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St. Augustine
On Christian Doctrine
IntraText CT - Text
BOOK III.
chap. 21. David not lustful, though he fell into adultery
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chap
.
21
.
David
not
lustful
,
though
he
fell
into
adultery
But
when
King
David
had
suffered
this
injury
at
the
hands
of
his
impious
and
unnatural
son
,
he
not
only
bore
with
him
in
his
mad
passion
,
but
mourned
over
him
in
his
death
.
He
certainly
was
not
caught
in
the
meshes
of
carnal
jealousy
,
seeing
that
it
was
not
his
own
injuries
but
the
sins
of
his
son
that
moved
him
.
For
it
was
on
this
account
he
had
given
orders
that
his
son
should
not
be
slain
if
he
were
conquered
in
battle
,
that
he
might
have
a
place
of
repentance
after
he
was
subdued
;
and
when
he
was
baffled
in
this
design
,
he
mourned
over
his
son
'
s
death
,
not
because
of
his
own
loss
,
but
because
he
knew
to
what
punishment
so
impious
an
adulterer
and
parricide
had
been
hurried
.
For
prior
to
this
,
in
the
case
of
another
son
who
had
been
guilty
of
no
crime
,
though
he
was
dreadfully
afflicted
for
him
while
he
was
sick
,
yet
he
comforted
himself
after
his
death
.
And
with
what
moderation
and
self-restraint
those
men
used
their
wives
appears
chiefly
in
this
,
that
when
this
same
king
,
carried
away
by
the
heat
of
passion
and
by
temporal
prosperity
,
had
taken
unlawful
possession
of
one
woman
,
whose
husband
also
he
ordered
to
be
put
to
death
,
he
was
accused
of
his
crime
by
a
prophet
,
who
,
when
he
had
come
to
show
him
his
sin
set
before
him
the
parable
of
the
poor
man
who
had
but
one
ewe-lamb
,
and
whose
neighbour
,
though
he
had
many
,
yet
when
a
guest
came
to
him
spared
to
take
of
his
own
flock
,
but
set
his
poor
neighbour
'
s
one
lamb
before
his
guest
to
eat
.
And
David
'
s
anger
being
kindled
against
the
man
,
he
commanded
that
he
should
be
put
to
death
,
and
the
lamb
restored
fourfold
to
the
poor
man
;
thus
unwittingly
condemning
the
sin
he
had
wittingly
committed
.
And
when
he
had
been
shown
this
,
and
God
'
s
punishment
had
been
denounced
against
him
,
he
wiped
out
his
sin
in
deep
penitence
.
But
yet
in
this
parable
it
was
the
adultery
only
that
was
indicated
by
the
poor
man
'
s
ewe-lamb
;
about
the
killing
of
the
woman
'
s
husband
,
that
is
,
about
the
murder
of
the
poor
man
himself
who
had
the
one
ewe-lamb
,
nothing
is
said
in
the
parable
,
so
that
the
sentence
of
condemnation
is
pronounced
against
the
adultery
alone
.
And
hence
we
may
understand
with
what
temperance
he
possessed
a
number
of
wives
when
he
was
forced
to
punish
himself
for
transgressing
in
regard
to
one
woman
.
But
in
his
case
the
immoderate
desire
did
not
take
up
its
abode
with
him
,
but
was
only
a
passing
guest
.
On
this
account
the
unlawful
appetite
is
called
even
by
the
accusing
prophet
,
a
guest
.
For
he
did
not
say
that
he
took
the
poor
man
'
s
ewe-lamb
to
make
a
feast
for
his
king
,
but
for
his
guest
.
In
the
case
of
his
son
Solomon
,
however
,
this
lust
did
not
come
and
pass
away
like
a
guest
,
but
reigned
as
a
king
.
And
about
him
Scripture
is
not
silent
,
but
accuses
him
of
being
a
lover
of
strange
women
;
for
in
the
beginning
of
his
reign
he
was
inflamed
with
a
desire
for
wisdom
,
but
after
he
had
attained
it
through
spiritual
love
,
he
lost
it
through
carnal
lust
.
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