God and the
same one is man. The same one who is the natural son of the
Virgin is the natural Son of God.34 For this reason we believe and
confess that there were two births of God the Word; that is, one
before the ages from the Father according to his divinity, and the
other in the last days, from the holy Virgin according to the flesh.
We execrate those who deny the birth of God the Word accord-
ing to the flesh, for they even draw back from confessing that the
wondrous deeds and the sufferings are of one and the same Son
of God—something the entire Church of God confesses.
34. In these two sentences, the words translated “person” and “one” do not
actually occur, but we have added them to convey the force of the masculine
adjectives alter and idem. See note 26, above.
35. The First Ecumenical Council, held at Nicaea in 325. It condemned
Arius and affirmed the full equality of the Son to the Father. It also produced
a creed that was eventually expanded to form what we call the Nicene Creed.
36. The Second Ecumenical Council, held at Constantinople in 381. It re-
jected Pneumatomachianism (the denial of the full deity of the Holy Spirit) by
affirming the full equality of the Spirit to the Father and the Son. It also pro-
duced—or at least ratified—the creed we now call the Nicene Creed.
37. The Third Ecumenical Council, held at Ephesus in 431. The Roman
pope Celestine was not actually present but sent legates to the council. Cyril was
the presiding bishop. There were two rival councils held at Ephesus in 431 and
another one in 449. The one headed by Cyril in 431 was ultimately called the
correct and ecumenical council, while the other one in 431 (headed by John of
Antioch with the help of Nestorius) was rejected. The council at Ephesus in 449
was also subsequently rejected by the Church. (Pope Leo of Rome referred to it
as a “robber synod.”) When the monks here refer to the “first council at Ephe-
sus,” they are considering the one in 449 to be the second, although they reject
it. They are disregarding the rival council of 431.
38. The Fourth Ecumenical Council, held at Chalcedon in 451. This is the
34 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
15. Thus we believe that the Creator of all made Adam good,
free from any assaults of the flesh and endowed with great free-
dom so that by his own capacity he might either do good, or (if
he should so desire) admit evil. Death and immortality were to
some degree placed within the freedom of his choice. For he was
capable of both, so that if he kept the commandment, he would
become immortal and have no experience of death; but if he dis-
dained the commandment, then death would follow at once. He
was then seduced by the cleverness of the serpent and voluntarily
became a violator of the divine law. So according to what had
been foretold to him, he was condemned by the just decree of
God to the punishment of death. He was completely (that is, ac-
cording to body and according to soul) changed for the worse,
lost his personal freedom, and was sold into slavery to sin.
terly mistaken, since the Apostle bears witness that both sin and,
through it, death are brought into the world.
says, “For it has been given to you by Christ, not only that you
may believe in him, but even that you may suffer for his sake.”51
20. (VII.) Our opponents say that if God causes unwilling peo-
ple to will to believe, but (in our opinion) there is no one who
can naturally believe in the Son of God or will anything good that
pertains to eternal life, then why does God not cause all people to
will to believe, since there is no favoritism with God,52 especially
when it is written of him that “he wills all men to be saved and to
come to the knowledge of the truth”?53 They argue that accord-
ing to our opinion, either God wills and is unable, or the divine
Scripture is lying. Since it is impious to think either, it remains to
say (in our opponents’ opinion) that God does not rouse up hu-
man will to believe, but instead he waits for it to come from man
so that there may be a fitting reward for those who will to believe
and a just condemnation for those who refuse to do so.
21. If these matters are really the way such heretics say they
are, then those heretics have comprehended the unsearchable
and incomprehensible judgments of God.54 If, as they them-
selves wish to say, God condemns those who are unwilling to be-
lieve but saves those who are so willing, then there is nothing at
all that needs any further investigation. But if they are right, the
Scripture that bears witness to the incomprehensible judgments
of God is greatly mistaken. On the other hand, as a way of be-
lieving in and demonstrating the incomprehensible judgments
of God, we say that from one lump of perdition some are saved
by God’s goodness and grace, while others are abandoned to a
just and hidden judgment.
22. Otherwise, let those who think that this is contrary to di-
vine justice and goodness tell us, if they can, why it was that the
one “who wills all men to be saved and to come to the knowl-
edge of the truth”55 did so many great works in Chorazin and
Bethsaida but did not will to do any in Tyre and Sidon, even
though (as he himself testifies) if he had done any such works
there, “would they not have been penitent in sackcloth and ash-
es?”56 Or why did he prohibit the Apostle from preaching the
word of salvation in Asia and Bithynia?57
24. (VIII.) But as for us, we follow that very apostle, and we
affirm that the source of all good thoughts, the harmony among
those thoughts, and even the good will itself, are from God and
through God and in God. He is the one who inwardly forgives
and corrects the wills of men, wills that had been evil and entan-
gled in earthly deeds. He does this by the inpouring and work-
ing of the Holy Spirit, as it is written, “The will is prepared by the
Lord.”60
jor influences on early Greek monasticism, the possible composer of one of the
major liturgies of the Eastern Churches, and a key leader in the latter phases of
the Arian Controversy leading to the Second Ecumenical Council in Constanti-
nople in 381. Basil was a good friend of Gregory of Nazianzus, whom the monks
have cited previously in this letter.
62. This prayer is not present in the current versions of the Liturgy of Saint
Basil and is not extant in its complete form. See McGuckin’s extended note on
the passage in Journal of Ecclesiastical History 35 (1984): 253–54n.
63. Innocent I, the pope from 402 to 417, condemned Pelagius’s thought
in January 417. The Scythian monks argue that the passages they quote in this
paragraph are from correspondence between Innocent and the North African
Council of Milevis (held in 416 as part of the deliberations of the Pelagian Con-
troversy) and between that council and the subsequent pope, Zosimus (pope
from 417 to 418). We possess this correspondence only as an addendum to
Ep. 21 by Pope Celestine I (pope from 422 to 432), who took part in the later
Semi-Pelagian Controversy and the Nestorian Controversy. It is not clear wheth-
er the quotations in this paragraph were originally written in the 410s, as the
monks allege here, or in the 430s. If the latter, it is also not clear whether they
were written by Celestine himself or by Prosper of Aquitaine.
64. Addendum to Celestine, Ep. 21 (Latin text in PL 50, col. 533A).
65. That is, the Council of Milevis was explaining Pope Innocent’s idea to
Pope Zosimus.
66. In the summer of 417, Zosimus presided over a Roman synod that re-
versed Innocent’s condemnation of Pelagius. But then in the following year, he
40 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
In the letters that you arranged to have sent to all the provinces, you
made the assertion that we must ascribe all good things to their author,
from whom they originate.67 Thus, we have by the inspiration of God
brought all these matters before the consciences of our brothers and
fellow-bishops. We therefore accept this formulation so that you may
cut down all those who extol freedom of choice over and against God’s
assistance as if you were sweeping through them with the drawn sword
of truth.What might you do with this free choice other than making us
conscious of our complete unworthiness? If, by God’s inspiration, you
have recognized this fact faithfully and wisely and have expressed it
trustingly and truthfully, it is surely because “the will is prepared by the
Lord.”68 God himself touches the hearts of his children so that the vir-
tuous may accomplish something through their Father’s inspirations,
“for as many as are led by the Spirit of God, these are sons of God.”69
God touches our hearts in this way so that we may not think that our
choice is absent in any particular good action of the human will, and
even more, so that we may not doubt that his grace precedes that will.
For God works in the hearts of men, and in free choice itself, in such a
way that holy thoughts, pious counsels, and every motion of the good
will may all be from God. Through him we are able to do any sort of
good thing, but “apart from him we can do nothing.”70
human race. The whole Church joins with them, asking and beseech-
ing earnestly that God may give faith to the faithless, set idolaters free
from the errors of their faithlessness, lift the veil from the hearts of the
Jews so that the light of truth may appear to them, cause the heretics to
recover their senses in their understanding of the Catholic faith, give
the schismatics a restored spirit of love, bestow the remedies of peni-
tence to the lapsed, and finally, open the halls of heavenly mercy to the
catechumens who have been led to the sacraments of regeneration.
The effect of these prayers shows that one does not ask the Lord for
these things either carelessly or in vain, since he deigns to draw many
people out of every kind of error. He plucks people from the power of
darkness and transfers them to the kingdom of his beloved Son,71 and he
makes vessels of mercy out of vessels of wrath.72 One can sense that this is
the work of God to such a degree that when one gives thanks and praise
for the illumination or correction of people such as these, one must as-
cribe such praise to the God who has brought the changes about.73
The same teacher also concludes this very letter like this:
“We believe that these writings have taught us according to the
aforementioned canons of the apostolic see and that these are
quite sufficient for the confession of God’s grace (from whose
1. This list of senders includes eight names not listed among the addressees
in the monks’ letter to the bishops: two Victors, Scholasticus, Vindicianus, Victo-
rianus, Quodvultdeus, Felix, and a second Januarius. This list does not include
Albanus, who is listed among the addressees of the monks’ letter.
2. This list of addressees corresponds exactly to the list of the senders of the
monks’ letter to the bishops. Fulgentius’s second letter (Ep. 15) has a slightly
different list of addressees.
3. As explained in the introduction, Fulgentius wrote this letter on behalf of
the North African bishops exiled to Sardinia. He wrote it to the Scythian monks
in 519, while they were in Rome. The Latin critical text may be found in CCL
91A, 563–615.
4. Gal 5.6.
43
44 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
2. (II.) You say, therefore, that “in accordance with the tradi-
tion of the Holy Fathers,” you confess “our Lord Jesus Christ
in two united and unconfused natures (that is, the natures of
divinity and humanity), in one person or subsistence.”12 As a
consequence of this, you also assert that you believe that “the
blessed Mary is, properly and in truth, the Bearer of God; be-
cause, in other words, she truly and properly gave birth to God
the Word incarnate and made man, and united essentially or
naturally to flesh.”13 Let it suffice for us to identify these points
from the tenor of your letter. The other things that your pro-
fession about the Incarnation of the Lord includes depend on
these points.
12. Scythian Monks’ Letter to the Bishops (= Ep. 16), par. 3 (Latin text in
CCL 91A, 552, and CCL 85A, 158; English translation in this volume, p. 26).
13. Scythian Monks’ Letter to the Bishops (= Ep. 16), par. 4 (Latin text in
CCL 91A, 552, and CCL 85A, 159; English translation in this volume, p. 27).
14. 1 Tm 3.16. 15. Cf. Jn 1.1–2.
16. Cf. 1 Cor 1.24.
46 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
all things were made and without whom nothing was made.17
This same is the Only-begotten God, “although he existed in
the form of God. . . .”18 (That is, he was equal in all things to the
one who begat him, he possessed a unity of natural essence with
him, and he was in that nature which he, being eternal, has
from the Father—that which the Father naturally is. The same
one was true God, most high and immutable; and he was not a
different God from the Father, but instead, although the per-
sonal distinction remained, he was naturally one God with the
Father. And of course, he was neither less than nor subsequent
to the Father, nor of a different power, nor of another essence.)
This same one, “although he existed in the form of God, nev-
ertheless he did not regard being equal with God as something
to be forcibly kept, but he emptied himself by taking the form
of a slave.”19 The same one “was made in the likeness of men”;
the same one was “found to be in the human condition.”20 In
him there could be no thought of forcibly keeping, because
the begotten fullness of natural equality remains in him, since
he is from the Father’s substance by an ineffable and eternal
birth. Therefore, “he emptied himself by taking the form of a
slave.” Thus indeed, God willed to be man naturally, and so the
Lord of all things took on a servile nature without loss of his
own sovereignty. Correspondingly, having emptied himself, he
compassionately accepted the form of a slave.The holy Apostle
of the New Covenant, after being made a fit minister by God,
just as he himself bears witness,21 also himself testifies about this
form, lest anyone of us who hears about the emptied Son of
God should by evil thought imagine that the form in the Only-
begotten God has lost or diminished its equality with the Fa-
ther’s form, and lest such a person, by following the crooked,
circuitous ways of the serpent’s deception, should not hold to
the path of right faith. To prevent this from happening, Paul
clarified that emptying by removing the unclear elements,
when he added subsequently: “by taking the form of a slave.”
Therefore, the Only-begotten God’s emptying was his taking
4. Therefore, the Word of God, the very same God the Word,
when he took human flesh from the flesh of his mother, did in-
deed receive the form of a slave in such a way that he deigned to
become what he in fact became. But he did this while remaining
in the form of God, that is, eternal and immutable God through
that unity of person in which he received the form of a slave. In-
deed, when “he was made in the likeness of men, he was found
to be in the human condition.”24 Although in all ways he had
immutable deity from the nature of the Father, nevertheless he
who was not created deigned to be created, and he who was not
created but begotten from the Father willed to be born from
a woman. In this manner “the Word was made flesh”25 so that
there might be “one mediator between God and men, the man
Christ Jesus,”26 “who is God over all things and is blessed into
the ages.”27 He is the one true Son of God and Son of man, one
and the same from the Father without beginning, always having
been the begotten God, but indeed also truly God according to
the flesh, conceived and born in time from his mother. It was
not that the Only-begotten God received an unconceived flesh,
but rather, God himself was conceived in that flesh in the pro-
foundest humility. Indeed, according to the flesh God himself
was created in and from the Virgin, and in fact he who had cre-
ated his own mother was created from and in that flesh.
5. (III.) If, however, God the Word had become flesh in the
Virgin in such a way that he had not come from her, it is cer-
tain that God himself would not have possessed the substance
of flesh from the flesh of his mother but would simply have
passed through the Virgin. In such a case, he could not have
accomplished the mystery of becoming the mediator for our
salvation, because in that case Christ the Son of God would not
have unconfusedly united true, full humanity and divine sub-
stance in himself. Therefore, the medical remedy (as it were)
that divine goodness employed was that the Only-begotten God,
who is in the bosom of the Father,28 should become man, not
only in a woman but also from that woman. Without doubt we
are commanded by the prophets of God to believe and confess
this. Indeed, the prophet did not keep silent about the fact that
God was made man, but he said: “Mother Zion will say, a man,
truly a man, was born in her, and the Most High himself has
established her.”29 Isaiah, also filled with the Holy Spirit, fore-
told the mystery of the coming Incarnation of the Son of God
thus: “Behold, a virgin will conceive in her womb and will bear a
son, and his name will be called Emmanuel, which is translated
‘God with us.’”30 Therefore, because the one whom the Virgin
conceived in her womb and bore is called “God with us,” we
recognize that indeed God has been conceived in the Virgin’s
womb and has been born. The Gospel also says of Mary: “She
was found to be with child by the Holy Spirit.”31 Joseph, too,
Mary’s husband (with whom she did not have sexual relations
and experience corruption of the flesh, but who was the witness
flesh which would bring the Truth from among the descendants
of Abraham himself. Therefore, that Truth is the one Christ the
Son of God in the natures of divinity and flesh. In him the one-
ness of person does not confuse the human and divine natures,
and the unconfused oneness of the natures does not make
them exist as two persons. Consequently, the truth of our recon-
ciliation and salvation remains because God the Only-begotten
became true man for us, and the man who was conceived and
born was none other than the Only-begotten God.
10. (V.) When, however, we say, “The Lord Christ is God and
man,” we point not to a duality of persons, but to the fact that
a very true union of both natures has taken place without any
mingling. To be sure, the same God who is man is the same
man who is God; for human nature was wondrously united to
God the Word in such a way that the true God himself would
become true man, and indeed in such a way that the true hu-
manity of the incarnate Word would possess no other person
than the incarnate Word. For it was a human substance, not a
person, that was added to God. Therefore, God with his own
flesh is one Christ—the Son of God and the Son of man, the
same one at the same time both Word and flesh. Indeed, the
same Word is flesh, for the same God is man.
11. (VI.) But God the Word did not receive flesh in some way
without becoming flesh, since the evangelist says: “The Word
41. Cf. 1 Cor 1.24.
FULGENTIUS, FIRST LETTER 53
was made flesh.”42 And the most high and most great God did
not assume the nature of flesh in the way [he dwelt] in one of
the patriarchs or prophets. In that case, God would certainly
have been in that man, but God himself would not have been a
man. May it never happen that the Christian conscience holds
to such an understanding or that anyone among the faithful
permits himself to be defiled by such great ungodliness. For
when “the Word was made flesh,” divinity thus deigned to unite
humanity miraculously to itself in such a way that for the life of
the world, that humanity of his would come into being as di-
vine humanity in one and the same God and man, Christ, while
preserving the reality of both natures. For God, “not withhold-
ing his mercies in his anger,”43 was made man for this purpose:
that whatever he had created whole in man, God might make it
completely whole again once he had taken it into himself.
42. Jn 1.14.
43. Ps 76.10, following LXX (77.9 modern).
44. Cf. Lk 1.28, 42.
45. Cf. Lk 1.35.
54 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
13. This is the grace by which it came about that God (who
came to take away sins because there is no sin in him) was con-
ceived from sinful flesh and born as man in the likeness of sinful
flesh. To be sure, the flesh of Mary had been conceived in iniq-
uity in accordance with human practice, and so her flesh (that
gave birth to the Son of God in the likeness of sinful flesh) was
indeed sinful. For the Apostle bears witness that “God sent his
own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh.”46 That is to say, he sent
the one who, “although he existed in the form of God, never-
theless did not regard being equal with God as something to be
forcibly kept, but emptied himself by taking the form of a slave.
He was made in the likeness of men.”47 For that reason, the Son
of God (the same one who was made in the likeness of men) was
sent in the likeness of sinful flesh so that he might become like
men in the true flesh that he himself had created and so that
God (created in the flesh without sin) might remove our dissimi-
larity to himself. He understood this dissimilarity in our flesh to
be a result not of his work but of our sin. Therefore, as the Son of
God appeared, he was sent in the likeness of sinful flesh, because
human mortality was present in his true human flesh, but not
human iniquity. When it is said that truly the likeness of sinful
flesh is in the Son of God, or rather that the Son of God is in the
likeness of sinful flesh, one must believe that the Only-begotten
God did not take the defilement of sin from the mortal flesh of
the Virgin, but that he received the full reality of its nature so that
the Source of truth might arise from the earth, the Source whom
the blessed David announces in a prophetic word, saying: “Truth
has sprung out of the earth.”48 Consequently, Mary (whom God
accepted) truly conceived and bore God the Word incarnate.
ing conceived and born from her. For if God the Word had not
been born as a true and full human being by uniting human na-
ture (taken from the Virgin) to himself in an exceptional way,
he could never have been the source of spiritual birth from God
for us who had been born carnally. But in order that the divine
birth might be given to those who had been carnally born, the
divine majesty was first conceived and born in the true flesh of
the Only-begotten Son. For salvation was far from sinners, and
our iniquities separated us greatly from God. Because we were
held bound by the fetters of death from the very moment of our
fleshly birth, and because we could be set free from this death
only by the blessing of spiritual birth, God was born of man
so that men might be born of God. For this reason, therefore,
Christ the Son of God, that is, the true God and eternal life, was
born and died in true flesh so that we might be reborn spiritu-
ally in the one name of the Trinity through the sacrament of
baptism. The Apostle teaches this, saying: “We who have been
baptized in Christ Jesus have been baptized in his death.”49
15. Therefore, the first birth of Christ, the Son of God, was
from God, and the second was from man. But our first birth
is from man, and our second is from God. And since God re-
ceived true flesh from the womb as he was about to be born, he
thus granted the Spirit of adoption to us who have been reborn
through baptism. That which he was not by nature through his
first birth, he was made by grace through his second birth. This
happened so that what we were not by nature through our first
birth, we might become by grace through our second birth. But
God conferred grace on us as he was born from man; and we
received grace freely, so that we might become participants in
the divine nature, as a gift from the God who was born in flesh.
Therefore, because the Son of God became the Son of man,
“as many as received him” (just as the blessed John the evan-
gelist testifies) “to them he gave the power to become sons of
God, to those who believe in his name, who have been born not
from blood,50 nor from the will of the flesh, nor from the will of
man, but from God.”51 Indeed, after the eternal birth that the
co-eternal Son possesses from the Father, if that Only-begotten
Son (who is in the bosom of the Father) had not undergone
a second birth for the sake of justifying man, then since man
had been conceived in iniquity, he would not be free from the
entanglements of his first birth. But according to the blessed
John’s word, “for this purpose the Son of God has appeared,
that he may destroy the works of the devil.”52 Thus, since his first
birth (by which he is true God and eternal life from the nature
of the Father) had no beginning [in time], the same God took
on the beginning of a second birth in time from the Virgin.
plural: “not from bloods.” The idea is that this spiritual birth of the Christian is
not like fleshly birth, which (in ancient understanding) involves the mingling of
the parents’ blood.
51. Jn 1.12–13. 52. 1 Jn 3.8.
53. Jn 5.26. 54. Lk 19.10.
55. Rom 4.25.
FULGENTIUS, FIRST LETTER 57
sure of my Spirit upon all flesh,”59 and, “All flesh shall see God’s
salvation,”60 and, “As you have given him power over all flesh,”61
and, “Unless those days had been shortened, no flesh would be
saved.”62 In keeping with this custom, just as the whole man is
indicated in some passages of the Holy Scriptures with the word
“flesh,” so also in other places the [same] whole man is desig-
nated by the word “soul” alone. For the patriarch Abraham left
his land, his relatives, and the house of his father at the com-
mand and with the help of the God who called him (for he was
in no way able to fulfill what God commanded without the help
of the one who had commanded). As he departed, he took with
him the men whom he possessed, and the narrative states that he
took with him the souls he had acquired in Haran. Likewise, as
Jacob was going down to Egypt, Holy Scripture reminds us that
seventy-five souls were in his caravan.63 The blessed Apostle Peter
also says that eight souls were saved through water at the time of
the flood.64 Also, in the Acts of the Apostles, when the Jews were
suddenly and wonderfully conscience-stricken by the preaching
of that same blessed Peter and were converted from being faith-
less to being full of faith by the right hand of the Most High, it
is written that “about three thousand souls were added on that
day.”65 We understand from these testimonies that when either
“flesh” or “soul” is used alone, full and complete human nature is
meant. Therefore, the Word made flesh is one complete Christ;
one from both and in both (that is, human and divine natures).
In him the glorious union of both natures remains absolute, so
that whoever diminishes Christ’s humanity to stress his divinity or
detracts from the divinity to stress his humanity denies Christ by
a sacrilegious infidelity and blasphemous preaching. And John
the Apostle, filled with truth, testifies “that every spirit that denies
Jesus is not from God, and this one is an antichrist.”66
was only God? But at that time the same God the Word (who was
always in the form of God) began to be Christ when he, God,
emptied himself and took the form of a slave without diminish-
ing the fullness of his nature. Therefore, God became Christ so
that Christ might be perfect God and man, for the Word deigned
to become flesh so that the flesh might be able to be designated
by the name “Word,” that is, God. For the flesh of Christ was not
Christ before it was assumed by the Word; neither did flesh itself,
that is, some man himself, take upon himself the form of the liv-
ing God. Instead, God, who was in the form of God, took the form
of a slave. God, equal to the Father, was “made in the likeness of
men and was found to be in the human condition.”67 He who
was rich became poor on our account so that we might become
rich through his poverty.68 Therefore, the Word-made-flesh is one
Christ; but that Word without flesh was the eternal God. Not only
was the flesh of Christ apart from the Word not ever Christ, but
that flesh had not even been conceived as a person. Therefore,
the Word-made-flesh was eternal before he became flesh, but the
flesh of the Word took its personal beginning in God the Word
himself. But because the Word-made-flesh is one Christ, the Son
of God and of man, the Word is not one person and the flesh an-
other person.69 Instead, one and the same person is without be-
ginning since he is eternal God begotten of the Father, and this
same person has a temporal beginning according to the flesh.
