Letter 143: 1. Desiring to reply to the letter which I received from you through our holy brother, my co-bishop Boniface, I have sought for it, but have not found it. I have recalled to mind, however, that you asked me in that letter how the magicians of Pharaoh could, after all the water of Egypt had been turned into blood, find any with which to imitate t...

Augustine of HippoMarcellinus and Anapsychia|c. 409 AD|augustine hippo
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Augustine to Marcellinus, greetings.

You asked about predestination — and I can feel, even through the parchment, how carefully you phrased the question, as though approaching an unexploded device. You are wise to be careful. This is one of the deepest and most difficult teachings in all of Scripture, and it has caused more confusion than almost any other.

Here is what I believe, and why.

God is sovereign. He knows all things — past, present, and future — not as we know them (one thing at a time, from a particular vantage point) but as he is: eternally, completely, all at once. Before the foundation of the world, he knew every soul that would ever exist. He knew which would turn to him and which would turn away. And he chose — before time began — to bestow his saving grace on some.

"But is this fair?" you ask. Of course it is not fair — if by "fair" you mean that everyone gets the same thing. But fairness, in that sense, is not what God promises. What God promises is justice — and justice means giving each person what is due. What is due to fallen humanity is condemnation, because all have sinned. Grace — the free, unmerited gift of salvation — is not due to anyone. It is a gift. And a gift, by definition, is given freely, not owed.

The potter has authority over the clay [Romans 9:21]. This does not mean God is arbitrary. It means his reasons are beyond our comprehension. We see a fragment of the pattern. He sees the whole.

If this troubles you, good. It should. A doctrine that does not trouble us is a doctrine we have not understood. The proper response to predestination is not smug certainty (as if we could know who is elect and who is not) but humble gratitude — because if we believe, if we love God, if we have faith, then we know that these things were given to us, not earned by us. And the appropriate response to a gift is not analysis but thanks.

Farewell, dear brother.

Modern English rendering for readability. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek for scholarly use.

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