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POPE
INNOCENT III
On the Misery of the Human
Condition
Of the vile matter from which man is made
‘God made the planets and stars from fire, the breeze and winds from air, che fishes and
birds from water; but He made men and beasts from earth. Thus a man, looking upon
sealife, will find himself low; looking upon creatures of the air he will know he is lower;
and looking upon the creatures of fire he will see he is lowest of all. Nor can he equal
heavenly things, nor dare put himself above the earthly; for he finds himself on a level
with the beasts and knows he is like them.
“Therefore the death of man and the beast is the same, and the condition of them both
is equal, and man has nothing more than the beast. Of earth they were made, and into
earch they recur together."' These are not just the words of any man, but of wisest
Solomon. What then is a man but slime and ashes? Man addresses God: “Remember, I
beseech thee, that chow hast made me as the clay, and thou wile bring me inco dust agai.
‘And God addresses man: “Dust chou art, and unto dust chou shale return.”> “Lam compared
to mud and am likened co embers and ashes."* Now, mud is made of water and dire, both
remaining what they are; but ashes are made of fire and wood, both being consumed. In
this a mystery is revealed, but it will be expounded elsewhere. Therefore, mud, why att
thou proud? dust, whar hase thou
Bue perhaps you will reply
10 boast about? ashes, why art thou so insolent?
that although Adam himself was formed of the earth's
slime you were conceived of human seed. On the contrary, Adam was formed of eacth,
but of virgin earth; you were made of seed, and chat unclean. “For who can make clean
what was conceived from unclean seed?" “What is man that he should be without spot
tnd he that is born of a woman that he should appear just?"® "Behold, I was conceived
in iniquities and in sins did my mother conceive me."” Not in one sin alone, not in one
Source: On the Misr of te Hama Condo, eranelaced by Margaret Mary Diets, Indinapois, Ind: Hackett
Publishing Company Toe, 1969.fishes and
he equal
hem both
and into
of wisest
rember, I
again.
compared
dire, both
umed. In
. why are
ne earth’s
of earch,
ake clean
out spot,
conceived
de: Hackest
ON THE MISERY OF THE HUMAN CONDITION
transgression alone, but in many sins and many transgressions: in her own sins and trans
‘gressions, and the sins and eransgressions of others.
Of the misery of the good and the evil
Ie is not for the wicked to rejoice, says the Lord, “For by what chings a man sins, by
the same also he is cormented.”* For the worm of conscience never dies, and reason's
light is never put out. “I have seen those who work iniquity and sow sorrows and reap
them petishing by the blast of God and consumed by the spirit of His wrath.”? Pride
inflates, envy gnaws, avarice goads, wrath inflames, gluccony chokes, lechery destroys,
lying ensnares, murder defies. So, too, other vices have their portents, for the sinful
delights which entice men are che very instruments of God's punishmenc. “The envious
‘man loses weight when he sees someone else getting fat.""° But,
The tyrants of Sicily never discovered a worse form of torment than envy."
For vice corrupts nacare ab the Apostle witnesses: “Because they have become vain in
their thoughts, and thee folish hearts have been darkened, cherefore God gave them up
to the desires of cheie hearts unto uncleanness, co dishonor their own bodies, and as they
liked not to have God in cheit knowledge, God delivered them up (0 a reprobate sense,
to do chose chings which are noe convenieat."!
But even those “who will to live godly in Christ Jesus will suffer persecution." “The
saings had the experience of mockery and stripes, yes, even of chains and prisons. They
were stoned, they were cue asunder, chey were tempted, they were pu co death by the
sword for the Lord. They went about in sheepskins and goatskins, being in waat,
distressed, and afflicted, of whom the world was aot worthy, wandering in deserts in
mouncains, and in dens and in caves of the earth." In peel from Hoods, in peril from
robbe:
In labor and hardship, in many watchings, in hunger and thirst, in fastings often, in
, in perl from the gentiles, in peril from the city, in peril from false bretheen.
cold and nakedness," in many hardships.