This same God was made man from a virgin, and he is one Only-
begotten Son of God from eternity in his divinity and with a
beginning in his flesh. From eternity (that is, in his divinity), he is
surely the Creator of things visible and invisible; and from the be-
ginning (in his flesh), he is the one saving his people from their
sins. From eternity in his divinity, the same one is co-eternal with
the Father (from whom he came forth ever living); and from his
beginning in his flesh, he came after his mother (from whom he
was born in time so as to die in time). For the Apostle testifies
that “at the right time Christ died for the ungodly.”70
18 bis. Therefore, it was not the Trinity (that is, not the Fa-
ther and the Son and the Holy Spirit together), nor the Father
alone or the Holy Spirit alone—(that is, not the one who be-
gat the Son or the one who proceeded from the Father) [who
was born for us]. Rather, it was the Son alone (that is, the one
whom the Father begat as the co-eternal and coequal Son for
himself in the unity of their nature—one person of the Trin-
ity, Christ the unique Son of God). This happened so that the
one who was conceived and born from the womb of his Virgin
Mother according to the flesh in order to save us would be the
same one who was the true and most high God from the bosom
of God the Father. It was not the Trinity, but the Only-begotten
from the Father, Christ the Son of God, who was a child in the
flesh and grew in the flesh. The Father (who is perfect and in-
finite) recognizes him to be his equal in perfection and infi-
niteness through the unity of divinity. It was not the Trinity, but
the one who was “the way, the truth, and the life,”71 Christ the
Son of God, who mercifully lived through the course of time
in the flesh through the human states from infancy to mature
young manhood. Since he was eternal in the unity of the Fa-
ther’s nature, he wondrously created the ages, and since he was
unchangeable, he made the uncertainties of temporal circum-
stances certain. It was not the Trinity, but Christ, the splendor
of the Father’s glory, who suffered in the flesh for us and who
was the sole person born from his Father God and was himself
the impassible God. Therefore, we sincerely believe what must
not be doubted: that Christ the Son of God himself tasted death
in the flesh for our sakes while still preserving the immortality
of his divinity. As we hear in the truthful preaching of the holy
Apostle John, he is the true Son of God the Father and true God
and eternal life.72 It was not the Trinity, but the Word-made-
flesh, Christ the Son of God, who deigned to be crucified and
die in that flesh and who arose. Since he remains the Life, he
raised his very own flesh from the tomb. It was not the Trinity,
but Christ (who is God over all things),73 who ascended in the
flesh into heaven in the sight of his disciples, and who is com-
ing back from heaven in the flesh. He did not desert heaven
when he took flesh on earth, and in his divinity he did not des-
ert his own followers on earth when he ascended into heaven
in the flesh. For he promised this when he said: “Lo, I am with
you always, even to the end of the age.”74 Therefore, he who is
in the form of God is God, according to the prophecy of the
blessed Jeremiah: “He is lofty and has no end; he is highly ex-
alted and infinite.”75 Shortly thereafter the same prophet says of
him: “He is our God, and no other will be compared to him; he
has laid hold of the complete path of instruction and has given
it to Jacob his son and to Israel his beloved.”76 In the form of a
slave (in which he was made a little less than the angels),77 he
was (as the same prophet says) “afterwards seen on earth and
interacted with men.”78 Unbelieving men saw the same mortal
and changeable man, but those who now truly believe in him
with a clean heart are going to see him as God, immortal and
unchangeable by nature. For true faith now cleanses the hearts
of men, so that the glory of the future resurrection will make
those hearts able to see God.
84. Jn 20.28.
85. Mt 28.19.
64 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
the Holy Spirit. For no one would think even remotely that faith
in Christ as one person is to be rejected, since the same per-
son is the only Son in the Trinity with the Father and the Holy
Spirit. This one person is Christ Jesus, who created the world
and shed his blood for us. Therefore, everyone who is washed
in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit in
the sacrament of holy regeneration is not truly baptized unless
his baptism is in fact in Christ’s death and in his name. From
this fact, one may clearly see that we have been buried with him
in death through baptism, and in Christ’s name alone (with the
Father and the Holy Spirit) is it certain that we have been bap-
tized. This is what the Roman Church (which is the summit of
the world, enlightened—as if by brightly shining rays—by the
words of two great lights, namely Peter and Paul, and embel-
lished with their bodies), along with the whole of Christendom,
holds and teaches. And she also believes this without hesitation,
leading to justification, and she confesses this without doubting,
leading to salvation. For these are the words that blessed Peter
preached about the Son of God to the Jews: “Be penitent and
be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for
the remission of sins.”86 Furthermore, so that we might believe
very confidently that we have been baptized into the death of
Christ, blessed Paul placed (as if in a most excellent mirror to
be seen by all) this mystery of our salvation in that letter which
he wrote to the Romans, saying: “We who have been baptized in
Christ have been baptized in his death; for we have been buried
with him through baptism into death.”87
25. Therefore, the “first man” created was “of the earth,
earthy.”90 He did indeed receive the grace by which he would
become unable to sin if he were unwilling to sin. He had not
yet received the grace by which he would be neither willing
nor able to sin at all. As a consequence, the good and just Lord
would certainly have deemed it necessary to bestow that grace
afterwards as a reward, if previously the slave had voluntarily
preserved this initial grace in his actions. Therefore, if he had
neglected to obey a good and just command, the sinner would
have undergone the death of the soul that he himself had per-
niciously inflicted upon himself by doing wrong, and he would
have even been punished with difficulties in the present life
through the death of the body. (Someone who had been unwill-
ing to preserve righteousness in his heart would not have been
allowed to hold onto his condemned fleshly life of sin forever.)
And if he had obstinately transgressed the saving commands
and had been willingly liable to spiritual death, he would have
been subsequently bound fast by the necessity of bodily death
as a punishment. For unless the soul had preceded by dying
through sin, the body would never have followed by dying in
punishment. The apostolic authority teaches this when it says:
“The body is indeed dead because of sin.”91 Therefore, after
sin had been committed by a voluntary lie, the sinner deserved
to hear in these words the sentence of the God who punishes:
“You are earth, and to earth you will go.”92 Consequently, if man
did not become dust by sinning, he would not be returning to
dust as flesh.
26. (XIII.) Therefore, that man was created without any ne-
cessity to sin, and in his very act of sinning he lost the health of
his soul by doing wrong; and he immediately lost the capacity to
think about those things that pertain to God. For he forgot to
eat his [spiritual] bread and was stripped of his garment of faith
of their young age, commit any sin by their own will. But the
Apostle defines death as the wages of sin101 and says again that
the sting of death is sin,102 by which death, with its sting, was in-
deed introduced into man. Thus sin is called the sting of death,
not because sin entered the world through death, but because
death entered through sin; just as we call a poisoned cup the
cup of death, not because the cup is given by death, but because
death is associated with that cup. Therefore, by what justice is
a child subjected to the wages of sin if there is no pollution of
sin in him? Or how do we know he has been pricked by death
if he has not felt the sting? And since there is no iniquity with
God (who made man in his image), what kind of justice is it if
God’s image [man], who can do nothing evil of himself, is not
allowed to enter the kingdom of God unless he is redeemed
by the blood of God’s Son? In truth, whoever does not enter
by that Son will be tormented by the endless pains of eternal
fire. By what justice, then, does a just God impose punishment
upon children who are born without sin, in whom he finds no
cause for punishment? What kind of kindness on the part of the
Creator God is it if he creates his own image [man] and con-
demns him in the absence of any iniquity, since “God who takes
vengeance is not unrighteous”?103 If these people do not want to
live in fatal godlessness by insulting God himself, let them admit
that the first man transmitted sin with death to all men.
29. (XV.) On the contrary, such people must see and avoid
another impiety in this opinion of theirs. For when they say that
children do not inherit original sin from Adam, they thus assert
that those who (according to their own admission) possess hu-
man flesh do not actually possess sinful flesh. But since they do
not deny that children possess human flesh when they deny that
their flesh is sinful, they are consequently denying that human
flesh is actually sinful flesh. Nevertheless, they concede to the
Apostle who compels them to admit that “God sent his own Son
in the likeness of sinful flesh.”104 For this reason, therefore, the
blindness of a godless confession compels them to pretend (by
30. But perhaps they will say that the Son of God was sent in
the likeness of that sinful flesh such as men possess when they
can already sin in accordance with their own will (whereupon
their flesh is rightly called sinful flesh), rather than being sent
in the kind of flesh that children have at birth, when they have
no particular will to sin. But in this line of reasoning, they do
not consider that if the flesh of children had been different
in quality from the flesh of adults, God would have come only
in the likeness of the flesh of children (who, they say, have no
original sin). For the flesh of Christ would be more similar to
children’s flesh (with which it would have had a common real-
ity in substance and quality) than to the flesh of adults (with
whom only the nature of the flesh, not the stain, would have
been shared with him). But perhaps they want Christ’s flesh to
have had only a likeness of nature with the flesh of adults, and
also to have shared purity with the flesh of children. Therefore,
let them confess that children—whom they assert to be surely
born in human flesh, but they deny they are stained by con-
72 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
105. Pelagius was reputed to have argued that Adam’s sin affected his pos-
terity only in an external way, by giving human beings a bad example. In this
view, there was no transmission of sin from generation to generation.
106. Cf. Jb 14.4.
107. Ps 50.7 (51.5 modern).
FULGENTIUS, FIRST LETTER 73
that occasion, to be sure, the faithful and just God (who does
not inflict wrath where he finds no guilt) speaks thus to our fa-
ther Abraham: “The male child who has not been circumcised
in the flesh of his foreskin on the eighth day, that soul shall be
cut off from his people, for he has transgressed my covenant.”108
Therefore, whoever denies original sin in children born accord-
ing to the flesh must explain in what way an eight-day-old infant
could have transgressed God’s covenant unless he transgressed
in that way in which all have sinned.109 For the Apostle asserts
that before they are born, infants have done nothing good or
evil.110 So let us now consider that those born—not only within
the first eight days after their birth (at which time infants were
commanded to be circumcised), but also after the day of cir-
cumcision, during the whole time of their infancy—are unable
to transgress God’s covenant. As a result, the knowledge of that
same covenant cannot be made known to them either.
33. (XVI.) Neither natural capacity nor the letter of the holy
law delivers anyone from this sin that fleshly birth introduces
originally, but only the faith of Jesus Christ, the Son of God,
who came “to seek and to save that which had perished.”115 He
“died for the ungodly,”116 giving “himself for us,” as the Apostle
says, “as an offering and a sacrifice to God, as a sweet-smelling
savor.”117 In this mediator between God and men, the status of
human nature has been restored and the work of fulfilling the
law has been accomplished; for the weakness of nature has in
no way been able to stand up to his power. Since “all our days
have passed away, and we have passed away in [God’s] wrath,”118
this weakness is deprived of both illumination and power, it sins
blindly apart from the law, and, as a result, it does not know it
is sinning. For this reason it is said: “I would not have known
covetousness, unless the law had said, ‘You shall not covet.’”119
In addition, not only has the hearing of the law removed no
one from the power of darkness, but indeed that hearing has
increased sinners’ transgression. Without the grace of faith, to
be sure, a known law condemns more harshly than an unknown
law. To the degree that ignorance of sin is diminished, to that
degree is the sinner’s guilt increased. Therefore, the Apostle
says: “For the law brings about wrath; for where there is no law
there is no transgression.”120 The same Apostle also says that the
law “was added because of transgression”121 and that “Scripture
has shut up all things under sin so that justification might be
given to believers by the faith of Jesus Christ.”122 Therefore, con-
cerning the ability of free choice alone (which, the haughtier it
is by nature, the more subject it is to the dominion of sin and
death unless it is preceded by the help of God’s grace, by which
a good will is restored and preserved in man), how does it guar-
antee for itself the beginning of a good will and work? For this
will could neither keep God’s command when it was healthy
nor obtain a remedy of healing (however small) from the law
34. (XVII.) The Spirit of life, however, has set us free not by
finding faith in any man, but by giving it. For God (who justi-
fies the ungodly) himself inspires faith in the unbeliever by the
grace of his good will, and this faith works through love. From
this the unbeliever gains the capacity to think correctly, as the
Apostle testifies, saying that “we are not to think that anything
comes from our own power, as if it were from us; but our suf-
ficiency is from God.”127 For, in truth, according to the same
Apostle, “God gives” to those whom he wills “penitence to know
the truth so that they may regain their senses apart from the
snare of the devil, who holds them captive to his will.”128 There-
fore, when that first of the apostles (who is also worthily called
blessed because of the word of truth) was speaking about the
faith of the Gentiles, he said that God had cleansed their hearts
by faith; and again he said that the same grace was divinely giv-
en to the Gentiles as also to the Jews, so that they might believe.
The apostles and elders in the teaching of the Holy Spirit rec-
ognized this to be the free gift of grace, and they all with one
accord agreed with blessed Peter’s statement: “God, therefore,
also gave the Gentiles penitence leading to life.”129 Certainly
our Savior himself summons the human will by the authority of
his own voice, saying, “Be penitent and believe the Gospel.”130
When he does so, it is clear that a man receives from God peni-
tence leading to life so that he may begin to believe in God,
(as they would have it) grace finds in us something that grace
itself did not give. If that is indeed the case, we first give the
will to God, and thus we receive grace not because of the mercy
of the one who gives, but because of the fairness of the God
who rewards. Nevertheless, “who has first given to him and it
will be repaid to him?”135 Surely no one, because “man can re-
ceive nothing unless it has been given to him from heaven.”136
For what does he have that he has not received? And if he has
received it, why does he boast as if he has not received it?137 But
if God never creates a good will, but instead hopes to find one,
then his mercy never actually goes before man. And where is
it that David says: “My God, his mercy will come before me”?138
And in the same way, may God’s mercy go before us, or when it
goes before, may it discover what kind of persons we are, as the
teacher of the Gentiles shows us not just through the example
of someone else, but by using himself as an example, when he
says: “I was previously a blasphemer and a persecutor and an ag-
gressor, but I obtained mercy because I acted in ignorance and
unbelief.”139 Therefore, how was Paul (who was blind and unbe-
lieving, who was unaware that he was a blasphemer and a per-
secutor and an aggressor) able to muster up from within him-
self any will to believe? As he considers this fact with a humble
heart, he says in another place: “I am not worthy to be called an
apostle, for I persecuted the church of God.”140 And immedi-
ately he ascribes his faith not to his own will, but to the grace of
the merciful God, saying: “But by the grace of God, I am what I
am.”141 And what was he already, if not faithful? But he obtained
God’s mercy in order to be faithful, just as he himself testifies
when he says: “I give my judgment, just as I obtained mercy
from the Lord to be faithful.”142 For even when he confessed
that at first he had been a blasphemer, a persecutor, and an ag-
gressor, he did not stop attributing his faith and love to grace,
for he added immediately: “And the grace of God, which is in
Christ Jesus, abounded exceedingly in faith and love.”143
135. Rom 11.35. 136. Jn 3.27.
137. Cf. 1 Cor 4.7. 138. Ps 58.11 (59.10 modern).
139. 1 Tm 1.13. 140. 1 Cor 15.9.
141. 1 Cor 15.10. 142. 1 Cor 7.25.
143. 1 Tm 1.14.
78 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
37. Therefore, if the grace of God did not give Paul faith,
one must not believe that it gave him love either. In that case,
Paul lied (may it never be!), since he said that “God’s love has
been poured out in our hearts through the Holy Spirit who
has been given to us.”144 But because Paul was not able to lie
in Christ (who was speaking in him), let us confess most firmly
that the Spirit himself has given us faith, since we cannot deny
that through the Spirit, God’s love has been poured out in our
hearts. So since Paul was a blasphemer and a persecutor and an
aggressor, the reason he was helped by the grace of God was not
that he willed to believe. Instead, he received the gift of preve-
nient grace with the result that he was willing to believe. Grace
did not find any beginning of faith in his will, but it found blas-
phemy, brutality, violence, and ignorance, all bound up in un-
belief. Up to that point, his will was blind, and as a result not
only was he unable to believe, but he was also unable to antici-
pate the very beginning of his faith. For if he had anticipated
his ignorance, he would not have acted in ignorance. There-
fore, in Paul’s case, it is appropriate to attribute not only the
beginning of faith but even the recognition of unbelief itself
to the gift of prevenient mercy. For God’s mercy conferred this
knowledge on him so that as he was illumined and aided, he
might recognize and shun his unbelief. In fact, the Lord is our
illumination and our salvation; he illumines us so that we may
acknowledge our sins, and he heals us so that we may live righ-
teously, separated from our sins. For this reason, he himself,
who confesses that he obtained mercy in order to be faithful,
instructs us salvifically: “Therefore, it is not of the one who wills
or of the one who runs, but of God, who shows mercy.”145 For in
reality we are illumined by the gift of prevenient mercy so that
we may will, and we are sustained by the help of subsequent
mercy so that we may run. Therefore, in us there is no power of
a living soul but only the pride of dead flesh, and the result is
that each person attributes to himself the good will by which he
begins to will to believe.
38. (XIX.) Indeed, since the time the first man willingly cor-
rupted and subverted his nature, weakness grew so much that
if the prior free choice of any given man were not continually
healed and helped by the medicine of divine grace, his choice
would surely be free, though not good; it would be free, though
not upright; it would be free, though not whole; it would be
free, though not righteous; and the more it is free from good-
ness, uprightness, wholeness, and righteousness, the more it is
made captive by mortal servitude to evil perversity, weakness,
and iniquity. For “the one who commits sin is a slave of sin,”146
and “by whatever someone has been overcome, by that also he
has been made a slave.”147 As sin reigns, a man does indeed
have free choice, but this is freedom without God, not freedom
under God. That is, he is free of righteousness, not free under
grace, and therefore he is free in the worst and most servile way,
because he has not been set free by the free gift of the merciful
God. The Apostle clearly implies this when he says: “For when
you were slaves of sin, you were free of righteousness.”148 There-
fore, he who is free of righteousness cannot serve righteousness;
for as long as he is a slave of sin, he is not found to be suitable
for anything but serving sin. No one becomes free from such
servitude to sin except one who is freed by the grace of the Lib-
erator, Christ, so that when he is indeed freed from sin, he be-
comes a slave of God. Our Liberator himself, however, explains
how one may become such by saying: “If the Son sets you free,
you will be truly free.”149 Therefore, the chosen vessel explains
to us the benefit of liberating grace by testifying not only that
we are free, but also that we have been set free. He does this
with these words: “But now, since you have been set free from
sin and have become slaves of God, you have your fruit leading
to sanctification, the outcome of which is truly eternal life.”150
fication in eternal life. But just as it was the case in natural birth
that the divine work of forming the person altogether preceded
the will of the person being born, so is it the case in the spiritual
birth (by which we begin to put off “the old man, which is be-
ing corrupted by deceitful desires,”151 so that we may put on “the
new man, which is created in the righteousness and holiness of
truth”)152 that no one can acquire a good will by his own initia-
tive unless his very mind (that is, our inner man) is renewed and
remade from God. Therefore, the blessed Paul commands us
not to be conformed to this age,153 but to be remade in the new-
ness of our mind.154 And lest we think we ought to attribute the
beginning of that remaking even partially to our ability, the Lord
uses the prophet to show that he himself is the Former of light
when he says: “I the Lord form the light and create darkness.”155
The blessed Apostle also confirms this in his preaching when he
says: “God, who commanded the light to shine out of darkness,
has shined in our hearts.”156 And in another place he says about
the same light that God had already formed: “For once you were
darkness, but now you are light in the Lord.”157 But since some
have lapsed from their laudable formation as light into the cen-
surable formlessness of darkness, he shows the affection of a
godly mind by speaking thus: “My little children, for whom I am
again in the pains of childbirth until Christ is formed in you.”158
But how is Christ to be formed in them unless he begins to dwell
in them, that is, through faith? The blessed Paul thus confirms
this by saying: “In the inner man, so that Christ will dwell in your
hearts through faith.”159 Therefore, as long as we are being re-
made, we are being renewed, and in the way that we are being
renewed, we are being made alive.
40. (XX.) Our life, however, takes its beginning from faith,
“for the righteous one will live by faith.”160 Blessed Paul points
out that this faith is not born from our will but is given to each
person by the Holy Spirit when he says: “For to one is given the
word of wisdom through the Spirit, but to another the word of
knowledge according to the same Spirit, and to another faith
by the same Spirit.”161 Thus, we received the Holy Spirit not be-
cause we believed, but so that we might believe. In fact, let us
recognize that the form that exists spiritually in our faith came
first in the flesh of Christ. For Christ, the Son of God, was con-
ceived and born of the Holy Spirit according to the flesh. The
Virgin could not at any time conceive or give birth to that flesh
if the Holy Spirit were not causing the emergence of that very
flesh. In the same way, faith cannot be conceived or increased
in the human heart unless the Holy Spirit infuses it and nur-
tures it. For we were reborn by the same Spirit, by whom Christ
was born. Therefore, according to faith Christ is formed in
the heart of each believer by the same Spirit by whom he was
formed in the womb of the Virgin according to the flesh. There-
fore, the prophet calls to the Lord on behalf of the faithful:
“Because of our fear of you, O Lord, we have conceived in our
womb and given birth; we have produced the Spirit of your sal-
vation upon the earth.”162 Therefore, the angel announced that
the Virgin Mary was full of grace not only before she conceived
Christ, but even before she knew she was going to conceive him,
since she had no prior knowledge of this or any prior will to
conceive the Son of God. Her ignorance of what was coming
shows that the Virgin’s obedient will itself (through which the
conception of the Lord and Savior took place) was the result of
God’s grace. In just the same way, before a man begins to will to
believe, grace is given and poured into his heart so that Christ
may begin to be formed in him through faith. And when Christ
is formed in each person, he forms himself, for he himself initi-
ates faith in the heart of each believer. Consequently, we are
strongly advised in the letter written to the Hebrews to look
“to Jesus, the author and perfecter of our faith.”163 There is no
doubt that just as he is thus the author of our faith, inasmuch as
he gives faith to those who do not possess it, in the same way he
is the perfecter of that same faith, for he adds to it by increasing
and I will put my Spirit in you, and I will cause you to walk in my
righteous ways and keep my statutes and do them.”169 Likewise,
the blessed Paul, in an effort to restrain the audacity of human
presumption, says: “For who makes you different? And what do
you have that you did not receive? But if you received it, why do
you boast as if you did not receive it?”170 We must humbly and
salvifically recognize with Paul and at the same time confess that
we are what we are by God’s grace,171 if indeed we are anything.
By this grace, human choice is not removed, but healed; it is
not taken away, but corrected; it is not set aside, but illumined;
it is not done away with, but supported and preserved. This hap-
pens so that where man had weakness in his capacity to choose,
he may begin to have strength; where he was going astray, he
may return to the path; where he was blind, he may receive
light; and where he was wicked, serving impurity and iniquity,
there—preceded and helped by grace—he may serve righteous-
ness leading to sanctification.
42. (XXI.) And we marvel that there are some who say: “If
God causes unwilling people to will to believe, but there is no
one who can naturally believe in the Son of God or will anything
good that pertains to eternal life, then why does he not cause
all people to will, since ‘God is not a respecter of persons’?”172
From these words that have been inserted into your letter, it ap-
pears that those who ask that question give no consideration at
all to what they are saying. If (as they would have it) God were to
find any sort of beginning of a good will in any man whatsoever,
then God would be a respecter of persons. But since he has not
found a good will in anyone, but has granted it freely to whom-
ever he chose, we know he is not a respecter of persons since the
generosity of him who gives is free in the case of each person.
