IT IS NOT A CASE OF THE BELIEVER'S "CO-OPERATION" WITH GRACE; THE WILL IS FIRST ACTUATED THROUGH GRACE
But perhaps some will concede that the will is turned away from the
good by its own nature and is converted by the Lord's power alone,
yet in such a way that, having been prepared, it then has its own
part in the action. As Augustine teaches, grace precedes every good
work; while will does not go before as its leader but follows after
as its attendant. This statement, which the holy man made with no
evil intention, has by Lombard been preposterously twisted to that
way of thinking. But I contend that in the words of the prophet that I
have cited, as well as in other passages, two things are clearly
signified:
(1) the Lord corrects our evil will, or rather
extinguishes it;
(2) he substitutes for it a good one from himself.
In so far as it is anticipated by grace, to that degree I concede
that you may call your will an "attendant." But because the will
reformed is the Lord's work, it is wrongly attributed to man that he
obeys prevenient grace with his will as attendant. Therefore Chrysostom
erroneously wrote: "Neither grace without will nor will without
grace can do anything." As if grace did not also actuate the will
itself, as we have just seen from Paul [cf. Philippians 2:13]! Nor
was it Augustine's intent, in calling the human will the attendant of
grace, to assign to the will in good works a function second to that
of grace. His only purpose was, rather, to refute that very evil
doctrine of Pelagius which lodged the first cause of salvation in
man's merit. Keep Reading >>>
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