Tor the just man “denies himself," crucifying his body on the cross of its own vices
and concupiscences, so that the world is crucified to him and he to the world. He does
fot have in this life a lasting city of this world, bur seeks the furure city of God. He
endures the world as an exile, shue up in che body as in a prison. “I am a sojourner on
the earth"!? “and a pilgrim like all my fathers. Turn thy eyes from me, that T may
recover, before I go and am no more." “Who is me that my sojourning is prolonged;
Thave dwele with the inhabicants of Cedar, my soul has long been a sojourner.""? “Who
is weak and I am not weak? Who is scandalized and I am not on fire?" For che sins
of those about us ate a torment co the righteous. And this eeaching is che flowing water
which Caleb gave for dowry ro his daughter Axa.
79POPE INNOCENT II
(On the enemies of man
“The life of man on the earth is warfare.” Is i noc truly warfare when a manifold enemy
the devil and man, the world and the flesh — always and everywhere lie in wait to seize us,
follow us about to slay us? ~ the world through che four elements, the flesh through ehe
senses, man through che beasts, and the devil through vices, “For the fesh lusts against the
spirit and che spirit against che flsh.”® For “our wrestling is noe against fesh and blood,
but against principalities and powers, against the rulers ofthe world of dackness."® For your
adversary the devil, asa roaring lion, goes about seeking whom he may devour.”
Of the guilty progress of the human condition
‘Men strive especially for three chings: riches, pleasures, and honors. Riches lead to
immorality, pleasures to shame, and honors to vanity. Hence the Apostle Joha says, "Do
rot love the world or the things hae are in the world; because all that is in the world
is the concupiscence of the flesh and the concupiscence of the eyes and the pride of life.
‘The concupiscence of the flesh pereains to pleasures, the concupiscence of che eyes t0
riches, and the pride of life to honors. Riches beget coverousness and avarice, pleasures
give birch co gluccony and lechery, and honors nourish pride and boasting
Of covetousness
“Nothing is more wicked chan a covetous man and there is not a more wicked ching
than to love money.” That is the statement of the wise man, and the Apostle confirms
i by saying, “They thar will become rich fall into temptations and into the snare of the
devil and into many unprofitable and hurcful desites, which drown men into destruction
and perdition. For the desire of money is the root of all evils." Ie causes sacrilege and
thefe, incites robbery and plunder, starts wars and prompts murders; it buys and sells in
simony, seeks and takes without fairness, trades and lends without justice, presses with
guile and chreatens wich frauds ie violates agreements and breaks oaths, corrupts witnesses,
and perverts judges
On respect of persons
‘Woe to you who have been corrupted by pressure of bribery, influenced by Jove or hate
to “call evil good and good evil, who put darkness for light and light for darkness,"
killing souls which do noc die and giving life to souls which do not live. (Judges! pay
no attention ro the value of a case, but to the value of a person; not to laws but to
bribes; not to justice but to money; not co teason's dictate but to your will’s desire: noe
to the law's decree but to your mind's urging. You do not bend your mind to justice,
80|
ON THE MISERY OF THE HUMAN CONDITION
but bend justice co your mind; not in order that you desire what is lawful but chae it
‘may be made lawful co do what you desire. For your eye is never so pure as to keep the
enemy ~ boeightness of che whole body: you add always some yeast that corrupts che whole
prough the
against the (On the despair of the damned
and blood,
‘They are laid in hell like sheep; death will feed on them." This text is based upon
the similarity of damned souls co beasts of burden, who do nor tear up the grass by the
roots bur only chew the top, so thar che grass grows again for pasture. Thus the wicked,
2s if eaten by death, spring to life again to die once more, and so are eternally dying,
For your
“The liver of Tityus, unconsumed and ever growing,
et lead co ‘Wastes not ~ whence it can be devoured many times.”
says, “Do
the woeld , ‘Then death will never die, and those who are dead to life will live for death alone
de of life They will seek death and never find ie, having had life and lose it. Hear what John says
he eyes to : in the Apocalypse: “In those days men will seek death and hey will not find ic, and
+ pleasures they will desire co die and death will fee from chem.” © death, how sweet you would
be to ehese souls who when alive thought you so bitter: chey will long for you and you
alone ~ they who had despised you so in life
Led ching Why the wicked will never be released from punishment
le confirms ‘Therefore lee no man flatter himself, saying “The Lord will not always be angry, nor will He
pare of che threaten forever,” and "His mercy is over all His works.” For "when He was angry He did
lescruction not forgec co be merciful,”*> nor does He hate anything which He has made, They take up
rilege and this erroneous argument because of what our Loed said through the prophet, “And they shall
ad sells in be gathered together as in the gathering of one bundle into the pit. And they shall be shut
esses wich up there in prison, and after many days they shall be visited." And therefore ~so they argue
vwienesses, ‘ because man sinned in time, he will not be punished in eternity.