They also say: “Why does he not cause all people to will?” Can it
43. (XXII.) But when we say that no one can believe in God
unless his heart is illumined by God’s grace so that he may be-
lieve, we do not mean that the possibility of believing can in no
way exist in human nature, but we point out that in order to be
able to possess it, a man ought to hope and pray for it. In fact, if
the possibility of believing had not been given naturally to man
in his first condition when he began to believe in the Son of
God, he would never have committed sin by faithlessness. And
such capacity to believe was not innate in every nature whatso-
ever, for God did not make every nature rational. “God does
not care for oxen, does he?”176 Wickedness is not punished in
them, nor is goodness crowned. But the divine words teach us
that God does care for all men.
grace) begin to seek that which it was not able to seek. And God
infuses this faith so that through the work of the physician (who
is needed not by the healthy but by the sick),183 his weakness
may be cast out and his nature may be healed. This is the kind
of health the person was praying for who kept saying: “I said,
‘Lord, be merciful to me; heal my soul, for I have sinned against
you.’”184 If human nature were healthy, no one would be pray-
ing for the healing of the saints; and if human nature were in-
capable of being healed, everyone would be praying in vain for
healing. Therefore, human nature can be healed, but it receives
the gift of such healing by the same grace that it received at the
beginning of creation. For if man could in no way be healed in
his nature, the heavenly physician would not have come to heal
him. But on the other hand, if he were able to heal himself, he
would not need the heavenly physician. In fact, he is healed by
faith. If a person could gain such faith from himself, God would
not give it to him. But God gives it, for “to another faith is given
by the same Spirit,”185 just as the Apostle says: “God, therefore,
has dealt to each one a measure of faith.”186
(XXIV.) It does not follow that all the things we can possess
are things we can acquire of ourselves. Even our flesh is made
by God in such a way that it is able to live naturally. This very
following: “For when the Gentiles, who do not have the law, nat-
urally do the things pertaining to the law, they (although they do
not have the law) are a law to themselves, and they show the work
of the law written in their hearts.”191 To be sure, the ones who
speak against grace strive to assign this passage of the Apostle
only to unbelieving Gentiles. Thus, they argue that the passage
means simply that even those who do not receive the grace of
faith preserve by a certain natural law those things that pertain
to honorable customs and the things that hold human society
together. As a result, even [such unbelieving Gentiles] use the
equity and severity of laws to restrain those who strive to break
them. Those, however, who interpret the passage this way do not
realize that their opinion is utterly undercut by the Apostle’s pri-
or statement when he says: “For it is not the hearers of the law
who are righteous before God, but it is the doers of the law who
will be justified.”192 But the same blessed Apostle demonstrates
that no one can be justified without faith, when he says: “And
knowing that a man will not be justified by the works of the law,
but by the faith of Jesus Christ, we also believe in Christ Jesus
with the result that we are justified by the faith of Jesus Christ
and not by the works of the law. Consequently, no flesh will be
justified by the works of the law.”193 And a little later, as he com-
mends the grace of faith by which true righteousness is bestowed
on each person, he says: “I do not nullify the grace of God; for if
righteousness comes by the law, Christ has died in vain.”194 Like-
wise, he declared that our father Abraham was not justified by
works of the law, but by faith, when he said: “Just as Abraham
believed God, and it was credited to him as righteousness.”195
And in order to show that in the same way the Gentiles (whom
the divine word promised to the seed of Abraham) were being
justified by faith, Paul continued by adding: “Know, therefore,
that those who are of faith are children of Abraham. And since
God foresaw in Scripture that the Gentiles would be justified by
faith, he declared to Abraham beforehand, ‘In you all nations
will be blessed.’ Therefore, those who are of faith will be blessed
49. Therefore, the Apostle says that when these Gentiles “nat-
urally do the things pertaining to the law,” “they show the work of
the law written in their hearts.”198 Thus the Apostle testifies that
he is speaking of those who are being justified, and he remem-
bers that Abraham our father was justified not by works but by
faith. Since the Apostle asserts all this, and since he himself testi-
fies that “everything that is not of faith is sin”199 and that “without
faith it is impossible to please God,”200 who would dare to accept
the Gentiles as the referent in this passage if it were known that
they are not justified by faith? Because if it is known that Abra-
ham (to whose seed the Apostle recalls that the Gentiles have
been promised) was justified by faith, then if anyone claims that
the Gentiles can be justified not by faith, but by works, what can
we say except that he is denying that they belong to Abraham’s
seed, to whom the nations were promised? For Abraham (as the
Apostle says) “is the father of all the uncircumcised who believe,
so that righteousness may be credited to them as well.”201 There-
fore, inasmuch as “there is one God, who justifies the circumci-
sion by faith and the uncircumcision through faith,”202 the Apos-
tle has made it clear that he is speaking of those who are being
justified, for he is discussing the Gentiles who naturally do the
things that pertain to the law and the Gentiles who have the work
of the law in their hearts. Such an understanding is consistent
with the truth because the Gentiles whom God justifies by the gift
of faith are understood in the same passage, and inasmuch as he
grants them the grace of faith, he writes in their hearts the work
of his law when he grants justification. Their nature has been re-
newed through the grace of the New Testament even without the
letter of the Old Testament, and this has happened so that they
may have the work of the law written upon them in order that
they may begin to belong to the people of God, not by the merit
of preceding works, but by the free gift of justification. The di-
vine teaching has graciously deigned to make this known to us by
the prophetic word, as holy Jeremiah says: “‘Behold, the days are
coming,’ says the Lord, ‘when I will make a new covenant with
the house of Israel and the house of Judah,’”203 and a little later:
“‘For this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Is-
rael after those days,’ says the Lord. ‘I will place my laws in their
hearts and write them upon their inward parts, and I will be their
God and they will be my people. And none of them will teach
his neighbor and his brother, saying: “Know God”; for they will
all know me, from the least of them to the greatest of them, for
I will forgive their iniquities, and I will remember their sins no
more.’”204
work together for good for those who love God.”208 For this rea-
son, no one accuses them because God justifies and glorifies
those who were foreknown, predestined, and called according
to his purpose. He does this so as to exclude any boasting on
the basis of deeds of the law, by which arrogant man has exalted
himself, so that “he who boasts may boast in the Lord”209 by the
law of faith, “which works through love.”210
51. But in the case of those who know God but do not glo-
rify him as God, that knowledge is not profitable for salvation.
Since this is so, then what about those who preserve something
good in their character and works, but that good does not re-
late to the purpose of Christian faith and love? How can they
be righteous before God? To be sure, certain good things as-
sociated with a fair human society can be found in such people;
but because these things are not done through faith in and love
for God, they cannot be profitable [for salvation]. As a matter
of fact, it is possible for a person who does not love God to be-
lieve that God exists; but it is in no way possible for a person
who does not believe in God to love God. For each individual
can believe that something exists that he does not love, but no
one can love what he does not believe exists. And the Apostle
says that apart from love, faith and other good works cannot
profit anyone; for he says: “If I have all faith, so that I could
remove mountains; and if I distribute all my means for food for
the poor, and if I give my body to be burned, but do not have
love, it profits me nothing.”211 Therefore, if works with faith can-
not profit one without love, how have works that have not been
done in faith been profitable? This is why the blessed Apostle
rightly prays for the Thessalonians that “may God fulfill by his
power every act of your good will and the work of your faith.”212
Likewise he had previously stated this in the same place where
he was speaking of the Gentiles naturally doing the law. There
he says: “But glory and honor and peace to each one who does
good, to the Jew first, and to the Greek.”213 But how can un-
52. (XXVII.) For surely that law (which is the law of deeds,
which cannot justify man, because “by works of the law no flesh
will be justified”)223 can exist naturally in the heart of the Gen-
tiles and in the heart of unbelieving Jews. Yet without the faith
53. Who would fail to see from these words of the Apostle
that the righteousness coming from the law is from man, but
that the righteousness coming from the faith of Christ truly
does not exist apart from God? Consequently, the former is the
righteousness by which the ungodly man is set up so that he
may fall into punishment, but the latter righteousness is that
through which the justified man is humbled so that he may be
exalted to glory. Therefore, the Apostle admits that while he
was living blamelessly in that righteousness that comes from
the law, he was nevertheless godless. For why else would he say:
“For while we were yet weak, at the right time Christ died for
the ungodly”?226 He also truly confesses that he was an enemy
of God, saying: “For if, when we were enemies, we were recon-
ciled to God by the death of his Son, much more, now that we
have been reconciled, will we be saved by his life.”227 Therefore,
since our Savior himself says to the Jews: “Unless you believe
that I AM, you will die in your sins,”228 what did it profit Paul
without knowledge of Christ to cling to that righteousness that
comes by deeds of the law? Thus, because the Apostle testifies
that the righteousness coming from the faith of Christ exists so
that Christ may be known, it is clear that the law of faith is the
law God promised he would write in their hearts.229 That is what
the context of that very passage230 clearly points out. For there
God says: “And none of them will teach his neighbor and his
brother, saying: ‘Know God’; for they will all know me, from the
least of them to the greatest of them.”231
54. This is the law that God writes in the hearts of them all,
not because of the condition of nature, but because of the
generosity of grace; not because of man’s free choice, but be-
cause of the ministry of evangelical preaching; not because of
the letter of the Old Testament written in stone, but because of
the Spirit of the living God dwelling in the heart. This is what
blessed Paul clearly indicates when he says: “You are Christ’s
letter, ministered through us and written not with ink but with
the Spirit of the living God, not on tablets of stone, but on the
fleshly tablets of the heart.”232 Therefore, this is what God writes
in the hearts of men through his Spirit, and this is what the
devil’s hatred then destroyed, because of which hatred death
entered into the world. Therefore, God writes the law of faith
by which he justifies the Gentiles, with the result that he renews
their nature by giving grace. Indeed, to this end he pours out
love (which is the fulfillment of the law)233 through his Spirit,
so that he may cause what he commands to be fulfilled. He also
bestows the grace of illumination through the Spirit of faith,
precisely so that what has pleased God, namely faith, may work
through love. As long as this faith is not present in man, then
regardless of whatever was written through the natural law with-
out the law of faith and has remained in man, that saves no one
who works. For God justifies no one without faith, and works
cannot achieve salvation for the one who works, for “without
faith it is impossible to please God.”234 Thus no one attempts
229. This promise that God would write the law in the people’s hearts comes
in Jer 31.31–34. Fulgentius discusses this passage in par. 49 above, and he re-
turns to it here.
230. By “context,” Fulgentius means the whole paragraph, Jer 31.31–34.
231. Jer 31.34. 232. 2 Cor 3.3.
233. Cf. Rom 13.10. 234. Heb 11.6.
96 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
55. (XXVIII.) And our opponents ask about God: “So why
did he not cause all men to will to believe, since God is no re-
specter of persons?” They have to recognize that this question
has been posed by those rather haughty people whom Holy
Scripture urges to restrain the boldness of human curiosity, say-
ing: “Do not try to search out things that are too difficult for
you, or try to discover what is beyond your powers; but always
ponder the things that the Lord has commanded you.”235 He
who was caught up to the third heaven and became more terri-
fied as he became more illumined feared these higher things.236
For that reason he did not cease to cry out even more: “O the
depth of the riches of both the wisdom and knowledge of God!
How unsearchable are his judgments and his ways past finding
out! For who has known the mind of the Lord? Or who has be-
come his counselor? Or who has first given to him and it will
be repaid to him? For from him and through him and in him
are all things; to him be the glory into the ages of ages.”237 Thus
it is enough for us to believe that God’s gracious mercy is free
for those who are being saved, to believe without doubting that
God’s justice is true for those who are being condemned, and to
sing with a contrite and humble heart about the Lord’s mercy
57. Who could be unaware that Paul had an evil will when
he was persecuting the Church of God and assaulting it? But
God put his malice to good use when, during Paul’s persecu-
tion, God crowned blessed Stephen with martyrdom. There-
fore, since God was able to crown Stephen through the unbelief
of Paul the persecutor, was God not able to convert Paul the
persecutor to faith? So, did Paul give his will to God previously,
and did God thus reward a willing Paul with faith? But there is a
place where Paul himself said: “Who has first given to him and it
will be repaid to him?”242 Paul surely would not have said this if
he had known that he gave his will to God and God repaid him
with faith. Therefore, may God protect his faithful from such
foolish ideas, and may he remove such ideas from unbelievers.
For in fact, one is defiled by profane thoughts such as thinking
that either grace is not granted to an obdurate man, or it is re-
moved from an ungrateful man. For God who converts gives life
to those whom he wills to save; God changes the wills of men so
that their wills begin to be good. Therefore, it is written: “And
I said: ‘I have now begun, and this change has come from the
right hand of the Most High.’”243 After this Scripture had been
made known, the prophet’s meaning was easily understandable.
This meaning is that the change came from God’s right hand,
not merely after one had begun, but even in the very fact that
he began. The Most High was not silent. Accordingly, as for
those who think that God’s will (by which he wills the salvation
of all men) is equal with respect to those to be redeemed and
those to be condemned, what will they answer when they are
asked why God wills all men to be saved but nevertheless not all
are saved?
58. (XXX.) Or when you write in your letter that “God waits”
for the will of man “so that there may be a fitting reward for
those who will to believe and a just condemnation for those
who refuse to do so,”244 are you testifying to what our opponents
say?245 In order to avoid unduly prolonging this letter, let us skip
over all the things that can be repeated on behalf of the truth of
faith in response to this perverse thought. In the meantime, let
us confound and overcome such people by the testimony not
of men who can talk but of children who are silent. For in chil-
dren the power of Christ’s cross shines brightly to make void
the seeming wisdom of such people’s word. This power shows
that of itself it graciously accomplishes the same salvation in all
men who exercise their own wills as it deigns to effect in infants
who have no will. For in infants there is neither a good will (so
that the reward would be fair for those who are willing), nor
an evil will (so that condemnation would be just for those who
are unwilling). Therefore, if God does not awaken or change
men’s wills so that they will be saved as they will to be, but in-
stead waits for men’s wills, how does he give eternal salvation
to infants who are baptized and die in infancy, infants in whom
he neither waits for nor finds a good will? Furthermore, how
does he condemn to eternal torments the others who have died
without baptism, since he finds in them no guilt of an evil will?
59. When these enemies of God’s grace (who are not the
defenders but the betrayers of human choice) see that without
an intervening will either to goodness or to evil, some children
obtain the kingdom and others are appointed to partake of
the interminable fire, does their perversity not compel them to
think God is wicked in the death of all children? In the same
244. Scythian Monks’ Letter to the Bishops (= Ep. 16), par. 20 (Latin text in
CCL 91A, 559, and CCL 85A, 168; English translation in this volume, p. 37).
245. In the passage here cited, the monks are, in fact, testifying to what their
opponents say. Our translation of the passage from their letter on p. 37 makes
this clear.
100 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
61. (XXXI.) For this reason, regarding all those whom God
wishes to save, we must understand that we do not think anyone
can be saved apart from God who wills it. Further, let us not
imagine that the will of the omnipotent God either is not ful-
filled or is in any way impeded in certain people. For all whom
God wishes to save are unquestionably saved, and they cannot
be saved unless God wishes them to be saved, and each person
whom God does not will to be saved is not saved, since our God
“has done all things that he willed.”248 Therefore, all are saved
whom he wishes to be saved, for this salvation is not born of
the human will but is supplied by God’s good will. Nevertheless,
these “all men” whom God wishes to save include not the entire
human race altogether, but rather the totality of those who are
to be saved. So the word “all” is mentioned because the divine
kindness saves all kinds from among all men, that is, from every
race, status, and age, from every language and every region.249
In all of these people, this message of our Redeemer is fulfilled
where he says, “When I have been lifted up from the earth, I will
draw all things to myself.”250 Now he did not say this because he
draws all men whatsoever, but because no one is saved unless he
himself draws him. For he also says: “No one can come to me
unless the Father who has sent me draws him.”251 He also says
in another place: “Everything that the Father has given me will
come to me.”252 Therefore, these are all the ones whom God
wills to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth.253
63. So that we may recognize more fully who those “all” are,
let us hear the words of the same blessed Peter, who (filled with
the Holy Spirit) concluded his sermon with this exhortation:
“Be penitent and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of
Jesus Christ for the remission of your sins, and you will receive
the gift of the Holy Spirit. For the promise is to you and to your
children, and to all who are far off, even to whomever the Lord
our God calls.”258 So he said “all,” but the Lord calls “whom-
ever.” Blessed Paul also indicates that they have been called ac-
cording to God’s purpose, and says in another place that God
has “included them all in unbelief so that he may have mercy on
all.”259 Even so, God does not show mercy on absolutely every-
one whom he includes in unbelief in such a way that he would
mercifully give the grace of faith to all unbelievers. Rather, the
merciful God gives the same grace of faith not to unbelievers
but doubtless to those about whom he says to Moses: “I will be
merciful to whom I am merciful, and I will show mercy to whom
I will be merciful.”260 Therefore, he displays grace as a willing
gift just as the Lord deigns to speak to his disciples: “To you it
has been given to know the mystery of the kingdom of heaven,
but to them it has not been given.”261 He also says: “He who is
able to receive it, let him receive it.”262 But in order to teach that
the very capacity to receive is granted by divine generosity, he
says in another place: “Not all receive this saying, but those to
whom it is given.”263
64. These are all those on whom God has mercy because
they are preceded by his mercy so that they may believe and be
freely saved through faith. The fact that they believe does not
take its beginning from the human will, but faith is given to the
will itself in accordance with the free generosity of the merciful
God. Blessed Paul recorded this distinction between different
senses of the word “all” (a distinction that a faithful understand-
ing must preserve completely) at one place in his letter so that
even when he says “all men” without noting any exceptions, he
might still indicate all men of a certain kind while excluding
others. For he says: “Just as through one man’s offense all men
have come under condemnation, so also by the righteousness
of one man all men have come to justification of life.”264 Can
it really be that when the Apostle says, “condemnation upon
all men” and “justification upon all men,” we must actually be-
lieve that the phrase “all men” means that those who were all
surely condemned through the sin of Adam were the very same
ones who are all justified by Christ? Against this interpretation
stands the death of countless unbelievers who pass from this
life without the grace of justification and are snatched away to
the eternal punishments of the second death without the sac-
rament of baptism. Therefore, it remains for us to conclude
that not absolutely all of those whom the Apostle places under
condemnation pass over to the grace of justification, but that
only these “certain all” from among those “all” do so. There-
fore, all are sons of wrath through Adam leading to condem-
nation, and from among them, “certain all” are sons of grace
through Christ. Therefore, the fact that these are all procreated
sinfully (by means of carnal generation) through the first man
condemns them. For all who bear the image of the earthly man
are of the earth, and all who receive the image of the heavenly
man leading to eternal life are of heaven. Again the prophet
says: “All nations whatsoever that you have made will come and
worship before you, O Lord, and they will glorify265 your name
into eternity.”266 And the Lord says to his faithful: “You will be
65. The same distinction is also found in the letter that the
blessed Apostle writes to the Colossians, where he says: “For
in Christ were created all things in the heavens and on earth,
things visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or
principalities or powers. All things were created through him
and in him, and he himself is before all, and in him all things
hold together.”268 And a little later he says that [the Father] “was
pleased to make all fullness dwell in him,269 and through him
to reconcile to himself all things, whether things in the heav-
ens or things on earth, making peace through the blood of
his cross.”270 Do we really believe that all things that are in the
heavens and on earth are brought to peace through him? May
it never be! For the person who wishes to think this way will
face the dilemma of choosing between two heresies. Either he
will be forced to deny that the devil and his angels were created
through Christ, or he will have to affirm that even they must
be reconciled by the blood of his cross. But let whoever is in-
volved in the wickedness of these thoughts beware lest he be
condemned to the punishment of everlasting fire with the devil
himself and his angels. For if anyone believes that the devil ei-
ther was not created by Christ or is to be restored at some time
by the reconciliation Christ effects, he is guilty of one and the
same heresy. For indeed, if Christ the Lord had not created the
devil, his condemnable departure from Christ would not have
happened,271 and if Christ were going to save him at some time,
272. That is, if the devil were not going to suffer in eternal fire, then no one
would. In that case, why would Christ have even spoken of such eternal fire in
Scripture?
273. Ps 29.6, following LXX (30.5 modern).
274. Jn 5.21. 275. Ps 134.6 (135.6 modern).
276. Rom 9.19.
106 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
by which we are able to achieve the goal. God has always pos-
sessed these gifts in his eternally and unchangeably disposed
will, according to which he has predestined and prepared both
the things he would give and the people to whom he would give
them. By predestining, he has himself prepared the gift of grace
that, once the grace is actually given, completes the effect of the
predestination.
279. That is, the ones whom God has elected but who have not yet come to
Christ, although of course we do not know who they are.
FULGENTIUS’S SECOND LETTER
TO THE SCYTHIAN MONKS
1. This list of senders does not include Felix or the second Januarius men-
tioned at the head of the first letter (Ep. 17). Interestingly, Fulgentius also does
not name himself as a sender of this letter.
2. This list of addressees does not include Peter, Leontius, and another John
mentioned at the head of Ep. 17. This letter mentions Venerius, who is not
mentioned at the head of Ep. 17.
3. As explained in the introduction, Fulgentius wrote this letter (Ep. 15 in
the collection of his letters) to the monks after his return to Ruspe in 523, at
the end of his second exile. The Latin critical text may be found in CCL 91A,
447–57.
4. Rom 5.5. 5. Rom 8.28.
108
FULGENTIUS, SECOND LETTER 109
6. Fulgentius is writing after the end of his second exile, but he and the
other North African bishops received the monks’ letter while they were still in
exile on Sardinia.
7. 2 Thes 2.16–17.
110 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
8. 2 Cor 3.4–5.
9. 1 Cor 2.12–15. The portion enclosed in brackets is missing in the earlier
manuscript (N) and is supplied in the margin of the later manuscript (Port.). It
was likely added by a later copyist to complete the biblical quotation.
FULGENTIUS, SECOND LETTER 111
7. It is good for you to bring these two points, which you pro-
pose separately, into agreement with the Catholic consensus.
For these points appropriately acknowledge the grace of God
and show that you do not deny the mystery of prophecy. For
those two brothers are rightly understood to signify two nations,
especially since it was foretold to Rebecca, who was consulting
with the Lord, that two nations would be separated from her
womb. Truly, one must recognize in that separation both unde-
served goodness and righteous severity. For since “every excel-
lent gift and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from
the Father of lights,”14 so also those who are separated by grace
are saved. In fact, what was chosen and loved in Jacob was not
human works but the divine gifts. On the contrary, since “our
wickedness highlights God’s righteousness,”15 there is no doubt
that the wickedness of human iniquity was condemned in Esau.
In that, to be sure, God shows in Jacob the free beneficence of
his mercy, by which beneficence he saw fit to adopt Jacob by his
free grace. For he did not choose him because of the merits of
any future good work, but instead he foreknew that both faith
and good works were going to be given to him.
works, but that he has also prepared them, when he says, “which
God has prepared so that we may walk in them.”20 Therefore,
Jacob was saved by grace through faith, and by grace he subse-
quently received the ability to do good works.
11. You say that a man is saved by God’s mercy alone, but
our opponents say that unless a man has run and worked in ac-
cordance with his own will, he cannot be saved. One may rightly
hold to both of these assertions if he preserves the correct order
of divine mercy and human will, so that divine mercy precedes,
the human will follows, and God’s mercy alone confers the be-
ginning of salvation. In that case, man’s will emerges as cooper-
ating in his salvation. The result is that God’s preceding mercy
guides the direction of the human will, and the human will,
obeying by means of the same subsequent mercy, runs toward
12. But whoever thinks that God bestows grace the way a
person lends money upon receiving an acceptable security is
wrong. Indeed, the fact is that God both bestows the security
(that is, the Holy Spirit) on those whom he pleases and distrib-
utes his money (as if it were money sought from bankers) for
the care and benefit of his slaves, as he says in the Gospel. Truly,
the statement of the Apostle by which he says, “Therefore, he
has mercy on whom he wills and he hardens whom he wills,”27
is certainly received better from a believer’s perspective. If an
individual is unwilling to receive Paul’s statement from a be-
liever’s perspective, let him subsequently consider without con-
tention what the Apostle Paul says: “Does the potter not have
power over the clay to make from the same lump one vessel for
honor and another for dishonor?”28 And when Paul acknowl-
edges the potter’s right to make both vessels, let the individual
recognize in the vessel for honor the undeserved grace of the
merciful God, and in the vessel for dishonor let him recognize
the deserved judgment of the God who hardens, that is, the
God who abandons. But we say that God hardens, not because
he compels a person to commit iniquity, but because whenever
he does not snatch a person away from iniquity, he is just in not
doing so, because he is just. Therefore, when God is merciful,
a man is saved apart from his own merits; but when God hard-
ens, the unrighteous man justly receives what he deserves. To
be sure, God saves by the gift of goodness and hardens by the
judgment of severity.
