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Augustine and the Beauty of Perseverance
It is worth noting that when Augustine speaks of the “peace that surpasses all understanding” (a peace that flows from the cross), he suggests that “we can only know it by coming to it.”[1]
Augustine through the course of his writings gives great emphasis to the grace of God in initiating our salvation, helping Christians to grow in grace, and in persevering His people. And Augustine quite consistently and repeatedly denies that human merit has anything to do with bringing about God’s grace. He writes: “the grace of God both for beginning and for persevering up to the end is not given according to our merits, but is given according to his most hidden and at the same time most just, most wise, and most beneficent will.”[2] . . .
In speaking of those who have come to Christ, Augustine also consistently affirms the centrality of desire, delight and affections as central. That is, consistent with his overarching theology of the will, Augustine contends that persons ultimately do what they want. Whereas before conversion persons do not want—ultimately—to believe, in a similar way after conversion we obey God because we want to. Just as we believed because we wanted to, so we walk in grace because we want to. Thus, Augustine can write:
For Augustine we do not even begin to do good works unless God moves in us. He writes:
But because we cannot do good works unless helped by his gift, as the apostle says, For it is God who produces in you both the will and the action in accord with good will (Phil 2:13), we shall not be able to rest after all our good works that we do in this life unless we have been made holy and perfect for eternity by his gift. Hence, scripture says of God himself that, after he had made all things very good, he rested on the seventh day from all the works which he made (Gen. 1:31 and 2:2). For that day signified the future rest that he was going to give us human beings after our good works. After all, just as when we do good works, he by whose gift we do good works is said to work within us, so when we rest, he by whose gift we rest is said to rest.[10]
Augustine holds that who someone is is determined by the nature of their loves. We ought to love the right thing (not the wrong thing), and we ought to love the right thing in the right way. Augustine writes: “for he is not justly called a good man who knows what is good, but who loves it. Is it not then obvious that we love in ourselves the very love wherewith we love whatever good we love? For there is also a love wherewith we love that which we ought not to love: and this love is hated by him who loves that wherewith he loves what ought to be loved.”[11]
[4] On the Spirit and Letter 5.
[9] Confessions VIII.viii.20.
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