"Let them also read," says he, "my epistle to the holy Bishop Constantius, wherein I have -- briefly no doubt, but yet plainly -- conjoined the grace and help of God with man's free will." This epistle, as I have already stated, [1880] I have not read; but if it is not unlike the other writings which he mentions, and with which I am acquainted, even this work does nothing for the subject of our present inquiry. Footnotes: [1880] See above, ch. 37 [xxxiv.]. |