13. This, however, is what you say: “For God is the one work-
ing in you both to will and to accomplish according to his good
will.”29 But our opponents say: “If you are willing and obedient
to me, you will eat the good things of the land.”30 If the heart,
at peace in faith, needs both and receives both, no question will
remain about God’s grace and the human will. For God com-
mands man to will, but God also brings about the fact that man
wills. God commands him to work, but he also brings about the
fact that he works. Therefore, the blessed Apostle demonstrates
both by saying, “With fear and trembling, work out your own
salvation, for God is the one working in you both to will and
to accomplish according to his good will.”31 Therefore, as each
one works out his own salvation with fear and trembling, it is
necessary that he be willing, but God brings about this willing
and working in those who are his. As a consequence man has
free choice and hears the commands that he must keep, but
man’s free choice is in no way capable of fulfilling the com-
mands unless it is divinely helped. As a result, man knows he
must work as long as he receives the command, and he always
knows he owes to God every good thing he wishes and does. He
also knows from the Apostle’s witness that God works in man
“to will and to accomplish according to his good will.” He has
deigned to promise this grace to his faithful through the proph-
et, saying, “I will put my Spirit in you, and I will cause you to
walk in my righteous ways and keep my statutes and do them.”32
vessels of mercy, but clerics, monks, and lay people are vessels
of shame.34 In fact, when the Apostle mentions those vessels of
mercy which God has prepared for glory (not present glory, to
be sure, but future), he says to them, “When Christ, your life,
appears, then you also will appear with him in glory.”35 To that
point, he says a little above, “Set your minds on the things that
are above, not on the things that are on earth.”36 Therefore, the
vessels of mercy are those to whom it is said, “Come, you who
are blessed by my Father; receive the kingdom.”37 But surely the
vessels for shame are those to whom it is said, “Depart into the
everlasting fire that has been prepared for the devil and his an-
gels.”38 Therefore, what makes men vessels of mercy is neither
ecclesiastical nor secular preferment, but spiritual love in the
Church. For that reason, a man in any profession whatsoever
who clings to a faith that works through love will be a vessel
for sanctified honor and useful to the Lord, prepared for every
good work.
34. It appears that the opponents of this teaching on grace have tried to
blunt the force of Paul’s statement in Romans 9 that there are vessels of mercy/
honor and vessels of shame by claiming that the phrases “vessels of mercy” and
“vessels of honor” refer simply to people who hold prominent ecclesiastical and
secular positions, whereas the phrase “vessels of shame” refers to those who
have no such titles. Cf. Fulgentius’s fuller treatment of this opinion in The Truth
about Predestination and Grace, Bk. 2, pars. 36–46 (pp. 190–98 in this volume).
35. Col 3.4. 36. Col 3.2.
37. Mt 25.34. 38. Mt 25.41.
39. Rom 8.30. 40. Eph 1.5.
41. Rom 1.3.
118 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
18. Above all, pay attention to the books that Saint Augustine
wrote to Prosper and Hilary,46 and urge the above-mentioned
brothers to read them. Hormisdas of blessed memory, the glori-
ous bishop of the Apostolic See, made mention of these books,
with great commendation of universal praise, in a reply letter
he wrote to our holy brother and fellow priest Possessor, who
was consulting him.47 These are his words: “Yet what the Roman
(that is, the Catholic) Church follows and preserves concerning
free choice and the grace of God can be amply learned in the
various books of the blessed Augustine and especially those to
Hilary and Prosper. Moreover, short summary chapters are also
contained in the ecclesiastical archives.”48
tent that the Lord deigns to give his slaves the grace of accurate
speech, one of us has responded to all those questions which
you made known that the above-mentioned brothers either per-
ceived or articulated against grace and predestination. He did
this with sufficient argumentation in three books dedicated to
you,49 and he produced seven books50 against Faustus the Gal-
lican’s two books. When you examine them, you will immedi-
ately discover the degree to which discussion exposes, evident
reasoning refutes, divine authority rejects, and the harmonious
testimony of the earlier Fathers belies the ideas of the afore-
named Faustus, ideas that are contrary to the truth and pro-
foundly inimical to the Catholic faith.
20. Furthermore, we hope that the Lord will bestow the help
of his grace so generously that he will grant an increase of holy
knowledge to those who think well, and that he will give believ-
ers help to recognize truth beyond what is required. For he is
the one who makes those he has predestined to life participants
in his grace, so that in all their good deeds they will submit their
human choice to God’s grace, that they will know that every ex-
cellent and every perfect gift descends from him,51 and so that
they will also know that they must seek help from the one who
gives grace and perseverance to those he has predestined, so
that they will receive grace for grace,52 the gift of everlasting life.
49. Fulgentius, The Truth about Predestination and Grace, translated later in
this volume.
50. Fulgentius, Seven Books against Faustus (a lost work).
51. Cf. Jas 1.17.
52. Cf. Jn 1.16.
FULGENTIUS’S THE TRUTH ABOUT
PREDESTINATION AND GRACE
Book One 1
O THE HOLY BROTHERS John the elder and Venerius
the deacon.2 I thank God that by his operation, you are
the kind of men who contend very courageously and
fervently on behalf of that grace by which we are saved. I am,
however, saddened because some of our brothers, calling them-
selves Christians, strive to deny the Catholic faith. That is, they
attribute the gifts of God’s grace to the power or merit of the
human will, as if our effort, without God’s help, might avail
for obeying the divine command, and as if the command were
God’s only in the sense that he commanded us to work, but
did not himself accomplish in us what he commanded. And ac-
cording to them, if God bestows something good on man, he
should be viewed not as giving, but as rendering.3 They go so
far as to think that the gifts of divine kindness depend on the
quality of human actions and to claim even in the case of lit-
tle children who are divinely foreknown and predestined that
nothing in the elect may be found to be a free blessing of the
heavenly counsel. Furthermore, they think that mercy does not
guide anyone by its free graciousness, but that the everlasting
compensation of punishment and reward depends only on the
future action of each person’s own will.
121
122 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
God and that original sin in those who were born subsequently
derived from the voluntary transgression of the first man. In ad-
dition, one must believe that likewise both the stain of iniquity
and the punishment of death flow to all men as a result of the
wicked transgression and very just condemnation of the one
man. For man was made in the image of God and [initially] re-
ceived righteousness both in will and in work.
4. Gn 2.17.
124 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
ment to itself, and death both passed into and reigned over all
men. Consequently, the Apostle also says, “Through one man
sin entered into this world, and death through sin, and so death
passed to all men, because in him all have sinned.”5 And again
he says, “Death reigned from Adam to Moses, even in those who
did not sin in the likeness of Adam’s transgression.”6 Therefore,
in himself a sinful man subjected all his descendants to his own
sin, when he lost true freedom by doing wrong: “For by whatev-
er someone has been overcome, by that also he has been made
a slave,”7 and, “Everyone who commits sin is a slave of sin.”8
11. Since these things are so, it is impossible that anyone who
is conceived in iniquity might be born without bondage to in-
iquity. In the decision by which God released Jacob from that
bondage while rejecting Esau, no human merits were involved,
but only the goodness of divine grace. To be sure, both were
circumcised with a visible bodily circumcision that was divinely
bestowed before the time of our fathers as a sign of the righ-
teousness of faith. But only Jacob, who was freely justified by
God, received that true circumcision of the heart that is accord-
ing to the spirit, not the letter, whose praise is not from men but
from God. Indeed, although Esau himself was also circumcised
in the flesh, nonetheless he was not removed from the lump
of perdition by the gift of divine love and election. He was cer-
tainly circumcised in the flesh, but that fact was of no advantage
to him because in no way did he receive spiritual circumcision
that could deliver him from the knowledge of the flesh, which
is inimical to God. Therefore, before the world even existed,
God hated the earthly man’s iniquity that remained in Esau,
and he justly relegated Esau to punishment. Moreover, in Esau’s
brother God did not foreknow any good works that might issue
from the man and lead God to choose and love him, but God
prepared the grace of justification for him before the world ex-
21. Ps 50.7, loosely following LXX (51.5 modern).
130 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
isted, so that through grace God would bestow on him not just
the beginning of a good will, but also the achievement of good
work. Nor did God find in Jacob good merits, but he set him
free by the free blessing of mercy. “And he said to Moses, ‘I will
be merciful to whom I am merciful, and I will show mercy to
whom I will be merciful.’”22 “Therefore, it is not of the one who
wills, nor of the one who runs, but of God, who shows mercy.”23
12. Therefore, God granted his grace freely to the one who
had been born24 because he prepared the grace freely for him
while he was still yet to be born. Indeed, God grants to the good
whatever good they have in respect of will or work, and he even
preserves the things he has bestowed. It is true that God could
never have prepared evil works or granted them to the unjust
and godless, works for which they live to their condemnation.
Nor has he planted in them evil wills, by which they might culpa-
bly desire unrighteous things, but he has prepared for them the
punishment of eternal fire so that they might feel his avenging
justice while they are in everlasting flame. Therefore, the evil
will of men is not from God, and for this reason the just Judge
punishes that will in the men themselves, because the good Cre-
ator does not recognize the order of his creation in such a will.
For this reason, God the avenger condemns persistence in iniq-
uity and the stubbornness of haughty necks because these atti-
tudes do not arise from his generosity. But for those whom God
makes heirs of his kingdom, he prepares a good will freely, gives
it freely, and even provides them with perseverance. For he has
freely and mercifully prepared the merits to which he will grant
rewards, and then to these merits he indeed justly returns the
rewards the merits have earned.
one group received the gift of saving grace, which it did not
deserve, and the other received the destruction of just condem-
nation according to its merit. In one group the merits of con-
demnation were found, and on the other group the free merits
of glorification were conferred for the sake of its justification.
The one group had within itself what was displeasing to God,
but the other received from God himself what was pleasing to
God whom it was going to please. Consequently, in all who are
being handed over to the Gehenna of fire, just severity finds the
sort of evil merit that it punishes. In as many people as the evil
merit was originally found, in these also it is increased by the
fault of their own will. Children are an exception, since their
will cannot yet be free to choose righteousness and flee sin, be-
cause at their tender age reason is asleep and not yet active. But
the rest, who are old enough to have the use of reason, either
do not come to faith or withdraw from the faith because the
fault of their own will is increased. But whatever anyone’s physi-
cal age, from birth to decrepit old age, no one is found worthy
of justification. In spite of being unworthy, a person is justified
by free goodness, in order that he may become righteous when
he had been unrighteous, may become God’s friend when he
had been his enemy, and may be absolved of guilt. And no per-
son is snatched from the power of darkness and transferred into
the kingdom of God’s beloved Son, unless the Lord of glory,
who freely saves and justly condemns, has freely deigned to go
before him. The merciful and just God justly punishes the per-
verse will that he does not mercifully correct, for he finds in it
a perversity that he himself did not make. But he himself freely
prepares the good will, freely gives it, himself helps it, himself
perfects it.
cause of past or future merits, but that all men’s good merits
are both begun and perfected by the gift and help of grace it-
self. Indeed, the wicked (those whom the just judgment of God
abandons to their iniquity), even if they are said to be deprived
of the sacrament because of the guilt of original sin, are hand-
ed over to the punishment of eternal fire because of the merit
of subsequent (that is, of their own) sins. For the merciful and
just God justly punishes human sins (original and voluntary),
either in children or in grown people, unless he has mercifully
washed these sins away. For he is himself the good and true God
who made man but did not create sin in him. And he has never
found in any men good merits and works on the basis of which
he might save them, but he himself changes both their wills and
their works when he justifies them by his free mercy. And by the
certain and unchangeable steadfastness of his foreknowledge
concerning the vessels of mercy, God did not foreknow any gift
except the gift of his own grace, a gift he knew he had to be-
stow in order to produce merits that earn rewards and to give
rewards to the merits. For God himself both gives free goodness
to the human will and helps the good will produce works. He
himself even foreknew those works of human evil that the ves-
sels of wrath would commit, works that were certainly going to
come about.
25. Dn 13.42.
26. That is, those who would live long enough to commit actual sins.
134 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
27. Dt 32.4.
28. Ps 18.10, following LXX (19.9 modern).
29. Ps 35.7 (36.6 modern).
30. Phil 2.13.
136 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
to ensure that the child lives until the time he attains to the
washing of saving water. But truly the effect of this regenera-
tion does not come from any man’s will or manner of living, but
from God who has mercy, who both stirs up the parents’ will
and gives aid to the willing ones.
for alms and a love of holy prayer. Therefore, the one who
found in Cornelius that which was pleasing in his sight was God
himself, who granted Cornelius the grace to please him. For it
is God himself about whom the Apostle says, “Now may the God
of peace, who brought our Lord Jesus (that great shepherd of
the sheep) back from the dead through the blood of the eternal
covenant, prepare you for every good work by working in you
what is pleasing in his sight, so that you may do his will.”33 In
Cornelius there was so much divine grace that he was advised to
summon Peter to himself, and the Holy Spirit also commanded
Peter concerning the men Cornelius had sent who were coming
to him. He not only commanded him to go with them, but he
even removed every sort of fear or doubt, and he strengthened
those whom he himself had sent. Finally, the Holy Spirit said to
this same blessed Peter, “Behold, three men are seeking you.
Arise therefore, and go down, and go with them without hesitat-
ing, for I have sent them.”34 We also read that the apostles want-
ed to go to Bithynia and Asia, but were forbidden by the Holy
Spirit.35 And after the Lord cast Saul prostrate on the ground by
his own voice, he visited Ananias and sent him to baptize Paul.36
And Paul, writing to the Corinthians, clearly affirms that a sa-
cred, earnest care was divinely inspired in his disciple Titus, be-
cause of which care he was troubled about them. For he speaks
this way: “But thanks be to God, who put the same earnest care
for you into the heart of Titus.”37
all this is the case, why shall we not also believe very confidently
that infants must be baptized, and why shall we not freely pro-
claim that the diligence of parents38 is attributable to the grace
of the God who redeems, and indeed that their negligence39 is
attributable to the justice of the God who judges? This does not
mean that God causes one to neglect a good work, since God
could never be the cause of any evil work. Rather, it means that
the more a good will (itself given by God) advances in love, the
more it bears a greater concern for the salvation of any soul. In
truth, by its own merit an evil will either does not receive the
grace of love or loses it, and since such a will does not turn away
from its negligent apathy, it is abandoned in its darkness and
becomes increasingly blind.
23. (XI.) And for this reason, one must believe that God gives
this good will to pious parents so that they will not disregard the
fact that the fruit of their flesh, which they know was carnally
produced and polluted by the contagion of original sin, must
be cleansed by spiritual regeneration. Furthermore, God gives
this will so that they will not so much desire to have a temporal
heir, as they will desire and diligently work so that their son may
become a co-heir of Christ with them, and also so that the son
whom they now have of mortal seed who will pass away mortally
may become for them an eternal brother reborn of water and
the Holy Spirit under God the Father. Nevertheless, there is no
doubt that God has bestowed this laudable will on those parents
to whom he has imparted the grace of holy love through the
Holy Spirit. They too come to eternal life, not because they, in
the body of this death, give birth to children who will die, but
because as they live in the fear of God, they are diligent to has-
ten with their children to the benefit of the second birth and,
so that this second birth may be accomplished in their children
by their work,42 they, out of their Christian love, bring forth to
baptism those to whom they gave birth through human fertil-
ity. Likewise, they do not permit those children who have been
baptized to fall away through crime and shameful behavior, but
they strive to nourish them and bring them up, as the Apostle
commanded, “in the discipline and admonition of the Lord.”43
They desire more that their children be pleasing to God than
that they be rich or famous in this world.
cerned about the earthly life of the children who are going to
die anyway, but they do not fear whether their children should
die with the guilt of eternal condemnation upon them, and as a
result, they bring maximum guilt upon themselves and spiritu-
ally become the cruelest of murderers. Because of their apathy,
their own acts of neglect serve the cause of diabolical gain, and
as they please our most wicked enemy, they provoke the good
king by their evil works. Therefore, just as we must humbly praise
God (“all of whose ways are mercy and truth”)45 when he grants
grace, so no man can rightly blame him when he withholds
grace. In fact, such are God’s goodness and righteousness that he
can freely and mercifully redeem whomever he wants to redeem:
“For who resists his will?”46 Truly he is neither willing nor able
to condemn anyone unjustly at any time, for “the Lord our God
is upright, and there is no unrighteousness in him,”47 and “our
wickedness highlights God’s righteousness,” nor is “God who
takes vengeance” “unrighteous.”48
why the effect of salvation was denied him, to whom neither his
parents’ desire nor way of life could have been advantageous.
Or are we to tell him that by God’s decree he was foreseen to
be ungodly and so we think that he was actually helped by the
blessing of a lamentable death? Who would say such a thing? Or
who would not understand that such a death snatched the dying
child prematurely not from condemnation, but from salvation?
Indeed, his condemnation was not mitigated, but he was denied
redemption, and it was not decreed that he suffer less, but he
was taken away lest he be set free. And in this situation, did not
the parents’ pious will and course of life come from God? But
still, they were of no advantage because it was not God’s will that
the child be baptized. Because of his profound and righteous
judgment, God imparted to them a God-fearing concern for
their child, but he was not willing to bestow the living remedy
on the child. In fact, God likewise imparted the gift of love to
holy David so that he might command that his son Absalom be
spared lest he die in his transgression,49 but it was not God’s will
that wicked Absalom be preserved for future penitence. In this
way, he showed what the holy will of an upright man was obligat-
ed to do, but divine justice worked what it knew to be necessary.
ously bound by the same debt of original sin. And where the
states of the two are completely equal, their merits surely can-
not be said to be unequal. Therefore, there is no difference in
the states of the children that might cause one to be elected
and the other to be rejected. In fact, if one takes the will of the
parents into consideration, the Christian parents earnestly de-
sired that their child be baptized and hastened eagerly to have
it done, but their child was prevented by death from being bap-
tized and was assigned to the eternal fires. On the other hand,
the one born to unbelievers and brought to the grace of bap-
tism against the will of his parents was made an heir of God and
co-heir of Christ. Why did God foresee a future in which paren-
tal love could confer nothing on the one and hostile parental
cruelty was very beneficial to the other? Who can penetrate the
depth of God’s judgments? Nevertheless, who does not under-
stand here both the mercy of free kindness and the justice of
divine severity? For inasmuch as there are no merits in the two
children’s acts and no dissimilarity in their states, it is indeed
clear to us that both were bound by the chains of original sin,
but it is indeed hidden from us why they were not both set free
from those chains.
29. Someone will say, “Why did God not bestow free mercy
on both, since one sin bound both?” To such a person, we re-
spond in view of the incomprehensible, but sound, depth of
God’s judgments, that the reason they were not both set free
or both condemned is that God can never will or do evil. This
God commanded with just severity that payment of a debt be re-
quired of one, and because of his free goodness, even ordered
the other to be forgiven. In both we recognize with certainty
God’s free kindness (which can freely forgive all sin without any
merits stemming from works), because one of them is absolved
and the other condemned. Indeed, the justice of God (whom
no sin can ever please) appears in the one who is condemned.
Consequently, merciful absolution cannot be blameworthy, nor
can just punishment. Goodness, which is overcome by no evil,
absolves the guilty, and justice, which does not rejoice in sins,
punishes the guilty. Therefore, when God saves men, he grants
grace by his own good works, and when he punishes sinners
for their iniquities, he renders justice for evil human works. In
the former case, he indeed repairs what they have become; in
the latter, he judges what they have done. “For all have sinned
and come short of God’s glory.”52 For even those who have not
sinned by their involvement in works, all draw original sin from
the transgression of the first man.
30. Moreover, let us not think that the secret counsel of the
divine will is unjust because it justifies one ungodly person and
condemns the other. It is hidden from us, but let no one there-
fore doubt that it is divine justice, for no man can search this
out. Accordingly, let us simply exhibit humility of heart, and
let us sing with the prophet the mercy and judgment of God,53
while we restrain our inclination to search this out, so as to
avoid discussing what we cannot understand. For he warns us by
Holy Scripture, saying, “Do not try to search out things that are
too difficult for you, or try to discover what is beyond your pow-
ers; but always ponder the things that the Lord has commanded
you, and do not be curious about his many works.”54 Truly we
waste our time with unnecessary seeking, when no amount of
discovery justifies it, for harmful curiosity immediately slips into
sin if human weakness ever fails to take stock of its own limits.
In this very deep secret of the divine will, we should rather learn
that nothing else accords with our salvation except that each
of us learn to say humbly with David, “Your knowledge is too
wonderful for me; it is great, I cannot attain to it.”55 Likewise, let
us join our God-fearing cry with that of blessed Paul, who says,
“O the depth of the riches of both the wisdom and knowledge
of God! How unsearchable are his judgments and his ways past
finding out! For who has known the mind of the Lord? Or who
has become his counselor?”56 In this passage, before speaking
of the unsearchable judgments of God, blessed Paul first speaks
appropriately of the depth of his wisdom and knowledge. With
those words, he has indeed stopped every complaint and rash
voice whatsoever that has been raised against God’s just judg-
ment. For it is certain that the role of the person and office of a
judge is not to neglect knowledge when adjudicating a case, not
to abandon the straight path of wisdom when judging, lest he at
any time be prone to give an ignorant judgment hastily against
an unproven “fact” or be found to suppress a proven fact be-
cause of his foolish perversity. Therefore, God is not ignorant
that he might judge rashly, nor is he foolish that he might con-
demn someone unjustly, for prophetic authority proclaims of
him: “The Lord is righteous and loves righteousness: his coun-
tenance beholds uprightness.”57
state for adults and children who finish the course of their pres-
ent lives without baptism, in unbelief. Because of their great
association with original sin, both adults and children will go
together into the eternal fire that has been prepared for the
devil and his angels,58 because the grace of the Savior did not
destroy in them the contract by which the deceiver’s wickedness
subjected them to himself. But on this point the condition of
the adults is worse because, after enjoying the faculty of reason,
they still reject or neglect the saving remedy of regeneration,
without which not only will they be unable to possess the king-
dom, but they will also be subject to graver punishments. For
those who despise the kindness of God, “in accordance with
their hard and impenitent heart, treasure up for themselves
wrath for the day of wrath and of the revelation of the just judg-
ments of God, who will render to each one according to his
works.”59 Consequently, they will burn in the eternal fires (fires
in which those who die without baptism will burn, even children
who have done nothing good or bad) not only because of origi-
nal sin, but they will also be tormented much worse because of
their evil will, in proportion as they add yet more of their own
wickedness. In this matter of original sin, to be sure, eternal
death embraces both, but the punishment for the wickedness
of wills and acts increases. For it is worse to refuse to seek the
benefit of redemption because of an ungodly will than to be
incapable of coming to that benefit because one is hindered by
a truly tender age. And he who adds his own burden to the bur-
den received from our first parents is even harder pressed than
the one who bears only the burden of another.
32. A Christian should not doubt at all that the grace of God
goes before those who are cleansed of the burdens of original or
even personal sins. Concerning the generosity of his grace, cer-
tain people—after giving slight consideration to the situation—
greatly err in thinking that grace is given to all men equally,
even to those who woefully lack the benefits of that same grace.
Indeed, those who think in this way lack grace themselves, as
long as they do not believe that the grace itself is necessary for
a man to receive that grace. God does not give the grace unless
he first produces a good will in the man. And may each one
who receives grace gain as much as God, in accordance with his
free mercy, pours into the heart of the one who accepts it.
42. (XX.) Therefore, let us not think that God’s grace is giv-
en to all men. For not all have faith, nor do all receive the kind
of love for God that results in their salvation. Instead, they have
a corruption of the human will that keeps them from either be-
lieving or loving God. As long as the human will is not changed
by the grace of the divine gift, it either does not understand the
commands or despises the insights that come from understand-
ing. In other words, the man sins in ignorance, or his sin in-
creases because of the corruption stemming from the transgres-
sion. Therefore, concerning these men whom the darkness of
43. (XXI.) God’s grace through Jesus Christ our Lord works
in such a way that it makes the unwise wise, grants faith to the
unbelieving, calls the disobedient to life and even calls them
back again after their worldly desires have been cast out, and
us pray for those who persecute us and speak ill of us.113 There-
fore, this love does not originate or increase in us as a result of
our will. But by the action of God’s grace, it is poured out into
our hearts by the Holy Spirit, who has been given to us.114
den from the wise and the prudent? For does he not show later
that the knowledge of God consists not in human power, but in
divine revelation, when he says, “No one knows the Son except
the Father; and no one knows the Father except the Son, and
the one to whom the Son has willed to reveal him”?121 On this
point, who would fail to see that when one hears a message of
heavenly instruction from a man, he hears in vain unless God
the teacher speaks mercifully to him in his heart by revelation?