© vain hope, © false presumption! “He shall not believe, being vainly deceived by
‘error, that he may be redeemed wich any price," “for there is no redemption in hell”
‘Therefore sinners shall be gathered in a pie and shue in a prison, which is Hell; and
| there they will be rortured without their bodies until Doomsday, and then after many
we oF hate clays they shall be visited, thae is, after ehey rise with heir bodies on che last day; bur
ackness,"” they will be visited wich vengeance, not salvation, for chey will be punished still mose
sdges] pay srievously alter the day of judgment. Thus itis said in another place, “I will visie their
ws but co iniquieies with a rod and their sins with stripes."
desire: not Therefore God will be angry with those who are saved only fora time, for "He seourges
co justice, every son’ whom he receives." From this it is understood that “He will not always be
aLPOPE INNOCENT 111
angry.” But with the wicked He will be angey forever, for itis just and right chat
those who go astray in sheir portion of ecernity shall have God's wrath throughout His
exernity. For although the sinner in Hell has lose che opporeunity of sinning, still he
does aot lose his will co sin, Te is written: “The pride of those who hate thee ascends
coneinually."
“The wicked will not be humbled, having already despaired of mercy. Malignane hare
‘will grow in them, so much that they will wish God, ehrough whom they know they
‘exist so unhappily, could altogether cease to exist. They will curse che Almighty and
biaspheme che Everlasting, complaining that He is evil who created chem for punish
ment and never inclines to mercy. Hear what John says in the Apocalypse: “And great
hhail came down from heaven upon men, and men blasphemed God for the plague of the
hail because ie was exceeding great."
‘Therefore the will of the damned, although it lose the effect of its power, will always
retain the love of evil; it will of itself be a punishment in hell, which had been a sin in
the world, though perhaps even in hell it will still be 2 sin, bue not worth punishmene
‘Thus the sinner, having always had within himself the accusation of guilt, will always
feel within himself che anguish of punishment: whar he did not wipe away through peni-
tence, God will not remit through indulgence. “There it pertains to the great justice of
the judge that they never lack punishment in hell who never wished to lack sin in life
‘They would have certainly wished, if they could, co live forever so that they mighe sin
For they show that they want always to live in sin who never cease to sin
forever
while they are alive
Notes
ecles. 319-20.
Jeb 10:9
Gen, 3:19.
Job 30:19.
Job 144,
JJob 15:14
Ps. 50:7
Wisd, 11:17,
Job 48-9.
10 Horace, Epil 1. ii. 36
11 Wid, 37-39,
12 Rom, 1:21, 24, 28.
13-1 Tim. 3:12.
14 Heb, 1136-38,
13M Cor, 11:26-2
16 Lake 9:23,
17 Ps, 11819,
18 Ps. 38:13-14.
19 Ps. 11955.J right that
vaghout His
ing, still he
chee ascends
lignane hace
/ know they
mighty and
for punish-
"And great
lague of the
will always
punishment.
will always,
rough peni
at justice of
cin in life
y mighe sin
2
a
22
23
24
26
a
28
2 5
30
31
33
34
35
36
s
38
39
40
4a
a2
ON THE MISERY OF THE
H Gor, 11:29,
Job 7:
Gal. 5:7.
Eph. 6:12,
1 Pee. 58
Feclus. 10:9, 10,
1 Tims, 69-10,
Isa, 5:20.
Ps, 48:15,
Ovid, Epittlae ex Ponto 1 ii 42.
Apoc. 9:6.
Ps, 102:9
Ps. 14439.
CL Bs, 76:10.
Isa, 24:22,
Job 15:31
Resp. I Noct. Offi Dyimctoram
Ps. 88:33,
Heb, 1256.
Ps. 10239.
Ps. 73:23.
‘Apoc. 16:21
Se. Gregory, Dialoguer IV. 44
HUMAN CONDITIONTHE
MANY FACES
OF EVIL
Historical perspectives
Edited by
Amélie Oksenberg Rorty