Page:Early Christianity outside the Roman empire.djvu/67

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OUTSIDE THE ROMAN EMPIRE.
57

Free-will, which has been given to them as a gift from God's bounty. It is in respect of this gift of Free-will that man was made in the image of God[1]. By his Free-will a man can modify his Fate to some extent, and with regard to his Free-will, and that alone, will he be judged at the Last Day. Moreover the commandments of God are such that they are easy, for they are independent of Fate, and only the Will is needed to perform them. Even if a man be poor and sick he can love and bless and speak the truth, and can pray for the good of every man he knows, while if he be rich and strong he can in addition help his neighbour. Nothing can hinder us from these things: we are not commanded to do anything involving bodily strength or mental cleverness. Nay more, when a man does well and abstains from evil he is glad—every man, that is, except those who were created not for good and are called tares[2]. The commandments of God are easy: it is success in this life that is barred with obstacles[3].

  1. Spicilegium, pp. 3, 4.
  2. Ibid. p. 5 ad fin.
  3. Ibid. p. 7.