Book Two
1. (I.) In the preceding book, I discussed Jacob and Esau
enough and more than enough. I did so with the help of God’s
grace, which alone can pour into the human heart the gift of
holy knowledge and grant the mouth the unwavering ability to
speak, for we and our words are both in God’s hands. I proved
by apostolic teaching that the holy Jacob was elected before he
was born without any merits from either previous or subsequent
works, but he was set apart solely in accordance with the benefi-
cence of the divine purpose. We know that blessed Paul asserted
as much in the passage in which he says, “For while they had
not yet been born or done anything good or bad, in order that
God’s electing purpose might stand.”128 The Apostle said this
in order to show that God’s purpose would stand not accord-
125. That is, knowledge that does not lead one to love God.
126. That is, a knowledge produced by mercy leading to love.
127. Cf. 1 Cor 8.1, 1 Pt 4.8.
128. Rom 9.11.
160 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
strength. In this way, the doctor intended that the patient might
recognize that the doctor himself was the very fountain of life
and health, so that the patient might beseech him for the ben-
efit of health. The doctor did not intend the patient to fancy he
could produce his own righteousness from his haughty heart,
and consequently to think that he was a stranger to disease, as
if he did not need help to accomplish his own healing. (Such is
the Pharisee’s thinking: “God, I thank you that I am not as other
men, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even as this tax collec-
tor.”)135 Instead, the doctor intended the patient to look upon
his wounds with the humility that comes from a contrite heart
and truthfully to exclaim, “I said, ‘Lord, be merciful to me; heal
my soul, for I have sinned against you.’”136 Yet if the doctor had
not given free choice to man, that doctor from heaven would
not have healed our infirmity by knowledge of or love for the
commandment. As it was, the infirmity was increased by the
mere knowledge of the command, to the end that grace might
begin to bring about the health whose source is faith and love.
Accordingly, infirmity is combined with knowledge of the com-
mand for the proper working of man’s free choice, not so much
because man can (by his own will or by his own power) fulfill
what the law demands of him, but so that he, through knowl-
edge of the command, may become aware of his own infirmity
and then earnestly request the help of healing grace. After ac-
quiring grace, the patient is able to love and perform and rec-
ognize what is commanded (which he may or may not be able
to do), so that he may indeed be able to seek earnestly both to
attribute the misery of his infirmity to himself and to entrust the
grace of health to the benefits of the medicine.
are willing” and “if you refuse.” Everyone knows that willing and
refusing have to do with the will. Therefore, our will is in accord
with the words of the prophet: “If you are willing and obedient
to me.” Consequently, we must always will the good and must
continuously and willingly persist in good works. Indeed, when
the Apostle says that “God is the one working in us both to will
and to accomplish according to his good will,”138 he in fact
shows that man’s will is not directed toward willing the good
apart from the divine gift and that the will is divinely helped to
do good works. Therefore, since we are commanded to will, we
are shown what we must possess. But because we cannot possess
it by our efforts, we are informed that the one who gives us the
command is himself the one from whom we must seek help. Yet
we cannot even earnestly ask for it unless God works in us so
that we desire it, for the will in us that the gift of the merciful
God makes good is the same will in us that God helps so that
we may be able to do good works. The will rises from the evils
in which it lies prior to justification and renounces them with
delight, not by its own power, but because of God’s prevenient
work. And after it awakens so that it not fall, it cannot be suf-
ficient to itself alone; but just as it is awakened by the blessing
of prevenient mercy, so is it protected by the aid of subsequent
mercy so that it can persevere.
each person may have pity on his own soul and may please God,
human choice is thus admonished with a divine word: “Have
compassion on your soul, and please God.”141 But indeed, no
one can have compassion on his own soul unless he is antici-
pated by God’s mercy and receives it so he can be merciful. To
show this, the Lord himself, the giver of mercy, instructs him,
saying, “I will be merciful to whom I am merciful, and I will
show mercy to whom I will be merciful.”142 Therefore, blessed
David says, “My God, his mercy will come before me.”143 And it
has been clearly stated in the letter to the Hebrews that no one
can please God unless God works in him what is pleasing in his
sight. There indeed it is said: “Now may the God of peace, who
brought our Lord Jesus (that great shepherd of the sheep) back
from the dead through the blood of the eternal covenant, pre-
pare you for every good work by working in you what is pleasing
in his sight, so that you may do his will.”144
wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts,
and let him turn to the Lord.”148 Paul the apostle also urges us
to be renewed in the spirit of our mind and to put on the new
man, who has been created according to God in righteousness
and the holiness of truth.149
12. (VIII.) But in order for us to know the things that God
gives us, the Spirit at work in us must be not the spirit of the
world, but the Spirit of God; not the spirit that man has so that
he may be born in the world, but the Spirit whom he has re-
ceived so that he may be reborn from God. The Apostle clearly
teaches this when he says, “Now we have received not the spirit
of the world, but the Spirit who is from God, so that we may
know the things given to us by God.”168 The Apostle testifies
that the divine gift is given not only so that we may know, but
also so that we may understand, as he writes to Timothy: “Un-
derstand the things I say.”169 According to that statement, hu-
man choice is indeed appropriate for understanding, because
if a man did not have human choice, he could in no way un-
derstand the things that are said. But so that the Apostle may
show the source from which understanding is given to human
choice, he adds (after saying, “Understand the things I say”),
“For the Lord will give you understanding in all things.”170 So
also the most holy David, when he asks God for understanding
so that he may learn God’s commandments, says, “Your hands
have made me and fashioned me. Give me understanding so
that I may learn your commandments.”171 Proverbs also bears
witness that “the Lord gives wisdom, and from his face proceed
knowledge and understanding.”172 And the Apostle James com-
mands, “If anyone lacks wisdom, let him ask of God, who gives
to all liberally and does not reproach.”173 And in order to show
that the will to ask is itself divinely given, he adds, “But let him
ask in faith, not doubting in anything.”174 For without faith, it is
impossible to call upon God, as Paul points out when he says,
“How then will they call upon him in whom they have not be-
lieved?”175 So because no one calls upon him before believing,
no one believes in God unless he receives faith. It is thus certain
that the one who enlightens us so that we may believe also awak-
ens us so that we may ask for wisdom.
13. (IX.) Consequently, a man wills the good by his will, and
he does the good by his will, but without God’s gift and help he
can never will or do the good. Indeed, he is called upon to know
and admonished to act because he always has the free choice of
will. But he cannot have holy knowledge unless he receives it
from above as a gift of grace from the Father of lights, from
whom every excellent and perfect gift comes.176 And once he
has this knowledge, either he does not do what he now knows
he must do, or he is crushed by the weight of his own pride
while he strives to take credit for what he does. In fact, this is
the reason I mentioned holy knowledge above, for knowledge
that makes man proud and does not build him up in love is
not holy. That is the kind of “knowledge” with which some who
knew God did not glorify him as God or give him thanks. That
is the kind of “knowledge” about which it is written, “If anyone
thinks he knows something, he does not yet know anything as
he ought to know it.”177
your whole heart, and with your whole soul, and with your whole
mind,”178 and, “You will love your neighbor as yourself.”179 Our
Savior says that the whole law and the prophets hang on these
two commandments. But the love by which we may love God
with our whole heart is not a love that comes from within our
heart, but it comes from God. For “God’s love has been poured
out in our hearts through the Holy Spirit, who has been given
to us.”180 And God has bestowed love upon us so that we may
love one another. For the blessed John says, “Beloved, let us love
one another, for love is from God, and everyone who loves his
brother is born of God and knows God. He who does not love
does not know God, for God is love.”181
16. (X.) And because there are so many passages of this kind
in both the Old and New Testaments, it is very well demonstrated
that divine grace continuously assists a man’s choice, for either
that choice is helpless to initiate good deeds without prevenient
divine grace, or it can in no way be adequate on its own for per-
forming them without the grace that goes before it. Neverthe-
less, one may not say that the choice does not exist just because it
needs help. Nor may one say that because the choice exists, one
must believe that it can suffice on its own to begin or to complete
a good action. Accordingly, if the humble and meek heart assents
to the divine words (because it can do so, if the gift of humility
and meekness is divinely conferred upon it), wisdom and knowl-
edge are granted to the contrite and humble heart because the
veil has been lifted from the inner and higher understanding.
For it is written, “The Lord gives wisdom, and from his face pro-
ceed knowledge and understanding.”187
and, “Each one will receive his own reward according to his la-
bor”;190 and, “Labor as a good soldier of Christ Jesus”;191 and in
another passage, “Therefore, brothers, be steadfast and immov-
able, always abounding in the work of the Lord, knowing that
your labor is not in vain in the Lord.”192 In the book of Wisdom,
someone seeks help for that kind of work, crying out with his
whole heart, “God of our fathers and Lord of mercy, you made
all things by your word, and in accordance with your wisdom
you established man to rule over the creation that you made, to
rule the world with equity and justice, and to dispense judgment
with uprightness of spirit. Grant me wisdom, the consort of your
throne.”193 And a little later he adds, “Send wisdom from your
holy heaven, and send it from the seat of your greatness, so that
it may be with me and labor with me, that I may know what is
acceptable in your sight. For wisdom knows and understands all
those things, and it will lead me prudently in my works and pro-
tect me by its power, and my works will be accepted.”194
18. (XI.) Nevertheless, lest anyone think that even this de-
sire to pray for wisdom for oneself is not divinely bestowed, the
writer says just above that he knew that he could not have pos-
sessed the desire if God had not given it,195 and he says that this
very desire, in response to which wisdom was given, was itself a
gift. Therefore, he was instructed to learn from what source he
was stirred to pray. Nevertheless, he both knew willingly196 and
prayed willingly, because Christ’s prevenient grace instructed
and stirred his human choice, while it was yet ignorant and in-
dolent, to know and to pray. Therefore, it is the role of divine
mercy to enlighten man’s free choice, for it is by free choice
that a man both knows the things pleasing to God and com-
bines the service of his work and God’s assisting grace in vol-
untary devotion. The purpose of man’s choice is said to be for
his enlightenment: “My God, his mercy will come before me,”197
20. Behold what God’s grace has bestowed on us! He has set
fearful people (about whom Scripture says, “The thoughts of
mortals are fearful”)205 free. Without doubt their thoughts were
subject to that fear, for which the divine word rebukes those
who are subject. It says, “There they were in great fear, where
there was no fear.”206 This is a fear begun by desire for things
of the world, a fear that causes guilt and increases punish-
ment. This fear takes possession of its captives and keeps their
thoughts entangled in uncertain and unstable matters. For this
reason, the one who says, “The thoughts of mortals are fearful,”
immediately adds: “And our plans are uncertain.”207 For plans
that are devoted to uncertain things are uncertain, and uncer-
tain things cannot be possessed certainly. Every day we can, in
spite of ourselves, lose whatever we cannot carry with us into
eternity. Consequently, the plans of mortals are uncertain pre-
cisely when the heart is entangled and gripped by love for ei-
ther things that can be taken from the possessor against his will,
or possessions from which the possessor can be taken against
his will. A little later, Scripture shows us the source from which
the uncertainty of man’s plans arises. It says, “A body that per-
ishes oppresses the soul, and an earthly dwelling depresses the
mind with its many thoughts, and it is with difficulty that we as-
sess the worth of things of the earth, and we discover with great
effort the things that are in front of our eyes.”208
set a value on the things of earth and with great effort discover
the things that “are in front of our eyes”209 asks of God: “Who
will search out what is in the heavens? Who will understand your
mind, unless you confer your wisdom and send your Holy Spirit
from on high? Were the paths of those who live on earth thus
corrected? Did men learn what pleases you? Were they healed
by your wisdom?”210 What do the phrases “did they learn” and
“were they healed” mean? They can mean nothing else but what
he says is granted to men through the Holy Spirit and God’s
Wisdom (who is doubtless Christ). This is that we may learn
what we must do for our spiritual health when God’s prevenient
mercy enlightens and heals us, so that what we learn through
the prevenient grace we may do through the same subsequent
grace. For indeed grace precedes us when the Lord forgives all
our iniquities.211 It follows us when the Lord heals all our diseas-
es. Mercy precedes a man’s free choice when through its own
benevolence it brings about the beginning of a good will that
did not yet exist. But mercy follows when it administers help to
the person who has received that good will, so that he, by doing
well, may achieve the result of a good will.
23. The right hand of the Most High brings about this
change,214 by which human choice is enlightened. These works
of the Lord are great215 and deftly crafted for all his plans. Thus
does God prepare his plans in us, for he prepares in us what he
finds in us. While he makes the bow of the powerful weak, he
also girds the weak with strength.216 That is, he weakens the pre-
sumptuousness of human strength in those men whom he saves
freely, so that they may acknowledge their weakness and accept
the help of divine strength. God mercifully does these things in
us while he bestows good things for bad (that is, while he gives
good things for bad by prevenient mercy), in order that he may
preserve those good things in us by his subsequent mercy. For
when he provides help to those who are justified and have a
good will, he definitely furnishes an increase by his gifts, and in
this way he strengthens what he has accomplished in us, while
not allowing the good will (which he granted) to become inac-
tive and fail us.
213. The reader has undoubtedly noticed various allusions to the Beatitudes
(Mt 5.3–11) in the latter half of this paragraph.
214. Cf. Ps 76.11, following LXX (77.10 modern).
215. Cf. Ps 110.2 (111.2 modern).
216. Cf. 1 Sm 2.4.
178 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
25. (XV.) Therefore, let the humble man’s will follow the
Redeemer’s prevenient mercy and accompany his subsequent
mercy. When mercy precedes us, we set aside those things that
are behind; and when mercy follows us, we reach for the things
that are ahead. Thus grace itself guides us by bestowing a hun-
ger for things before us and removing the record of things past,
and in doing so, it does not permit us to abandon the way of life
we have laid hold of. Grace comes first so that we may pursue
“the prize of the high calling of God.”227 Grace also follows so
that we may glory in tribulations, “knowing that tribulation pro-
duces perseverance; and perseverance, character; and charac-
ter, hope; and hope does not put to shame, because God’s love
has been poured out in our hearts through the Holy Spirit who
has been given to us.”228 Grace keeps us from being seduced and
captivated by the desires of the world or from yielding against
our will in the face of adversities. Thus, because of subsequent
mercy, we die to the world to the extent that we are more and
more renewed in the spirit of our mind.
gift of faith and the power of working by the gift and help of
divine grace, he continues, “I was formerly a blasphemer and a
persecutor and an aggressor, but I obtained mercy.”232 And he
shows the work of that same mercy when he says, “But I give
my opinion as one who has obtained mercy from the Lord to
be faithful.”233 Accordingly, after saying that he was not worthy
to be called an apostle because he persecuted the Church of
God, he shows the work of prevenient mercy in himself by say-
ing, “But by the grace of God I am what I am.”234 And in order
to show that the gift of working has been bestowed on him by
the generosity of grace, he continues, “And his grace in me was
not in vain.”235 And what does “vain” mean, if not useless? So he
adds, “But I have worked more than all of them. Yet not I, but
the grace of God labored with me.”236
thy of a reward for itself and for its labor, because both in its
very existence and in its work, it relied not on its own strength,
but on the generosity of divine grace. Finally, for this reason,
Paul always truly and humbly attributed all the good he was able
to think and to do not to himself but to God who strengthened
him. (Thus, of course, he enjoyed success with restraint, and he
also resisted adversities courageously.) For he said in a certain
place, “Wherever and in whatever situation I may be found, I
know how to be humbled and I know how to be exalted, to be
full and to be hungry, to have an abundance and to suffer lack.
I can do all things in him who strengthens me.”237 Therefore,
Paul was able to do all things by his free choice, but only in him
who had clothed him with strength from on high. About this
he says, “In the work I need to accomplish, I labor according to
his work that he accomplishes powerfully in me.”238 Therefore,
blessed Paul was not silent about the mercy that preceded him
so that he might be faithful, nor did he use the operative grace
of Christ in himself as an excuse to cease from his holy work.
For grace worked in him in such a way that he neither failed by
becoming slothful nor became haughty by being ungrateful for
the grace itself.
lies not in the one who commits suicide, but in the one who did
not come to his aid with a healthful cure. To be sure, medicine
is not the cause of death, but its cure. So one is certainly not
right to blame the medicine for a death if it is not provided for a
very bad wound that a man inflicted on himself. It is indeed an
example of justice if the wounded man is abandoned so that the
death that he brought upon himself by his voluntary acts befalls
him. And it is an example of mercy if the doctor keeps him from
deadly destruction by the freely given benefit of a cure.
present age but at that future time when he will bestow glory on
the vessels of mercy and condemn the vessels of shame to burn
forever in eternal fire.
37. (XXI.) For this reason, blessed Paul testifies that glory,
honor, and peace can be given not to anyone endowed with
a secular or ecclesiastical position, but to everyone who does
good.277 And speaking of vessels that are in a great house, he
does not say that a greater position will produce a vessel of hon-
or, but he claims that any true honor will be bestowed on those
who have been cleansed. This is what he says: “But in a great
house there are not only vessels of gold and silver, but also of
wood and clay, some for noble use, some for ignoble. And if
anyone purifies himself of the ignoble, he will be a vessel sanc-
tified for honorable use and useful to the Lord, ready for any
good work.”278 And again he says about God: “He will render
to each one according to his works: to those who by patience
in doing good work seek glory and honor and immortality, he
will render eternal life; but to those who are contentious and do
not obey the truth but trust in wickedness, he will render wrath
and fury. There will be tribulation and anguish for every human
soul who does evil, to the Jew first and to the Greek; but there
will be glory and honor and peace to everyone who does good,
to the Jew first and to the Greek.”279 Blessed Peter also shows
that it is by the mercy of God that those who are saved are called
vessels of mercy, not that they receive a temporal position in this
life, but that the gift of regeneration is conferred on them in
faith, hope, and love. He says,
Blessed is the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. Through his
great mercy he has begotten us anew into a living hope through the
resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, and into an inheritance
that is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading, preserved in heaven for
you who are kept by the power of God through faith for a salvation
prepared to be revealed in the last time. In this you will rejoice, though
now for a little while you may have to suffer various trials so that your
faith, which is much more precious than gold tested by fire, will be
found to result in praise and honor and glory at the revelation of Jesus
Christ. Although you do not see him you love him, and although you
do not see him you believe in him. And as you believe, you rejoice with
unutterable and exalted joy, and receive the end of your faith, the sal-
vation of your souls.280
38. You see that the holy shepherd is providing the saving
food of spiritual teaching for his sheep, which he received from
the Prince and Lord of shepherds so that he might nourish
them. He certainly shows what this God accomplishes “through
his great mercy”281 in his faithful ones, namely, rebirth, not into
a hope of a secular or transitory ecclesiastical position, but into
the hope of eternal life. This rebirth is not into an inheritance
of service in the imperial or ecclesiastical army, but “into an in-
heritance that is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading.”282 This
rebirth is not into a hope to be pursued on earth, but one that
is “preserved in heaven.”283 The sheep [are born] not among
those who achieve temporal heights of a secular or ecclesiasti-
cal position, but among those “who are kept by the power of
God through faith for a salvation” that is not yet granted in its
perfection in this age, but “prepared to be revealed in the last
time.”284 He says that “you will rejoice” in this salvation and im-
mediately adds as a way of indicating the character of the pres-
ent life, “though now for a little while you may have to suffer
various trials.”285 He then indicates that things happen to the
280. 1 Pt 1.3–9. 281. 1 Pt 1.3.
282. 1 Pt 1.4. 283. Ibid.
284. Ibid. 285. 1 Pt 1.6.
192 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
faithful for a useful purpose: “So that your faith, which is much
more precious than gold tested by fire, will be found to result
in praise and honor and glory.”286 He reveals that this hoped-for
honor and glory are to be expected soon, “at the revelation of
Jesus Christ.”287 The chosen vessel288 also indicates this by say-
ing, “For you have died, and your life is hidden with Christ in
God. When Christ, your life, appears, then you also will appear
with him in glory.”289
42. Therefore, can any Christian say that the emperor Con-
stantine was a vessel of mercy in such a way that he calls Antony
and Paul vessels of shame?301 If Constantine Augustus of blessed
296. Gal 6.14. 297. 1 Cor 7.31.
298. Cf. Rom 6.11. 299. Rom 9.23–24.
300. Gal 5.24.
301. In the early fourth century Constantine was the first Christian Roman
emperor. Antony, whose long life stretched from the mid-third to the mid-fourth
century, was an Egyptian solitary monk and is considered to be the father of mo-
nasticism. The point of Fulgentius’s comparison is that Antony and the Apostle
PREDESTINATION AND GRACE 195
43. Who would deny that the following were blessed bish-
ops: Innocent of Rome, Athanasius of Alexandria, Eustathius
of Antioch, Gregory of Nazianzus, Basil of Caesarea, Hilary of
Poitiers, Ambrose of Milan, John of Constantinople, Aurelius
of Carthage, Augustine of Hippo, and other bishops? They gov-
erned the churches of God very vigilantly and (with the Holy
Spirit dwelling in them) resisted those heretics who were emerg-
ing or had already emerged. They did not permit old wolves
to creep into the ecclesiastical flock or permit new ones to lie
perniciously hidden in the Lord’s sheepfold. Who, I ask, would
deny that they are vessels of mercy that God has prepared for
Paul were clearly even more saintly than Constantine, although they held no
ecclesiastical or civil office.
302. The Theodosius whom Fulgentius mentions here is Theodosius I, Ro-
man emperor in the closing decades of the fourth century. John Thebaeus was
an Egyptian solitary monk of the same time period. Again, the point is that the
latter had no official position but was at least as saintly as the former.
303. The story of Emperor Theodosius’s consulting John Thebaeus before
going to battle is related in Rufinus, Continuation of Eusebius’s Ecclesiastical History,
11.19, 11.32 (Latin text in Die Griechischen Christlichen Schriftsteller 9, 1024
and 1036; English translation in The Church History of Rufinus of Aquileia, Books
10 and 11, trans. Philip Amidon [Oxford: University Press, 1997], 77 and 87).
196 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
glory? But who is such an enemy of divine faith and love that he
is not afraid of calling Paul, Antony, John, Hilary, Macarius, and
other monks of similar life and holiness vessels of shame? For
in them the truth of the correct faith and the integrity of a holy
lifestyle shone forth. May it never be that any Christians might
believe such things about God’s worthy slaves.
44. (XXIII.) For any who are led by the Spirit of God are sus-
picious of such unworthy attitudes, not only about monks “who
castrated themselves for the sake of the kingdom of heaven,”304
but even about married laypeople who believe correctly and live
uprightly. Certainly the seed sown by the Son of man that the
good earth receives to be nourished in its fertile bosom pro-
duces different kinds of fruit. Since God now grants an abun-
dant inward increase, the fruit increases not just a hundredfold,
but also sixtyfold and thirtyfold, so that it may be gathered into
the storehouse. For God says through the prophet that he will
give the eunuchs, that is, the virgins, honor and a place in his
city and within his walls that is better than the place of sons and
daughters.305 But because of the liberality of his goodness, he
also speaks through his apostle to grant fitting honor to the ab-
stinence of widows and to conjugal purity, as Paul says: “Honor
widows who are truly widows”;306 and again: “Marriage is honor-
able among all, and the marriage bed undefiled.”307 Can it be
that the Apostle, who says that in a great house there are some
vessels for honor and others for shame,308 would teach that wid-
ows and married couples were to be honored if he numbered
them among the vessels of shame? Surely none of the faithful
dare to deny that all who are devoted in faith and love to the
virtues unbelievers have despised are vessels for honor. But who
will dare to say that those who have been set at the Lord’s right
hand and to whom he is going to give the kingdom are vessels
for shame? They fed him as he hungered and thirsted in the
person of the least of his own, clothed him when he was naked,
showed him hospitality when he was a wanderer, visited him
when he was sick and in prison.309 Who, pray tell, would dare
to say that all those who the potter himself testifies are going to
enter into eternal life are vessels prepared for shame?
45. Or perhaps, are those people saying that monks and lay-
people who serve the Lord devoutly in their positions and pro-
fessions are vessels of shame only in this age, because they them-
selves see clearly that the monks and laypeople suffer affronts
and tribulations? But absurdity will immediately follow those
who think such things, since they would be compelled first of
all to call the blessed apostles (that is, the most glorious rams of
the Lord’s flock, the most vigilant shepherds) vessels of shame.
Will brothers of that sort really say that, in their opinion, certain
members of Christ’s household are vessels of shame because (as
Scripture testifies) they suffered shame for the name of Christ?
