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CHAPTER
IX
17. But among all these vices and crimes and manifold iniquities, there are
also the sins that are committed by men who are, on the whole, making progress
toward the good. When these are judged rightly and after the rule of perfection,
the sins are censored but the men are to be commended because they show the
hope of bearing fruit, like the green shoot of the growing corn. And there are
some deeds that resemble vice and crime and yet are not sin because they offend
neither thee, our Lord God, nor social custom. For example, when suitable reserves
for hard times are provided, we cannot judge that this is done merely from a
hoarding impulse. Or, again, when acts are punished by constituted authority
for the sake of correction, we cannot judge that they are done merely out of
a desire to inflict pain. Thus, many a deed which is disapproved in man's sight
may be approved by thy testimony. And many a man who is praised by men is condemned--as
thou art witness--because frequently the deed itself, the mind of the doer,
and the hidden exigency of the situation all vary among themselves. But when,
contrary to human expectation, thou commandest something unusual or unthought
of--indeed, something thou mayest formerly have forbidden, about which thou
mayest conceal the reason for thy command at that particular time; and even
though it may be contrary to the ordinance of some society of men[78]--who
doubts but that it should be done because only that society of men is righteous
which obeys thee? But blessed are they who know what thou dost command. For
all things done by those who obey thee either exhibit something necessary at
that particular time or they foreshow things to come.
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