Let such brothers hear blessed Paul as he speaks these words to
the Thessalonians: “For you yourselves know, brothers, that our
coming to you was not in vain, but although we had already suf-
fered and been shamefully treated at Philippi, as you know, we
were bold in our God to speak God’s good news to you amid
great opposition.”310 Likewise, while writing to the Corinthians
he says, “I will gladly boast in my weaknesses so that the power
of Christ may dwell in me. Therefore, I delight in weaknesses,
in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in distresses, for Christ’s
sake.”311 And so that they may know that it is common for all the
saints to endure insults in this age, let them also hear what the
book that Luke the evangelist wrote testifies concerning the oth-
er apostles and their acts. There he relates that after the apos-
tles had been sent to prison and had been freed when an angel
opened the doors of the prison, the Jews brought those apostles
forward again and beat them murderously and threatened them
with floggings so they would not speak in the name of Jesus, and
then released them. Then Saint Luke tells us in these words that
they joyfully suffered shame: “Then they left the council, rejoic-
ing that they were counted worthy to suffer shame for the name
of Christ.”312
46. (XXIV.) But perhaps the reason they will not say that the
blessed apostles were vessels of shame is that those abuses the
apostles bore for the name of Christ were seeds of future honor
and glory, inasmuch as those abuses did not deprive them of the
truth of faith or the virtue of holy living. So the brothers who
think this should know that the vessels of shame are not those
who bear abuses in this age, but rather, those who have been
placed within the corporate body of the Church (which the
Apostle calls “a great house”)313 and yet obstinately hold opin-
ions contrary to the correct faith until the end [of their lives],
or cast off the instructions for holy living. And at the same time
let such brothers learn, according to blessed Paul’s thought,
that “if anyone purifies himself of those things,”314 whatever his
position, whatever his honor, whatever his profession, “he will
be a vessel sanctified for honorable use and useful to the Lord,
ready for any good work.”315 He will receive the eternal blessing
of future reward from that Judge who in this age gives free jus-
tification to whom he pleases, and who supplies the assistance
of grace to whom he has justified by faith, and who leads these
people into the blessing of the kingdom of heaven as he gives
them glory equal to that of the angels.
Book Three
1. (I.) Now we must discuss the order of the work that is un-
dertaken concerning those whom God has predestined to adop-
tion as sons. These have been predestined in Christ according
to the standard of true faith fixed by the authority of the Holy
Scriptures. They have been predestined in Christ before the
foundation of the world by God’s free goodness, not only for
the reward of glorification but also for the grace of justification,
not only for the eternal blessedness that does not change but
indeed also for the faith “that works through love,”316 not only
313. 2 Tm 2.20.
314. That is, the ignoble things about which the vessels of shame are con-
cerned.
315. 2 Tm 2.21. Cf. 1 Tm 3.17.
316. Gal 5.6.
PREDESTINATION AND GRACE 199
God has already done whatever he is going to do, and the eternal
and immutable arrangement is found in the works he is to do.
God’s power and wisdom have immutably known from eternity
all future things. He has irreproachably arranged all his future
works, and thus everything that he has arranged he does invinci-
bly. God does not change the things he has predestined, because
one cannot deceive his wisdom or find fault with the way he has
arranged things. And God accomplishes the things he has pre-
destined, because no one can impede or overcome his power to
accomplish these things. This constitutes the foreknowledge of
our God, “all of whose ways are mercy and truth”319 and to whom
the Church truthfully sings on account of his mercy and judg-
ment.320 Because God is immutable and eternal, he foreknew
with immutable and everlasting knowledge not only all his works
(which are definitely good and “sought out in all his wishes”),321
but also evil works of angels and of men that had to be carried
out in time. He foreknew not only the things he arranged to give
freely to those to whom he willed (so as to show that he is good),
but also the things with which he intended to repay the good
and the evil (so as to show that he is just).
one can bind his will. For if that number is not certain in God’s
mind, then either divine knowledge is in error, or the divine will
is found to be mutable, or divine power is overcome by some
kind of opposition. Moreover, if only the ungodly can say any of
those things just above, or if perchance not even an ungodly per-
son would be bold enough to say any of those things, then let no
one deny divine predestination, because we declare God’s pre-
destination to be unequivocally true, his knowledge blameless,
his will immutable, and his power unconquerable. To this pre-
destination belong both the Redeemer’s free justification and
the Judge’s righteous retribution. To this predestination belong
both the mercy that Paul pursued in order to be faithful341 and
the crown of righteousness which the Lord, the righteous Judge,
will grant to him in that day, and not only to Paul, but also to all
those who love his coming.342 For all those whom God predes-
tined for adoption are here freely justified from among the un-
godly, since “Christ died for the ungodly,”343 and since “all have
sinned and come short of God’s glory, being justified freely by
his grace.”344 Just as he has prepared for them the free gift of jus-
tification by his mercy, so has he prepared the reward of eternal
justification by his righteousness. Therefore, the work of grace
begins with the free gift of mercy to all who are predestined, and
it is brought to completion by a just reward.
this reason the Apostle says that eternal life itself is the grace of
God,348 for men freely receive the gift of the good life, for which
eternal life may be justly rendered. But God also prepared eter-
nal fire for the wicked, whom indeed he justly prepared to pay
their penalties while still not predestining them to commit sins.
For God predestined what divine justice repays, not what hu-
man injustice allows. Therefore, he did not predestine a guilty
man to sin, which he hates, but he predestined such a man to
judgment, which he loves. For it is written that the Lord “loves
mercy and judgment.”349 Consequently, God is going to punish
not only original sin, but also every actual sin present in the
wicked, because he does not provide a beginning for evil works,
and never does he engage in any agreement with them. So evil
works do not please God because they do not come from him. If
in fact they came from him, they would not be evil. Accordingly,
God justly crowns the good works that he mercifully gives; and
he justly punishes the [evil] works that he does not himself give.
In the former case, he crowns his own divine generosity, but in
the latter case, he condemns human transgression. Therefore,
what man has received from God is salvific for him, but what
has come from himself is destructive.
10. Thus, if anyone should say, “If a man has been predes-
tined, he need not pray or watch,” it would be like saying that
one who has been promised life by God should not seek the
things necessary for life. We read that fifteen years were added
to the life of King Hezekiah as a gift of divine compassion.354
Therefore, since Hezekiah received what he considered to be an
unequivocal divine promise, should he have said that he ought
not accept food or drink, or even give any attention to the things
necessary for life? Indeed it is because these things are given that
a person perseveres in his desire to live, and that he loves his
life and does not reject those things necessary for life. From ex-
perience we know that we think anxiously about the conditions
of life. Accordingly, God’s grace, which he predestined (that is,
prepared from eternity for his faithful), accomplishes this in us
because we received grace so that we might ask that this grace
be preserved in us in accordance with the divine gift, and so
that what we received in accordance with the generosity of grace
might also produce good works in us. And in those people the
gifts of grace (that were prepared for them as a benefit of divine
predestination) continue. Therefore, let no one ever say, “If we
have been predestined, let us not be vigilant or pray.” When we
watch and pray, let us realize the benefits of God’s grace. And
let us not deny that those good things that we see in ourselves
originate from God’s generosity. In the same way that we cannot
doubt that those gifts have been predestined, so we know that
they were eternally prepared. This is why the Apostle says, “For
we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works
that God has prepared so that we may walk in them.”355
11. (VII.) And may it never be said that the evangelical and
apostolic commands do not apply if one claims that predestina-
tion is in effect. Since Jesus knew from the beginning those who
were going to believe and who was going to betray him,356 the
Creator’s knowledge cannot have been false. For this reason,
just as he foreknew his betrayer, no one betrayed him except
the one whom he foreknew. In just the same way, he knew those
who had been predestined to faith by his preparation, so he
knew from the beginning those who would believe. But how do
we explain the apostolic statements about predestination, since
we know from the Apostle’s preaching that not only were those
who are members of Christ predestined, but so was Christ him-
self? Blessed Paul says about Christ, “He was made from the seed
of David according to the flesh; he was predestined to be Son of
God in power, according to the Spirit of sanctification.”357 He
also says in another passage, “But we speak wisdom among the
mature, wisdom that truly is not of this age or of the rulers of
this age, who are being destroyed. But we speak God’s wisdom
in a mystery, wisdom that was hidden, that God predestined be-
fore the ages for our glory.”358 So what is one doing when one
disputes the claim of predestination, if not finding fault with
the apostolic teaching by a fatal impiety? To be sure, Paul had
learned and was teaching divine predestination, which he knew
in his head and did not deny in his body. He knew that the eter-
nal and immutable God had, in accordance with his eternal and
immutable will, foreknown all things that he himself was plan-
ning to do and had predestined all things that he foreknew he
himself was going to do mercifully and justly among his saints.
15. (X.) But the word “all” is used because they are brought
together from every race of human beings, that is, from all na-
tions, all stations in life, all masters, all servants, all kings, all sol-
diers, from all provinces, all languages, all ages, and all ranks.
Thus, all whom God wills to be saved are saved, because no one
is saved unless God wills to save him by free justification. For
when our Savior says, “No one knows the Son except the Father;
and no one knows the Father except the Son, and the one to
whom the Son has willed to reveal him,”368 he is indeed showing
that he wishes to be revealed to certain persons and does not
wish to be revealed to certain others. How could he wish those
to be saved if he does not wish to reveal his Father and himself
to them? To be sure, it is clear in the Gospel that he spoke in
parables precisely because he wanted his words to be heard but
did not want them to be understood. There is no doubt that
the Lord himself revealed this fact, because when the disciples
also denies salvation. For men are saved simply by coming to the
knowledge of the Truth.376 Of Christ it is truly said that “he will
save his people from their sins.”377 Even blessed Peter says of him
that “there is no other name under heaven given among men by
which we must be saved.”378 So how could God have willed that
those people be saved, when he hid the very knowledge of the
Truth from them?
18. What, then, does it mean to will to save yet not to will to
reveal the mystery of salvation? What, I ask, did it mean when
he said that the Truth willed all men to come to knowledge of
him and that he did not will to reveal to them the means by
which they might come? What does it mean that he denies life
to those he invites to his Father’s domain? He said, “I am the
way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except
through me.”380 How, then, does he want those to whom he re-
fuses the knowledge of himself to come to the knowledge of
himself? What does it mean, then, to refuse to reveal the mys-
tery of knowledge of himself, if it does not mean to refuse to
save? Therefore, one who refuses to open the mystery of knowl-
edge of himself to some people because of the hardness of
their hearts does not will all people to be saved, for without that
knowledge of him no one attains to salvation. But the Apostle
could not be lying when he said that God “wills all men to be
saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth.”381 Nor did
the Evangelists lie when they said that the Lord himself had
granted the disciples, but not others, to know the mystery of
the kingdom of heaven. And there is no doubt that they knew
that he granted this to those to whom he willed to grant it, and
did not grant it to those to whom he did not will to grant it. The
evangelists also knew that this was why he granted such knowl-
edge to the former so they would be saved and did not grant it
to the latter so they would not be saved. Therefore, he willed to
save those to whom he granted the knowledge of the mystery of
salvation, but he did not will to save those to whom he denied
the knowledge of the saving mystery. For if he had willed to save
both groups, he would have granted both groups the knowl-
edge of the saving mystery.
380. Jn 14.6.
381. 1 Tm 2.4.
214 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
others, and let all those whom God “wills to be saved and to
come to the knowledge of the truth” understand rightly that
the will of the saving God is in truth known [only] to those to
whom the grace of knowing the Truth is granted. In this way,
God, since he has accomplished all things that he has willed,
fulfills his will in all things, for he gives the correct knowledge
of the mystery of salvation, along with love, to all whom he “wills
to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth.” Blessed
Peter shows that the word “all” is to be understood as meaning
“all those whom God deigns to call.” These are his words as he
speaks to the Jews: “For the promise is to you and to your chil-
dren, and to all who are far off, even to whomever the Lord our
God calls.”382
20. For blessed Paul also uses the word “all” in a certain pas-
sage without intending it to be understood as referring to all
people indiscriminately. Writing to the Philippians, he says: “All
are seeking their own interests, not those of Jesus Christ.”383 If,
in that passage, no one is excluded from that “all,” then all the
apostles and the other believers of that time must indeed be
counted among the “all,” because no ungodly person will be
considered. Therefore, it remains that we must understand “all”
to mean “certain ones,” that is, not all people without excep-
tion, but all who seek their own interests, not the interests of
Jesus Christ. Earlier in the same letter he indicates some good
people: “But some preach Christ from a good will, some from
love, for they know that I have been placed here for the defense
of the Gospel.”384 Therefore, those who were preaching Christ
from a good will out of love were not seeking their own inter-
ests, but Jesus Christ’s, because “love does not seek its own inter-
ests.”385 Thus, they were not among all those who were seeking
their own interests instead of Jesus Christ’s. At the end of his
letter, he calls these good people “saints.” And just as he calls all
the others evil, so he also calls all the former ones good, for he
says, “All the saints greet you.”386 Consider this: In one and the
same letter, blessed Paul mentions all the saints and all those
who seek their own interests instead of Jesus Christ’s, for in
truth all who were not seeking their own interests were saints,
and all those who were seeking their own interests were not
saints. So one must consider all the former and all the latter not
as a single entity, but as separate entities. In other words, both
are designated as “all” in such a way that all the former may be
distinguished from all the latter, and all the latter from all the
former, in accordance with the right ordering of the truth.
and every eye will see him, as well as those who pierced him,
and all the tribes of the earth will see and lament over him.”392
Behold, all the tribes of the earth will be blessed in Christ, and
all the tribes of the earth will lament when he comes.
for he says about certain people, “I will remove from them their
heart of stone and give them a heart of flesh.”399 Consequently,
he removes their heart of stone by removing their hardness of
heart, and he gives a heart of flesh by imparting the grace of
holy belief. Thus he softens the heart that had been hard and
grants the beginning of holy faith in it.
24. (XV.) Certainly God created the free choice of the hu-
man mind faultless in the first man, yet even then that choice
was faultless only with the help of grace. Indeed, by means of
that grace, free choice was able (if it so willed) to remain in that
same state of righteousness; and it was also able (if it so willed)
to depart from that grace through a malevolent will. But now
prevenient grace works in a man to set right the freedom of his
choice. To the extent that a man’s choice is set right, to that ex-
tent it is free; but to whatever extent it is led captive, to that ex-
tent it is still entangled in the bonds of servitude to evil. Those
bonds do not merely press lethally upon the children of this
age, but they also afflict them frequently. This is the very law of
sin, which tenaciously held the Apostle Paul in the clutches of
concupiscence, as it lived in his members and resisted the law
of his mind. Even though he was a resolute soldier who delight-
ed in the law of God according to the inner man, he was not
able to subject the law of sin effectively to himself. Nevertheless,
he actively made suggestions for subduing sinful desire. Hence
the same Apostle says, “For I delight in the law of God in my in-
ner man, but I see another law in my members battling against
the law of my mind and holding me captive to the law of sin
that is in my members.”400 He was not silent about the fact that
he could be set free only by the help of grace, so he continues
by saying, “Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from
the body of this death? The grace of God through Jesus Christ
our Lord.”401 Therefore, he possessed the strength of grace
in his mind, but he felt the weakness of choice in his body, a
weakness that Adam did not possess before he was corrupted
by willingly violating the command. As a result, although he was
25. (XVI.) The saints who live mortally in the body of this
death still possess these bonds, and indeed they are unfortunate-
ly vexed by them. God allows this so that the saints will know
that because of sin, they have lost the grace both of holy free-
dom and of the initial peace present in the first man, and so that
they will know that they cannot receive it again except through
the grace of Christ. This will happen only in that life in which
the saints will have no anxiety related to strife, but rather the
perfect security of peace. Then, to be sure, after [this life] has
trampled on death, every struggle with sin will be rooted out of
the members of the body. Then it will be truly said of that peace,
“Death has been swallowed up in victory. O death, where is your
victory? O death, where is your sting? For the sting of death is
sin,”404 into which we have fallen because of the first man’s trans-
gression, which none of us can escape in this life. For “if we say
that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in
us.”405 We must be watchful in the struggle so that we may rest in
peace. We must always be mindful of the weakness of free choice
that the iniquity of the first man has generated in us. We must
humbly beseech the Divine Majesty to replace it with the help
of his power, so that he may grant power to us who labor and
lead us who conquer to peace. This will happen so that we may
26. Therefore, before the first man sinned, the free choice of
the human mind was truly free to such a degree that the man
sensed nothing conflicting within himself. Consequently, he
was whole and happy, and he did not sense within himself any
wretchedness, for he retained righteousness with steadfast free-
dom. He indeed served righteousness407 freely, and therefore he
rejoiced in true freedom.
413. De Genesi ad litteram; Latin text in CSEL 28, 1–435; English translation
in ACW 41 and 42.
414. Vincentius Victor was a North African layman who wrote elegantly in
opposition to Augustine’s view of the origin of the soul. Here Fulgentius men-
tions Augustine’s response to Vincentius. The Latin title is De natura et origine
animae (Latin text in CSEL 60, 301–419).
415. Jerome, a Roman of the fourth and fifth centuries who spent the lat-
ter part of his life in Bethlehem, was the greatest biblical scholar of the early
Church. He is best known as the translator and compiler of the Vulgate, which
would become the standard Latin Bible by the ninth century. Augustine’s letter
to Jerome that Fulgentius calls a “book” here is Ep. 166 (Latin text in CSEL 44,
545–85; English translation in FOTC 30, 6–31).
416. Optatus was bishop of Milevis in North Africa in the late fourth cen-
tury. He wrote extensively against the Donatists (a rigorist group in North Africa
that tied the efficacy of the sacraments to the sanctity of the priest performing
them), and his work was the starting point for Augustine’s polemic against that
group. The first of Augustine’s three letters to Optatus is preserved as Ep. 144
in the collection of Jerome’s letters (Latin text in CSEL 56, 294–305; English
translation in NPNF, second series, 6, 283–87). The other two letters to Optatus
are in the collection of Augustine’s letters: Ep. 190 (Latin text in CSEL 57, 137–
62; English translation in FOTC 30, 271–88); Ep. 202A (Latin text in CSEL 57,
302–15; English translation in FOTC 30, 407–20).
PREDESTINATION AND GRACE 223
29. (XIX.) To be sure, those who claim that new souls are
made individually completely miss the point, since one may be-
gin to oppose them by asking by what justice of God could a
soul that is given anew to a body derive original sin, since it does
not come from the propagation of human seed. Those who as-
sert this are evidently constrained by a dilemma that compels
them either to call God unjust or to deny original sin. For a soul
that is not propagated the way flesh is must not be considered
as a partner with the flesh in original sin, and therefore, such a
soul is not found to need the sacrament of baptism. And if, in
the case of a child who dies without baptism, the flesh alone is
polluted with the contagion of original sin and the soul of the
unbaptized child is thought to depart this age without iniquity,
where then will the child be in the resurrection? In the king-
dom of God because of the purity of his soul, or in the eter-
nal fire because of the impurity of his flesh? But wherever one
might say the child will be, [in this scenario] one must say that
God is either a liar or unjust. He is a liar if he brings an unbap-
tized person into the kingdom after the Savior himself previ-
ously established a very strong condition: “If anyone is not born
again of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of
God.”417 And God is unjust if he sends a soul into eternal fire
along with the flesh, when the soul shares no common sin with
the flesh. But it is obvious that everyone is to be condemned
to the conflagration of eternal fire if he has not been baptized
either by water that has been sanctified in Christ’s name, or in
417. Jn 3.5.
224 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
his own blood418 for the name of Christ and for the Church.
Therefore, by what justice of divine judgment will the soul be
sent into the eternal fire along with the flesh, if it is not held
guilty of original sin?
31. (XX.) Indeed, on this point those who assert that souls
are propagated with bodies can demonstrate that God’s judg-
ment toward children is just by establishing that original sin is
present not just in the flesh or just in the soul, but is common to
both. As a result, those who say this may rightly regard the guilt
as being shared because of a common source of sin, but on the
issue of sperm that dies without leading to conception, let them
be completely silent. It is certain that the human soul has at-
tained eternality by the very gift of its creation, and the body, in
which the soul lived for however short a time in this world, must
receive eternality in the resurrection. Therefore, who would say
that sperm that has issued forth (either sperm that has not led
to conception [in the womb] or sperm that has flowed as the
result of a nocturnal emission) has been ensouled? Every sane
person sees how preposterous and completely irrational it is to
say that.
feels. Let us not doubt that original sin envelops the soul along
with the flesh in which it is born, and that for this reason, the
soul also needs the benefit of holy baptism.
420. Tertullian, who lived in Carthage in the late second and early third
centuries, was the first major Christian theologian to write in Latin. Around the
year 206, he joined a rigorist group known today as the Montanists. The passage
Fulgentius refers to here, in which Tertullian argues for the corporeal constitu-
tion of the soul, is in On the Soul 6 (Latin text in CCL 2, 787–90; English transla-
tion in FOTC 10, 189–93).
421. Jn 4.24. 422. Ps 103.4 (104.4 modern).
423. 1 Cor 2.11. 424. Jn 10.18.
425. Ps 31.9, following LXX (Ps 32.9 modern).
426. Manichaeism was a dualistic sect that originated in Persia in the third
PREDESTINATION AND GRACE 227
not only in the bodies of men, cattle, birds, and fish, but also
in wood and grass, in trees and vegetables. They are ignorant
wretches, and they have not learned that the creature is not
the same as the Creator. Although God is immutable, the soul
is in fact mutable. Now it knows, now it does not; now it pro-
gresses, now it fails; now it has rational intelligence, now it does
not; now it remembers, now it forgets; now it hates what it loved,
now it loves what it hated; now it falls into the trap of being de-
ceived, now without even having been deceived, it still consents
to error. This is certainly what the blessed Apostle points out in
Adam and his wife, when he says, “Adam was not deceived, but
the woman was deceived and fell into transgression.”427 There-
fore, the woman who had been deceived sinned, and the man
who had not been deceived consented voluntarily to wicked-
ness. Thus it is ungodly to believe that the soul is a part of God.
The soul is sometimes changed for the better, sometimes for the
worse, but it is found to be not a part of the divine nature, but
a certain part of the divine works. To be sure, it is one of those
works that God made, each one definitely good, and all taken
together, very good.
century. It was based on the idea of a struggle between light and darkness, and
the purpose of religion was to enable a person to release the particles of light
within him. Augustine was a Manichaean in the 370s, prior to his conversion to
Neoplatonism and then to Christianity. The idea Fulgentius discusses here was
common in many forms of Eastern religion, not merely in Manichaeism.
427. 1 Tm 2.14.
428. Origen was the leader of the Alexandrian catechetical school in the
early third century. At the time Fulgentius was writing in the early sixth cen-
tury, Origen’s cosmology was considered very problematic, and he would be
condemned at the Fifth Ecumenical Council in 553. Notice that Fulgentius’s
statement “as Origen is said to have thought” suggests doubt about whether Ori-
gen actually taught the ideas for which he was being criticized at the time. In
fact the textual history of Origen’s On First Principles is extremely complicated,
and it is very difficult to ascertain what Origen himself originally wrote. For the
228 FULGENTIUS AND MONKS
ly, saying that children who have not yet been born have done
nothing good or evil.429 Indeed, the deeds of those being born
are not their own, although they are born bound by the ancient
sin of the first man: “For through one man sin entered into this
world, and death through sin, and so death passed to all men,
because in him all have sinned.”430 Hence, they became sons of
wrath and slaves of sin by nature, and by serving sin they became
void of righteousness, since they were conceived in iniquity and
were also nourished in sin in the womb by their mothers.431
idea Fulgentius mentions here, see Origen, On First Principles, Bk. 1, Chap. 8
(ancient Latin version in SC 252, 220–32; English translation in Origen: On First
Principles, trans. G. W. Butterworth [New York: Harper & Row, 1966], 66–75).
429. Cf. Rom 9.11. 430. Rom 5.12.
431. Cf. Ps 50.7 (51.5 modern). 432. 1 Tm 2.5.
433. Jn 3.5. 434. Rom 3.22–25.
PREDESTINATION AND GRACE 229
In the originator himself, this sin originally claimed for itself all
his progeny. To be redeemed, this race needs the blood of that
mediator, who was true God, and while remaining “in the form
of God,” nevertheless “emptied himself by taking the form of a
slave,”435 so that he might not possess the blot of either original
or actual sin.
1. If anyone does not confess that in our Lord Jesus Christ there are
two natures (that is, divinity and humanity) united, or if he confesses
one incarnate nature of God the Word but does not mean this in the
sense of two united in one subsistence or person (according to what
the venerable synod at Chalcedon has handed down to us), let him be
anathema.
2. If anyone does not confess that the holy Mary is properly and
truly the Bearer of God, but if he instead attributes this title to her only
according to a great honor and in name because he believes she bore a
man who is said to be God only according to grace, rather than believ-
ing that she bore God incarnate and made man, let him be anathema.
3. If anyone does not confess that there has been a union of sub-
stances and natures according to which the Word was united to a hu-
man nature while remaining God by nature, but if he instead confesses
that the union was one of subsistence or person or as a kind of illustra-
tion or according to favor or good will, let him be anathema.
5. If anyone does not confess that that child whom the holy Vir-
gin Mary bore is by nature God, and that through him all things were
1. As explained in the introduction, this is perhaps the earliest writing by the Scyth-
ian monks, written in 519 during the monks’ stay in Constantinople, if not earlier. The
standard title is Capitula Maxentii Ioannis edita contra Nestorianos et Pelagianos ad satisfactio-
nem fratrum. The Latin critical text may be found in CCL 85A, 29–30.
235
236 APPENDIX I
6. If anyone says that Christ has suffered in the flesh but does not
consent to say that God has truly suffered in the flesh (which is pre-
cisely what it means to say that Christ has suffered in the flesh), let him
be anathema.
7. If anyone says, “God was not made the Christ, but the Christ was
made God,” let him be anathema.
8. If anyone does not confess that there have been two births of the
one Son of God (since God the Word was indeed born from the Father
before the ages, and the same one was born from his mother in the last
times), let him be anathema.
10. If anyone says that sin is natural, and in a mindless way ascribes
the source of sin to the Creator of natures, let him be anathema.
11. If anyone does not confess that original sin has entered the
world through the transgression of Adam (according to the voice of
the Apostle when he says: “Through one man sin entered into the
world, and death through sin, and so it passed to all men, because in
him all have sinned”),5 let him be anathema.
1. “The Father is God, the Son is God, and the Holy Spirit is also
God; but there is one God, not three.”2 There is one substance or na-
ture, one wisdom, one power, one dominion, one reign, one omnipo-
tence, one glory. Nevertheless, there are three subsistences or persons,
and each person always unchangeably retains what is proper to him-
self, in such a way that the Father is neither the Son nor the Holy Spir-
it, and the Son is neither the Father nor the Holy Spirit, and the Holy
Spirit is neither the Father nor the Son.
2. And the Son, that is, the Word of God, the Only-begotten God, of
the same substance as the Father, remains God in his own subsistence.
In the last days this Son assumed human nature from the womb of the
blessed Virgin Mary, and as he united flesh to himself, was made man,
possessing a rational soul or a mind.
1. That is, John Maxentius. The standard title of this work is Item eiusdem professio
brevissima catholicae fidei, and the Latin critical text may be found in CCL 85A, 33–36.
2. This is a quotation from the Athanasian Creed, art. 15–16. The Latin text and
English translation may be found in (inter alia) Creeds of the Churches, vol. 2, ed. Philip
Schaff (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, reprint 1998), 67. This creed arose in the West some-
time in the late fourth or (more likely) early or mid-fifth century.
3. Cf. Lk 2.52.
237
238 APPENDIX II
ing to his humanity. We must confess that God ascended into heaven
with his own flesh, that he sat down at the right hand of the Father, and
that from there he is about to come again in glory with his own flesh to
judge the living ones and the dead ones.
5. We must say in turn that the one who is eternal life, the wisdom
and power of the Father, was born of a woman according to the flesh.
We must say that the one who is eternal life, the wisdom and power of
the Father, lay in a cradle wrapped in cloths. We must say in turn that
the one who is eternal life, the wisdom and power of the Father, suf-
fered, was crucified, and died according to the flesh.
7. For he is “from the loins of Abraham,”6 and a child has been giv-
en to us from the seed of David;7 he is “the God of heaven”8 and “the
Prince of peace.”9 And indeed, there are not two persons, but one per-
son of Christ, because “no one ascends into heaven except the one who
descended from heaven, the Son of man who is in heaven,”10 and “Jesus
Christ is the same yesterday, today, and into the ages.”11
The words “Lord,” God,” “Christ,” and “Jesus” occur on virtually every page and
are not included in this index.
Abraham, 49–50, 58, 72–73, 82, 45, 48–49, 51, 54–55, 57, 60–61,
89–90, 112, 174, 193, 200, 203, 63–64, 66, 74–78, 81–90, 92–94,
215–16, 238 96–97, 99–100, 102–4, 106,
Adam, 11n15, 35, 42n76, 68, 70, 114–15, 120, 122–23, 125, 129,
72n105, 73, 103, 124, 218, 220, 135–36, 138–40, 142, 147–48,
227, 236 150–52, 154–55, 162, 166–67,
adoption/adopt (as sons of God), 169–70, 172, 176, 180, 184, 191,
15n29, 55, 93, 112, 117–18, 168, 193, 195–96, 203, 207, 214, 216,
198, 201–4, 231 218, 221, 224–25, 227, 230, 235.
Anastasius, 9–10 See also faith
angel, 45, 49, 53, 61, 81, 104, 117, beloved, 41, 43–44, 49, 61, 106,
136, 146, 193, 197–98, 200, 226 109–10, 119, 128, 131, 169, 171,
apostle, 32, 35–36, 38, 42, 45–46, 49, 192, 202. See also love
54–55, 58–60, 63, 70–71, 73–75, birth, 16n31, 56, 71, 73–74, 80, 124,
77, 79–80, 82, 86, 88–90, 92, 94, 127–28, 132–33, 139, 189, 191,
97, 103–4, 106, 109–17, 123–27, 228, 230; of Christ, 27, 33, 45–46,
136–37, 139–40, 147, 149–51, 51–56, 69, 81, 106, 236
154–60, 164, 166–67, 169, 172, bishop, ix, xiv, 4–5, 9, 17–19, 21–22,
177–80, 182–83, 187–89, 192, 25–29, 33–34, 38–40, 42–43,
194, 196–98, 201, 205–8, 211–14, 45n12, 83n172, 99n244, 109n6,
217–19, 226–27, 229, 236 119, 185, 192, 194–95, 222, 236
Arius/Arian, 4–5, 30n20, 33n35, blot (of sin), 65, 72, 122, 125, 128–
39n61 29, 135, 141, 229
assisting grace. See grace Byzantine Empire, x, 3, 5, 8–11. See
astrology, 208 also Roman Empire
Athanasius, 26n3, 30, 195, 237n9
Augustine/Augustinian, ix, xiii–xiv, Caesarius of Arles, 20
12–14, 16n29, 19–20, 42n76, 119, Carthage, xiii, 4, 11–12, 195,
185–86, 195, 222, 227n426, 236 226n420
Cassian, John, ix, xiii, xv, 13, 15–16
baptism/baptize, 11n15, 32, 55, Catholicism/Catholic, xi, 3–5, 25, 42,
63–65, 72, 99–100, 102–3, 113– 51, 100, 119, 185, 193, 238; Cath-
14, 118, 122, 135–43, 146, 160, olic faith/dogma/truth/consen-
223–24, 226, 228, 231 sus, vii, 26, 41, 45, 65, 72–73, 109,
Basil the Great, 38, 39n61, 195 111–12, 114, 120–22, 224–26, 237
belief/believer/believe, 8, 11, 18, Catholic Church. See Church
20, 25, 27, 30, 32–37, 40–42, 44, Celestine, 33, 39–42, 236
239
240 General Index
Chalcedon, Council of (year 451), ix, cooperative grace. See grace
xiv–xv, 3, 5, 7–11, 15n28, 17–18, council, ix, xiii–xiv, 3, 5, 7–8, 10,
26, 33–34, 235 12n15, 19–20, 26–29, 33–34, 39–
child, 15n29, 32, 40, 48, 60, 69–73, 41, 197, 227n428. See also the place
80, 89, 99–100, 102, 114, 118, names of the councils (e.g., Nicaea,
121–25, 127–28, 131–36, 138–43, Constantinople)
146, 160, 187–88, 214, 218, counsel, 32, 40, 121–22, 135, 144,
223–25, 228, 230, 235, 238. See 184, 208–9. See also purpose
also infant counselor, 32, 38, 96, 145
choice, 12, 35, 36, 40–41, 66, 74–75, covenant, 46, 73, 91, 137, 165, 215
79, 82–83, 87, 95, 99, 109, 111, creation/creature/create, 10, 30, 44,
116, 118–20, 123, 148, 160–67, 47–48, 52–54, 60, 64, 66–67, 70,
169–74, 176–78, 181, 184–85, 77, 80, 86–87, 104–5, 112–118,
218–21, 228–29 122–26, 129, 130, 132, 135, 153,
Christological issues/controversies, 166, 17, 206, 218, 223, 226
ix, xiv–xv, 3, 5–8, 14, 16n30, 19, Creator, 35, 49, 53, 59, 63, 66, 70,
26n3, 28, 34n40 84, 87, 97, 124, 130, 133, 161
Christology, ix–x, xiv–xv, 6, 14–16, crucifixion/crucify, xiv, 9–10, 16–17,
18–21, 28, 34n39 31, 36, 60–61, 65, 194, 206,
Church, ix–xi, xiv, 3n1, 4, 6n6, 8n9, 237–38
15n29, 19–20, 25, 29, 33–34, Cyril of Alexandria/Cyrilline, xv, 6–9,
39n61, 41–42, 77, 94, 98, 113, 15n28, 26–28, 31, 33–34
117, 140, 149, 180, 185, 192–93,
195, 198, 200, 222n415, 224, 230, David, 29, 49, 51, 54, 72, 76–77,
237n9; Catholic, 100, 119, 193; 117, 129, 142, 145, 148, 164–65,
Roman, 64, 119 168–69, 171, 183, 207, 238
circumcision/circumcise, 32, 72–73, death, 4–5, 9, 19, 31, 34–36, 51,
90, 113, 129 55–57, 60, 62, 64–70, 73–75,
Cledonius, 27–28 94–95, 99, 103, 123–24, 132, 139,
compound (as a description of 141–43, 146, 154, 159, 161, 171,
Christ), 29–30, 236 174, 178, 189, 218–19, 228, 236
conception/conceive, 48, 50–56, decree, xiii, 7n8, 11n15, 20n41, 35,
59–60, 68, 72, 81, 106, 124–25, 142, 184, 199, 225–26
127–29, 133, 140, 160, 225, 228, demon, 85
230 deserts, 84. See also merit
condemnation/condemn, 11, 13, 29, destruction, 57, 84, 97, 126, 131,
33–37, 39–40, 67–68, 70, 73–74, 158, 189
93, 96, 98–100, 103–4, 111–14, devil, 36, 51, 56, 75, 86, 95, 104–5,
122–23, 125–28, 130–31, 137, 117, 141, 146, 153, 174, 182, 185,
141–45, 154, 158–60, 184, 187, 229. See also demon, Satan
190, 205, 216, 223, 227n428, 237 diabolical, 85, 141, 169
condemned lump. See lump Dioscorus, 17, 34
Constantinople, xiv, 8–11, 16–20, divine nature. See nature
27–28, 34, 119n47, 195, 235n1, divinity/divine/divinely, x, xv, 6,
236; First Council of (year 381), 8, 10–11, 14, 17, 19–21, 25–26,
8, 27n5, 33n36, 39n61; Second 28–31, 33, 35–37, 39, 40–41, 43–
Council of (year 553), ix, 20 45, 47–48, 50, 52–53, 55, 57–63,
continuing grace. See grace 65–66, 72, 75–76, 79, 80, 84–87,
continuing mercy. See mercy 89, 91, 97, 101–2, 104, 107, 109–
conversion/convert, x, 4, 58, 98, 116, 14, 116, 118, 120–23, 126–29,
155, 162, 164, 166, 168, 180–81, 131, 134–35, 137, 140–45, 150,
188, 211, 227n426 152–59, 161–62, 164–75, 177–81,
General Index 241
183–85, 189, 193–94, 196, 199, father (of the church), ix–xi, 19, 26,
201–2, 204–9, 213, 217, 219, 221, 29, 38n61, 42, 44–45, 111, 120,
224, 226–27, 230, 235, 237–38 128, 147, 184–85
doctor, 161–63, 188–89. See also phy- Faustus of Riez, xiii–xv, 13–14, 18–19,
sician 42, 119–20
favoritism, 37, 128. See also respecter
earth/earthly, 15n29, 38, 54, 61, 67, of persons
72, 81, 85–86, 93, 97, 101, 103–4, fear, 11, 65, 81, 96, 116, 136–39,
113, 117–18, 125, 128–29, 141, 141–42, 145, 149, 168–69, 174–
157, 175–76, 182, 188, 191–93, 77, 181, 192, 208, 217
195–96, 209–10, 215–16, 227, Ferrandus, xiii, 4
230, 236 Fifth Ecumenical Council. See Con-
ecclesiastical office/preferment, stantinople, Second Council of
116–18, 190–95 First Ecumenical Council. See Nicaea,
election/elect, 12–13, 29, 91, 106–7, First Council of
111, 121, 126–27, 129, 143, firstborn, 31–32, 117, 201
158–60, 201–2, 223. See also pre- flesh, xiv, 16–17, 27, 30–31, 33, 35–
destination 36, 45, 47–63, 65, 67, 69–74, 78,
emperor, 5n5, 8–10, 16–19, 192, 81–82, 85, 87–88, 93, 95, 101–2,
194–95 106, 117, 122–25, 129, 138–40,
empire, 3–4, 8, 10–11. See also Byzan- 147, 179, 182, 194, 205–7, 218–
tine Empire, Roman Empire 20, 223–26, 235–38
Ephesus, Council of (year 431), foreknowledge/foreknow, 92, 121–
9n12, 28n10, 33–34 22, 126–27, 129, 132–34, 144,
Esau, 111–13, 122, 127, 129, 159, 184, 199–200, 202, 207
187 Fourth Ecumenical Council. See Chal-
eternal life. See life cedon, Council of
evangelist/evangelical, 32, 47, 52, free choice. See choice
55, 95, 150, 197, 207, 212–13, freedom, 35–36, 40, 66, 79, 109, 124,
221, 226 163, 174, 218–21, 228–29
example, 14–15, 21, 72n105, 77, 88, Fulgentius of Ruspe, ix–xi, xiii–xv,
101, 188–89, 192 3–5, 9n11, 11, 14, 16–22, 25,
Ezekiel, 82, 147 32n33, 43, 95n229, 104n271,
108–9, 111n12, 117n34, 119–21,
faith/faithful, x, xiv, 3–4, 8, 17, 25– 185–86, 194–95, 222n414, 226–28
26, 36, 41, 43–46, 49, 53, 57–58,
61–67, 72–78, 80–82, 84–99, Gaul, 12–14, 16n31, 40, 42
102–10, 112–14, 116–22, 128–29, generosity (of God), 83, 87, 95,
131–32, 135–36, 138–42, 148–52, 102–3, 111, 130, 146, 148, 152,
154–55, 159, 163, 166, 168, 170, 155–56, 169, 179–81, 183, 189,
172, 177, 179–81, 183, 185, 205–6, 217, 221
189–93, 195–96, 198, 200–201, glorification/glorify, 26, 91–93, 103–
204–8, 211, 215, 217–18, 220–21, 4, 106, 131, 155, 158, 170, 185,
224–30, 237; of Christ, 93–94. See 198, 200–202, 217
also belief, Catholic faith glory, 31, 36, 38–39, 45, 47, 52, 57,
fate, 208 60–61, 73, 84, 87, 91–94, 96, 110,
Father (in reference to God), 4, 28, 113, 117, 126, 131, 137, 144, 179,
32–33, 36, 40, 46–48, 50–52, 56, 190–92, 194–96, 198, 200, 204,
59–65, 68–69, 82, 93, 101, 104–6, 207, 211, 215, 228, 237–38
109, 112, 117, 139, 151, 157–58, Gospel, 48–49, 75, 115, 149, 210,
168, 170, 182, 184, 191, 210–11, 214
213, 236–38 Gothic/Goths, 3–4, 10
242 General Index
grace, ix–x, xiv–xv, 6n6, 11–16, 95, 101–2, 108, 110, 114–16, 118,
18–22, 27, 34, 36–45, 47, 53–57, 124, 136–37, 139, 150–51, 156–
65–68, 73, 75–79, 81–89, 91, 93, 57, 165–69, 171, 176, 178–79,
95–100, 102–3, 106–26, 129–32, 185–86, 195–96, 206–7, 211, 223,
135–44, 146–47, 149–70, 172–76, 228, 237
178–86, 188, 194, 198–99, 201–6, hope, x, 9n12, 77, 84, 93, 109, 120,
214, 217–19, 221, 228–31, 235; as- 179, 182, 190–92, 204
sisting, 173, 185; continuing, 148; Hormisdas, 10–11, 17–19, 119
cooperative, 100; operative, 100, horoscope, 208
181, 185; prevenient, 53, 66, 76, human choice. See choice
78, 148, 164, 168, 172–74, 176, humanity, ix, 6, 19–21, 26–27, 29–30,
184, 218; subsequent, 88, 174, 45, 48, 52–53, 58, 61–62, 124,
176, 185. See also mercy 235–38
Gregory of Nazianzus, 27–28, 30–31, human nature. See nature
39n61, 195 humility/humble, 42, 48, 72, 76–77,
guarantee, 74, 186–87 82, 85, 94, 96, 141, 144, 159, 163,
guilt/guilty, 73, 87, 99–100, 104, 172, 176, 179, 181–82, 189, 192
113, 122, 124–26, 128, 131–32, Huns, 3
141, 144, 154, 159, 175, 187, 205,
224–25 immortality/immortal, 9–10, 35, 51,
60–62, 65–66, 69, 87, 190
Hadrumetum, monks of, 12–13 immutability/immutable/immutably,
healing, 9n11, 17, 20, 74, 86–87, 29, 46–47, 182, 184, 199–200,
135, 161–63, 168 204, 207–9, 227
heart, 40–41, 44, 61, 65, 67, 72, 75– incarnation/incarnate, xiii, 6–7, 9,
78, 80–82, 84–85, 89–91, 93–96, 15n27, 20, 25–27, 30–31, 44–45,
106, 108–9, 111, 113, 116, 129, 47–48, 52, 54, 106, 235–36
137, 141, 144, 146–49, 151, 153, infant, 11n15, 72–73, 99–100, 133,
155, 157–60, 163, 166, 171–73, 138, 228. See also child
175–77, 179, 182–83, 188–90, Innocent, 39–41, 195, 236
192–93, 212–13, 217–18 intercourse. See sexual intercourse
heaven/heavenly, 31, 36, 41, 49,
53, 60–61, 69, 77, 86, 93, 96–97, Jacob, 58, 61, 111–13, 122, 126–27,
102–5, 118, 121, 125, 156–58, 129–30, 159, 187
163–64, 173, 176, 179, 185–86, James, 82, 157, 169, 182
191, 196, 198, 203, 210–13, 227, Jerome, 222
230, 236, 238 Job, 72
Hebrews, 81, 150, 165 John (the evangelist/apostle), 31, 47,
help, 6, 13–14, 20, 26, 33n37, 36, 55–56, 58, 60, 169, 171, 215–16,
41, 58, 66, 72, 74, 76, 78–79, 83, 221
88, 97, 106, 109, 115–16, 120–21, John Cassian. See Cassian, John
126, 128, 131–32, 142, 149, 151, John Maxentius, xiii, 16–20, 25, 28n9,
154, 159, 162–65, 167–68, 170, 43, 108, 119n47, 235, 237n1
172–74, 176–85, 187, 189, 206, John of Antioch, 37n33
218–19, 221, 229 John of Constantinople, 11, 17
Henotikon, 8–9, 11 John Thebaeus, 195–96
heretic/heretical, 18, 25, 29–30, 33, John the Baptist, 32
37, 41, 72, 195 justice, 32, 37, 66, 70, 84, 96–97,
Holy Spirit, 15, 25, 29n14, 32–33, 36, 123, 130, 137–38, 142–44, 162,
38, 40, 44–45, 48–49, 53, 55–58, 168, 173, 184, 187, 189, 199, 205,
60, 63–65, 75, 78, 81, 83, 86, 93, 223–24
General Index 243
justification/justify, 14, 45, 56–57, medicine, 79, 154, 161–63, 189
62, 64, 73–75, 85, 88–95, 103, mercy, 9, 10, 29, 40–42, 77–79, 84,
113–14, 125–26, 129, 131–32, 96–97, 100, 102–3, 111–15, 117,
144–45, 152, 154, 158–59, 164, 121–22, 126–27, 130, 132, 135–37,
177, 184, 198–202, 204, 210, 141–44, 147–48, 150, 155, 158–59,
228–29 164–65, 168, 172–74, 176–77,
Justin, 10, 17–18 179–81, 184, 187–95, 199, 200–
Justinian, 17–19 201, 204–5; continuing, 148; pre-
venient, 113, 147–48, 164, 176–77,
knowledge, 37–38, 65, 73, 75, 78, 81, 179–80; subsequent, 78, 114, 164,
91–92, 94, 96–97, 101, 111, 118– 176–77, 179–80. See also grace
20, 129, 133–34, 145, 154–55, merit/meritorious, 12–13, 39, 41, 54,
157–59, 161, 163, 165, 168–70, 91, 105, 112, 115, 121–22, 125–
172, 175, 199–200, 204, 207–14, 32, 138, 143–44, 151–53, 159–60,
217, 222 185, 187, 195, 199, 201–2
mind, x, 16, 18, 27n6, 38, 52–53, 76,
law, 35, 41, 49, 68, 74–75, 89–96, 80, 96, 109, 117, 132, 136, 138,
122, 125, 153–55, 159, 162–63, 142, 145, 155, 157, 166, 171, 174–
168, 171, 179, 188, 218–20, 231 76, 179, 181, 183, 185, 203–4,
liberator, 36, 79, 125, 229 216, 218–20, 237
life, ix–x, 3–6, 12, 13, 28n10, 31, 36, mortality/mortal, 11n15, 51, 54, 57,
43, 51, 53, 56–57, 60, 67–69, 72, 61–62, 68–69, 79, 104, 122–23,
75–76, 87–88, 94, 98, 103, 105, 128–29, 139–40, 161, 174–75,
109, 116–17, 120, 122, 132–33, 186, 219, 229
135, 141–43, 148, 155, 159, 162– Moses, 73, 102, 124, 130, 187–88
64, 168, 170–72, 174, 178–79, mother, 5n5, 47–48, 50–51, 53, 59–
182–86, 189, 191–94, 196, 201, 60, 68–69, 72, 124–25, 129, 193,
205–6, 210, 213, 219, 222n415, 220, 228, 236
224, 230; eternal, 36–37, 55–57,
60, 63, 66–68, 79–80, 103, 120, nature/natures of Christ, 6–8, 14,
122, 139, 149, 168, 175, 190–91, 17, 19n40, 26–28, 30–32, 34n42,
197, 201, 204–5, 210, 238 45–47, 50–53, 55, 58–63, 65, 69,
love, 32, 41, 43–44, 66, 75–78, 85, 122, 124, 235, 237–38
91–93, 95–96, 107–9, 112–13, nature, human (of others besides
117, 127–29, 137–40, 142–43, Christ), 56–57, 63, 71, 74, 79,
145, 147–48, 151, 153–59, 162– 84–88, 91, 95–96, 105, 122, 125,
63, 168, 170–72, 175–79, 187, 129, 153–55, 159, 208–9, 228,
189–91, 193, 196, 198, 201–2, 231, 236
204–6, 211, 214, 221, 227. See also Nestorianism/Nestorian, xiii, 8, 11,
beloved 15n29, 17n33, 39n63, 235–36
Luke, 150, 197, 211 Nestorius, ix, 6–7, 15, 20n42, 28,
lump (of condemnation), 37–38, 84, 31n28, 33n37, 34
115, 126–29, 137, 143 Nicaea, First Council of (year 325),
7–8, 33n35
Mark, 211 North Africa, ix, 3–5, 12, 18–19, 21,
marriage, 128–29, 140, 196 22, 25n1, 39n63, 42–43, 109n6,
Mary, 27–33, 32, 45, 48–50, 52–56, 222n414
59–61, 72, 81, 106, 124, 235, 237
Matthew, 211 Only-begotten, 32, 45–48, 50–52,
mediator, 35, 47–48, 68–69, 74, 124, 54–56, 60, 62, 65, 69, 106, 182,
228–30 201, 237–38
244 General Index
operative grace. See grace predestination/predestine, 13, 19,
Orange, Second Synod of (year 529), 21–22, 42, 87, 92, 105–6, 117–21,
ix, xiv, 20 126–27, 184, 198–210
original sin. See sin prevenient grace. See grace
prevenient mercy. See mercy
patience/patient, x, 150, 190, 192, pride/proud, 44, 78, 85, 96, 157–59,
230 161–62, 166, 170, 176, 178
patient (person under a doctor’s Prosper of Aquitaine, xiii, xv, 13,
care), 163 39n63, 119
Paul (the apostle), 19, 32, 46, 49, Proverbs, 149, 169
64–65, 68, 71, 73, 77–78, 80, Psalmist/Psalms, 32, 76, 87, 166,
83, 89, 94–96, 98, 102–3, 115, 181, 183, 203, 226
117, 126, 137, 145, 149, 151–53, punishment/punish, 35, 51, 57, 67,
159, 166–68, 170, 174, 180–81, 70, 84–85, 94, 100, 103–4, 113,
183, 186–87, 189–90, 192n288, 121–23, 129, 130–32, 141, 144–
194–98, 202, 204, 206–7, 211–12, 46, 152, 159–60, 162, 175, 188,
214–15, 218, 227. See also apostle, 205, 224, 228
vessel, teacher of the Gentiles purpose (of God), 53, 56–57, 92,
Paul of Samosata, 29 102, 115, 126, 127, 141, 145,
Pelagian Controversy, 11, 39–40, 147, 155, 159–60, 173, 188, 192,
42n76, 185n260, 236n6 199–203, 208
Pelagianism/Pelagian, xiii–xiv, 15–
17, 20, 72, 185, 235 Ravenna, 11
Pelagius, ix, 11, 15, 20n42, 39–40, Rebecca, 112, 126, 160n129
42, 72n105, 185n260, 236 Redeemer, 36, 47, 53, 63, 66, 68,
penitence/penitent, 38, 41, 64, 101, 124, 146, 157, 162, 174, 179,
75–76, 102, 142, 146, 161 204, 231
perseverance/persevere, 13, 26, redemption/redeem, 45, 51, 63,
39, 105–6, 109, 119–20, 130–31, 70, 73, 93, 98, 100, 114, 122,
149, 164, 179, 183–84, 190, 206, 125, 136, 138, 141–42, 146, 216,
210–11, 217, 230 228–29
Peter (the apostle), 42, 58, 62, 64, regeneration, 41, 64, 72, 135–36,
75, 93, 101–2, 136–37, 148, 152, 138–40, 146, 191
190, 212, 214–15 remission (of sins), 64, 72, 102, 228
Peter the Fuller, 9 respecter of persons, 83, 96. See also
Pharaoh, 188 favoritism
physician, 86. See also doctor resurrection, 57, 61–63, 163, 191,
Possessor, 18–19, 119 223–25
power, 4, 10, 28, 32, 35, 36, 38, 41, reward, 37, 66–67, 76–77, 90, 98–99,
44–46, 49, 52–53, 55, 57–58, 61, 108, 112, 115, 119, 121–22, 130,
63, 65, 74–75, 78, 82, 84–86, 88, 132, 135, 138, 160, 173, 178, 181,
93, 96–97, 99, 104, 109–10, 115, 184, 198–99, 201, 204
118, 121, 126, 131, 138, 141, 145, righteousness/righteous, 32, 44, 57,
150, 158, 162–65, 167, 173–74, 66–70, 78–80, 83, 89–90, 92–94,
177, 180–85, 188, 191–94, 197, 103, 112–13, 116, 123–24, 126,
200, 204, 207, 209–10, 217, 219, 129–31, 135, 141–42, 145, 155,
221, 226, 229–30, 237–38 161–63, 166, 168, 174, 177–78,
prayer/pray, 9–10, 25, 38–39, 41, 84, 185, 189, 193, 201, 203–4, 218,
86, 92, 107–9, 119, 136–37, 148, 220–21, 228–29
157, 165, 173, 178, 181–82, 184, Roman Empire, 3–4. See also Byzan-
186, 189, 197, 205–6, 211 tine Empire
General Index 245
Rome, 3, 8–11, 13, 17–21, 25, 33, 78–79, 84–87, 90–91, 94, 97,
42–43, 119n47, 195 102–3, 105, 111, 113–14, 118,
Ruspe, ix, xiii–xv, 4, 5, 19n40, 22n52, 122–25, 128–29, 131–35, 139–40,
108n3, 121n1 143–46, 150, 152–54, 156, 159,
162–63, 174, 177–78, 187, 189,
sacrament, 41, 55, 63–64, 72, 100, 194, 204–5, 211–12, 218–21,
103, 113, 118, 132, 136, 138, 223–31, 236; original, 11n15, 51,
222–23 66, 68–73, 100, 111, 113–14, 118,
sacrifice, 69, 74 123–25, 127–28, 131–33, 135,
salvation, x, 6, 12–15, 20–21, 38, 43– 139–40, 143–44, 146, 187, 205,
45, 48–50, 55, 58, 63–64, 72, 78, 223–31, 236
81, 92, 95, 97–101, 105, 114–16, sinner, 55, 66–68, 73–74, 126, 144,
130, 137–38, 140, 142, 145, 149, 159, 161, 189
154–56, 158, 162, 172, 177, 185, slavery/slave, 35–36, 46–47, 49, 54,
188, 191, 203, 212–14, 217 59, 61, 67, 68, 79, 115, 120, 124–
sanctification/sanctify, 32, 79, 83, 25, 155, 174–75, 192, 196, 220,
117–18, 175, 190, 198, 207, 223 228–30. See also servitude
Sardinia, 5, 18, 25n1, 43n3, 109n6 Solomon, 76, 82
Satan, 35. See also devil Son, the, 4, 6–7, 11, 15, 17, 27–31,
Savior, x, 72, 75, 81, 94, 146, 148, 33, 36–37, 48–50, 52–56, 59–65,
155, 161, 171, 193, 203, 206, 68–69, 71–72, 74, 79, 81, 83–85,
210–12, 223–24, 226, 231 105–6, 118, 125, 136, 158, 174,
Scripture/Scriptures, 37, 40n70, 49, 196, 210, 229, 237–38
57–58, 74, 82, 84, 89–90, 96, 98, soul, 35, 56–58, 66–67, 73, 78, 86,
104–5, 118, 128, 137, 144, 154, 88, 118, 122–23, 138, 140, 163,
175, 186, 188, 197–98, 213, 217 165, 171, 175, 190–91, 220–27,
Scythia, ix 230–31, 237
Scythian Monks, ix–x, xiii, 3, 5, 9–11, spirit/spiritual, 13, 41, 49–50, 55–58,
14–22, 25, 27–29, 31–34, 39, 66–67, 72, 80–82, 107, 109–11,
41–43, 45n12, 83n172, 99n244, 117, 123, 129, 139–41, 147, 150,
108–9, 111n12, 119n47, 235–36 153, 159, 165–66, 168–69, 173,
Second Ecumenical Council. See Con- 175–76, 179, 185–86, 191, 193,
stantinople, First Council of 203, 220, 225–26, 230
seed, 29, 49, 68, 89–90, 107, 117, Spirit of God. See Holy Spirit
122, 127, 139, 174, 196, 198, 203, strength/strengthen, 26, 39, 41,
207, 215–16, 223, 238 83, 110, 137, 150, 163, 177–78,
Semi-Pelagian Controversy, ix–x, xiv– 180–82, 184–87, 200, 215, 218,
xv, 3, 11, 14, 20, 39n63, 185n260, 221, 230
236n6 subsequent grace. See grace
servitude, 36, 68, 79, 124, 168, 218, subsequent mercy. See mercy
229. See also slavery Succensus, 26–27
sexual desire, 124, 129
sexual intercourse/sexual relations, teacher of the Gentiles (in reference
48, 50, 53, 68–69, 123–24, 126, to Paul), 44, 77, 152, 228
128–29, 160 Theodore of Mopsuestia, 6–7, 34
sheep, 85, 137, 165, 191, 195 Theopaschite Controversy, xiv, 14–20.
shepherd, 85, 137, 165, 191, 197 See also Christological controversies
sickness/sick, 86, 154, 161–62, 181, Third Ecumenical Council. See Ephe-
197 sus, Council of
sin/sinful, 11n15, 21, 35–36, 42n76, Thrasamund, 4–5, 19, 25n1
44, 51–52, 54, 57, 59, 64–75, Tomi, 16–17
246 General Index
Trinity, 4, 6, 10, 17, 20, 27n5, 29–31, 105–6, 116, 118–19, 130–32,
55, 60, 63–66, 122, 235, 238 135, 138–39, 147–49, 151, 153,
Trisagion, 9–10, 16–17 157, 161, 164, 165, 172, 176–81,
truth/truthful, 19, 21–22, 27, 36–37, 183–85, 189, 201–2, 208, 214,
40–41, 44–45, 47, 50, 53, 58, 60, 217, 224, 229, 235; of God, xiv, 97,
63, 70–72, 75, 80, 84, 91, 97, 118, 160, 188
99–101, 106, 111, 114, 117–20, wisdom, 32, 38, 45, 52, 65, 81, 96,
122–23, 127–29, 132, 134, 136, 99, 110, 145, 157, 162, 168–70,
138, 140–41, 143, 147–48, 157, 172–73, 176, 182, 199–200, 207–
162–63, 166, 168, 174, 184–85, 9, 211, 237–38
190, 196, 198–200, 207–8, 210– Wisdom, book of, 173
17, 219–20, 224, 226, 231 Wisdom (as a title for Christ), 29,
Truth (as a title for Christ), 50, 54, 166–67, 176, 182
56, 62, 210–14, 228 womb, 48, 50, 52, 55, 60, 68–69, 81,
106, 112, 124, 129, 220, 225, 228,
unbelief/unbeliever, 57, 61, 75, 77– 237
78, 85, 87, 89, 92–94, 98. 102–4, Word (as a title for Christ), 9, 11,
142–43, 146, 150–52, 155, 166, 26–29, 31, 33–34, 45, 47–48,
176, 180–81, 196, 216 50–55, 57–60, 106, 235–38
uncreated one, 30 work, x, xiii, 3–4, 8, 11, 13–14, 17,
27–28, 30n20, 37–44, 53–54,
Vandal/Vandals, xiv, 3–5, 19 56, 61, 63, 66, 73–76, 80, 82,
vessel: of wrath or of mercy, 38, 41, 85–86, 88–93, 95–97, 100, 106,
84, 97, 113, 115, 117, 126, 132, 108–9, 111–17, 119–23, 125–30,
137, 147, 158–59, 185, 190–98; 132–42, 144–49, 151–53, 155–56,
chosen (in reference to Paul), 49, 158–65, 169, 171–74, 176–81,
79, 151, 192 184, 187, 189–90, 193, 198–206,
Victor (deacon in Constantinople), 208–9, 215, 217–18, 222–25, 227,
17–18 229–30, 237
Virgin, the. See Mary
virginity, 49, 53, 124 Zion, 48, 166
Vitalian, 10–18 Zosimus, 11, 39–40, 236
In most passages from the Psalms, and occasionally in passages from other parts
of Scripture, the ancient and modern numberings of the verses differ. In all such
cases, the ancient numbering is listed first, followed by the modern numbering.
An example is as follows: Ps 18.10/19.9.
Old Testament
Genesis Job 50.7/51.5: 51, 72,
2.17: 123 14.1: 68 129, 228
3.19: 67 14.4: 72, 128 58.11/59.10: 77,
12.3: 90, 215 148, 165, 173
15.5–6: 203 Psalms 72.24/73.23: 171
15.6: 90, 193 2.11: 181 76.10/77.9: 53
17.14: 73 4.3/4.2: 148 76.11/77.10: 98,
22.18: 215 5.9/5.8: 168 148, 177
24.2: 49 7.11/7.10: 149 77.39/78.39: 85
24.7: 238 7.13/7.12: 164 80.11/81.10: 166
46.27: 58 10.8/11.7: 145 81.5/82.5: 155
11.7/12.6: 84, 102 84.7–8/85.6–7: 155,
Exodus 11.8/12.7: 183 164
9.16: 188 13.5/14.5: 175, 208 84.12/85.11: 54
33.19: 102, 130, 165, 15.1/16.1: 182 84.13/85.12: 88
187, 188 18.10/19.9: 135 85.9/86.9: 103
22.3/23.3: 168 85.15/86.15: 143
Deuteronomy 22.6/23.6: 148, 174 86.5/87.5: 48
32.4: 135 24.10/25.10: 100, 87.5–6/88.4–5: 69
32.39: 178 127, 141, 184, 200 89.9/90.9: 74
24.17/25.17: 219 89.17/90.17: 172
1 Samuel 24.20/25.20: 183 91.16/92.15: 141
2.4: 177 26.13/27.13: 87 93.10/94.10: 157
29.6/30.5: 105 100.1/101.1: 144,
2 Samuel 30.17/31.16: 172 200
18.5: 142 31.9/32.9: 226 102.3/103.3: 176
32.5/33.5: 205 103.4/104.4: 209
2 Kings 35.7/36.6: 135 103.24/104.24: 226
20.6: 206 36.23/37.23: 76 110.2/111.2: 177,
39.9/40.8: 165 200
2 Chronicles 40.5/41.4: 86, 163 115.10/116.10: 166
19.7: 100 42.3/43.3: 168 118.73/119.73: 169
44.7–8/45.6–7: 32 120.4/121.4: 183
247
248 Index of Holy Scripture
Psalms (cont.) 8.1: 209 Jeremiah
120.5/121.5: 171 8.21: 156, 173 9.24: 92
120.7/121.7: 183 9.1–4: 173 10.23: 82
120.8/121.8: 183 9.10–12: 173 17.21: 183
125.1–2/126.1–2: 9.13–14: 174 31.31: 91
166 9.14: 175 31.31–34: 95
126.1/127.1: 183 9.15–16: 175 31.33–34: 91
134.6/135.6: 97, 9.16: 176 31.34: 95
101, 105, 118, 9.16–19: 176
203, 210 10.21: 166 Lamentations
138.5/139.4: 199 11.21: 203 5.21: 166
138.6/139.6: 145 12.18: 97
142.10/143.10: 165 Baruch
144.13/145.13: 200, Sirach 3.25: 61
215 3.22: 96, 145 3.36–37: 61
145.8/146.8: 168, 10.9–10: 85 3.38: 61
176 10.15: 85
146.4/147.4: 203 15.17–18: 171 Ezekiel
30.24: 165 36.26: 147, 218
Proverbs 40.1: 68, 220 36.26–27: 83
1.28: 182 36.27: 116
2.6: 169, 172 Isaiah
4.23: 182 1.19: 116, 163 Daniel
8.35: 38, 40, 76, 84, 7.14: 48 12.1: 203
148, 149, 217 9.6: 32, 236, 238 12.3: 203
21.2: 82, 149 26.18: 81 13.42: 133
29.19: 155 40.4: 97
45.7: 80 Joel
Song of Songs 45.11: 199 2.28: 58, 101
4.8: 149 46.8: 85
53.11: 125 Habakkuk
Wisdom 55.7: 166 2.4: 80
1.14: 86 56.5: 196
7.24: 209 Malachi
1.2–3: 127
New Testament
Matthew 11.25: 157 25.34–36: 197
1.18: 48 11.27: 158, 210 25.41: 117, 146
1.20: 49 13.10: 157 26.41: 206
1.21: 212 13.11: 102, 157, 211 28.19: 63
1:23: 48 13.13: 157 28.20: 61
5.3–11: 177, 193 16.16: 62
5.44: 157 16.17: 36 Mark
7.7–8: 182 19.8: 212 1.15: 75
8.20: 62 19.11: 102 4.11–12: 211
9.12: 86 19.12: 102, 196
9.12–13: 161 22.37: 171 Luke
10.22: 104, 190 22.39: 171 1.28: 53
10.42: 138 24.22: 58 1.35: 49, 53
11.21: 38 25.34: 117 1.42: 53
Index of Holy Scripture 249
2.52: 32, 237 Acts 4.21: 200
3.6: 58 2.3: 101 4.25: 56, 62
8.10: 211 2.17: 58, 101 5.1–2: 93
10.20: 203 2.38: 64 5.3–5: 179
17.5: 150 2.38–39: 102 5.5: 78, 93, 108, 157,
18.11: 163 2.39: 214 171
19.10: 56, 74, 125 2.41: 58 5.6: 59, 74, 94, 204
19.11–27: 186 3.25: 215 5.10: 94
19.20–21: 187 3.26: 215 5.12: 35, 68, 124,
22.32: 148 4.12: 212 228, 236
5.41: 197 5.14: 73, 124
John 8.26–40: 136 5.16: 125
1.1–2: 45 9.1–19: 137 5.18: 35, 73, 103
1.1–3: 238 10.5: 136 5.19: 73
1.3: 46, 236 10.19–20: 137 5.20: 66, 75, 221
1.9: 111, 148 10.34: 83 6.1: 178
1.12: 93, 221 11.18: 75 6.2: 178
1.12–13: 56 15.11: 42 6.3: 55
1.14: 47, 53 16.6–7: 38 6.3–4: 64
1.16: 120 16.7: 137 6.9: 57
1.18: 48 16.14: 166 6.11: 178, 194
1.29: 75 6.12: 229
3.5: 223, 228 Romans 6.18: 220
3.13: 31, 238 1.1–3: 49 6.20: 79
3.27: 77 1.3: 117, 207 6.20–22: 175
4.24: 226 1.4: 118 6.22: 79
5.21: 105 1.19: 158 6.23: 70, 204, 205
5.26: 56 1.20–21: 158 7.7: 74, 154
5.28–29: 224 1.21: 155 7.19–20: 219
6.33: 69 1.21–23: 91 7.22–23: 218
6.37: 101 2.5–6: 146 7.24–25: 75, 154,
6.44: 101, 210 2.6–10: 190 218
6.52/6.51: 69 2.10: 92, 190 8.2: 75
6.65/6.64: 207 2.11: 37 8.3: 54, 70
8.24: 94 2.13: 89 8.7: 179
8.31–32: 174 2.14: 90 8.10: 67
8.34: 79, 124, 229 2.14–15: 89 8.14: 40, 156, 167
8.34–36: 174 3.4: 102 8.15: 93, 168
8.36: 36, 79, 125, 3.5: 70, 112, 113, 141 8.21: 220
229 3.19: 143 8.28: 92, 108
10.18: 226 3.20: 93 8.29: 200
12.32: 101 3.22: 93 8.30: 93, 117, 201
14.6: 60, 213 3.22–25: 228 8.33: 91
14.30: 229 3.23: 144, 204 8.33–34: 158
15.5: 40, 229 3.23–24: 73, 9.5: 47, 60, 61
17.2: 58 3.30: 90 9.10–13: 111
17.11: 182 4.2–5: 90 9.11: 73, 159, 228
17.15: 182 4.3: 193 9.11–12: 126
17.22: 57 4.11: 90 9.12: 160
20.28: 63 4.15: 74, 154 9.13: 127
4.20–21: 215 9.14: 187
250 Index of Holy Scripture
Romans (cont.) 12.4–6: 153 Ephesians
9.15: 130, 187 12.8–9: 81 1.4: 106, 201, 202,
9.16: 78, 188 12.8–10: 168 209
9.17: 188 12.9: 86 1.5: 117, 202
9.18: 102, 115, 187, 12.11: 114, 153 1.6: 202
188 13.2–3: 92 1.10: 93
9.19: 105, 115, 118, 13.4: 76, 156 1.11: 210
141, 188 13.5: 214 1.13–14: 186
9.20: 189 15.9: 77 1.16–17: 211
9.21: 38, 41, 84 15.10: 77, 83, 179, 2.3: 57
9.22–23: 126 180, 185 2.8: 112, 151
9.23–24: 194 15.47: 67 2.8–9: 44
10.3: 162, 178 15.54–56: 219 2.9: 112
10:4: 162 15.56: 70 2.10: 44, 112, 113,
10.9–10: 106 15.58: 173 206
10.10: 44 2.14: 93
10.14: 114, 170 2 Corinthians 3.16–17: 80
10.16: 149 3.3: 95 4.7: 114, 151
11.32: 102 3.4–5: 110 4.17–18: 155
11.33: 37 3.5: 75, 167 4.22: 80
11.33–34: 145 3.6: 46 4.23–24: 166
11.33–36: 38, 96 4.6: 80 4.24: 80
11.35: 77, 98, 187 4.13: 166 5.2: 74
12.1: 80 5.4–5: 186 5.8: 80
12.3: 86, 149, 152 5.21: 69 6.4: 139
12.5–6: 152 8.9: 47, 59 6.9: 37
12.11: 44, 178 8.10: 137 6.23: 151
13.10: 95 8.16: 137
13.13–14: 205 12.1–4: 96 Philippians
14.23: 90, 152 12.9–10: 197 1.15–16: 214
13.4: 61 1.29: 37
1 Corinthians 2.6: 29, 46
1.23–24: 65 Galatians 2.6–7: 54
1.24: 45, 52 2.16: 89 2.7: 36, 46, 47, 59,
1.31: 92 2.21: 89 229
2.6–7: 207 3.6: 89, 193 2.12: 138, 164
2.8: 36 3.11: 80 2.12–13: 116, 149,
2.11: 226 3.19: 74 178, 217
2.12: 150, 156, 169 3.22: 74, 154 2.13: 82, 116, 135,
2.12–15: 110 4.4: 49 181, 229
3.8: 173, 178 4.4–5: 231 2.21: 214
4.7: 77, 83, 111, 157 4.19: 80 3.6: 94
7.7: 147 5.6: 43, 76, 85, 91, 3.7–10: 94
7.25: 77, 180, 204 92, 148, 193, 3.14: 179
7.31: 194 198 4.7: 183
8.1: 159, 161 5.21: 113 4.8–9: 167
8.2: 170 5.22–23: 156, 206 4.12–13: 181
9.9: 84 5.23: 156 4.13: 230
9.24: 172 5.24: 194, 206 4.22: 214
10.11: 49 6.9: 178
12.3: 36 6.14: 194
Index of Holy Scripture 251
Colossians 2.20–21: 190 2.21: 82
1.13: 41 2.21: 198 2.23: 90, 193
1.16: 236, 238 2.25–26: 75 3.15: 182
1.16–17: 32, 104 4.2: 192 4.3: 182
1.19–20: 104 4.7: 179 5.20: 44
1.29: 181, 230 4.8: 204
2.2–3: 211 1 Peter
3.2: 117 Titus 1.3: 191
3.3–4: 192 1.16: 113 1.3–9: 191
3.4: 117 2.7: 192 1.4: 191
3.25: 37 2.12: 155, 204 1.6: 191
4.3: 211 3.3: 155 1.7: 192
3.4: 155 2.7: 93
1 Thessalonians 3.7: 204 2.22: 124
2.1–2: 197 2.24: 124
Hebrews 3.20: 58
2 Thessalonians 1.3: 238 4.8: 44, 159
1.11: 92, 217 2.9: 61 4.9–10: 152
1.12: 217 2.14–15: 174
2.16–17: 109 2.15: 174 2 Peter
3.2: 149 4.12: 44 2.19: 79, 124
7.5: 238
1 Timothy 11.6: 90, 95, 151, 1 John
1.13: 77, 180 152 1.1: 31
1.14: 77 12.1–2: 150 1.8: 219, 220
2.4: 37, 97, 101, 118, 12.2: 81 3.8: 56
210, 212, 213 13.4: 196 4.1: 169
2.5: 35, 47, 68, 228 13.8: 238 4.3: 58
2.14: 227 13.20–21: 137, 165 4.7–8: 171
3.16: 45 13.21: 116 4.16: 171
3.17: 198 5.20: 60
5.3: 196 James
5.8: 140 1.5: 170 Revelation
1.6: 170 1.7: 216
2 Timothy 1.16–17: 157 1.8: 51
2.3: 173, 179 1.17: 82, 112, 120, 5.9: 101
2.7: 169 170, 184, 229 5.9–10: 216
2.8: 49 2.1: 37 7.9: 216
2.9: 44 2.5: 193
2.20: 196, 198 2.19: 85